HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-10-16 - Orange Coast Pilot·--·
THI DRAllil CDAIT Ylll HlllTlll llllY PIPll
ORANGE COUNT V CALIFORNIA 50 CENTS
I ~
School
)
tenants
may get ..
. evicted
By L.P. BENET
Of"'9De11J~•t1111
From a distance. it looks Like
just another empty school· build-
ing __: one of many across the state
that have been shut down in the
-aftermath of Proposition 13 and
declining enrollments.
But up close, the Aliso Elemen-
try School ln South Laguna
reverberates with activity. Each
day, dozens of young children
gather in a private preschool and
kindergarten to sing, play games,
and study German and French.
Several Laguna Beach artists
• paint and 9Culpt in refurbished
studios that once served as
classrooms wh~re children
learned multiplication tables and
' read Dick and Jane texts.
'Every bit" of the sehool build-
ing i.s leased out," said Dr. Zane de
Arakal, chief administrat.or of the
the Capistrano-Laguru1 Beach
Regional Occupational Program, a
non-profit organization that
subleases the school for the
Laguna Beach Unified School
District. The district earns $42,000
annually from the tenants, who
include six artists, a school, and
several organizations that have
been renting space from ROP for
one to two · years under
month-lo-month leases.
But next June -when the
ROP's lease with the district
expires -12 tenants may have to
move out of Aliso to m.aliee way for
a proposed 71-unit low-income
elderly housing project that re-
cently received a $2.9 million loan
from the federal goverrunent.
The loan may make it possible
for a non-profit dev•?loper, the
Laguna Beach-based National
Church Residence. t.o purchase
Anneliese's School students, from
left~ Nicole Mcintosh, Justin
McMahon, Michelle Bray, Kristen
o.e,~~~ ....... ·---
Brown and Alexandra Ash pet and
feed a . baby lamb at the South
Laguna preschool and kindergarten. --the 6.34-acre site from the district
The tenants are miffed at the
achool district becauae they were
told the property would not be for
sale until the 1985-86 9Cbool year.
"They never said how long we
could stay," said Anneliese Schim-
melpsennig, co-director of An-
neliese's School. a European-style
l!IChool. "'But we felt we had at
least five years when we first
rented the space a year-and-a-halt
ago. We've invested a lot of money
-$10,000 in renovations. Three
hundred familes bring their chil-
dren here . It would take aome-
thing away from the community If
we had to go."
Laguna School Superintendent
Bill Barnes said al~ ~
IChool board decidt!Ct'.ft.wqiald put
the A.liao property up 'for bld in
1985-86 if it couldn't strike a deal
with the county, 9Chool district
officials told the church residence
that it could submit a housing
(See AL1SO !CBOOL, Pa1e A%)
Sheriff wants jail
file-·maae -public
By JEFF ADLER
Of Ille.,.., ..........
Orange County S heriff Brad
Gates wants a U.S. Justice Depdrt-
ment's investigative file on county
jail conditions made public to
highlight the cost taxpayers in-
curred becauae of a "couple of
vindictive people."
Referring indirectly to Central
Municipal Court Judge Bobby
Youngblood and American Civil
Liberties Union attorney Richard
Herman, Gates said the investiga-
tion cost taxpayem hundreds of
thousands of dollars because o(
"untruthful and madeup allega-
tions."
Youngblood and Herman, who
both were interviewed during the·
course of the 10-month federal
probe, have harshly criticized jail
conditions and the manner in
which Gates runs the Santa Ana
penal facility.
Youngblood, a longtime politi-
cal oppohent of the sheriff, strong-
ly pushed for the federaJ in-
vestigation.
Justice Department attorneys
Thursday announced that no civil
(See JAIL FILE, Page AZ )
Coastline addresses
missing flie_rs case
Missing: 9,859 handbills.
In jeopardy: 15 Coastline Col-
lege classes.
College spokesman J ack Chap-
pell said the Coastline staff last
1Tuesday hauled 15 bags contain-
ing 16,00-0 fliers to the Santa Ana
Post Qf fice. They were ad~
to homes around Lincoln Inter-
mediate School in Newport Beach.
The handbills were designed to
, let residents know about a spectal
lelBion of 15 college classes to be
offerred at the school beginning
Monday.
.When some of the fliers failed to
arrive by Friday, Coastline of-
ficials began to investigate. They
discovered that the poet ofl\ce had
appa.renUy lost all of the fliers
addressed to zip code 92660 -
more than 9,800 of them. The
affected areas include the com-
munities of East Bluff, Dover
Shores and Big Canyon.
<See MISSING FLIERS, Pa1e Al>
The debut that waen't .
It WMeuppoeed to be Q4w~ Petehet'• Broadway
debut fn amUllcal abOut Marltyn Monroe, but the
MNwauft• natlvewaa r91>tacect 10 daye befor9tM
opening. Page 87.
"
Resignatio_n
~f transport
chief asked
BI JEFF AD{,.ER
Of .... Dell)' .........
Orange County Transportation
Comrnis&on 1nembers have open-
ed their battle to win voter
approval of a&pecial 1-centcounty
option transporation tax.
The co~ion's executive di-
• rector Tom Jenkins became. the
battle's first casualty when mem-
bers demanded his resignation. A
special meeting has been called
Monday when the commission is
expected to publicly accept the
resignation.
Jenkins tendered his resig-
nation Thursday following a
meeting with Supervisor Thomas
Riley, the commission chairman,
Riley aide John Stevens con-
firmed Friday.
Riley said he was designated to
ask for the executiv~ director's
i"esfgnation during a closed-door
session tne commission held
earlier in the week.
J enkins was not in' his office
Friday and could not be reached
for comment.
Riley said a "majority" of the
five-member panel argued for
Jenkin's ouster from the
$61,000-a-year position during the
meeting. He said he expected the
resignation would be accepted
unanimously.
"I think many members of the
co~ion felt that the develop-
ment of the 15-year (transpor-
tation) plan and the selling of It to
the people required different
skills than Tom's," Riley said.
He called commission efforts to
win voter approval of the tax "the
paramount issue in the County of
Orange."·
The commission chairman
added that while there was no
question that Jenkins was "un-
equaled'' in technical ~tten,
•
there wer~ questions about his
handling of public relations mat-
ters. "The public relations part 9f
the effort was not ~ satisf~ •
as some would have Liked," Riley
said.
Jenkins, 42, is an engineer by
training and has been with the
co~ionsince 1977.
The chairma.n also said com-
missioners probably would ap-
point an interim dlrector at Mon-
day's meeting.
He said commissioners have n!>
particular person in mind for the
perma.nentpoeition,butsuggested
the principal qualification would
be someone who is "good in public
relations activity."
Within the last several weeks,
the commission voted to hire Al
Holliden. a former commi.91ion
chairman and Fountain Valley
city councilrnan, as a special
consultant to spur the pro-tax
camapaign. However, Riley said
he doubted that Hollinden would
be considered or would even
accept the executive director's
post.
Gov. Deukmejian allowed the
long-awaited transporation tax
bill to become law without his
signature Sept. 30. The law per-
mits the transportation com-
mission to ask voters to approve a
l-<.-ent l.nci'ease in the county's
sales tax to help pay for a $12.8
billion package of transportation
improvements e n visioned
through the y~ 2000.
Without the tax, according to
transportation planners, the coun-
ty would fall aome $6.8 billion
short of its goal.
Before the plan and tax-hike
can be submitted to county voters,
however, the pack.age must be
approved by a majority of the
county's 26 cities.
Boatloads of
celebrities
A dozen or to celebrities
bra\'ed o\'ercaat skie1 and,
for the mott part, their own
inexperience to compete in
an inflatable power boat
race at the
Newport Dunes Aquatric
Park Saturday.
Hollywood and 1port1 fig-
ure• were tearoed with top
offshore powerboat com-
petiton in tiny rubber run-
about• for the 10-lap event
held in conjunction with the
Bud Warmington Inter-
national Grand Prix. The
big boats begin their
200-mile orf ahore race at 10
a.m. today orf Newport pier.
Saturday'• racers were just
as enthu1iaatic as a small,
but l'ocal crowd
c heered on their favorite
stars.
Among the celebrities par·
ticipating in Saturday'• race
were Mikf' Reagan, aon of
Pre1ident Reagan and hia
son Cameron, bottom;
••Streets of San Franciteo"
and .. BattleatarGalac:tica"
1tar Richard Hatch and re•
cordiQg artist Trini Lopez,
tosJright, and 0 Adam 12"
star Kent McCord, top left.
o.., ............ ~·-.......
Irvine bond plan to
double ·re·ntal stock
BJ ANDREA ADELSON
Of .. 0.., ........
For thoee who have competed in
vain for the ·handful of rented
homes and apartmenta that sur-
face and quickly vaniah in the
Irvine houatna market, aome help
iaat hand. Dw1na the next three yean,
about 2.200 a~ta will be
built in 11 •h• throuchout the
city, more than doubllna the 3,500
apartmenta ln e>dstenc.-e or under
conltrUct1on in Irvine.
>.. part of ·the dty'a flnt
mortcaae revenue bond Protnm
the Oty Council hu acreect to
Ooat a $1,4>0 million bond llaue
~
next month to pay fot apartment
development by the lrvlne Co.
Citibank hu 8'P"eed to .ct• ..
underwriter and lntenda to reeell
the 12-yeer tax free bonda, prob-
ably to institutional lnveston. at
the market'• prevalllnc 9 percent .
or 10 pen:ent yield, city ldmtnla--
t.rator Michael McNunar.i aid
before the coundl met ~y.
A AAA bond rattnc ta expected
becauae of the IUOCeil of t.hNe
prevtoua bond laauea ln Irvine, he
added.
Federal l\&ldellMI require 20
pel'l.'ent of ~ houelnc built ~th
th1I finandal mechanllm be CIC•
(S..APAATM~ Pqt~)
~ .
• -\:"
1 . '
1 i
,
A2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
'TU tu ~ goes home
to Balboa Island
By KAREN E. KLEIN said. "She hadn't been mistreated °'-o.iir"""•..,. but she recognized me and she
made a real fast dash for the car The Blum family of Balboa when she saw us.
Island is back together again, "The first thing she did was to
thanks to a Costa Mesa woman lean down and gt"9Wl in Spooky's
' who read an ad asking for tlle ear, just to let her know she was
return of "Tutu," Ruth and Alan back and things were back to
Blum's tiny gray poodle. normal," Blum said.
"We are so pleased to have her The woman who had Tutu said
back," Blum said, after the dog, a her mother bought the dog for her
member o{ the f~y for 12 years, at a garage sale the day after the
was returned. poodle disappeared.
Tutu had served as a guide doff ('; A drunk was wandering around
and companion for the Blum'~ with the dog, trying to sell it to get
.othe r poodle, "Spooky," who is money !or food, she sai'd. The
deafandhalf-blind.Butabouttwo Blurns gave the woman $100 for
weeks ago, Tutu vanished from Tutu's safe return.
the BlUJn:S' car while they were "When we first got home there
having lunch. was five minutes of heavy run-
The elderly CQuple, whose three ning around to make sure things
daughters do not Jive nearby, were still in their places, and since
thought of the two dogs as their then things have been back to
children and wer~ devastated by normal," Blum said. ·
Tutu's disappearance. The numerous calls of en-
Then they got a call Crom a couragement and sympathy the
woman who said she thought she couple received since their story
had Tutu .. They arranged to meet was publicized week helped get
early last week. them through their ordeal, Blum
"The poor little thing," Blum added.
Women Voters joins
lawsuit over housing
Orange County's League of
Women Voters has taken the
unprecedented step of joining a
Superior Court lawsuit challeng-
ing the Board of Supervisors'
decision io phase out the county'$
affordable housing program.
Lee Podolak said the league is
joining the suit, filed by the
Orange County Renters Associa-
tion and a Santa Ana woman.
"~use we feel that there are
many unanswered questions
about (the program) which can
only be answered in a court of
law."
The league opposed replacing
the affordable housing program
with a voluntary one when the
Board of Supervisors considered
the matter during a marathon
public hearing last March.
The program, which required
developers to build 25 percent of
any new development in the
unicorporated county at narrowly
defined "affordable" pnces, is
being phased out over three years.
Podolak said the lawsuit
challenges the legality of the
phaseout because supervisors fail-
ed to order an environmental
impact report before voting to
scrap the program.
The suit also• contends the
county violated state housing law
by approving the phaseout.
The league's decision to get
involved in legal action is a first for
the county organization, Podolak
said.
A hearing on the case is sched-
uled Nov. l before Superior Court
Judge Linda Hodge McLaughlin.
MISSING FLIERS ...
From Page A 1
"If they don 't reach the New-
pqrt Beach Post Office by Satur-
day. the earliest they could deliver
them is Wednesday because of the
sortmg system." ChappeU said.
"But hv~ of the 15 classes start on
Monday or Tuesday."
The Coastline spokesman srud
the classes were not listed m the
college's fall catalog and the fliers
were the primary means of notify.
ing prospective students.
Uthe fliers aren't found some of
the classes may have to be
canceled for lack of students, he
said.
Chappell said class topics in-
clude income tax law, painting,
computer literacy, marine inter-
tidal ecology, escrow and real
estate topics, women in manage-
ment, small business manage-
ment, shorthand. speech and ski
conditioninll.
The Coastline spokesman said
registration information is avail-
a ble by calling 751·9740.
MORE APARTMENTS ...
From Page A1
cupied by people earning an
income ranging between $17 ,400
and $28,000.
Irvine has bettered that per-
cent.age by proposing an ad-
ditional 10 percent of the apart-
ments be occupied by those earn-
ing wages below $17,000 a year.
Uncontrolled monthly rents on
the one-, two-and three-bedroom
wu'\s are expected to range from
$5<><\ to $700, with those homes
intended to meet federal guide-
lines dropping to $450, Irvine Co.
treasurer Dick Moran said.
The absence of rent control was
a demand of Citibank, Moran said.
"We are only able to pursue this
as part of an overall development
community. If we were only
building these apartments, lt
wouldn't be feasible," he said.
He promised that the apart-
ments will be "aesthetically p1eas·
ing" and will meld w ith surround-
ing homes.
"' Dallfl'tlol'_.., __ _
Woman
dies in
car crash
A 35-year-old Laguna Niguel
woman was killed late Friday
after she pulled her vehicle into
the path of an oncoming car
traveling 65 miles per hour, a
rounty highway patrol officer
said. ·
Suzanne Ubl was rushed from
the &eene by Orange County
paramedics to Mission Communi-
ty Hospital at 7:20 p.m .. but she
died abOut 3 hours later at the
hospital.
Ub l was traveling northbound
on Neuva Vista m Laguna Niguel
when she inexplicably pulled into
the path of a vehicle driven by
Robert Rinderer, 20, of Dana
Point, who was traveling in the
eastbound lane on Crown Valle
Parkway.
Artist Bill Ho lt works in his stud io a t Aliso Elem entry School. ,.
$1 ,000 r e ward '
for horse info ALISO SCHOOL-TENANTS WORRIED • ••
From Page A1
project proposal to the federal
government with the Aliso prop-
erty as a possible site.
Barnes added, however, that
the school district did not guaran-
tee a sale if the developen
received the government loan.
"We're a long way from closing
the deal," Barnes said. "The board
has expressed an interest in get-
ting a fair market value for the
property."
Barnes said the Aliso property
has never been appraised, but
added that the district feels the
parcel -next to Coast Highway, a
shopping center and the Treasure
Island mobile home park -is
worth a lot more than the $3
million the district hopes to get
HB teen-ager
s truck by van
Anneliese
Schimme l psen n ig
from sale of the 11.6-acre Alta
Laguna property in Laguna
Beach.
But that does not reassure the
tenants.
"Wf:'re angry," said Steven
Sargeant, an artist and Anneliese
teacher. "So far, nobody has
explained to us what's happen-
ing."
Barnes said he recently in·
formed de Arakal that the
proposed housing -project will
have no impact on the tenants for
the remaind~.r:.o!J.he ,w-.hQnl year.
Anneliese administrators said
there is nowhere else to move the
school and would like to purchase
the part they 1eue and co-exist
with the elderly residents.
But a developer said there is no
room for the school under
proposed plans.
"We plan to renovate the exist-
ing buildings into residential
units," said Reed Flory, a consult-
ant working on the project for the
church residence.
The project may be discussed at
Thursday's school board meeting.
according to school district Busi-
ness Manager Clyde Lovelady.
The owner of a $20,000
• racehorse missing from a boarding
stable in Costa Mesa since 1aSI
, week is offering a $1,000 reward
for information leading to the #rk bay mare's return.
Robert House ot Laguna Beach
said·there has been no trace of thE
horse, Tinione, since she Wa.1
reported missingOct.4. "It's got tc
be an inside job," he said.
Tintone was seen in her stall a1
the Orange County ~uestriar
Center the day before she turnec
up missing, House said.
"Someone who gets througr
the security gates has to know th(
system -it was someone who ii
employed there or boards there.'
he said. The center is t
state-owned stable located on th'
Orange County Fairgrounds.
-Anyone who has informatior
about t he missing horse can cal
House a t 754-1415 during the da:
or 494-8679 evenings.
A 14-year·old Huntington 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii.-------..
Beach girl was listed in critical
condition at Fountain Valley Hos-
pital late Saturday after she was
accidently struck by a van earUer
m the evening, po1ice said.
Jody Hill was walking with a
gtrlfriend along a sidewalk adja·
cent to McFadden Avenue west of
Golden West S~t at 6:55 p.m.
when ahe inexplicably ran across
the s treet and collided with the
side of a moving van traveling
wvstbound on McFadden, police
said.
Huntington J3each paramedk s
admintStered aid at the scene and
the n rushed Hill to the hospital.
No charges will be filed against
the driver, police said.
JAIL FILE • ••
From PageA 1
rlghta violations were uncovered
during the review of 18 jail inmate
dutha and 50 other matinees in
which harassment or the use of
excess fort"e by jail deputies was
alleged.
Gates said he would formally
seek release of the entire in-
vestigative file complied by the
FBI through the Freedom of
Information Act to show how
groundless some of the allegations
were.
SLAVICKS
JEWELERS
RELOCATION
SALE
10-50% OFF
Oct .. 17-27·
TODAY'S WEATHER • • •
Precious Gems
Jewelry
• Men's Watches
..
More clouds are pre.,icted
Coastal Am8fitto
11nc11011~
11tll4v11te
n>cl•y Mo<M'9 CIOv<ll ~ """''" m<)tlly ...... ,.., °"'~ """"°°" HIOll• 7 llll•nllt City
10 71 1on19n1 and onct•L ConllOdeteble Au1un
clOudtneu l ..... 54 lo HIOll• ea to 8 aJ11m01•
749 8'tll1>91
(>;•out.-*119fl fr OM POM"ll Conceo--8 1tmtnQh•m ,..,,, 10 San N~ ,.,_ ...,,,,,_, Bltmerc•
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"""-' 10 10 20 '"°'' IONQl\I °'""'"'"' .. E-• llQllt •erleble _,.,, "'9111 and a.,,n...,
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ty CIOudy llvougtt lon!OM c,,_,,.,Nc c....,.,_
CllQOO
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SURF llPIRT
•
, ...
IW
• Ladies Watches
Fashion Jewelry • Giftware
SLAVICKS JEWELERS of
Newport Beach is relocating to an
exciting new location in South Coast
Plaza. Take advantage of these
~ceptional values bef ore we oye.
~ave 1 O to 50°/o on selected chan-
d ise. Use one of.our con ent
charge plans or American
Visa or Mastercard.
SLAVI CK'S
Fine Jewelers Since 1917
18 Fashion Island (714) 644 -1380 •Newport Beach
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IOP OF TH-·NEWS
NATION
Chicago teacher negotiators
walk out, sides 'miles apart'
By The A11oclated Pre11
CHICAGO -Uruon negotiators walked out of contract talks
aimed at ending a teachers strike in the nation's third largest school
district Saturday, saying they would not return until the board
made a better wage offer. A Chicago Board of Education
spokeswoman said earlier SatW'day that negotiators for the board
and the Chicago Teachers Union remained "miles apart" as they
met in a federal judge's chambers for the third straight day. The
strike has idled 436,000 student since Oct. 3. Uruon negotiators
walked out of the latest session at 5:10 p.m ..
Hijacker surrenders in New J ersey
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J . -A People Express jetliner en route
wark from Buffalo, N. Y. was hijacked to Atlantic City on to Ne
Sa turd.ay by a passenger who briefly took.. a. f.lighl attendant
ge before surrendering, officials said. The hijacker, who had
y claimed that he was armed, surrendered shortly after the
g 737 landed at Atlantic City International Airport in nearby
na, officials said. The FBI 1dent1f1ed the al?l?ged hijacker as
Robert Ambroise, 27, of New Jersey.
hos ta.
false I
Boein
Pomo
Jamil
Ol 'ficials vo'w to bring bank back
plan
MIDLAND, Texas -RepublicBank Corp. officials say they
to make a ''billion-dollar bank" of the failed First National
Bank of Midland, a 93-year-old institution that collapsed with a
e in the Texas energy industry it had helped finance. First
na1 became the largest bank to fail in Texas and the second
t, in tem\S of assets, to fail in U.S. history when acting U.S.
troller of the Currency H. Joe Shelby declared it insolvent
y evening. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. sold the bank
1.1 million to RepublicBank Corp. of Dallas, the nation's 21st
t bank holding company. The bank. which had Sl.4 million in
declin
Natio
larges
Comp
Frida
for $5
larges
assets and $600 million in deposits, reopens Monday as
blicBank First National Midland. Repu
STATE
'Str ike looms in aerospace talks,
exp&
LONG BEACH -An 11th-hour rounct of negotiations was
ted to last through the weekend in an effort to head off a
tened strike Monday by 6,300 workers at McDonnell-Douglas
plants in three states. Meantime. the United Auto Workers
instructed its members who are scheduled to be first on the
Lines at 7 a.m. Monday to begin picking up picket signs, and
day general membership meeting in Long Beach has been
ed.
threa
Corp.
has
picket
a Sun
cancel
ld found in car after s uicide Go
LOS ANGELES -South African gold coins worth about
0 were found in the trunk of a sport.scar owned by the
auman of the Bullion Reserve of North America after his s uicide
$18,00
ch ·
last month, the Los Angeles Times reported SatW'day. Citing
ntified sources, the paper said that in a tape recording found
his body. Alan D. Saxon specifically left the $58,705 Maserati
estranged wife, Susan Authorities have not publicly' revealed
uni de
with
tohis
the co ntents of the I.ape pending an inquest into Saxon's death,
the county coroner has ruled a suicide. The Los Angeles
y district attorney requested the inquest.
which
Count
Sal mon season one of state's worst
s
from
AN FRANCISCO -California fishing communities, reeling
a double punch of aggressive Alaskan competition and
wide weather changes. sought' disaster aid m the wake of one
worst salmon seasons ever. "Only 42 salmon were brought tn
g the entire month of September,'' said Gerry Grader of
world
of its
durin
Grade r's Fish Co., one of seven wholesale fish buyers in the
ocino County community of Fort Bragg. "Usually we see
usands and thousands. It's been a terrible year" The state's
ercial salmon season ended two weeks ago, and reports
g in now show the cat.ch at l~ast 50 percent below that of a
rmal year.
Mend
tho
comm
co min
no
WORLD ~
Gr omyko clashes with Genscher
VIE'NNA. Austria -Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A.
myko clashed Saturday with Hans-Dietrich Genscher, his West Gro
Ge nnan counterpart, at two long meetings about the planned
yment of new nuclear missiles in Europe. In their first
ting, Genscher asked Gromyko to help arrange a superpower
wnnut to avert a cnslS over NATO's plan to start st.atiorung 572 '
built rrussiles in Western Euro?e at year's end. West' German
urces said. The sources. members of Genscher's delegation, also
the West Gennan diplomat urged Gromyko to meet with
tary of State George P. Shultz to ease growing East-West
deplo
mee
s
U.S·
so
said
Secre
tensi ~.
Ma yor of J erusalem assaulted
JERUSALEM -Ultra-Orthodox Jewish extremists assaulted
ar-old Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek with sticks and bottles
rday, knocking him down in a street brawl. KoUek's
esman, Rah Davara, said the mayor suffered a scratch on his
a bruised knee and tom trousers, but he needed no medical
tion. It was the latest incident in a mounting campaign of
nee by religious extrerrusts who believe modem Israel is a
ege agflinst their Messianic vision of a Jewish state and who
72-ye
Sa tu
spok
face,
atten
viole
sacril
op pose KoUek's moves to provide secular facilities such as
swuruning pools · hel:t holy city.
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. t6, 1983 A~
'The Cracker' tracked down by FBI
Te~n who supplied secret tJRmputer codes to Irvine youths is located in San Diego
The FBI aaya it hu found a ceen-.ager who
supptted aecret codes to four Irvine younpten
whose homes were talded in an FBI roundup of.
alleged computer tamperers.
The home of the youth, who called himself
"the Cracker," was raided Thursday, the day
after raids on more than a dozen young
com~uter enthusiasts across the country, said
GlU"y Laturno, a spokesman for the FBI in San
Diego.
Wednetday. C.Ope was interviewed before the
Cracker wu caught. _
However,Copuaid, "ldon'treallybeUeve
they (atudents) know who thla person is. They
told us they cont.acted the Cracker through a
telephone number they had ln their computer,
but they didn't remember the number."
cont.act with a computer uter tdentlfyi.ng
himaelf aa the Cracker "I've talked to him once
or twice," Pratt told the San Dieao Union on
Friday. By t.alk, he wu referring to contact by
computer.
The Wednesday raids were carried out in
Lo6 Angel,es and Irvine and in Detroit, Tucson,
Ariz .. Rochester, N. Y .. and elsewhere, the FBI
said. There were no arresta, and the FBI said it
probably would be months before any indict·
ri'M!nts were sought.
"The last time wouJd've been about two
weeks ago,'' Pratt said. "He was on (a
computer) with a friend of mine who knew
h. ti un.
The Cracker is male, age 17or18, and lives
in the San Diego area, Laturno said Friday.
The teen-ager was not further identified and
the FBI did not say how he was caught,
although agents may have traced the number
of the telephone that was hooked up to his
computer.
"I believe there are more students ftonr
our school -six to 10 of them, maybe -who
knew what was going on," said John Kalko, a
science instruct.or at Woodbridge High.
The four Irvine youths told reporters
Thursday that the Cracker enabled them
electronically to break into GTE Telenet
C.Ommunicatlons Corp. 's electronic mail system
called Telemall.
Greg Cops, the principal at Woodbridge
High School in Irvine, told the San Diego
Union newspaper earlier that the Cracker's
telephone number was contained in material
the FBI seized from the boys in their raids
FBI agenta confiscated computer equip·
ment at the Irvine homes of Wayne Correla, 17,
David Hill. 17, 14-year-old Gregg Knutsen and
his brother, Gary, 15.
Rob Pratt, 15, a high school sophomo~ in
San Jost>. qajci he, too, hal'I had Mmputer
The Lo6 Angeles Herald Examiner, cauot·
ing a computer buff it only identified as Bob,
said the Cr~ker, who probably is from San
Diego, has a reputation for breaking the codes
of complex systems and giving out the
information for nothing, "just to show off."
Bob said the Cracker belongs to a group calling
itself the Inner Circle.
O'Brien was-Rockne
to Reagan's Gipper
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Act.or "Angels With Dirty Faces,''
Pat O'Brien, who used his broad "Knute Rockne, All-American,"
Irish face and gift of gab to portray with Reagan, and "Fighting
cops, priests and Knute Rockne to 69th."
Ronald Reagan's ''Gipper," died He won an Emmy and the
Saturday of a heart attack, his Carbon Mike, presented by the
publicist said. He was 83. Radio Pioneers. But he was never
He was pronounced dead at 6 nominated for an ~cademy
a.rn. at St. John's Hospital in Award.
Santa Monica, hospital officials Born William Joseph O'Brien in
said. Milwaukee on Nov. 11, 1699, his
O'Brien, w ho would have been most memorable job was the title
84 on Nov. 11. underwent prostate role in "Knute Rockne,'' portray·
surgery Wednesday, said his long-ing the famed Notre Dame foot-
time publicist, Jewel Smith. ball coach of the 1930s. Reagan
"Everybody at the hospital portrayed doomed halfback
knew I was here because the George Gipp, "The Gipper."
president called,'' Miss Smith said Another of O'Brien's most
the actor told her. memorable roles was as the slum
O'Brien ·and his one-time priest in ''Angels with Dirty
co-star had talked almost every Faces" who tried to keep his
week by telephone since Reagan pansh youngsters from admiring
has been in the White House, Miss a hoodlum, played by longtime
Smith said. friend Jimmy Cagney. At the end
Assistant White House press of the movie, the priest begged his
secrf!tary Mark Weinberg said old friend to go screaming to the
President and Mrs. Reagan were• electric chair so the children
lnfonned about the actor's death would think he died a coward -
and were "deeply saddened," He and the hoodlum did, despite his
said both of them had spoken with pledge to the contrary.
O'Brien since he was hospitalized, O'Brien, who once considered
and Reagan had spoken to him entering the seminary, played so
within the last few days. many priests on the screen that he
O'Brien's films included quipped."Onemoreandtheywill
Pat O'Brien
have to ordain me."
He made more than 110 films in
his career, among them: "The
Front Page" in 1931, "Bureau of
Missing Persons'' in 1933, ''Here
Comes the Navy" in 1934, ''The
Irish in Us" and "Ceiling Zero" in
1935, "China Clipper" in 1936,
"San Quentin" in 1937, "Boy
Meets Girl" in 1938, "The Fight·
ing 69th" in 1940, "His Butler's
Sister'' in 1943, "A Dangerous
Profession" In 1949, "The People
Against O'Hara" in 1951,
"Okil)awa" in 1952. "The Last
Hurrah" in 1958, "Some Like It
Hot" in 1959, and "The End" in
1977
Interior noniinee pro-developer
UC/ professor: Clark supporte d builders as State court justice
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' , ... OellJ "°' ..... Wilham P. Clark, President Ronald Reagan's
surprise choice for Secretary of the Interior. was a
strong supporter of developer interests during his
nine-year tenure on the Ca.liforrua State Supreme
Court, according to a UC Irvine professor who
conducted a survey of court decisions during that
period.
Joseph DiMent.o, director of the university's
social ecology program, reported the results of the
atudy in a 1960 issue 6f the UCLA Law Review.
In an interview Friday, he said the justices'
records were analyzed according to how they voted
on environmental and land use issues.
"On balance. (Clark's) opinions tended to favor
the development orientation," Di Mento said.
He said Clark wrote an. import.ant dissenting
opinion on a case in which environmental impact
reports were required for oil drilling. OiMent.o said
Clark also opposed the expansion of powers
stemming from the state's Environmental Quality
Act.
The professor was hesitant to predict the former
National Security Adviser's performance as Sec·
retary of the Interior.
He said the study "is an lndication of his
orientation but ls not necessarily something he will
stick to.
"I'm· surprised someone associated closely with
development interests would be selected for this
position."
John Glenn calls for tax increase
SAN 01.EGO (AP) -Demo·
cratic presidential candidate John
Glenn called for e tax increase
Saturday, saying the government
should not risk cutting the defense
budget but cannot maintain "a
$207 b1Uion a year deficit very
much longer."
Glenn. a senator from Ohio,
made his call for a tax hike before
addressing the Marine Corps
Aviation Association.
no huge maJOr cuts,'' he said. "We
can't rut back on our defense
commitments "
Glenn said all federal budget·
ary cuts without a tax increase
_would amount to $15 to $20 billion ,
not enough to significantly reduce
the nation's deficit.
"lf we can't do it on the cut side
-and we say its necessary to
bring interest rates down -then
we have to consider tax in·
creases,'' Glenn said.
Marines
kill 5
• snipers
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP)
Marine sharpshooters said they
killed five snipers who pinned
them down at Beirut airport for
the second day Saturday, and a
mine or bomb blast wounded two
French soldiers in a U .N. convoy in
southern Lebanon.
It was the first time since the
Marines were deployed in Leba-
non .,that they reported killing
combat.ants.
Lebanon's cease.fire commit-
tee, meanwhile, agreed to aak for
Greek and Italian obeervers to
police the Sept_ 26 truce that
ended three weeks of
Druse-Christian fighting in the
central mountains.
The sniping Saturday oc;:curred
along the northeastern edge of the
airport, where one Marine was
killed and another wounded Fri-
day, bringing the toll to six
Marines killed and 51 wounded in
Lebanon in 16 months -most of
them since Aug. 28.
Marine spokesmen said there
were no American casualties in
~e latest sruplna. "We were tut by
srilpin&j_n the same area about 8:20
this monuhg,'' said Warrant Of-
ficer Charles Rowe. "We returned
1ire':"'
OC jail will
dro ~'gruel'
SANTA A CAP) -Orange
County Jail fficials have agreed
not to punish prisoners with a dish
described by inmates as "gruel"
and "dog food" in a lawsuit
settlement t.hat was hailed as
unprecedented in the nation.
American Civil Liberties Union
attorney Dick· Herman said the
agreement was "a step forward in
penology."
"The agreement represents the
first rules of this kind in the
country," Herman said following
the settlement Fri~y before U.S .
District Judge Pamela Rymer in
Los Angeles.
The food. which inmates said
was a foul-tasting concoction of 10
ingredients mixed in a blender
and baked in the form of a
meatloaf, was served as a dis·
ciplinary measure to prisoners in
isolation, jail officials said.
The 62-year-old former
astronaut said no major cuts
should be made in the Department
of Defense budget "because we
see the danger we have around
the world right now."
"We can cut $12 to $15 billion
dollars from def~nse without
hurting our security, but there are
THE CLASSIC
COUNTRY TWEED
w
Li
e're
stening •••
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. l . 8chw•r1z til
Publl&het
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Fdllor end Aas111an CQfltroller
10 lhe Publlttwtf
,, .... , .. e ....
p,~,1()11 .. ~
Qlorla A f'-MI ....... .-.""'II .... .,. Don* L.. WI'"-"'' (.t(~ttOr
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All ot!Mr dep•rtment• M2~t
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C"JOC>VIOO'" t!HIJ Ot•l>Q<I eo. .. PuDl!lh<nQ l'"..omQ<On; No
n••' t10t1t'\. 11tdl1'1t1nt'll td,tQt1e1 "'""•' or
•~9'11-t~" n41-t••n mA., M tef'>fOOV(IWJ w1t~;1 "*' .. ' ~"'"•'°" nt <<lfr;noN --
'.«~ '"'.-i 004ta~ ll*•l:I ~· C.Ot•t ~ C••l0t.,.. !UPS IU 8001 Svl'IKl<()t!Of\ Dy CA"•'-" 1~ "'Ol'tNy
1r; "'"~ se $0 "'OlllNv
VOL. 11, NO. 211
Perfect with pleated cor·
duroys or olwoys appropriate
with your favorite pair of
gabardine or flannel trousers.
46 Folhlon ~NI~ leoch
(M)~tO
. j
... \ •
".a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
·:
•.
·.
~\
~ ~
..
When
they ..
grow
up ...
•
... these Newpo rt Elementa r y School s tuden t~ ~ill
know what it's like to he a fireman, or dress like
one anyway. Bryan Bear has a way to grow into
the turnout coat. H is twin Lindsay reacte d to a
s iren while Me lissa Whalen got help in steadying
the hose from Firem a n Rick Zaccaro of the
Balboa Sta tion during fire Prevention Week.
Daily Pilot Photos by Richard Koehler
!
,
.. -·;..-
HB students can add
a class next semester
Junior and 9C81or atudenta ln
Huntington Beach Union High
School Diluict'a .even ~hools can
take six classes instead of five at
the start of the aecond semester
next February.
The expanded curriculum was
made poeaible by the lncreue In
money received from the at.ate,
school officials announced this
week.
The number of classes available
to upper claasmembers waa cut to
five two years ago as par\ of a
series of economic cutbacka.
"The first thing that board
)
members wanted to do with the
addition.al money was to put It
back into the cl.ulroom for the
kids," Supt. Frank "Jake" Abbott
said. "We are very pleued to
restore the cu ta."
Abbott said the change will give
juniors and seniors a chance to
take an extra academic claaa or an
elective. The claaa won't be man-
datory.
Atout 20 extra teachers have
been designa~ to handle the
expanded program at an expected
cost of about $600,000.
Use OCC career center
Orange Coast College Is inviting
local residents to use the services
of its c~center placement
office g the 1983-64
academic ye .
''This is one of the largest
placement offices in the country,"
said Dennis Bethune, director of
the OCC center. "Annually we
serve approximately 15,000 indi-
viduals and we place more than
5,000 people per year in full-and
part-time jobs.
For a $10 fee, residents may use
all services in the career center,
including job information listings,
a computerized placement and
referral system, on-campus em-
ployer recruiting sessions, an em-
ployer information library, em-
ployment referrals and a library
containing information relating to
careers and university transfer.
The placement office is in the
Costa Mesa coUege's Career
Center. For information about the
program, phone 432-5576.
I ,
School offlclal honored
A Corona del Mar High School
assistant principal who i.s aought
out by students as a counselor and
works with child abuse cases was
honored recently by the Orange
County Boa.rd of Education.
Betty Townsend won the
Outstanding Contribution to
Education A ward for her work as
a counselor and liaison with
parents about curriculum, dis-
cipline and special education.
She also assists the Zonta Club
in selecting Girl of the Month.
Monday night will he magi~al
A evening of magic will be
staged Monday at Magic Wand in
Newport Beach to benefit the
Pediatric Cancer Foundation of
Orange County.
Proceeds from the 6 p.m. affair
will help fund laboratory research
for children with cancer. A labora·
tory was established last year at
Children's H011pit.al of Orange
County.
Tickets for the evening at Magic
Island. a pnvate club in Lido
Marina, are $50. For detaiIS, call
Jane Fowler at 675-8987. ,
OC Red Cross helps in Arizona
Two American Red Cross vol-
unteers and one staff member
from Orange County have joined
the team of 200 volunteers helping
to feed and shelter victims of the
Arizona floods.
Anaheim and Irvine's emergency
services director Gordon Brown
are among those giving aid to the
4,000 (amities displaced
-: ~-~~~~------~---------~---------==:::::~~~~~~~~~~~ .. -----
Volunteer nurse Nancy Habish
of Santa Ana, emergency services
volunteer Trish Dammeyer of
Those willing to contribute
disaster relief to Anwna flood
Vlctims may send their checks to
the Orange County Red Cross.
P.O. Box 11364, Santa Ana. ... . ~ . .. .. :· ..
. . ~
•. •
' .
' ..
~
\
... ·
.
Why Do You Choose To Live
With Pclin?
These People Chose To Eliminate Pain
Dear Jerry,
I am writing in regard co
services rendered concern-
ing m~· migraine head·
aches . Since childhood, 1
have been bothered by
these headaches until they
progressed to the point
that I needed frequent hos-
p1tal izac ion and vast
amounts of medication co
treat them. This led to
hospitalization for drug
withdrawal. Treatment at
the Ma>o Clinic led tO
another series of med1-
cat1ons. le became increas·
ingh difficult co function
and desperation led me cu
answer ·your aJ for mi-
~ratne release A fcer one
session I never had even
one recu rre m.e of migraine
headaches. Thank you so
much .
Sincerely, J.W .
Dear Jerry,
M)· lower back hurt me
95% of the time. I had
learned to try and ignqre it
because I could nor fi.nd
any way to relieve the pa in.
Now thanks to my
sessions with you I am
living a life completely
free of back pain.
Sincerely. D.M.
problems were gone and
for the first time in 34
years I could take a deep
breach. The doctors told
me that I had emphysema
but now I am fi ne. Thank
you so much for your help.
Sincerely, D.L.
Dear Jerry, Thank you so
much fo r showing me how
Transitional Psychosensics
allowed me to eliminate
having premenstrual bloat ·
ing. depression and ir-
regula r periods. It seems
Dear Jerry, incred ible that I have so
I went for help because I quickly and easily ovcr-
was hav1n~ trouble breath· come this problem that
ing and I wanted to stop has troubled me for many
smoking. After a few }"ears.
sessiom rny breath in~ Sincerely. A.B. •
Addresses and Phone Number Available on Request
ELIMINATE PAIN WITH TRANSITIONAL
PSYCHOSENSICS, NOT DRUGS
Newport Associates is pleased to invite you to attend a free
seminar featuring the newest and most effective approach
to eliminating pain.
Call Newport Associates for information about
this sem inar (71 4) 631·1~44
~eminar leader: Arloa Boyd, R.N . MA
This dynamic and humorous speaker brings clarity to the
subject of health and how it relates to the TPS method of
total and permanent release of pain.
\
Health Educator
THE TRANSITIONAL
PSYCHOSENSIC METHOD
Question: Mr.Johnson, I believe rhat
you are rhe founder of the
Institute of Transitional
Psychosensics.
Answer: Yes, that is true.
Question: Well, I have read a lirtle
about it and find it be very
much like hypnosis. How
would you respond to
that!
Answer: At first glance you might
deduce that bu· there are
two very different concepts
involved.
Question: And what are those!
Answer: First of all. hypnosis is what
someone docs to you . Sec-
ondly, hypnosis uses the
power of suggestion. Hyp-
nosis 1s what someone does
to you and the power of
suggestion. Transitional
Psychoscnsics teaches rou,
and uses no suggestion.
Question: I still don't understand the
difference.
Answer: Well, basically Transitional
Psychoscnsics is something
char you learn to do,
through educational guid-
ance. The old thought that
you arc being controlled
docs not exist with Tran·
sitional Psychoscnsics.
Question: That sounds pretty far ouc
and simple.
Answer: Yes, I can see how you
would feel that way but
isn't it sometimes true that
things that seem "'far out
and simple"' have turned
out to be an ult imate -
answer. Docs the fact of 1t
Gerald B. Johnson
'"being simple'" mean it may
not be effective for you?
Question: Well. no, it's just a dif-
ferent thought. But then
how does this help and 1n
what situauons.
Answer: We have shown conclusive.
Ir that by entering our
Educational Guidance Pro-
gram people can learn in-2
matter of hours over a
period of a few days that
they can deal effernvely
with a variety of physical
manifestations. These mani-
festations are ofren called
··symptoms·· by the medical
societ)".
Question: Oh, then do you consider
yourself a part of the
medical or psychological
society?
Answer: We don't. We deal with the
··causes'". not the "symp·
toms".
Qudtion: Yes. but how can you 1(
no one knows what the
causes are ?
Answer: I believe that when we set
asid e our long ago acquired
traditional thou~hts the
causes can be surfaced. And
yes, we can deal with them
successfully.
Question: And thcre·s more?
Answer: Y cs , there is much more .
(to be conunued) Newport Assiciace s
404 Westminster # 201
Newpart Beach, CA. 92663 FOR FREE CONSULTATION CALL 631-1544
,
--·
Is she taking the law
. into her o~n hands?
JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) --
To Rosemary Funnan, it's a
matter of "giving the people back ·
thelr courta." To the Florida Bar,
It's a case of practicing law
without a license for which she
should be punished. •
Whatever the issue, Funnan's
business of providing legal foITO§
to the poor and illiterate for a
fraction of the fee a lawyer might
charge has generated controversy.
She now faces a four-month
prison term for violating a 1979
order by the Florida Supreme
Court to stop giving legal advice.
She will go to federal court next
month to get a jury trial in her
battle with the bar.
Furman, a 56-year-old widow,
says her 22 years as a legal
secretary and courLreporter left
her with an overriding im-
'pression: "Lawyers ar:e stupid."
chores that require little tralninS
and no hefty fees. .
If the forms were readily avail-
able, 70 percent of the court CASe
16ad and lawyers' revenue would
be eliminated, she contends.
Eleven years ago, she opened
Northside Secretarial Service in
Jacksonville. The business, she
says, has h~lped thousands of
people gain at"cess to the courts -
for s.uch simple procedures as
uncontested divorces, adoptions
and name changes -through
forms she provides and helps fill
out for $50.
Four years ago, she ran afoul of
the Florida Bar, which said she
was gi~ng legal advice, some-
thing only licensed lawyers are
allowed to do.
They spend their tim e, she said ,
getting secretaries and assistants
to fill out fonns, check details, file
papers and perform other routine
The state Supreme Court .
agreed, and in 1979 laid down
guidelines. Under the court's
order, Furman was allowed only
to provide the forms and type in
information provided by her cus-
tomers.
Rosemary Furman is at odds with the Florida Bar
over he.~ low-cost legal service.
TV station's earth-shaking story hit
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Scientists say
a catastrophic earthquake eventually will
occur along the southern San Andreas fault,
but they scoff at a television news report
gcedicting a 60 percent. chance of such a
qake by year's end, scientists say.
"I can st.ate unequivocally that the
report is in error and that no credible person
within the U.S. Geological Surve)'. would
make such an assertion," Allan Lindh, a
geophysici.St with the USGS regional office
in Menlo Park, said.
KN.BC, defended the story, saying that
while the station did not identify its source,
"we believe the source is a credible one ...
We're going out and talking to other people
who said our report was inaccurate or
misleading ... but that doesn't mean we have
any reason to doubt our source."
Richter scale along the ~jon Pass section of
the San Andreas fault by the end of the
year. The pass is about 55 miles northeast of
Los Angeles. The source also said there was
an 80 percent chance of such a quake by
1987 and a 50 percent chance at any time.
Lindh, Jonnson and other USGS
scientists said a catastrophic quake eventu-
ally will occur along the southern San
Andreas -stretching 100 to 150 miles from
Cajon P~ to the Salton Sea -but that the
chancei&abouta few oercenta vear at meet.
......
C.arl Johnson, geophysicist in charge of
the USGS office at the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena, called the
Wednesday night story on KN.BC-TV in Los
Angeles "bad reporting."
Steve An~niotti, news director at
Pete Noyes, KNBC news executive
editor, said he was "very cautious" when he
edited the story, but declined to identify the
source except to say he was "a scientist with
a great deal of credibility" who believes
"the gravity of this situation is being swept
under the rug."
The KNBC story quoted the source -
whom the station implied was within the
USGS -as saying there was a 60 percent
chance of a quake greater than 8.0 on the
''We guess that the probability of that
kind of an earthquake during 1984.is no
greater than 5 percent. But that's old news.
That~ been out for at least 1 ~ or two
years," said Kerry Sieh, an associate
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
BRUNCH
Featurln1 ••.
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• Assorted Omelettes •
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801
. E. BALBOA ·
673-7726 •-·~
' ()I; rHE PENIHSUL A
BALBOA
geology professor at Caltech.
NOTICE
Due to manufacturer's delivery
problems, the Texas Instruments
Computer Music Box software
cartndge advertised in today's
Target sale circular will not
be available.
We will issue ra1nchecks and
fill them as soon as possible.
We are sorry for any inconvenience
this may cause
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ACINC
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zmu•
Orange Coast O~I~ PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983 A6
Anti-gang 'Angels'
striking out in LA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Boredom and disappointed expec-
tations may have hurt initial
efforts by the Guardi$11 Angels to
recruit an all-volunteer anti-gang
force in Los Angeles, its leaders
say.
Police say the transplanted East
Coast group with the red berets
and white T-shirts hasn't haq
snuch impact in Los Angeles but
still wish them luck:
"One of the problems in Los
Angelesisthat it'sa townofs ,"
said Guardian Angel found
Curtis Sliw~ of New York. "It'
bigger than life .... The tedium of
patrolling didn't go over too well
in Los Angeles. Quite a few people
were burned out by patrolling
places like Sherman Oaks, where
you walk .miles and see two
people.''
But Sliwa hopes for a bolstered
effort during next summer'$
Olympics.
"The sight of an Angel in a red
beret and T-shirt will come as a
welcome relief for thoee people
who may fear being ripped off
during the Olympics," he said.
After two years here, an antici-
pated 300 v.olunteers never ma-
terialized, and many of the initial
members have departed. Of a
current membership of 75, only
Darrell Otteson, Los Angeles
chapter leader, and C huck
RedwoU, who h'.eads the San
Fernando Valley chapter, remain
among the original recruits.
"People thought patrolling was
a parade or something," said
Redwolf, 29, a student at Valle,Y
liege.
The valley chapter still patrols
twice a week, but it is lucky to get
three-man patrols rather than the
standard eight, 'he saip. Patrols by
Lhe five divisions in Los Angeles
vary from one to three times a
week, and they are down to four
members in some areas.
"The excitement of patrolling
wears off very fast," said Otteson,
251 a Culver City hair stylist.
f!ll 9. fkyk1t~ /Hi.</).
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aid 1n the control of the aging process.
You will learn of the high "Fibrebran" diet for-
mula so necessary because of the great amount
of processed foods we eat, and how pro~essed
foods C:iffect our health and well being.
You will learn the importance of exercise 1n
keeping your body conditioned and properly
toned.
You will learn the beneficial rewards that go
with following the Xtratlfe Anti-Aging Program.
Dr. Richard Lippman.
P.h.D.-1nternat1onally
renowned Swedish
So ent1st 1n the field 0 1
Gerontology (tigrng) o f
the Department or
Medical Cell 8101ogy ,1r
Uppsala Un iversity 1n
Upp~ald Sweden Dr
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c1g1ng control tests on
both animals and humilns
Guest Speaker
Dr. Robert Glazer noted
Bariatric Physician will
speak on "Permanent
Lifestyle Modification
Program"
SEMINAR RESERVATIONS
DATE: Tuesday, Ocl. 18, 1983
TIME: 7-9 P.M.
PHONE: XTRALIFE IM NOW
(Sp"c:e is limited/
LOCATION: MARRIOTT HOTEL
700 W Convention W11y. Anaheim, CA
(7 '4, 840-9604
OR
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' .
At Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct 16, tG83
1Jme to straighten
up seawall permits
'fhe process for approving new seawalls to protect
eroding seaside bluffs in Laguna Beach needs revision.
~ People whose homes are threatened today by rampaging
waves cannot be sure whether their best option is to chance
a puzzling channel of bureaucratic steps to obtain permits
or to simply call in a contractor to get the job done pefore
i" anyone notices.
~ 1t·shouldn't be this way. As long as the law requires
permits, property owners should be mandated to obtain
• them. And it is up to government officials at several levels
~ to agree-on ah approvaj.process that is fast and meaningful. ~ As things stand.today, however, the pr~ is lengthy
· and confused. The California Coastal Commission, one of
• the agencies supervising the system, is underfunded and
slow to act, and virtually no penalty exists for people who
• don't follow the rules.
;.:.i The only part of the pr~ that seems successful,
,._ fortunately, is the process for issuing emergency permits
• when property owners face the immediate threat of losing
~. a home. Those permits-can be issued by telephone. T he
; system for other permits isn't as streamlined. J· Here is the way it works: When property owners want
~ to build a wall, they are supposed to start with the city ~ Planning Department, which reviews the plans to ensure f they meet construction and aaf ety codes and don't
e ncroach on others' property. ,
" If the planners and the city's Design Review Board
approve the wall, the owner next goes to the Coastal f Commission for another permit. If the wall would stand
~ where the water occasionally laps directly onto the rocks,
• then a permit from the Army Corps of Engineers is needed. r Until a recent case where the corps temporarily halted
• seawall construction at Arthur Jacobson 's Cliff Drive •• f home, though, few people realized the agency should be
consulted. A group of residents concerned about the
· environmental effects of Jacobson's Crescent Bay con-? structio n contacted the corps.
: Meanwhile, another Crescent Bay resident, Marion
·. Knott Montepart, not long ago built an $8,000 seawall
without bothering to obtain permits in advance. She now
has applied for her city permit, but only after city officials
:. issued several warnings that they would seek misde-
meanor penalties if she didn't. T hus, the city still might
' w rench a few dollars for a construction permit from Kndtt
-but it had virtually no control over how the
" concrete-and-boulder wall was designed. f Already a large boulder in that wall is loose and could
become a safety hazard to people wh o spread their
beach towels below it.
..
•' .. ~ :·
•.•
This is no way to protect a public beach or its homes.
MAllBOX
Upper bay has priceless charm
To the Editor:
Congratulauons on your edi-
torial of Tuesday, Oct 4, concern-
ing University Drive, entitled "A
DeUcate Balance.'' Your rec-
ommendation that this is the
proper time for policymakers ln
Newport. ~ta Mesa, Irvine and
the Orange County government to
agree on abandorung the ex-
tension of Uruversny Drive IS both
timely and appropriate.
Upper Newport Bay is an asset
which cannot be replaced Its
pnceless charm and delicate
ecology must not be endangered
by a high-volume highway close
to its shores.
DONALD A. STRAUSS
Member, Newport Beach City
Council
Don 't harm res.erve with road
To the Editor
Many thanks for your excellent
edttonal Oct. 4 pointing out the
lack of real need and potential for
great harm in extending Univer-
sity Drive. To build an artenal
street so close and parallel to the
Corona del Mar Freeway is
foolJsh. And the prectous but
fragile treasure we possess in the
Upper Bay reserve wouJd certain-
ly be sullied by an adjacent
thoroughfare
RICHARD KUST
Irvine
l. M. Boyd /No nighties
Seven out of every 100 women
wear nothing at all to bed. So
report the garmentmakers, who
penodically check up on such
matters. PaJ81llas are ~id lo be
preferred by single women two to
one The married ladies choose
nlghtgowns three lo one The
statistics on pajamas and night·
gowns change somewhat from
year t.o year. but the nudity figure,
curiously. has remained the same
for approximately three decades.
Q Doesn'~ the more intellectual
man u a rule tend t.o go for the
fbghty feather-headed type of
female?
A . Not exactly, I( you'll attept
the retearch of a Stanford achoLar
who made a study of the matter.
The more intellectual the fellow.
the more likely he'U fall for a
highly emotional aort of girl, thia
authority contends. There's a
large dHfercnce, it's said, between
ORANGE COAST
Daily Piiat
the "highly emotional" and
''flighty" type. Extroverts tend to
be romantically attracted to in-
troverts, this researcher also
avers.
Consider yourself a Seasoned
Citizen, too, if you can remember
when: 1. Girls walked backwards
In a high wind, 2. A free plug was
a raw potato in the spout of a coal
oil can. And 3. The citizenry
criticised federal extravagance In
giving away free garden seeds.
Q. Why do we call that fish
"halibut"? ,
A lt waa the traditional entree
on Christian holy da)'B long before
turkey Ol' ham. The name halibut
comes trom the word holy.
The making of beef jerky on the
o ld fr o ntier was a
two-maybe-t~ree months' chore.
H.L lchwetll IH
P\dtNI
ChuJDoweftbJ t"lllllor __ _
IO IN~
Llrry D. 1,..,._ .........,.,llllof
. .>
I WAS
DEEPLY TOUCHED
WHEN THAT CROWD
BROKE DOWN ANO
WEPT OPENLY . WHO
WERE THEY?
Hatred: The great motivator
We're all going to miss James
Watt. Government officials come
and go but not many of them make
as lasting an .impression as the
recently fired-resigned (choose
one) secretary of the interior.
He'll be missed by the ~ple
who approved of his efforts to
open up our wildernea to com-
merce.
He'll be missed even more by
the people who hated him and
hated every decision he made.
Those are the people who are
really going to miss James Watt.
There·s nothing like having some-
one you can really hate with all
your neart to get the blood
running.
Hate has •always had a bad
press. If the Bible mentions hate,
I'm sure it disapproves an.cl yet
hate is responsible for a lot of the
things that have been ac-
complished in the world. Americ.a
has flever been so productive as it
was during the years we hated
Adol! Hitler durmg World War Il.
,~,,
-.N-DY-RO-DN_fY _ _,,.~
n was not love of country that got
us up off our tails. It was hatred.
Hate may not be nice but hatred
is as 11\uch of a motivating force as
love. The environmentalists who
hate James Watt have never been
more effective or better organized.
They have a rallying point and
he's it. His actions were often so
overtly anti-environment that he
made 1t easy for conservationists
to raise money to fight him. If
President Reagan appoints a sec-
retary of the interior who holds
the same views that Watt holds
but who is less flamboyant, the
environmentalists could be in for
trouble What if Reagan appoints
some pleasant, friendly, efficient
enemy of the environment? What
if we get someone who goes about
accomplishing the same things
Watt did but aa:omplishes them
without making a lot of noiae?
It's been apparent these past
few weeks how much people have
enjoyed hating James Watt. Con-
sidering that his remark about the
composition of a conunittee he had
appc)lnted to study the coal prob-
lem was considered to be offensive
to a lot of people, it's amazing how
many times it was repeateOOy
every newspaper, television and
radio report in the country.
Having someone to hate IS
absolutely essential sometimes if
you're going to get anything done
in the world. Love is nicer than
hate but it tends to JJe around
mornings. It's hate that gets you
going.
Just Last weekend I went to a
little piece of P,.roperty we own
with some trees on 1t. A lot of the
trees. along the open side where
the sun hits them, were grown
over with a creeping vine, wild
grape. It's something like Kudzu
.althoullh notqu1teso pernicious. It
turns -itself-·around trees and
eventually pulls them down and
kills them. I hate ~ild grape as
much as a lot of people hate James
Watt.
I took my hedge clippt>~. my
wire cutters and a machete and l
started out after that stuff. 1
worked for five hours at a pace I
never could have sustained if my
hatred of wild grape hadn't been
as intense as it is. Love for wild
grape couldn't have moved me lo
that much exertion I'm still a little
stiff from all the work and \l feels
good because it remmds me of that
wonderful feeling of detestation I
had.
Hatred lS a much sunpler emo-
tion than love. Love gets all rruxed
up with affection, sex, eternity,
romance, the moon and a lot of
stuff that clouds the J.SSUe. That's
not so with hatred. There it is,
pure and simple.
Those of us who hated James
Watt as secretary of the interior
are gping to miss him .
·Hummer's dismal track record
WASHJNGTON -Americ.an
infantrymen may be in more
danger riding to the battlefront in
the Army's newest dream vehicle
than they would be from enemy
fire.
The High Mobility Multi-
purpose Wheeled Vehicle -
called the "Hummer" -is in-
tended to be the infantry's wheel-
ed workhorse of the future. h's
supposed to replace the jeep, the .
weapons carrier and the personnel
earner -with missile-firing
capability to boot. The Army
wants nearly 55,000 Hummers at
about $22.000 apiece.
But the diesel-powered vehicle
has already amassed a dismal
record for reliability And now a
series of inLemal Army reports,
examined by my associate Donald
Goldberg, shows that the Hum-
mer gets a flunking grade for
safety as well.
af t>ty problems
A report sent lo the Anny's
deputy chief of staff for research,
development and acquisition lists
a number of serious safety prob-
lems:
•A badly placed safety strap can
result in "passengers potentially
ejected" from the carrier.
•The dnver's field of Vision is
reslncted. "This Item Is particu-
larly Lmport.ant during driving
over the crest of hills and in traffic
on roadways," the report notes.
•There is no "park" position on
the Hummer's automatic trans-
G.
-Jl-Cl-l-11-11-11-1 -~
mlSSion. 'I]llS oversight, "may
resuJt in accidents ... due to
potential driver error (in-
advertently leaving transmission
in a 'dlive' position).''
•The brakes aren"l protected
from objects kicked up from below .
by the wheels. Result: "Potential
brake failure."
•The Hummer's 62-pound
"TOW" missiles cannot be tied
down properly. "Failure of missile
rack to adequately secure TOW
missiles may result in missile
becoming dislodged during ve-
hJcle operation over rough terrain,
with subsequent damage or per-
sonal injury."
•If they avoid getting conked by
a dislodged missile, the Hummer's
crew faces serious danger from
the ever-present possibility of a
m1SS1le misfire. "This may result
in a number of different accident
situations. ranging in severity up
to subjecting all crew members to
TOW exhaust blast and flame."
•And even If everything goes
like clockwork, the Humll'}er miss-
ile gunners will be subjected to
deafening blast tas'ise. "This will
result in permanent hearing I~
(even with double hearing_protec·
uon) unJess the number of ex·
posures is limited to one per
gunner per day" -hardly the.
kind of quota that Wll\S any
battles.
Army spokesmen stoutly insist
that the H ummer won't be ac-
cepted until the bugs are worked
out; they say testing is continuing.
But other Army sout'Ces doubt
that the safety issues will ever be
resolved.
There's good reason for these
doubts. Officials at the Army's
safety center at Fort Rucker, Ala.,
have urged further tests and
correction of the safety problems.
But a July 7 memo from the safety
center said: "Verification of these
fixes in a realistic environment is
needed to insure their operational
adequacy, but additional oper-
ational testing is not currently
planned."
SCANDAL OF THE WEEK:
With callous unconcern about the
poisor\S that seep Into our food
supply, pesticide producers are
lobbying strenuously against
legislation that would tighten the
testing reqwrements for deadly
agricultural chemicals and the
people who use them
Industry pressure is ex peeled to
kill a requirement, for example.
that older, never-tested pesticides
be checked. Whatoonsumers don't
know, it is presumed, won't hurt
them.
The pesticide companies are
also protesting the bill's proposal
that "applicators" -the individ-
uals who actually spread or spray
the deadly poisons -must show
that they know how to use and
d1Spose of the chemicals befor~
they get the necessary cerufica·
tion.
In some states, minors allegedly
take the applicator tests for their
illiterate parents. State ofCietals
deny this can happen. but it is
legal for a wife or an 18-year-old
offspring to take the test for an
illiterate farmer-on the assump-
tion that they will then supervise
the use of the pesticides.
To their credit, SOQle re-
form-minded pesticide manufac-
turers support the legislation. "We
want the sloppy operators out of
business, because they give us all a
bad name," one explained.
HEADLINES AND FOOT-
NOTES: Dissatisfied with the
resporue to the Sept. 11 national
day of mourning for the 269
persons killed in the Soviet shoot-
down of the Korean airliner, the
Texarkana, Ark .. city council has
deslgriated Nov. 1 as a new day of
mourning and seeks natlonwide
support. It also critJcized the
White House for not doing enough
to promote the earlier day
•In a generally sympathetic
biography of David Ben-Gurion,
the father of modem Israel,
author Dan Kurzman reports that
Ben-Gurion and other Zionist
leaders failed to urge drastic
&etlon by the Allies to save Jews in
Nau Germany, becauae they fear-
ed it would hamper plans for a
postwar Jewish state -
Masks can't hide the hypocrite
We become what we do. One of
the greatest mi.stakes we can make
-and aome of the arn.utest men
who ever lived have made It -la
to usume that we can do fa.lae or
d18credltable thlnp and 1till
"deep Inside ua" remain good
people, or the same people.
We become what we do. Il we
do It lon.g enouah, or o(J.en enough.
the act or the-habit t.rtnsforma the
peraon It Is much like an old story
thQt make« thb potnt touchlna)y.
h a central cl1&rfle1er is a cynk:al
~gency rake named Lord George
Hell, a debaucher and de.poller of
women who lne>tpUcabfy (alb In
lovo with • aaJntly youna lady. To aam her t:n4t and atfectJon.. he
t
IYlllY Ulml
~·
--~ ~
conc:eala hi• corrupt and ravaae<f
feat.urea with the maak of a saint.
She, being na!ve and vulner-
able, takes the appHr&N."e for
ttatity and falla ln love wtth him.
They marry. AJJ roes well until a
jealoul etren out of his put en ten
the 1Cene and t.hl'Mt.ena to n~
him for the vile hyPOQ"ite he is
unlt!91 he takft off ~ muk and
~x~ hit tNe Nlure.
Kavtna no choklt, he pu1a It off
ln front of his bride -and
'
astonishingly enough, beneath
the saLnt's mask la the face of the
salntlS' peraon he has become by
wearing It in Jove.
Thls Dorian Gray story In
revene, u It were, exemplifies the
maxim that we become what we
habitually do and what we ha-
bitually feel rn a aerue, there is no
"deep Inner sel!" that remaina
inviolate despite our ac\lon1 and
reJeUona with the world.
Per'IOnaUty 11 more Uke an
on!on: Peel oft layer after layer,
end when the final layer la peeled,
there It no onJon l~ft. 'J'he core of
ua rnidC!I within the la yen of love
or hate. atralghtn-or crooked·
n(!ta, In our dally deallnp and tn
the h.abi ts we fonn and are fonned
by Alas. it often takes a llfetJme to
Learn this.
lllllYCll
~ple are protest.ll\I f/lfef"Y· thJna In the air them dayw -
mualc, airplanes, airplane puU
and helkopten. Thank God for air
poUuUon .owe can't lft whet ebe
UI up then!.
Chicken Un.le
..... ,u.. ............... " .......................... ... .............. -=.-· ............................ .... .... q.. -.-·-•
I
I ~
-Nestle irnpro~~s
inf ant f orinula
foreign effort
'
WASHINGTON (AP)-A comm1ssion set up by
the Nestle corporation to monitor its infant formula
marketing practices In the Third World says the
company is making progress. but ·not enough to
justify abolishing the L'Ommission.
Former Sen. F.dmund Muskie, chairman of the
Nestle Infant Formula Audit Commission, cited areas
of progr~ on Thursday as he released the audit
group's fifth report on wheth~r Nestle's marketing
practices conform with the World Health Assembly's
marketing code. The code was adopted in May 1981. He said Nestle, the world's largest inlant
formula maker, has stopped giving away samples,
improved its labels and taken a variety of other steps,
but it still isn't in full compliance.
"I think they are on the road," Muskie said. "But
I can't tell you whether they are on the (ave-yard line,
the 10-yard lirfe or the 20-yard line. That's hard to
do." .
Nestle Execuuve Vu~e President Carl Angst said
that Nestle will soon complete rhanges it is making in
its infant formula package labels to remove illustra-
tions. a move which would answer another criticism
against the company. Nestle also has added a revised
health wa.rning explaining how formula should be
used.
"We have therefore lived up to our commitments
and I consider that o ur mission w1U have been
accomplished by the end of the year," he said. "There
will no longer be any possible ground for an
adversary approach to these problems."
Screen children for
, heart disease woes
CHICAGO (AP) -Greater attention to family
patterns and more examinations of young ·people
could lead to better control of heart disease.
researchers have r~ported.
Researchers at the Universtty of Cincinnati and
the University of North Carolina said that if
screening for coronary heart disease focused on the
families of heart patients rather than on the general
population , heart ailments would be detected more
quickly.
To the extent that blood levels of fatty
substances vary with such family patterns as eating
habits, modifying habits to reduce risks of heart
disease "may be most successful when it occurs
throughout the family environment," said ·the
researchers. led by Dr. J ohn A. Morrison of the
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.
Their findings were published in today's issue of
the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Morrison and his colleagues studied about 7,500
offspring and siblings of people having either normal
or high levels of cholesterol and triglycerides -fats
that move through the blood and have been linked in
excess amounts with hean disease.
"Presumably, shared genetic and environmental
factors that elevate levels of triglycerides and-or
cholesterol in such families can be identified in
sub}eCts and their first-degree relatives, allowing for
early intervention," the report said.
The researchers also said that close relatives of
people with dangerously high levels of such fats face
up to four times the normal nsk of having high levels
themselves:
2 DAYS
ONLYI
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983 A 7
.. .· ... . . .. ·.•·.~:,::·:·.~
. : ·~~~·~·~S~Ff ECTIVf SUNDAY AND MONDAY OCT. 18 I l;~~·f~.
SUNDAY I MONDAY 2 DAYS
ONLY!.
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,\8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
GORIN ON lllDGf
BY CHARLES. H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
DEAR AN N LANDERS: Your response to
O'Malley and Ginsburg was all right con&l.dering that
the indivjduaJ had never heard of the Protestant
work ethic, but I disagree with your statemen t that it
applies to people of all faiths. .
There Is, ln fact, a Catholic work ethic (auiong
others) which is specifically different from its
Protestant counterpart. Space l.s at a premium, so a
brief but powerful example will have to suffice.
Someone once asked Mother Teresa how she
could continue to work so hard knowing in her heart
that there is no real chance of succeeding in her fight
against poverty. Her answer: "We are not called to be
successful; we are called to be faithful."
The Protestant work ethic has always held out
the promise of material success as the reward for a job
well done, whereas Catholicism tends to view work as
a means to spiritual authenticity. This is why
Protestantism was closely allied with the rise of
capitalism, while Catholicism and capitalism are
mortal enemies. No name, please. I have to live in this
town. -KALAMAZOO
DEAR MAZOO: You say tbe Protestant work
ethic bas always betd out the promise of mate~lal
reward for a Job well done. How tben do you explain
tbe thousands of Protestant ml11lonarles who,
throu&b the centuries, have labored among the
lmpov€rlsbed in China, Japan and South America
and trekked through tbe steamlngjungles of Africa?
There were precious few material rewards for those
flMA IOMlfCK
AT W IT'S END
dedicated 1oldler1 of Clarl1tlanlty, and to tbl1 very
day they pre11 on.
As for Catbollc1 belDI .mortal enemies of
capitalism, surely you jest. Many of llae heaviest
flDdltlaJ llJtten In America are Calla0Uc1. For
example: Wllllfm E. Slmoe, cbtrmu of Wetra)';
David Mahoney, former chalrmu of Norton Simon;
James E. Barke, cbalrmu df. JobD1on & Johnson;
Tboma1 A. Murphy, former chalrmu of General
Motors; William Elltnghaas, president of AT&T;
Peter Grace, cutrman of W.R. Grace; Barron
Hilton, cbalrmu, Hilton Hotels; Peter McCol,Pugb,
cbalrmu of Xerox; Donald Kelly, president of•
Esmark, and William Graham, cbalrmu of Baxter
Travenol. ', • •
One of the rea toDI we are tbe envy of the free
world 11 because tbe capltallltlc 1y1tem bas given as
the lllgbest standard of Uvlll1 on tile face of the eartla.
Tbl1 great melttn1 pot 11 composed of lmmlgrut1
who came bere lD search of opportunlty. Tiley are
people of every coacelvable religious persuasion.
You can be sure that no CatboUc ever felt guJlty for
1euiDg-rlcb. Nor abouldh. _
Discover how to be date bait without fa)J.ing
hook, line and sinker. Ann Landers' booklet, "Daring
Do's and Don 'ts," will help you be more poised and
sure of yourself on dates. Send 50 cents along with a
long, stamped, self-addressed ·envelope with your
request co Ann Lan ders, P.O. Box 11995 Chicago, IU.
60611.
The 1980s have but they wear out shoes camp. · J*ISlOn and littlP under -
produced a new poster quicker. They eat more Forgetting . to call standing of what they're
GAROZZO'S GAFFE
OEAR READERS: We
have had auy r11qaeeu o-.er
ti.e yean for &boee ltaod1
that we tC)81Jder to be our
favorfte1. ~at mallet quJte a
l11t. For t he time hela1.
therefore, we are devotl.a1
the Sunday column to 1
1flrle11 of famou1 h1ad1. At
the end of the H r iH, we w ill
10 back to our weekly qiae11-
tioa aad a111wer cola.ma.
Neither vulnerable. West
d"als.
NORTH
• 102
~ 9 4 2
0 J 6
+KJI0984
WEST EAST
•J875 •6
\: J 5 ~K 876
O Q l08532 O K 94
+6 +A7532
SOUTH
+AKQ943
"?AQ103
v A 1
+Q
Tht> bidding:
West North Ea1t Sout h
Pa11 Pa11 PaH I+
Pass l 0 Pa88 2 +
Pa118 3 + PaH 3 t:J
Pass 3 • Pass 3 NT
PaH Pass Pa111 ·
Opening lead: Six of +.
The 1969 World Team
C hampions hiµ was noteJ
more for sli11shod play lhan for
brilliancy. Even thl' world"s ~esl players St<t'mt'd caught in
a web of lethargy. The grl'at
Italian star. l:lenato Garozw,
let lhas one slip away.
Carozzo"s opening one C'lub
hid e.howed a hand of I 7 poin t!>
or ht>tter . and North~ne dia
mond response wa3 negative
Thereafter, tht' auction wa!>
nat urn I. Note Garozzo"s dec1
saon to try for nine trarks at no
trump rathl'r than ten al
s padt>s .
Wt· simpli· pluyt•r-; might
have t'lected t 0 lt•ad rourt h
best from our longest and
strongest suit, 1.e .. a diamond.
but West chost> to lead has
e.mKletonclub -wa.,helrying
for a rufr! Declare r playt·d the
kinK from dummy and East·
won the ace.
A diamond shifl now w1>ulrt
still have been df'adly, but
Ea~t chose to shift to a low
heart . Declarer played low.
W e'it wont he Jack and had onl'
more chance to find lhl' daa
mood switt'h. Hut he chu'!e an
• s tead to return a heart lo
dedarer"s ten.
Ry now. Garozzo must have
been t hin king lhat bvth
defenders were void in
diamonds. Hl' was 'iO happy lo
escape thP diamond allack
that ht' did not spot the fact
that he had a vailable a safety
play which would gu1mintet-
thl0 contract -he should have
lt-d t h' nine of spades!
If the defenders allow the!
n1 rw of s pades lo hold. declarer
ran r\Jn for homt-with six
'>pad!' tricks, two h~arts and
tht· art' of didmonds. If West
w1n'I the jack of spades, dum·
my's Len or s pades is the entry
to the established cluh!>.
Instead. Garozzo tried to
run spades from the top.When
he· conceded a ~rick lo the jack
or sp11des. West perforce. if
rehH·tantly. returned a dia·
mood ht• had noth1nK else
J.,.fl 1n hp, hand. Ueclarer could
mak~•onl.n·aght trick' and '!ur
ll•n•d a nne trick o;et
Send any 14uestions for thiN
column to: Charleli Goren aod
Omar Sharlr, care of this
oewNpaper. Each week apriie
of a copy of the oew "Goreo'N
Br idge Complete," a S9.95
value. will be a warded fc* the
queuion judged the best
received.
Charles Goren and Omar
Sharif personally can not
undertake to answer all qUflli·
lions submitted.
child for your care and fast foods and prepared when you have to work going through.
consideration: T h e foods to save time . But late a new b1·cycle and · I'm declaring next Sin.gle Parent. the biggest expense is chaperorung· a f1"eld trip week single parents lt is now estimated guilL The h lnh ,..,._.t of on your day off LU&&' .. ...._ • week. Take -single that nearly 14 million guilt has risen steadily Total respons1"billty parents to lunch. They'll children under 18 years since 1971 and there is no for the rain 1.hat fell on a feel guilty having 8 good
Local . county . state. natio nal and international
events come to your doorstep D ·1· p·1 ....
in the bright . li.ght and Lively 81 J I DI
,,
of age are living with one hope in.sigh t of its drop-Saturday is a trip to time. but it'll be worth it.
parent. And nine out of ping. , Disneyland and no nag-,------------L~-----------------------------------= ____ _ 10 of these parents are "What have I done to ging just because the
mothers. , you" is the most ex-aquarium caught fire.
Single parenting isn't pensive bit of guilt Single parents will
a disease. It's a con<lition known and can get a even tually Jblend into
brought on by divorce, child anything he wants. our society, bW until
death or the choice to That line alone has put 3 then they're lonely out
have a child without million children of single there, trying to figure
benefit of marriage. Few parents in underwear out how they can fit into
people know anything with alligators near the our "Ark" Society that
about it. waistband. travels t wo-by-two.
Two weeks into single The current rate for a Most of them are
p a r e n t i n g a mother going away for a trapped into a work-
phenomenon occurs. The weekend is a new video worksleep pattern that
child falls apart He or game and a week at carries no praise, no com-
she develops an overb1 te, •-;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill or toes in and needs I
orthopedic shoes. de-
velops eye strain and
usually some mysterious
malady that isn't serious,
it just has to be main-
tai~ed financtally on a
deferred payment plan
Next. single · parents
~ver that what they
did for nothing and
everyone told them was
1 fulfilling and fun no,w
costs them an arm and a
leg in babysitting fees.
No one wants their job!
Another probl~ that
must tie taken seriously
is that a child raised by a
single parent oosts more
to raise. The walk less,
RUFFELL'S
U'HOLSTlaY, INC. ......... , _ _.. ....
1922 HA~BO~ Bl VO
COSTA MESA-548°1156
~special
Only • penny for each
pound your child weighs
for a 5x7 color portrait*
• Reg 3 00 • Age hm•l 12 years
• No appo1ntmen1 necessary
• Add 1 00 for 2 or more children
• L1,m11 one portrait spec;al per child
' ..... , • 41 ,
Offer valid from Oct. 18 through Oct. 19
10:00 -1:00 2:00 -5:00
JCPenney ~
2800 Harbor arvd. C'oata Me , CA 92826
''October Sale''
Dresses 20% off
Selected Belts
Jewelry & Scarves
50% off
Come;arly for best selection!
Something Special
feminine I sshion!i
250 £. 17th. Coit• Me1a • 645-57 I I
'1t •P«l1llM In fHhMl11 for lh~ mlMy fl1111e
I•'-• tht• II>
-
m~557 -2847
1J WE El<.$1 0 COURSE
~.. ··· OFF
\I. lw f I ,
ICE CAPAOES CHALET
M ESA VERDE 919-b'.">~ 1
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Good · .. for you!
Daily Pilat class1f1ed ads
phone 642-56 78
011w Thru Servic• Avtihblr
I 1H I WAt l PAP£ RS TO (,0
MAITIN-SENOUI
PAINTS .
Over 1200 custom colors.
Sale on famous premium
quallty Martm Senour Bnghl ure ·
Ftnnttln latex or allcyd
Satin Gloss $15~99
Reg, $21.99. gallon
Flat $3.99
Reg SS 99, quart
Satin Gloss $4. 99
Reg S6 99. qua:r1
Hurry! Sale ends
Oct 24. 1983
NEW!,
Breaded Shrilnp
Platter $2.99 THRU
OCT. 30
You'll feast on more than 1/.i lb. of
lightly breaded shrimp, 2 hushpuppies.
fresh cole slaw and golden fryes.
3<)Cn Harbor Blvd. (
ln Costa Mesa
Qu11 Soulh o( S.n Di~go Fwy ,
ecrou ftom Pcdco)
1471' Jeffrey Rd .
At Walnut Outt o(( S•nu
Any Fwy)
Irvine
L
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0 R E 0 AS T
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Karen Isman of Newport 'Beach is among the growing number of
female executives with bus iness entertaining as part of their car eer.
({
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1983 -c
D
Entertaining
for
business
- -very aspect of business has its rules and
E rituals, and entertaining clients is no
exception. Companies expect their em-
. ployees to dem9111trat.e a certain savoir
faire when dealing with their clients in
' social situations.
· In these informative articles, ex-
cerpted from the book, "The Extra Edge: A
Woman's Guide to TOTAL Professional Style,"
Charlene Mitchell with Thomas Burdick, exam-
ines the "rules of the game" of the business of
ente{Wning. The importance of planning. and
reservations .• how much should you spend, and the
difference between a "business" lunch and a lunch
with someone with whom you do busines.s are
explained. A sidebar on tipping is also included.
Though'this article is written for women, the
information it contains will be of interest to both
men and women.
IiP-ping
By Cbrleae MUcllleU
Wltb Tlaomaa B9rdJck
_..... ..... 0..,"'4
Knowing what and when to tip is essential to
your style. .-
Overtipping or undertipping can give your
host a negative impression of you. I know quite a
few people who believe that they can assess a
person's characler by the way he or she tip8. lf you
overtip, you may appear to be careless with money
or trying very hard to Impress your h06t. If you
underlip, you may appear to be ignorant or cheap.
It ia very important for women to become
savvy about tipping. For years many restaurants
have given women I~ than the best tervioe or
table, primarily becau.e of a rather universal,
although erroneous, impresaion that women are
terrible tippers. You should never put up with this
treatment -demand good service a.ad good tables.
and tip accordingly.
One of the biggest mistakes peopJe make is
tipping when they receive poor service. You are
not obligated to tip and if you feel that the penK>n
did not perform the service to your satisfaction,
assert yourself and reduce the tip accordingly. U
you choose not to tip at all becauae of the poor
service, tell the maitre d' or the captain. This will
preclude an impression that you are merely cheap.
If on the other hand you were provided with
special service or attention, you shold show your
appreciation and tip more than the a1andard.
A GUIDE TO TIPPING
The following are guidelines for tipping:
Maitre d': Generally not tipped unlees he/she
provides you with a special service. Captain:
Oversees your waiters and should receive a 5-10
percent separate tip. Waiter: 15-20 percent of the
bill before ta.x. Wine Steward: About 10 percent of
the wine bill before tax at time of service.
Bartender: If your bar bill is separate. tip the
server 15 percent. Cloakroom Tip at least 50 oenta
per coat. Attendant: Ladies' room 25 to 75 cents i1
she provided attendant service.
Entertaining proper'ly can be_step up corporate
By Cllarlene Mltcbell
Wltb Tbomas Burdick
~ ...... Delly..... '
• You're inte~ewing for a new job.~ou've spent two days
talking with people from various departments in the company. And
now the vice preside~ of the dJvision is takine you to lunch. You
can breathe easily no , you've been hired. Right? Wrong! You're on
your way now to the inal test.
Your company wooing a new account and the divison
manager has asked you to take the account group to dinner. You
smile smugly~nd realize you're on your way up the ladder. You
make the reservauons. When you arrive at the restaurant your
group is kept waiting for 30 mmutes before being seated. You may
have just slipped on the corporate ladder.
You're about due for a promotion. And th~ is a big one, a
vice-presidency of a very old, very blue-blood investment bank.
The senior partner, whom. up to now, you've only met in business
meetings. has invited you to lunch with one of the bank's most
valuable customers. You're dazzling -until he asks you to select
the wine.
What do these situations have to do with your career success?
The simplest an.swer la -a lot! But because managerial work oft.en
involves .adalizing (especially at the higher ecmelons), how you
hand.le younelf in IOclaJ altuations can be vital to your career.
Very oft.en today when a person is being cohsidered for a
top-level po1ltion, an execu1Jve will take the candidate to dlnner.
Thia not only provides an opportunity for the executive to get to
know the p~pectlve employee better u,nder "relaxed" conditions,
but to tee how they "perform" in socla1 settings. It's abo a prime
tactic that headhunt.en u.e when 900utlng for new managerial
talent. Poor eUquette can result In the loa of a job opportunity or
promotion.
Sounda superficial? Of coune It la. On the other hand a
company hu the right to want It.a reprettentaUves to dlaplay
appropriate savoir-faire. They, too, are being judged by client.a,
cuatomen, and peers, and they want their people to be deemed
poliahed and 1<>phi1ticated.
Take eomethlng u 1Lmple u telectlng wine. A client can't help
feellnc m<>n' respect tor the company representative who know1
.. .. .
n import.ant "don't" is using entertaining as a
chance to explore new·rest.aurants -you could
lose credibility (and even your client) if the
restaurant is a disaster. Cultivate several
restaurants in which you entertain clients.
and enjoys good wines. or who can oversee lunch or dinner at an
e1egant restaurant with style. After all, why should your guest feel
you cM\ handle a business matter successfully if you can't
orchestrate a dinner smoothly?
For the&e reasons It is important lhat as a professional woman
you comport yourself with confidence throughout your entire
business day. In every si tuation. This means you should feel at eue
Lil restaurants and In social business situations.
ENTERTAINING FOR BUSINESS
The key tlmes for business entertaining are traditionally
lunch, dinner, or drinks. (Breakfast is usually so limited In time that
It Is only uaeful for short, stricUy business meetings). You really
have to experience each to decide what works best for you.
Drinks tend to be almost totally social. Lunch is generally the
time to have a tomewhat relaxed discussion, with a fair amount of
bualnesa talk. Dinner uaually comes with an LmpUed understanding
that there will be a generous amount of aocializing but a limited
amount of "hard" busineM dlacuasion. •
Ditcuasing buslneu over drinks can be haiardous. and may
depend upon your ability to handle liquor. If you can't handle
several drinks and retain your business acumen (and moet people
can't), skip ~lness talk and keep things completely toela I. Or avoid
It all together. I have seen too many aharp, profesaional pedple
become boring, slow-witted, and embarraalng aft.er aevecal drinka.
It's noamaU t.aak to regain the retpect of your companions after 1uch
a display, and this is especially true for women. (Another double
standard at work!) And don't expect people to excWk" thla type of
lapte u "after-hours letting go." Business I.I butinet1, whenever
and wherever it takes place .
THE IMPORTA NCE OF PLANNING
Lei's assume that you have decided to entertain a client. The
first step to sut"CeSSful entertaining is planning. If you leave the
entertaining to spontaneity, chances are it will fail. There are just
too many things that can go wrong. Map out every step bef~hand.
What's the purpose.of your entertaining? Is it to conduct some
business. or is it strictly social? If you have a business discusmon in
mind. you want a setting that provides reasonable privacy for your
discussions. If it is social, do you want to impress your guest with a
famous, classic restaurant, or should you use your own "special"
restaurant that provides incomparable food and a relaxing
experience?
Don't make the mistake oJ burdening your guest with the
responsibility of selecting a restaurant. This put& them in a
potentially uncomfortable situation -they don't know the she of
your budget. or they may not be familiar with the restaurant.a in
your area. Instead, once you have decided on your objective, aeJect
two or three restaurant.a (with different cuisines) that aerve your
purpoeet well. Then give your guest a brief detlCription of each to
aee if they have a preference. •
An important "don't" is uaing entertaining u a chance to
explore new restaurant.a -you could loee credibility (and even
your client) 11 the restaurant ls a dlsuter. Cultivate .everal
restaurant.a in whJch you entertain client.a. Thia way you know
what to expect, and ll you are a famillar face at the establ.lahment
you are l\W'anteed better service. Thia al.lo help1 U you need a
1pedal favor or conalderat.lon during your meal. And let's face it, It
will certainly enhance your lmaCe In your guest'• eyea if you are
accorded respect and per1<>nal attention by the maitte d' and the
waiters.
Al WAYS MAKE RESERVATIONS!
Nothing~ get your meal off to a worM alart than havina tn sit
around and wait for a table. And lt •YI 10mething about your
ability to anticipate potential problema If ~ can't anUdpate the
possibility of a crowded restau'rant. Don't t.A chances even it you
0 SN There's, Page 8-4
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P Ortfnge Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
•·
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, .. ~-" ' 'tf \, I , .... ! ...
The master of makeup Will do make.overs
By VIDA DEAN
Delly ...... .._., IAMot
~>t akeup arust George Masters is coming
to '°wn! He will be at Gary Compton
Company Create from Oct. 20-29 to do
makeovers.
· Appointments may be made by
telephoning the salon (located at 1617 Westclifl
Drive, suite 102, Newport Beach) at 642-6164.
Compton srud one of Masters' makeovers takes
about four hours. The consultation involves
makeup, hair, wardrobe and colors. The cost is
$350. -.
...,... If you have been wanting a new hairdo, but just
can'tdecideon which way to go, you might want to
try one of .the styles created by the Sebastian
Artistic Team. '
Sebas.tian is an international company head-
quartered in Woodland Hills that started in 1973. It
provides educational programs for profession
hairstylists and consumers plus manufactures
makeup and hair care products available in salons.
The latest styles developed by the team
feature a variety of finishing effeclS achieved by
three of their produclS -Wet, Shpritz Forte and
SZWAST -GROVES
Our Lady Queen of Angels
Catholic Church in Newport
Beach was the setting for the
Sept. 24 mamage of Kathleen
Julie Groves and DaVld Matthew
Szwast. The bride is the daughter
of Mrs. Guy L1vmgston Jr. of
Newport Beach and Herman J
Groves of Van Nuys. The bride-
groom's parents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Szwast of Chicago. Ill.
Given in marriage by her
brother. Brian Groves, the bride -
wore a white off the shoulder silk
dress trimmed in seed pearls.
sequins and lace with a matching
veil. Her attendants were Mrs.
William Phil Whitman. matron of
honor, Allison Groves, Stephanie
Groves. Mrs. Dan Marsch and
Melissa Crow.
Ushers were Scott Brannen,
Joseph Modes. Alfons Duttoux·
and. and Brian Groves.
i.ef
AnstttrAd
Yth pora -W ~Olli at
Daily Pilot
642-5678
VD~
Fizz.
Wet is a combination "SCUipting lotion and
styling gel which can be applied to either wet or
dry hair. It endows the hair with fonn and
movement, specific curl control, body and shine.
This liquid gelatine can be used on haLr you blow
dry, hair you leave wet, hair you set or hair you
shape into a sculpture . You leave it on for a wet
look that last for hours, or brush it out for for body
and shine.
Shpritz Forte is a finishing spray. It lends
extra holding power to a finished style and to a
blow dry set. Also, it imparts body to hair near the
root for extremely full or spikey looks. and if you
WOOD-KNAPP
Peggy Allene Knapp, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Byron
Knapp of Laguna Beach. and
Douglas Wayne Wood, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Wayne Wood of
Sacramento were married Sept.
17 at St. ':fames Episcopal Chureh
in NewP<>rt Beach.
The bride wore a gown of ivory
lace overlay detailed with beads
and ivory colored sequms with a
long detatchable train, and
elbow-length gloves. Her veil
was attached to a beaded cap.
Attendants for the bride and
bridegroom were T~resa Parent-
eau, Cornelia HeWer, Louise
Titus, Terry Taylor. Christina
Remmling, Leslie Wood, Matt
Wooldridge.· Dick Metz, John
Drury, Peter Davis, Jim Roberts,
Scott Deacon, Steve F.gge and
John Winn.
There's More Of The
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On
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are into a special fantasy style it will hold. One of the latest companies introducung
"technological breakthroughs in the science of
skin care" is Orlane. "Extrait Vital" will, their
publicists say, accelerate the process of new,
healthier cell growth, by providing a superior
environment for cellular reproduction. After i4
days of use, you will see and feel the difference and
it is suppoae to improve the skin's ability to slough
off cells damaged by ultraviolet light.
Fizz is a <'reamy clear foam mousse for fine,
sparse or curly hair. It is abeorbed into the hair to
promote incredible volume, body, bounce, sheen
and controls static electricity. W e were told that is
doesn'tQfy the hair out and is not sticky. And, the
claim is that it revitallz.esdried out, penned or color
treated hair. (Talking to a company spokesman in
Woodland Hills, we were told this product will
soon be available in colors to temporarily tint the
hair.)
The hair styles pictured tpday will give you
some ideas to dL9cuss wit}\_jour stylist (some of
them Jove picturefl and 110me hate them) and he or
she can probably tell you more about the
company's products.
V' I used to take the skin on my face for granted. I
cleaned it, moisturized, put on aome paint and then
at night cleaned llJ'ld slapped on a dab of night
cream. That was before I knew about exfoliation
and cellular renewal.
Now it seems that you need to be concerned
about what goes on underneath the top layer of
skm. You feed those little cells working their way
to the top that will slough off after 21 to 32 days.
The skin will slough off by itself eventually
(otherwide we would be up to out eyes in skin). but
there are a lot of products to assist with thia. The
theory is that the sooner you ge\ it off, the fresher
your skin wttt-took and the moisturizer will work
better. ·
The 3M Company has a Buf-Puf Gentle facial
sponge on the market that will not only clean off
dead cells, but "actually in<'reases the rate of skin
cellrenewal up to 30 percent."
If that is not your cup of tea. Germaine
Monteil offers "Super Moist Fresher Skin" a
refining treatment for instant results.. It's a facial
scrub (that can be used on delicate skin) and at the
same time a cream that not only gets off the cell
debris, but conditions and aoftens.
Life was so simple at one time.
Fashion Calendar
Mrs. Wood
ROBINSON'S : Designer Carole Little (St. Tropez West) w1U
make a personal appearance at the Newport Beach store at I p.m
Friday to present her holi<Uly and resort collections fC?r '83. Informal 1
modeling and refreshments will follow the fashion presentation. '
NORDSTROM: Personal shopper Jill Cruz will p~nt ~ ~
informal seminar on investment dressing 7 p .m . Wednesday m
Individualist on the second floor of the South P>ast Pla.z.a store. In.~he
same department on Thurfiday at I p.m .. spo~e~ b~yer Re~ee
McGovern will present an info_rmal senu~ highlighung quality.
value and versatility of the stores label cl~thmg. I
NEIMAN-MARCUS: Loom demonstrations will bf condueted
Tuesday and Wednesday in Gift Galleries, second level. Contem-
porary jewelry designs will be exhibited by artist Patrick Sullivan
from 11a.m.to5 p.m. in Fashion Jewelry, first level. Flower arranging
claues will be conducted by Randy Harmer of Miles-Randolph on
Thursday at 10:30 a.m . and 7 p .m . in the European Bucket Shop.
Reservations may be made by calling 759-1900. eX1. 364.
SAKS FIFTH A VENUE; The Rina Di Montella collection of
dresses in luxurious fabrics will be modeled noon to 3 p.m. Friday and
Saturday in the Designer Salon, upper level.
. MAY 00.: The latest tips on becoming more beautiful and
glamorous will be given at dinner seminars on Wednesday 6:30 to 8:
p.m. in the Westminster st.ore (phone 898-2521, eX1. 2644) and on
Thunday. same time, in the South Coast Plaza store (phone 546-9?2 l .
ext. 2644). Reservation are necessary. The $5 fee includes a light
supper. free C()6Jlletic favors and discount coupons.
Q'fJ1mph r l £1~1trf1:rld} . ~ d-*,.,,.a c\JJt?J~fl'
There 1.s a look and .style that makes your
Jewelry from Wyndham Leigh just tha1
much more .special. It i.s a clean. fresh
look. tailored for a taste that appreciates
simple. understated good design.
to every design detail and quality control
For a helpful and exper~ed 1nterpreta--
tlon of your own ideas. or an tndMdual
Jev.telry design created j u.st for you. the
Wyndham Leigh .staff will .see your order
through every single step from concept
to dehvery and take great pnde in !he
'NOrk vve do for ,you. all along the Wi.J'/
Almost every piece in our .store has t>een
1ndMdually handcrafted 1n 18 Karat Gold
or Platinum 1n our own 'AIOfkshop on the
prem1.se.s. 1n.sunng the .stncte.st attention
Wyndham LE!1gh ~~~f.PRT
127 Fashion Island. Newport ~ach. CA 92660
r~~ 714/644·0501 · New Bullocks Wilsh•~
•
t '!
..
l .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983 ' 83
By VIDA DEAN ~
Of ... Del\t ........
six-foot redwood aculpture was one of the
gifts New Directions received at its sixth
birthday party. Artist Simo Tadlc orig-
inally made It for former ND resident
Carole Sllort, who in tum presented it to
the residential recovery home for women with
alcohol problems. Carved into the piece of art 1s the
Serenity Prayer. •
And, New Directions gave a gift on its
birthday -a plaque to the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce Dolphins for the group's
support through Wimbledon West Tennis Tour-
naments. Cork! Wbltford, Dolphins' president,
accepted the plaque. '
Kay BroWJI, executive director of ND. and
Sally Coombe, board member, conducted tours
through the thr~ houses of the Costa Mesa
facility.
Brown. Lynne Kite, (administrator) and
board members including chairman Dot Clock
there with husband Ralph and party chainnan
Nancy Hines welcomed the more than 100 guests
including many former residents.
Others attending were Carol South (NH Co!C
president), Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson.
NB Mayor Evelyn Hart, Supervisor Tom and
Emma Jane Riley (she is president of ND support
group Las Socias), Calvin Schmidt, Sally Yount,
president of NH Junior League (they started the
home), Carolyn Shea, Jim and Barbara De Boom,
Paul Britton, director of Capistrano by the Sea
Hospital, Max Scbnelder (National Council on
Alcoholism), and Grant McNlff. former board
member. • • •
New Directfons pres8nted sCulptured gift
·\
• Wiiliam A. Wittman of South Laguna.
celebrating his ?5th birthday, was the honored
guest at a surprise party held at the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club. The guest list included a •
number of people wh05e friendship with Wittman
hasextended over 45 years.
" Dot Clock accepts sculpture from
D.ily ............. 11J ~IC .....
Another surprise -Wittman received a
congratulatory letter from President and Mrs.
Reagan. To make sure the celebrant received the
message at just tpe right time, Presidential
Advisor Ed Meese hand delivered it to son Stephen
Wittman ot San Diego.
The party was hosted by µte celebrant's
grandchildren and his three attorney sons and
daughter (and spol.Jses), Stepben and Sandra
WIUma.a, MariLyDD and Randall R. Wittman of
Mission Viejo. l\uth Ann and WUllam Wittman Jr.
of Newport Beach and Barbara and Thomas
Searles of Irvine (she's a teacher) ..
Wittman has practiced law in Los Angeles and
Orange Counties for 47 years. He contiues his
practjre on a limited basis while his sons and a
daughter-in-law conduct the firm's law offices in
Tustin, Newport Beach and San Diego.
Wittman's wife, Verna, was on hand to help
him celebrate and he was particularly honored by
the attendance of his associates in his founding of
Rio Hondo Savings and Loan, Fint National Bank
of South Gate and as Man of the Year and
President of the Southeast District &r Associa-
tion.
• • •
Carole Short.
A festive luncheon in the directors room was
held on opening day of the 15th season of
thoroughbred racing of the Oak Tree Racing
Association at Santa Anita. ,
Ly.DD and Clement L. Hirscb had as their
guests Messrs. and Mmes. William Bealer, Joba
Elmore, Harry Rinker, Robert P. Strab and Patti
Mancini and Charles Soda.
Mr. and Mrs. WIJUam T. Pascoe ID (they
lived in Newport BejCh, b1Jt spend most of their
time in the Bahamas now) entertained the
Ricbard Carrs, E.W. Jobnstons and Artbur KeUys
• • •
Oct. 25 is a day you may want to circle on your
calendar! That's the date of the Corona del Mar
High School PTA pome tour that has become an
annual event of great interest. Six homes will be
open from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to th<*! with a
$12.50 ticket. Also, ticketholders .will get a basket
lunch at Sherman Gardens and entertainment by
students from the school.
'fo get tickets -Jou Torres, 640-04 72 or
Ruth Salver, 644-2139, may be called.
Nancy Hines, ND party chairman,
and Cor:ki Whitford, Dolphins presi-
dent ~ ·
Mrs. Howard Ahmanson, right,
grand patron of the arts, visits with .
artist Millard Sh eets and Suzanne
Paulson, art education director, a t
Clement and Lynn Hirsch at Santa
Anita.
'-'I )
the Laguna Beach Museum of Art.
Ahma nson of Beverly Hills is orie of
the underwriters for the Millard
S heets exhibition.
The Masters Way to Beauty
Let George Masters Create A Classic
Look For You As He Has Done For
The Worlds Most Beautiful Women
"G eorge , I love what
you do for me."
-Marilyn Monroe
"George -you're the
Master!''
-Ann Margaret
I Marilyn Mon roe "I ._I __ L_uc_i_ll_e_B_a_ll_----.J
IL-_R_i_ta_H_a_y_w_o_rt_h_~ll~ __ M_io_F_a_r_ro_w _ __,
~!~J_e_n_n_if_e_r_J_o_n_e_s~~'' ~~-D_i_na~h _S_h_o_r_e~__, "George -who maQe
me what I am
today -infortunately." I Lynda Bird Johns.on I I.___ ______ __, Doris Day I
-Dustin Hoffman I Diahann Carroll I Ii._ _______ _, Ltza Minnelli I
I Elizabeth Taylor I!.__ _____ ___. Jane Fonda l "What else can I say?''
-Bo Derek I Shirley Maclain I! L-_______ _, Nancy ReagC:ln I
IN,PERSON: Oct. 20th to 29th
Exclusively at:
Sixteen -Seventeen W estcliff l)rire
Newport Beach, CA. 926'°
(714) 642-6164 .
i -
I •
I • I I
I
. . .
~ .
... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 18. 1983
, ' ---
Looking like a woman .at the office ~~ ' ,.,. ..,.
n.. ••111••• ,._ . agers about what look.aareacxeptableat the office tor :~
NEW YORK -Women ln the execuuve·suite female execuuvea. Mc.t said they d.ia~ the strict:
have learned that lt'a OK to look like• woman at the W\Jform look. ...
o!flce. "I'm not IOO~Jli for a woman who la t.ryin, to ••
Dresses, frilly ,blouses and 1e>ftly structured suita look like a man. one banker told her. •
are fashionable for women executives who used to She also stuqied 1~0 qu~tionnaires filled out by f..
feel comfortable only In female versions of the cuatomers at her store, who had an average age of 32 ~
traditional male pinatrlpes, gray flannel or oxford and an average annual income of $40,000. .,
cloth. "What was lnterestiJla waa that the majority of ".
FaahJon experts say that as the number of female responses denied that women conactoualy copy male i ~ executives has Increased, their clothes have lost the dress patterns, yet over 86 percent acknowledged')
male mimickry that came aa women began to break that the ma.le perception ia involved in aome way in :~
sex barriers in the buainesa and professional world. the way they dress," Diedorek aaid .:;
"There are more women In the work force and In this admittedly small sample, more than halt :~
there's really safety in numbers. The look.a are much said they tried to avoid either overtly aexy or ~~
softer, "says Mary Fiedorek, owner of Streeta & Co .. 8 maaculine-look.ing clothes at the office but alao tried :~
Manhattan clothing store for female executives, and to look aa authoritative and conservative as men. ·~
author of the book, "The Executive Style." The moet masculine dresaers were new college ~
Not only is a softer style desirable to employers, graduaate uncertain of where they fit in the work .. ?
those interviewed for "Executive Style" say. but place. After a few years in the work force. they opted ~
perfume, makeup, nail polish, sheer colored stockings for a softer look. Established professionals also ten to :;
and other claasically ferrunine touches are perfectly dress in a softer style. •
acceptable at the office. But virtually all women felt pants were wrong •
for e"Xecutlve attire. "They think it's too masculine ·~
They thank pants are emulating men," said Fiedorek. • And while suits continue to be the primary
choice of upwardly mobile women, they are no longer
designed to disguise the female form.
Appropriate attire for the rising female ex-
ecutive, according Fiedorek. can be had with the
classic looks of skirts, blazer. soft blC\uses and the right
accessories.
Here are ber tlpa; Threads for the Games
Richard O swald and Sally Moran
{left) mode l the official Jravel
uniforms for the J 984 summer
Olympics in Los Ange les provided by
Levi Stra uss and Co. This includes
white d emin culotte with brass rivets
for women. Bi JI Overton, Pam
Spencer and Tim Shaw (right )
show-off o utfits U.S. Olympic ath-
le tes will wear when they e n ter the
Coli e um for openi11g cerem onies of
next year's Gam es. The uniforms are
primarily blu~ in color with to uc hes
of red and white.
"Attractiveness· has always been an asset for
men m the business world, but women msunctively
shy away from it," Fiedorek said. "They should
really use it to their advantage like men do. They
should play up everything that was given to them."
Fiedorek said she believed the fenunist move-
ment exposed sexual harassment and sexism at the
office but also left women feeling that to be accepted
professionally and avoid harassment they had to look
like men or be dowdy.
"It may have been tr.ue 10 yea.rs ago, but it's no
longer an issue," she said. "Suddenly it's OK to be
attractive -whether you're a man or a woman."
For her book, Fiedorek question investment
bankers, lawyers, government and corporate man-
Suits should have softJy padded shoulders and a
one-button subtly fitted jacket with some shoulder
detail at the sleeves. Jackets with side vents are
unflattering. Lining, buttons and finis hang details are •
important.
Dumpy "A" line slurt.s should be rejected 111
favor of soft dirndls. ln skirts with back slits. be sure
and wear slips that are short enough not to be seen.
Blouses should not be traditional oxford cloth
but should be silk or other soft fabri<' with finished
neckline. Bows are nice if they're not too big. Men's
ties are wrong. r " There's proper way .to entertaln.thosej mpo r:tant business clients
v From Page 81
know the maitre d' -your business entertaining is as unportant,
perhaps even more important, than an in-office meeting.
When you make the reservation, give the restaurant specific
details. Your name, your guest's name. and your company. If your
company drops a lot of money at that restaurant, it will be reflected
in your treatment. But even if it doesn't, the fact that you are a
businesswoman will give you clout and gain you preferential
treatment. After all. you can recommend the restaurant to other
people in your company.
Tell the restaurant when you would like to leave, if you are
pressed for time. U you wanla leisurely lunch, let the maitre d'
know when you~ve so that the waiter will not try to rush you
through your meal. If you have a favorite waiwr or area of the
restaurant, request that location. Check the restaurant's credit
policy beforehand. Which credit cards do.,.they take? Not all
restaurants take credit cards, or they may not take the ones you use.
To avoid awkward moments at check time, you can discreetly
give your credit card to the rnaitre d' or the waiter when you arrive.
You can get your receipt and card at the end of the meal, or better
yet. make arrangements for a faxed-percentage tip and sign the
credit card invoice to let him know ahead of time that you are the
host. This is one of those instances in which being familiar wnh the
restaurant beforehand can prevent embarrassing moments.
SOCIAL RITUALS
Like so many things m the corporate world. busll\ess
entertaining IS a ritual. No. the rules aren't spelled out anywhere.
but they eXlSt. Consider lunch. for example. G<>nerally there are
two types of business lunches. There's the social lunch that is called
a business lunch so 1t can be tax-deductible. and the real business
lunch. The purpose of the first (an American business tradition that
On the cover ...
aren Isman of Newport Beach is director of leasing
for South Coast Plaza, a position she has held since
January. Entertaining for business for her would
usually involve prospective tenants at South Coast
Plaza, Mesa Verde Center and South Coast Plaza
Village. ''Sometimes there are breakfast or dinner
meetings, but mostly I would entertain clients at luncheon
meetings," Isman said.
lsman was photographed at John Pohl's Bistro in
C.OSta Mesa by Richard Koehler, Daily Pilot staff. She
wears a St. John Knit suit from Bull~k's, SCP.
has kept thousands of restaurants financially solvent), 1s to have
lunch with someone with whom you do business. The objective is
simply to make or maintain a contact that 1s of value to you. No reaJ
business need be dlliCussed -in fact 1t may be counterproductive to
do so The "real" business lunch. on the other hand, contains both
elements of socializing and dotng business. and is more complicated.
ln the case of the real business lunch. the first thing tO
remember is not to begin talking business as soon as you are seated
ThlS is especially important for women. who are often more
.ccustomed to being entertained than to entertaining, and who may
be reluctant to spend ume on "small talk." feeling' instead a
compulsion to "get the job'done."
You must understand that business entertaining is a well
Calen·dar of club meetings
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
RETIRED FEDERAL EMPLOYEES.
Saddleback Valley chapter. will meet
Monday at 2 p.m . in Mission Viejo. For
7.30 p.m. in Santa Ana. For information
call 542-15525.
• • • Nee• •••rta
e4ul•••ntf
established, previously all-male, "social ritual.'~ -The ritual begins
by "breaking the lee," even when it's with someone you already
know. U you are a man you would probably be discussing sports or
some other typically male interest. Unless this ~mes naturally.
don't fake It. (Nothing ls more ridiculous than a businesswoman, or
anyone for that matter, trying to "rap" about defensive football
plays with a business client when she abhors the game). Instead.
disc455 subjects of mutual interest. If you have no idea what your
guest's interests are, explore varjous topics until you hit on
something. If you are havng drinks first, use this time for this type
of interaction. Only later. after you have ordered the meal. do you
steer the coversation to business.
When the talk finally does tum to business. have some outline
in your mind for the rest of the discussion. Don't fall into the trap of
sloppy thinking just because the atmosphere is non-business. Your
plans should be presented in a clear. direct and logical manner.
After you have disc~ the intended topics with your guest,
reiterate what you feel is the outcome of the meeting. Make sure
that you both agree on the next step in your plans. Once this has
been done. drop the business talk and finish your.meal on a social
note.
If you haven't been able to get the conversation to the busmess
discussion by dessert time, or if every ttme you brmg up business
you are side-tracked. forget 1t. Your guest probably expected a
social lunch and any further effort will be unrewarding Instead.
tell them that you have some ideas or plans that you think will be of
interest. and suggest a time and place to get together later. An
an-office meeting is probably the best bet
. How Much Should You Spend?
Before you begin your business entertaining. check out your
company's ''nonns" and stay within them. Fmd out from your
co-workers what restaurants they frequent.
DIVORCED? SEPARATED?
~ information. call 58 1-1226 . SAMARITAN COUNSELING
CENTER of St. James Episcopal
Church in Newport Beach is hosting a
stress management seminar Thursday
from 7 to 9 p.m. For information . caU
673-9435.
l '•·rhup., 1h,· nllli<I fll .. hlunahk
b<111ll•1•"' fur d1iltl~n Mii~"" h••r•· 1,. • • •
TOWN AND GOWN JUNIOR AUX·
ILlARY of Orange County meets on
the USC campus Tuesday to honor
• scholarship recipients. For infor-
mation, call 851-1700.
• • •
,1 EXECUTIVE WOMEN INTER-
: NATIONAL will meet at the Balboa
Pavilion Tuesday for a Las Vegas
Night. For reservauons, call 540-9380.
•••
CITY OF HOPE. Newport Harbor
chapter, will hear a hypnotist speak at
' 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Newport Beach.
For reservations, call 540-1338. ...
FRIENDS OF THE NEWPORT
BEACH LIBRARY wiU host a morn-
ing coffee Tuesday at the Promontory
Point clubroom. For mfonnation, call
760-0756.
• • •
THE LUPUS CLUB. of the Arthr1us
Foundauon of Orange County. will
meet at 7:30 pm. Tuesday at the
Medjcal Center of Garden Grove to
kick off third year activities. For·
information, call 957-1234.
• • •
SPYGLASS HILL GARDEN
CLUB president Pat Beauchamp said a
momlng worklhop la tcheduled
Wednetday entitled "Potpourri." For
reservations. call 644-6905.
• • •
NEWPORT BEACH CHRISTIAN
WO MEN'S CLUB mmlberl will meet
for lunch Wednetday at the AJrponer
Inn. For reiervaUoN, call M4-2921 .
• • •
SOCIETY OF A.Rcmnx:rtJRAL
SECRETARIES' ASSOCIATION
membent will meet Thw-.day ln Santa
Ana for a "brown ti.g" lunch and a
t~h on Ume manacement for admln·
lstrttora. For Information. call
~9-2207
SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
YWCA members wlU hl'ar a pluuc
surgeon dilcwil breut reconstruct.ion
af~r maa1eet0my surjltory Thurtday at
...
COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB
members will meet Friday at the
clubhouse for lunch and a business
meeting. For Information, call
675-2742.
• • •
ORANGE COUNTY ADOPTIVE
PARENTS ASSOCIATION will host a
pot luck dinner/white elephant sale
auction Friday at 7:30 at the OC
Rehabilitation Center. For infor·
m~tion, call 779-7485.
• • •
For ci.wlrttd A4
ACTION
CaU
A DAllT '1lOT
AD·YISOI
'4!·'411
~
A SHION'-r OR C H l l OR(N
~1,.·da111h\1l In lm.,.1r1l'tl dothlnll
11.011 '4hlll'" for l(lrl" ancl hoy ..
thl' .. hop olTl'"' ml'rchandi"c
from S.'~.OCI .. ho.: .. I•• S 11 1 00 fur j1u:k.-1 ...
Th• 1.umi,.ry•rd Pt•u
384 Fo•ut Av'!nue
• Laguna Beach CA 92651
71-'-~9~·:'1 it I
Wetlporl Square
35q East 1 711l S1ree1
Costa Mesa CA 92627
7 H·t~2-H H · S SOtrrH COAST WELLFSLEY
CLUB members will sponsor a docent's
tour of Heritage Hill Historical Park m •====--------____________________ ]
lll't jet ca ""IP 1t ... mw Brllt~ it!
DIVORCE RECOVERY WORKSHOP
Six Tu•tday Ev•ninga
October 25th -Nov•mber 29th
St Andrews Presbyterian Church
Newport Beach
SI . .,,...._ I& .t 15 .. St.
Acrou .,_ ~ H.t.or Hip
$18.00 R99i.trotion
FCH mOf• Information coll:
631-2885
9:00 -S:OO Mon.-"i.
El Torp. For reservations, call Betty I I l I Cannon at 544-0896. . . . ..--
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF
UNIVERSITY WOMEN. California
State Division. wiU hold its annual fall
conference Saturday and Sunday at
the new Hyatt Regency Hotel m Long
.Beach . For information. call 894-367 I.
• • •
AMERICAN MENSA. ORANGE
COUNTY CKA.PTER. the high IQ
IOCiety, Ls testing potential members
Saturday ln Orange. Cott Is $15. For
information , call ~25-6004.
• • •
ALPHA XI DELTA ALUMNAE
will meet Saturday for a brunch and a
workshop featurtna tcrapbooka, photo
albums and picture framet. For infor-
mation, call 962-3606.
JUNIOR MANNEQUINS: Orien·
tation claeees for Junior Mannequins
(grades live through high 11ehool) wlll
begln Monday at Buffums, Fashion
IAland, and at Balboa &y Club on Oct.
22. JM Is a program designed by
Beverlee Kelley to build confidence
and M"lt etit.eem that u1e1 modeling u a
focus for develo~ln1 IOdal skJlla.
Studenta enrolllng will be eligible for
formal November famlon show at
Buffums. Kelley may be called &t
760 9787 for furtheor Information.
...
Opening October 1 Bth
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Co<onn ""' Moo . C A s2eee 11....._ ____ (•7•1•4•)•142-···3280•-----'
1900
. (betwHn lrvlne I Dover)
Ar~oros
~..._,. -fl,.,j~/J.r . ./i:if' · r 77?.:r;-
SWING BACK TO FALL at Apropos With"~·'" rea
Knitted Dress -fit to fo rm.
PHELPS -60 YEARS OF TRADITION -serving Southern
Cal•forrna with fine menswear .
•
• • • •
• • • •
-AUTUMN ATTITUDES
• •
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) WHAT S yw_here . textures. an
swear. hats are ever
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Neiman M;,rcus. u d MacArthur B1vds.
0 er 70 fine stores.in all. tween Jamboree "n
v ff Pacific coast HighWC\Y Justo
Newport Beach .
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F A 5 H 0 N iJ 5 l A N D
N f w p 0 A c E H T f R -
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 18, 1983 a
cathy jean
OUR SANDALIZED 9«Je,it; Pump With its delicate
stacked heel gives your tailo red outfit a feminine touch.
THE GENTLEMAN'S WEEKEND WARDROBE. Updated
classic sportcoat in pure lambswool houndst ooth check.
100% Saxony wool English pleated trouser, all cotton
corduroy lapeled vest and 100% cotton oxford buttondown
shirt s with sllk ar)d wool club ties. Luggage and umbrella by
Ghurka.
IVY'S LEAGUE
A FALL TRADITION -Blazers. blouses. bows and Ivy's
League .
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FROM OUR MEN'S SECTION a handsome outfit made w ith
our corbln cord slack. brushed Shetland sweater and
acceuorles, topped With our great lambsuede jacket. Aven-
able In natural. brown & taupe.
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.. , .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oot. 16, 1983
-nuth Buzzi, guest-starring in NBC's
'4Days of Our Lives," c ha ts with
Romulos the lion during taping for
upcoming episod e.
. .
Current
Best Sellers
FICTION
1 1. "Poland," James Miche ner
2. "Changes," Danielle Steel
3. "Hollywood Wives," Jackie Collins
4. "The Name of the Rose." Umberto Eco
5. "Who Killed the Robins Family?" Thomas
Chastain
6. "Christine.'' Steven King
7. "Monimbo," Moss & De Borchgrave
8. "August," Judith Raisner
9. "The Little Drummer Girl," John le Carre
10. "Everythlpg and More," Jacqueline Briskin
NON-FICTION .
1. "The Mary Kay Guide to Beauty," Mary Kay
Cosmetics
2. "In Search of Excellence," Peters& Waterman
3. "The Body Principal," Victoria Principal
4. "Motherhood," Enna Bombeck
5. "Megatrends," John Naisbitt
6. "On Wings of Eagles," Ken FoUeu
7. "Fatal Visions," Joe McGinnis
8. "The Best of James Herriot''
9. "The One-Minute Manager," Blanchard &
Johnson
10. "Creating Wealth," Robert G . Allen
(Courtesy of Time, the weekly n.ewsmagazine)
NOW PLAYING
At These Specially Selected Theatres
AMHI• fCllll• tllUll OIWIGl Wlnmmtll
-PICJflc I~ :::0!.*' AMC Chnot ~ Ploht S Hi Way l9 llnvt-111 879-9850 "3 IJOI 637 CX340 Orm In ~)693
COSTA .aAtaw••OS llt~IOI ~IW OMllGf UA C.ryC....mo 6).6 )911
~..WUM:cc1t11o•O.-HOllNG•Q!.lii!!,.']
• COl'TA11£U
fdwllOs Town Cenle• 7~1 •184
TIMOTHY HUTTON
..
Not much new under theatrical sun
By TOM TITUS
Of .. 0.-, ,_ '""'
There's not much new under the
theatrical sun along th~ Orange C-Oast
, this week, but those looking for musical
entertainment can find it at a pair of
northern Orange County theaters.
The only local openin8 this week is
"Little Women," a stage adaptation of
Louisa May Alcott's classic novel, at
$pddleback C.OUege in Mission Viejo.
• The play. adapted for the stage by
Marion De Forrest, opens Friday for
two weekends in the Studio Theater.
Perfonnancesof "Little Women"
will be given Friday, Saturday and Oct.
27-29at8 p.m. with matineesOct.23
and 30 at 3 p.m . Call 831-4656 for ticket
information.
The rock musical "God.spell" is the
new production of the Buena Park
C.Omrnunity Theater. opening Friday
for a five-weekend stint at the Sullivan
Center auditorium, 7631 W. Melrose
Ave .. Buena Park. Perfonriancesare
scheduled Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m. through Nov 19. Reservations
523 0351.
A1lo givtn1 final performances \h.11
weekend la "Angel Street" at Golden
West C.OUege'a Playbox Theater. The
Victorian thriller plays Thursday
through Saturday at 8 p.m. and
Sunday at 3 p.m. Reservations
895-8378.
Four other local stage productions
continue their respective runs this
week. They are:
•"Guysand Dolls" at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico,
San Clemente ( 492-9950), playing • .
Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m., Sundays at 1 and 7 p.m., through
Oct.30. /
•"Romantic C.Oefedy" at the Harle-
quin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S . Harbor
Blvd., just north of C.osta Mesa
(979-5511), on s tage nightly except
Mondays at varying curtain times
through Nov.13.
•"~arvey" at the Irvine Community
Theater, Turtle Rock C.Ommunity
Park. Sunny hill Road at Turtle Rock
Drive, Irvine (857-5496), playing today
at 2 p.m. and Fridays and Saturdays at
~ 8 p.m. through Oct. 29. Also opening Friday, under the
banner of the FuU~rton Civic Light
Opera Co., is "Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers." The show will play Frid.ays
thr~ugh Sundays for three weekends,
closing Nov. 6. Reservations 526-3832.
On ~e closing side, both productions
at the Newport Harbor Actors Theater
wind up their engagements this week.
Final performances of "Dear Liar" will
be given Monday and Tuesday at 8
p.m ., while "Pygmalion" closes with
stagings Thursday through Saturday
at8and Sundky at 7 p.m .
•"South Pacific" at the Curtain Call
Danner Theater, 690 El Camino Rea I,
Tustin (838-1540), continuing
Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8:30
and Sundays at 1 :30 and 7:30 uritil Jan.
15
. Both shows are presented at the
Back Bay High School auditorium. 390
Monte Vista St .. Costa Mesa. Call
631-5110 for information and reser-
vations.
BACKSTAGE -A "theater fun
group," open to anyone who enjoys
going to the theater, is being formed in
Laguna Hills ... members will travel to
Los Angeles to see three plays this
season -"Dreamgirls" at the Shubert
TbeaterDec.4, "ASenseofHumor"
with Jack Lemmon and Estelle Parsons
Jan. 19, and "Hobson'sChoice" with
Glenda Jack.son at the Ahmanson Feb.
8 ... call Jean .Krueger at 840-5819 for
information ...
Ba rbara June Dodge and David Lewis star in
Comic-crime
novel loaded
with humor
HP ygmalion" at the Newport Harbor Actors Theater.
THE BURGLAR WHO PAINTED LIKE
MONDRIAN. By Lawrence Block. Arbor House.
25~ Pages. $14.50.
/" Thecomic-crimecapernovel is difficult to
bring off well. Largely, because crimes such as
murder are no laughing matter.
If not done with just the right touch, this kind
of novel becomes an exercise in bad taste.
l.:.awrence Block, happily, has the right touch.
The burglar of the title is an affable chap
named Bernie Rhodenbarr. In an effort to go
straight, Bernie runs a used book store in New
. York City. But every so often the need to pull off a
caper overwhelms him because" I'm a born thief .
the urge to burgle bred in my bones. How could
they ever rehabilitate me?Can you teach a fssh to
leave off swimming, a bird to renounce flight?" .
Bernie's latest itch is to crack a seemingly
impregnable apartment house and make off with a
collection of valuable stamps. He manages to get in
andoutof the building.stamps in hand. but doesn't
IM,ElllAL AT IDAHO
11UIH• 003
realize that he has set m motion the forces that
involve him in an extremely convoluted plot
which seems impossible to resolve.
But novelist Block is a very talented man and
he keeps a steady hand on things as Bernie first
finds himself arrested for a murder committed in
the apartment house he burgled. then finds
himself running from the law which wants him for
a second murder that took place in his book shop.
He is also wanted for stealing a pnceless
painting by Mondrian. Bernie, of course, did none
of these foul things, and he sets out to prove It. He's
aided by a variety of zanies, such as his
"henchperson," a lady whowashesdogsfora
living. and his lawyer, a running freak who hves to
do b.usiness while dash mg through Central Park
"The Burglar ... " is a well-told crime story.
liberally laced with lots of humor
Phi/Thomas
AP Books Editor
SFAN~ "THIS IS A BETTER
.I 11 JAMIS IOND '" BOND, AND-BY A
MGS~l'GA• WIDEMARGIN:'
i1C> IO'W llW lllY* ltllill' WINO • •fV41j.,_I
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"Connery is won
For Bond fans, I w
therecheeH
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inventive, imaginative,
tension-filled fun:·
"Sean Connery is back and·
greater than ever:·
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TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX PRESCNTS
ALL THE RIGlfT MOVES
TOM CRUISE CRAIG T. NF.LSON LEA THOMPSON 1~tt•1,1u1,... ... .,,,, tOIWOOt<"flt llMl'\fC e\ •-.itHU'•'
GARY MORTON PHIWP GOWFARB DAVID CAMPBELL MICHAEL KANE
R -·""::'_"_ STEPHEN.DEUrsCH MICHA
1EL1 CHAPMAN la\
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STARTS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21at
•
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Marcia Haydee and Jorge Donn per-
form in Maurice Bejart's Ballet of the
20th Century an New York's City
Center.
Critics hate him
but he dances on
By MARY CAMPBELL '-
0t1MA_..._,,_
NEW YORK -Maurice Bejart's Ballet of the
20th Century is loved in its hometown, Brussels, and
is a hit in Germany, Italy and Japan. Once. it had a
cheering audience in Berkeley, Calif.
But New York's another story.
"ls any other choreographer railed against in
New York as much as Bejart?" says "Ballet News."
The publication goes on to say that Bejart's steps don't
flow and that dance numbers may be separated by
walking around, acting or acrobatics.
The controversial choreographer's company has
been playing to New York this month to mixed
reviews. ·
Bejart doesn't rail back at New York critics. "If I
wasacritic," he says, "I would be much more naughty
about my ballets than anybody else. I love my work
and what I do. At the same time. sometimes I am
self-indulgent."
His ballet, "The Firebird," has been danced by.
the Paris Opera Ballet, the San Francisco Ballet. the
Hungarian National Ballet and by companies in
Stockholm and Mµan, Italy.
"When I create a ballet I think of today," Bejart
says. "But in a way. my today is alplost tomorrow, you
know. For me. it is today. For m06t of the people, it is
tomorrow."
Marcia Haydee, prirna ballerina and artistic
director of the Stuttgart Ballet, who is appearing as a
guest star with the Bejart Ballet, as it often is called.
says. "Maurice isn't a c)loreographer. He's a creator."
Sometimes Bejart's story lines, like his steps,
don't flow. "For example, 'Romeo and Juliet' isa very
well-known story. Many choreographers have done
it. I like to do it because It's an important story and I
try to do it in my own w ay.
"Sometimes they are dead before they are in
love," he says." At the end of the ballet. they are dead
and reborn. Sometimes, domg things like that. you
see more deeply in1o the truC'~tory of Romeo and
Juliet."
When he starts creating a ballet, he only thinks
of his 65 dancers.
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19th SMASH WEEK OF
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DAN AYIR01D EDDIE MURPHY
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Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983 97
Geralyn Petchel ••• Her Br adway debut postponed
By JAY SHAJUIUTT °' ... •11111111 •,,_
NEW YORK -It wa.a to have been
Geralyn Petchel'• Broadway debut.
She's an actn!Sa and a singer. the
blonde, beautiful kind. It amuses her to
quote the critic who said of a ahow in
which she appeared: "She hM her own
style. She shouldn't Imitate Marilyn
Monroe." .
"Very ironic now," she notes.
That was when she waa just starting
rehearsals for a new Broadway musi-
cal, "Marilyn, An American Fable,"
having been hired to play the late
rrtovie queen. •
She joked then about her Broadway
debut being the old dream-rome-true
cliche. Unfortunately, now she has to
wait a bit longer for that dream to come
true.
She was replaced in the show l 0 days
before its previews began.
She's a fine actress, a fine singer. a
spokesman fur "Marilyn" says, but as
the musical evolved, much more danc-
ing was required of the s tar. She did
her best, he says. but finally "they felt
they needed more of a dancer In the
role."
"Oh, Brother," and a1ao played in the
national company of "A Chorus Line."
"Marilyn," originally scheduled to
premiere Nov. 6, now will open the
week of Nov. 13.
Petchel left New York after she got
the bad news and wasn't available for
comment. •
The actress. who vaguely reminds
one of Marilyn Monroe with her
blonde hair, pale .white skin and what
they call a. full figure, said she began
dreaming of working on Broadway 10
yea.rsagowhenshewas 17.
Some 800 actresses here and in Los
Angeles had auditioned for the title
role of the muaical "Marilyn," about
the celebrated sex symbol who died,
tormented and alone, in Hollywood 21
y~ago.
.t-'etchel smiled when asked if she
recalls what song she sang at age 8
when she ·made her debut as a
performer back home in Milwaukee.
"Sure," said the unknown actress
who -until the difficult decision by
tlle show's dlrector and producers was
made on Oct. 7 -was about to debut in
a Broadway musical, and as its star.
"I sang 'The Impossible Dream' -
and I gu~ it came true.''
Well, not this time. But someday ...
Geralyn Petchel, left, strikes a familiar pose as the
originator, Marilyn Monroe, is seen at rigkt in scene from
the 1954 musical HThe Seven Year Itch."
She's been repl~ by Alyson Reed,
25, whose credits include Broadway's
"Dance a Little Closer," "Dancin' ,"and l-U-X-UR_Y_T_H_E-AT~R~ES~,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
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LAMP .. N'S IMl/ft "THE
LAST FIGHT" (R)
Fri. 7:15, 10:!50
Set/Sun 3:45, 7:1S, 10:50
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Nathalie &ye
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EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
CO·HfT
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U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
I
Today's TV
~~mmwmc
~ t It "f It en.no." (198 11 Fernt\ltn r~~
tt • • "'Soundtf" I 11121 C1C1ett T yeon, Paul Wlnlleld
-11:00-
.. NASHVIUE ON TMEAOAO .MOYIE .
"(Kid ~·.. ( 19801 Joe Jollnlon,
!WrySIOU..
• MASTf:NlllCE THEATRE 6D COHTBIPOMAY HEAL TM
ISSUQ "'~ ~~~Sycamore" 119751 Jasoli
Robltds • .leln Simmons.
lZ>MOYIE
• t It "I Lowe My Wiie" f 1970) Blott
Gould, 8rencll VICCllO
-11:30-
U ATONEWYTH
B(llOOlF
TBl'Y OOlE·WHITTAJ(fR (})MOYIE • ** "Jl.wlgle Booll" 119421 Saou. ==~TMeHOME GD COHTEMPORARY H£ALTl4
ISSUES
e;) WEEKl Y SPORT HIOHLIGHT
(JAPANESEl
r tf) FRAGGLE ROCK
-11:'5-
'1)JEWS (JAPAHE.SE)
AmRHOOH
-12:00-
" TMREE STOOGES G ~ 8) MEMORIES WITH LAWAEHCE
WElJ(
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Algjttt"" (Ii'~) 8W A.thbont, Nigel
~
-2:30-
1 FAa THE NATQI
GIUJOAH'S ISL.AHO
QftOWINO 't'!AM
Ml'8IC ON VIDEO A COUNTRY MUSIC TMVTt
TOKITTY~LS
-3:00-
• COt..LmE fOOTBAU. G MOYIE
t t ~ "I Oood 11'' ( lk3) Red Skel·
tOl'I, LeN Horne
• ~BOOY'S.BUSINE88 CCJMOYIE * * ~ "1'1lomulne & Buallrod"
( 1973) Max Julian, Vonett• McGee. (Q)MOYIE
t • • t "Tiie Godlatller" I 19721
Marlon lltando, Al Ptclno, <ZJ MOVE
• t 'h "Casey's Shadow"' I 1978)
Wallll Mal111au, Alexis Smith
-3:15-
0CRYWOl.F
-3:30-
(}J LITTLE HOUSE ON TH!
PAAIRIE 11!1 TONY llAOWN'S JOIJRNAL m rrs EVEAYBOOY'S BUSIHESS
-4:00-
.. SUftOAY
Q MOVIE • * "The CooQuei0< Worm" ( 19681
Vlocen1 Price. Ian Oglll'Y
Q)MOVIE
• t "Retufn To Feotffy lslaod'
( 19781 RICatdo Mont&Jban, Adrienne
Barbeau
ti) MOVIE
t * 'h "Band Of Angels" (1957) Clarl.
Gable, Sldney Poilier
fll) WALi. STREET WEEK mi NEWTON'S APPLE
Cl) WELCOME BACI<. KOTTER
~ THATSINCREDIBLEl
OJ)MOVIE
One time T V series sta rs (left-right,
rear ) Elinor Donahue ( 44 father
K now s Best"), Dawn Wells
( uGilligan 's Island") a n d Angela .
Cartwright ("Make Room forJ
Daddy") join Michael J. Fol
(Hf amily Ties") in the cast of H High
School U.S.A.,"
tonight at 9:00 o n KNBC ( 4 ).
~ HUMAHfTIES TMAOUGH TME
ARTS
c;) SHOGtM DAAMA
OOMOVIE
• • .. ~. South" ( 19781 Jack
Nleholsoo, Mary Steenb\Jlgen (SJ PAPER CHASE
-12:30-u NF\. '13 II Wl.D, Wl.D WOALD Of
Mli&ALS G HUMNIT1ES TlRXJGH THE
MTS
(.t') Al.BUM FlASH
(O)MOVIE
• t "The Toy" (111&2) Rlchatd Pryor,
Jacll11 Glellon.
D MOYIE * • "Pendemonlum" j1!182) Tom
Smoltlen, Carol K.ne.
-12:'6-
(Z) CINEMASCOAE
-1:00-
l 2wmtYOU
Cl) NF\. FOOT8AU
I =~ JULIE AHO OQ< ti COVENT
OANl9I
I ADNll-12
NEW VOICES 1H AMERICAN TMEATAE
-~ t t 'h "~ StatlOf'I Zlbf1" 119681
Rock Hudson. Erntel Bofgnlnt.
el) HOll YWOOO 1001 NIGKTS
(JAPANESE}
rCJMOVIE
t t '/r '"Telelon" 119771 Clllrles
B<onton. Lee Remick $)MOYIE * *'"1 "Andy Hatdy Comes Home"
11953) M~key Rooney~atrlcle Bres.
lin
ZIMOVIE
• • • "A Streelc.v Namecl OeeKe"
119511 MarlOn Brando. VMen Leigh
-1:20-m m'SUl<O NO HEY A
(JAPANESE)
-1:29-11 9 WOAU> 9EM8
lit!: •*'Ir "Bun.ic> 9*" (1D•41 Joel ~ Undt °"'*'· eMWit-12 .OCfNUI
OWOYIE * • * 'h "Thorougtlly Modlrn Miit"
11een .Nit "'* .... c.o1 °""""
1119
-to0-
1 HEW8MAklAI
~8181.NC>
ft tt "'nit Oty OI Thi [)olpiln"
( 11131 Georgl C. Scolt, Trilli Vtn
°"""' .WOYll
..... ~ Booll" (1942) Sabu, JoeeP!C.-.
• lllOVI&
I t "Wonder WOll'llln" (1974) C&tlly llM=o,~~
·~Y'fMI
OINl800TT
* ~. Wit" (1911) t dwtrd """'*'"· 0..-lldlrw ,.. owov.
t t "~ HOlrNe "' PllrlUll To
• t "O.Utnger" (1945) LawrenGe
T 1emey, Anne Jetfreys
HISITCOM
t$)MOVIE * • •;, "It Came From Hotlywoocl"
119821 Joho Candy. Dan Aykroyd
OMOVlE • * *'"' "Aotoss The Gre<11 Divide" ( t976) Robert LOQlll, Heather Rat-
tray
-5:00-
" CHIPS PA TAOl. Q A8CNEWSO (}) WALi. STRE!T JOV~l
REPORT
&lFRNGtH:
6i) DINNEJU T JULIA'S
(I) M•A•S•H
O NEWS m Aaout TELEV1S10N
(C) l!l£TTE MIOWt. NO RllLLS (?)MOVIE
t • • "Tomorrow" ( 19721 RObert
Duval, Olga BelUll
-S:30-
U H8CNEWS
D NEWS Cil 1H SEAAa1 Of ... mi MOTOAWEEK
Cl)AUCE
@)ABCNEWS~ ~~
I • • "I Wille Up Screaming'
( l!M 11 Betty Grable, Vlclor Mature
fSl MOVIE
• t 'ot "Taps" (1981) GllOlge C
Scou. Timothy Hulton
EVEHIHG
-4:00-
tJ CJ NEWS '1 MOVIE It "Kiii Or Be KKled" ( 1966) James
0-en, Robert Colbert. G HOUYWOOOCLOSEUP
WOAl.O AT WAR
PEOPl.E TO PEOPLE
• M'A'S'H e MOYIE
... ,., "lmpme" (1969) Bun Aev·
noldt. A11ne Ffll\011.
·~ Cl) ENC 8EVAAE0'8 OHffOHICl.E
(II TAIUNO Al.NAHT~ a..:NlWS G ATlUTtl IN ACTION
CHlMOVIE
h •,; "Pat•~( ( 1981) Burt Rev·
noldt. Bevtrty 0 Angelo
(Q)MOVIE * • ··r 1111 Ot Tiit Pink Penlhlr"
11en1 11e1tr 8*1, Onld NNtti e MOYE ***~"'My Ftv«tlt YNlf" (1982)
Ptltt O'T ooie. Jelcllct Hwper
. -··-lr~™E
1~·
-r:00-e eo...urES
8 q! RAST CAMERA Ill NPl!'Y'8 K11Vf IT Ofl HOT! G llOVIE •• * The Day Ot f he Dol(>nln ..
(1973) Geotge C $colt, Trl6h Van
Oevete.
i=SEARQi
S) ALL CAEA TURES GAEA T AHO
SMAL.l 11
'1l) *TUAE '1> lll£ PROTECTORS
(CJMOVIE
• •..., "F11t ChanQC!" ( 198 JJ Farnh8m
Scott. January St11Yens
ll)MOVIE
t t 111 Tiie Pur5Ult OI 0 8 Coopei"'
(19811 Trett Williams Aot>en Duvall
-7:30 -
'1) GEHESCOTT
! HI FRAGGLE ROCK
-8:00-IJ (JJ AUCE II Q! KNtGHT R10ER
D TAXI D 9 HAAOCAST\..E &
MCCOflMICK
(!) TWILIGHT ZONE
Q)MOVIE . * * "Return To Fan1111y Island"
( 19781 Rtcatdo MontaJban. Adrienne
Ba1beau
Q)SOUOGOlO
Oi)HATURE
mi MASTERPIECE THEATRE
:HIMOVJE
• • "Trail 01 Tile Pink Panther'"
( 1982) Petw Sellers, David Nlve<l
10 1 S>MOVIE * II The Toy" (1982) RICh81d Pryor
Jacioe Gleason
@MOVIE
• • • • "TIMI Goolatlle<" ( 1972/
Marlon Brando, At Pac1no '
-8:30-
0 ONE DAY AT A TIME O TAXJ
lOUGR.AHl
-9:00-0 {).) THE JEFFERSONS
D (B MOVIE
"High SellOol U S.A " (Prermerel
Mlchael J Fox. Nancy McKeon
0 UNDERSEA WORLD Of
JACQUES COUSTEAU U ~MOY£
I II •,i, "NighthawkS" ( t981 I Sylvest11
Stallone, Biiiy Dee W1U111m1.
fJ WILD KIHGoo.,I
Q)SAUIT'E
&l> MASTERPIECE THEATRE
6i) fWlffAEl.
fC)MOVIE
11 •'it "Telelon" (19771 Cllatlet
Bront00. Lee Remtcll
l :ZJMOVIE •• * 'h "'Prtnce 01 The C1ly" ( 19811
Tr11t Wlltlams, Jerry Orbach
-t:30-o GOOOHIGKT, BEAHTOWH fJ SCHOOt.. BEAT
M0\'1E
t t '" "The Big Shot (19421 Hum·
phrey Bogart Jreoe Manning
-10:00-0 TAAPf>ER JOHN. M 0
UQ)NEWS fJ TliE WORLD TOMORROW e HARAYO
fJl) OIHNER AT JULIA'S
~ GAEA T PERFORMANCES
(HJ.MOVIE
t * 1) "The Sender 11982) Kathryn
Harrold Zel1ko tvanek
0 MOVIE • • * '1 Monteoegro (1981t Susan
Anspach Eiland Josee/Ison
S, GAU.AGHER: THE MAOOESTI
-10:30-u IT IS WRITTEN m ENTEATAJtMHT THIS WEEK
ti) MllMY SWAGQAAT
&;> SHE.AK PREVIEWS
e;) RACING FROM OAK TRE.E
-10:45 -0 SUNDAY S~TS PAGE
-11:00-6 0 0 lil ~·~NEWS O WALLSTREET~L
RE POAT G P£TtJI POflOf'F fD VIE'TftlAM. A TE1.EVISION
HISTORY
e;) WALLY GEOAGE r CI Al.BUM FLASH
tSl MOVIE
t Halloween Ill Season Of The
Wiich ' (1982) Tom Alkins. S1aoey
Nelk1n
OMOVJE
• •• "Ouesl For Fire" (1981)
EY«ell MoGlll, Rat Oewn ChonQ
-11'15-
6 C8SNEWS
-11:30-
0 SPORTS FlHAl. D PACESETTERS
O ABCNEWS
(!J sa5l<El & EBERT AT TME
MOVIES Q) JERRY FALWELL
(]) HARAY O
@)MOVIE • * ·~ "Tile ResorrecttOn 01 Zachary
Wheelof" p9711 Angle [)jci(lf\son,
~~an
u It 'Side 8y Slcle Tiit True Story
Of Tiit OtlnonO family' f 1982) Mwlt
Ottnond. Jotepll Boltomt ID 700CLU8
lCIMOVIE
• t 1.-\ "Eating Raoul" ( 111&2) Paul
81r1411, Mary W«OOOY
-11:3.5-
HISITCOM
-11t'5-DMOVE
t t 'fl "Side By Side: file True Story
OI The Osmond Famlly" I 1982) M111t
C>smood, Josec>n Bollomt
0 !:+OU YWOOO ClosruP
-11:50-&MOVIE
t t "Murder On Flight ~2" ( 19751
Ralph Bellamv. POiiy Bergen
-12:00-D 700CLU8
(f) IC)EP£N()EHT H£TWOAK
NEWS ti> CHIL.OAEH: CAIJQHT 1H THE ~ fD AH AMERICAN FAMILY ( Ol THE OTMER CAf'E'S COMmY
SHOWCASE
I ZJMOVIE
• • • "A Streetcat Named Oeslle"
11951) M811on Brando. VMen lelgll
-12:05-
HtMOVIE
• • GOln' SOYth" ( 1978) Jacx
Nicholson. Mary Sl9j111burg111
-12:15-
0 MOVIE • * • '40 Carats ( 19731 Liv
Ullm8/\n, Edward Albeft
-12:30-
(l l ACIHT BACK! WITH OAVIO•
HOROWITZ l MOVIE
t t 1~ 'The Eyes Hive 11'' (19741
Sinead Cusack. ()ennjs Watermen
(DTHELESSON
-12:40-
\SJ MOVIE * '.~ "H 0 T S r· ( 197~1 Susan Kiger.
Lisa London
-12:45-
OMOVIE * * * "Conan Tiie Barblflan" ( 19a2)
Arnold Schwanenegg«. Jimes Earl
Jones
-1:00-ffi DENNIS THE MENAC£
ti) INOEPE>«>E'NT N£TWORI(
NEWS 6D WESTBA00t< H0SPrT Al
IC)MOYIE • *'" "'The Kenrucky Fried MOVle""
(1977) Evan Kim. Masi« Bong Soo
Han
IOI MOVIE
• t 'T tail Of The Pinll Pan!ller"
119821 Peter Seliets David NIV«l.
-1:30-
1 •J MOVIE
t * Jongle Gents" f 1964) Bo"'Y
Boys. Pa11ielc O'Moore
I)}) ABC NEWS
~NEWS
-1:'5-
D AT ONE Wffi4
-2:00-
0 If) C8S HEWS HIOHTWATCH
IH1MOVIE
t * 11 Venom" (1982) NICOi Wlllt• amson. t< taus K1nsJ.1
Z MOVIE
• • lhe Honor Guard p981) Rod
Ste.get Oavod Huttman
-2.20-
S MOVIE • * '• Taps 119811 George C ~Ott. TllTI01hy Hutton
-2:30-C MOVIE * • , Thoma~ne 4 BusllrOd
I 1973) M&• Juhan V011el1a McGee
-2'45-
D NEWS
-3:00-
• I MOflNlffG ST1£TCH
OMOVIE * * ·~ Ealing Raoul' 119821 Paul
Banel. Mary Woronov
1.fJ FAl"Tli 20 ZIMOVIE
-3:30-
*•II ·1omo11ow' (19721 Robert
Ovvll Clo• Bellin
-3:3.S-ftil MOYIE * t 1h "I. The Jury" f 1982)Jirmande
AUlnte. !Wblft C1ttera 1
-4:00-
TOP O' THE MOANNG
-4.15-
CJMOVIE
• • • "I Walle Up Soreammg"
( 194 II Beu~ Grable, Vlcl0< Mature. -•:30-BULLWN<LE
0MOYIE
• • • • 'The Godla1her' ( 1972}
Mlflon Br1ndo, Al PIClllO
-4:45-
$1 GALLAGHER: me MAOOESTI
CHANNEL LISTINGS
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Cill 11.CST IABCI
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t rWORI NY N Y
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t IESPNI
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50c off adult ticket with ad
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MIW NODUCTI PAYIJOM. .... 11
..., .... ).A ......... c:.e.w.. ... .. ~ ..... ,, .. '""""
Duck's Breath
Wacky comedy tr9upe on radio
By FRED ROTHENBERG
OUloe~"-
NEWj RK -Did y~u know that
critic Mel Egypt, get.a h1a cl.nema verite
mixed up. lie paMed "Black StallJM"
becau.e lt wun't another "Rocky"
aequel. explore eriwether Lewis and Wil-
ham Clark, paddling tlirouah the
Mid we11t, d18covered that the Ind1ana in
lowa were already a1n.gjng open?
Good thing, LOO. aocordJ.na to the
Duck'• Breath Mystery Theater, a
wacky oornedy c.roupe -the aria.a
heard from one side of the river were
the only way Lewis and Clark could
distinguish betw• Iowa and Ne-
braska.
Duck'• Breath 1a the collec:tive
lunacy of five UnJveralty of Iowa
sraduates -Jim Turner. Merle
Ketaler, Bill Allard. Leon Martell and
Dan Coffey -who bepn working
iopther In 197~ u a college stage
troupe. The group name "just popped
into my head," said Kamer. "I\ IOrt of
flt.a the group: pompoua and silly at the
same tlme_ ••
·It seems fitting to recount th.I.a piece or revisionist history today on the real
Columbus Day, which is not to be
confused wlth the observance two days
ago whose sole purpoee was to elongate
the weekend.
Although they're now baaed tn San
Francisco, the group memben -all
from small towns -feel their rural
root.a make them d.iat.inctive from moat
comedy troupes baaed in Los Angeles.
Chicago and New Yotl.
"A3 a group. we have no politic.al
point of view." said C.Offey. "We're not
all anti-nuclear. We all don't hate
Reagan."
Playing fast and Jooee with historical
dates is just the kind. of social absurdity
that appeals to Duck's Breath, a cross-
betw.een "Saturday Night Live" and
Monty Python. Since 1980, some of the
group's routines have been heard on
National Public Radio's "All Things
Considered."
And now. thanks to a $11 ,900 grant
from NPR's satellite development
fund. more Duck's Breath bits can be
heard daily on 150 public radio stations.
These sketches are called Duck's
Breath Home Made Radio -"a minute
and a half of radio comedy so bold, so
daring. you'd sware it's 90 seconds
long."
"We're .all hiclu at heart," aaid
Kessler. "We're a bunch of rural boys
with urban pret.enaions. We make fun
of attitudes -yours. mine. every-
body's. We think about our lives
growing up. We're not interested in
jokes about cocaine or political humor.
We're wary people. but we're not
trendy or hip."
For example, host Richard Att.aboy
takes listeners on frequent trips under
the evolutionary ladder. He'a lboked at
lint and done a cl.aaaic investigation of
sponges. Att.aboy revealed that sponges
were not fish, but "rectangular. bright-
ly pastel species that can be found
under kHchen sinks."
Kessler's Ian Shoales, oft.en heard on
"All Thing.s Considered." is a sneerinl
commentator who has a broad acope of
snlde opinions that apply to any and all
situations. "That's the whole point,"
said Keesler. ''This guy i.a given time on
the radio to expreta himself, and his
opinion is as worthwhile as anybody
else's."
Shoals is outraged that America bas
a national drink, Coca-Cola, but doesn't
see fit to also have a national smell or a
national sight. He doesn't like "Hill
Street Blues," which he dismia8es as
"soap opera for liberala."
One Duck's Breath character, Mr.
Science, has no background in aclenoe.
He believes the American space pro-
gram is a hoax, mere re-creations
st.aged JI a warehouse by the Army.
Another character, perplexed movie
Besides radio spots, Duck's Breath
wants to get into television, both as
writers and performers.
TDDAT'S CIDlllDID PVllLI
ACROSS S1a11· Stele" 37 Moving 112 Cuscomary
abbr abbr 1ruc« 113 Arm oone
1 Has status 81 Exhibited 153 Bushy 39 Propel l 16 Assass•·
6 Cloakroom 8d Provided clump " 1 Cry ol pain nates
otem that 155 Ooze "3 C-0ncern1ng 118 Helm
10 lnv11e11ons 86 Sticky stuff 156 Sea eagle •5 "'City of POSiltOn
1• Ampho-87 Parsonage 157 Hadrian hght' 12~ theater 89 Desk ugnts 159 Modern11t 47 English
19 Solum 90 Size 01 shot 161 Tired ·eer 122 Comoan·
20 Spanosn 1ar 9 1 Meantngluf 163 Tumero<: •9 Footoall •Ol'IS
21 Mine 9• Hawaiian 164 For 11<ample tally at>«>r 12• Ob1a1n
entrance bird 165 Lamb's cry 50 Tiny rodenl 125 S.cs tree
22 Apportion 95 Swamp 166Complele 52 Digraph 127 Allach
24 Wire service 96 Mercury thoughts 53 Wheel track 2 words
25 At1ernoon ant1septocs 169 Sturdy tree 55 Girl's name 128 Gam&s of
oar1y 98 8Mr 171 NaYal boat 58 Fll(ftOry competo11on
26 Japa~e Sweoosh 172 Booe again 60 SIOw letco~ t29 VogOf
28 MlmlC 99 Re1urn 174 Always 61 Baby 132 Ch1nffe
29 Physician 2 words 175 Small pie carro19e ~anmen1
abbr 102 eeoy1on11n 176 Sleep 62 8111tdlru1t 134 tnlOfmal
30 Obtain god sounds 63 College greetong
32 Ly11c muse 104 Trademark 178 "Pear· $Ub19Cl 136 Guide
34 Conclude 105 ~ Ch1415e shaped'" 64 As lar u 131 Obtecl 01
35 Fasteners t08 Komono sound a 6 5 FIOCk attack
37 By way ol sash 17.9J•v-tenders 138 Tavern
JS Oklahoma 109 Time period Catrl• 66 Rubblah 139 Jewel
ctty ebbr 180 Lyric poems spreadet , 140 F0tmetly
40 Thll g irt 110 tnjeetlon 181 Glldealong 68 Oratpauae prellx
4 1 Alleged hazard 69 Makes 142 "Dogwood
lorce 2 worda DOWN lawful State"':
42 Thus 113 Eleva10t 70 Sh0t1 jKkel abbr
44 Parking direction 1 Snow 7 1 lntec1ton 143 Tibetan
area 114 -ccxi. remon• 1" W•9')0nl gazelle
45 Dips IOI 115 Lerge stone 2 Mo(lndln 76 French 145 lrlsh ...
gold I t7 Extsta dye article god
46 Cubic t 19 Fruit drink• 3 Seine 80 Hebr-146 R-rvellon
measurv 120 Pronoun 4 l eg )otnt letter dwelling
48 M otet 121 Class. abbr S Heedlinlfa 81 Hooded 147 Petty
51 Frustrate 122 Ojlbw1y 8 Argues Jeck et quarrels
53 Scopi ~rel order 7 Hodge· 82 Steamlh1P 149 Sllura1es
~ Bentu 123 Architect podge eobr 151 lntroduc-
langu8ije 126 Sm8f1ed 8 High 83 Sluggard 11on. lor
56 Theology 128 Coerte mountain 85 Iron symbol shor1
degree cloths 9 Casaette 88 WOO<len pail 154 Metal weste
57 Policeman. 130 Meadow-holder 89 Varnish 157 Speed
slang land 10 "Coml>Os' 1ng1ed11n1 9ontest
59 One oranv 131 Alphabet t 1 C.rp·llke 92 ,..ncHlflt ttme 158 Leningrad's
60 Biryond character ll1h 93 PromtH rtver
pretlx 133 Ancient 12 Pla1e 95 Boat dock 160 Cottego
61 Averls Areblln 13 Fiiching 97 Maidens degree
65 Poison measure t4 Make alang ebb<
symbol 134 Westward 1ultable • 99 Wood 161 b lsted
6 7 Chrt11ten1 -1 15 Tears measure 162 Jerk
72 Bridal 135 River Island 16 Night before 100 HautboY t65 Coat
"'51\0Wet"' 138 Marsh bird 17 Nickel 101 BeSlde con111nlf
73Jep•-131) Sllcilum 1ymbOI 103 Encourages 167 MasculiM
drama 14t Alive 18 Appending 10.c Size ol shot mckname
7" Exe1amatton 14.C Otssolves 19 Storms 105 Naval 168 Bounder
75 Go by boll 1.ce Browns 1n 23 Rub out potJoe 1bo1 170 Haw1111n
77 Sun deity the sun 27 Forward 106 Border limber tree
78 Abel's 149 Witness 31 Bind 107 Health 173 Ring
brother 150 Nero s 33 EAclemeuon reaorts dec11lon
?9 t love Latin "'eleven· 36 Sun god 111 Medtclf 177 NFL p0S1·
80 K~tone 152 "Creoce su111.c tton eoor
l!lt CLASSIFIED 8!0TION FOA ANSWERS
... 'I'
•
\ . -
Nowhere t o go ••
Daily Pilat
SUNDAY, OCT. 16, 1983
;
BUSINESS CS
STOCKS C6
.
..
Mesa's Brendan Hayne
an d CdM's Dave Anderson
) earn firs t-place hon ors
at Orange Co~nty meet. C3.
Orioles set to chirp
'' '•' ..
Baltimore on ve rge of ending Series
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Rich Dauer led the
charge of the light-hitting brigade Saturday. and the
Baltimore Orioles moved to within one game of
winning "a pot of gold" -thelr third World Series.
Dauer had been earning his pay with his glove,
not his bat, but in game four he came alive on offense.
He had two singles and a double, scored once and
drove three runs as the Orioles beat the Philadelphia
Phillies, 6-4.
That gave Baltimore a 3-1 lead in the
best-of-seven series heading into game five today.
The Orioles will ~nd left-hander Scott McGregor,
the loser of game one, against rookie right-hander
Charles Hudson of Rhlladelphia, the loser of game
two, today.
One more victory is needed for Baltimore to
celebrate. and Dauer noted that the Orioles this year
have done some of their most important winning on
the road.
''We haven't clinched anything at home yet."
said Dauer, who hit .235 during the season and had
only one hit in 26 post-season at-bats before breaking
loose Saturday. "We clinched the division in
Milwaukee and the pennant in Chicago. Win or lose
tomorrow (today), we'll come back ready to play."
There was another guy on the field who was
read y to play Saturday. That was Pete Rose, the
Phillies' first baseman, who was benched and
embarrassed Friday in game three. He was the heart
of the Philadelphia attack Saturday, and though it
"'!asn't enough. he wasn't ready to concede defeat.
. "All we've got to do is win three in-a row,"Rose
said. "We've got to stop thinking about it and start
doing it."
"I can hear the echo of some of the veterans
saying we were here before and lost," said winning
pitcher Storm Davis. ''I think we're going to bear
down tomorrow (today)."
The Orioles can make a bit of history themselves,
since only three teams have lost the first game and
then swept the next four. They were Boston in 191~
St. Louis in 1942 and the New York Mets in 1969.
The two teams erupted for 10 hits apiece
Saturday, the most by either club in the Series. And
Dauer led the way.
His only previous post-season hi~ been in,
Baltimore's vic1ocy ~~°""i.J.V~~ l-'!!!'~1ilu · ·-
trio witn Rick Dempeey and Todd Cruz, the 6-7-8
hitters in the Orioles' lineup, who had been dubbed
the Three Stooges by teammate Ken Singleton for
their inablli\)' to do anything right at the plate.
"I don'tconsider myself a hero," Dauer said. "We
won as a 25-man team. The fact that our 3-4-5 hitters
haven't been hitting has given u.s a chance to do
something."
Orange Coast College's Dave Col-
ema n ( 70) grabs Mesa r unning
back Greg Latham by the jersey
while linebacker J e ff Long co~
pletes tackle Saturday during
Pirates' 31-22 win. See page C2 ..
The Orioles ~on the Series in 1966 and 1970, but
they remember all too well that they led Pittsburgh
3-l in 1979 before losing in seven games.
That has happened only four other times in
Serles history. with Boston in 1903, Pittsburgh in
1925, th e New York Yankees in 1958 and Detroit in
1968 all coming back from 1-3 deficits.
Orioles' Manager Joe Altobelli was particularly
pleased with his bullpen, which went 20 post-season
innings without allowing a run until Philadelphia
scored with two out in the ninth, when pinch-hitter
Ozzie Virgil singled home pinch-runner Bob Dernier.
CdM gets jolt of reality before winning
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of IM o.ly .... ....,
Sometimes when things are going good,
so good that a win is taken for gra.n ted
~fore a game is played, there's an
excellent possibility 90meone is goinj~ to
come along and administered an u11ex ·
pec~ed jolt of reality.
they could handle from an undermanned,
but game Irvine squad before pulling out a
21-7 Sea View League victory before an
estimated crowd of 3,500 at Newport
Harbor High.
downa in the final nine minutes of the
fourth quarter in order to put the
Vaqueros (2-4, 0-3) away.
"l was expecting a letdown, although I
think Irvine played its best ball game of
theseaaon tonight," noted Holland. "They
we~ well-prepared and we were down
and continually made critical mistakes."
eight-play. 78-yard drive on the Sea
Kings' first posession that was culminated
by a four-yard misdirected bootleg by
Hatfield into the end zone for the acore.
Such an occurrence befell the Sea
Kings of Corona del Mar High Satw-day
night.
The Sea Kings, the No. l ranked team in
the CIF Central Conference ansi 'he Daily
Pilot's No. 4 top 10 representative, got all
"We did everything we've been
coaching.against for weeks. We weren't
poised . . . we just made every mistake
possible. I'm not happy at all," offered
CdM Coach Dave Holland.
Just to illustrate what dire straits the
Sea Ktngs (6-0 overall, 3-0 in league) were
in Saturday. they needed two touch-
The result being a surprising 7-7
deadlock after three quarters.
The contest started as if CdM was
mentally ready as junior quarterback
Bobby Hatfield engineered a flawless
Maybe it was the ease with which they
scored. though, that lulled the Sea Kings
into a flase sel'\lle of security, because
nothing went right for the offense
thereafter. Hatfield, for instance, who
finished with 188 yards passing, also
threw three costly interceptions. There
were also 105 yards in penalties.
(See CdM, Page C4)
Power ~oats begin dash to· Catalina
200-m il e roun d tr i p starts this mor n ing off Newport Pier
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
°""J ..... _..,. Wrtlef
TP..at low growl you hear in the harbor
starting about 9 a.m. today will be from the
exhausts of 27 giant offshore power boats
parading toward the ocean for the start of the
Bud Warmington International Grand Prix
. offshore pow~r boat races 9Cheduted at JO
a.m.
But that noise will be low key compared
to roar of the boats as they get W'lder way
from off the Newport Pier in the 200-mile
dash to south Laguna, back to Newport,
across the channel to Catalina Island, back
across the channel to Long Buch, dOW\) the
coast to Newport for another blast across the
channel to Catalina and return for the
checkered flag which will decide the
national championship in several classes.
The event was organized by 'Eud
Warmington, Newport Beach real estate
man to raise funds for Lhe American Cancer
Society.
Cooperating in organizing the national
points race was Betty Cook. two time world
championship driver who organized the
California Offshore Power Boat Racing
Association (COPBRA) for the specific
purpose of running the race under the
sanction of the American Power Boat
Association. It will be the first APBA race
held here since 1980.
Seven boats are entered in the open
Class I division, several of which will be
racing for the coveted Hannsworth Trophy,
symbolic of the European championship.
Top contenders in the open claaa are
Michelob Light, a 38-foot Cougar dr1ven by
Tom Gentry who is leading in the national
points race with 1,995. But expected to take
the checkered flag will be the new 50-foot
Cougar, Popeyes, driven by Al Copeland of
Florida. The boat is powereed by four
MerCruiser engines capable of generating
2,800 horsepower with speeds up to 120 mph.
Also in the running will be Cook who
will be driving her 40-foot Formula Oat.
Cook is not in the running in this year's
points race. Betty Cook
Trojans bedevile d
in 3 4 -1 4 trouiicing
Titans stun
San Jose S t .
Bruins rushpast WSU
By ROGER CARLSON
OI , ... OellJ -It.II -
LOS ANGELE.5 -The Uni
versity of Southern Califomin ·
showcased its proud Olympic
Games tradition at halftime Sat-
urday afternoon to highlight
their Homecoming -but un-
fortunately that was the onl:y
thing the Trojans could boas•t
about as Ariz.ona State's Sun
Devils humiliated USC on the
• field. 34-14, before ~8.664 at the
Collaeunt In Pac-10 football ae-
t.ion.
There was no suspense, no big
moment, no nothin g for the Tro-
)llJlS, who fe1:i behind by a 27-0
margin at halftime, then watched
the Sun Devils turn an 80-yard
touchdown play on the first play_
in the third period to virtually
seal the victory.
"We couldn't stop 'em and we
couldn't move the football.'' said
an obviously frustrated and un-
happy USC Coach Ted Tollner.
"I don't know where we go
Crom here, we just have to stay
together."
SAN JOSE (AP) -Run-
ning baclu Roy Lewis and
Rick Calhoun each had 1-yard
touchdown · runs Saturday
night to lead Cal State Full-
erton to a 20-11 Pacific Cout
Athledc Amociation football
victory over San J oee State.
The win left the Titans, now
4-0 In league play, at the top of
thePCAA.
Fullenon led 10-0 at the half
after lnterceptln1 three
Spartan p1111e1 and holdina
San Joee to 39 yarda n.aahJ.nc.
UCLA finds running game in 24-14 win
PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) -
The defending Pacific-10 Con-
ference and Rose Bowl champion
UCLA Bruins got their rushing
attack going. among other things,
in the third quarter Saturday.
And th.at, according to Coach
Terry Donahue of the Bruina, was
the key as hi.a team overcame
error-prone Washington State,
24-14.
"The third quarter waa the belt
quarter of the year for ua.''
Donahue said. "A lot of players
made big plays for ua.
"Our running game came
together, and we were able to
sprinkle a few balls around."
Tailback Danny Andrews
scored on runs of four and one
yards in the third period to give
the Bruins a 17 -7 lead. Quar-
terback Rick Neuheisel connected
with tight end Paul Bergmann on
a two-yard 1.<>uchdown pass mo-
ments after the fourth quarter
began to make the acore 24-7.
•iAt halftime our team was very
lethargic because we were down
7-3, but I told them we were
fortunate to be only down 7-3,"
Donahue sald. "It waa a aood
thing for ua, oomtna at a difflcult
time of the 1eaaOn."
Cardiac
Rains host
Falcons
By CURT SEEDEN
Oflloel>ellJ .........
Entering week seven of the
National Football League season.
Rams Coach John Robl.naon ad-
mits. "Now we have to start
thinking like winners."
Think all they want, but the
Rams -at least lately -haven't
been able to determine if they're
winners or loeers until the final
play of the game.
Last week, you might recall, it
took a blocked field goal attempt
by Ivory Sully to preeerve the
Rams' 10-7 victory over San
Franci8co. In all, the Rams have
have had four games decided on
the final play.
Today (1 o'clock), the Rams
entertain the Atlanta Falcons at
Anaheim Stadium in a contest
which figures to be just as cloee as
the first six of the aeason. The
Rams; 4-2 and tied with New
Orleans and San Franci.ICx> for the
West lead, boast the No. 1 run-
ning back in the NFL in rookie
Eric Dickenon.
Atlanta counters with the No. 2
rusher in the league. veteran Wil-
liam Andrews.
Dickeraon hM piled up 787
yards in six games and could
produce the best aea.eon by a run-
ner in NFL hi.story. He's averag-
ing 131.6 yards per game and is
one of the key reasons behind the
Rams' resurgence.
"Each week he's gotten better,",
says Robinson of the Rams' No. 1
draft pick out of SMU. "He found
out in the first three .games that
he had to adjust or his fumbles
were going to cost the Rams vic-
tories. Look what he's done. He
hasn't fumbled in three games."
The Rams u a team, in fact.
haven't fumbled or bumbled their
way through any game this
seaaon.
"I'm getting ready to believe
we're going to atop people," Rob-
iNon says. "When teeml beain -
movinC on ua. rm l1Ar11nC to
think, 'Hey. we're Finl co do tome\hina to stop thl.t.'"
U.S ., Japan
showdown set
For the record, Tollner'• 2-3-1
Trojans go to South Bend next
where Notre Dame awaits.
USC had exactly two momenta
in the first half -a 42-yard pus
from Sean Saliabury to Timmie
Ware in ita fint aerles, and Duane
Bickett'• 13-yard sack of Ariz.on.a
State quarterback Todd Hons late
In the second ~uarter.
Dickerson set to test Sports Illustrated jinx
LONG BEACH (AP) -Na-
Uonal women 'a volleyball te811l8
from Japan and the United States
scored convincing victories Saiur-
clay night to tet up a showdown
for the champlorwhip of the Blg
Four Challenge Tournament at
the Lona Beach Arena
Japan, .eeded leCOl"ld in lhe
three-day , rou nd-robl n
pre-Olympic event, topped
third-.eeded Cuba, 15-12, 15-12,
16-5 before the U.S . ovef-
whelmed four\h«eded South
Kora. l~ .... 16-8, 16-5.
'
The reward. A 49-yard field
goal "'Y wu low, wide and short.
And alter the uck, Hona tt-
aponded by hlttina targe\a for 14
and t5 yards and l>waine Wright
duhed 13 yards on the next thrff
plays to 1et up Lull Zendejas for a
22·yard field goal.
The S u1' Devils, who rolled up
Ike ASU, Pa1e C•)
•
Nobody came ln on the noon balloon
from Saskatoon and uked me but ...
•We will shortly learn how eood Rama'
runnlnl back Erk Dickerson la. at leut how
lucky he LI -his picture la on the c:qver of the
current edJUon of Sparta Wuatnted.
• Dw1na tho !Mt Monday ntcht football
epttode. thla ldmu.t put a :swatch on the
MC\lon from the tnatant the watmapped
J.mtil It wu blown dead ... There were 14
minute., 47 eecondl of actual action In the
telecaat whJch wt three houn. nine mlnutea.
•IC the Bonon &He were it.ill ln the
National Le.,ue and won the pennant and
'
SPORTS COLUM~ST
BUD
TUCKER
the Balttmon Oriolel wen chunplona of the
American ~. would we have a World
Ser'la between the Blrdl and th• Beea?
•When Chi.de Studley WM rwned
lni.rtm coech of the H6uaton OOera the other
day, he aid hJa Job Mt"Urlty depended on . I •
wtnn1ne ..• Now there II a man wttb hia
ftnaer on the pulle of the lituadon.
• But COllCh1.na the wont llt\19 '*U.11 in
Texaa la not a Job ... It ta a m\tenct.
• Hpwarcf Co.ll said he la thl.nk.tng
about Nt1rlnc and people all over the
couniry started coUectJna qnenu. on
petitlonl. •
• Reelly, M..-cua Dupne'1 ..,exbn......,_. at
Oklahoma ahould not be all that compUcec.d.
•Now th.at the Anaeb md Dadfm'a
have blown U, It behocMI the 8erftl lrid U..
Raiden to pve ua a Fnieway Su.-Bowl
• Perhape it la juat .. well the Kinla' (f TtJCltER, P.,. •al
4
t
. .
a Orange Coast OAfLY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
SPORTS BREAK
Dillon passes 49ers
past Pacific, 28· l 6
From AP dl1patcl1e1
ST<X:KTON -Quarterback ,...
Todd Dillon threw for two touchdowns ~
and ran for a third'1o..lead Long Beach
State t<>a 28-16 victory over the University of the
Pacilic in Pacific Coast Athletic Association
football Saturday night.
Dillon completed seven of 16 pass attempts for
98 yards and two interceptions. Lenn:t Montgom-
ery rushed for 144 yards on 20 carries for Long
Beach and Tim Golden returned a punt 61 yards
for another toue?fdown.
Long Beach also had touchdowns on a 37-yard
~from Dillon to Billy Ervin and on a four-yard
pass from Dillon to Alfred Rowe.
Running back Kirby Warren had 166 yards in
32 carries for Pacific, which had a total of 458 yards
total offense, outgaining Long Beach by 146 ya.rps.
]'he vict.Ory gave Long Beach a 5-1 record
overall and a 1-1 record in the conference.
Quote or the d ay
K&nsas State's Davtd Bo1ae. on why he
changed hi.a major from vetemary medicine
to petroleum geology: "I didn't want any
telephone calls at 4 a.m . from people saying:
'Fifi is throwing up.' "
Tie keeps Kings winless
INGLEWOOD -Ivan Boldirev ~·
sc.'Ored his second unassisted goal of the '
game with 31 seconds remaining in
regulation Sattµ'day night to give the
Detroit Red Wings a 3-3 tie with the Los Angeles
Kings in a battle of winless National Hockey
League teams.
The Kings had taken a 3-2 advantage when
Charlie Simmer knocked in a rebound with 29-
seconds to go in the second period.
Lakers fall to Warriors
OAKLAND -Purvis Short m
scored seven points in the final period
and finished with 19 for the Golden
State Warriors as they beat the Los . .
Angeles Lakers, 127-121, in a National BasketbaU
Association exhibition game Saturcfay night.
OCC shocks Mesa:, 31-22
Annicharico throws for 366 yards, but Bu cs win
U.S., Europe tied at Ryder Cup
The heavily-favored United n
Staie., which has won 20 of the
previous 24 Ryder Cup matches and
Ued another. was even wlth Europe,
8-8, after the eecond day of play at Palm Beach
Gardena, Fla1 Wl.nning for the 0 .S. were the teams
of Tom Watson and Bob Glider and Cral1 Stadler
and Lanny W8dkln1 ... Don January snatched the
lead from second-day leader Arnold Palmer with
a third-round 68 to go up b)' three strokes at a
seniors' tournament In Melbourne, Fla. Palmer
feU to four shots off the pace, one behind •
runner-up Gene Littler.
Epp~rly sets dragster mark!
Unheralded Top Fuel dragater •
driver Rocky Epperly shared the
spotlight with Gary Beck Saturday as
qualifying concluded for today's 19th
annual National Hot Rod As8ociation Winston
World Fin.ala at Orange County International
Raceway in Irvine.
Epperly, of Lynwood, established a new
dragater speed record of 257 .14 miles per hour. The
former record was 256.41 mph, set in 1982 by Mark
Oswald of Cincinnati.
i Epperly qualified sixth in the 16-car field
with an elapsed time of 5.66 seconds.
Today's sports
on TV, radio
TELEVISION
10 a .m. (2) ,_NFL FOOTBALL-San Francisco
at New Orleans. (56) -COLLEGE FOOTBALL -
Notre Dame af '2\rm y (taped).
11:30 p.m. (7) -GOLF -Final round coverage
in the 25th Ryder Cup from Palm Beach Gardena,
Fla.
l p.m . (4) -NFL FOOTBALL -Raiders at
Seattle.
1:30 (7) -BASEBALL -World Series:
Baltimore at Philadelphia.
3 p.m. (2) -COLLEGE FOOTBALL.,_ Arizona
State at USC (taped).
RADIO
NFL Football -San Diego a t New England, 9:45
a .m., KNWZ (1190); Raiders at Seattle, 1 p.m., KRLA
(1110); Atlanta at Rams, 1 p.m ., KMPC (710).
Baseball -World Series: .Baltimore at Philadelphia,
l:ZO p.m., KNX (1070). ExhiSltion .Basketball -
Seattle at Laken, 7:~0 p.m., KLAC (570).
... ~ By JIM CARNETT ~ tt-lal I~ Ille D911y '11ol
~
2-3 season record.
Mesa, now 3-2. went into the contest ranked 10th
in the Southland. The Olympians, whose motto this
season has been "It's in the Air," are led by perhaps
the finest quarterback in community college football
-sophomore Trent Annich!ifico. Annicharico leads
the nation with 1,678 passing yards and 14
~ When Orange Coast College's star runntng back "
-, Kevin Bradley went down with an ankle injury in the ~ first period Saturday afternoon, things didn't look
$ good for Coach Dick Tucker's OCC football team.
"' Bradley has been the Pirates' big offensive ~ weapon this year. He had rushed for 193 yards_ in the
~ previous two games, and his absence didn't bode well = for the Bucs. :, "OUr kids could have ·given up when they saw i Kevin go down, but they didn't," the DCC coach said.
~ "Instead, they turned in one of the guttiest
~ perfonnances I've ever been amiociated with."
~ What Tucker's Pirates did was knock off
~ heavily-favored San Diego Mesa. 31-22, at Orange
,., Coast. The win was a significant one because it was
the South Coast Conference opener for both squads
and was OCC's second in a row, giving the Pirates a
Sweazy leads
Hor.nets past
Rustlers, .41-7
ByCURTSEEDEN
Of"'"' o:it,-. ,...,
Somebody at Cal S tate Fullerton had the idea
Damon Sweazy would make a good wide receiver.
But Sweazy, a runrung back at heart. had other ideas
-1.Jke splitung Cal State Fullerton.
The Tit.ans' 1058 was Fullerton College's gain.
Saturday night at Orange Coast College, Sweazy, the
Conner El Toro High standout, ran for two
touchdowns and caught a 34 -yard TD pass to lead
·opportunistic Fullerton to an easy 41-7 Vlctory c"1'er
Golden West College in the South Coast Conference
football opener before about 2,200 fans.
The Hornets. the pre-season favorites to win the
SCC crown, recovered five of six Golden West
fumbles and intercepted a pass to hand the Rustlers
their second straight lopsided defeat.
Fullerton, now 5-0, broke open a 7-7 tie with 4:43
remaining in the first half on a 5-yard Sweazy TD
run. Golden West promptly turned over the ball
when punter Mike Pearlman fumbled a snap on the
next series of dowr.s, and four plays later Fullerton
quarterback Gary Ruhlen hit Matt Palmer for a
12-yard TD pass with 51 seconds left.
It could have been ~orse. On the ensuing
kickoff, Golden West's John Steiniger fumbled
giving Fullerton a first and goal at the Rustler 7 with
37 seconds left in the half. The Hornets, however,
decided to settle for a 17-yard field goal attempt by
Rick Frank -which was blocked by Fernando
Griffiths.
touchdowns in just five games.
Annicharico hit 25 of 55 passes for 366 yards and
two touchdowns. The Pirates intercepted him three
times.
While Annicharico was doing "his thing" in the
air, the Pirate defense was masterfully d9ing "its
thing" the ground. OCC has one of the best defen.seS
against the rush in the state this year, allowing just
27.8 yards per game on the ground.
Mesa was held to minus 30 yards rushing on 22
carries. ruuucharico was sacked four times, and
received heavy pressure all game.
Trailing 10-3 late in the second period, OCC
drove 65 yards ·on five plays for its first score.
Freshman quarterback David Goodin~ capped the
drive with a 20-yard scoring aerial to wide receiver
Gary Satterfield and Satterfield hauled in the pass at
the 10, making a nifty move to get past a defensive
back and into the end 1.0ne.
OCC took the second half kickoff and marched
73 yards in nine plays for the score. John Castaneda,
filling in for the injured Bradley, culminated the _
drive with a o~e-yard dive for the score.
OCC went up 24-10 on its very next possession.
Tim Hyer recovered a bobbled punt snap at the Mesa
18 to set up the TD and seven plays later Castaneda
slammed in from the one
OCC 31, SO Mesa 22
Scor• bV Ou•l"len
S.n Olevo ~H 0 10 6 t..-72 0.enge Cou t 0 10 14 1-ll
SOM-H<11tlng1 27 FG
OCC-GrH ne ll FG
SOM-Latllam I run !Hn •
.ng1 kick)
OCC-S.llorllttd 10 ou 1 trom
melt<lt INOIVIOUAL STATISTICS
llvllllflt SOM-Latham. t· U, .Jol\nM>ll,
1·2 4Mlcntrlco, IO-f0<·mlnut·73 OCC-Cauenedt. 11·61,
~r.altr\, lO·SS. Down•, 1·Sl. Brown. 6·?4. Goocil11e, I· 16. Crar\Olll,
4· ll, 8rtdltv, 1·J
Pt nine
SOM-A.,,,ICtlerlCo 7S· SS ), GOOdlnt (Grttne luck)
OCC-Cn te neoa
(Greene klo l
OCC-Cu ta nt ae (Greene kic k)
run 346
run
SOM-GaHoro 11 oau trom Annlcr>t rlco loan lell.O)
OCC--O'Nen • DU I from GOOdlne <GrMn• klck)
SOM.-Rowe 21 pan from
Annltllerlco <o•u ltlled)
Allenot nct -p oo ''"I· -I
WARREN MILLER LIVE!
OCC-GOOdlM, • 14·). 2t
llKttvtfle SOM-Rowe. 10· 19S, Geltord,
6· IH Hervev. J-7S. LAlham. l ·lor mlnui· 1 WelCl'I, 2· 10. Carroll.
1·9
OCC-S.ll~Mtlcl, 2·?9, O'Mtll,
1·1. Ce111neoe, 1·1, Oown•.
1·for ·mlnu•·4. 8 r eo11y,
l·for·mlnu1·6
SHARK FISHING
3 TRIPS DAILY
140 PER PERSON
(6 peraon maximum)
• e am -11 am
• 1 pm -8 pm
•I pm -1 am
41' 8PORTFl8HER
HLBOA DEEP SEA
FIStlNG CHARTERS BALBOA (714) 675-2960 It was all downhill after that for Golden West.
"We played pretty dam good in the first haU but
that dropped snap on the punt really hurt.'' said
Golden West Coach Ray Shackleford. "We just
played a better football team. I really don't think it
was as bad as the score indicates." Od lO Nl'#l'OllT HACH (0 C C I
ll'ue.n.t 41, G4lldefl West 7 6 oo & e JO om
k«• llv ~,,.,.. s-n ; G•rtnd, Hor·ml11U1·). Miiier ..... 1 AIUSITOll 8~ ""°I
EDISON
HIGH SCHOOL
Fullerton 1 u 13 7-41 7·4, Colleton, 3·19; Mouw, .... 7 llOlmllllOll 1CSUN SI 1Jf1 I
GOlotn We" o 1 o <>-1 1 ·for m In u 1 • I 7 , Run 1 t n, 6 1~ & e JO pm
F-SwHrv l4 pau trom .4·10<·mlnu1· IO. ""' 1 UIS AllG(US fSllnne .\uCl 1 II~ tF'rt n" "ICk ) GWC-Fl1chbtck. 70•S3; a 00 pm
GWC-<>r• 74 otu from Jo11n1on. 1·24, Slmown, 1·1, Ht lnlt, Nw ._. INl'lA *>ltlCA 1c-""° 1
presents
lOK RUN SAJ!CTIONEP
Ht inlf (0 ?8n kick) 1· I Gragnano, 4·1or·mlnu1·J9 800 om
F'-SwMIY S '"" (F'rt nk klCkl Ptu.!ne N0t .. 10 ll(OOflOO RACH (leoonoo '4 SI F'-.Paf~ 11 P4111 from F-Rulllen, 13·24· 1, 119, 111~ & 8 )() prn
lluhltn (Frtnll kick ) Mouw, 2·3·0. 60. *" 11-17 ~ (CMc. Aoio 1
FOR ACADEMIC EXCELLEN.CE
F-Swttzv 4 run (Fri nk kick I GWC-Htlnlt . 7·9 o. 16, ftOO om
F'-Frt nl< 31 FG Greimano. 7·11·1. SS ""' 11 U111Q llACH (Tetr.IU in 1
F-F rt nk 11 F'G ll~lfte 6 oo & a lO om
F-Lewl1 Sf oeu from Mo<.w F--<lincv, 4·11, P11mer, 4 JI, tFrt tlll kk l<) Wt rMr. ?·l9;Robl111on. 1·3. Swtuv. TtOlll ,.,,_ " Ide! ,,..., .. OUl>fll
""•ndance -2.200 (1111· >-34,Guv.1·12,Gerano, 1·1,Ltwli, (2ll1 •80J?l2111lit>t1,,,,,M10 lolUIWIAalnc'ls meled) If 1·S9 -bOk o111C:eS 111 p11o1-e 12131 J181e.31 !lit
8 · S d Sponaored a.m. -on ay ay .&. .
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS GWC-OrY. 6 s.t. 8owte1, ._' _ _,, _ _,_.,..,_.., ________ _.
11v.,.,. l ·74, Parrlin, 2·77, MtcOon•ld, 1· 12.
F-S•••rv • •<. o,. s 1t Ptt....,P,. JOl'ln•on. 1 .. 6 Lootl t·I
October 23, 1983 A•'NO Ml L
COURSE: Alon)( t he hl'Jlh 11n .1'ph.1lt '11rt.1Le ,tJrt J t "'·orlJ IJmou ..... Huntinfron B"J"h l'i•·r rltn alono 1.. 1. I 1 J J . I' . I I h ' ... ... ... , ,., 111~l· tra1 .Hll a<.:e:cs!> rod . turn Jro1111 . rl t urn 111 Ill cir 1111' lour,.-"'di he rn Jtrnl·J hY">l'Vl'fJ rJcc officiah , llo cJ:>y tu fo llow anJ IJ~t
• •
FEE: l'rc ·Rq~1 ~t rat111n··· SH llO, 111d11.Jrn)( T ... h 11 1 l .11~· R"K"tr.ition ··· 'S 10 00
LATE REGISTRATION: At race i.11c IP1l·r) lrom (, \II 111 .7 .\0 .i m for S JO 00
SE~DED START: Zones 5 through 10 . 5 minute miler -zone 'i. 6 minute milers = zone 6 etc .. through 7 R 9 Io Please hnc up in your appropriate ume zone ' • ' • 1
DIVISIONS: 10 &. under, 11 -13, 14·17, 11<·24, 2'i·29, 30·34, 3'i·39, 40·44, 45·49, 50·54, 55-'i9, 60-plus fo r male anJ female
AWARDS: W:nchcs, de sk sets, trophies, mc:Jali.
·································· · ···································· f.NTR Y f()RM ·······································································-·
Check Payabl~: Academic Booster Club
Mail To: Doug Sm ith, 20861 Q uetns Park Lane, Huntington Buch, Ca. 92()46
Name ___ ~---~-~--City/Zip ----------
Phone...-( __ _ -------------Su M 0 F 0 Age ___ T-Shirt Siu: S D M 0 L D XL 0
IMPORTANT! LEGAL WAIVER MU T BE COMPLETED ANO SIGNED
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~ange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983 ca .
Henson nosed out;
Anderson, Hayne
wjn at county meet
TUCKER • • •
From Page C1
radio station cannot be he&rji more
than four bloclu from the Forum.
., •For all of the good work and
9cientific findings of Doctors
~ Jobe and Paul Bauer. the
fact r~ the human arm I.a not
conslplcted to throw a baseball 90
College f o~tball scores
WIST Cent Araen&u 2•, s Atll.anw• 21
ArlrOftl St )4, Soulllltn Cal 1• E Teaa& SI 2•. Mowaro Pavne 0
UCLA 2•, Wunlne1on SI t• MerOlne 40, SWe&t.,11, T-2• ~u<rv 4 , Colo<eclo COi It Wa&lllnQIOll 12. Slt ntord U NE Ol<ia-)1, Evaneat 6 California o. Oreoon SI " ~ -c I I u Cal Sl•le FulierlOll 10, S.n JOH NW Oklalloma -· ""· en re
St 11 73 LOllO e.acll St 21, Peclflc 10 SW Tun SI 74. S.m ~OU&lon SI
CS Nortnrldlll ... Cal POIV·SLO IO SW Ol<llllOml 2S, SE Ol<lellOma t
Doane 20, Ma&tlflll& 14 Ou~ 20. Uoper towa 0
E. tlllnoh 1), N l11w• O E••n&vllle )7, veio.raiao 1)
SOUTH
Autl;;rn 31, ~GI• Tacll 13
C1-m&0n >I. OW.. l l
FIQ(IOI SI Q , Clne:lnnatl 17
Furman 17, W Carollfla 11
Georel• 10, vanoert>tn n Kentucky 21. LSU I)
•AST
P91l!" St 17, Svr.cuM 6
Noire O.me C2, Army O
Nevv 17. Prlftc:eton 2'
Bo4ton u 2•. 11'*'9 1~ 12
8 row11 U, C«-)
C01um411a 21, Yale II
Dvlmoutll 29, M.,-.arO 12
E. CarOllN 24, T.,.,. 1l
MOIY Cron 20, Connecticut 16
MauaclluMlt& 11. Maine 7
New Meme>tlllre 52. LeMlh n
Ptn11 1t, Lal•velle 20
BY RICHARD DUNN
........... Delly..... •
finisher in the heat, as Newport ph
f m . easily won with 44 points, l.nish-•The worst thing the Chi-
21 Paclfk, Ore 37, WIMamell• IS Sul Ron SI )4, Tar .. IOll SI. 10 T UH· ArllnolOll 11. Lam•r 0 M&rvlano 36, Wake Forni 33
Miami, Fla. JI, Mlnlnl~ SI. 7
N, Carollna~2. N, Cerollne SI l• N. Tue& SI. 17, McN .. M $1, 10
NE LOUl&lane 41, NlcllOlll St. 27 Plttl butOll SS, Loul&vltt. 10
•Ucnmond 31, Cent. FIOrlOI 26
A controversial finish in the
girls' 2-A varsity heat highlighted
the Orange County Cross Country
Championships Saturday after·.
noon at Saddleback College, as
Newport Harbor High's Maggie
Henson (18:33.7) was nosed out
by Mis&on Viejo's Mavra Daly
(18:33.4).
ing -.head of Espefanza (56) and cago White Sox did wa:i betray the
Portl•nd St «. Mumboklt St 16 Texa• Lullllran l3, Prairie View Puo.t Souno so. Or.ffOll Tech 6
Secramen10 SI •7. Cel Lulh.,an 1• Rulo-n 2', COIOate 26 w. Vlr11tnla ll. Vlrelflla hell O
Alt>rlelll 21, UO.non Val. 0
Alfred 7, ~rl 7
aetllany,W.V•. 14. Tlllal o
810om&bur11 St n , Mlller&vllle St
"She (Henson) was leading, but
misjudged the finish line," said
Newport's girls coach Bob Van
Sickle. "She knew that she (Daly)
was -going to be her competition.
Maggie just thought the first flag
on the hurdle was the finish line."
Henson was the Sailors' top
Gauchos rally
for 10-7 win
Mi~ion Viejo (60). . • fat men of the universe.
. Newport placed two ~ther gtr!-9 _J •The significant question of
m. the top 10 -Julie Mon;ts the decade may we\). be: Doesn'~
(sixth in 19:37) and Buffy ~bb1tt Art Schlichter ever win a bet? (seve~th in 19:38). to spearhead •Just about everybody at the
the win. , . Country Music Association's
On the men a s1d~. CoronA del awards telecast was dressed like ~tar Hi~h's D~ve Andei;son. w~o Bum Phillips.
tied with Villa Pai:k s Kevin •Tommy Lasorda took the G~n for the best ~e of the job covering the World Series tor ~ruors, was slowed by illness the USA Today because the food in l~t two wee.ks, but ~ged ~ the press box is free ... and there is
wm the boys 3-A varsity heat an plenty of it.
15:48. •Add overrated coaches: No.
Costa Mesa's Brendan Hayne. 2 behind Miama Dolphins' Don
who won his race in the COsta Shula -Barry Switzer of Ok.la-
Mesa Invitational in 15:17 and homa, which makes both these
was third in Fountain Valley ln-guys qualified to someday coach
vitat1onal, ran away with the the New England Patriots.
first-place trophy in the boys' 4-A •With the run making a
varsity heat in 15:55, 11 seconds comeback in pro football, coaches
faster than his nearest com-need only to keep in mind that the
petitor. best offense is a good defense ... or
14
21
Sl. Marv'& 16, Sa n Francl&CO SI. 0
Simon Fta&er S2, E Oreeon n
W Oregon o. W. Wa&lllnolon 1
Llnlleld 30, Pee. Lulneran 27
Cen1. We&lllnoton 37, S Oreeon 1
ROCKIES
Orto0n 19, Arltone 10
Air Force 37, Tuu·Et Puo 25
Brlohtm Youn11 66. New Mulco
Utan 69, Wvomln11 14
Utell SI. 10, Bol&a SI 1
Nevade·Reno 31, Montana O
COiorado St 17, S.n Oleeo SI 15
Weber SI lt. ldallo 10
Fruno St. 31, Monlana St 12
Hawaii 23. NevaOe·La• VeeH 0
ldallo SI o. Norlh••llArll 2•
SOUTHWEST
8avior 13. Tuu A'M ll
OlllellOma 71, Oklt llOma St ?O Tuu l l, Arken&al l
To .. Teen 14, Rice 3
Mln ln lDOI 70, Te .. , Cnrl&llan 1
T ulu 39, llllnol\ St 25 SE Loul&len• 70. TtxH Soulnern
Angele> SI 26, Abl .. nt Cllrt•llan 20
Arkan\I• St 21, Louhlane Tecll 7
10
Ar~~""' Tec11 14. Henoe .. on S1
Au•lln Col 4S, MlllH D• 70
MIDWHT
,,!lllnol& 11, Ol11o St. 13
lnOlana 24, Mlcnlean St 12
Wllcon&ln W, Mln.,.&ol• 17
Mlctilgan JS, Norlllwetltrn 0
Iowa 31, Pur~ 1•
Nabra&Oa 34, Mln ourl 13
Kan&e& 31, Kan&e& St. 3
lowe SI n , ColoraOO 10
Bell SI. 17, Kent SI 13
s. Caroll11• St, 1t, DavlOlOll 1 s. Mlu lu lPOI 27. Mtmotll• Sl. 20
TenllfilM 41, Alabama ;u
Tn ·Chettenoooa 30, Cllao.I 9
Tul•M 17, SW Loul1l•na 15
Virginia 3', VMI 10 w. Kentucky 11, TenllfilM Tech
14
Bowllna Grffn 73, W. Mlclllaan 10 Indiana Sl. 24, Wlcnlle SI. m 0 Wiiiiam & ~ry 24, J ame&
~dl&On 21
Moran takes
cycle title
19
It
N Ullnol& )4, E Mlcllloan IS
S llllnol& 24. SW Mln ourl 6
ToleOo 10, Miami, Ol11o 9
Vou,.llown St , 41, Au•tln Peav
Adrian 1, Albion 3
Alma IS, Otlvtt 6
BalOwln·Wellace 1t, Mount Union
8el011 11. Chicago 1
Beml01I SI 1, Norlllarn SI , S 0 1
'&e1nan>t, Ken 30. Taoor 1
8e11111, Kan 2•. Ollawa. Ken l
Bla ck Hill• SI •4, S De·
kOla·SorallO 0 Buene Vl\le 1), Wiiiiam Penn 12
Cent towa 21, w aritiuro 1
Ce111 Mlu ourl ll, NE Miuourl 1l Ca. 31, Grinnell 0
C011Cordla, Moor 23, Betlltl,
Minn 1•
Oekola SI 21, Huron 0
Davion 4S, Ollvel Nararene 2
Akron 31, Morehead St. O
AP1>alaclllen St 21, Gar·
oner·WeOC> 11
8et11une·COOkmn 2•. Alabema SI
Kelly Moran was the
overall winner Saturday
night at the U.S. Na-
Car&0n·N1wman •2. Mall Miii o tional Motorcycle Racing Centre 31. Obe<lln 20 e Tenne•we sr 2•. Georel• Championships before
Sou1nern 1 an estimated crowd of EIOn 10, PreU>yleri.n •
Fnallevllle St 13, WlnllOll·Salem 9,000 at the Orange
13 F1or1oe A'M d , Aloanv, Ga o County Fairgrounds.
F1 v., ... sr 11. Alabama A&M Moran outfinished
29 Grembllno s1 ,., M.lu lu l1>1>I vei runner-up Mike Faria or
21 Richmond while-· 9ubb
Guittard u. llroowater,va 13 Ferrell of Whittier was Memc>Oen·SvO,,.Y 10, Wull a.
L.ff I third.
Hamo1on ln•t "· Norlotk St 12 Moran had 14 of a Jacklon SI. 31 , Sout111rn U 0
t.lvlnallone 11. Jc ~m1111 J possible l:j points, while
Dan Gasser kicked a 27-yard
field goal with 1:10 remaining in
the.game Saturday night to give
Saddleback Co l lege a
come-from-behind 10-7 victory
over Santa Ana in the Mission
Conference football opener on the
Gaucho field.
With 64 points, Corona del Mar is it the other way around?
finished first as a team in varsity •Suggested title for th.e
3-A heat. latest chapter in the book on the Newport Christian rolls Marvvllle 1, BaDll\I U 0 F . had 3 MIOdle Tenn 17, Murrav St ly-aria 1 ·
5adchblclr 10, sama Ana 1
S<we l>Y 0Uar19N
"Anderson is coming back Angels: Too many millionaires of
stronger than ever. He'9'i~t com~ summer.
ing back from a virus ~ti<l!"," •Quote on Dallas Cowboys'
said Corona del Mar Coach Brian Coach Tom Landry from the
Hunsaker. '.'He's getting stronger Sporting News: "Very innovative
every race. He's improved h is but tempered with practicality." ..
PASADENA -Peter Dean caught a 43-yard
touchdown pass and later threw a 13-yard TD strike
to lead Newport Christian High to an easy 34-6
victory over host Pasadena Poly Saturday in
non-league high school football action.
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
BIG SCREEN TV
FAMOUS HAPPY HOUR
S,.nte A11a O O 1 0-1 S.ddtec.ck 0 0 0 10-10
SA-Sllefft.id I run (Tallev kick)
S.d-Enrillht 1 1>1u from Douoleu (Gauer
klcl<)
SH-Gauer 27 FG
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
"""*"
time over a minute within a week, At times, he is also very lucky.
which.is pretty impressive. Dave •The perfect bet for poli-
always. gives you 110 percent." ticians to make with each other at
Conqueror QB Randy Stuart connected on 5 of 5
passes for 99 yards in the first half before giving way
to Dean. Newport Christian (5-1) also received a big
rushing day from Steve Forbes who carried the ball'
23 times for 109 yards.
•BBQ Ribs
• Basll Chicken
• Tuna Fish Salad
• Llngulnl White Clam Sauce
• Fresh Fruit
•Guacamole
•Salsa
SA-Brown, 1~·.,, Coooer, 6· 16, Stleffleto.
7·14, TorOI<. S·ll. RelMv. 1·12 S.0-C•rroll,
21·90, Brown, I·~, EIOrl4", 6·1', Douala",
I Hor·rnlnu• 26
l'he Sea Kings alSQ. finished times of the World Series, Super
third in the girls' 2-A junior VaJlSi· Bowl, etc., would be for the loser
ty with 128 points, behind Edison to resign from politics and get a (18) and Mission Viejo (126).
Newport Christian 34, Puadena Ptlv 6
kwe tty OIH'1Wl NC-Forbes H run (PIU
lelltdl
FREEi All during geme
Win e FrM T-Shlrt
l'Hilne Newl>Ol't Chrhflan I 12 6 t-34
Pa&aclana POiy 0 6 0 0-6 SA-<C>OHr, 17·•5·3, ?o. S.~Oouolau, 9·26·1, ICIJ
-~ SA-VerOOn, 7·9', ButllQl, 6·SS, Orv, 2· 17.
ReiM>t, 1-1•. BoOlne. 1·•· S.o-<aea. 3·76,
Marlo.lnl, 7·32, Brown, 2·n , 8uellter 1·16,
Enrl11111, 1·7
"I'm real happy with how our job.
teams did," Hunsaker said. "Two •The best NFL team at
covering the ~pread up to t~
particular stage of autumn is the
Rams.
of our top runners were not even
here, and we still finished high.•
Our team just wanted it real bad."
NC-o .. n I run (Forti .. runl
PP-Smith SS DAU from
Wll&Oll I kick talleOl NC-Ou n •3 DHl from Stu•rl
Coeu leiledl
>t:zei;j_
• 2 Big Screen TV's
• 50¢ Hot Dogs
Presents
Monda1 lftht Footbal
Featuring
• $1.00 Kamakazis & lfl Price Shooters
during half time * $1. 75 Stadium Mugs of Beer
Yr11 a FREI T -lt*il
free dr"* tokens -Rams & Raidtrs touchdowns
3901 W. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar
759-1854
"""'-
'' , . Airporter Inn Hotel
• Giant Advent Screen
• Cocktails Regular Price
• Complimentary Hors d' Ouevres
• Entertainment & Dancing After Game
18700 MacArthur
833-ZT70
~I Ttll ~-CANlll
SONY GIANT SCREEN TV
New Galley Menu In Lounge • New Low Poces
MICHILOI MARGARITAS
Glass 75• go• Pitcher $4.25
... ,11 .. .,,,, ,, .. ,,,.,,.,
3010 L1f1yett1
Mtwport 8t1dl
..
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
ON THE BAY
Big Screen TV
Stadium Beers Sl .00
Foot Long Hot Dogs 50'
Live f ntertainment
After Game
642-3431
2735 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
II lit.Ill. 1'1 01'1 I. I\ 1 llt h \HI\ t,11
Rama' Claeerleaden
la Person!
BIG SCREEN TV
2~ HOT DOGS
$1 .00 BEER
Eattrt1laatat a D1acla1 Afttr Gaat
3190 AIRWAY• COSTA MESA
• TUAN ONTO McCORMICK ST. Off RED HILL •
DANCING ANO ENTERTAINMENT ~EVEN NIGHTS A WEEK
714/M&-9NO
• CockUll1
Happy Hour Prlc~s During Gam~
75• Beer• 1 1.00 Wefl Drinks
Complimentary Hors d' Ou~rf'S
D•rts • Pool
1 7th & Placentia
Costa Mesa
NC-Morven IJ pau from
Deen (run lalleO)
NC-Seletv. 1>u(lttr tackled In
•nd cone r
NC-Tllffl JS ln1trceoll011 re ·
turn (run taileOI
Allend•nc-150 (H llm ale<I)
• 3 Giant Screen TV's
• Guest Celebrities
• Raffle Prizes
• Mexican Hors d 'ouevres
• 25c Muga
of Beer
• Corn Dogs, Popcorn, Peanuts
Live 50's & 60's Music After Gsme
NO COVER CHARGE
549-1512
Oyer Ad. at Newport Fwy., Sanla Ana
18 oz Mugs of Beer
Happy Hour 4.30 to 7 P.M M·F
Complimentary Hor d' Ouevres
Live £nterta1nment Following Game
14912 Redhlll
Happy Ho4I Drlnlf Specials
7~ Draft BHr • Double Welle 12.00
50$ Hot Doge
BIG SCREEN TV
and amener one1 throughout "i
4250 Mlftitc• Way Newport Bt1ch
.. ~Ml CllSll~
MEXICAN RmTAURANTI:
E•t. 1i12
GIANT SCREEN T.V.
{Ootta M ... )
2 TV Sett Each Store
Doublt ''tflll" Drinks Throu1hout G1m1
•' • Ptu• lurprt ... • •
-•• 17ttl ••• 10I ....... It. c:::::--=
103 N. Bayside Dr.
Newport Beaot1
640-5260
.,
• C4 Orange €oaat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
•
·foR THI RECORD
I
I
~ t I • •
WO.-LD S••UES ~i.~4
CGwMl'-1 eALTlllllOttll l'HILADI LP'HIA .. ,...... M>tl\bl
Bumbrv cf Fore! P11
Siewert o
TMarlnl P
Owver rf
Lanormrt
ltlPhn u
Murrev lb
Lownlln" Aoenlck tt
Dauer 21> Crut 3o
NOian c
Oamoav c
s1noon Ph
Sakal• 2b
Oa11lo p
S/lelbv cf
) 0 0 0 Moroan 1b S 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Roat lb 3 1 1 I
IOOOS<hmell3b 4 010
0 0 0 0 L •lebvr rt 3 0 I 1 s 2 , 0 Pere! 1)11 1 0 1 0 , o o O O Samuet P< O O O O
S 1 1 0 Leac:ano rt 0 0 0 O 4 0 l 0 Mallllws II 3 0 1 0
• I 1 0 GGrou cf' 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Madda P11 I 0 0 0
4 1 ) ) 01 .. C 4 I 1 0
2 O 1 O Oe<nle< P< O 1 O O I 0 0 O OeJflu• u 4 0 O 0
IOOO OennvP 2111
0 0 0 I Hern<1e1 p 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 AMd p 0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 HevH Ph 1 0 0 0
I 0 I 1 Andertn o 0 0 0 0 Vlroll Ph 1 0 I I
l5 S 10 S T~s .lS 4 10 • ~Illy IMille> ..,..,,_. 000 202 100-s 1'1111..... 000 120 001-4
Game-Winning RBI -S/lelbv Ill
E-Lowensieln 0-Balllmo<• 1. Plllla
delPhle I. LOB-Boltlmora 1, Plllleoe1onle 6
28-1,..al•bvr•. Diez, Rou, Oeuar Owver
SF-Snelbv
II' H A EA B8 SO
Balflmaca
01v1sw.1-o
Slewarl
TMarlMI S.2
s 6 l l I J
2 l·l I 0 0 I 2 11-l ) 1 1 0 0 ....... ~ OennvL,1-1
Hernck1
S l·l 1 4
1-l 0 0
I 1·3 1 1
4 ) 4
0 0 0 RHO Anoaru n 1 1 )
2 I 0 0 0 0
WP-Davi> A_..,,., B•lk-S1ewar1 T-2 SO
Wortd SfflH at 1 11111nca
( a.ltlfMI'• ... els 3. 1 )
c;.,.,.1
PhllaOafPhla 000 001 010 2 S O
Baltlmore 100 000 000 1 S I O.nnv. Hollano (I> ano Diet. McGr~r.
Siewert (9), T Marllnaz <91 an<I Oaml>\Ov NOian (9). W-Oennv. l·O L-McGraoor.
O·l. HRs-PhlladelPllle, Moroan 111. MaO·
crox (I) Ba1llmora. Owvar (I)
c;ame J
Phllaelelpnle 000 100 000 I l O
81lllmora 000 030 !Ox 4 • 1 Huoson, Harnanoa1 CS>. Andersen (al,
RH<I (I) and 0111, VlrOll (I I; lloodtcker .ncr OlmPHV W-Bl>CIOlcker. 1·0 L-
HU<IM>ft, 0-1 HR-8altlmora, LPwensiafn
(l)
0-3 Balllmort 000 001 :!OC>-J 6 I
Phllade4Pllle 0 II 000 000-2 I 2
Flana91n, Palmer (S), Sl•warl 17>. T Merllner (9) an<I OtmPsav. Carnon
Hollan<! (7) ano Diaz W-Carllon, 1-0. L-
Flana11en, 0-1 HR•-8alllmor•. Ford (I)
PnlladelPhle, MallMw• (1). Moroan (2)
GAME t
8a1tlmort 000 20t 100-S 10 I
Phlla094Pllla 000 110 001--4 10 0
Davi•, Stawari (4). T .Martinez (II and
Oarnosav. NOian C.l, Oennv Hernander W . Reed (6), AnCMfMll (I) ancf Olar
w-Oavls 1-0 L-Dannv 1-1 TadeV'• c;ama
Balllmora (McGreoor 11·7) al PllllaO.I·
Phi• (HuCllOn 1·91. I 30 p,m TvesdaV's Game
Pnllaelell>llle al Banlmora. 5'20 om (II
l'IK'eUarv)
WedMMleV'aOama Pnllael.illf\la al Balllmora, 5'20 Pm . (II
MCtl'8tV)
All llmH POT TV Cnennal 7, lllaOlo IC.NX 11010)
NHL
CAMl'BELL CONl"ERENCE
SmVftM Dtvlllan w l T l"n c;I"
Edmon•on s 0 0 10 29
Vancouvl!< 2 4 0 4 21
Wlnnle>eQ 1 ) 2 • 21
C•loarv I , I ) •• KIMll 0 4 1 , 16
Nam• Dtvtsltft
SI LOUol s I 0 10 11
CPllOOO ) , 0 6 71 TorOftlO 2 , 1 s 11
Mlrw>eso•a , J I s 24
O.lrolt 0 3 2 1 19
WALIS CONl'EREHCE
l'alTIClr ~
Pflllac>etPhle s 0 0 10 26
NY Ran-• s ' 0 10 76
NY 1.iat l 2 0 6 24 Ntw JtrM• I 3 0 , 13
Plltll>o<gh I s 0 2 16 w .. n1n111°" 0 s 0 0 13
Ada"" DM\larl ao,,.,., 4 1 0 I 25
Oueoec l 1 I 1 l3
Buttaro , , I s 19 Herlfora , 2 I s ,,
Monlrtol 1 ) 0 • 70
S.lllt'daV'a S<orfl
Kines ), Oelr~ll 3 (OI)
Bosion S, Bu alo 3
PnllaOtll>tll• S. N v 111an<1e•• I Harlford 6, Plllsburoll •
Toronto 10, Chlceoo I
Motl tr H I 5. v ancouvar •
Eomon•Oft 4 Caloe rv )
SI LOUIS '· Ny Ranoers s
Mlnneio1a 2. Wlnnloeo I
TadaY't Garn..
N Y !\lander\ a l Bufialo (nl
~ •• wewi1no1.,.,, <nl Pnllac>etPllla et N Y Rano•n. (11)
Toronlo al New Jtr'4V. Cnt Mlnnet01a a 1 Chlceoo, (n)
Cel!lerv at Eornon1on Int
Klnet ), Rad Wines l
Sc-. llV l'tr\MI
c;A
19
21
2•
IS
26
19
21 11
23 19
• 14
25 11 ll
25
13
21
T.I 70
2S
o.trell 1 I I O->
LM AllMifl 1 1 0 0-l
"'"' ,..nod I Ot troH. Barrell I IV n rman.
8okllre¥1. l 11 1, Lo• Ano.ieo. Meclellen I
INlcllOI••· F oal, S.11 Ptna111u -wcxxa,
Otl, 0 21. M•<Lt llen, LA, ma ror, SH.
JoMson oa1. ma1or S·2S. Herdv. LA. 9 SS, Wltllt LA, 1•·24, Nolan. 011. 17 4S
S«el'd ..... lacl
3, LOI Anoe1t1 Chrl>lott I COion"'
Simmer). 1 39 4. Oatroll. Boldlrev J lun
eulstaol, 11 21 tool S Lo• Anv.las Simmer 2 I Dion"" Chrl>folll 19 .31 Ptnet· 1~-Noten, 0.1 •'09. Larton 0.1 1 11.
Harov LA. 9 )I, Melrose, Dtl. 12 11. Gert .
Ot! mer0t·mll'Or. ml1c011C1u<' I 510. Well•
L.4. rne\M mlscOllClu<I. IS 10. Simm.< LA.
,. (J
Third l'.n.CI
6, Oetron, Bokllrt • • luno•l&tedl. 19·2'
Pef\Oll~tNy, LA. 641
Owf1llM H-Ptnattlet~P"8
Shols on -1-0elfoll 10-IJ·U·l-3'
LOt All!*n ll·IJ-~l-~
~roo, Slefan Los Anealft LM .. rd ,._.,m
-(_ > .
NaA w.,,... 12', ...... 121
I.OJ AMO•lat 11111 -S«ltat 1.
Wiit." 11, N1ler 1'. E JOhnson IJ. McG"
20, C-11, Oerrell It, McACIOo lt,
P,,INlj>t 7, C. JOllMoll • Tolel• 4t•f) '1•30 121
00\.DaN $T~Ta C 1711 -Sllorl 19, ...,1111 10, C¥rOll If, c~ 17 FIOvd 11.
M JOflntoft 1', MaMlon l , a rtu 6, lllflef 2, ~ 1, TNMau• 1', lllomar 1. Tlllfs e, kl>d > T...it· ..._.. >H• 171 La.,._. U •a u -UI
.... ..... Jl J2 J1 11-1'11
TIWW-....,1 -'-<-~
811'"-CI I I , ~ Ill.OW ldt "4M An•
..... 0 (NII« f). GO!filft Slale .. (..,,.Ill,
M.. Jolwl'4ln II AHl•l-.1..0t Ant91H 71 II
JollnlOfl 161, 0114d9f1 ~lelt 24 ($11orl SI
To1a1 '°""""'-°' """* )4, ~ St11t 2' T~. wwrtof& .....,
~ A_,..6)1
Oak TrM <•• SMel Aftlta) SA TVRDAY'S RISUL TS
(IOlll at J2••v·-..r~ IMtftnaJ
l'IRST lllACE. a lurli>nO> Ra<:lno COOvarasl 10 10 UO 1 IO
OM Ev"1 Aomao <Btt Ckl '·'° 2.60 Jtt Maneuver tOalanouuoal 3.20 Alto ractd Mo1>1leur E •cllemanl,
w1nooo. Uncle Duka, Ron i SI Geor~.
Jimmy CyclOM, Oarbv Call
Time· I 11 )IS
SECOND RACE. 6'1'1 turlOnOa
llun For Tevle (\/lni) 6.00 3.60 l 20
Wtcll.•d Fall CO.te~s .. val too •.20
Eerllt11 CPacll'ora) '60
Alto racao Ntxl Corna• Love. Tes1v
Oencar. J P 's Giit. Knll Two, Laellera
C.rano • Time. 111 l1s.
,, DAIL y DOUBLE (l·J) palO S29 00
THIRD ltACE. 6 turlOnOt LIOlllnlno Swltl I Mate I 710 4 00 3.10
Too E"core (Valenzueta) 4.IO 4.00
RU11"9 Poiitlon CLIC>llam) S 00
Al•o raced Swlsn•1 Wino. Pvramlo
20111, Es<alallno. True Proml>t, Gela Wno
Tim• 1 10 crs
FOURTH RACE. 1 lurionos
Klllanln·s Lau ILIPllem) 11.00 6.60 4.•0
Luckv Camille (~tz•I 9.00 4 40
Pr Im Dusi I Bloc~) 4,40
AllO roced. TIOIOPPtlr, OQ·Po•lllv•
Trace. Qu1e1 Flloni
OQ-Finloned ""' Ol1ouallf•ed e no
PlettO lllth. Tome 124 4,~
Fll"TH RACE. I o mllH 011 lurt
110 .. l Ca Pf Ive t01ivue1) 14 60 10.70 6 00
Hane11ome One (Pierce) 5 IO 3 80
Pin Pullar (Valenzut lat SOO
Also rano· Mauera. Th• Hooua, Puro
Hebano. Belmont Bay Tall Again, Norlh· roo
Time 149 '5 EJlACTA (I-JI PalO Sl7S SO
SIXTH RACE. 6 lu•IOnOl.
Pertlolenl CV11tf\1uela) 9 oo 4.ao 2.40
Mallorce CUllNmJ '·'° uo Sleke L•Ov (Oittanouuavel 2.20
Also ri ced Oet>reh, Avouo LauncM
Tlma: 1·10 4/S
U EXACT A (6· 11 oaJO Sl11..50.
SEVENTH RACE. One milt
Norbel (Guerre) 8 40 4 40
01vmolad's Son <H.,tev) 4.00
RtO Crtlcenl (Sl!Oef'f1•Url
3.20
2.80 uo
Atto rectO 8uliavtnto, Poor Es1orll. Bosto, Mr. Reaclor
Johll,
Time I 36 115
'5 EXACT A (6·3) paid .ao.SO
Elc;HTH RACE ....... lurtonoa
IC.anoroo Couri <S1elnerl 12 20 5 00 uo
Shane1111e (Hewtevl l.60 2.IO
Cava·, Frlen<I (Mara) 3.40
Ai.o rect0 Ot0lca1a. Cool Frtncllv,
Total Departure, E.clullvt BIO<ler
Tl,,... 1.16
12 ,.!CK SIX (S· 1·1·6-a-7) Paid
$129,14120 wltll one winning tk ktt l>IX
llO<MI) •2 PICll. Sl.i conlOl911Qn palel '3.60J 80 wllPI 36 winning llc"•I• (live
nonn l
NINTH RACE. I 1116 mlltl
Val De Roi IONllouuavt) I IO So Goes lMazal
Foret Fun (Slblllt)
Also ractel A Faol Ptaca ,
Summll Run. King of Ille R1nch
Time 1·43 41 S
U IXACTA <•·7> oalO S79 00
AlltnOence 3" 6.JJ
Holvwood Parti
4.10 J.20 •.20 ).00 HO Bunnell,
SA TI>ttOA Y'S RUUL TS
(47111 .. SJ ...... J l'Ml,,,.U "'"""9)
l"IRST ltACE. Orwt mlle pace tnellan
Cnltf (Parker Jr ) S 60, 3 60, 2 tO.
Mon11onor Cele J 60, 2.80. Et Tortnto 6 00 Time 201 U EXACTA (2·6) Pl lO Ul 70
SECOND RACE. O"' mlla oaca Howov
Star (Parker Jr ) 9 IO, 4 40 J 10. MonltrtV
Rooe1 J 80. 2 60. Mlsltr G • 00 Time 1.51
I S '3 EX ACTA U-7) oald Ml SO
THtaD RACE. One mlla Dace LorO
Neutrino I L0"90I t to. 4 IO. 3 40, Ideal
T anntr l 80 ) 00. Tac• Weva IBelllaroeonl 260 Time I S7 I S U EXACTA (6·0 0110 uao
FOURTH RACE. On• mllt peca:
Montertv t<n1gh1 (Croohen) 9 80, 4.40, 3.00.
Niia• Ster 3 60, 2.60, Jibe Ho 2 IO Time·
100
l"IFTH lllACE. One milt Pace 8 C
Count (Ve11an01nonam ) 4 IO, 3 oo. 2.60,
T ore>ICI> Knlghl 3 60. 3 00. On The Sool 4 00
Time U9. U EXACTA (5·4) oald '26.40
SIXTH RACE. One mlla oau ~1-
YPuno <Lonool 4 00, UO. 'UO. Whal•
Scha111t 4.60. 3.tO; Sim \.alone l .60. Time. 1•5' llS, '3 UtACTA (3·1') Paid US.IO.
saval!ITN RAC•. One milt oaca:
Felllmen•o <Parker) It 00, 1.40, S.60. Oenall S 60, '70, Al>lt GOid 7.60 Tlrne 1·57 3/S U
EXACTA (1·11 paid $13500
EIGHTH RACE. One mllt Pact 1!111
Chemo (ParU1" J• l 4 60. l 00, J.40; Vl~o
C 40. 3 00, ForH ler 1 IO Time I S7 2/S U
EXACTA ll-41 paid '35 10
NINTH RACE. OM milt pace Vertan
(Perll er Jr ) 2 10, 2. 10, 2 10, Sul>af &reel·
shaw 2 70, 1 10. Al UR Bluaoran 2 10,
Time. I SS. S3 EXACTA ( 1·2) 0110 '4.90 U
,.!CIC SIX (3-S-3-1-1·1> oald M07,IO wltll lS winning llckets lsht llorMtS) 17 Pk k Slk
c1>n1ota1lon PtlO t.39 00 wllll ~ wlnnl"9 llckell (live '1or>tll
TENTH RACE. OM m ile oact Cou11eeu
(Crool\anl I 00, 3 40. J 00. ~nla Jaca
310, 280. Van Tuoor l 40 Time 1 S9 )IS »
EXACT A (6-2) Palo t.35 10 Allt<ldance.
l 1.SS7
Stnlon toumtment
tat Melb4KI,,,., l'la.)
Don Jenuerv 69·66·61-10:!
Gt ne l..llller 14·69·63-206 Arnold P11mer 6'-6S· 7r?07
Miiter Barber 70 70-70-210
01~ SikH 11·12·61-211 GarOntr Olc'ln•on 70-71-11-21'
vtoroa Baver 6'-1>·71-113 v •• a rawer 13.41-1;-213
Oovo seno"" 71·69-1;-111 Oten Lino 14· 70-10-214
Al Balellno 7J·10·1l-2U
Jim FerrH 11 70-12-1"
VUV WOl1lt nhotme 12•11·71-114
Blttv Cat1>er 13·6t·7r2U
Peltr Thon,.on 6t-1J-15'-11S
Ml"a FttClllcil 11·73·71-21S
llol> GoalbY -12·74·ff-21S Ctwln $1t!0<d 10-n·n-216
P a\11 H•rrwtv 11-n -n-?1'
llol> ErlCkson 71·11·7>-t1'
Dent• Hutchlll"°" n ·n -n-216
809 $•-11•71-7f-216 llltt Collln1 70·7J-n-t16
P1ul Har"8V 71·7)· 72-'216 l!lob Ertck\Of\ 11•12·1>-21'
Rvdar Cu~
(It him ... di OaNIM. f'll,) .....
UlllllM ,_ •• ·-• Torn Wilson Ind llol> Glklar CU.$.) Oel S.rn T0<r1nce ln<I Ian w"'nam <Eur-),
, •nd ' Nick F•IOO eno a.rnn.rd Lanoer
IEur-> Oel Cal P"le •110 len Cren1t11w
IU.S I. 4 Incl 2
Crelt $1adler and L•M• Wadkln• IU $.)
a.I Ken arown tnd ltrlan Well"
IEurooe). 1 'JP
Gii Moroan and Jav HHs (US I v1 S.vt 8aln11WOI allCI ...... Wav CEIKOM ), Htd ,. __
U!lleM ... ,... •• ·~ I I..-ln<I ,t!Oo CEurOH) otf Torn
IC.lie allO h • 'IOYCI IU $ ), l and t
WIClllnt •ncl OR MIKH n (U.S.) def. km
TOfT'lllU Ind JOM-Mefle c.nbw ..
Cl urOH). 1 and •
~... ttlel Cunlt Sir•nte HU .I dlf
w1Uat •lld erown, <l:urooe>,1, a anc1 t. ..... ._ Ind Wav I•"°") Otf
Wet-allCI Glleltt CU.S ), 1 encl 1.
•
NP'L
NATIONAL C«*'l,.UK• Wftt W L T ftct. P'P' ll'A
RIM• 4 t 0 ... 1 Its UM
NtWOr ... na
San Frlt"laco
Atlanla
• 1 0 .. , us 123
• ' 0 ... , 111 lot
2 • o m 124 111
Mlnnt&ote
Graen 8av
Chlcaoo
O.lron
Tamo1 Bav
C..al • , 0
) J 0 , • 0
, 4 0
0 6 0 ... ,
M1 I )() .soo 161
.m "' .:w 116 000 I I
1$)
1'6 ,,,
116 157
Oa1111 6 0 0 1.000 17' 121
wa1hlnoton 5 1 o .m 112 1n
Plllla<le!Phla • 1 O .'61 104 101.
NY Glan11 2 4 o .m lot 111 SI Louis I S 0 , lt7 103 ltl
AMmltlCAN CON,llllNCa
Raiden
Dan11er
San Oleoo
SH llla Ken .. a Cllv
Pl11>1>ur1111
Cltvltl•nd Cine Inna II
Housion
w .. 1
5 I 0 .3 3 0
l <l 0
3 3 0 2 • 0
CMlll'W • 2 0 • , 0
1 5 0
0 6 0 ....
8attlmort 4 2 0
Bullalo • 2 0 NV Jell 3 3 0 Mlt ml l ) 0
NIW Enoleno 2 4 0
... 1 13' 11S
·"' 111 1lS .m " 1n
000 lot "'
.. , 130
.. , 116 soo 132
SOO II• 333 111
12S in
llJ
H2
144
T-v·so-Allan•• •I lt11ms IAnahllm SleOlum, I
omt Raldln •• SHtlle (Cllan"81 • II I P.m.)
Sen Francl.co 11 New OflH f\1 <Cl'tanneJ
2 11 10 a rn.)
Miami el Ntw Yorto. Jt"
Hous11>n at Mlnnesola
SI Loula al Tampa B•v Sen Oieoo al N1w E nolano
Cnlceoo •• Oe1rot1 C1tvt1ano al Pllllbur o11
Bullaro at Balllmora
Clnclnnall at Denver
Ntw Yorto. v lantt al Kan .. , Clly
PnllaOelPllla ti 0 11111
~ ... ·.o.m.
weslllngle>n al Gr"n 81v !Channel 7 at
6 om>
COLLI GE Ariz-St. >4, USC 14
Sc-1W OU.""1 Arilw St. ~Cal
ASU-FG ZtndtlH lJ
10 17 7
0 0 7
0-:M 7-14
ASU-<:lack 3 run (ltnOela• kkk) ASU-i<ern Sl oau· from Ct1wtord
(Zan<lelas kick)
ASU-Wrton1 I run IZancJalH kick)
ASU-FG Zanelelas 11
ASU-Clack '° POU lrom Hon• (Zenda· , .. klcti.)
USC-60Vt f 4 POU lrOtn Sallll>urv (Jor•
Clan lllck)
USC-Soancar I run (Jordan lo.lckl
A-sl.8'ol
First OOwn'
Ru•M•-••ros Pau lno varO•
llelurn yard1
P1nas
Punls
Fuml>las·IOll
f>anallles-v4rck
T(me 01 PouaulOll
UK
" JS·130
I ASU u
'6·174
J97 1'6
0
13·32-1 •• 22·30-1
J-47
0-0
•·5'
3S'1f
•-43 3.,
1-lS
24:31
INDIVIDUAL STATl1TtCS RUSHING-Arl10fla SI., Clack 23·119.
Crawford 1-3'. Wrlollt 10-n Southlrn Cal, Cru1char 14-3', Har!>lf' 1-lt, ~ 1-2'.
PASSING-Arllona St.. Hons
71·2'·1·346, Crewlord 1·1-0·SI. Soulllern
Cal. Sallst>urv 12-29-0-137, GrWI 1·3· l-9.
RECEIVING-Arizona SI , CIKk S-134.
Kern S·M, Oa• )·52. Wittler-3·3'
SoulMrn Cal, ware 6·1l, Norman 2-26
Corm'4tr 1-10
UCl..A 14, WI~ SI. 14 •
SC....lrtOua~
UCLA 0 ) 14 1-M
Wt~St. 1 O o 7-14
WSU-Turner I run ITreul t<k kl
UCLA-FG L" 4J
UCLA-Andrtrws • run CL" kick I UCLA-Andr-1 I run (L .. klO )
UCLA-earoma"'I 1 114" lrom Ne\I ntlH I (L" kl¢k)
WSU-Slewart ' run ITr1u• •t<'l
A-30.000
Flrol oowns
Rushea-varch
Paulno verO•
Rtlurn varos
Pas .. \
Punh
FumDlts·lo•I
Pene nlas·veros Tl,,,. of POS'4Ulon
UCLA WW 17 ,.
&:1·1» St-no
139 120
10 0 16-lo-0 11-21-1
4·4S 0-0
2-2 1-1
5·>9 S-4' 2S~ 34.37
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING -UCLA, Naltofl 11·$), An·
clt'ew• I0-4S: C~ 11·26. Ttnnall )•II wsu. Por•er n -us. Turner 72·•. CaMr1 5-71
PA~ING UCLA, N41UMIM4
14·20-0-13' wsu, Turner ;; 21·1-220.
RECEIVING -UCLA. Andrew' 3·41D,
Oorrttl 2-22, snerraro 2·21, komann 2-20. wsu, Bret1ne1 l·61, 8urrls 3·54. J1tnft
)·21. Marshall 3·11
cal State Futaneft 10, SM_,.... St. 11
~ ..... Oue"9n cs 1''*'11ft • 10 1 >-• Saft~ll •• , 1-11
Ful+-<ellloun I run (Sltlnk• kick)
Fui+-FG Slalnlla 27
Fult-Lawla I run IS1tlnh kkkl
SJs-FG RtOl>oah 16
Fult-FG St•lnke •1
SJS-Rlcn1roson lO Pan from CerlM>tl 1Crltwa4t oau trom Cartsonl
A-21,lll
Flrll crown\
lllus""·vard•
Paul"9 vard•
Rtlurn varos
PHltl
Punlt
Fumb!11-lost
Pena Illas ·verd•
Tim. ot PoutulOfl
.... "'' " 11 6J-1.. »-90 ., 1n '° 1S 6·10-0 11-31-3 ,.,. S-43 o-o 1-0
10 •• ''" )7.21 21:39
'-""" a .. dl St. 21, P'acHk 1'
Sc-lrY 0Ua"'9rt L_._dlSI. 1 14 1 0-JI
,.acMk o ' 7 i -16 L8-Ervln 37 Dan lrom Olnon
t0caouare klcto.J
L8-Gol0en 61 Pun! rtlurn <Oceoua<a klCll)
L8-Rowt • oau tri>m Oilton IOcaouera kick) •
UOP-WOOC11 S oan lrom Pili tlC.tnnn
~lck)
UOP-Horooackv ., NU lrom Piii
llC.lnM Y klc:t<I
LB-Diiion 3 run IOcaout1• klCk )
UOP-Saltlv Carltf lackleel tn '"° ,_
A-t.100
F lrst crowns
Ruahls-vards
Paulno vard• RehJf'n varcrs
Pau .. Pun II
Fumo!ts·IOll
Penallfft•.,..rell Tl!l'W OI Polltlalorl
La UOP IS 24
44·214 5'·260 ,. '" ,.. 120 7-1,., la·Ja-l
1·'4 4-· 0-0 ,.,
... 103 t·l7 2l:lt )6:11
HIGH SCHOOL ITANDINGS
S.. View LAetue
~
C0t-Oe1 Mar ' o o Newoor1 Herbor l O O Co.la Mata 1 I 0 ~baCll 2 I O
•1 Toro 1 t o ! 1land4I 0 2 I
Unlvef'shv O 1 1
'"''"-0 > 0 .. ~ ..... ac.r.. CorOfla del Mar 11, trvlrwt 7 ir.-v-. 0-(11»)
$a6dleOact< al New-I Harbor
0¥«• WLT • 0 0
4 I I
4 2. 0
2 4 0 2 • 0
1 J I J 2 I
2 • 0
CCl("()M da4 f>Mt "' Colla Mau el OCC Etl111<la el lrvlM
un1.,.,,11., vt El Toro al Min ion Vle!P
,,.., C*""'V
o....... e-CM.ml...,..
aovs •-A v"""" Ttam rMull•: I. Matef' Dal, l11
RtnchO Alamll0t, 100; 3. Edi.on, 119,
Cosio Meu, laG; S. SeOClltbeek, 173 .
lndlvldUat tt•ullt: 1 H1vna IC0111
Me1tl, lS:SS; 2. V1len CEI ~nal. ••:06. 3
Vouto.ln (Meler Del), ( i.:0t), ' Ad1m1 <AanchO Alamllosl, 1'. IS. S. Dolan <Matar 0.1), 16•19
>·A Vanltv Tu m results. I Corona <let Mar, ~. 2
Tustin, '3; 1 Mln !on Vlalo, ft, 4 Unlvar·
sllv, 91, S. Garden Grove. 131
tndlvlelual rHulla: I Anderson ICori>na <kl Mer), IS'al; 2. Barrio• (Unlv1r1l1v),
IS.SI, 3 Gonzalas <Magnolia), IS:57. • Cllrlslle (Minion Vlelo), 16:0S, S. Orth
ICorone oe1 Mar), 16:1'. •
l·A Vanttv
Tum result•. 1 VIiii Perk, •2. 2
Newe>orl H1rbor. 69. 3 Woodt>rkloa, 14, '
Buena Perk. 94, S. Founlaln Velltv, 151.
lndlvlouet ra1ulls I GrMn CVltla Pt rk),
IS ... 1 Klno IP1<lllca), 16-ot, 3. Verg ..
<Sanlt Ana Vel1tv>. 16 12, 4 Pt rker (Vitia Perk), la.17, S. Harl <VIHe Park). 16;20.
1-A V1N1tv Team re1ull•· I. E.1 Toro, '5; 2. Den.
Hlll1, 71; 3. Ocean View. 9S; 4. Foo111111, 104,
S. Sunnv Hill,, 119.
lnellvlOuet r•tulll: I. F•ikleno ICvortul.
1S 40; 2 Wrl9hl (Sunnv Hiiia), ts:SJ; 3. R"
IKennecrv>. 16:05; •. ArcllU>elO <Ocean Vltw), 16~; 5. Anoarson IEI Toro). 16:10
J-A Jillf'ltw V anlfY TH m raw1t1· t Maler Dal, 20; 2
Min ion Vlaba6'; 3. COl'ona <1414 Mar, 16, •.
Sonia Ana, lw, S Wetlmlnaler, lt.3 -
1nc11v1e1ua1 retullt: I. EPPkh IMalar o.n,
11:34; 2. Cruz (Maler 0.1), 17:36; 3. Ktr~
CCorona del Mer), 17:'9; ' L-1 (Maler
Dal), 11'51; S. McGann (Min ion Vlelol.
11:51.
2-A Jlllllar Varalty Taam rt•ulll: I. Tustin, _,; 2. Ville Pari..
SS1 ) NeWPOl'I Herbor. '°· .. FounlalA Valltv, 114; S. UnlvarMIY. 121.
Individual rHUll'; I, H-<T11tlln), 1115; 2. MIUl90n (Tuttln), 17.11, ).
Munetnllsu (New-I Harbor), 17:20, 4 GoutCI <Founteln Velltv), 17:25, S. Water-
man (UnhtlWMIV), 17:27
1 • A Jillf'ltw Vanlt't'
TNm rt&ulh; 1. Dane HI"'· JI, 2. llutna Per~ 31, 3. Foolhlll. 6J, • El Toro, 107: s.
Ocai n View. US.
lnOlvlduat retullt: I H"melef' IDant
Hlna), 17:25, 1. Gomer <Buena Perfll. l7·>0;
3 Kavl <FootlllMI, 17;33; 4. Soulllarel <Dana Hlfts), tN3; S. Ttvlor (Dana Hlllll, 17:Sl.
>·AS..e.-. TN m rtwtts· 1 E.-an1a, Cl; J MallW
Del. 71, l Laouncr Hiiis, '3, 4 Edison. 111. s C« ona <1414 Mar, no.
lnolvleluet t1sulh : 1. Saucaoo
<E.-anra), 1•:'2; 1. Vllveroa (Maenollal.
16:44, 3. PallnO !Edison), 17:01; 4, Nave
CS.Alf Anal. 17;11; S •r-cuoune
HJlllll 11'17. 2··~· Team rttults: 1 Vitia Park, 39, 2
Min ion Vltlo. 4S, l Foun11ln Veile•. "· 4 El Ooracro, 135; S. P1<1flce. 170.
lncll•ldual r"u111 I LlnOruel (Mls•lon
Vlelol. 17'0S, 2. Moore !El Ooracrol, 11.19. 3
Gurule !Min .Ion Vi.lo), 1Mf. 4 G._ IVltta Parto.). 11.JO. S Brounaro (Vitia
Par•). 17 31
•·A~ Team rasu"' I lr~I,,., lO, 2 01na Hiii>.
69. > Etttncla. 12. • Foothlll, 91, s. Lo• Amloo>. 172,
tncJl•IOual re•\1411 1 Olson ttrvlnel. 16.JS. 2 Ptrrv <E11ancla), 16 S2, l Poleno
!lrvlnel, 11-o?, 4 WOICll UrvlM), 11-ot. S,
MOI'-ILaouna Beach), 17-17
>-A,.,..._,.
TH m rn ull$. I C~la Ma .. , )J, 1
Laguna HIMl, 10. ) EOlson, u . • Sanla
All8 9•. S Corona Oaf Mar. 149 lnOMClual rH ulh 1 Aruch IEOlson),
1117, 2 Tlloma> <EdllOll), 11 11, J Gut<· rero <Santi Anal. 17.11. •. Mclachlan
<Cos•• Ma'8l. 1719; 5. Ma (Co•I• Ma .. ) 11 Sl '
2. A I' "'"""'8ft
Ttam raw111 1 WOOdbfldee. ll, 2 New-1 Her'bor. 117. l futlln. 119, 4
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l·A ,........,_
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Hilb, "· " lrvlne, 10; 4. a-Par11. IS?; S. Lot Amloo1, l1't
Individual re1uO• 1. ltotll>lnt IEI Toro>.
11.JS. 2 Luoo (Valtncla), 11::N; J Bled<
(lrvlna). 17 40; 4. FOOOr IOana Hilb), 11.'01.
5 Ernmaj CValtnclal. 11171'
0.LI #
4-A Y«Wtv
Ttam rtwts 1 Tualln, 34; 2. El eor.oo .
&3, l Irvine, 7'; 4. Fl>Uflll ln lleRev. 12•; S.
Valancla. 131. lndlvldual ra1u111: I. Eteobo.. (Et
DoraOO), 11:40. 2. McCormick (Tutlln),
II SJ. J Scoll (Tuatln), 11:51; •· Chl!MI
(lrvlna), 11:57, S Kenney (Valtnel1). 1901
J-A Vanlrv
hem relUlh . 1 ECll'°"• n , 1. Dena
Hiii•, 56, l. Unlvanlty, &l, • C0tla Ma ... 107. S Sa"le Ana. 171. Individual ,........,., I ltllchol IEdltonl
19'.06, 2. Snvdari CEcslsonl, lt'20; l Ever1~
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(Edison), It-Al; s. Quinn <Dana HI~&), 19:$2.
• -•
1-A V1nltY
T•am rtw1lt: I. NtwPOn Herbor, 44, 2,
Eso..-11111, 56; >. Mtu ton vi.io, .o1 4. Corona o.i MM. '7, J., wn1m1n11w. l)e
lndlvfoue1 r11t,11t1: I Oatv (Ml1110n Vlalol. IUJ, 2 Henson INewPOl'I Harbor) ll;l), J Hutchlnaon (Mlu lorl Vietti. 1t:1•:
4 Shll CC0tone de! Marl, lt:2t, S et.llltd
(E1-an1a ), 19.31
l·A VatWtv
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Latl\lna teach, IS3
llldlvlelual ttaull•. I. Fall (Miiar Dall, Iii~: t. Krl•lln (La Oulnla). lf:o:J. J, CoJC
tFoolhlN), lt;)I; 4 Carnav CF00111IU), lf:SI, S FrlaM Cl'oolhlH), 19:51.
J.A JllW« V«Wtv TffM retullo: I. Tuatln, 17, 2 Foun1aln
Vallev, 7S. l lr11Jne, 121.
Individual r.wi•a· I, Oonlldaon (T~11n1,
20 W; 7 Snlllll (Tutlln), 20:t.4, J Waftller
<Tutlln>, 21:05, 4 Fernav <Tu"4nl, 71:11, S
Sl•werl (lr11lf'l8), 21:A7. •
2-A Jllftlw V•nltv
Teem r"ulll: 1. ECllM>n, 111 1. MIUIOll
Vlelo, 124; >. Corpna o.i Mar, 119; 4. Dana Hlll1, l_,1 s. Senl• Ana, 140.
lndlvldual rnu11,. 1 Manke <Eellsonl,
20'.Je; 2. An<lra.an (Edison), 20:S2; 3. Gallb
<Min ion Vlalc>l. 20:57; 4 MacKenzie
<Edlaon). 21-ot; s. VaWnJl<y CEdlson), '1 ll
1-A JuNlr Vl""'Y
TN m rHUllS. 1. Newoort Harbor, 21. 2
Foot111n, 6'; 3 El Toro, 73; • Maler 0.1. 1•. s. E.-enza, 106.
ln<IMduat resU41a: 1 Ouclltv (Newoor1 Harbor), 21:17; 2. Knox (El Toro), 21:19, 3
Aelam• (Newoort Harbor), 21.2•; 4 Jakoval
<Esoer1n11>. 21:2S; s. lllulflna (N1woor1
Harbor), 21:26.
c .....
l'CAA· .. AC 10 INVITATIONAL
lat USC) UC ,,,,_ 1, Stantatel 1
UC lrvlne 3 1 1 2-1
Stanford I l 1 1-1
UC Ir vine scortno Rou l 2 084 v ant 2
CllOOIMlluanca I. Evan• I. Ollvltr 1
UC lrvlnl 10, Cellfotr'ftla 9
UC lr•lne t 1 3 ._10
Ct lllornla 3 4 I 1-9
UC Irvine >Corino· Evan1 •· Oll11lar 1,
Ct ml>belt 2. Ch<>QuahUlllCll I. Dal VI iia I
HICOH SCHOOL
AGIAMtT~
New-1 Na.-7, Mir-1-
Ntwe>orl Harbor 1 2 1 ?-7
Mlrernonlt I O I 0-2
N•woor1 Harbor soc:orlno GruD« 2,
811<ha"8n 2, Lawson I. Slutr~v I. Banedlcl I
Nlwl*t H1111tr 10, S-... H .. e Sunny Hills 3 1 I r I
Newoort Harbor 3 3 2 2-10
Ntw-1 ~aroor scorlno· Gruba< 4,
Tlnoiar 2, Siewarl I, Lawson I, 8a<ladlcl I,
8ucklav 1
U.S. WMakMlr ~IHPS
\at RICllU9't 0..-ef lnllM) ,.,.,,.., 0-samNINI .......
Bred Parks Cleouna Nloue41 def Jim
wor111 <llraa>. •-o. a-0, llenctv _ Snow
1011181) def Oavt l<lltV (PomoN), 41, ··1, 6·3 W.,_.a 0-,.,.... l'IMI
M1tllvn HamlllOfl (Fretnol def. Bech
Whll• <Carson), 6·2, 7·51. Nola P1tkl n . Snow champlonshlo
rnalCh ll>ClaV al 1
Woman'I twnwnent
(It SM otew)
S«nMNI ~
Karrv AalO (U.S l oef 81Mla JH n Kl"9
\US). 3·6. 6·3, 6· l, Shor°" Wel•ll CU S I
def Roole Ca1tls CU S ), 1·6, 7·6, 6-l
o... ... ttsNM
AltT'S LANDING (Ntw"'1 e.ecfl) -m anotaro. 1, 115 mac11art1, m llOftllo, 110
rock cl>CI. 2J send bau, l vt11ow1111, 14
lllffPaheeel. 10 1klplack tuna. I llullel tuna,
I llno cocr, 1 vellowfln tuna, I c:a11a1on,
DAVaY'S l..OCK•R I....._, BMdll
-Hit anolan 93 bonllo, 41 bau. 241 mact.era4, la roclo. lllh, 1 scule>ln, 9
shleolllled. l5 veHowlall
• >'-·
Woman'I ¥ .......
BIO PO\M Tou.NAMSNT
Cal I.-. -..0)
Unlla<I Slate• Clef. Soulh KOfM, 15·4,
u -1, 1s-s. Japan def Cube, U-12. IS-11. IS·S
s.car
COLLaGI
S4utltem Cal c-.. J, l"I. L-0
Soullltrn Cal ICOflne: C11mmlno1 l
For the Winter. Sprtn1, Sla•mer &nd f&ll ... . • and a new lifestyle awaits you where there are cooling
breezes with room to grow and ft place to create a home
In the-true tradition of CAllfornla's early ranchero days.
Whatever the se-ason. enjoy country charm near the
sea In an exclusive. guard-gated setting of espec.lally
large custom homesltes dwarfed only by the endles.s views.
Vliltw-Ortem.d Ho_,... Prked "°"' S 140,000 to US0,000
O..ttn.4 to ~ o,.,.,. Cotlftty'I ftnfft re.W.ntW c.o."'unlty.
ASU • • •
From Page C1
071 yards on the defenaele.a Tro-
JaN, got 116 yard.a from Wlback
Darryl Clack, and Hona picked
the USC aeoond.ary to piece..
"Our one chance at ha.lfUme ia
to atop-them on their first drive, .
hold them and take the ball down
and acore," Tollner told hit tum
at halftime.
A year ago in a 17-10 ASU
victory, the Sun Devils KO'd the
Tro;ana in the third quarter by
knocking Salisbury out of the
season with torn knee Ug~nta.
This time they used another tac-
• tic.
The Sun Devilil took just 11
second& to destroy the Tro;an,a'
hopes as Hons went to Clack over
the middle and he raced away for
the 80-yard score.
"We knew the game wasn't
over at halftime.'' said ASU tight
end Cun Arons, a product of San
Clemente High and Saddleback
College. "Not after the UCLA
game. We went back as 1f 1t was
0-0. And, we needed that (the
80-yard TD pass play). Now, it's
up to us, we can go to the Rose
Bowl.''
The Trojans managed to avert a
rare shutout loss when Edi.son
High product Mark Boyer caught
a 4-yard scoring pass in the third
quarter, and the Trojans scored
again m the fourth quarter after
an interception by Jack Del Rio
ignited a 5-play, 24-yard marcf\
by tailback Todd Spencer.
Among the USC casualties was
defensive back DIJ.aine Jackson.
The ex-Edison High staJ: suffered
a concussion when he was hit on a
kickoff return, fumbling to set up
ASU's third TD.
CdM. • •
F.rom Page C 1
CdM's defense did its best to
make life miserable for Irvine,
and quarterback Jeff Blelman in
particular, sacking the senior six
times alone in the first half for a
minus 41 yards, I.n fact, CdM
limited the Vaqueros' offense to
minus one yard in tot.al offense in
the fU,t half but bad only the 7-0
lead to show for it.
The Vaqueros, who h.ad scored
just one touchdown in 1 7 prior
quarters, extended that to 19
before getting a break in the third
quart.er. Following an inter-
ception by Bielman. the defensive
safety, of a Hatfield ~at rrud -
field. Irvine's offense took nine
plays before Bielman. the quar-
terback, oonnected with running
back Steve Frank swinging out of
the backfield for a seven-yard TD
pass to kriot the 9e0re at 7-all.
The Sea Kings capitaliz.ed on a
poor Irvme punt and addiuon
penalty for their second score.
Starting at the Vaquero 38, CdM
needed just four plays before Jett
Brown, who rushed for 166 yard.S
on 20 carries, would 9COre the first
of his two touchdowns on a
nine-yard blast up the middle
with 8:48 to play.
Six minutes later. it was Brown
again on another nine-yard spurt
to make the score 21-7.
"I guess if there's a positive
thing about the game it was the
way we played after they
scored," said Holland.
c-dlf Mltr 21, lrvtM 7
Scer-tlW~ lrvff>t o O 1 0-1 CP<ona a.I Mar 7 O O ,._,,
CdM-Halfle(d •run IHUQMi klcll 1-f'ranll 7 NU from 8i.4mln CHenloan klO>J
CoM-tlro•n t run (Huohel klci.)
CdM--erown P run (H.,gllll klcti. l
INOIVIOOAL ST A TlSTICS
RuaMne
1-Bltlma". IJ.lor mlnut 21, AaltrNIUlla
11-4', FroM., 4·21.
CQM-Hallleld. >-21, 8 rown, 10·16',
Tom..,., 14-ft, Colllno, J· 1 ... ~ .....
l-81alrnan. S-U-0, 19. LIPlon. 0-1-<), 0. COM-+4alfield, 10-11·>. 1 ..
Racel¥"'9 1-Htnloan. 1-l, NMI, 1-17 Rallmalulla, Hor
mlnu• 3, Franlo., 7-12
CdM-f>rvor, •·ts; l!lrown, J-41, ltoale, I-IS,
Tomlclttk. 1-16, Wer,,..., 1-31
OM Momlna Dow
l "luN N41ueL C11Urotni. 01677
(714) 8)1-9096
••
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct 16, 1983 t.•s
Presley Co. chief calls for Federal Reset-ve change.s
By MARCY S. BURTON
As September came to a close the unemploy-
ment figure was down from 9 5 percent to 9.3
percent.
Retail sales were up for the hf th straight month
in a row.
Indications are that In terest rates will conunue
to trend lower Until the end of 1983 and into 1984.
Inflation will remain subdued for at least a year or so
and corporate profits will show strong gains this year
and next.
In other words investors should not head for the
st:Orm cellars.
What are interest rates going to do the rest of this
year and next? The prune rate. recently at 11 percent,
should ease to an average of about 10 5 pen:ent in the
fourth quarter of this year and to around 10 "Percent
in the early months of 1984. •
Long term rates are ljke ly to show s1miltar
decline with the rate on 30-ycar Treasury bonds.
recen tly at 11.68 percent, averaging l L.25 percent in
the fourth quarter of this year and Calling to 10.75
percent in the early months of next year.
As business activity accelerates in 1984, interest
rates can be expected to rise with growing demand
for credjt. Only slight incre~ are likely however.
Prime should move up to an average of 11.70
percent in the final quarter of next year.
In short, by the end of next year, rates in general
may be slightly higher than they-are today, but still
well below the highs of recent years.
The stock market? ~pecially favorable are the
strong gains projected for corporate profits.
Gains for the fourth quarter of this year are
expected to be 26 percent higher than they we re in
th e final quarter of 1982. By next year's first quarter,
after-tax profits are likely to be a remarkable 34
percent above the level a year earlier. While
year-to-year gains in subsequent quarters are apt to
be somewhat smaller, they should still contribute to a
creditable profit performance for the full year. Thus
corporate profits, after declining for three year.;, are
expected to increase by 11 percent this year and by
By ANDREA ADELSON
OllMD•r -I Mft
Randall Presley, chief of the
Newport Beach-based Presley
Companies home building firm, ls
calling for a radical restructuring
of the Federal Reserve System.
·Presley told 300 members of the
Huntington Beach-Fountain Val-
another 20 pert-ent in 1984. Although stock prices
could move lower in the next month or so the shares
of firms that can show earnings momentum would
seem to have a special appeal.
Also attracti\.:e at this time are the shares of
companies that should do well as interest rates move
lower. Some include home builders, buHding
material supp!Jers. real estate firms, banks, insurance
companies, utilities and telephone compames.
In conclusion a few reassuring. as well as
realistic, observations about financing the federal
deficit.
First, there is more than e11ough liquid wealth in
the nation -cash . savings. stocks, etc. -to finarlce
Washington's red ink and a vigorous recovery as
well. The money to service the national debt does not
just come from the dollars yo\J might save after
you've paid your bills.
Second, a nation that is creating wealth enjoying
a'Onomic growth, producing more JObs and higher
incomes, is in a bettet position to finanre a
government than one whose economy is stagnant.
Uncle Sam is perpetually in the red, but state and
local governments are usually in a surplus. For the
past decade, the U.S. net government deficit was one
of the lowest, as percentage of GNP, in the Western
world. Morever. about $90 billon of what Uncle Sam
or one of his agencies borrows ends up being re-lent
to the private sector, primarily for housing.
,Marcy S. Burton JS a registered representative with
Mernll Lynch in Newport Beach.
DRANGICOASTSTDCKS
H er e a r e the s toc k m a rke t ac tivit es o f publicly traded
Ora nge County firms fo r the week e nde d F riday, Oct. 14 .
Da ta p rovid e d b y Newpo rt Securities Corp.
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ley Board of Realtors this week
that he has mounted a challange to •
the Federal Reserve's monetary
system with a multi-plaintiff law-
suit filed in June.
ln an interview prior to the
meeung in Huntington Beach,
Presley aaid the suit's aim ia to
wrest private control of the Feder-
al Reserve "04' of the hapds of the
major banking interests.
of Southern California. Presley
said, so far, more than 1,800
co-plaintiffs from all ~O stat.et
have joined the suit.
"We expect to have thousands
before we're through," he said
The ault Is expected to be heard
next month.
"If one industry is going to run
the Federal Reserve, I think It
s hould be developers," said
Presley, 65, only half-joking.
The residential developer, lead-
ing one of the top 10 firms in
Orange County, i.s the founding
member of the Committee for
Monetary Reform. the group
Pretley co'htends the bankers
set favorable monetary pc)Ucy at
the expen.!le of other induauies. To
llluatrate, he pointed to record
bank profit in the past year while
other industries tallied the worst
bankruptcy rate since the De-
pression. Randall Presley
New HB Sav-On opens Thursday
which filed suit ln a Washington, Sav-On Drugs will opens its mclude a complete cosmetic sec-
0 .C., federal court. 180th store Thursday in Hunt-tion, a party shop, a photo ~on
Presley said "a glaring conflict ington Beach. The new Sav-On with a wide range of electronic
of interest exists" within the will have 17 ,800 square feet of items, a magazine section and a
institution that controls the na-shopping area, compared with beverage department. Spo. rting
tlon's money supply because five 5,000square feet housed in its first
of the 12 members of the Federal drug store, opened in San goods, automotive suppUes and
Be d . · 1945 housewares also wiU be offered Open Market Committee rep-rnar mo m .
resent the nation's largest banks. Grand opening ceremonies wiU Store manager is Jim Cooper:
The chief plaintiff in the sitit is be held at the 7191 Warner Ave. assistant manager lS Karen
the Building industry Associati_o_n __ 1oc_a_1i_o_n_a_t_9_ a.m. The store will _Sc_h_u_r_ig:...___
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l
Ce Orange Cout DAIL Y"PILOT /Sunday, Oct 16. 1983
WEEK'S AND YEAR'S HIGHS, LOW CLOS£
•
NYll COMPOllTE TRANSACTIONS
OUOTAl._. IHCtuot TMDO OH, .. ~W YOM, MIOWUT, 'Abtl'C. 1'9W. IOITOH, OllftOll AHO ~m tTOC!I llletwiGU AHO llll'Ofl'TG l l Tllf Mt!> AHO .. ,....
•
STOCKS
"EEK 'SAND YEAR' HICHS, LO" U.OSt:
.......
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983 C1
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ll '"" "' 1] 71 .... b v. 1l'•r .... 1~ .. lllo l/t MYR 160 t ' IS IS 11 -•t. I~ • Wtctlllt 1014 11" s I.lo+ "' 1~ TllOfEn II n '" ,.,. 1''1 1•" IS\'t Vt tm.c 711 IC 7• n 11 .. ,,_ .. ,.,, '"' Wllic.~C JI "' ... '" ,_ .. s-. l11teO , " 11 xn """" 11 11'-• "' o ,, 1S"' "'"''"' 611 11 17 ull" 40"' •1•1.-.. .!"'. 16~ ww"'i-"! ~ 1 1, •111 ...!~ 211. .?" •. JI TN111tn 1 IO f 611 46 4)" &>-" ?t•it 1 1'1 VrOltn > l4 0 !1 It .. 11 lS'll-1'' ,. • ·--.,,. " " -9 • I • Tld.... 1J lS6 141• 11'°" 1• ,.. • I 1''> Vtfll 70 Ill S.. ,._ S '>i .. 1' l lo WI-IO II 1 le ll"" IJ-'• 1'11 TotEo OIO S 1100 :17'1> ,,.,, )11-' ,. .. 17 .. l/IAmC ltO 10 ]1 70lo 10 10 -.. &) I ,. ""'''"'•IO 1110 tO . eo· .. 40'9-..
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11' TollPI e h ti II''> II" 11 " 9 , ''°" Vt rtOit Oi 11 117 /" I ·n ~ '"' .... W•O<IE 6'1 t'4 7"' 1 • 1'1> ) lo1P1 ... J , .. ) .. )lo II > • l/lllKh " 41 .... ' ..... " '°" 20'> WrallV OS 111 ... )1 ........ 11 TolP1 ol7 N " ?t 17 •• ,. t ,,... ~ Vl(OI'. 11 16 10 . ,,., , .. _ '" l 1·11 W<QIM9 70 CS6 '" • ..,._
]I\ To ..... r 01 lo.cl ~ s ,... IS'-) .. ""''0<0 17 II• t lo '"• ·-, .. -ll-'l'-t -'" Town Nl '1 1' 11'1 1" 1'1'1 I 1Jv1 ~ \/lrto 1 lh 9 tc ll'• 17 ... 17•,._ .. 1' • l'l'I Ya~oO i 17 lllvlf" Ha. It • 1,. ,.,. "''"'' "' ,... I • I ·-., ll ~ ........ n I •I '• 0 • w~-lll>t '" z,,..., ' 10 7S )U "'-,, ... II ... 10 ... TrO\L• 10 ., ll • 171.. .,.. IS•lt .. v ... e~. "'' .. "
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ca Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/$unday, Oct. 16, 1983 \
MUC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTJCl
PM:TmOUI 9UlaHll l PICTIT10UI .,.._., 1'1Cil110Ua--U fltC'nT10Ue -·· NTmOUI .U..U HChllOUe ...,..... PK:TmOUI ...,..... l"ICYIJIOUt llUllMUI ..,._ HA.,....NT NM11 tTA.,....,, MMlll ITA~ . ..... etA...-.r ltMill lfATlllllNT _.. eTAftmNf NAMI tTAllMDIT NAm ITATUmf'r
The lollo.lng penona are doll!O The followlng '*"°" .. doing TM tolkMfng '*"°" i. dolllg TM f()ltowtno .--.,. doing file tollowlng .-.on la dOlnCI The lollOWing l*90ll .. doing t119 ·~ '*'°" ,. doing The totlowlno ~ .,. doing bl*,,... u tine. M; bUll,_ u : -• W. bu..._ u : buelMel -. bull-11: bulln-11:
WESCO ELECTRONIC SUPPLY. VALMARK, 23297 Souln Pol/lit UNIOVE AOVEAl'l81NO, UHIOUI (A) CASAf MADRIO LIMITED 18) W (L TOH MARINE &E R· COME COAST WITH ME. 11'1'·F OOAA18PAYNEANTIOUE8&AC· OH THOSE OONUTS. 173-4 N-· 11-46 Beklt SI, Coate Meea, CA. OrtY6, •230, uoun1 Hlli.. CA. 112653 EM 8 R 0 I 0 ER Y , II NI 0 U ! ASA MADRID APARTMENTS, VICetCHAl8 WELTON MARINl'i Alwrelde OI' .. Newport Belch. CA. Cl!S80RIE31 1173 Klnotton, Cotti Port 81., C0tt1 M ... , CA. 82427
82829 JlmM v~. 2428 I OnllflC ENtEfllPRISES. UNIQUE PROO· 11562 MICMhur Blvd .. 811. 440, SERVICE, t9028 Appi.81 .. Fovnleln ee3 ....... CA. 112828 Stephen Edwlfd ,...ro t&Ot 1
0.'lld Q, Cary, 3030-.C So Brad· Llt141. El Teto. CA. 92e30 • -l.)CfS. UNIQUE PROOUCTION8, NI~ CA. 827 t5 vaai.y, CA.112708 8tenda M. Mllcn.11, 208B David Dorri• A. P1ycw. t 173 Klng1ton. FlelObury Ln. Hunttnotoro' BMctl.
fOld St .. Santi Ana. CA 112707 Thia bulln..-11 conducted by. 1111 UNIQUE BENEFIT 'PROGRAMS, l>1vld K Ulmb. 18652 MICAfthljr CMll?j>li.t Tom Welton. t902i Or.,~ 9Mo/I, CA. 112863 COiie M .... CA. 021128 CA. 112847 .
Pauto: C1ry, 3030.c So BlllOIO<d ndlvldulll. EAGLE COMMUNICATIONS. U.S. lvd., 14140, lrvlne. CA. 1127 tS Appt. St.. Fountain Vall9)1, CA. Thi• 1>4.111,llMI II coodUOUld by an Thi• lw•lneee la.c;ondualld by. an Nancy Lee Metro, 18011 I Fllllclbury
St .• Santa Ana, CA. 92707 JllllM Vllgen M ARKETING, 34840 C1ml110 John Minar, 111552 MacArthur 0~708 lldlvldu1I. lhdlvldulll. Ln., Hunllngton BMch, CA. 112447 Thi• bulit'lft• 11 conducted by• , Thi• 1111emen1 w11 llMKI with 11 .. Ctp111r1110. f8, C1191tlr1no a..ch. lvd .. 1«0, lrvlne, CA. 1137 t!I Thia l>Yllln"' la condU01ed by: an 8tltldt M. Mnet*I Oofrla A. Payne 81991\en E. Metro ~ partrw.nlp ounty Clefk of Orange County on CA. 112024 M1llrd1d Ruukh, 111552 lndMdu1I. Thlt l lllemet>t WM flied WUll the Ttua 1t1temen1 >111t)l*I with Ille Thia 111111'*11 w .. Iii.cl with the
OaVld G. Cerf t 27, 11183. .. Denni• Wayn., 34840 Camino acAr1tiur 81\fd:.. A'lt40. trvlne, CA. Chrl1t()f)her T Weltoo ounty CMlrie or Ot•noe County on County Clerk 01 OrlllO• Covnty on Covnty Cleft! of q,.nge County on
Thlt tt•t-t wH 111.0 with tne ~ Caplalrano. Capt1trsno Blach, CA, 2715 .. Thia 111t-1 wu rte.a with IM . 4, 11183. Ocl 11, 1983 Oct. J, 11183.
County Cieri( of OranQit County on Publllhed Oran~ Cout 011,., 92824 Thia t>ulllnees 11 C)()f'lduotlld by: • County Ct.fl< of Orttl(>t Cc>uoty on "221111 • 1"227127 ~
s.c>t. us, tll83. 1101 O<;t 2, 9, 111. 3. t983 Thia butl,_ 11 oonduotld by: an enwal partnerehlp. Oca. 7. 1983, Publftll«I Or1no-Coaet 01lly Publl•Md 0tang11 Cout Qllly Publlahed Orange Cout Dally f'22U9I 5412-83 lndlllldull. David K. Ulmb, Gen.,11 PenMt t rU911 Pilot OCL II, 18, 23. 30, 11183 Piiot Oct. t8, 23, 30, Nov 8, 1983. Pilot Oct. 9, 18, 23, 30, t983.
Publlthed Oranoe coast Dally Denni• wayne Thia 11a1~1 waa fll.O wltri llWI Publllhtel Orange Cout Dally 55011-83 5649-113 5517-83 Piiot Sept 25. Oct. 2. 9, 1a. t983 P\Bt.IC NOTICE Thi• alatement waa flied with Iha ounty Ci.ti< of Orange County on Pilot OOt. t8, 23, 30. Nov. a, t983.
53t4·83 ounty Clefk of Orange County on 12. 11183. 563M3 ,,._ ,C NOTICE n1n•ic NO""'r FtCTlTIOUI ........ apt. 111, 19113. 1"'227211 PtllllC NOTICE l'UUU f'UUL llW. ----.---•c""'f'-NO_TI_C_E___ NA• ITATl.MINT fma94 Publl.n.d Orange Cout Olllly ,ICTIT10U. llUIMH FICTITIOUI •u ..... ----"-uuu_______ Tha 1o11ow1ng Pl'ton• are doing Publlshld Orange Coot Dally 1101 Oct. ta, 23, 30, Nov. 8, 111113, f'tB.IC (!)TICE PJCTlTIOUt aUl lNIH f NAMI I TATl!MSn NAME ITAnMeN'T
butlneu as: Piiot Sapl. 25, Oct, 2, 9, t8, t983. • 15632-83 NAMI ITATllllNT '1CTTI'l<Mll llUl!NEll TRAVEL AGENCY OWNERS SO· 5312·83 f lCTITIOUI llUIMll Tha IOllowlrig l*IOli• 111 dolng The foltowlng peraon 11 doing The following PlflOnl are doing
NAME ITATl!llEIT CIETY TAOS. 2158 Newpor1 Blvd., • NA• I TATl!•NT 11,,_ .. : bullln11111: bulllneM u .
The lollowlrig persona are <lolnO Coita M-CA 92027 P\BJC NOTICE Tiit followlrig pereon1 1111 doing HUNTINGTON BEACH HUB-DENISE'S SANDWICHES. 140t E. SLUMS OF SAN FRANCISCO, 0011n ... M ' p 1 J ' e ' h II 4840 p k .,. .. ,, bualnett u : APS 18423 BHch Blvd CA lat Street, Sama Ana, CA 112791, 17440 17th St., St. A, Tu1lln, CA NEWPOA~ BUILDING SERVICES, ~. ~~~ B~h. CA. 92:6c ~1c NOTICE f lCTrTIOUI llUllNl!H ' PARADISE POOL & • SPA SER· Mitch Nu<* 4000 co1d\..119' Cyn A. (Alb6rt) Howlrd Furlong, s212 92880
2711 Avcocado Suite C-t02, Co1ta Paul Jay Burchell FICTITIOUI aUllNIU NAiii STATl!lllNT VICE. 2t01 Plac.ntle, Coale Meea. #2 Studio Ctly CA 91406 St Ge<><ge, Weaonlnater, CA 92683 Creative Waye Inc .. I Calif. COfp.,
M .... CA. 92827 Thia statement wu tiled wllh the NAiii! ITATl!•NT The IOllowlng peraona 1re doing Ca. 92027 Anthony Lomb1tdl 27453 l<enlell Ruth R. FurlOflQ. 5212 St George. 729 W. 16111 St .. B-6. Coate MMe.
Loul• Rene' Candelerla, 276 County Cleft• 01 Orange County on T 1 1 1 dOI bualllllt u : David R. Wampler, 313 381h St., Or Ssugua CA 9t3So We1tmln1tlf, CA. 92883 '\ CA. 92027 _......_ AvOGado Suite C-102 Costa Mesa l\e fol OW ng perton I ng HARDISON EQUIPMElllT MAIN· N-port Beach, Ca. 92863 Thi bull• '1 ducted b 8 n1a butlneu II conducted by: an Thia bu1lnet1 It conductea·oy, a
CA. 112ei1 . • Sept. 27• 1983· f22tOIO bu1lneaa u : TENAfilCE ANO flEPAIR. 1145 F W. Oevld Wampler ner~ '::,J con y lndMdual, corporatlOO.
James Michie! Ban. 24159 Titus Published Oran 8 Cout Dell MARATHON BUSINESS MAN· Blller0Coal1 Meta, CA. 92628 This statement was llled wllh the Mltct> r::net p. A. Howll'rd Furlong Cllttord A. Hanton, Pr11ldlnt
AY6., Pomona, CA. 91766 Pll 1 Oct 2 9 16 ~3 1983 Y AGEMENT SERVICES. 920 CS. Robin H. HardlllOn, 21126 U High· County Clerk 01 Orange County on Thi• etllement wee Ille<! with the Thia atelenient was Ufed wlln the Thia statement w11 nled with the
Louis Rene Cendetarle 0 · • • ' ' ·5<1 17_83 Nutwood Ave., •62, Anaheim. A. land, 881111 Ana, CA. 112704 Sept. 16, 1963 County Clerk 01 Orange County on County Cieri< ol Orange Counry on County Clerk ol Or1nge County on
This 11atemen1 was filed with the 92804 Harvey R Hardlton, 750 Hudson r225217 Oct 41 lll83 Sepl. 16, 1983. Oct. ~. 11183
Coumy Clerk ol Oran119 County on N1wH1 Jal Tavarla. 1120 S. AY6., Coate Mesa. CA 92626 Published Orange Cout Dally · ' · ~22M05 F225Z73 F22elCll
Sept t6, 1983 PlEl.IC NOTICE Nutwood Ave .. #62, Anaheim, CA. Reita M. Herdlson. 750 HUdllOn Pilot Sep\. 25, Oct. 2, 9, 16, 1983. Published Orange Coest Dally Publlshed Orenge Cout Dally Publllhed Orange Cout Diiiy
f 2252i2 92804 d ed Ave., Co1t1 Mesa, CA. 92826 5310-83 Piiot Oct 9 16 23 30 1983 ?1101 Oct 18, 23, 30, No~ 6, t983. Pilot Oct. 9, Hl, 23. 30, t983. Published Orange Coast Dally F1c m1oua IUllNEll This buslnets la con uct by an Thia bualM!l.S la conducted by: a • · · ' 5509•83 5662-83 .5514-83
Piiot Sept 25, Oct. 2, 9, 16, 1983 HAME STATEMENT Individual. limited par1nersfllp. DIDLIC NOTICE 5307-83 The following persons ate Clolng Nawzer TaYarla Rella M. Hardllon n 111 .,..., C NOTICE
buslneas u : This statement was filed with the Thi• slltement ll"H llled wltn tne ,,..,,IC NOTICE l'tB.IC NOTICE l'UDLI ----P\Bl--IC_NO_T_IC_E____ PRO CAP COMPANY. 16820 Ml County Clerk ol Orange County on ounly Cllfk ol Orange County on FICTITIOU8 llU91Nll 8 r UDL FICTITIOU8 llUSINESS 1---flC_T_fT_IOU __ l_llU_laNE __ t_I __
------------Hutcnlngs, Founteln Val)ey, CA Sept. 16, 1983 --10ct 11, 1983. Th I NllAMIE 8TATEMl!NT I NOTICE OF D E A TH OF NAME ITATEMENT NAME ITATtllENT 92708 r~ f 221130 e 0 ow no l)flflOnl are dong
FICTTTIOUI IU81NESS Riek l McOermoll 18820 Mt Published Orange coest Diiiy Publlahed Orange Coast Dally business aa; PEMBERTON WRIGHT The lollowlng 1>41<110n la doing The tollowlng pei110n Is doing
T 1 NAME I TATEMENT d 1 HUlchlngs. Fountain 'valley. CA. Piiot Sept 25, Oct. 2, 9, 16· 1983• Piiot Oct. 18 23 30 Nov 8 1983. HERITAGE JEWELERS. 2340 AND OF PETITION TO AD· bu(~l·:~~~AAVEL/(B) BUSINESS bu~;:;sGS:~LERY t215 w. Baker
ne ollowing persons are 0 ng 92708 5308-83 ' ' ' S651·83 N-port Blvd · Suite 111' Co•ta MINISTER ESTATE NO. NO LEISURE TRAVEL. 130 E. 17th •F. Colla Me••, CA. 92828 bullness as: David Jachlmawlcz 1133 Blaine Meu. CA. 92827 -MICRO Fel.OWMATIL OElllCES. 1195, Riverside, CA. 92507 Leonel Mena, 8642 Ginger Lane. A -119813 Slteel. Suite ··J", Coate Me&a, CA. C1tol E Young, 3478 San Aafeel
LTD .• 5120 Birch Street. •200. New· Johrf May 71A Caselll Sen Fran-Ptlll.IC NOTICE Ptlll.IC NOTICE Westminster, ca. 92883 1 Geofl Levy. 1537 LeGrand& Crr., Costa Meaa. CA. 92626
port Beach, CA. 92660 clsco CA 924114 ' Wlllle Robert Venegas, 8642 Gin· To all hetrS, beneficiaries, treet. Thouaat•d Oak a, CA 91359 Tl11s bualnesa 11 conducied by an
Avan1e Proty1, Inc. (Delaware). This bu'alnesa Is conducted by: 8 FlCTITIOUI llUllMEll NOJ'ICI: Of' DtllOl.UTION ger Lane. Westminster, CA, 92883 creditors and con tingent Thia bulllneu 11 conducted by· an 1ndlY1du11.
3333 No, Torrey Pines Ct., .ct33!l, La genertt partnership-NAME STATtllENT Of' PARTNl!A&HIP Thia bualneu la conducted by: 11 creditors of PEMBERTON ndGl~ttueLl:.V., TCha[sottY11ou1e~~t w•• 11,..,. .... th the
JOiia. CA. 92037 David Jachlmowlcl The IOllowlng persona are doing gener11 pertnerlhlp. ~ -·• "~' -_, ,.., Thia buslnesa Is conducted by: a This ttetement was fifed wtth the bullness u : Publlc nollcfo Is hereby given that Wlllle R Venegas WRIGH T and persons who This 11a1emen1 w• llled with the County Cieri< of Ortnge County on
llmllec:t partnership. County Clerk of brange County on ALIGNMENT SPECIAL TIES. RTHUR J. VALENTINE. end ROB· This 111tement was filed with the may be otherwise interested ounty Clerk of Orange County on Oct. 4, 1983.
Ec!Wart T Boyte, Preeldent Sept 27 t983 l8t0t Redondo Cir. Unit T Hunt-ERT ABBOTI, he<elolore doing County Clerk of Orange County on in the will and/or estate: apt, 29. 1983 F'229227 Pubt'·'"~ Oraruwo Coaa~ty Thia stllemenl was llled wtth the · ' · F2290M lngton 8Noh CA 928411 ' bu1lneea under the llc1111ou• llrm Sept. 18, 1983. ,....., -... -
County Clerk of Orange County on Publllhed Orange Coast Dally Joe E. Grubba, ·t1139t Cindy LIM, ame 1nd style of CUSTOM f22Ull A petition has been filed Publl1hed Oranoe Coast Delly Pilot O<;t 9. 18. 23. 30, 19113.
Sept, 16, 1983. Piiot Oct. 2. 9. 18. 23• 1993, Huntington Beach. Ca. 92646 WARDS & AECOGNITIO;fAO. PubllSlled Orenge Coas1 Diiiy by Pet.er M . Kimball in the Piiot Oct. t6, 23, 30, Nov 8, 1983 • 5512-83
F2252IO 5419·63 OorQthy L Grubbs, 19391 Cindy RA-,.s, 11 3609 West M hur Piiot Sept 25, Oct. 2, 9, 18, "1983. S u perior Court of Orange 5683•831------------
Publlshed Orange Coast Dally , .. Lane, Huntington Bllch, CA. 92848 leY1td, Suite 805·806, C y of 531t-83 Co t U tin that~ PlllUC N011C[ Piiot Sept. 25. Octt 2. 9, 16, 1983. Joe E Grubba anta Ana, County of Orange. Stele un Y req es g 'e P\BlJC NOTICE
5309-83 P\Bt.IC NOTICE This ~111.,_,, wH fifed with the f ealllornla, did on the 30th day of MllC NOTICE M . Kimball be appoil} as · FICTmOUl llUllNEll
------------• nty Clerk ol Orange County on anuary, 1118,o. by mu1u11 conMnl, • perlOnal representative to flCTnloul llUl*Et l NAME ITATl!lll.NT PlllUC NOTICE ~:,.~=• ep1. 27. t983. lllOlv1
1
1 '~~ Mkl91 .~~ner.hlp and flCJ!!IOUI llUlaNfll administer the estate ot . NAME ITATl!ME.NT The lotlOwlng per.on 11 doing F221011 efm n1 e ....... r r • ""'' 11 partners N .... E I TATl'Ml:NT PEMB ERTON WRIGH T The 1o110W1ng pe<son Is doing ootlneu u · • flCTmC>US 9UI M88 Thi lollo_wtng petllOll la dolng Put>ll1116d Or1noe Cout Dall)' herein. The lollowlng person la dol11g bullnell u: RYAN ENTERPRISES. 809 W.
N.U. I TATEllENT ti.i.ineu u . Piiot Oct. 2. 9, 18, 23, 11183. Saki t>ullneta In 11\1 Mure will be bullneu u : • The petltlor\ requ ests KAY EVANS INTERIORS. 2830 Bllboa Blvd., BllbOI , CA. 9266t
The !ollowtng person IS doing vie':~~~60:1~~~·ci~l2~r-5<118-83 ductedbyCUSTOM AWARDS& C.C.,ENTERPRISES,2324tSouth authorit y to administer theAvon St. ,E, Newl>Oft Beach, CA. ChrlllOj)he< p TUCker, 801I w
bull,_ u : Ct>rlatopner Noel MacDonald RECOGNITION PROGRAMS INC ... Pointe Or., 11103, Laguna Hiiis, Ca. estate under the Independent 1121183 Balboa Blvd., Balboa. CA. 112661
DESIGNERS LIFE STYLE, 2324 t 2300 Fairview AV11 Cotta Mesa CA' . Cllll0<nl1 corpor1Uon, who >11111 pay 92653 A dministration of "'·ta•~ K1y Ev1n1, 2242 Chennel Ao., Thia bullneaa 11 oonducteo by· an So. Pointe Or., Ste .ct20-:l, Laguna ·· ' · Ptlll.IC NOTICE and dlachsrge 1111 ltabllltl" and Cr1lg Carney, 201 Calle Potrlo, """ """"Balboa. CA. 92681 lndMdull
Hilla, Ca. 92653 92826 1 ctebt1 of Iha firm end reoel111 all San Clemente. CA. 92672 Act. The petition is set for Thlt buslnMI Is conducted by an Chrls10!)her p Tuell ..
Beverty Eltzat>etn Cerney, 201 Fal~=~.!;:"n ~:.~:! 2~ flCTITlOUl llU .... •a monlet payable to the firm. Tiiie bulllneta I• conducted by; an hearing in Department 3 at lndlvtduel This 11atemen1 wu flied *1th the
Calle Potro, San Clemente, CA, 92e26 ·• · · HAM![ ITATl!ll!NT 'tur1hlt notice 11 hereby given 111111 Individual. 700 Civic Center Drive West Kay Evan• County Cle<k of Oranoe County on
92872 Thi b sl 1 d ed b , The lotlowing person 11 doing the undlrllgnld wlll not be respon· Craig Carrwy San CA ' This statement wu flied wtth the Oct. 11, 1983 . This bljlllneu Is conducted by. en lndlvl~ ~ nett 5 con uct y. an bullnua as: lll»e from January 30 1980 for any Thi• atafement w11 filed with the ta Ana, · 92701 on Oc-County Clerk ol Orange County on F2271211
lndlvldull. Oeb~~·L MacDonald • WEST COAST TRAP CO .. 1550 obllClllllon Incurred by.ROBERT AB· County Clerk of Orange County on tober 5, 1983 at 9:30 A .M . Oct. 11, 1983. Publl1neo Orange Coaat Dally
Beverly E Carney This 1tal-I WU llle<I wHh 1ha lramar #8, Balboa, CA. 92681 BOl"T In hi• own name Of In the Sept. 22, t983. IF YOU OBJECT to the F22'7129 Piiot Oct 18, 23. 30, Nov 6, 11183.
This s111emen1 was tllec:t With the C Cler 1 Or Cou t Roy S. Truetdell, 1550 Miramar name of Iha llrm or tor any obll f22l8IO ting f th tJti Publl1hed Orange Coast Dally 5631-83 County Cler1< ot Orange County on ~in~y 198311. 0 11199 n Yon #8, Bilbo•, CA. 112861 g•tlona Incurred Dy CUSTOM PubllSlle<I Orange Cout Dally gran .0 e pe on, you Pilot Oct. 16, 23, 30. Nov. 6. ~83, 1
Sapt, 22, 1983. . • . 1"12111 Thi• oolllneu 11 conducted by: 811 AWARDS & RECOGNITION PAO· PllOI Sept. 25. Oct. 2. 9. 18, 11183 should either ap pear at ~he 5850-83
0 c ~ly1 Publl'11ed Orlngfl Coot Dally ~Md~~T uesdlll GRAMS INC .• Calltornll corpor· 5315·8a hearing and state you Ob)eC-Plano l Pll~~~~~~5 ~'io; 9 C::S\96f Piiot Oc1. 9. t8. 23, 30. 1983. r::,~ ,;11~1 wu lllec:t with Iha •lion. lions or file written objec-Ml.IC NOTICE
. • . • • '5316-83 S515-83County Clerk ot Orange County on Oiied at Coate MMe. Callfornla, MllC NOTICE tions wit.ti the court before " 'f teTITIOUI 9USIHEH out of '""· r
Sept. 21. t983. hi• 7th d1y or October.11183. FICTITIOUI ......... 11 hearing. Your appearance N'" ... I T .. -..-NT ~) c ~'' I Dl-1c NOTl"r rueoa (Signature) Althur J. Valentine --be . -.. I.,_.. -Nl.IC NOTICE ,_ ___ ,. __ UDL;..;;...-.. ...... _~ ___ -l Publlltled Orange Coast Dally Publlahed Or•"Ofl Cou1 Dally HAME STATt:•NT may In perBOn or by yclur The lollowlng peraont are doing A t o ~
FICTTTIOU •• u •• ....,,, Piiot "-1 2 9 t8 23 1983 Piiot Oct 18, 1983. 552g...93 The following Pl<IQn Is ootng at torney. buslneu 11: JI' .: )) •• -"" . • • ' • ' buslneu ea: (A) THE BETTER IMAGE/(8 ) UNI '\ FICTlllOUI 8UatNE8S NAM£ I TATl!MENT 54115•83 INTERIOR MOTIVES, 2t05 Yacht IF YOU ~E A CRE?l-GRAPHICS. 3001 Redhill, Bldtl #4, c/f:=-
NAllE. STATEMENT The lollowl119 persons are doing ID•pane, Newport Beach, CA. 92860 TOR or a contmgent credit.or Suite 118. Coate Mesa. CA, 92626 1 ~
The IOllowirig pe<sons 8/e doing business as. l'tEl.IC NOTICE Lynne P G1111ch, 2t05 Y1cn1 of the deceased, you must file Dawn R1nchlg0d1, 3010 Perl( ! ,,-d -y...., bu~~,:L MEDICAL COAPOA· 1a::~M:.'!~n v~;c?· ~~~~1nd1~~; MllC NOTICE K-o7'117 jo.peM, Newport Beien, CA 92060 your claim with the t'Ourl or Newpor1 '402, N-Port 8eaoh, CA .,.. .,_
A TION, .!2642 Lambefl S1 Sulle S.ach. CA. '928-48 · .. f lCTITIOUI •UetNEll NOTICE OF INTENDED j This t>uslneas Is conducted by· 111 present it to the personal rep-Tony Wlckramaslnghe, 30 tO Park
403 El T0<0 CA 92630 Ronald G Peralez 10 Leda Irvine NAME ITATIMWHT TRAN&f~ Of ftl!TAll Individual • •-' b h Newport •402, Newport Beech, CA .....,~ -~
National Meci1c11 Corporation, A CA 92714 · ' ' · The following peraona are 0o1ng ALCOHOL.IC MWMOe UCEHH j Lynne P Glat'h resentau~e ~ppotn<CU Y t e Thi• but1neN 11 conducted by· e
C111torn1e Corporation. 22642 Ar1nur G Peralez, 832 Adellls St., bualne11 u : UNOIR t ECTIONI 24011 end TM• •latem<int Wll llled With lh<t court within four months general par1nerllllp.
Ulmberl SI . Suite •03, El T0<0, CA Montebello. CA. 90640 (A) SUPERIOR WINDOW CLEAN-• M074, County Ctlfk 01 Oranoe County on from lhe date of first issuance Dawn Aenchlgode I For CIAwfM'd Ad
92830 This business Is conducled by' • ING (8) SUPERIOR WINOOW MAIN· CAl.l'ORMA ..., ...... ANO t. 18· 1983 P'22S292 of letters as provided in Sec c Thi• ·~atement;u 111-g With the ,4CTION
Thi• business '' CO'ldUCled by· a g-11 p1t1nerah1p . rENANCE. 2005 W. 8alboe Btvd., PRCWl~I CODI PubMshed Orange Co111 011ly tion 700 nf the Probate Cod; c:;:n;y t9~k of range ount~y on c~u
CCH'poullOO. Ronlld G Peralez Ste. 2t0, Newpor1 Beach, CA. 92&83 1 Lk:en-'s N1,,.,.,1) p lo S · · · A DAILY "LOT
EllZabeth G Hammerslag, Sec-This st,temenl was filed wttn the Ty-Rae Eubanks, 320 Sante VA 'YEN TRAN 1 1 apt 25• Oct 2• 9· 18•5':~·e:J of atlifornia. The time for P bllsfled 0 C F~ AD·VISOt
re11ry County C~k of Orange County on Isabel, •8, Cos11 Mesa. CA 92827 IM•Ulng Addreu (Othtr than • filing claims will not expire Plto~ Oct 18 2;•~geN011°:\9~ Ml -SOI
This st11emeot was flied with the Oct "· 1983 Ken Fuller. 194 Broadway, Costa Llcenaed P/emlses) prior to four months from the · ' · •5664-83
County Clerk of Orange County on f 229I04 Mesa. CA 92827 12300 S. Harbor Blvd •5, Coa11 f'tB.IC NOTICE . .
Sept 30, 1983 Publllhed Orange Coast Dally This bullnees Is conducted by: 11 Mesa, CA 92828 ate of lhe hea.rmg nOlll'ed - -----
F22e308 Piiot ()(;t 9. 18. 23. 30, 1983 genlf'el partne11h1p. 2 tnttnded Tr1nsteree's N•met•I NOTICE OF DEAT H OF ve.
Publlthed Orange coast Dally 55t0-83 Ty·Rae Eubanks Ip s v P Inc M E RLIN EDWARD BARB YOU MAY EXAtAINE the
Pilot Oct 16, 23, 30, Nov 6, 1983 Thia sta1emen1 was flied with the Socl•I S.Wrlty Number(s) AND OF p' ETITJON TO & ..... m · k t b lh t If 5635-83 .,..,,IC NOTICE County Clerk of Orange County on Feet ID /1 Applied tor """" e ep Y t; cour . you -----------l'UUL Sept, t9. 1983. Mdreta MIMST E R ESTATE . NO. interested m the estate,
NlllC NOTICE f te-TITIOUI BUllMEll l'22l3IO "I• •13805 Doty Av•, "60 , K-071t5 ou may serve upon the ex-Publlshed Orenge Cout Dally Hawthorne CA 90250 • • • dminis NAME STATEMENT Piiot Oct. 2, 9, ta, 23, t983. 3 Kind of Llc41nMl(i) lntendect 10 To all heirs, benef1cianes, tor or a trator. or
FICTITIOUS IU81NES9 The IOllowlng pereons tre doing 5411·83 be Tranalflffeo (Name and Numbtw) creditors and contingent pon the attorney for the ex-
The ,!:!fng'T::!!E'f: doing bu~~c:s.TOUCH LIMOUSINES, 411·133843 creditors of MERLIN ED-to~ or administrator, and
t>uSln168 u : t9e8 Church St., Cost• Meaa, CA, ONSALE BEER & WINE FOR WARD BARB and per.ans e wtlh the C'Ourt with proof
(Al PRODUCTION ANO DESIGN 92827 Nil.IC NOTICE B~~~~:~.:.u~~f,~T.:~:~~ who may be ot herwise ( aervice. a writte.n requ~t
(B) GRAPHIC DESIGN, 1433 SU· David James H1n9)1, 1968 Churcn flCTITIOUI BUIMll the i.Jc«l""'a) llu (heve) been.._ interested in the will and/or ting that you desire special parlor. 218. Newpor1 Beach, CA, St , Cof11 Meaa, CA. 92827 '""' · f •'-r·llng f in 92963 Todd Ge<><ge H41the<lnaton 1970 NAMe ITATtlllrNT 2300 S. H1rt>or 81Vd. •5, Co1t1 estate: tJCe o u1e I o an -
Batb1111 L.. Frees 1433 Supert0< Church St Coeta M ... CA i12a21 The lollowtng persons •re dot M .... CA. 92828 A ~tition has been filed entory and appra.lsement of · · ·• • · bu•lneM u : 5. Name and Addr ... 01 Eacrow th f ta. Newport Blecti, CA. 92&83 Thi• t>ualneu le COf1ducted by; e GONZALES-HUNTER & SON 71 HOid., or GuarantOf by ECURITY PAClFIC tate asaeta or o( e peti-
Thla bullnee& 1' conducted by: an llmlted ,>ertnerlhlp, Lido Park Or Sp-36 N • GROVER ESCROW CORP 23.,.,. N ATIONAL BANK a na-ons or aocounta mentioned lndMdull. Davi.: J Haney ·• • ·• vvv •
81,,,111 t. Freu This atcitement wu !tied wtlh thf 8each. CA. 9~863 Rocktleld Blvd. St•. 2N, El Toro, lion.al banking aaociation U\ Section 1200 and 1200.5 of It · f Wayne B. Hunter, 2300 Flllrv C1lllornl1 • r. "f · p bate Cod Th 1111emen1 was lled with the County Ctert< of Orange County«>< Rd., Unit p2ot. Cotta Mtu, CA ESCROW NO &-4171•35 theSupenorCourtof Orange e ~ on_ua ro e.
County Clerk of Oranoe County on Oct. 3, 11163. 112826 a Total contldefatlon to t>e p11d County .-,u-<;na that SE-Pet.er M Kimball Oct 7. 11183 f2M50t • ·-... --'6 p f~ Publlahed Or1111g• Cout Dell~ Wayne B. Hunter tor the bulllneae Ind llcenM (to In-CURITYL P A CIFIC NA· etitioner
Publlahed Orange Cout Diiiy Pilot Oct 9 18 23 30 t983 Thll slltement wae 11190 with 1 ciude lrwenlory Whlthef actull COii. TIONAL BANK a nalton.al GARLAND G. STEP· PllOt Oct t6 23. 30. Nov 8 11183 ' · ' ' ' 5507-83 County Clerk of Orange County •tlmatld COil, Of 1 nof.to-exOMd '---•·· . '. be H E N S
.,
· ' • ' · 56Jr-33 Sept 27, !983, amount)(lnventory tnc;lu<*t I none) u1uu• . .ng U80Clallon ap-
f Caah . on~' . . 15,000.000 pointed as personal represen-Ateon1ey for P etition er Nil.le NOTICE Published Or•nr Coaat Demand note lo be reptllOed by cull tative to administer the estate 10.0 a L 0 I A I• m I t 0 I
PlalC rtOTICE f lCTITIOUt IUllNHt Piiot Oo12,9. 10. 3. 1983.5420-~:~m~ 'No1::!·~·~or or the of MERLI N EDWARD Boalevard
F1CTITIOUI IUllN£H NAME I TATEMENT ... 1 ...... 25,000.00 BARB (under the lndepen -Lo• Alamito s. C A . 90720
NAME I TATEMIENT Tha followtng pereon 11 dol~ l'tEl.IC NOTIC£ Tangible 1ndl o1 lnllnglble prope<ty dent Administration of Es-Published Orange Coast bU~ol:.-'ng penon I• dotng bu~=L'L"soFTWARE SYSTEMS. TOTAL AMOUNT $65 000 00 tat.es Act). The petition la 9el Daily\PiJo\ Sept. 17• 18• 24•
THE SHOE LADY, 88 Fair Ofl111, 1905t Suva lane, Hl.lntlnglon Beach. F~~:A~~=· 7, The partlle agree th1t the c:On-for hearing in Dept. No. 3 at11983.
Coste Mesa. CA. 92626 CA. 92848 The I lowl I ·0o1 eldef•tlon tor Iha tr•n•flr of the 700 Civic-Center Dr' West, 5225-83
Brend• Gottlieb, 18-t67 Santa Oaryt Eugene W11ton, 19061 Suva bullnet1~8' ng pet'ton 1 n bU1fnee1 Ind lhe llOlnM(I) la to be Santa Ana CA 92701 on Nov
Carlotta. Fountain Valley. CA 92708 Ln .• HunUngton Buch, CA, 92848 PAB MANAGEMENT COlllSULT p•ld only attar Iha Oec>anment of 2 1983 t 9.30 AM · PlalC NOTIC£
Thi• business 11 conducted by· '" Thi• bifatneaa la conducted by: an ANTS t8312 Holtywooo Line Hunt Alcohol~ Be....,age Control hu ap-• y'oaU •00 ~ th OflMKM COUNTY lndlv1<1u11. lndlvldulll In ton Beech CA 1126,.7 · proved 11\e prQPoled tranater. The CF _ ..,... .,...._ • to e
Brenel• Golllleb M Daryl E. Watton ~atrtot• Ann Barker lMl2 Holly· partlet 1110 eo•ee and he<etn direct grahting of the petition, you 700IUP!c......_ "'°c.:t~~ .. , Thia a111emen1 wH filed wnh the Thia 1111ement wu lllod with th• • the et>o'/9-n11med ete1ow holder to h Id 'th th ,.... -County Clerk of Orange County on County Clerk of Orenge County on wood Line, Huntington Beach, CA. mike payment or dl11rlbutton within 8 ou. et er appear al e lanta AN, CA. tf701
Oct. 11. 1983 Ocl, <I. 1993 112047 1 reuonable time •lier the comple-heanng and state you objec-Plalnlltt: Tllom11 C. Parrish and
1"221128 F22lllOI This t>uslneu la conduc1eo by an tlon ol tha 1ran111r ol tha llQenM u lions or file written objec-Edwin A. Brown
Publllhed Ora;;8e Coast Dally Publl•hed Orang• Cout Dilly In~:~~~~!· Ann Bark.r provldld In Section 24074 of the lions with the court before ~nd~nt: Wiiiiam Henry Everell.
Piiot Oct 16. 23. . Nov \~~83 Pllo1 Oct. 9, 16. 23. 30. 19a~513_83 Tilts slltement wH filed with the g~r:nht Bu1in1ss and Protet1lona the hearing. Your appear-Jlc~1~0.vr~~35
P1ERCE BROTHERS
BELL IAOAOWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Coste Mesa
642-9150
BALTZ BERGERON
IMfTH a TUTHILL
W.I TCLlfF CHAPEL
427 E. 17th St
Cotta Mesa
646·9371
PACl"C VIEW MEM<>f'IA&: PARK
C.me1•ry Mortu1ry
Chapel-Crematory
3600 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beech
6«·2700
County Clerk of Orange County on Tr1n1teror(1) Slgnatur11 a.nee may be In person or by IUllllONI
---... ---·c-NO-Tl-,.-r --Sept 27, 1983 VA YEN TRAN your at•-mey HOTICl l You ... " bMn •ued. n111u ~ f 221G1<4 s "' · The ~ mQ cteotde .. e11111 rou Publl•heo Orange Coeat Dally Trens~.,8~•J 1~~•tures CF YOU ARE I\ CREDI-wttfNM1t ,_ belna !Mefd unlffe
FICTITIOUI •UllNIEH Pilot Oct 2. 11. t8. 23. 11183. OftOVl fl H OROW COflit, TOR or a rontlngent credit.or rou reepoftd wttNn JO cl.Ira. ftMd Hille STAtt•NT 5413·83 flcMd a l d f h d ___ _. f'l Iha Wonnatloll betow T lie 1-•1owlnn ..,...aon1 era dol"" neoo Roell ,, " "2H o l e ece_,.., you must I e If ....... to k th. ad I of ..,. ... .....,. ""1-------------1E1 Teto, CA nao I , Ith th you ,..,... -• voe in bu111ne111 u : .,._IC NOTICE Publltlled Ora Co111 0111 P1to1 your c aim w e court or altorney In thl• matter. you anovld
UPLAND PARTNERS, t8195 Ea11 f'UUL Oct. 18, 1983. nge y present It ta the pe~nal rep-do IO promrtly '° 11111 your written
McDurmott, Unll H. lrvlne. CA. FICTITIOUI IUatNEll • 58413-83 rese.ntatlve appoint.ed by the r•pon11, I any. m•y bt 11119 on
112714 •NT time Samuel R1m1111, 18 t95 E111 The :i,'::: ITA'!on 11 dol . rourt within four months AVtlOIUtted h• lldo demandada. ~Ourmott, Unit H, Irvine, CA. &Wtlneta U '. ng per ng PtllllC JtOTICC from thedat.eof finl lseu&l'lCe El 11tbum1: Ilda dlddlt oontre Ud.
917 t 4 (A) ORANGE COUNTY MEDIA of letters as provtded In Sec· liln llUdlenctl a ltllftOI .. Ud. ,....
MelYln Kooyumjlt1n. 18195 Eut GAOUP (B) SOUTH COAST METRO NOTICI: CW ltUIUC .. AIUNO tlon 700 of the Probate Code llllOftlle dantro • IO cllM. l.M le
MoDurrnott, Unit H. Irvine, CA. (C) NEWPORT CENTER NEWS (0) AICON LANDrlU. t "'·"f mi Th f Int__..,_ .... . 11271<1 AIRPORT BUSINESS JOURNAL axTINStON M MOlllATOftlUM 0 ......... 0 8.. e wne or ",.. ... to ... the Mtvtoe of
Jeffrey Mallook, 1a 1115 Eut 180 ~pon C9nt« Orl\11 NewJ>Oli NOTICE 18 Hl!AEBY GIV!N th1t • filing claims will not expire • ..._, "' tNe 1Mtter1 you
McOurmon, un11 H, Irvine, CA. e.acn CA 92880 • 1.1bllchNr~wttlbelleld bythlCtty prior to four monlJui from lhe .._..., .. ,....,.,.., .o tile• raw 82J'~ 5~o11 1 & 1 9 6 E 111 And;ew j0ft11 l.ewl1d20 Morning 11 ~l~om~lty n:.~~~':;,O''!! date of the hearing notJoed ~ ~· " any, .... , be • ., • Canyon Coron1 def Mar CA 92625 • ' '"' bov -911 -McOurmott. Unit H, lrvlne. CA Thi• tiu.i.-11 c:ond~ed by· 1111 he 9JI01Y1tl00 of matertat trom the• e 81u.lled._..eea4tlllll-
927t4 tndtvl<lulll · aeon L.andflll IClopted .. 1n ur-YOU MA y EXAMINE the .. • 111r1 ......-" Mte -• Rk:hatd O Burne, 1a111& Eul AndrM Lawler Ordlnanol •xPfrlng on No-!Ue kept by the l'ft.I." U you dllltlfte NMtto ~ ...
McOurmotl, Untl H, 1,-,,1ne. CA. Thia •ttlement wu fll.o With 1111 blf 3. 1983. The oxtenllon on l ,...,,, r.~ ·· • -. ....,_., 111 ,..,_.,
112714 Count Clerk 1 0 Cou t he MOfl tOfl\lm wlll be lor 1 !*lod are n tereti..,.. In u1e etltlte, _...,el~,...
1<ev1n R W1tk... 1e195 Eatt 8e9t ~7 1983° 'lf'IOe n 'I on t 10 e110Md to S.Ctton esese of you may 11erve u pon the ex-,..... ..... •
Mc!Ourmott. Unit H. '"''~· CA. • • ,._, hi G~menl coo., ecut.or or Mlmlnlatnt.or or l·TO THI DI ANT: • dVtl
1127 t4 p bl hec:t OI Coaa D 1,.. Said otenM<>n of the !Tl()(ll<>flum ... ' ==-,_ ~ fled bf t Kenneth &tlonfelcl. 18 106 £ .. t u 1' lll)gl 1 1" ~ beolu11 of the potenttlll upon tht! atto~ for u •• ex-_.... w 111 ltfeft t
McOurmoll, Unl1 H. trvll'I. CA. Piiot Ool. 2• 11· ta, 23• 111113·&.414~ r11ttotllepubllohMlllllltldu 111ty ecutor o.r adminiatrat.Or, and .....,. ilea ..=... 1,_ lftwt
02714 reeldlnl• llWIO In Ille IU'Toundlng fOc with tN cou rt with proof ..... • dl)'I 1fter fllll *""'°"' I
()try OlrAgollan, 181116 Eut .... II' NOnrr ''°"' dllturt>lnOI, ·-of eervtce • wntt.en NWluell ......0 on 't<JAI; ftlt llf!th lhl• coun McOurmott. Unit H, lrvtne, CA. l'\IUU\f ·~ OIYetlonwlllen•bl9tt'9Cllylooom-~ ....... ~ .. _._·~ ... ""11an reepon• to tftl eo<nplajnl. 1127141 ltlldlM and OfdlnlnQlll ci.. Ila-.. u .. t you~•...-~ 1Jn1au you Clo.. your default wlll
M lchHI Hog1n. 18106 EHi l'lCTITIOUI euellllll lllgned IC)eCftklllfy to protact the en-notice of the tlltna o f an In -entlNd on app11ea11on of the plain
Md>urmott, Unit H. lrvtne, OA. tlAMI ITAll•NT vtronment llld popl.lllllon In \Ill Vt'ntory and appra.laement of tiff, Ind 1111t CCMll't ITl•Y enlet 1 JUd 02714 Tho tOllowfng pareon 11 doing VICfnlty ot tlll A'°°'1 Ulndnn ... • ment llGllntt you fOf the 1'91111
Thi• bll11neee " condllQlld by: • b1alMM •: alld i-1ng wlK be hald 11 11)1 Nt&U! ueela or of u1e peti· mJll!Oed In IN oomplilnt. wllloll
Qllllflll patfne<~I" T' 8 $NACt< 8ERVlct82 1'412 w. hour of 7:30 P ...... on Outobef 17. llON or lltC1"0W'lll me"ntioned COl.lld (flUll In garnlellmtnl ol
MeMn Kooyum11111 0111n11a. Orange, CA. Oii8211 111a, In me OQuncll Cllll'lloert In Sec:tlon 1200 and 12<>0.5 o f weoee .... lno of money Ot prQ91f1y
T1111 •11f.,,,..,,1 •II flied wltll lhe ThOmltl Wood Vennum, 122 351118\llldlno ot the ~Cent•. 2000 th Californi Prob9te ~ or otftt, rollef rtca\Mlltecl In ftll com-
County Clttk of OllnQI County on t:t... ~ 9Mcll, CA. a:>oea M1tn StrMt, Huntington 8-h, Ciiio ~ a -•N!.. p C .. ••y· p6111n1. Oct 4. 1983 11111 bu .. neM 11 conductld by; an fOl'nll, a.I'" n.... "'....., • ftQlll:< , Ol~ect· NCl'tl 16 1H2
,,_ Mdual. ,. All lnt.,..tect l*90f\l lfl tnvttecl ATl'ORNBY AT LAW lll A. i M NCH,'Qltt'll
JON1.1, 11AttOmv • -.YTC>N Thomaa wooc1 vennum 10 •tt•M .. 10 '*"rlll· AL1C1• M. 111 • o.ve strtec., s.aa. ie1 :r:Lm::=v--· o.itV A"°'11ep et I.AW Thlt tllltr'Mnl Wll fllecl with '"-W!HTWORTH N ._ ...... c.a ..... • "-ATY
........ ~-Drtwl, ...,_ OUllty OMfk of 01'1lllOI County on 01lY Cll!AI( fWPWt -· "' ,.. .... lvtk f10 t. 27. t883 CITY OF ttUNTINOTINO llA~ ('71') H I-IHI ~..._,CA. iliii
P EOP LE T U RN T O CLASSIFl~D
BECAUSE THE Y KNOW OTHER
PEOPLE ARE SELLING.
t.v·ll11tt• ,., ,., , u11"~
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Daily Pilat
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Piiot Od. 9. 11. U . 30. tM3. 1o1 Ot1, 2. 9, 11. 24, t983. Pu&H~ Of~ Coeel l'Not IJ)' Pilot Oc\, l~ UJ, 22, ()C)C a I. l~M3
6511·83 1411-«1 <>etobef t , 1Nl s H.P 1983. ~W-43 ' ' ,4tMl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j
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.t JACOBS REALTY, INC.
675-6670
llE ILHI 'ye IUOH
3+ 2 Br. duplex on deep lot. Garage and
storage plus extra parking. Fully as-
sumable 11~ 30 ,ear loan. Only $259,500.
11111011 110,000
Triplex two units are 10 years new.
Blt-ins, carpeting, clean and well main-
tained. Private patios and deck including
a huge 8xl2' jacuzzi. $275,000.
00011 VIEW DUPLEX
Across the street from the beach, and
owner wants to carry Joan for you. Offer
your do\Vn paymen·t. $198,000. ••
"'coBs REALTY, INC.
.. ~~~-6670
I
Sell things last with Dally Find what you want In
Piiot Want Ads. Dally Piiot Classifieds.
&WAD Wllllll llPLDD-Oll
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WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
Ill.AL E&TA Tl '*• lll•n1.tk p,_.,. M-M
~Iii c ..... Hwv )lt Ma,.,,. I!-.,. ,._, btecti BeltlOo l•WMI
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.· Orange cOaat DAILY PILOT/Sunde • Oct. 16, 1983 D I
CN=, )J
8 75-5511 . .,,/::{/
OOWFHIT &T ITI ltll
BIYSHORE Just Listed
3 bdrm. 4 ba. completely re-
modeled. 2 story, lrge family
room. $385,000
10% DOWN-HY HOIEI
2 story -4 bdrm -. MOTIVA TEDI
$259,000 Fee
llt2
a~
OPEN TODAY 1-5
Ill CllYOl-IEW LllTlll One of the finest and largest homes on
the S¥td. 5 Bdrm. 4 'h Ba, elevator to
2nd-Mtory elegant Mstr suite. Shows
like a new home. Asking $1,150,000.
Opn Sat/Sun. 1-5. 1020 W. Oceanfront,
LllE NEW-HY HOIES
Remodeled. Superb financing.
$269,000
Old CdM, 5 bdrm, new, spacloul, ucltlnc
This elegant remodeled 4 Br. 2111
Ba, Plan IV Broadmoor on a
cul-de-sac location offers the
very finest of appointments. A
large view lot only stepe from a.
park. Well priced at $760,000.
Danny Bibb
N.B. • $549,000 ........ 442 Begonia Old CdM
SEASCAPE OHIO
Spacious 2 Bdrm 2 Y2 Ba redwood
decked patio, highly upgraded, walk
to ocean, across from Newport Crest.
Asking $128,500. Opn Sat/Sun 1·5. 7
Seascape, N.B.
EVERYONE'S FAVORITE
Shorecllffs -4 bdrm. 4 ba.
Ocean/Canyon \llew
Harbor View Btdmor; 4 Bt, spa, serene,
$375,000(L) .... 2600 Lighthouse, CdM
CATALINA VIEW
Fresh decor, xlnt taste, 4 bdrm, pvt yard
$169,500 .... 5096 Harcum, Brdmr, TR 644-8200
•
OLI OOllH& DEL MIR
New spacious 3 Bdrm, 3 1/i Ba-. Light &
airy. Spectacular use of wood and
skylites. Walk to .Peach. $325,000.
Open Hse. Sat/Sun f!.5. 616 Marig?ld .
from 6 rooms. Cameo Shores. 3 '
den + maid's .,. pool. $595,000 Fee
11& OllYOI VIEW
overlooks golf course
PrlYllt 11ra1• $275,000 fee
Blc Burineame, 4 Bt. bonus rm, canyon vu.
$439,000 ..... 1306 Sandcastle, HVHls SHARP 1 MEW CONDO
IPSIDE IOWI llOME
llVESTIEIT COIDO
$ 116,900 Fee Great Assumable
Loan I
2 CdM LOTS
" Oen vu ownrs wt carry! 3 bdrm, 2 ba, pvt bch
$285,000. 420 De Sola Terrace, CdM
Charmin& okl CdM home w/euest lllit,
$250,000 .......... 701 Acacia, old CdM
tndoor/Outdoof feelil1, 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba.
$187,000 .......... 2613 Redlands, C.M.
JUST $108,000
Qualified buyer can· move in with
only 10% down! Convenient Costa
Mesa location. 2 Bdrms., 21;, baths,
attached 2 car garage plus fireplace,
deluxe built in kitchen, carpets and
<:!rapes. Builder's close out.
Unusual home Vi bl.pck from Little
Corona beach. 2 Bdrm 2 Ba, freshly
painted, new carpet. WHITEWATER
VIEW!! ASK.ing $450,000. Opn Sunday
l-5PM. 223 Poppy adjacent 301 & 303 Narcissus (7141 6 73-4400 lmmac., 3 Bdrm, tennis, pool, spa, Bic C1nyon
$234,900 .. .' .......... 5e Sea lsland. N.B. I 21 ll 621·2121
ll&lllOll VIEW 1101111 > Lovely surroundings, stunning decor
and FURNISHINGS. Asking
$265,000. ($245,000 w/t'hout
...... Two
--.. ONGS
TIE l·TAllES
COfllPAIY
760-1397 673-7761
T astehA, 3 bdrm twntwn, cshn ftrJ, fbwteu
TM Horttor Arta's l..°"9ftt
htabfisiwd ltol h .. OM .. ft'f
. furnis~).
COLI OF NEWPORT REAL TORS
2515 LC.. Hwr .. CoroM del .._
875·5511
$438,000 ....... 5 Jetty, Jasmine Creek R\llB<>ll
U ~ l ()U ~ tiVM~§
REAL TORS". 675·6000
Classified Ads 642·5678 ,Want Ads. Cali 642-5678 ----------
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
NEWPORT BEACH
ILIFFI 11 H ,IOO
Least expensive large condo available. 3 BRs,
famlly rm, lovely patio & private entry. Excellent
starter or Investment property. Sellers are mov·
Ing & n.eed fast sale.
THE ILIFFS llU,100
Sparkling with new paint & carpets. Large 3 BR
model on picturesque wooded greenbelt.
Fabulous owner asslsted financing. Unusual,
quiet. peaceful & private setting. A superb buy!!
IWlllll VIEW IOllH 1211,100
Gorgeous 4 BR. family rm+ bonus rm Portoflno.
Beautiful neutral decor. large professionally
landscaped yard. Terrific financing available
and owner will consider lease/option too!!
llUIOI VIEW llllU Uot,IOO
4 BA, 3'12 ba. flexible ,floor plan for lfg. famllyl
Family rm .. formal dining rm., separa~e bonus
room with Iott &. bath. Super for teenagers.
Excellent family neighborhood near sohool &
com. pool.
l&YOllESl SUt,000
Perfect for the growing family this 2 story home
has 4 BRs, famlly rm .. an expanded lanai, large
yard with spa, new car"pets, and Is rated as a
super value! Best of all, owner will finance!!
111111 VIEW H•ts UH,000
B6autlful & ln'\maculate Palermo with large ex·
panded family room. New oven & micro .. new
carpet. lovely panelling & large brick fireplace In
family room. A "Must Seel"
ILIFFI UH,000 Ftt
Everything good. Fee land -front row -bay
view -2200 sq. tt. -exquisite customizing
thnI·out -all 11ew 1andscaplngl Sellers want to
hear any and all offers.
IE&VIEW IHl,000
3 BR, formal dining rm, view! A special home Is
now avallable In private. gated Seavlew. The
view encompasses Catalina, the ocean, moun·
talns & the nlte llghts of Newport Center.
Tasteful decor & lush landscaping.
WEIT OLIFF SH0,000
The curb appeal doesn't stop after you 're inside!
Charming tradltlonal on one of Westclltt's best
streets. 4 BR, formal dining & sit down wet bar
open to covered terrace w/spa.
IWlllR VIEW llO•H UI0,000
A beautiful, customized & expanded PDrtoflno
plan whose seller builder says "We'll fine-tune
customize this home to the buyer's slightest
whim!" -Even Including a pooll Just make us
an offerll See what we can doll
M&llllll VllW MILLI U 10,000
Fabulous Broadmoor 5 BR home. Secluded
Interior patio, rear patio & yard with gorgeous
bay and nlte lite view. Famlly room w/flreplace.
kitchen w/eatlng area. Wonderful community
pool & recreation faclllty. ·
l&YOlllT 1 .. 1,000
Like a llmlted edition or a rare wine, this 5 BR
custom home la an.experience! Not Just another
home. Thoughtfully, lmaglnattvely bullt with
quality features too numerous to Itemize.
NEWPORT BEACH OFFIC.E
2 161 SAN JOAOU•N HILLS ROAD
A MEMBER OFTHE SEARS.FINANCIAL NETWORK
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES
OPEN HOUSES 1-5
l&THIAY
N.111111 VIEW ll•H
4 BR $309,900
2012 Port Ramsgate
LARAINE SHAW lllllY
MIHOR VIEW ll•H 1934 Port Provence
JOAN DONAHUE
200 Orvleto
EDIE OLSON
202 Seaward
DEBI BIBB
1308 Santiago
3 BR $239,500 LIM Ill.I
5 BR, FR
{llOIECLIFFS
3 BR, Den
WHTOLIFf
4 Ek FR
HHlllllllH
4 BR, FR
WEITOLIFP
$692,500
$395,000
$398,000 EVAN CORKETT
320 Morning Star Lane
$1,215,000 TEO PETERSON
4 BR . Pool $346,400
1206 Cambridge Lane
MAGGIE GUTH
3000 Ocean Blvd. OOllOll IEL 1111
3 BR $645,000
11.1111811 VIEW IOIH
4 Br $299. 900
LllO ISLE
4 Br
E&ITILlf F
$725,000
..JJ BR $220,000
JASlllH GREEK
3 BR, FR $430,000
llHllll VIEW MILLI
3 BR. FR $415,000
Ill OAIYOI
NANCY SIMMONS
17 18 Port Margate
LYDIA MURPHY
220 Via Genoa
C. RUMSFELD
2531 Bunya
TOM BOLAND
1 Jasmine Creek
CAROLE McMAHAN
1301 Keel Or.
MARIAN REEDY
11 Rue Marseilles
3 BR $398;000 CORA BALOIKOSKI
l&Tllll&Y 1 lllllY
SPYILAll l lllE 1606 Sea Bell Circle
6 BR. View. Pool $585,000 BERT REEDY
l llOIECLlfFS 356 Evening Canyon
4 BA. FR $695,000 EVAN/KAY .
111 OAIYOI H•4,000
A truly dramatic floorplan with S or 4 BRs plus
bonus room compliments one of Orange Coun-
t; 's most exclusive private communities .
Circular kitchen. winding staircase & 2 fire·
places are just a few of the amenities .
Ill , .. ,.. 1111,000
Bright and cheerful 4 BR famlly horn~ In de-
sirable area of prestigious community. Charm-
ing covered patio. Lots of gracious decorator
touches ~nd very attractive. 1st 'lrust~deed can
be assumed.
111• ..... 1110,000.
4 Br Lautremont model In ;a ·very private lo-
cation. Mountlan & city view -foothills that roll
gehlly to the horizon. Thia home has a unique
combination of location• design, & value In a
prestigious areall Owner may consider trade.
\. MIYMIOSCll JOMI OOMIM W AllMWI COIA UU.OSlll l YUIJt [llllG MMC1A llAYnnS Rl IOITS SUZI DUY l YlllA IUPtlY MMctAIOflS ... amt CDI OUOM --ualYHMM llAY PMltw f OM IOI.NII ...... , --masOfl W AID IOWll .IOCMOl tuml 111 POUICll ==w •ALDll -l ··= 1111awaT011 ,.,
CORONA DEL MAR
0811111 1EL IWl 1210,IM
Just above China Cove nestled amidst ferns and
pine trees Is a very speclal 2 BR, 2 BA condo. It
Is newly decorated wth the best of taste and
even has an assumable loan. Why wait!
OlllEI •IHWH 12tl,OOI
Enjoy ocean and Catalina views from this lovely,
light, airy, pastel 4 Br home with vaulted ceilings,
trench doors & plantation shutters; quietly
located with use of private beaches.
OLIE 0011111 IEL •U IHl,000
Fantastic financing on this cheery duplex In a
good area of old Corona del Mar. 3 BR detached
home plus super 1 BR apt. Don't miss this great
buy on a corner lot.
llllDI• •.Y.I. UH,000
4 BR Spanish with Inner courtyard & tountlan.
Deck leads to mature treeit & private park.
Home Is clean, adaptable & located In o"e of our
best communities.
OLI OHIU IEL llAA IHl,IOO
Shake roof, stucco, wrought Iron and a walled
courtyard open to a hlgh vaulted celllng room of
Imposing proportions. All luxuries In this one
year new custom with quaint older unit.
lllHOll VIEW MILLS S•11,000
Popular Tiburon plan -3 BR home In quiet
residential neighborhood with pleasant open
view -vaulted ceilings In llvlng. dining, & family
rooms. You own the landll
OOIOll IEL UI S.Ul,000
It's worth your while to take a look at this 3 BR
house located a stone's throw from a sandy
beach & sparkling bay. Appointment only.
IPYIL&ll lllllE 1111,000
Beautiful 6 BA, family Mme In parklike setting.
Prime ocean. canyon. & city light view. Large
pool & spa. new appliances. tastefully decorated
thru·out.
OLD OOIOll& DEL Mlll IMl,OIO
New on the market -oceanfront home with
outstanding view of Catalina. Sellers are
motlva,ed & have priced this to sell fast. Corona
del-Mar charm galorell
BEACH COMMUNITIES
l&YllllEI lll0,111
Excellent location In private gate guarded area
on oversized lot. Immaculate & sparkling with all
new kitchen. new carpet. Open & airy, 2 patios, 3
BR. Outstanding valuel
' IAYJIOHI 1111 ...
Totally remodeled Dutch Colonial In finest
Bayshores locatlon. Thia owner-builder quallty
home Includes 5 BR, paneled library, formaJ
dining rm, large playroom, full security & fire
alarm system.
UllllLI IHI ...
The charm & elegance of gracious Lido Isle llvlng
Is Incorporated In thlt lovely 6 BR famlly home,
Excellent street to street looatlon. adjacent to
strada. & close to bay & beaohea. ·
llATI U&UTOM USAMm Bl llD'f ....... .._!ID, IOI n.l cnmu MlafUO mni Y0111C
'1MllSOIES •auUJ. IJllfDHW <• .............. > L.M*HW -llTCll.O, -_,_
(SIM ...... ) taUIYntMD
AMERICA'S LARGEST FULL SE~VICE~ REAL ESTATE COM~ANY
• I -
oa
•
I
"
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Oct. 16, 1983
Dliv:
l .. W 111T111T111 11, 1.._
Tall doors open to an indoor pool'
surrounded by fems and palms
walls of marble and
glass-spacious rooms with crysta.J
chandeliers. Glamorous mast.er
suite with fireplace -3 other
bedrooms suites. City -bay &
ocean view. B. Aune
llfflHl 11 WHT UY 11, 111,000
Channing redecorated home -"3
Bedroom s uites -sun filled ter•
race on the bay, Slip for large
yacht -off street parkJng for
extra cars -A great invesunent
property. Barbara Aune
.. , .. IPlllll·YIW 11,411,000
180 degree view of ocean and
bay. Enter through secwity
gates to imported Italian marble
entry to this 4 BR, 4 BA home
with winding stairway &
elevator to elaborate recreation
area. The perfect home for ex-
ecutive entertaining. With land.
Maureen White/Ed Escano
Ill GUYii ~ lllt,000
This very secluded 4 BDRM, 2 'h
BA plan II Broadmoor has all the
quality & custom features you
expect from a prestigious Big
Canyon locauon. Danny Bibb.
DATWIA VIEWS II
lllVllE TOWE MH,OOOLM
Large lot with private secluded
pool & hot tub area. Excellent
o wner financing available. 3 BR,
2 'h BA with huge view living
room. George Grupe
Ull .. JlllE'I FllEITI 1711,000
An incredible expanded & cus-
tomized Jodelle, w ith a climate
controlled wine cellar. This 3 BR
home features French doors, cus-
tom oak cabin.etry, stained glass
windows and a spectacular
ocean/bay view. Includes land.
Maureen White/Ed &cano
IEllATIIU1.
UUTU nH&OE 1111,000
Prime Irvine Terrace view lo-
cation. 5 nns overlook the bay &
ocean. 3 Br's, 3 BA's with huge
private office or suite, with bath.
Beautiful grounds and pool.
Large jetty view lot. Includes
land. George Grupe
ounE II TIE HY -H,100,000
M agnificent English Cotswold
Tudor home in prest igious
Harbor• Ridge with spectacular
ocean, Catalina, nite lite view. 6
BR's. 71"2 BA's, library, bonus
room. 8 hreplaces & spa Must
see this castle on the ndge! &i
Escano/Maureen White
MUIFlllT WH& 11,400,000
Huge pri..me estate lots, mature
treti, 6 BRS . Beach house. Pri-
vate steps to lovely secluded
sandy "<>Ve 2 lots with 115' on
the ocean. Owner will finaJ.lce.
Sensational value. George Grupe
YllW II
OtHU MIHWll SH0,000
Including land -Canyon and
ocean view from this chann.ing 3
BR, 2 BA home. Extra lg lot with
room for expansion. Access to
private beach. Great potenual.
Donna Godshall
OAIEI llHEI 1141,000
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW
from this beautiful single story 4
BR. 3 ba, fonnal dirung rm h ome.
Secluded patio w /spark.ling pool
& prof. landscaped yard 3 pn-
vate beaches. lncludes land
Donna Godshall
C&llH lllORH
0tm•NU1Y H41,IOO
Panor~ ocean view -Beauti-
ful single story -3 BR 2 lfl
baths, formal dining nn, fam nn
situated on large comer lot.
Sparkling pool. High ceilings
skylights, and extensive use of
walnut. 3 private beaches. In-
cludes land. Priced reduced!
Donna Godshall
llW 11111 OUlH UH,000
HighJy desirable single story
townhome w /wonderfuJ wrap
around garden. Prime cul-de-sac
location. 3 BR, 2 BA urut in
pnvate golf oriented comm"nity.
Martha Macnab
llWNIT WOii HT&Tl 12,000,000
2.4 ACRES Pastoral setting for
this 6 BR, 5 'h BA Georgian Col-
onial. Estate includes stables, nd-
mg ring. barn as well as 3 car
garage and pool. Full security.
includes land. Martha Macnab
llftllHlll
W&TDFIMT .. 11,111,000
Spacious 4BR one-•tory contem-
porary home features 1~· 9ock &
p4er. free form pool, separate spa
& many other ouLlt.anding
ameniUes Owner wlU assiat
w/ftnan cing. lncludea land.
Paula Bailey.
____ ,.. lllO ....
Jodelle Model -Thia home Of·
fera luxury and comfort. 3 BR,
2 lh BA. formal din1ng rm & a
panoramic view of all Newport &
the Slue PacWc. Low ln~mt
rt~ tlnanctna. Dan Bibb
144-1200
...... ... ..... ="= ...... ... .... ...... ... la1t ln111 ... ..l!lt 1118i_... __ ...... ____ ...... ••• ..... ... ... '" .....
lwraJ l l9ml 191 ""'t! Liii C.... ~I )ii; llM 1.,....-=::i:iiiii::=.l;;;;miiiiii;;;;:l;M4;: lntat
1.111 llll
llM
flDI ... + ..... +..._.11;;;;;;;;;;;::=:11 ······-ltlT&nu "l~'.-* DUSTIC-IEIUOTIOI '":~
Opml·5Vla L!do Nord 1114.800 cu IH0,000 0~-1~= lrlallallyt111,111;1n•11T,M1' ~Perkin. Tradition.al 3 Br. 3~ Ba. Bayfront, ..... & fllcer.::; ~•or• owner Sbr/3be+5brl3ba·1 v.c COLDWELL BANKER
float for e~· bo.t. Priced to 11ell $1,%60,000. nxee uve 15.ooo. 3 80f ~Wlllk to bMOh Lowest priced condo with 2-car gar~ ln &52.QOOO 1eo-1& 111
B.cSroom. 1"° battl, pool S"K~dn-Aoorl!Md Woodbrid N la d ti
• l\(omodeled 3 br, 2 bath + large reo.-t"ft\., beam
oeilinga, fumiahed, patioe. $420.000.
UYlllE PUOI UYFlllT _ sp«tacul.ar bayfront dpb<. 2 br. 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 boat Speoetl. Reduced-$1,500,000
&ep~ .. s-1• nowanduw. 440K,_,/l>llr6'S.7°"8 1ge. ear poo an recrea on Lij!U ... , lid
5'8-c. .. " ,.-.. areas. End unit upgraded ln earthtones. -
THE ~EAl.
ESTATERS
IRVINE TERRACE llll f ......
3 Br. 2 ~ home w/trplo, Sl20 llllltl 11 Owner desperate! Submit offers 431 Holly St. 2 Sty. 38r. _.y pvt ywd on fM lend. 28a. deicing a ow-ge. s2eo,ooo <>wnortei;t 1111111 '13 Opei:i House Su.n 1-5 15 Firebird 1370,000 With 10% dwn 873-2711 844-0357 a good ftnWlClng Operl
OllllMYIFIDI .a .... ,,..... KRANT1 RAO ~52-1714 Hou .. 1l-4thl•weelcend
OcMn 6 a.v "'-for -111111 mu Prime loc:e11on townllome. only No commlulon•
,E.l.•1u lllE IOWFllOIT 1379000 Thi• 3 Bd 2•1t B!eOOMnt~vltW.oneof By the Blutte. Latge 3 MERRILL LYNCH REALTY (8191756-1160 • horM need• tome' r• the ,_ In ..nine. U9-bedroom unit. 2 b•the. Ch81mlng bNch h<Xde &
Ocean & jetty view1. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 h1blllt•tlon but hu grH t gr~30~v. SBr + f81n Formal dining, ftrepl80t. guMI unit. vacetlon or
'-Ath 3700 tt 4 ..... nar l.-ift... • 1 385 000 pottntl•I. Submit •ny rm. ' Only 2 yre. Oldl Lot• of r-tal. Lot• of ptantt & ..,.. • l<l· · ...... ,,_ ....... '6. • ' ' · ofler-iry 1 trade. Open Sun 1"15 upgreo ... •14•.900. Oat C la.... 1024 l•al. BarM•r 1042 prl~8C)'. Unique eseeor.
FlllllAllll UIOl llLLTOP
ew 4 br, 4 'h ba, custom French Nonnandy
tat.e 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000.
1113-7370 1 JumlM Creek Dr. the d•t•ll•I ff AbHntee owner wlll Carol McM8han Agt. llNlllUlll
844-&0e7 844-~ We're &II Ian! llU Yllll Hlllll Pvt dock, 3 Br l den. Brtng thow Fri-Sun. 1229,900. •--------a.II« wm lleten lo all ol-~odel9d 4 Br.+ f•mlly ' c11h, tr•dee(l150,000 Motlv•ted. 497-1331 .l&l .. 11111 f.,.I 3 beclroome, 1.76 veiy. llghl & airy, e>1· equity). Open Sund•y -.-1--... ---.. ---:-1-:-211-:-:-,000--:-:--
ChMPMt on the m81'ket •t bath• f\repleoe Many 1llfl•lve UM of wood 1-5 16285 Tl1bury elr ....-... cu•tom .. ~ 180
I •&JflllT $27&.ooo. o.ne11 PNh 1 · c · thru-out. <>pen beam ~I-· 59-93 · ,_,. ,..,.,,. 011111111 GIT It Propertle8 851-1787 ~~~~iFH~o~:rn,1:. Ing w/tllyllght. Off.,ed at Agent 1 14 deg. oceen view. 4 8'.4'1t
TRADITIO~\L
RL\I TY
'Coronado la1and cust. bayfront lot. 85' .boat LIT'l llT llllllSt 1 1 2 9 9 0 0 0 w n • r S 179,900. Call Hcwltaoa mu 1044 Ba Prlv•te beech com-
deck. Plana avail. Now $370,000 w/trade. Owner wlll con•ld•r mot1vatec11 ~r~aht•n:.~. P • m 2 •m llml ;'r~i 5~10~·~ g '!8li
Dalebout reHon•bl9 off« on th•t .lntll4llt4I tPllllllAY 1·4 Why not 2 owners? 213/592-3747 a•11ow11u1 llOIE B 8...,,...,-..h ape<:1•cul•r OCMn Yl9w I··-OT FabUIOjll view property In S'""I h ,., pt I "" cry & ~ ' property In C<>fon• High-Seller •nlllou• 10 movel 5 2t24 -sLLA Turilerock Ridge. F0rmal "" your ome '" ua Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view 3500 sq. Red Estate ianda prevloutly agent-bedroom•, t.75 bath•. dining rm gourmet EFFECTIVE<fECHNIOUE
ft. $440,000. Will trade for a local property. •••1 tsr.rtuctur..co..ct '"' offef'td •t $440,000. 4 bf, Dining and 18/Tllly room•. Ill& WMIS kitchen & at;lum. 2~ Ba. ,.,,, plu1I 851-6370 Bkr
3"' ba. Walk to private fireplace. Lota 01 cloeet Tutefully deco<ated 3 br, overal;r.ed garage, perfect SUPER 2 br ch•rmer cot-
IALIOl COYES
Traditional Bayfronl 3 Br. 3 Ba, remodeled ~ sq. ft. furru.shed & boat. $600,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bur•<k Dr•v•· N R bl') blb l
NEWPORT'S BEST BUY
IPEI THAY 1·1 beech. Prln. only. tp80C!I. Corn« lot, RV ac· 2 ba uec:utlve relldence In every de1all. Owner out 1a~e plua tludlo rental on 2021 YHltt hft14tr 558-81121780-1548 CHI. GllFH~ terms. w/frenctt & grMnhouse or tlate. 1295.000. Jean SO lot. 100 Yrd• to Bch.
SUYIEW I 133,500. Don t del•yl windows. 2 lrpla, private Lay 1 0 n 7 5 2. 1 4 1 4 Many Extru. s 185,000 MW I Jim YllW •P• In atrium & btfl patio 851-1545 res ' OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 Beautifully decorated In 200 Blk. 40' lot, 3br +den, lattt Seti area w/runnlng .(ountaln. · 370 MOUNTAIN ROAD
muted 1one1 Four 3b•. yard, compt. refurb. Gr .. t 18/Tllly home with 3 Convenient to So Coast --------1673-1923 494-0527 tsedrooms It's the e11-$499.000. 217 Jumlne. bedrooms. 1.75 b8th1. Plaza 1hppplng & JllTYlDATEI
pended "Port Royal" ()peflSat/Sunl-5 Gr .. 1ruat1cf•mlly1oom, theetre• Auume Lovely2 Bdrm,dencondo Uf.Ullt .. l 1052
model Shuttered win-Owner/agt873-5551 TWO FIREPLACES Fruit $97,000 loans · owner for only 1130,000. Cen-IYl--TIWIJllU•., dows Special cablne11 · ano cypreu tr .... Short leaving 1rea -MUST 1 AIC ood b 1 ""&" -for e>1tra storage. Lovely 0 Pen Hou I e · 4 1 4 5 min. drive to beaches SE~I 759-1501 tra · w urn ng 3br 2ba frplc, c/alr. ,_ spa In artistic tlle. !Watful Heliotrope. Sun 2-6. New S 125,000 Submltl llrepl•ce, big kitchen. crpl. cov patio. beam Olll. 3 or 4 Br.+ l•m rm. 'l•raw ~.LEE electdc t•rage door 3 yr new, Kint large -m view ot city llghta .. Peclllc Coastline f .. ls S, I I ~ opener See this one 1 ,.,,,, 11112nd I 1411.50Q ·1· $4l l95l.OOOIOO Propertlea, Marina Agt ~pletely ~:'one with n--• m.::::: story quiet corne< home Open hse wknds 495-0283 720 110"' .ftlCm ~ on Sunday. t-4. ----• • ., • naw carpet, p•lnt. ., __ ~ #1 Plllll&
Outstanding l Bdrm condo-n~w list-I•------• tPll IAT/1112-1 wallpaper. Bright. open ~ l!!J!rl leacla lMt.
ood nOOf'Plan. • 8edrm1, 3 ~. lltY111 lllYIS llOI • ...,1 • ·-ing-grea t location-Versailles-g financ-IEU IEL Ul Hl lel4t1rl4, Olll bathe. Formal dining. 142 1200 -• ~
tng. Big. bright and low prleed, Pre~ ... Salt 1212,HO !amity room. tlrepl•oe. *Ull IENI* • IPll SllllAY 1·1 whet more could you ldHI A-2 Pf'QWtY. 40 It Quiet •11.ecvt1ve neigh-POOLSIDE 2 Br condot 5BO, 48A. Pool. Probably
ONLY S 101,000
101 ICHOLZ PW& #123
JONI OllEY, 1111. 113-lll 1
UNITED BROKERS
want? 4 bdrm 2th with lot. Ted Hub«I Rltr. borhood. 1244,000 Call l'IHI s.c. Plua from the beet buy ol quality eq'
MP•rate muter aulte ~5-5510 todayl $ 7 4 , 9 9 9 , 3 B r . tt In Npt Bctl. 1332.000.
cloM to tchOOI. thopplng •-=59-1-1 y-ou-r h-ome--1-%-pl_u_•_ Ill-HM $89,000-198,500. WON'T Owner ~262
end park. Full prlee only EFFECTIVE TECHNIQUE llll S. lrhtel LASTI Call P•trlck * W&ITEI * $134,000751-3191 l%plu•ISSl--8370~r. Tenore 760-870 2.
831-1266 --------5 Bdrm Herbor Ridge Of' Spygl... custom home. • C: SELECT SPYIUll UITWllT SP&llHS .... PROPERTIES Enjoy our tvnMt• from 2BR Condo naar So. thl• model home. <>wner. Co111. Security Gate.
WliE
PREllUI 'LOT
Tr8CM Newpor1 Bcl1 home
+ CASH C.lll 645-9922 Agt. M Jecqun. ready to mor•. 90 you can Amenltlel Galore
1002 C.•tral 1002 IPUHll&f1-1 llveh.,ethleyear. $134,500. Agt ~-4825. SALE157,900.Pool3Br, C.Hral 2'"11 Orn_._. ... • Open Sund•y 1·5. Cardinal Realty 651-1360 den.. 2 ba, fncd & garage.
on cul-~uc. 4 Bdrm, 2'h Sll,ttO
ba Plan 45 In Culverd•l9. IELIW lllllm
•122 000 YIEW am LllllTI "' •111• 71Montecito By~ 5'1-8077
. 1 • UYllllQ..IEllGlll Jo-Ann Doran, Altr: Ulll FHIOLISIH Large backyard. Many upgrad" and custom Foreclosure mu1t 1111 4 Br leature a. S 155,000. 3 Ba. 2700 sq. It. Priced below market for w/ocean vu. Only UITSllE UI oau1r Oat• 9u•rded community 759--0819 Local bank hal IOl'ec:foNd luta lu , .. ..., 01••
Super2Bedroomhomeon Bank repoeMUlon. Only wt private entranc;e C"ta •tsa 1024 ~3~ ~~fu111155'=i 1111'1 lashnOlrelt the Eutslde ol Co1ta 10'1.downandlenderwlll B.8 C · 2 private & ; 4 B 2 ,~B 2 tty3Br2.5Ba,Nun•. Mesa. huge redwood tlnancebalanceatbelow beache9,onetorHobi... 1a1 ... ma1T. -r • ap•. mlhoma pad.
quick sale $379,900 w/trlp to Hawaii · tor two C•ll Patric!<
Tenore 760-8702.
631-1286 Agl deck over look• lu1h market Interest & no,_, Lido 141• Sabota, ate. LR 3 BR Iba, lge R2 lot. 11185·000), The unltl .,e $185,000. GOoel term1
yard. Asavme 11'1t% loan Latge 3 Bdrm, 2'.\ ba w/FP. French d~•· MP-$137,500. Owner wlll u.-3 yeart new, spaciout V~t ~isor
·Realty payable $772 PIT Call conoo & ready to moll9 ara.ie DR, 3 BR 1• 3 tull slat nnan. and fu lly •PPOlnted op4.n Sun 12-5. now for more det•ll•. Into. Fantastic Ylew1. BA 'e'Rpanelold3 .~ & MUl • ROBINSON, RL TR. w/modem INturM. Bank Batooslngh Alty IEIT llYI 1141. N
548-2313 Lender wants outl On ter . ;, pat..,., one o 548-5647 taoffenngeteatlvennanc-54'4-5331 9¥9 54~1
S 162,900. 648-7171 accommodate 1mall boat Ing. Submit all otter•. ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 651·1177
OcnVu Tri-Ml comunty
pool/tennis ,,.., belleh.
Spaclou•. frple . dbt;iar.
bltns gd ,.,ms Npt Crest
2-3 Br, den. End unlll.
S 179,SOO to 12.25,000.
THE REAL
ESTATERS THE REAL
ESTATERS
01 R.V. 100 yrds. from 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 Story Condo. Agent 842 .... 623 t•
clC>Mat beaetl. & B.B.C. 10% down. Now only Condo 3 bd 2 b• $4000 TllUlllMll
C•n go to two ltorles. $103.000. Dockside R.E. dn. Lo-pyint. S90,000 TIRIO S ell er wlll au lat 840-8208 476-1275 or 6'4'4-4157
140,100
ZIEIRHI
wlllnanclng. $355.000 * FIU• * Out of area owner MUST with landl Atk for Belle n WTlllE IPfOllL SELL 4BR 2000 sq. ft 111,IOO Chue L ... ~7020 3 Bdrm, tamlly kltctten In 4 Bdrm, 2 b•. pool. ipa. near So. Coul Plaza. r-----2-11-.-,---i
Lge 3 bdrm older tmly LI .. lllL man Pf'ltne M ... Y9fde .,... corner locatlon. Too SUPER STEAL 1120.000 ........ ., TWlllE 1,,. ··-· ., IWIEI
~Tom 046 noo
~o !tier RE AL TOR
Super large mobtle hO!Tle.
2 Bedroom•. 2 b•tha, large llvlng a.rea with bay
window. Walk to shop-
home on huge lot Exls~-Tai<• over 1•t & 2nd many amenities 10 1111. LOW DOWN. Mike (213) s -•
Ing FHA loan •t only 8 5 Y. PttL 111111 Below market. Call to -Priced below mirket lor 519-7808 owner agnt I Ul,000 1 w. fixed rite 30 yeart.
Interest! 759-1501 Thi• 3 Bdrm 2 B• home 11 and m•ke olr qulell sale SoC?tt (213) 3111-3745 eve Spacious meeter bdrm , Monaco with GC vie-14
localed In College Park Ital Etf ... lhrt 345 E 19th lot, air, upgrades, neutral Rue vmars °'*1 wttnds
Need• TLC oot ha110ads 171·1711 OPEN SUNDAY t-5 Dua Peial 102' colors. attach 2 car gar 640-1538
of potential. Ask l11g 759-9491 Ownef/agtG1ll BUILDERS CLOSEOUT
$129500 Wiii con11der *Tl ..... 11* OCEANVIEWTownhou11. 559-6404 720·2509 5135,000 Buutllvl 281. otttf~. 631-7370 BEST FINANCING Eutalde 3 Br w/gue•t 31>< 2~ba. 1150 sq ft. OPEN SAT ISUN 1·5 den 2'~Ba Twnh.. In BEST PRICE houM. spa, quiet neigh· $156.500. Xlnt lln•nclng 24 CHARDONNAY Nwpt Hta 3Br 3Ba
Momt square footage. borhood 546-91178 Agent owne< 714-240-3102 OA CALL FOR SHOWING S 145.000 ' Ope~ Sun
ping Pool & spa S 10.000 W'• • ~.LEE down, owne< wUI carry ~
balance Call now Real Estate 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
IEWPOllT HEllllTI
Eutllde E.1111 lllT se111.cour home 1•.<. plusl By Owner. Tur11erock 5 12-3.30 Or call 675-4333
UJL •E OtT 472-~n Dally ~~3~7111. Pr lc•IE~ ~~£." are Ef~. ~~!~~5~~g3~~1~~rE ~~d!.!8'101~'$:95~: Ill Tiii WUIUI 11 l&YSllOIH Opn "'ou~ S•t 1 •• , Sun .. IN BAYCREST FROM
TRl\DI T IONAL
REALTY
• _,., J II 2'A IA otlM F-L-E·X·l·B·L-E. Lrg lot :.. ,... -" 0 EA 3 f 11·1 LDT 111 .... w/dbl wide AV acceu. 3 a •••• llac'. -1040 2-5. 752-2264 5502 WN . 4 br, be, am-Lowest priced home In 11'1 • BEAUTY Like ,_ 8d 1,., B 1 _ Southall Uy room. office. pool Ex~llent area. Walking Bayahores Light & bright lalM& lalau 1006 w/frplc. 2 car gataga end r T• •. oan1 ate a•· · '320.000 Open Sat/Sun
dlstancetonewllhopplng w/formal dining room unl1 Uquld•tlon at ::t~~~~1:i;~&eRob· cmlCLW WOITIYE .. E 11-8 1924Hol1<1•yRd. centtf. Includes• charm-and room to expand up & llEllCEI 11001 S 13-4,90011 Call P•trloll 4 Bdrm. 2 ba near WOODBRIDGE 2 BDRM Ownef/agt 955-0809 Ing 2 Bdrm home plus out Take over an as-Forced to 1111 4 Br reno-Tenore. 801 780-8702. St-t t I lake & --------
bachelor unn Each In-turnable 1st of 1 132.000 vated Cape Cod. Now 631-1268 ~t~KOW:,~~~~~: p;:. T°.J,.e~r:! low Int· IY ....
eludes a double encloeed Call IOI' Information & prl-Hklng S425K. Snore down. Excel. financing -t t11. Only $152.500 111 lllYN
&.,age & alley acceu. vate 1howtng Prln only mooring. 1 h11 to So. llUT f&MllY 119E Brolter 840-50711 018lll,_Pertllna Charming 2 Bdrm t den. 3 real potentlal Full price Diana Cappel 631·1266 Beytronf Agt 114(). 1538. 5 BA .. d-. llr-'eoe. dbl •• uu If.... COLDWEtL BANKER Aue FontalneblMu. ~-only S 145.000 646-717 1 ~' 'VY' 7""' 5 6 I ..,49 500 640-9333
* •• a••R• • ._ * garegt. N•eds 1ome Spacious 4 bdrm l'lome 552-2000 .,.,.. 1 1 no.., , . ._..._ .-OUCh Owner tr M8I Npt Harbor High Newly decorated spaciou• IPll M 1 I THE REAL
ESTATERS
LI•• l.,tre1t Trl,111 llllTI LAllU
Eully convlf1ed to sll'gle IOW llH IF IWJ
family $895.000. Prln 28r, own your own apt, onty Bkr 953-8783 Tiny oen view Walk 10
Sell with EASEi Crescent Bay Beach It's a BREEZE Setler wltl llnance
Classlfled Ads 642-5678 $145,000 Agt. 499-1320
C.aeral 1002 C.Hral 1002
VERSAILLES
The LoWHt Prle~ Vlew1
• In Newport Betl'eh
PERMANENT bay & ocean views,
beautifully kept penthouse, 2Br
2ba. 100 Sholz. PH l~ Open Sunday
1 to 5.
LOVELY 2BR 2ba, ocean and
Cat.alma vwws . $232,500 Avail. for
rent also
2ND FLOOR end unit 2Br 2ba
WlLL EXCHANGE. $126,500
CHESHIRE REALTY 7!58-18n
LUIE/IPTlll
ExceptJonal two bedroom & den w ith
2 fireplaces. Shows like the former
model It was. Lots of upgrades. Owner
will oons1der .. !case/opt.ion. Please calJ
Lindo TagUanettl for a private show-
ing.
Tlfll It llUHI .. I
Home located last on the bluff over-
looking C hlna Cove ln Corona del Mar.
This artisUc beauty has full views
from every room of the ocean, harbor,
bay, tsl~ds & jetty. Trees & huh
gardent' prov1de a eerene and private
setting. Your own steps to the beaches.
Maste r 3-room suite w/three other
bedrooms. Guest beth has sunken tub
& teak cabinets; 2 other baths. DlnJng
room. family room & bar. Extra I~
lot & room to expand . Price reduced to
sell NOW! $1,396,000. CFontact
Cathryn Tennille.
2 hits Lffttl h&M4 1 1'·2 500 ana-Scnool. Rom•ntlo muter 4 bdr n-. b•. aunken llv-Premlef Northwood Pl809 •
owe 1g ·,,t TD w/15% ferr•nedi._!.~.:..,..-· •"'· eYlte w/hlgh e»tllng, Illy-Ing. IOl'mal din rm, f•mlly Home. 4 bd w/glant mu-IJ twm down, Trade for Income --9 llght. nettled In a g•rden rm, wood beam•. Walk 10 ter suite. Highly up-Harbor View Hiiis 3 Bdr 2 or?? 18 ONewport I.CM .. ttlng. Family room, 2 beach & •chool1. gr•ded. Pool. apa. Muat Ba model perlec:t hOml
Pre,, frH I ti... 141-llH ftreptacea. Prlvlte •un I 182.000. 988-2802. By NI to •ppreciate. By at 1218 KMI Of, CdM.
XI n t I o c 1 1. A 1 k Ing 4Br 28a. 8011120 lot, •t-dtlde, MCll.lded te>• aur-Owne< 0 w n er 12 7 O 'O O O · 1362,000. Euy term1.
1390,000. Owner• are tactled g81, RV pkng. rounded by tropical Yl llOOl lllYE II 551-8897 Appl. onty. Call &42-7787
motlv•led. M. J90qv.. $98,500 call 846-113116. ~~n~i~•· 1235,000. Ownat P•YI polnt1. NHt 3 Selllcour home 1% ~ut~
Agt. &45-9922. Affordable ••-•nee In -br + famlly room (or 4th EF1! q:~!VI 6E5T1Ef.,H7N01Bku I
·• BUY OR SELL r:br==).=R=2=·=perm===lt=t=o=oo=l=~=4:.l===n=p=_,=====...,.,======..r * ll Jf ROIT ~~ H~HOr~r~ GIVE DOWN A YELL unlt1. $7000 conv. move SELL Idle Items with a
Du.LEI Normandy ~n. 3Br. DAVE WHITE 546-2313 In $ 105,400. 538-5789 Dally Piiot Clasaltled Ad
2'1t8•. 2 frplea. 220 Kno• THE REAL EST ATERS
WILL TRADE St. 0wner/8gl 842"5722 s .c Plaza condo 2Br iv. C)
Excell•nt B1ylront Lo-TUii"' , .. ,,... b•, pool, tpa. In Santa
8 B .... -. 51 An8. Own tor cost 01 rent I c1t1on 1ndy e• .. ~" Lovely 3 Br condo 5 Of l0% dwn Ctit to ~ N11r new condltlop. w/comm . pool. 1pa, S85 500 556-1828. OwMrs unit plu• 3 bd"'1 p1tlo, 2 car gar909. Only --·--·--__,..-..,.-rental. Trade for lno<>me $98.500 wlterm11 Mutt a.II your home 1% plu• producing property. Ask-.... Cal~ Patrick TenOl'e EFFECTIVE TECHNIOU£ Ing $995,000. Owner/agt 780-8702. 63 t-1266. Agt. 1% plu1I 851°6370 Bkr. &44-9513
1~~~ ... ~-----'.c..:::::'•: .... ::::::::::::':':24:.!=C:•'='·=·=·=·=·====1=0:::;24 •••i••••• 1N7 I
. lllTlftl
Non-conforming duplex •
large IMng room with flreplll09, formal dining, hardwood floors and
11rg• bath. Upper unit · luge living room, kitchen
end beth 2 car gatage
Clo.. to beaches. Can
expand. Low price ol
$250,000. Call Biii Gold
to -.
142-1200
Ull
OPEN HOUSE Fri-Sun 11-4PM. 2109 E. B81boa Blvd. Lg f8m nome. bay
view $575 ,000 .
s.11/tr•de, dn E-Z lennt. owe. PP 111•1844> 1842.
875-3712
Oll'T IE IUT I Ul,100
This roomy 3 bdrm has the features
you want! Convenient location, free-
way close, large lot with room for kid's
safety G reat family area and to p
Newport-Mesa scxhools too! If lo-
catton, terms and condition are for you ,
this 1s 1t! Call today!
O .. tlry 11, ltl4 ltlf IHhtn
141-1414
Mem~r Top Offl<'el in Orange County
'::~::.~· scc ~~~-1tr.1rs· :::
• ..... k tut t IOt,lAAt ----
o·~llt"'Ot · .... & «10,..,.., WOfd\ bi. .. _ to l't-0-~• 6
.. MDtf -CY h ,tll'lt , .... ,. Of
.-,. I\ ,~ ,,, t ft+ o• tovor••
I RUEBAJ
I' I I I' I
I T 0 H A £ L
Ctr•• "1 llar HU I' t I I I
11~ ...
To cloM by Oct. 12th. I 70t A\IOC8dO. Auum•
1225,000. 2+ 1+8ach. I I I I r
1275.000. ~r 875-48e3. I " [ p H [ " I
2or3Brll .. • 1brapt.Vu. 1--l......,;;l_l'-l-'-l......1 "Ju11 rem•mbtr. 011r," ACION trom Catn8tl00 '-· _.... _ __.. _ __... _ __. _ __. . ..__.Hid Or•nny. "PtQplt will park , Pr Im • Io c .--------. 1uaoe you by you1 •cllon1, $395,000. Not•n R.E, I S L Y M U C I not you1 lntent1on1 You AnM Crabbe 497-$45'4 1-........ ,, ........ ,-...,--~-may llave • nu11 ot Oold, .__...__..__.._...l_.I_.~~~' 1111 •n •oo 1h•ra lllf .....
One or t.he ways homes are being
bo~ht and sold I.Oday Is Wlth
Second Mor,gage
A second mort.gage ts a met.hod ot
flnahctng whereby the buyer ls
provided with an addlt.lon&l or
second mort.gage when I.here Is not.
enough cash t.o assume t.he
extst.lng.,mort.gage A second
m ortgage can also be t.aken when
the rtrs t mortgage and the down
payment ran short. o r the sales•
pMce. A second mortgage can be
provided by sit.her the seller or a
lending lnst.ILut.lon. Payments are
made both w the seller o r lende r
on the second mortgage and \.0 t.he
tender o r t.he underlying me>r~age
Impact on buyer
• Down paym•nt m-.y IHI n rgouat.nd
• P:nablH puroh•H (If home w tlh
Ul8Llnll mOMf&«• NQUU'lnll lull•
down paymnnt
• With u 1umptlon al e>111L11111
mot~a«" a tuMabl• 1nUtrHL rAl.ll 1e
flOHlblt
Impact on Hller
• Smaller down paymtmt 11HrM:l.i! rnol'fl
po~MIAI bUYllJ'-
e A'1\11Uon111 pror1~ w1~11 1111.t1rnt
rttOtlvt<l 1111 &11()<1nd mor~a1t11
~101 iLll fund• 1r lefldlr•«
ln1muuon l)rov1d111 ll4t00nd n1nr41&&~ Harbor view Hlllt Lullt. I C " F I C O I 1312 ~..,, 38', ,.,,, 4 I I I" I I • c--... , ..... "' -M -;: :~'·-· .... _-:... ....... ~ Im, 2 •. Mu•t ... .... , -There Ut • number or slt.uat.1on• 9319,900. Aol Jvetlne ••" --h h th d t.ga.g ~~2~~~~~~!:~:·1A •rw .. ~_· ... ·.·
1
• r r r rr r r r r r 1 ~~~I~~ t.h: :r~~~~r ~: ~;~
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C)
~
• >< C)
•
~ • . ' •
POOi.. oceAH v11w i~ . I [ [ I( 1 l 1 L L I propcirc.y Cont.act. your rnl e otat.e
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ H 211,000. °"'*_.fin expert. w u111t. you
_ 1eo.~1=1S4~1;•a..;:2U=::':=JL.: .. ::::IM:..:U:IYl::_~ .... ::•:M:rt::_ .. :..:•:•:•:• .... :::::M:•:•:..:.IM:::l:J~============================:::::~.::::;..==::===---'
-. --4
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Sunday. Oc:t. 16. 1983 03
1 ..... 1 .. S.Jt 1 ..... 1 .. \!It leUH •• • ltaaea .. , S.Jt lt•Ml ltt lal• I• .... f11 laJ1 •MM..... 1100 ..._.Pitt I l•••n ruab~.. lnM11Jala1abW
lt!J!!I '"'' tOH 1--d h•c' lOH lt!)lrl leac' 1011 i..,.rt ltac' 1111 Mnprl ltu' 1111 lnprt hec~ 1111 Older unit; Npt loh, h..I. h .. l lnettenl a.J... C..t1.... UM _ ._..., _ _ _ -10X42 Aoult i>artc no Wiler• .,. YoU? LO'#elt PnlaHlt 2101 ..... YI .. "' .. A11aume/forec1o a11re, pet• Ptrll AP9f0\lll ,.. ptloe oc:eenfront Npt &di SURFERS DEUGHT vg UUM... l•-------•I OwNr Wll'lla to wtieel and 138.000 dO*ll. Harbor ........ YllW.... quired Furn $15,950 ~uplN. l350,000. Rent ON THE OCE".AN·2Br, fBe modern 1 8' IJOUl'INl kit
BMlltlful Let~t moet UFUm. YllW deal c edlU t cloM r Ridge. Agt. n&-4492, Like ""· llOhf and bf.lohl. Stephanie 24 M282 ~-S30t< Kiii 638-57&9 aot home, MPar•t• yd. tw· 1>r.-1u1 b1r custom fabuloua vt9w In H11b0r C11llOl'll home with 4 · .,.. 1 o '60-34&!1 ' · • r..Oy to move In. fhl• ege, winter 1800 mo. Call decot NOW 134() t $!0
Ridge. Agent 7e<M>&e3. Bdrma, lormal dining ..ctow IO bUY«I l\Mda hlff""""a home wu buUI to lla-atlta., BREAK EVEN DUPLEX John 898-9824 aecurtty I• 537-5027 ........
.... .., 1 ..........
AenMMnoll Model beet
IOCatlOn, pnc. a t•m•
Only 20% dn. Aaklng
'374,600
lllTAIT '911 IM&
..... IA Pllfll11ll .......
room Ind prlvlle •P• Xlnt cond Nr GrMnbell """""' --.., T S30 000 dn 10% Int
ProfeHlon111y decor-Jo-Ann Doran, RealtOf Ull UYJIMT enl<>Y the ba~land ~ Pnttrt:I IHI ~.TO.' ' . ~·· ... ,~ 1 TOT ALL y cuetom 3 trg
a t e d . Offered 11 7S8--06l9 Superb vt.w of bl y and = "r"bath!oc:'Jng 8Jdr mr1o iilfAri& GREATEASTSIOE BMUAfui 2er. 28a, on ~rm~i C~2._ = 1395,toO. May alao be Here la a BEAUTlfUL 4Br bOetlnQ 4 Bdrm hOme Ml-In· kitchen, and hld: ,,.... on bldO SA 9700 11 COST A MESA LOC w1ter, 1250 aq It I 1050 tht:!'oul n~~ 6"'A
puref\IMdtumlehed.S. 3~ba,f1mrm,lrmldln. hu pier and lllp, front Belly~arrRHlly den den/workroom leSK req'd Qd toe 50% 3e10g .. St. mo 873-3909 blQ lned yrd '°' f:;a
todey1 rm, utll rm & llv. rm ~dk~·~L.~bl•'°' nc:!i Hlil $495.000, lncWdlng land '-Md 7 f4/5&8-1433. 873~~E. Doud :..~0468 I u J I .. a..I pell ONL y $490 + $50 1121 IJllS IW w/ffplc. 2 Cit git., pool In '"" .. ,.., 1411 •-•-•• Ill taltt a lfa ••-~·rlt" , .. '"'1-..,."7 beauL Dover Shor•• AND well prloed !Of Ihle Dramatic 4 bdrm. pool ._ -_._ .. am -.u , -....,..
......... , 1·1 Ve<y good uaum fixed comer IOUllont hOme In OM IOCatlOn 01 INI .... , l·I Rehab~ ~000 eq ':{. DIPLEI C.at11l UQZ x1n1 1oc New 3br/2'~b• 1•2-1200 rate roan. Cuti dn to lOOYl&Ull... 81yer .. 1 Unuaupallylatge1 142-llOO par1l1lly 1emod•I• . ITIPI TO ION •a.S. condo,yerd.-tbar,DR . loin. $335,000. ph IPllllll&Jll hOmeandyard. r~I awn.ttverymotlv1ted a. $11001eaM.845-7050
642-7053, 00<>-0455, • 1385,000 A WOflOerl\11 Price reflecte cond. Trade IOf emaller property Rentel llll Set'ilc& -
I T n 142-1200 vllue for IO mucn prop. 1395.000 with $250,000 M°TNat Deed. 2 3 bdrm NB., H B .. C.M. YOI IEIEIYE m J PETE
BARRE Tl .. REALTY •ti UI I "'iPEN SUNDAY l-6 Oown. Xlnt nnancln(I. unit• In eitcellent Sen ~!~1 ~ ~~~"&' NEW gated 20 Townhome larhr =..... llWNIT lllffl 1~5 Wtndwerd Call Agt. 875--8700 Clemente loc.tlon. Ask-M·F 11•6, Sat 9_ 1 VILLAGE COMMUNIN. VI~.... Former 3 Br 2'.; Bl with I 1179 ,.00 .. I 2 Bdtm, 2'i'I Bl, 1800""' ,_._ 873-1181 C .. 1-f 1279 ng •" . ng 1--..,,,_,..,.....,...._,,..~,.... ,... lmmeoulate 4 br. 3'~ ba aundeck, on grMnbelt. t ea .. ••• 8«-9513 Ellec 6 Br, 3 B1, 3,000 eq 11 '1. of pure luxury 2 car
J<enalnoton. ANUmlbl• Walktoahops&Newport S.A. Ht• w/vlew or SC Plua condo 28r m 1 hmovergolfcourae,pan-garages, apu In ....ery
10.375" 30 yr loen. By CONDO EASTSLUFF 4 BR Beach Tennie Club. low B1Ckb1y, lg lot, 2Br. LIDO· Loweet price 2Br b• pool ape Own lor Ltt1 ftr Salt 4 orsmlc vlaw. $995. home· muter aulte, dln-
Ownec 840-1 1 H · 2~ BA 1165,000. l(Jnt price $199,500 L/H. 1185,000. 557-8070 frplc, 35' lot. Make orr: oott of rentl Si<»<°' leu cOstbM LOT Carlabad 496-1235 Ing room•. wood bumlng
854Ml77i , , Flnancln(I Avlll. P.P. 140-1211 Sell yoor home 1% plull OWC. Bkr. 848-3949 dn .. By ownr. "185,toO, H1tbor Hiii, CdM. Adja-New 1Brw/qen condo, nr llrepleoea, micro-wave --------(71'4) 850-4018 °' collect l&JOlllTIUm EFFECTIVE TECHNIQUE 55&-t826 °' 775-2580 cent of Harbor Rd(t. S C 0 a e I p 1 a ra, ovena, prlvete plllot & WYllW-IHt,IM (8 l9l 3-40·S434 ~~~ 4 Br, 2'A Ba + '¥" rm, 1~ plual 851-8370 Bkr -l /U-'t l"OO w/pl1n1 $299,500 W/O wahr/dryr, pool, epa, 1en-Y 1 rd•· g 1 rd •1~ • r Bat Her1>«-Mu1t NCrllk:e '"Y. ~1 //,,r_J pool, ape, belt term•. LIN llLE _, txn _ 111 I • plane 1249,500. Call Mr. nls. 1650_ 549.9498. provided. Eteg1nt ng w/lrg 1~·% let. For OonLUT F ,/~ <'4-V Priced tor fut tale at lllffll S11.JIG 0 . Smith Agt. 675-5511 only 15 mlnut" from
detlll• IMG-8227 IS WH"T YOU GET IN. R E A L T Y $299,000. 213-430-3829 Spectacular Blutf• 'fwnhM 1111,000 ... • -••JI llU K I 1 ...... I S.a•tr I Wl.ter Futtlon laland, 7 mlnut"
" Condo. 4 Br. 3 bt. bonus El Fiii Du=~~ ba + 2 Br 1 Ha I a, -.er Rnfllt to S.C Plaz.a Of O.C. Alr-
N.B. custom home, 40' WHTOUFF L c 1 F t w t N UY I IOW VIEWS rm, formal din rm. 3 llEllO be. S..t buy In COM a...rt 1450 JIOlll IUl.n ~ ~~~'. ~'° °'ot ~~
sllp, 3 Br 3 Ba, fOf"mll 1222 SUSSEX LANE gor~.na .~:':' co~~u~~; 2 R~~~· ';'!ny lud'1"~9:: Pi11:;.f :,1r 11W:~~;~ . QllCI SILE Liited $310,000 wui Aro BMr Cabin, aecluded, IT Diego Frwy. $1050/mo. ~j;..,,m~!., Ml~/C~~ $229,000 -Owner wlll pools &tennls.Avallnow, $429.000 Agl 845-3370 ~~an avatl. 1244.500. Ch8lmlng3bdrm ~ r1mlly contlderotfert. gr .. 1 for 4 wheeling or P111P141W1111111a11M1E. 631-5439, 2473 Orange
•'"•r"t•rade fft• unit• O.C carry flrtl with 20% down. unde< mkt at $289,000 ()wn./anant 759.9083 rm, 2 frplc., French dra, Broker 8«-6824 get·IWIY wknd Sleepe 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,..iiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiii Ave Costa Meu. '""' ~ 4 Bdrm• and 3 bath• Owner 645-3370 WATERFRO~T CONDO, -..~· custom b<lckWOf"k 12 $ 150/wknd or 11 --------°' S.D Cty Agt. M.J IP!l lllllf 1·1 uoo ISLE pool:' •llP Sec bldg TUii QtmEI LIDO REAL TY New on Mkt. 2 Br + 1 Br t-$60/day. 957-6071 Wiater I llttrt ltrtl DaH Ptiat ll2' 631
"
8499
'
84
5-
9181
207 Via Orvleto 3 Br, den '375·000 575•9042 mn Tl 1111 973-7300 B.ach AMUme $225,000. • ••• Ctuty Rental• a111llable on p1lme BNuUful townhouse, 3 bd MW/l&Y I lfTl Lm WllTOLIFF 3 ba. 3 car gar • bOat Harbor Knolls Condo 3 Reduced & remodeled 708 Avocado, CdM. Prtptrty JSOO property on Balboa .. den, 2'A ba, nr bch, YI_. •a• ..1 I t515CUMBERL.ANO Patio, 2 street enlry Br, 2'h Ba. $280,000 By Newport duplex. Perlect $275.000 Bkr/Ownr _ _ Island It T la pool
UH· -•aa •• 1222.000 -Owner w111 $400,000. 673-29'56 owntlf. 760-6961 tor owner's unit & Income LIDO: Steal! 2 br, 35' lot, 675-4863 Crypt, companion, Pacific 0 =u$l;5 .;.~g6_5980 • Mer carry 1erge second Trust property this unique de-trplc, beam celllng owe. lSO View Memorial Park O.tsl4tr Tra4tt tr ... Deed 3 Bdrrns and a lfnrrt hie~ 1069 lfewrrt lt1d1 1069 algn on come< lot otters $279,950. Bkr 848-3949 lactat Prer I Choice 1ocat1on, 25•1. IHI. h•c' 2240
Wiii o.rry 10~ 1.t great lamlly room . llreplaces, spa and RV (6)1 bdrm apta on 81iboa cuh discount. (619) Huntington Continental
Custom entertllnlng ho~e IPEI lllllY 1·1 parking. Equity o f Saa Clt•tatt 1076 Pan, Ideal for lnvettOf"a. 328-7270 aM 6PM. _ ·I .... . condo, 3 or 4 Br
w/lge llvlng rm: bonus 1•JOIEIT lllRIOll lllllE sdo1w3~.ooo~c.Wcl~ll ~I~~= Secluded m colony, Flnanclngavall.556-1655 hac~n, ,.,.. ..f.:an wi6A $550/mo to mo. only.
rm, 3 Bd. 3ba, muter bd • 2 BR 2 BA Dynasty w /sauna & Spa: 1 d I PLU p I IO a. ,._ 1575 -. Reis req'd. Call Patrlek, 141118 wlllreplace & bar. 1350,000 PROBATE SALE I 631-1266. Agt. Hpans ve ocean an • r •• .. ea .. ntt Balhoc1 b lAnd Rcahy agt 780-8702. $499 000 Sae I od I First or second llnanclng Seller wants quick saJe, assum oan & whitewater views. 4 Bdr, Wiii show poaltlve w(S60K Rlwl/16 acres gOOd pro-• ~· , · wm. E Oood t~.1:l av1llable. • Bdrms, den seller will help finance. $359,000 or TIY lllUTllM ., 3 Ba, huge IOf"mal dining down. Sup« lln1nclng. ductlon. Int ~ly pymte. 673-8700 Spec. 3Br 2ba condo
673-160 548-0458 and l1mt1y room. LIO or lease $1650/m o. rm, apacloua Mstr Stille, 73"/e Imp. deprecl1tlon. Cunla Agt 876-2040 G r eat am• n 111 e •
IOWFlllT duple11 , by owner,
$499,000 10% dwn.
548-1936
llUIFINf
a.y 1 I flll PllY&n Ptll... lust atepa to beautllul No mgmt. problems. __ $795/mo, no pet1, call
IP!l lllla • HW 11 YHR b •a ch Pr Iced 11 S42K gross. 840-5078 Preatlglous Lol/Ranctio, l1lk1 1111.. 2206 Mrs. Ganz 846-1372 1•2-1200 COllOll DEL lllR DUPLU llllUll ••& $665,000. Call Lingo R.E. IAYFROIT Call!. Good terms. Curtis B 2b I F I ' 2".a.a _. 498-4950 Agt. 878-2040 3 r •. year y. rp c. lniat _,
-
3 Br 3 Ba, F.R. & Deck , ne wer rear Gorgeoue 3-4 bdrm, 2ba laundry rm. Garage !r'....-l"'IP_...,.Pll~P'!l'!l"!"!I~
·.: • , unit+ 3 Br 2 Ba. refurbished o lde r ~:r.'9nCe.~2il,l:oo' .:.fh •••ll• Btatt 1100 DUPLE•-fkf ~~~:·~:, ,!~f, c~1z:~:~ 6;::3:~ 2•
2
'
0 4
Bdrm•. '7~1400
help finance. 12000 per mo. Submit all encl poreh, 6 etar park, d t Tram Gunbarrel rt 780-8384 SOI' Prime weat oceanlront 101
with • 2 story 2Br bch
house thrown In for 1--------
nothlng $495,000 loe&ted MRS CLEANS DREAM at 6802 W. Ooeanlront. 875-911 t Open H01ae 3 Br. 3 Ba. Playroom, spa,
Sal/Sun 1-6 oak dOOf's & atalrcue. bl
front unit $325,000. 15% dwn. Slr $30,000 dn. P1ymen1 Cuatom 12 x 55 FiamlflOo. WILL TRADE heavenly 2 Br, 2 ba, 80 STUDY. l csr gar $900 ~
offers or trades. Hontlngfon Herbour E11cellent Baylront lo· ~ 11 rully f~rn $20K y y. lfy
640 -62 &9 Wm.E.DoudCo.lnc. area Forapptoe.11 cation. Sandy Beech. Nr ""Uliy 213-5'43-4,225 IHI ••I Mar 2 22 673·1800 548~458 846--0245" 846-0477 new condition. Owner• ...., ·
U •• u.ILLI unit plui 3 bd rental. U Waatt4 Ills 2br/2ba/ So of Hwy No 651·1177 11•11 IPPT'Y Trade IOI" Income produc· ' pets. Furnrunturn $900
anttquea, bran hard·
OPE. Su. 1 •6 ware. stained glau, trench dOOf'S, 2 fps, MW 5 br, 3 ba, apa, m<>l'e. root, walk to beech
$249.000. 1525 H~hland Only $299,950.
Dr, Westclltf. 842-4959 DOCKSIDE R.E. 840-8208
_c.. ___ .. _. __ 1 ___ 1_00_2, ..... :·•
~ Cape Ci>a 2-aty, 2000 s.f t972 De11111e Royal Lanoer Ing property. Aaklng .sil I Olllfl 2131355-1597/466·7745 / ~~-F /) J) + 400 a.I. gueat unit + 241162 28t, :ZBa. large llv-$995,000. Owner/agt Wiii pay up to 100% value 48', deo. 3Ba. new paint, ( ~ ( · / ( garage ~ RV ecceu + Ing, dining & kitchen 844-9513 and all cost•. 859-3342 · cpta, gar, grdnr I 1800
R E A L T Y 12V.% fixed + ooean view areas. F1m rm w/-t bar, mo 6«·0554 673-0888 from declca. Drive by 4 11 all appllanoee & llr cond. Mike your ~Ing eu-Se41 with EASEi '
AlllO. Npt Hgll. Sincere Young adult• W91come ler by ullng the Dally Pl-It's a BREEZE Cullom Bayside Dr home 4 Br 2 Ba tam rm. llv rm.
lnqulrlet. 548-9928 Agt. S.0-5937. lot Cluslfled Ada. Cluallled Ads 642-5678 w/sllp. Mo to mo Avall alngle lam, lrg bacilyard
1211, 955-2473 wfpatlo & wood decic. llHIGtatral 1o02 8tatral 1002 Gtatr1) 1_002 Gtatrl) 1002 Gt1111I 1002 HarbOr View Hiiis. Im-a l e , fresh pa int
maculete 4 bd, tasteful $950/mo. 873--03$3 KER & LEE decor, Ille entry. akylite. Piil/SP& lrplc. trellt• to patio, spacious back lawn Im-Gorgeous exec home. 4-6
mediate posteslon thru Bd, 4 Ba. 0119< 3000 aq. It 01ymp1cs No pets, Refs Two frptcs. tam rm, IOfm.
-equlred $l650/mo Incl dining, 3 car gar. IM. call ~ard 72o--0100 w11'daya Nancy NIChols. REM AX
alter 1 pm 559-9400 ·Real Esta'te 11V11En1uo1 • -B-~-.~-!~-~1-~~-m-.-,-~-b~-~
3 car ger 11450/mo Spectacular vlaw1 from 17141 553_9202 4Br pool l'lome. pvt
A Great Western Company counyard. formal dining, ~v1""11a_g_e.....,1,,..1 -:-M:-a-rq-ue-:-:tt-e_m_d7.'I.
remodeled kltcl'len •PPfOll 2250 a I., 3 Br.
$3000 mo. Agt. 844-9060 lamlly rm , formal dining
NEWPORT BEACH
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE LIST
--------s. PILI IPIUllS -SUPER llY
llQllFICEllT VIEW
From thts 5 bdrm mansion high atop Spyglass Hill One of the best
panoraln.tc ocean and bay views w e have ever seen! And the spark.lmg
lights of all Newport Beach at night is breathtaking! POOL. spa,
security system. You OWN the land! Over 3 ,300 sq ft of e xecutive
luxury Just hst.ed $890,000. 759-1501
DOYEll lllOIEI -1301,000
Spacious 5 bdnn executive residence with lovely Spanish influence ln
decor Large separate family room for entertaining. Owner may carry
1st trust deed! Just listed! 759-1501.
UITILUFF
Terrific view of bay, mountains & spark.ling lights at night. 4 bd.rms, :l
baths, 2 fireplaces, beautiful grounds. Only $249.000! 759-1501
llAlllOll VIEW llDIES -1221,100
Fantas•ic price for th.ls sought aft.er area! 3 bdrms. 2 baths + family
room. Least expensive home we have seen in thts beautiful area'
759-1501
IPYIUll RlllE
Featuring ocean view, beautiful pool and large lo t. Tremendous price
reduction to $475,000! 759-1501
S 111,000 -OCEAN VIEW
From balcony of this ''best priced" 3 bdrm, 2 1"3 bath T owne Hon:ie in
walking distance to beach! Over 2100 sq. ft. Pool. spa & tennis! 759-1501
JlllllE OREEI
Ocean & gTet;?nbelt view -extra large private s pa, recreational area,
several tennis cour ts, 2 large pools. sauna & Jac uzzi. Guard gate for
security Only $428,000 -better see this one! 759-1501 \
CLIFF lllVEI
Charming colonial mansion with brick entry, coun try kitche n with
fireplace, French doors & hardwood floors. You'll e npy the famUy
warmth of thlS Ea.stem style home Only $272,000! 759-1501
1211,000 -PllYlTE IUCll
Access comes with thit custom built h illside home that proVldcs &
"countryside" feeling with views ol hills & "open space". Owner w11J
help with low interest Cina.ncing. 759-1501
1111111 YIEW llMEI -Sll,000
ln upgrades In t his 5 bdrm. 3 bath Somerset model wtth expanded
dining nn. Sec:wity system. All new kl~en. Beautiful spa. Sett.er see
thl.a today! 759-1501
OllTOI WATllFIOITr -1111,000
Private 40' dock & view 4 bdrms, 3 44 baths, 3 car g&rage : ExceUcnt floor
plan. Takeover 9~% T .D.! 759-1501 ...
Completely remodeld home on hve acres o f land Ten minutes to
downtown. $8,000 dwon, $715/month P .l.T I A.slung only $72,500
556-7035
111,000 IOWI • 10 QllLIFYlll -POOL I SPA
Our 4 bdrm 3 bath beauty comes complete with a pool & spa. It's a
spacious & .:Well decorated home but the best news is the financing.
Payments a low $1,695 PITl with $15,000 down! Takeover l l.5% loan
plus seller will carry back . 963-567 l.
IOl'T Ln THE PlllCE FOOL YOU
Brand new 25 year old home. Gorgeous added family room .. completely
.remodeled kitchen with built-in microwave and oak cabinetry. 10%
down, $880/month P .l. at $110,500. 556-7035.
noo 10. FT. Ill FRllCISO YICTORlll -1231,000
With only $69,000 down, this San Franclsco Victorian channer can be
yours! Priced under recent appraisal at $235,000, this is a superb buy for
the large family desiring beach living a.t affordable price and tenns.
Four bedrooms plus four baths Library and family room. Huge sundeck
and solar heating 963-5671.
120,000 IOWI, IUllE 1% VA LOii
Our owner will carry the balance for 10 years at 12%. Total payments
$1.050/month. Lovely home with new carpets. new tile. remodeld
kitchen. Priced below market at $99,500. 556-7035.
IFFFOlllAILE PRICE All THIS
Our 4 bdrm, 2 'l'2 bath interior decorator's home can be purchased for
$1 ,376 per month with $18,800 down and it's gorgeous! From the sunken
living room with a cozy fireplace to the secluded master bedroom. no
expense has been spared to upgrade this beauty. Fonnal dining room
with crystal c handelier and a large family room are perfect tor
e nte rtaining. Asking $188,000. 963-5671.
11,000 IOWI I lfOO/IOITll
Two master suites near pool w ith a view. Double car garage. This luxury
condo 1s available at an affordable price of $91,500. 556-7035.
FIL TllY FIVE lllllllM FIXER
Huge home needs locaof "TLC" but the price shows it. At $173,900 with
monthly payments a low $1,316, there Is exceUent valuf> for the
handyman . Added bonus: A Pool & Spa! 96'3-5671
110,110 HWI -111111 lll,IOO ht IT 12~%
Owner will carry the balance for ten years at 12'1. Total payments only
$1.200 for this 3 bedroom, 2 Y\ beth dream townhome wtlh private patio.
double endoeed garage, eecw1ty gate & teMb ooW'tl. ~~-703~.
Ill 1111 PllTI UU
We are presently offering SIX labe for aale In the following locations:
S8.nt Barbara. Santa Monte.a, Monterey Park, Buena Park, Anaheim
and Irvine. Prices start at $~6,000 + equipment. Flexlblt!""tenN, rMny
owners will h elp finllntt. 963-~671.
•
IB.
..... , llAll ""°' 2670 SUI Miguel Drive
Newport Beach. CA. 92660
(714) 759-1501 ti . AMERICAN HOME SHIELD
"We Protect & Service
Things That Service You."
lllTlltfll ........
9032 Adami Ave.
HunUnit.on Beach. CA. 92646
(714) 5~-7035
\
rm, very fresh, nu
IRVINE TERRACE-3Br. cplfpalrit, comm. pool &
2'hBa. tmmec. bright & tennl1 S 1300/mo. Agt
airy Wik. to bch1, lalan<I & 573-5354
1hopa Avl 10-15 11300 W~ood-_,,b-r'""'ld_ge_con_d:-o-. -=3-=B:-r.
mo yrly Agt 760-831 t t'I• ba, no pet.s. $725/mo
2508 OCEAN BL Home 675-8786
OPEN SATtSUN ~k 773-8398
3 Br, 2 trplcs view l:!fUI ltack 2241
52000/mo Agt M Hitt §Nut No c;oun. 2 Bl 2
759.9 too Ba hOme View, trptc.
Sell your home w. plual 11a1nec1 g1 .... dbl garage
EFFECTIVE TECHNIQUE $1095 875--0349 t% plusl 851-6370 Bkr E•EW.IUY C"tl Ktta 22 4 N-CUiiom home, ooean 2 Br w/stove. crplS, view, 4 Br 4'A Ba
drapes. eoctld garage, $ 3 2 0 0 I mo Age n I
no pets $550/mo 773 w 213/592-3747
Wiison. 631 -4889 •IYEllTlt&Yl S355/MO Cottege/Duplex Penor1mlc View.
Smlll. pvt I br. very. very 3• bd, J b•. cuatom, lrplc. clean, newly recond, n-d/w, Mlcrowave/renge.
crpte, new paint Saunl & s 1250/mo. 848--0603 feoced )llfd. No pets•-----,.....,,..-..,,.-. (213)471-1871 Very attractive 3 Br 2 Be. pOOI, I 1350 494-3788. 3 Br, 2 ba hm, 2 car oar & Beautiful setting lrg lncd bckyd. $700/mo
494-3408 or 496·6000 LllHI lit••• usz _3 _B_r-. -K-ld_a_&_pe_t_e_O.,,.,.,.K Luxury new Vina Home, on
S7SO/mo Avlll t 11t5 Falrw1y wt ocean view.
REF'a. 831-5107, 10-2pln 3Br, fam rm, form11 din,
5 Br 2'h Ba Mesa <181 Mer.
POOi & service gardener
Av all 1113 $1 150/mo
Slerr1 Mgmt 84 t-1324
gourmet kitchen, ei1-
qulalle decor. design
pool & )ec w/w1tert1ll,
1t1t11n Ille yd. 12900 mo
untum, S32SO lurn. June
$700. C.M 4Br 2be. cpte. Agl/ownet 644-6200.
1tove. gar, clean, no P811 PYt Niguel ShOf"• ocean
845·29 t9 view condo: 2 br. frplc.
Beeutlful 3 Br 2'A bt new crpta. St1p1 to
a11·mdl All am1nltlea beectl. $450 493--0195
Baker/Bear $850. I rt le • 2-t 642-8663 544·9858 ~ IC -
BIG flash tittle caahl Lrg 3 1Hfr'.iS:. on_,.,, WIO.
Bdrm 2'1'\ Ba custom refrlg , $950 m o
hOme QUMnS kltCl'I rorm 673-3909
din euper plush decor ='3"'"'B=-d.,..r-m-. -=2:-:-b•-:l-:-h,--=2-n=-r-e-
troplcal p1t10 relaxing places. newly painted In &
epa & mOfe &495 • $50 out. cul de aac. 0 50/mo
security fM 637-5027 leaM. 2304 Fllrtlltl Dr.
Condo 2 Br, 2'~ bl, frplc, 2 Avall now. &44·7424
cer gar. Frig, w/d Incl. 3 Br. 3 Ba. pool, e1c.
350 Avocado St $775 N-port Hgt• St400/mo
547-2888 73t-7747 Ottlce 833-9773
Condo 3 bd 2 ba 2 cer gar. Home 5~982
$890/mo w/$250 dep Big Cenyon 3 Br 2'A b•
478-1275 or 844·4 t57 condo Beaullful goll
courae view. 648--0632
Fllllffl E.1111 Big Canyon 4 Br. lamlly
3 Br 2 B1 sgl tamlty home. roonm, view, pool, IP•
$850/mo Pie c all $3300/mo. Call Anne ex
831-7090. Agl M1gdy 478-1234 -
Lge 2 br, 2~ bl twnhM, H bO BJ.::.~"ff Oen 2 yerd, trple. E/alde. '825. Biii r It N r 1 Mull -833-8106 I . Ava ov. II $ t 200/mo 873-3251 lrg be<:kb1y condo, 3 Br 2 G .. ~ 1 ..... 3 ... Ba, trplc, garege. pool & c::"geou' .,_yo a .., "'• ape HOO/mo Wkdye 21'\ b , gate guarded ....
8-5 cell t·8:Z 1·9830 ,,.,,, w/oom pool, tennlt
• . · court a prtv ac>a. ~ llOht -l•'780-l 185 view w/ r«, W/O. 11705.
llW YUll ' eecut1ty 68P a~
On the gOlloourM. 4 Br 2 de9. $4&0. Aval! tmmecf.
81, tamlty rm, 11150 M .. 2215
7 0 1 • 3 1 t l s •I• c t 1"H..,..A'"'R'""8,...,,0""R:-:A:-:'IOO=e=-=coT:"':'NDO=--r
Pl'OpettlM. a&R, 28A. Vie'#, ..._.Uful
MONTICELLO Condo Condition. S1850 mo.
38drm, 2be, -v clean, Mo-532•
no pet•. 1700, 548-019 l HARBOR VIEW HOtlliES
call 111 11 am 4 ar, 2·atory, view,
NEW LUXURY 3BR, 2'1'\BA I 1700/rno. 8«·5a 1
Condo, Fam room. Jea_ LIAll Wlllll Tub, Lrg yerd, Avail NO'/ Exec ..,..., 1 yr ..... In
1, s1050. ea1.e22e N,e . °' CclM. 11400 to
Nwpt Hgt• 3 br, 3 be, trplc, S2500 mo mu. Mvet be
wet bar, bit ln1. patio, by NOv. 1 Of '°°'*
dbll gw. 2000 eq fl .. 780-9702 •
t1200 mo. 494-7420 wa Splll leYll '48R 2\t&A, In
SPACIOUS 3 er. 2 Ila, !M1blufl, dbl oer.. nr tmmt1e1, lrpto, yd, dbl ow OOMm poo1 t1250 mo. Mr
1825/mo. ~t. 75S.1341 t-tarrll MO-1195 wtldy
Spec1ou1 iU11. oondo 2 Ir, WATERFAONT:~2bf ~ 81. pvt cl11b, Fr win-& den, 2 be, ffplo, bit n. dOWI, rrple, lpe view ptly fum. OI unfum. mll'\t
S&OO. &49"342 t Nr S.C oond No pMa. l.MM/op-
ftlaz1. Avlll lmmec! llon & 1080/tnO l1&-a4 t
'
J I
I
I
-04 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Oct. 16. 1983
3 bdrm & den, 2 ·baths, 3 car garage.
Assumable financing. Corner of Tustin &
16th Place. Open Sunday 1-4. Owner/agent.
171-llH tr 111-1,314
·~
Most exclusive 5000 sq.ft. custom home on
almost ~ acre lot with 180° view of Back
Bay & Fashion Island. 5 &inns each with
larj~ walk-in closet & baths. Tiled floors,
brass fixtures thru-out. Xlnt. financing.
Pool & Spa. $935,000 L.H. Land Quotes
$131 ,000. Motivated Selle r will carry.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, 1-5
1014 MARINERS DR, Npt Bch.
(714) 751-5989
R & H Investments
COUllTRY FREllCH DUPLEX
COROll DEL llR
Four bedrooms plus Two Bedrooms unit. 3
years new . Used Brick, French doors and
windows, four car garage. Good assumable
fin~ncing. $427,000.
DAllAE CORPORlllOll ... , 1a11.,, ,, .. .,
(714 ) 111·1131 or (714) 720-1104 ..
SPECTACULAR OCEAN
& NIGHT LITE VIEW
Popular Tradewinds Model. Upper Spy-
glas,,. Lush landscaping. 37 Cambria. Open
Sunda;~~~;·;;.c;~;i;.-;~nt.
' IHI lllleJ, IHffer
(114) 111-1111"(114)720-1104
I
,. ..__illr:!I
:Y~I,: '· --~J~;=!ll i
211/213 Marcuerfte, Corona del Mar PRIME OCEAN VIEW
15 Cambria Drive, Corona del Mar
11New Bedford'4 model in exclusive Spyctass
... Panoramic ocean views. Pool and spa
uroooded by used brick. Remodeled master
suite to caphn ocean view. Fresh and clean
and ready to move Into! Terrific lone term
financinc available. Cal John for details
*NEW HOMES*
In Old• Corona del Mar
Four beautifully appointed townhomes, all
3 bedroom. 2th baths. Walking distance to
beach and shopping. 101h% APR available.
MAGNIFICENT MEDITERRANEAN Vl~LA
2 Corona del Mar, C.ondomiiJ's
Brand new 2 bdrm, 21h baths, Family Room.
Less than 1 block from ocean. Customiz.ed
throughout. Custom made oak cabinets in
kitchen w /top line appliances incl. Sub zero
re!rig & Thermatronic Oven. Security and
Fire Alarm Systems. Ocean view from Liv-
ing Room. Financing flexible. Asking price
$595,000. Submit your offer. Call for private
showing. ·, Askin& $74~,500. q___
CAMBRIA PROPERTIES
403 405 407-409 Poppy
Open Fri/Sat/Sun 12-5
Dick Satterlee, Jack Howell
3 yrs. old, 7500 sq. ft., 5/6 beqroom, 6 ~ bath.
4 fireplaces, 3 wet bars, 3 jacuzzi.s,
steam/sauna room, pool, billiard room, fam-
ily room, 3 car garage, security gate and
more . , . magnificent ocean and city views
from this very private estate. Walk to pri-
vate beach .. Adjacent home atso available.
Open house Sunday, 12-6 p.m.
THE IERIE COIPlllY
(714) fJl-4710
JOHN SHEA (714) 955-3454 833-0242 Brokera 844-1156 ..... . 429 Isabella T errace, Corona del Mar
.. JIHI llllUY /lllllEll 140-0J
l••M• UaJaraia~t4 At1rta1at1 Faraia~t4 At1rtatat1, Val. Arut•tatt, VaJ. At1rhltat1, UaJ. Aprtatata, Vat AJ!!!atata, Val. At1rtllnt1, UaJ. ...., 2900 ltatala I•
l!!f!rt luc~ UH l!!f!rt ltac~ 2'69 Ct1t1 111111 2724 C.ata lllen 2724 Cnta llltaa 2724 l•at. ltac~ 2740 l~rt a..c~ 2711 ll!J!rl ltacla 27'9 Beaut. furn. Mon•rcl( Tt<· 1_1..,~,,.•..,rt __ _..---.
Wlmtl HIJILS •MESA VERDE 2 Br. 1 E/alde lux. In a pine IOrNI. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. n-2Br 1ba. gaa paid. ~25 11fifoc.k1 lrom seeCJl. lo Ctlll Haven: 2 br, 1 b• ra,~ exe~~lveh ... hom~ Fem. to shr 3 br, 2 ba UM ISll Steps from beach, gar-Ba. upper. Newly decor. L 2 b 2 b 1 1 ow & /$375 d · M 4br 2ba nu carpet vac ' w ..,.....an v-. ' are ex house near ocean NB 4Br, 4'~8a. family rm, age/carpor1. Xlnt foe. 203 $525. No pets. 833-6974 b~ e~a 1' red g, ' carpet drapes. freah w ep. cFadden $1050 ,;,o 535 42Ss o; patio, garige, ate. Ideal penau. Im med. oc· Pool tennla ~ 1~·
pool. ana. lmm--"late oc-33rd. St. N.B. $ c. . gar. as lnct. paint. 382 Victoria btwn nr Beach. 893-4894 960 9214 · -lor retired couple. No cupancy ref., required utlta ·.,."903· 1 Sharon · ..... ......, •SPACIOUS & SUNNY* 565/mo. ~2·1844 agt H1rbor & Newport. $525 2 br apt. agl car gar. Nice • pefa. Yearly:548-5306 4915.~6 or 661-53•6 · , ___ · --~-----
cupanc;. $2500 mo. Edie 3 Br 2 Ba $700/mo. I br gar bale OW $450 Frpl pool prvt pa!Jo 651·9523 neighborhood nr Beach & 1BA + Study. Ullf. paid, LIDO 2Br 2Ba 2 people Fe, non-smkr. to ahr 3 bd,
Olton 0< Cynthia Agt. N.B. R&alty 5•8 9os.4 · ~0-5446 dshwthr X-LG 1 Suon Ellie. "465/mo. 891-831• 1725 yearly. Ocean aide no pet1° S8i5 lee mo' ....... , Attt8fle11 2 b•. 2cargar, C.M. 1330 144-IOIO 675-1642 2 -w Eut1lde $510 557-2841 PALM MESA APTS of 113 e. Balboa Blvd. 675-0377 673-6589 . Save car coat• & time. Pv1. -..... utlls, 650-4297 ~~~~~~~~~ l~la:;•!!;l!:t~l.!lt!!!IC!!!~ ..... ~2:!1!11! I story, 2 bd, I'"' ba. 0 / . 1561 l\Ae11a OR 2 Br. Corner of Huntington Call (714) 673--0532 · rm/pvt balh w/eep entr -F--------= garage. $500/mo. lsl. lllTAIT Ill Unturn 1 Br '460. & Baltimore. $675/mo. Lido Bayfront. 2 bd, 1 ba, avlll. Mon thru Frt 1or 8 rmmte •• non-smkr 10 lhr
I Br, dlx, across from ocn. laat, security. No pets. Junior 1 Br turn $.440 Ocean vu. volleyball. gar· 2 Br 2 Ba. yearly W N--sandy beech. tabuloua quiet conlefVatlve em-3 Br. 2,., b• In COM. Liii iSLE fully 5~"{';;6;;-canl S600 646-1955 2 e~~isJ'"' g:~~~~~n~°i:'::: Call btwn 9_. 5•6-9860 dener. qutel. 53 1.9100 port, wshr/dryr hl(·up. 2 view. $975/mo yrly. ployed man In age mobile $270. Call Sue 759-t 17•
S Bdrm .. 3 bath wtlh South mo. · • $395 1 Br. mobile home. $585/mo. + $275 sec. PALM MESA APTS Large 2 Br 2 Ba private 2r;:; L~~~ $675/mo. 675-0120 0< 673-0289 hOme In adult park nr. F/non smkr, mid to late
P1t10. Cloee to beach and A,.rtlltab, UaJ. quiet adultpark. No pets. total move In cost. Great t561 Meta DR patio enclsd glfttO-, N B Realty 675· 1642 NO FEE Apt & Condo ren-beeeh In H.B. $60/wl(. 20·1 ahr 3br 2ba houte
tennis club. $2000/mo.. -Z 1 4 O Cab r 111 o ,, 2 7 . loc/clean. Junior 1 Br Furn. $4'40 bltlns: freshly painted. · · · tafa. Vitia Rentals Reta pleaae. 960-5844 CdM $300 mo. 673·3729 WattrfrHt ..... lalMa ltlaai 7M 673·7787 23•6 Santa Ana Ave. Calf btwn 9-M 5-46-9880 840-5504 Dee 675-4912 Broker wlmda/eves. 0< 673-7479
111-HIO 3 br, 2 ba. refrlg. ow. TSL .. IT 142-1JOI PENT RIDGE cove. 2 Br. 2 Spacious quiet .1 Br. $~35, N r b c h . b ache I 0 r Eem. 25+, reap .. quiet, pvt F pref: neat, prof, n/amkr
r81"1ge. ate. poola, sauna, IUTAIT Ill Ba . C 0 ND 0 n ea ' 2 Br. Twnhee $585. Wall( COUNTRY CLUB LIVING w/kltchenette. utlf pd, :9"tr & Ba. $310/mo. 1at. to lhr 2 br. 2 I>• condo
security. Nr SC Plaza. No ~OO/ .__.. Baker/Bristol. lnclds to beach 960-8656 IN NEWPORT BEACH clean. 645-l8l9. ~of l11t, Imm, 644-0611 cloee to beech. N,B. $375 O~rwlew 2 Br:-2 b•. 2 YALY RENTAL $600/ pets. S675. 960-4657 mo. am un1ttac • ...., washer/dryer, relrlge, wOl'tl, 673-2857 home. uttla. Incl. 631-1098 car gar. $650/mo. : mo. cottage. 1 Br. 1 Ba. ott micro-wave elec ar Walktobeach,1Br.etove, Slnglee1&2BdrmApert-Pnaula xtra lg 2Br, 646-5600 6-45-2682 Lovely 2 br w/plllo IEW a llllMI road, quiet. 0 r 0 ~ r Ir y ref11ge. crpt. drapee. menta & Townhouna. eundeck, yrly. S745 mo. Furnl,tled room nr SC Houae to share, 2 rooms.
675-8362 evea Totall~ remodeled 3 Br 2072 Newpor1 Blvd. ~~ h P ti. p cl $.450/mo 536-4637 Some ue elegantly 552-0653 Of 675-2636 Plau. female pref. Penn. Point. Balbo1.
Lido Ille 2 stry 3 Br 4ba lalL--1,L h · .... ..... a.a2 llO• ws r. P• o, gu furnllhed From $680 S250/mo. 556-1737 $350 mo. yrty.673-M33 • • • -" a town ouae apt•. •--.•• -• • water f:ld. No pet• Wilk to beach. 1tudlo, On Jam~r .. Rd it Quiet 2 Br, 1 ba, p1tto, gar, ---------1---------~8~~ :'~61~;;io· Ptalaa•l& 2707 ~":.' r:~~~~'.dFso~r';,~~ Large I Br 1ba, 4 plex. g~Soo 50. Ag1. no tee. atove, relrlge, crpt1, San Joaquin Hiiie Rd. pool, no pete. 1601-C let1J1,!l!t!Ja lff4 M~~ ~-r,:n~~~~:-jac~
lut. ·--"210 38R 2BA.115 25th St. Yrty appllcatlon 645-6646 D/w, laund. $4•5/mo. . ~~F utll• lncld. 144-1tt0 ~~ St. N:fJ55 Hgt•. cxm:mx Be;ACH ten cr1a, etc '335 mo. _. • leale, atepe to the beach. 645-6625. Imo. 64 MOTOR 1.,.N Pam 241-1492 Iv m1g. 2 bd, 1 ba COOdo. $595 + 11000 mo. 640_2036 S.-25 1 Br. refrlge, no peta, Sharp 2 Br upetalra apt. 3 Br. 2'h Ba, 2 1tory luxury Sml 2 Br 1 Bi, garage, 120 Wkly r1tee S105 & up.
eecurlty dep. Laundry patio. 731·0 16th. St. Lrg 2 Br 4-plex, 720-A encled gar8Qt.$.495. Cati condo. Bkr. 642-3850 0< 371h Pl. seo<l/mo. let. Dally/Wkly/Monthy M/F to lhr 2 br, 2 b• apt In
h/u pool apa play· 3 br, 2 ba. 2 sty. New crpt, 673-7787 Shallmlr, $.495. No pets, M9·1976 al1 5PM. APUmm 642·1010 lul, S250 Hcurlty. l(ttcll'I avall. ColO< TV, H.B. P1tlo, gar. $2~/mo. llf~nd wOodey area nr deci<~r. Nr beech. Nov. ~6-2613 645·3924 WESTSIOE·2Br 181 ult! 1·2 bedrooms 3 Br 2 ba beech 2 blka 631-3~. Utt!. not In-heated pool & atepe to uttla & dep. 843-7660
Fllrvln and war~er. l O. mo. 675-0988 lllSTUT Ill Lrge ~ bdrm Lndry rm pd•$550 mo. 's250' eec. Beautiful liku and trplc, g1r.' No peta. Avali eluded oceen. 985 N Coaat Hwy. NEAR OCC/SC PLAZA
831·2039 Yearly 2 Br. 2 ea. par11ally $525/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. pool, pool $404 tirm All utll~ Cati Beth 631•5230 1traam1. Complete Nov. $775 yrty &45-1682 Laguna Beach. •94-15294. Non-amoller.1260.
tum $6501 No 1 laundry room ctoae lo • · 1menttlu . Security ' · llM• I IPAllllS ~6-8277 955-0809 3 Bdrm, 2 B•. POOL 67~ mo. pe •· shopping. 149'e, Bay SI. pd. ~8-0336 Dua Ptiat 2721 gllM. Entry by phone. 3 Br 2 Ba frplc, dlx, step• 2Br, 11Ja. ctiolce Nwpl Hte, Motel rm• for rent by~., ____ . _____ _
home, near We at-T1L I ltt M! llGI LIKE NEW 1 Of 2 Br No peta. ~6-6591 to water. 209 418t. cathederel celling• wood $95-up w/l(ltchenelte Need rmmte to lhr lovely
mlnater/Newhope. fncd C.reaa ••l lllu 2722 I ' • PAV p1t10, pool, spi IOW YllW 2 I $775/mo. 213/669-5965 burning fr pie ' new •vall. 875-8740 quiet IO 2br prtv condo In
yard & ~age. Kids/pets fa Br near rn new $675. 2 story. 2Br. Elegant TOP arN qule1 no pet• Only 10 mlunutes from La, ... ltacla 74 Of 944--691~ cptldrpa. LO PvT DECK, Vacatl•• East CM, $350. ~2-0670
Ok. S7 5. Agt, no lee. l(ltcnen. $600/mo.' 212 twnhme. Good locatlon. MESA PINES 28so Hart• Lagun1. your own private 1 Br apt, aectud:d. franch 3 Br. 2 ea. Steps 10 beech. pvt g1rage, no 1>9te. Lae. ltatall 2907 N/smkr: N.B. 11 beech.
883-1500. Marguerite. 675-3130 Near new. Peta & children $.49s..$625 549·2•47 ocea~ view from Dina door• & pvt dee*. all utll ye r 1 y s 9 5 o. e k r . $795 mo. ~gt. 631-5155 Lge LA. bllh & kit. $325. C.dndai••• ok. Agt 646-7019. Point• moat aecluded Incl. 1685/mo. 494-a126 642-3850 0< 642-1010 Upetalra dlx 2 Br 2 Ba UWAll YAIAntll 645-3015/~6-3170 (4-8)
U '-i L-..1 ,. ... 10 2 bd, frplc:, gar, laundry, BAY Tt••BER APT IEWllEEI UT. a<;enlc bluff, llke newt 2 1• 01 • nr Luvurlo 1 witerfront --,--------,--a1•la ••--~as pd. no pete. $650 "' B het 1 B & 1 tt Br with den xtr• larna 2 Br apt, near beach. utll $795/mo 3 Br 2 Ba ocean, g1r. 7• mo. ft u CONDO IN NEWPORT
12 2 S /s 6 0 1 Br, lrplc. pool, private ac ors. r, 0 1' • • ... •-pd $700/mo No pets · · d. 681-1391 home on Oahu, exchange BE c TO s RE 38R 2BA Condo. Beautl-pen • 11 un .. 1 patl, enclsd garage. $396-$566 645-4411 private patio. -25/mo. · 499 2990 · upper unit, garage. w/ or IM equlvltant 6 Br vu A H HA .
fully decor1ted. pool. AM1rguarlte,CdM. S!Sl5/mo.399 WBiySt. NEWLY PAINTED C11t Mon•Frl. 9 ·5. • hk~p.3block1tobeech, V E AS A ILL ES hOUM NB or vicinity 2 ~~22•
)acuzzJ, all elec kitchen, 2 Br apt. 1 block from 650-6357 uu11 paid garage pool no 6 4 3-o 2 1 2 · wk n d 1 La.J!U llt•tl 2752 111 bit-Ina. PENTHOUSE 2 Br· 2 ba. weeka In Nov. 631-6799 Nwpt Bch rm & bath. $276. llr cone:!. ,_, So. Cst beach & storM viii lnci t . • • 68'-6441 &-208 Lugonla C)()tlnvlew. turnkey flv· M/F pref 30+ Call Joan :!:~:4962~:a322 oi S67Stmo 49•·3324 c~~anpe~:.r s'..~a51~~·a1~:y 2":d~~ 1ea 5530.15ss IHt. ltacla 2740 "'3sr ~:. ~~.~·= T1l llplt M2-11GI ~~: 8fe·1~~.~~n'rft: P~;, ~~. ~:.~0.:.i: or J~n. 631.2011.
---------Bach unit, no kitchen. McCardle Rltr. M&-7729 ~~~ocado •:.3t9'6~5 1 Br 1 B1. Pf1v1te patio bch. $950/mo 551-0585 Acron from beach. 2 Br. Barrington egt, 875-6000 re1taurant, tounge, Ir .. Nwpt Bch: worl(lng, '8:' ~t t f i ~-Avail Nov 13. For 1 per. C d 3 bd 2 b 2 -enclld garage, freshly Stepe to belch frg new 2 (>ool. encl gar1ge. Yearly or 644-0•52 golf car1, wkly ratee. ll1ble, n/amkg M/F lo afu •• araa ._aon __ S300 __ ._6_7_5-_4_8_63 __ 5°!'90°1 11a250c1rgar. 18d ---;:;.5 .~60 pitnted SHS/mo Br 2 BaCondo'trplc pool 1565. Oo direct to 210 968-3483,679-6302eva 2br,2 baapt.Vlew.pool • • -" mo w dep. rm -~ -... IM0-5504 · eee 177 • Ceder Apt 1 640·5078 •-Cl 2771 Jee tennla lot• of lll1ru Duplex, 3 Br, l'h Ba, din •76-1275 or 64•-4157 24t w w neon •P•· 5 Incl• water &. • ' .. a. taMtt ltatala te 1395 . · 1 s dep. Pnia1al1 2'07 rm. gar, walk to beach Condo park setting with 631-0960 Beaut. 2 Br. 1'h B•. hell 768-•529.557·1928 B!,A~HYlcEAIALYtdhc~~!..2 Near m.1 Hoepl11i. 1 llaart Hoa Avall.l~·i~t~8J,~8 .
Step9 to seeCfi. 2 Br, 1 ba, $900. 1-996-3008 . NI Twnhte frpfc patio tncd 01· rp ' • epe 0 .,,......... bd newly decOflled t $700/ view. 2 Br 2 ba. patio, $ce 2 Br. 2 Ba. No peta. yard eocl g'arage' Kint Mua your shopping eat· ooean vu. gar. $790/mo. r;.·1, &. drapes AviN . 'h off II relocating M/F OVflf 30 to lhr 2 Br 2 ~rea:7~...ie30 mo, ROE 1 Br, S695 t dep, ~lllns, Sg~1n~ry rm.s%~ N495/';°. ~val! approx area nr Hunt. Ha;bour. ter by ullng lhe Dally Pl· 2t3/420-8660 ~ 29 1435 896-·5974 WHY HASSLE? Ba condo nr Hoeg Hoep. t~ :... ~~ s:;~o~~~~-~2~~· ~";,ep. to. m~~e&ln. No 6~;~75~~·eve~~~~:nd~~ S67S/mo. 8'46·0736 lot Claaallled Ada. NEWPORT HEIGHTS . . R~~~:r=:s Utlla lnci $300. 846-7332 -~~~-_.,;~~ Cnta ....... 27 ..... pets 631-6t07 B•al ltaeli 2740 IHI leacla 2740 Brand new 2 maatflf suit· lute Aaa 2710 photo'a&match419 prol Prof male will ehr Irvine
W IE .II •--• ' ... each witti full blth & ' 2BA 2BA twnhm with M/F 0 EASTSIDE 2 BDRM 01 Tiil ILlff µ mirrored wardrobH * * * * people. You talk only to 35 G Id kid
ALL UTILS PAID 1c~~~ 7~~·B u~~~': z:· 1 bl. pvt p1t10. down· Oulel 2BR 2BA CIOM 10 • oer1mlc Ille kitchen. brick qualified apple'•. +$3 "· w i no S,
Compare before you rent 645-8'4S3 · stairs. $525. 957·2909 bch, O/W, din rm. lrpl, KE frplc. ftrge aundeck, P11L ~ 4341 Bir~~· N-:'9port9 · pet
75
mo.
8
6-3
821
~om deatgn featuraa, T patio encl gar S6~mo WOODLA l1Undry hi( up & geraoe 1br/1b1 condo olootllng '"1·1o Flfol. non·amoklng M.
poot, bbq, cov'rd garage. 1 Br 1 B• roomy. n-et~c s~:~: ~?if~d ?oae 2153' Peclllc. "c.M". c11i $850. No pet-. 759-9194 poot av1ll $525 558-0050 2 Lvt 2+ 2'h dlux lwnhae. wanted to lhr 2 Br 2 ba ===· ~~~f.'.ush c1rpet. drapes, freeh yard. $!S90/mo. 675_6458 mgr Jett. 548·4530 APARTMENTS. leltli La~•H l71f Oen & t60dag vu mbr Park Newpor1,apt. '390. ,. __ ._ F
1
paint. 382 Victoria, btwn 1 ,,, w/wfk In ct1te lee grg, _7_60-_9_2_7_9 ____ _ 2'8dr,.;'~~~m. ~;g ~:~~~~3 N-port "425. Baal. leac~ 2740 Hut leac~ 1 Br. ~60 mo lncld1 viii• micro, waah/dry, retrlge, Prof. non-amoklng M. 3e
5
w . Wlleon.
642
_ 1
97
t • • 27 40 & C1ble. Clfport, walk to pool t1ble In lvng rm. All w1nted to lhr 2 Bf 2 ba beach. 1 perton. No pete. lum xcpt mbr reu mile Park Newpo11 apt. '390.
let. lut + $300 eec. eeek• tame. Cell Mike 760-9279 llWNIT YIU.Ml 1Br unfurn, $.475 mo. +
deo. Newly d«x>rated,
etove & relrlO, off atreet
perking. Quiet neigh-
borhood. No peta. To-
ctill &46-960-4'
7 min from be.ch, gu A
water paid. Junior I Br.
1475. 1 Br. $530
pool, apa, tennla,
volleyball cour1e, aaunaa.
tee. rm. Sorry no pet•. ~~~~~~~~~
Cell557-0075. 2 Bdr m . 1 on bath ... ...... 1141 Townhoun. $835/mo.
-831~13 trailer et Treuura -=--=--..,.--=--..,,,----lelend, OOMn w . 1450. 2 Br. f'..~ Bl. Excellent 21~1 Eutelde locatton. 14125/rno. 720-084~ ~ .... \ liii 2 Br. 1 Ba. Private patio. ~. 3 &.-. 2 Ba. atepa bMm celllngl, frl>lo. 2
from belch, carpofi, xlnt pereon1, nopeta. 1696.
loc. 203 3&d 81. 850-1798
N.8.Aeelty 875-1&42 iii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-I
8eylkte v1nage. nr w1tflf. 28r 9')t, 2195 Miner at., Must .... Poot, Clut>hM, N.-C9tl, dr1>9. p1lnt
IP&., .... 875-993e Oettwtlr, alov. • refrlg,
IMcf\lront 3BR 2BA j950 No pet•. M50 mo. + eee.
mo. Vacant. 536-<4268 or dep. To ... ce11&46-te0•
M0-921•
OCEANFRONT·.,nlr Clw 2 Bf. ii50tmo.TwnhM,
A ecec. quiet tutn, Cleln. lrplc, w/d, 1tt11Ched gar.
S1000-St 100 e7Meet age, pool, ep1, YetfY qule1 _____ . ____ 83t-i9&4
~ tllll 2 ,,._,81,,.--W..,../~--crp-t-l,--Wlt-tlf
FUm. 3&2 S.-Apt1. Nr paid., 83M 120 1-<5PM
beldl. A9ent 874-lt70 1671 "8 " Orange M15.
Winter fJilntal IHI June tet.
OcMll ftant, 3 191' 2 Be. Alf'• ,.q. 53~
•2 Br. 2 Ba, pooli....IPI, lie. Clbt\M, rw 80 f'!Ua,
gu pd. M75. &4t·813e
Kenneybu nkport?
Isn't that the bo~t
that won The Am enc a· s ·C~p in '75?
:-'1': ro ~~-
tt yo.u'rt not Mt who (or what) l\enntybunkporl wn.
don I fetl bad -you re not alone. Ktnneybllnkport is
one ol 14 d1st1ncttvely 61fle1ent apartment lloorplans
at Suw1nd Vl!lt&t 1n Huntin1ton Buch. St1w1nd
V1lla1e 1s a result ol lolally personahzed proftss1on11
PIJnnm&, lht •ind ol attention you dtmvt A perlecl
bltnd of nalure and hv1na -nulled '" 1. forut w1lh
b<lbbhna blook• and qu1tt ponds, cooled by ~lurat octan bleeztt Add lo that ten111s court$. Slflmm1111
pools. a Sl>8 and • convenient louhon nttr shoPPtnc •114. emplafl!lenl and you've 101 a place anyone would
proudly call homt (hen llenneybun~Portl Ont and
two bfdroom, one and two bath epertmenb
from $57~
I ~SSS Htinllnaton V1M11t ltnt. ltuntln&lon Beach. CA
(714) 898·9961
From tht San Oiqo Frwny clr1v1 north on Buch to
likflddln, thtn wat on likfl6dell Is Satwilld Vllltlt.
hr•np tvlNtlll • Open ...., 10 Ml ... w .
•
Spacious
1-2-3 bedroom
apartments
tram $480
* Lakes & Streams
*Pool ·& Spa * Large Recreation Room * Bar-B-Ques * Newly redecorated
I * Beautlfully L&S,ldscaped * Security Gate
(714) 848-8591
8100 Edinger
Huntington Beach
,
FORNISHEO or
UNFURNISHED. All UTILITIES
PAID. HEALTH
CLUBS. TENNIS.
SWIMMING. plus
(TIU<h more! Sorry,
no pets. Models open dilly 9 to 6.
Oakwood
Garden Apartments
Ntwport Buch So.
1700 16th Street
(at Dover)
642·5'13
Ntwport Beadl No.
880 Irvine Avtmlt
(at 16th)
64S·ll04
Rel'I. 499·3982 evH 831 ·90 17 d•Y• •=---,------~ 213/813·6313 Prof. non·1moktng M.
... .._ wanted to shr 2 Br 2 ba , __ ._. ____ • __ .__ • Br 2 81 h()\jM, W/O, Park Newport apt. 1390.
Lge Br In 5Lr CM IPI kttch,, etc. 1250/mo + 7ll0-9279
CIOM to occ. $285/mo: S20·dep. &48-1318 -------~137. Apt to lhr, UOO/mo 4' ,.. Prof. pereon to lhr t>Mut.
tll .. _ ft F•..... CclM turn. home. OCMn
Nwpt: w1lk to belch. POOi. u 1· ...... oee om -.-'riew. 1500. &44-6347 11nnl• Jae Furn or un Ion f1l1nd . Encl. gtr. rum. $2eoi mo uti111nc1. • Aeft. 720·1747 bet. 9am Rel Fem Rornl1e w11ttt9d. ~a.-..2e0/993-i688 F/Shr "'--·t 3 Br condo E. CM. 280+1A ut. Aftlr -. . •·30pm &40-7223 Cyndi OCEAN BREEZES Jog or CdM, wllk to ocean, dbl i~-· _____ ;.......,,_
bike to bch, Furn rm In Qll'. 1Undedl, Mini-pvt ~ temllle to ihr. Hr,
twnhM IOf rnatuN l'9IP MPl'•t• Uv rm, wuh· 2Ba at PromontOtY Pt,
ctMn quiet wonclno per' 1f/dryer1Vlllt. 1111.1400 non...mkr, no peta. "460
IOfl. 'non-imkr/drfnker~ t 1/2 utH. Cell Ant Ad mo. caii Daw 6711-6497.
TV -Ktt prlv, PoOI. Jae, 1212• &42--4300• 24 hra ~ t. to lhr tum COM
SSOO/mo l11c1 utile. ee.it. pvt NB home, S250, 'TWMM. M25 + utll. Hr
631-2288 worlclng Fem edult, Kttef\, ooten. No gar. 875 9041
Room. W. Coet• Meu prlY. &45-9515 ~. F to lhr -2 bf, 2
'200/mo. 3 Bdrm hOu•. Etnpl. F n/1mkr IOOklnQ lor ba aux. condo: jec. gtMI
&42-3988. Male or Fem. ume, 26-315, to lhr N.8. vteW. CM/NB .,.._ 1350
R 0 0 m w I k I t°"". n °' OclM.,.. llM or 1pt. lktll. 541-7-414 ~
prlvelegel Nr llt\~ng 596-1918 X15 ::fw 8-5: ~. MfF n·emkr lfw toe
center l But. "2·7&20 213•796-e37e wtu\d tum. hee, lrvtne & 11th, IUUll 9ITIL Fem. 2 Bf 2 Ba, rw>n-IM"l\kr, CM '300 + utll M._._
C.M.1310.[)yl....._1700, .. _ ........ ~. -= Wlllyrent111now1vall. I Xt St1 ewe IMl2-7220 nmm ••• rn ... x. --·
115.50/Wtt. t. UC) Oolor ' "' SC Pel. poole+. 'TV.Ptlonellnroom 227• llemlleroomm•t•went9d. mo. 4$24707 Mertc/8ob iil!!!!!! .. ~lllJ!!!!!!!!!!!~~I Newcwt BIYd. C"4. 18R eeetllde O.M. S2t0 Ammte Wlll'tted fOf brlftd -..e-7«11 \h tll. 848 •M3 -2 Bf. 2 .,. condo In ~~~cn::C •·x-L_N __ T_n_r _HollG __ .--Pvt-.,-.. -, Fern. to ltlr 2 bf. 1\4 b• full ..a~.,....
1er*9 °"9ot«!'Y In I'-... N-ernc*fnotdt, '300. -'· O.M. Avelt. Nov, 1. In t~'l.. t400 hf uUI.
DAIL. y Ptt:OT &4&-1035, 845-90911 l HO + •· &45-7M2 6&4-t7111 dUr bUe In
,
•
·HOUSES FOR SALE
1 BEDROOM
728 Surtalde, Seal Beach
894-7521 $290,000
2 BEDROOM
223 Poppy, Corona del Mar •
875-5511 S.50.000 Sun 1-5
7 SNscape, Npt Sch
675-551 1 $128,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
507 Goldenrod, Corona del Mar
545-5510 $232.500 Sat/Sun 2-5
100 Sholz Plaza (P.H 10) Versailles. N.8.
758-1877 Sunday 1 to 5.
212 Tustin Ave, Newport Beach
645-3370 $429,000 Sunday 1-5
2 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
3 Rue Fontainebleau (Bg Cyn) Npt Bch
640-9333 $349,500 Sun 1-5
2 BR plua FAM RM or DEN
1 Rue Deauvllle <Bo Cyn). Npt Bch
6«·6200 $385,000 Sun 12:30-4:30
305 Poinsettia. Corona del Mar
644-6200 $405,000 Sat/Sun 2-5
**6802 West Oceanfront. N.B.
675-911 1 $499,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2704 Park Lane. Peninsula
631-1 400 $255,000 Sun 1-5
233 16th Place, C.M.
675-4333 $135,000 Sun 12:30-3;30
•43 Montpelller (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Sch
760-8333 $395,000 Sun 1-5
43 Beachcomber (Jsmn Crk) Npt Sch
851-8767 $275,000 Sun 1-5
#31 Canyon Al~e Turtle Rock Irvine
759-1501 Sat/Sun 1-5
2406 Holly Lane. Newport Heights 631-1~ $225,000 Sun 1-5
•••827 Via Lido Soud, Lido Isle, N.8.
673-7300 $1 ,650,000 Sat/Sun 3-6
3 BEDROOM
217 Jasmine, Oceanfront, COM
673-5551 $539 .000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2606 Elden Costa Mesa
472-8230.673-7771 Sat/Sun 1-6
616 Marigold, CdM
675-5511 $325.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1860 Port Wheeler, Npt Sch
631-1266 $269,000 • Sun 1-5
**2021 E. Bay Ave, Peninsula Pt,.Balboa
642-5200 Sunday 1..S
• 3148 Manistee, Costa Mes.a
646-7434 $142,950 Sunday 1·5
*420 De Sola Terrace, Newport Beach
675-6000 $285,000 Sunday 1-5
2613 Redlands, Newport Beach
675-6000 $187,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
2109 E. Balboa Blvd .. Balboa Penln
675-3772 $575,000 Sat-Sun 11-4
2525 Holly, Newport Heights, NB
979-2390 S 180,000 Sunday 1-5
11 Rue Marseille (Big Canyon) NB
6«-9060 $398,000 Sun 1·5
3309 S. Towner. Santa Ana
645-0303 s 116,000
15311 Beach Blvd, Midway City
$109,000
8682 Garo, Garden Grove
894-7521
8801 Carmel, Westminster
894-7521
6051 Ivory Circle, Hunt. Bch
894-7521
469 Westminster. Newport Beach
Sun. 1-4
$99,500
$159,500
$117,500
646-7434 $229,000 Sat/Sun 12-4
20362 Bayview Ave .• Santa Ana Hts
557-5670 $195,000 Sun 11-6
•#5 Jetty, Jasmine Creek, COM
675-6000 $438,000 Sunday 1-5
433 Walnut(+gueat), Costa Mesa
5'48-9878 Saturday/Sunday 12-5
•SB Sea Island, Newport Beach
675-6000 $234,900 Sunday 1-5
•969 Linden. Costa Mesa
546-2313 s 115,000 Sunday 1-4
220 Knox Ave., Costa Mesa
642-5722 Sat/Sunday 1-5
*608 Shasta, Costa MMa
546-2313 $134,900 Sunday 1-4
* *1418 W. Bay, Newport Sch
644-6200 $1, 195.000 Sun 12·4
3000 Ocean Blvd. Corona del Mar
644-9060 $625,000 Sun 1 -5
192 The Masters Circle, Costa Mesa
5-41-5331 $185,000 Sun 12-5
110 Valley Circle, Costa Mesa
546-2313 $117,000 Sunday t-4
975 Poat Road. Costa Mesa
546-2313 S 120,000 Sunday 1-4
1419 Santanella Terract, Irvine Terrace. NB
631-7300 $279,500·~ Sun 1-5
3 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
'402 18th Place, Nwpt Hgta, C.M.
87&-753'4 $185,000 Sun. 1-5
# 1 Jaamlne Creek, CdM
6«-9060 $430,000
207 Via Orvleto, Lido late, NB
Sun 1-5
752--8841 $400,000 Sunday 1·5
4 Yort(thlre (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Bch
759-9100 12,200,000 Sun 1-!5
** 18285 Tlabury, Huntington HarbOllr, HB
759-9314 $480,000 Sund•y 1·5
,9351 Sallwlnd, Huntington Beach
1289.500
**721 B1yalde, Corona del Mar
790-8333 $1,2150.000 S1t1Sun 1.5
••815 Hampden (Cameo Shra) Npt Boh
780-3333 "475,000 Sun 1-!5
2004 Tut11n, Cotti M ...
831-7370 $179,900 Sun 1·5
,...,F
Orange Coast O~ILY PILOT/Sunday, bot. 18, 1983
This
Weekend!
•••P lht\ hOftdy d1rulory with you lhl\ wulotftd o• Y°" qo hoin•·h.,..11"9 All It.• locoho•" lhhd b•low
or• docn~d 1n 9noltr d•to.I by od••rl"i"9 1l-.wh1r• 1n todoy" DAil T "LOT WAHT ADS ,otro•n
\how1n9 OP"' ho..•u tor •al• or '"'' art vrqtd lo 11\1 \llCh j.,formolio" '" th1• coh1mfl •och Sotwrdoy
Oftd \ .. ndoy
104 Via Lorca, Lido Isle, Newport Beach
673-8700 $374,950 Sunday 1-5
2 104 Miramar (Pen. Pt), Balboa
759-9100 $295,000 Sun 1-5
**1411 Kings Rd, Clltthaven. Nwpt Bch
642-5200 $495,000 Sunday 2-5
474 Cabrlllo. Costa Mesa
631-8011 $169,900 Sun 1 :30-4:30
2491 Crestview Dr, Newport Bch
644-7020 $355.000Fee Sun 1-5
2592 Vista Dr (Byshrs) Npt Sch
644-6200 $369,000 Sun 12-4
1515 Cumberland, Westclltt, Nwpt Bch
642-5200 $222,000 Sunday 1-5
•2989 Jacaranda, Mesa Verde, CM
541-8077 $157,900 Sunday 1-4
202 Seaward (Shoreclltts). NB
644-9060 $395,000
t 711 K· Tllanga, lrvlM Tert.ce, CdM
031·7300 $"85,500 Fee Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
506 Rockford Place, Cameo Highlands, NB
631-7300 $295,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
20701 Horizon Ln, Huntington Beach
546-2313 $145,000 Sunday 12:30-5
1215 Mariners Drive, Baycrest, NB
631-7300 $455,000 Sun 1-5
111 Via Eboll, Lido Isle. N.B
673-7300 $395,000 Sun. 1-5
209 Via Cordova, Lido Isle, N.8 .
673-7300 $550,000 • Sun. 1-5
236 Via Mentone, Lido Isle, N.B.
-673-7300 S.70,000 Sun. 12-3
4627 Cortland. Corona del Mar
645-0303 $285,000 Sun 1-5
4 BEDROOM
*601 Jana, Huntington Beach
$155,900
2 Rolling Brook (Trtlrk Gin) Irv
644-7020 $369,000
**415 Bayside Or, Npt Bch
Sun 1-5
644-7020 $685,000 Sun 1-5
* 710 Avocado, Corona del Mar. NB
642-5200 $2 15,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2224 Aralla, EHtblutt-
631-1400 $225,000 Sun 12-4
18 Hermitage
644-6200 $769,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
**100 Via Udo Nord, Lido Isle, NB
642-5200 Sunday 1-5,..f
4934 Lori Ann Irvine
759-1501 $142,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
* * 601 Bayside Drive, Promontory Bay
631-1400 $1,300.000 Sun 1-5
* 4500 Wayne Road, Cameo Highlands. NB
631-7300 $370,000 Sun 1-5
1821 Kings Rd. Ocean & Bay View, NB
6'46-7171 $750,000 Sunday 2-6
4 BR plu1 FAM AM or DEN
19 Toulon. Harbor Ridge. Newport Beach
760-0563 Sat/Sun 1-5
2718 San Juan Lane, Mesa del Mar.C.M.
631-7370 $144,500 Sun 1-5
2227 Windward Ln. Npt Sch
759-9100 $339,500 Sun 1-5
#40 Drakes Bay (Spyglass) CdM
759-9100 459,000 Sun 1-5
* •3625 Ocean Bl, Corona del Mar
759-9100 $3,500,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2333 Port Lerwick (Seawlnd), Npt Bch
644-6200 $369,000 Sun 1-5
5 Malibu Cir (Spygla) Npt Sch
644·6200 $549,000 Sun 1-5 '-'
* • 1206 Cambridge (Weatcllfl) N B.
6'44-9060 $346,400 Sun 1-5
*4601 Camden Dr., C'dM
844·9060 $739.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 12 Geneve (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Bch
844-6200 $2,950,000 Sat/Sun 1-e
• 15 Sen Sebastian (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Bch
844-6200 $1,495,000 Set/Swn 1·8
* 1 Trafalgar (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Bch
6«·8200 $1,395,000 Sat/Sun t-8
• 11 Hllltbofough (Hrbr Hiii) Npt Bch
844-8200 $950,000 Sat/Sun 1-e
* 1308 Santiago Or. (Weatcllff), Nft
6«-9080 $398,000 Sun 1-!5
17868 San Clemente, Foontaln Valley
$1&8,700
2040 Mandarin. Costa Ml ..
$280.000
1441 011axy Or. Dover Shorea, N.B
648-5848 $389,600 Sat/Sun 1-5
1845 Port Aahley, Hrbr Vu Hmt, COM
780-8333 $310,000 Sal/Sun 1 ·S
•
·-
2718 San Juan Ln (Mesa del Mar), CM
631-7370 $144,500 Sun 1-5
•20252 Eastwood, Huntington Beach
963-6767 $217,999 Sunday 3-7
* 5096 Harcum, Newport Beach
675-6000 $169,500 Sunday 1-5
*2500 Lighthouse. Newport Beach
675-6000 $375,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
• 1600 E. Balboa. Peninsula Point
631-1400 $589,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 Ii>
1306 Sandcastle, Newport Beach
675-6000 $439,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1222 Sussex Ln, Westcllff, Nwpt Bch
642-5200 $229,000 Sunday 1-5
104 Via Havre (Lido Isle) NB
644-9060 $550,000 . Sun 1-4:30
1845 Santiago, Baycrest, Newpor1 Beach
642-5200 $350,000 Sunday 1-5
1844 Port Charles (Hrbr Vu Hms) NB
760-8333 $339,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
6 Coventry (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Sch
760-8333 $650,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
207 Via Mentor'le, Lido Isle, N.B.
645-0303 $539,000 Sun. 1-5
*2811 San Juan, Costa Mesll
645-0303 $145,000 Sun. 1-4
* 1974 Port Edward Pl, Npl Bch
759-9100 $425.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 1849 Tanager. Costa Mesa
546-2313 $220,000 Sunday 1·4
* 1624 Antigua Way, Dover Shores. NB
631-7300 $475,000 Sun 1-5
•• 1310 Galaxy Drive, Dover Shores
631 -7300 $965.000 Sun 1-5 * 1627 Iris, Costa Mesa
546-2313 $143,900 Sunday 1-4
• 1050 Santiago Drive, Dover Shores, NB
631-7300 $695.000 Sat/Sun 1·5
1125 easeAane, Westcllff, NB
631-7306--$285,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
• 1921 Kings Rd, Clltthaven, Nwpt Beach
642-5200 $695,000 Sunday 1-5
**426 H~or Island Drive, N.8 .
673-7300 $950,000 Sun. 1-5 * 101 Via Florence, Lido Isle, N.B.
673-7300 $530,000 Sun. 1-5
1906 Santiago Drive, Dover Shores. NB
631-7300 $450,000 Sun 1-5
53 Cambria, Spyglass Hiii, NB
631-7300 $625.000 * 1924 Holiday Rd. Baycrest. N.B.
Sun 1-5
955-0809 $320,000 Sat/Sun 11-6
**404 Morning Star Lane Dvr Shrs, NB
759-1501 Sun 1-5
* • 3 Point Sur, Spyglass Hiii, NB
631-7300 $540,000 Sun 1-5
* 1834 Commodore Road. Baycrest. NB
631-7300 $299,000 Sun 1-5
2846 Tobago, Costa Mesa
546-2313 $169.500 Sunday 1-4
• 2027 Yacht Defender. Seavlew. NB
631-7300 $495,000 Sun 1-5
*614 Brookview Way, Costa Mesa
546-2313 $124,900 Sat/Sun 12:30-4
* 1925 Windward Npt Sch
673·1181 $365,000 .
5 BEDROOM
* * 1020 w. Oceanfront, Npt Bch
Sun 1-5
675-5511 $1, 150,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* * 40Qi Morning Star Lane. Dover Shores
631-1.lOO $850,000 Sun 2-5 .
628 Malabar, Irvine Terr. CdM
631-1400 $599,000 Sun 1·5
2828 Europe. Coata Meaa
546-2313 S 189,000 Sunday 1-4
* *219 Via Lido Soud, Lido ltle
760-1900 $1,790,000 Sunday 1·6
~fl plua FAM RM or DEN
•1525 Hlghllnd Or, W/Clltf., N.B.
842-4959 $249.000 Sat/Sun 1·4
•• 1014 Marlnera Or. Dover Shores, N.B.
75 1·5999 $935,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
· 19e7 Port Provence (HV Homn), N.B.
844-90e0 $338.!500 Sat 1·5
422 a.Qonla, Corona d•I Mar
675·6000 $&49,1500 Set/Sun 1·5
1533 Mlrlmar.1..f•nln1ul1
631 ·1400 ~99.900 Sun.2-!5
77 Monteclto. Spyglua. Corona det Mar
159--0619 Sunday 1·5 * 1600 Anita. &.an• (Nwpt Bch)
648-4282 1332.000
•
Sun 1·5
* * Morning Star Lane, Dover Shor•
831·1400 $1,476.000 81t/8un 1-l5
••429 laabella Terra~. CdM
640-0357 Sunday 12-e
220 Via Genoa (Lido late) N.B.
644.9080 Sun 1-5
200 Via Orvleto (Lido Ille) N.B.
644-9060
6502 Soothall
752-2264 $495,000
Sun 1-5
• 1824 Santiago Drive, Dover Shores, NB
631-7300 $615,000 Sun 1-5 • •= 20 Cypress Pt. Lane, Big Canyon
760-1900 S 1, 195,000 Sunday 1·4
* • Ht Geneva, Harbor Ridge _
760-1900 $2,495,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1210 Potarla Drive, Dover Shores, NB
631-7300 $740,000 Sun 1-5
8 BR plua FAM RM or DEN
** 710 South Bayfront, Balboa Island
6-i0-5078 S 1.900,000 Sunday 1-5
* * * 107 Miiford (C. Shra) CdM
644 -6 200 Sl ,975 ,000
Sat1-4, Sun i :30-4:30
* 110 Via Trieste, Lido Isle, N.B.
673-7300 $785,000 Sun. 1-5
835 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle, N.8.
673-7300 $798,000 Sun. 1-5
CONDOMINIUMS
FOR SALE
1 BA p lu1 FAM AM or DEN
15 Flreblrd Woodbridge, Irv
552..-1714 $117,000 Sun 1-5
2BEDAOOM
* * •310 Fernando unit 311, Bal. P~n.
675-9042 call 1st $375,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* # 1 Pandora, Irvine Groves. Irvine
642-5200 $130,000 Sunday 1-5
* 111 1 South Coast Drive G204, C.M.
851-1360 $134,500 Sun 12-5
82 Sea Island, Big Canyon,"'pt Bch.
673-4400 $230.000 Sunday 1-5
16 Westcllff VIiia, Westcllff, Npt Bch
631-7300 $169,JOO Sat/Sun 1-5
510-12 Poinsettia, Corona del Mar
631-7300 from $251 ,000ttt Sat thru Wed
11 Stoneplne, lrvlne
546-2313 $116,000 Sunday 1-4
16 Westcllff VIiia, WestcllH, Npt Sch.
631-7300 $169,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
2 BR plua FAM RM or DEN
2711 Vista Umbrosa, ~luffs
673-6900 $330,000 Sun 1-5
3 BEDROOM
13436 Lynwood Pl .. Garden Grove
694-7521 $110,500
11390 Lampson 11 12. Garden Grove
894-7521 $109,900
510/5 lO'lt Polnsenla, Corona del Mar
631-7300 $269,900 Sat thr Wed 12-6
3 BA plua FAM R..,...,, DEN
* * * 320 Ote<o (Bluffs) Npt Sch
759-9100 $279.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
8 Kamalii Coun. Newpor't Crest
631-140 $170,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
4 Canyon Lane, Canyon Crest. Npt. Bch
631-7300 $255,000 Sunday 1-5
4 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
415 North Star Lane, Dover Shrs, Npt Bch
673-4400 $995,000 Sunday 1-5
TOWNHOUSES
FOR SALE
2 BEDROOM
*5092 Elksford, Walnut Square, Irvine
552-2000 $9-i,800 Sun. 1·5
3 BEDROOM
403-405-407-409 Poppy, CdM
833-0242 64'4 -1156 Fri/Sat/Sun 12-5
3 BA plua FAM AM or DEN
926 Lombard Court. Costa Mesa
• $195,000
DUPLEXES FOR SALE . 2 BR plua 1 BR
370 Mountain Road Laguna Beach
494-0527 $185,000 Sun 1..S -· 2 BR plu13 BR
1101110111 Colllns Ave. Balboa Island
63M400 $535,000 Sunday 1-5
3 BR plua 1 BA
421/421'/t Begonia. Corona def Mar
497-5454 $395,000 Sunday 1-5
70 t Acacia. Newport Beach
675-6000 $250,000
4 Bfl pWI ,_.R
Sun 1-5
** 132/132'~ So. Baytront, Bal. lat
831'-1400 $1.215,000 Sun 1 .. 15
5 BR pfu1 3 BR
l509 Acacia (Oc .. ntldt of Hwy), CdM
845-7048 $399,0007 · Set/Sun 1·5
509 Acacia (Oc4analde of Hwy), CdM
845-7048 $399,0007 Sat/Sun 1·&
RENTALS
3 BA HOUlll
2508 Ocean Bl. Corona del M•r
759--9100 $2000/mo Sat/Sun 1-5
•Spa
*Pool * * Waterlront * * * Wat911ront l Pool
.. ..
.
'•
: i
'
., 1
•• e Coaat DAILY PILOT/Sunde , Oct. 16. 1983
!fttd1dat lat• &tt•m.m cure•!!! Dni1• lla.U~ •••11 a Puat!aJ. Pllldla1 '"' a.me. ;;;;;;;;~fiiii~iiiiiii iotvORUs 1160+ A41c>atr1ema11 Jobi. Fenoee. KITCHEN DESIGN: Need tiTIOM@ REPAIR DOM tLEUPKEEP T09 qvlff11 .. Fleeeonebi. No Bo&• 10 supP<>f1 11t11 J.c. TREE SCAVlce •2 1 T d •DRUNK D~IVING 1250+ ~. pertlllon1. Low Piao• IOt new 0t remod Elee-Plvmlll-Cerpentry Thor o u g II c I e en Ing Oulck/carelul Low ratH. rat• Can IOI' ettlmete. emp. St lie #311M50 Joe TtlmmlnQ. removal. yVd • per 3Y Accldente/Benkruptcy rel-. Steve 731-831 I ii?Pl!fwtri? CALL CARYL, Fanc:ee Keith MM072 w/ettentlon lo detell. Lie: T 13eo.O 552.(µ 10 650-2328. uk IOI' Bred 644·8444 no )ob 100 1mall c1Mn..yp1, 9tc 842·2914
TNI'• .ALL YOAJ P•Y (()( • ~ coneult 241..03-43 ••••• C.atrtl• 642.0055. Ref9r~. Homa Repalra-Cerpentry local Newpon hml only *A· 1 llYUll* Cullom Graphlct/Murela ...... mc11 n I nlct
301nd•,!.ed ~lttlaft Goo's CONCRETE & llMlrlw F~llnela-EDO!ec-NP!'!'J:~ng1 9 c:P'::"·u pw;~·ei; .rq8:.4:~: Beet quallty. 25.,,. ~p Quellty Int/ext painting I . ,.., " -~ ng ...,~14 tor "OUr h~ Of bullnes• Lendlordel We JI eecure TyplnQIWord Prooeulng
DAILY SITT NG In my MASONAY ... 9 yre Mme e[ecfRiciXN: Priced · 673·8840 •ti. &pm COmpettttve ratee. Free ett R•fttly 962•7519 tenant1, 11na111.e clQtlno• Alf buelM91, IClhOol & qer·
N>me, 5 yr• eliper • yard toe. Free •t. 840-1705 right, tree .. umete on ONE CALL DOES IT ALL Uc. T ·I 18,428 730-1353 · -• Aele STARR 548 .. 4'7f aot1al PfOj.c'tl. 851· 1j)41
& rele# TLC 050·3052 large 0t amen job1. Lie. We II• It, bteek It, buy It Hlll-IAIPfT. STARVING COLLEGE SPECIAL OFFER will peinl :,,---.,,,.--,...---PILOT BABYSITTING Ctraalc Tilt 3~21. 073-0359 or haul It. 5-48·5009 ...... OLUllll STUDENTS MOVING co. your car, PU O{ 11en In••• met
In my home,"' Vlc:torla. cdsfoM TILE §tRVlct * ELEOTllQIUI * PAINTING·CARPENTRY we do lhOl'ough WOtX. Re-Lie: T 12 ..... 30. lnaored v./IMAON paint. your Cullom r•u1M1{Co11er SERVICE Colla Me... 1142-s4e2 Qull. workmen.nip, rea1. ""' REPAIRS-Gary 6'45·5277 liable & REFS. With coin-M 1·8427 choice of COior for unoer 1ett8fe/Job .. rcn 11p1 prlcea. Wray 547-8322 Reuonable. 631-2345 PTL plete carpet & ho\IM-WATCH US GROWi $300. Gary ~0-98291> Cell COS 673-1107
DIRECTORY Babysitting, your home, 3 f cleaning, wlndOWI done p • ltt la .
Wta•n Cl11a1a1
wAITe wfZXR6
WINDOW WASHING
"The only magic 11
QUALITY" 631·2026 dye wk. Occasional la tar r•talila IHllat ... FREE. CALL TODAY! Palallat __.•f!._n,..•.1______ 1.
... 0.£1RVl ... E ••1RROR wl<nda. 5-48-7248 cl ... k f9ab Ford wOOdy EEi DUMP JOBS & . 540-5054 , ......... , ..... -1 ... ,-11-m-.-.--Farthing lnletfor oe;fgn Aus;i\oollng·elf typel ,..ui 11"' •• "' ' ... LL Ch•"lfeur for weddlnga. s ••A o NG o s HANGING/STRIPPING N R "'--ka 11111 LIW
and the HUNTINGTON -·· I p~ms etc $50/hour Topped/removed. Clean "" ~I~~ 64V«L 39J1
8 HOUSE-APARTMEN( by Richard Sinor Lie. VISA·MC Scott 873-1512 UC. ::; 1:g~'.'9r·548.9734 "s-..te""te"!"'\"j8!"'w~req~u~ires~~lh~e~t~8J~j BEACHCOMBER •YefY Bkkpg. peyrOU, gen. acctg '95i·6071 . up, new lewna. 751·3476. 1 Cleaning or Renovlt ng 2808.44. 14 yra of happy f ;=====::;;;r.=~:;=:fl contractOl'I who pertOl'm
Wedneldayal & aec'I. Fle1t. hrl, Incl. ABE'S GARDENING HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE Free eetlmete 650-4488 local Cliltomere. BLACKWELDER Peper· WOl'k over 1200 lnciudlng
no •Kira cllarget wknda. at your bualneu kiW Ill General malnl Ci.en· UP• Furniture, Truti, Trees HOUSECLEANING Thank you. 963-4t14 hanging & removal. Ouel. lebot end mate<lel• muet
CALL TODAYll or can pickup & deliver. FOl'!Y* Pr;;;a;OOJ Teacher Free Mtlmate;a 545.8519. 963-5'15 NORM EXP'D. GOOD REFS. work only. 494-3816 be lloenMd. UnllCenMd &II .. IUIU Fr• counsel. 642-704 7 Ir, CdM wlll bebyelt lull· LT HAULING • MOVll'IG Gladys 5'8·5' 7 t (4-9pm) pii~~r; ~~"{.T~~~. EXPERT Wallcoverlng In· contrecto11 should 10
YOJ.Jr Dally Pllol ~i I •ul time -kdays. 720-9138 Gardening & melntenenoe. Rental Clean Ups, Jon . HOUSECLEANING FESSIONA(S. 838-7 149 stellatlon. Reas. consult-rtt1rlal atete In th4Mr edvenlllng
Setvioe Directory I al •I tree trimming, mowl~, 8-45-8192/731-2916 Have xlnt rel1. Call Allcla, . ant Aulgnmt. 581-85~ S.nic11 Contractors end con-Repreeentetlve 1'N-cabinets. cabinet C.•t•ltr ltmct1 cleen-upa & haullllil· • "~6-8392 ti 3 12 YRS EXP I'm amell, WE GALS SHOULD HANG eumera. contact Mery 142-Hll tit. au racing, bars & lorml<:a IBJl.r>c AetPI Xttordable do It all 731-6386 GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS -• . pm My prloes .,. smetll TOGETHER.. Wallpaper Superior Secreterlal Svc Grondle •t 558--4086 with
countenops 1142-0881 & useful on·slte advice. lar ... tlfrafi W•-"t..a & HAULING No lob too PAM & BOB'S CLEANING 850·84771850~8 + uphol wells 839,0730 Reuoneble ratea Pie~/ any questions Contrec· el I & od • _, • email. 895-6006 Husband & wife. 8 yr1 exp dell119' Joanne 645-1""2 tor'.a State License a ... __ .... _ CeblnelS & Carpentry tr n ng Pl ucta. Mowing. Edg ng Twice a 67"7012 •" 5 Dave's Custom Painting Pl I tie • N-G Board. 28 Cl·"c Cent~ ___.,... Smell lob• and repairs SSP/PC 75'-1039 month $20 10 s25. TIM'S UIUll ->-" lnl/e1tt. Highest quality. II tr f!ll TYPING/BOOKKEEPI v• -
CPX: Hnencf;J stet.,nen11, Free estimate 6-45-2003 CHlr&cltrl 8-45-5737 Haul anything. 645-7331 ltaH~tl4I s.nict1 •owest re1H. (i-40·54\9 R PL.AS EA1 ~TCH301NG H~~;;;!~/aml b:b~9:~8 :':c:~0~90• Santa
tu return1. Costa Mesa. "· 1 JESSIE'S GAR NINO B Cl LIMITED OFFER Give your eslUCC()S. n, ext yrs
John Brown 631-8-483 Car~at2 -~"~ Cleen·ups yard melnl HI& H•i!I IAlllH fl MY llME home •·face lilt for the Neel. Peut 545-2977 All Secrete11ei'SiiiVIC"8S ---------At.. ti al Rem~el/repelr. Unique & Remodel/Repairs. comm Free estlmeie 5"0.8035 ROBIN'S CLEANING $4/HOUR. 8-45-9692 holldeys. 9111 of average Pl••~i•I MAILBOX STATION UtOe Miss MuHel 581 on 8 I C unusual w0tk a specially. & reald. Llc'd, bonded, SERVICE: e thoroughly • 11 home painted for -----li'!"'!---------1 Downtown H B. 960·9603 Tullel, along came 8 CtillaR!JI 20 yeer1. Llc'd, bonded. Ins. For est, 552·9142. MIW•EtlE•TalM clean hO\Jse 540-0857 Lu4llCI i•I unoer S500, pelnllncl. 20 H ~r El• 141· llH spider and reao in the FJ:Wl ra".RemOd.1 PelomboConst962·8314 Dflita REAS RA1ES.·FREE D I Ch fl -yrs up Gary530-9820 WATERHEATEASpeclal lpriakltrl Delly Pilot ClaHlfled ' 4 235 ependab • rlsllan Pruning 1 Lendacaplng p 1 h •F -A~r>ef'ty Bllryd;,uc. ;33~ 1~~ Repelr·Allerellons EST (714)2 1· 1 Woman wllh 1,eferences Speclellsl.. Cell Alftedo • PAllT I RE-,-,-,.-,-. -• rauc:'~4!~1~~~~s lllT&l.UTill/IEPAIR Mellon eboul MIS$ Muf·
.,.. -Ooora·Wlndows·Cablnets IHl&a'r I lall41'r MOW/EDGE/CLEAN·UP wlll clean your home. 549-4930 0, Leon Maciel Carpentry & Remodeling Ftee est. Pete !179·2821 :~~·· $~~::• ~~~ ~ngh.'e\\ •-~l Panel·Pallos·Fences. 35 M & o Development TRIM. Free est. Reas 551·3225 75l·2 t28 tree esllmetea. Lie 443908 John 661·3189 Drains clear from $5/25 1 -I yrs up. Jerry 546--4413 650•8300 rates Jim 646-1958 Repair faucets, dlsp, etc. Have you reaa 1oaay s your turret and 011 01
P.,kl. Lot THE CLEANMAKER PATIO COVERS/DECKS RALPH'S PAINTING 851-9604••• M-432·0500 Clessilled Ads? 11 no1, 01 her things through ~~"o-:,_ongetlng , ••• OL116• •• -MO D II p I I Cl lfl d .......... ~...,..... Have something 10 sell? Sell things fast with Daily "" UU1 ,.. 5 yrs exp. Home/ofc TREE SERVICE lnl/e1tt. Reas. Llc'd you're m1"1ng Iha best a Y 1 o ass •
S&S Asphlt 631-4 t99LI<: Classllled eds do 11 well. Piiot want Ads_ Free eat. Pele 979-2821 Refs evell. 675-4853 Free eat. Ron 645-2537 Free eal, 841·3588/24 hr want Ads Call 642-5878 bargain• In townt Ads Call 642·5678
lntal1 tt Ofllct IHt•h 2914 Lt11 I FtH• 3004 B1lr WaalN 5100 Heir WaalN 5100 Htlt Waatt• 5100 Helt Waatt4 5100 8111 W11tlN SIOO 8111 WaatN SlOO 8111 WutN stto
nart ltOI NEWPORT CENTER. Full LOST: Lg Pit Bull, lawn Banking 1 Banking Olll I .E. ULEI IRfYElll HOUSEKEEPER LIQUOR CLERK-pert 110l9
Shere luxury hm. vu. Pr111. eervlce Executive Suites. w/wnlte chest, Skubl.HB 2 YOUNG c ASH VAULT Our newe1t 11at-ide lo-Full time. must be t8 yrs of Refined lady needed H Exper & rel'• a must Ba, 2 lrplcl. $285, utlls, $575-$625. &.40·5470 area. A-anlt 964-8095 TELLER cation, N-pon Beach. age and have good drlv· live In companlonlhtekpr lrvlne aree·551-8801
1 I I dep 906-8479 Losl pr mens glaases, brn FOR AIRLINES Aahwlll/Schnelder. Con-Ing record. Start at min f\K elde<ly lady No nurs·
9',
1
• "Tiii 11 ""•th ....... vie Gelson's TELLER (Part·Tl•t) tec:I Frank Ryan. (714) wage. Call 751·2680. 8 Ing. Muat drive Pvt rm & RMteurenll Shr l>Mut furn lrg house In ~CUTIVE SUITE ...., ......., 76-2880 5 M F I salary. 8-44-8819 Lori' a Kitchen. Inc has tile
C.M. Wftl/dry, trplc. yard, N...nn Ctr 640-5470 MarkeL 760-0-408 lmmedlele openlGng1 for, tO Aggressive mid· sized Sev. 4 am-pm, on-r Hou iek eepe' went ed following openings,
mlcto. 1-425. 850-8314 ~.. STOLEl /IEW••1 Sharp Guys & els. ree lngs & Loan has en open-conatructlon Telephone Salee Meet Sllcer and P0t1lon ---------lallan• an IO travel. u.s M1jor Al 1ea11 one year S&L or Ing In brand new Newpor1 Decking lnateller neeoed. WI aaoo ,, SIOO 12-6pm, Mon·Frl MUii control person, famlllar Sh< Npt Bcti duplex 1 lal 2916 2 Blue & Gold Magaw'• Cltlet & Aeeort Areu b1nkl ng ••perlence Beactl omce for wa-EI( Per 1 9 n c e 1 n speak Engllllh end Orlve with Hobart Sneer 9:30
blk/bcfl. $300. Wnt r._ tat I If Found Call 645-2963 with Unique Bualneu (WOl'klng with cull). Type tomer servtc:e oriented Etutomerlc: deck c:oetlng PIA WI, PUT-TIIE Lag. Niguel erea REF' a AM • 6 PM. Mon-Thura. 8
-e>on•lble, conllderate. llAU llW Group Tren1por1at1on 45 WPM end 10..key by Individual with minimum •Yll•m• end Epo1ty Easy accea air cond otc, req 831·285", 881·5156 AM . 12 Noon Sundeye.
25·40 yr, non-1mkr. Gerl« 1 LOST: Yellow Lebrad0t Furnl1hed, No Exper. 1ouc:h required. Account· 6 month• bank °' S&L Trowel coat systems. cuh bonuaes given exit 11 you enloy wrapping Baking and Food prep-845~8181 or Iv mag oue~mpr~ female. recent llttet. NE N-8ry. Must be 18 or Ing e.nd bOOkkeeplng ex· teller experience. Muat &.42·7222 deity, No cher~e backs, peckeget and have an 11e11on WOtkets. PIT 1:30
840-1&38 =:a.comm. s~in: Coate M••• ere• older, •Ingle, well perlence preferred Con· be wtulng 10 work Setur· No reserves. ell Brien eye tor det,ii. -have 8 pm . 6 pm Mon·Thure 6
Want apt In N.B. 8fM by 2"68 ~ Bl. C.M. .~~:~:~! .. Answers lo groomeO. ano lree to lec1 Debra Bugerln for deya. Olllt 836-9334 PIT position tor you 7 30 em·l2 noon Sun
11-1, lhr w/2 clean-resp 8-42-34~ , ~~R'E' w•RD start lmmedle7150ely8. 9F~! In· mo3re) .. ~nl2ormt .etton lit: Do You Enjoy Cooking. we ra•y I Fii em to 1 pm. Mon.Fri Food Ser;lce worti.e<s 5
F• 11•2 57 " teNlew cell • ""°' (21 .,..t-1 ... Sii llRllO wlll train Good aalary & ..,.. $3.50/hr BOOKS ON em · 130 pm, Mon-Fn n-emk •· .,.. -41 . aa1rclal •32.9.•52 e11-...... nd• "" I """'*"'n to ·•rs PERllL SIL We need studenl8 ot A lie He-9971, 720-8724 '" "' v~ .... ep,,.y n ....... ~ M II benefit• Mesa Verde TAPE, 729 Fared SI. II app ants mu11 be
WANTED ltatah 2911 P1r11aa11 3012 Pike 12192 Chapman SIYlllll!S Cn11ateacen1 Hospital. housewlfes _'or local Cott• Mesa neat. c:ie.n. and depen· Ave., Garden Grove Equal ()ppty Employ« • 861 Cenle< St . Costa phone work No uper deble Mull read end
Large BR In Horne w/poot CORONA be[ MAR Between 9•m·5pm M/~/H 224 w Pacific Coast Hwy Mna. 5'8·5585 nee .. hrs 10 suit you, or LadtH,. LIM •aa apeek Engllah Apply t>e-
Ptof Non-smkr mele look· Retell or o"lct. Newly re CIRCUS Of on-Tue-Wed Parenla wel-N-pon Beach, CA wont from home Top E 11 h tween tO AM . 12 Noon.
Ing for tamale wno want• modeled. 500-3000 sll come et Interview 111111111! 71 4/645·8133 Co1t1 Mesa's llneel Health comm. pald. Cell Tflfry Bl·lln~ual 10 ng s · or 2_.. pm Lon's Kitchen.
,...,,. rmmte In N.B. will RfU renll. Agt 875-6700 llSSlliE Eng 111 h s p es k Ing • Equal Oppty Employer Food Store le -king (714) 631-7932 Span Sh 1°' landacepe In· 3077 So Harbor Blvd ...,, hel 1 181 Foreigner'• 11 you ere Interested In e MIF qualified entheuslesllc 1telletlonlmelnt. crews C ""' 10 P me 0 n. r&-Retell apace 1250 sq rt. 719 NO HARBOR BLVD careflf oppo<tunlty end health o~lented peraoni Eleofrtlll THllllolaa, Full time E1tper req (Harbor el arr1a9e 1er •nc •1 · L •av• 17th St., C.M. Prime re-FULLERTON can meet our requlr&-B 0 0 K KEEPER . Fu II for cellhlers 10 work P/T Paging & BG Music Install 8-43-2114 D rl ve) San 18 An•·
rn.eege. ~7345 tell location. 045-3477 ll0-1112 4.5 full de~s per week de· ments, consider the fol· charge. for Newport W9ekends end evenings. & service. Exper. only. LEl&I. SIORETUY _9_7_9_-0_7_4_7,_------,
Went Fem. to Shr Twnhse: Otllce/Shop/Store epece l UY l Wiii llvertng Olelers for tele-towing polltlon: Beach retaller Computor PleaM cell 548·7355 for 548.0671 Costa Mess Loving chlldcere wanted ~• tennis. patio. pool. 300..,., II or more, r•--C. W Id systems experience help. delelle needed for bu1y H B tew for new born lri out home.
onede1Mer759·9459 MeseC-2.548·7249 SS SSES htllplfhadllnowledgeln lul. AIR. MP, P /R -1 1 week d ay s Gold · ...... -ATTRACTIVE phone company OU PrHf ·~rater ESCROW SECRET AAY otllce genMel prac11ot &
MA U Full·Tlme t1AM-l!PM lhroughtrialbelance.Eic· Countet person tor dry Exper. busy olc, salary corporate I tlget ori '11nwesllM cfadden WE LOOI FOR la•aitrlal TO SERVE YOU. programming auto M 0 n • 't h u r s , cellentbenelllundwork· cleaners, 37 hrs, weekly. open. Send resume to. Sell·starter. 3 yrs legal 892•4826 2920 Elco"Ts/.o.ELS ~~8~~~·.~~st~=~e ~~:,' 11:30AM·8.30PM Fri.) Ing conditions. Send r&-846-7821,wllltraln. Saddleback Escrow. ex per preferred -----:-:::--=-:-:-:-:--YOUU ltitab Own transpor1etlon re-Must have a min of t sumetoGruber&Gruber Cruise Sntp Jobs 950266t00Campus Dr. N.B. 847·8041 llAlmlAIOE 2.660 sq ti. 3975 Birch, Outcell ONLY 835-9ig9 quired Hours, 8 • 5. ~ar uperlence on NCR Acctncy Corp t7400 $14,000-$28,000 Catlb· PAATfTIME LIBRARY Pflffome ell lypes of apt ..... /IM-ltlt NB S 1330. MIA zoning. Handsome Man. some Selery. Hourly , mlleege 775 (-4 pocket sort) and Brookh1us1 ste 205 been, Hawaii. world. Cell Experlenceo Waitress CLERK I, aubslllute clerk repairs, pre111ous employ· l•ll•lte4 Agent 541•5032 means. lady with same. As 11, 1 or Ram on a lhe eblllty lo run a min. of Fountain Valley, 92708 refundable Fee lor Dirac· wanted Call all tO position neeoed for,.._. ment In apt malnl or
11 1 In Orange Co. •5775 up 2265 M lndstn relellonshlp marriage, 859·7204 t ,200·plus nems per IMllEEPER/•·-tory 1.3 t2·888·434 7 644·9550 Ask tor Keren port Beach Public LI· bulldet customer service E1tabll1hed 12 years• ottlor 18t0t Redondo 646--0721 hour ·CAT Dela e1t-_,,, C-1533 brery, entry level pos· re<1u1reo 642-4~7
Ptio1os taken/Ref'a chkd Ct •U. H B 842·2834 AIYEATllfll SALES perlenoe preferred wlll 1 gttl office To handle i>e<· Factory worker. hvy lltllng. ,ltlon. 15 76/hr Clerical ---------8 mo Guernted Servloe HOLIDAY SINGLES EXPO PrullQlout 20 yr old bull· be responSlble tor 'reen-sone I bu •I nesae a CUSTOMER SERVICE or1v1ng, must be reliable, eicpetlenca dHlt&ble IUtmlAIOE
*Credits• E~ Witness JllOten Dlsneyland Holel 0819 P<Jbllc:etlon need• tryolrejectedllems 714/760·8780. (2 13) Person needed to handle meture.gdOrl\llngrecord Mustheveoncellli.lllbHI· llPllYISll
.._. 1 time Magazine, t t I 2 5 • 2 7 A I • aggressive experience<! 557·9000, ext 394 mOdetete to heavy cus· 1-4 50 hr . FIT 5-40-9990 ty 800 min avellabllly 01 Full ume, muil be ...
KNX Radio Wllntllf t • n d / E K h 1 b 1 1 tel~hone and outside hHrltHM Talltn HQ tomer cont eel, and some FHI llPEHISIR 5-20 hra/wk, day• • ...-& perlenc.d In conveles-~Ole 832-4134 w/sml otllce. lmmeo occ 2!3/986-9255 career minded ules Full-lime Requires• min IMIUIPIR/-'Y light olllce work Sets. rt.ppllcatlona may c.nt holQltels. Jt.lnt ben· ·~ ott to Ill 30$ gross. 631•8480 NEW CREDIT card! No-rep1 Drew • com· 01 one year recent ex-Full/time Typing, IO key, Pleeaent voice Is• mull. Convalescent Hosp II el, be obtained a1 Newport efltl Cell 642·8044
wnoererelocatlng lt11111 2132 body refused I Also mission Unllmltedpoten· per~ In all pha.ses of AIR. AIP, etc Pay •c· end good snlluOe 19 a '1 ~ood salary 4 ~':,9fltL Ceni.r Branch, 856 Sen ---....,..--,-,-.,.----
TUl11n Ole 832-4134 For r..::, .. 0u::Ue lockable Vise/M astercard Call llel Cell B Gori•. commercial banking cording to experlerlce II you flt this deacr1p11on. 95en8dDrel~P7 ,'op 0 ~o Clemente Or. Newport Man8Q8f·Ambltlous. xtre ... ~ 64g. 623 tetle<trenaac1lon• CaJltoreppt,545-0171 give me e cell JuOy, . a Y o . ox Beach. CA 92680 Mell income Marketing White Fem 50• 10 Shr 2br storage tpllct for boats 80 S-6 8 7. 8 0 0 0 E 1t I t 636-9334 1560. Costa Mesa, CA anntlcauona to Library mgmt Cell 750· 7377
2b. apt In ••-· v~de ,,, care Coale ••-• C-l590 Aide end Hou=--k .......... for w ott ....... tllul •••-1 M••••111 ....,,. ,.._ -...., ... v. -""""""' e can et you .... eu --Dale Proc .. alng Fout Supervisory open-Admlnlalretlon, aame ed· area CM, $3<15. 2'1-8246 831·7271 laiiaHHI Arthritic woman on new ollloes. friendly w0tk Undaey & Co Inc. a Sacre· Ing• for Health Orlen· d .., ab W .. 3002 I Ol2 Balboa Island Mon·Frl, en11lronmen1.compe1111ve mento beMd mongege IPIUTIR led/sell motlveled lndl· _r _______ _ I eat laaeaacta"h ltr alt 4 12 noon to 8 pm aalary end benefits banker. hu en opening In M icro computer dis· vlduals High urning LIBRARY CLERK
cARlsTIXN ben. ll;;ole In •SPIRITUAL X6V1sOR• I .... , ••• ,....... 675-0596 the Tuatln o"loe We ere lrlbUIOt eeeka lndl11tduel .... • INTERVIEWING BY looking for a meneoer 10 enume Operator potentlel. No expetlence
wheelchelr. need• 1mall AdYIM In love merrrlage 4 Atrnles l•IOI Aides APPOINTMENT ONL YI with e minimum ot 5 ~· r-""nllblllllea lor 2:00 tequlred. We Train In Npt II ..round lloOt apt lmmed. bualneee 675·2495• ,.._.,,,.... • 'ldn"'hl •tde, -..-otc 650·2148 •· ..af ..,... • ....., M ·v " experieooe In proceu ng PM -t t·OO PM ahltl Mu at · • Emp!Oy9r reloc. 10 area. •WIN WIN WIN• Shi. 1 lull time. t I Pm -7.30 em. Pleaee cell FHA, v •, and con~. he~ eblll"' 10 work Ind~ Gen~11 otllce I 11H·l 1• U /•t Call PHlor Slmpeon 1000-+ members Xlnt lo-642·5661 N-port VIiie, Pereonnel Dept " ..... •• " ~ -
845-2082 0t 540·2888 G1~antloeedcorfoor~lyoo~!r! cation In Corona del Mer. 4000 Hllerle We", Npt tlonel loan1. pef'denlly In a fasl paced Buay Medical Distributor -.. -· ....,. ... c $-45 ooo Ith S10 ooo ' (114) 110-1000 TIP •ai ••y FH RlllT environment. IO·key by need sharp veru.llle per. Per1orm e variety of ad·
M..-i-~anted, exit
working cond We w111
train. no Cflarge. In OJ.Jr
atete approved ec::hoot
Apply et 719 N Harbor.
Fu•terton. bet t2·2pm .
Mechanic. eaperlenced.
O'NO loolL MacGregor
Yacht COtP. 1631 Plecieo-
111. C.M Couple w/dog eold home. Tangletown puulet In •· • w • Bch PEI-Ill touch enenllel Thi• Aftft e1t"-"rlenceo In A/P, vence technlc:el & clerlcal down. Owner moving to ~ ~· .,.. -----,--.,-0-Need rental w/gatage In aec:ond1 or your money Auetralla. w on't 1881. Call Te I e phone PBX .-......:. • entry level poalllon o"era Inventory control. end duties Involving some lri· RI/HIT I IT I
C.M. area. Reas. John bacit. Send 15. + SASE 7141752·8955 An1werlng Svs exp. Cord ~ I} ')Ilk AU replla 119 eonfldenllel. growth, salary, end c:om· purchasing. Muat be well dependent ludgement 3 Yaare e.petleooe. prehlr
557-6677 to PWP·2. 3857 Birch SI. · Boerda. Eves g grev~ ... ~ ~ Con\• ct Tr• c Y · prehen1lve benellltl. orgenlz.ed and able to end raepon1lblllty. Re-aom41 beck olfic.. PfT
.. H ftr SCTaA. 943.42860N-;>ort S..ch, la1laHI OJJ• 4014 yard. 780·8305 ~ ul 71 4-730-0671 Apply lo: work Under pre11ure. quires high echool greddut· 042-3181
Brk:k Layer'a HELPER llOAI I Benefits aetery nego-etlon or equlllelen1 en .... 2tl3 ANS SVC. Ex~. only ~·w1xu1 No ••Pel nee;, MUii ha'le 17406 Ml Clltlwood Cir lleble. e.41-2865 between year of library clerlcel eJt-MEDICAL ASSIST m l lOl'Bge ~•rage. SCRAM-LETS I lllTS Plant ofc NB II 3 pm • • good trans 875-3175 Founleln Valley, CA 10 • 12 noon only. Pflflel\C.. Musi be able 10 Front & beck oflc el1?9' ..
10 • 10 • 2• 1•A . 2111 Sunar ""Ahlple11;, each with t 1 pm 631·56-40 EOE 540 ~1e 1 E 0 E rype 40 wpm eccuratly on dle~lea/lntlmed pr act •
A " .. °" S ""' -v M/F Ca.h'·· av•• 21 lull time ~ l111•·..&1e1 l11-et1r ." '""-Irle , .. ..-.....11•·. For N B, F. V 8'0--4589 St 185/mo. 8-40--4282 •NSWER 3 Bdrm, 2'n be, double An1wMlng service tele· -""'· -· · .... n• -· ••-,,..v-. .,, n garage with gereoe dOOt phone opereto• Varied Banking will tr eln Newport DECORATE INTERIORS Vivacious & energetic per-tunher detail• end epplt.. Medical ualst. PfT. Nwpt OMkit lntal1 ltl4 Abjure-Loathe opener. $700,000, H · ahltte Exp preterted. PrOduce Cell Mrs Camp Hom.maket1, bored •• son to teach beginning catlon,oontect Personnel Bch Ophlhelmologlll of. Morbid .~ aume financing t2Y,,.... 382 3rd St. 11C. Laguna TELLER •11 11 845--0032 home? Have ne1r tor d&-gymnaalle9 skllls to smell Office. City or N-P<><t flee. e1tper pref Send,... 4W .. TllAll Clumey-Denne Terrific Investment 'Beech warm loving bebytltter llQn PfT.FfTcar-Ari children 786-2555 Beech, P 0 . Bo• 1768, aumetoP o 8o1t21t5. OIWTm AfTt HARD BOILED $795.000. neeoeo to cere ror 10 mo Conaoltenl, no exper nee H SI hi I d 3300 N-pon Blvd, Npt Coste Mesa, 92628 "'*' "Just remem~. deer,'; ll0-1to0 "e".!1~:~~~~rdae~~::1110~: larl lltJ trlllf old. 5 days e 0¥1<. 7-3pm. Train avell. n5·5H 7 ,f!,y ~~!.':~and'~n; ~f4~6"o~;~00t3 eci'Eh~~Fe Medell, Actora. pit Xtru,
BELOW MARKET JV.TES aeld Granny " eople wll el!petlenoe req'd Dey I H Leg Bch area 494-0«!18 Deliver L A Times to help Apply In person. commefciela & TV Sl'low·
GOOD SELECTION ludge you by your ec:· ahllt al local exchange Clerical homee In HB & CM 3 -6 1000 Nonh Cal Hwy, cse, 778·FILM kids too
7141760-8070 ... Ilona. not your Intention• Cell 646-2550 Grean w .. 1ern Savings o• 11111 AM $400 • 1450/mo • Laguna Beach 494-404' L1'f eguard You may have • i-n of hu en lmmeOlete ~ bonul Dependable car nursing
18 17 Waatcff". N B 278 to gold, but eo haa en egg APPRENTICE TRAINEE OP9f11ng lore TELLER on FDIC ho Immediate open· 5"&-4481 or gs.c.4992 Housecleaning 3-4 dey1 • OU
1305 aq l't. Sulteble '°' lh•I'• HARD BOILED." • FUl.L· TIME ball• Ing for en entry level clerk week Reliable ref's. H Attendant Expetlence<I, FIT deye. ~~r 0entel Agent Lest r.... 3004 1111 llllllEU 100 YEAR Prevtousllnanc1a1 ~~1~0~ .c;,a~~~~ D~~~:ry e1~~;~~1. cf:~g 673•
9192
' 0 675-0523 H .1l/IHr . XLNT WOtklng condition•
250 aq l't.1200/mo. 779 w Fe. Bik/BtWn 68Cfil9: b. Fii Y•SELPI OLD COIPAIY lnalllullon 9lepetlenee 01 dent reliable peraon with Plac.nlle Bring MVR HISHILI HI.Piii ~~d•P~~·~~~ ttth St C.M. Tom Terrier X, puppy, white; M ()pponunlty ror high earn· r.ean hendllng experience good clerlc:al aklll1 We DENTAL Aasl Ortho •KP. For congenial remlly The Envtronmental Men· Ftegahip Road Npt Bdl
851·8928 Brown Pit Bull: Fe. Ing power A phenomenal 1' neceeaery Public offer excellent benefit• & req ADA pref M/Th Full Varied duties, part time. egemenl Agency. Rec· Grey/Blk/Brwn terrier: new aging control pro· PROVIDES contact bec:kground 11 e pleuant work environ· or pltlme NB 642•2626 S deye. Excellent position re 11on11 F • c 11It 1 ea OFFlCE HELP GENERAL
Beyffont. Offlcee. petlo1. Mele Grey Schnauzer, gram. Semlnt1r,Anahelm IAIHI PLNR helptul KnowledQe 01 menl For more lnlor-and salary tor e•oep· Dlvlalon, currently hu Mon-Fri, l4 00 hr Irv
per111ng, lanttor1a1 The Newport Beech Merriott. Tuesday, Octo-IPNRTllm IO·key end llght lyPlng Is metlon, pleaae ull '"'"' Wtrtlrtta tlonelly qualllled person. 1wlmm1ng pool llfaguaro 551-6003 673-1003 Anlmal Sheller. 125 Meu t>« 18, 7-9 pm. RSVP & required Pereonnel E leneed I Musi have oar. be bond· positions localed •• ===-=-::-::-:
CORON• DEL .. •R Drive, Coate Mesa Information. 8•0·9604 Large Weal German Com· You'll find-have (714) 546-5858 :::. 0 ...... ,;~ "c~.~~ able. non smoker and Crown Valley Community OFFICE MANAGER, A/P, " "'" d 1 1 t ,._, provide references Cell Park In Laguna Niguel AIR, payroll, ens phone. 1275 sq tt. Perteet lor Found 2 mele Alredelea, XTAALIFE PtlnY expan s o rv ne competlllve salarlea. drapery. Apply In person; Ans w 8 r Ad 5 8 3 . · computer knowledge
architects. dulgners, vie: Brookhurat & Adams. THEATRE IN MAJOR Key poslllona 10 be lllled eKoellent benefits end Clerical: COIT DRAPERY, t297 642-4300 24 hrs Generel duties ot Ill•· helpful 859·4677
etc. 90c per IQ It Incl all 968-8775 Orange Co shopping dby ae,r1ou1 adpp1,1c11,n1 We comfortable working OL1•1 nPllT/W, Logan All, C.M 540-1368 PER guerda Include teac:hlngo ~-,d-.-,-m-~-.-m-.t-ure .• , .... _ •"t. 673-8409 eve op an re,n our oondltlon1. Pre ... call or " • • DRIVER HOUSEKEE • 1111e.1n, 1 I 1 d Vo .,,.. ....., center High Income 9 per writ FO C 1 medl E 1 1 h aw mm ng o ...... a • 11118 10 Bebyatttef'for 2 EHtalde Coate Mei& S7000down wlth no own manager • npplylnpersonto· 1 hea m ateopen· Llghl dellve<let. Mon-Fri. ngllth speekng, wt mlnl1lerlng emergency chlldren. M-F 7·~.30.
0th., ten agreement. Inoa lor clerk typist/word 8•5. 54/hr. App'.Z· Mes· references 675·9322 Flril Aid, oollecllng IMI. 10xl0x24 s.65 180 E FOIJND ADS v lll!REAT proceuor Candidate• 1 91191/wknda ott In ex· 2111. 648-4282 paymenia 1111 1985 Plue a fate•• te ltart • should be able 10 type 50 lflf, 234 Flac:her v. C M. Housekeeper /Nanny end Informing pe1roris o change for room & bOard
&ec eulte olflee1 evell guarantee that yoor S 1200+ Jtr It WESTER I .. WPM Banking & Book· IRIYER Must have drlvera permit. p •' k re P. u I• 11 on 1150· 746418"5-2161 ARE FREE entire down payment 119991ng e.1tperlence 1 •, non smoker, clean Ing, Certlllcllte 1 requlreo.
ftom Nov 1 PrMt~ loc Investment can be made No experlen<le neceaaary SAYlll.lll!S but 111 not nec.,..ry FOi' Leading local pest control tight cooking, 1rternoon Advance llfegvardlng. ---------. on Nwpt Blvd nr PCH Cal•. beckwllhln31 deya Call Minimum quellflcetlone, II• more Inform. pleeM call· company nMda route & evening youth chlld CPR. Flral Aid, end WS I ~~v:~~· 1~ngr! be~n t l em & 2pm. Neel appearance. Am-3200 Park Cerlter 01 Personnel driver IOI' steady Job. care. room. board & euto required prior to lea<;hlng
Mot.Mi ••z.Hll Sund1y, Mon & Tueadey. bltlovt. Aell&ble. Mutt Coale Mna, CA 92828 171•) 640-5858 Entry i.ve1 poaltlon We provided. Salary nego-awlmmlng clNHB PfO ...ioneia 645-8-404 -(213) 45S:.83211 ...... 1 (7 t •1759 • ..,.5 train • No tapetlence tleble. Ref1. H 673-9 f92 h1ve c:ar end ...... r-•r .. ..."" lalY Cell Charley 0 075-8523 A.poly Immediately
Hlca eman office for reni.1~~~~~~~~~ VIII...___, , So. Celll. rMldant OUll/nrtlT ~... · 1., 97" .,..21' No resume• .............. st & a-......... _.....,....,, EqualOffityEmployer earn Ctiri1tmu money. ...on. ••m-"· ......, _....,..,.... ........ B"·ND NEW excfllng 5 In F H SELL Idle Item• with • Hunt. lktt Non/ll'nOtler Found: BASSETT HOUND "" CALL MONDAY, I I Typlat for computer Went Adi Call 6'42·51178 Dal"' Pllol Claulfled Ad (114) 114-1144
1 176/mo 963-58-47 FllMei# & Beker Call t countertop video geme hm· tpm only wortt Evee 6 to 0 NO j~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ.iiiiii"~'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij 640-3807 dletrlbutor' ~ now 714-4117 The raact11 drew In the computer exp. nee Wiii COUNTY OF ORANGE OC AIRPORT AREA Tremendoua t1rnlng1 · Wt1t 8 Dally Piiot trai n . C ell Irene P~MIOep\
.... oomer office bldg. FOUND Bltl famei. Poo-Coltec! eUh dally Call AUTO DETAILING CllNlfle<IAO 6-42-5878. 846-7112 Excellent Opportunity For HaJIOIAdmlnlltratlon
(90% leeeed) Wiii build to die Tetrler, med w/Wllt P e I r I c k Steve'1 ct.talllng ~I tmmmmm;;;;;;;.i..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim.:~iijil 10 CMe c.nter Pitz• 91111, Up to tOOO IQ M. epot on etieat. 075-& 170 714·760-87021631· 1288 reep ci.en ~t lndlvlduel I A . S Santa An•. CA 11270 t
UIO HHH. Com« R.dhlll Found, 8* & Wht YOUng Janslatal IOI' eet wuhlng encl euto ACCOWlll"i $$0Clate culptor Affirm. Action Emplyr M/F
"...,04 751·5M9 Male cat w/green ... ,,. w ~ "II.I d. t •II In Q f 111 rn. ICCOUITS PAYAILE
for a-!llfd Ad
ACTION Cao
Office IP& tor leeM Coller. Palmer 81/C.M 01-... &Jt-811()() u s A t c T•? ti, 1506/mo 111 &.42·6133 Young dihware Mfg n::a.1=ea-:byll,....-.,,t.,...ter-. -:G::-r--•n-::-dmo--:-.:ther:-: SUPERVISOR • I u 0 omp any
mofl1h rent tr .. utllt pd FOUND ler1)e TORTOISE 17000 to keep up with type, non·tmkr. 10 care
AIC. ClfOUnCI fir 1065 EJ vie M eea V e rde ...... 714-240-0295 '°' 2 aml Clllldren PfT Mlrm CompulOr d.laU1butor tlffka el(· West Coast Locat1"on CemWlo Of, Co.ta M.... 546-7308 Of 549-3587 Mea~ WulJ Incl. wknd• Own Irene. perienced Superviaor to~ A/P ''"""" a •• E. or F~' ·-· -H4..S1 t4 •• Th ··-'--' I _.,,, .. _ h • Mame Found mai. pup, blk & I NE D 12600 ventur••=-'"'="''-='==:-:-:==== .,.on. e Si.A.._,.,_,u CA1....,u.\4' mU1t ave"
7&4-t040, Mr Treciy _.,t. unu8'1at mertllnga, cepltel Should return BABYSITTER·HSEI< PPR ye-an Ill A/P SupcrvUc>r. be d•tall orlt'nted.
vie Fel,..,.. 6 Balw 1 111200 by 15 Jen NMded IOI' Happy Fem-and ~ ability (o in~r!IK'e with v..n·
PROfESSIONAL OFJ"'ICE 546-ea&e Ph Tony 045-78~ evee Uy, 2 chlldren, may llve In dora and various li!vele nf man.iigement.
ftH rent. 150'. l300 mo. • . or out. need own car. AA, BA, BS de~et-(bualne?M or 8ct'OUnt-~70-1060 Loet Siu. Front Amazon "Jlln, runll•t detail• 846-2148,
P
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r.. .aag · lng) preftrrt.'d e offer excellern 1&1.ary • 340/up. c~t•ldrp•. lllTol t0.8. 1100 RE-• • -BABYSITTER Mlld9d tov-and com-'n:hf'mlw bfont'fllJI ..... 1uan-.
a/o, ntmi•. 1 1 e..cn WA.AD. 714/873-0320 wioow HAS IU for fb'.. Ing woman to oare few .. ..--~
ltvcl. H 8· M 2• t.34. LOST gray & l>lllC!k t2 yi 110.000up. No credit tOddlef pan-time In our Apply to UY ft1W fen\ KeiathOund mad a ~. no l*\alW Aleo trvtne home Own trtna. a-..~1eroaomoeavall-doa. vie Harbor view lend on & buy TD'• ref• 151-tt38 ....... 1 .... ,, ·~2 .... H Hllf1, CdM 844-5728 S10,000uo to Jumboa. ...... .... · .... ...,....., Oenlaon~ 17:)..7311 fh• lutetl draw In lllt
Mon-Ftl, H lo.t 9124. emall wflt/bm F WHI. 1 Delly Piiot
IELL IOI• 1tem1 with e Matt .. ml~. Nwp1 Holl. Find wllll you went In Cletelfleel Ad CaH Today Diii)' !'lot C'•tllad Ad a3-4-t1n/~6tU Daly Ptl01 CIMtlltiedt 142.-5178.
EOE
'
MICROD
17406 M t. Cliffwoud Clrcl~
Fountain Vallt'y. CA 92708
~0--4781
•
Ftfl(' An1 Degrff prefe~ -minimum 2
y..-tralnln(l In art .chool required. Ex·
l>(lrlcn~ In Automotive Sculpturing p~ffrl'C!d but not reqult'f'd.
<.Andldotn must havt' U.S CIUt.enah!p or
Visa 1tatU1 which pennlta legal a«epunce ot permanent employment undc-r U.S Im
migration lnww F: 0 E.
Qualified pel"IOn 1hould tend resume to:
ANwer Ad #40, Delly Pilot. P 0 . Box
I !!GO, C.0.&A MeA. ~ 92628·0~60.
Tiide your old lluff lo• A OAIU rtLOT AO-flso. n ew goodle• with e Ml·ttft
Claeallled ad. 842·5e78 --------
~aily Pilat .. · · · .......... · ·· ·· ·-
PART TIME
Deliver Daily Pilot by auto In
" Laguna Beach area (2 hours
per day). Weekdays P.M . -
weekends A.M. F.am about
$400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow
or Mr. Bush 642-4321. FX)E . ..... .
•
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ltlt Waat.. SlOO ltlt Wu... 5100 lilt Waat.. SlM ltlt Waa... 11 lelt Wp1t4 119 ltlt Wut.. 11 00 lf!t WuW llM
Plllntet, ~. ,... PUITI RfCEPTIONISTfOf~ly ~lon/TYS>itl UTllL ... SALIE(MiARDWAAE. Full
llable,tippn1ntlc.palntlf lnterlor/eltterlor m1lnt NIOn, fllhlon OOMCien· Newpot16-dl It.IE. omoe ~llty'ltlop looking ror 8 peoc>1e needed IOf pa11 1im. f)Oeltlon In retail
&4&-15M w/llou-.plant MNloe 00, tloue, lull·tlml Notlatd looking for• per90n with meture ..-...antr-woAI time oHle. promollon berdw•r• atore. s ..
Pen time aflemooni In an WOftllng plant 1xp req. Ouellttle Salon, 200 a<MWI oftlcl •1111, type Into rnanegement S.... WOt1c lcw Newpot1 8Mdl et ..... , H. W. Wright Com·
lndue1nei catering war• Own tren.. ~ nr.. Newpol'1 Center Of .. N.B 6e-70wpm 951~188 eJtPer. nee. t<Jno9 Row ~ &tete ~ .. OPtf. peny, IM .. 1745
nou.. H2-5457 M·F 751•221' Recec>!toni.t f0t HB 1aW ot· ~/~ F1fepleoe s11::.... w .. t-r-=: ~:::t: ::-:. UUI (PUT /fm)
Orange p9aat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, OC1. 16, 1983 8'7
· HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA ....
PART-TIME PERMANENT PfT penn, Bright, detail floe. "Mue1 be lnt .. UQent, ~ lewa m1naa.r w.11. 7641' = 9-t 1-6 M·F 15 00 Mlt\lf9 l*90fl f()f 1.ci•· ~ Ol'lented Individual for congeni al, diligent heavy ~•te per 011<1ui. ~ .;, I*'· otothlna S.t. & Sun. O.C. Mondav, OctOber 17 lllT P/T M new butlneel In i...ovoa. w/good typing •klll• 80wpm, no 8.H. R()()fall' eon. Mon & Tu. only. s"" Meet. ~ 1 •IUllllHllfl UI• Typing helpM/'#111 OrHI opportunity to .. cretar111 •klll• ,te· llU '426JamtM>tM.ete1308 pt9ferr.ct.(213)703-812t ARIES (March 31-Apnl 19)· What appears to be a delay
tr.in 4Q4·51'05, 9-8 M-F: break Into ~el •ee· =Reply to Box 981 111...... . et~ lor 2 CPA•. showd beregardeduachaneetogain.econd wind. Younctuaily II II 11,.,1., 811• e-1 " retltlat lleld. &4 -80'1 Piiot, PO Bolt • •• ,.,_.,. ..-... Satea w<Hlclng In ofllCe of •t· may be on brink of major dlacoverv. Gather additJDnal • • R-"lo"""' ... _ M1--•-R I p T f 1*· C.M .. Ce .... ge pr..,_.. ·-top UP a•-••-·., .., ._., omu•, _.,.., ecept onlll· I a ter-Qulllty WO(lcera .. 'Ol"erMn __...... IOl'"-Y 'P'Clallilng In to inf t" th~i--data ob•M-to behind to Seo Newport BMch Mat1141tlng VllJo. need• lull time noon1. $4.00 hr. to 1tart. Ree1aurant: (4) CIPeble of Nnnlng ,., .... Plfi-tllMI mat1er1. Newpol'1 Beeoll orma ion, syn ~ • .....,, 8 ry 8 ry rplo
flrmhUMvMIOS>enlnQI front o~medleal ttan-Could IMd to 11111 llme, Appllcatlon1 tt.ing •c· ~ Journeymen (lO), Eu y 1cceu /alr con· locatlon, ellOellent 911111• oould play key role. l0tr~bte.mature .crlt>er. d~ng Larry957-87t7 cepted fot day Um• 5.10Y..,..~ • dltlonedoftlee. llNl'ltllLSomeov«tlme TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Focus on 1deahsrn, romance,
ml , lndu1tnou1 t*plut. 49 00 --. .. 1.-bartendtng, day food ..,, ... l /P · IAll ll•lltl&ILY1 required. 112001011<400 abllitv to win trlends and influence people. Lunar position also
people U_,..,_, -••' waiter/ w8itreN, day & -NoC t;actt I a month. &44-e618 " 1ilaepend1ntty. o owned night ooctltallt, day heel· c.pabll ot Quallty wonc. ... ~-~i • hlghlJghts aspirations, emotional fulfillment and gain in business llAI. man branch of net.tonal nrm• ... , lloet, kltc:htln help, Muet know all lypM of ~0 ,_..._ lllllJUY .; 't' n~ . tm t uld di 'd ds .... IPIAll• Yltll Aental/..,_ IQlflt for ee-nHd• Quality reoep· pertllng hott. Apply In roollno. 5 yeera elt-Catt Brian, 113e:9~ tmmec:tt1te opening tor or career &ewVl ies. ncu::nt mves en co now pay v1 en . a 11111 tlve Belboe llland offloe. tlonl1t 10 CINI• I warm peraon at lh• Ruely perien<le. SALES m11uce. organized lndl-GEMJNI (May 21-JWle 20); Basic domestic adjustment
Mornlng1, 1fternoon1, We ll•ve opentno• lor 1n111ronment for their Pelican, Newport ee.cn. .... llTllATll wt MPfllll llldual wtlo can WOfl< with occurs-you could make repalrs, add a room, entertain superior
evenlng1, & w .. kende twoexPtflenoed,tulltlme Client•. Thia pereon will Between8:30-12:30only. Roollng&tlmater(4).Exp Prof1*9Qnw/MIMbilel& little or no dlr~tlon. at home. Focus on harmony, diplomacy, ability to convince •
1vallable. A great way to llc.nMd lglfltt. Com-an Important part ol our not neoetMty Out lhould r"'~ .......... Typing 65 wpm. die-h th t d lbili' d · Iner"" your budget mlUlon• only. Call Bette orgenlzatlon. Selary ~-.. ~ befemlllalwtth c:onltNC> computer exp. ~ tepnone required; ll'IOfl· ot ers a you eserve more respons ty an promotion.
dollar.. We pay for your Wallf1 IN OUR ISLAND open. Prof ... lonal lm1ge ~\Jil tlon. Top comrT)l11lon, Salel hand & word prooellllng Libra is in picture.
training. For Interview OFFICE 873-8900. • muet. N«ma. '47&-2882 ~ Benefit•. llTSTllMll d11lrable. Newport CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect highlights
ei>t>I call Mr. Bleemer, -""11 HI HO'\ r 11•n&1Y/UIPT 142·1111 Breun1r1 Rent1, Call· Center ., ... Call Blane, .communication, travel, familiarity with international customs . ..... llll 1111Mt.., hK-• f«nl•'• taroeet furniture 840-0350. la Rea h be d t · · REALES•ATE F11t pace d Newport Aeataurant cMll poaltlon rentaloompanyliloolclng Secret : ws. c yon curren expectauons -you are gomg to Piil.nil. Tiii Be1cll P.R office In evalleble. 2407 E. Cout Salel f« 1a1e1 eoneu1tant1 '°' ary receive privileged i.nformat.ion and a po6Sible promotion Pisces
Leading toe.I peat control 173-elOO lmmed. need of eltper. Hwy CdM. Exp. pref. * * * our Weatmlnltlf & Coeta UUL n•nUJ'J plays S}0 anificant role. rnponalble ~· 165 ' Meaa S Corporation lffklng 1 e•~ company need• route wpm. Hea11y pllonH. R .. t•urant. Menagere. 11 Ill IOIEY howroomi. "you tegalMCtetarywttlleltcel· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus on intensified relationship, drhN for ateady Job. RHI E1111e SALES· IBM/PC de1lreable reut 25 yra old Gina'• enjoy mffllng people lent MCretarlal & or· Entry level polltlon. we PERSONS our H1w111 · ' SHORT HOURS and are IOOlclng ror a major commitment, money, emotional responses. You'll learn
train • NoC:l~~lence m1ln ~~lee 1111 = <tti $1 lOO/mO, 720-084 l r:b..:,,~S. ~~~2~· grMt oppty W/I fllt ~=~~~r~:~. ~:!; more about fiscal responsibility ofone WhO WOUld be close to YOU.
nec:eaaary. · on• d ... Mar bra · a llOIPTWT •Photo Copy~ growing company we b•n•fll• wltn a pro-Reject superficial explahations. dig deep, be aware of tax and Moo. llam-12. 979-602 PA e 111 c Coast 11 n e , Nlllon&I Reel Estate firm Reetaurant • e 6 AM . NOON want lo talk to you. leaalonal WO<k environ·
Phone canvualnn, w0f1t 720·1105 Ask fof seek• prof ... lonal ,._ flll.,/UQlllll •NoE.xper~ Selary +comm.Fullben· . licenserequirementsaswelJasaccounttngprocedures.
ePM-11:30PM M0n-Tllur Marina. cepllonl1t with llgllt tor gourmet ... food r ... • Ex1et\ltVfrtralnlng eftta. Cell Mr• Score ment. ~::· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Finish rather than initiate
s...oo pr hr + bonus. 01· IEOEn /fre.t tfftee typing 1111111. High public taurant, Nwpt Bch. Call progrem Mon-Tue btwn I0-2PM (714) 546-5858 project -check legal rights, permissions. Def me tenns, steer
lie• -near a ir port Part lime. 8.30 to 12:30. 5 contact and Client lntlf'· Tim. 675-2560 bet. 10-4 • WMkly Pay Guarantee (71418'&-.4772 Or Send reMime to: FDIC. clear of self-deception, see places. people in light of reality Focus
957-2528 p f"' action. Salary open. Koll Retail Salea e Pteuant, Proteulonal IHHtn leltl P.O. Box 3008, Costa day week. hones, 'V-Center Call MIU Jone1 Ole In Coron• Del Mar I ...._1...... I M CA 92e28 also on ~<:Ible partnership, public relations and marital status. PIYllOWI
&ISllT&IT (Pl)
urn, Ille typing. varied lor ,·ppolntment it TIE lllllWIJ If you're brl~llt and ... .-...-1111tnl ••• .... . .---dutleN&10meoomputer •--------LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stress independence, originality,
exper pref. Consolldated 476-0340. from 9 • 5· Hlllll ...._ ~~'t!!tw-,1~' amM /. ltl M/f The 118111t draw fn the willingn~ to pioneer a project. Lunar emphasis also on needed for PfT employ·
ment. Luge lemlty prac·
llee office. San
Bernadina. Pleue Call
714-887-253-4
Restiurants of Calif. · Receptlonlst/Typlat. New· lllWPllT ll.&Oll 1pm11 WHI .•. 1 Dally Piiot employment, ability to follow through on resoluuonsconcemmg
19752 MacArthur Bl, Ste port Centlf' l1w office. 11 toolllng for • highly 113·0111 • Cluslfled Ads 642-5678 Clutllled Ad. 6'42-5678. di.et, nutr1";on and general health. Leo "'~uve helps in gettmg to 110, Irvine 553-191 t Call Luisa 6'40-8900 moth11ted HouNwar11 " •i.c>
Manager. Experience heart of matters.
--------Classllled Ads. your one-Find what you want In
Seti Id~ items 642-5678 atop shoppl!'g cinter. Dally Piiot Ctassllleds.
pretenecl. Weofflf'exoet· Get GREEN cuh SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emotions tend to dominate -::.'.on~o':i~Frl~~~tn'~ 1!r1~~g,~~·~~ SECRET ARY strive to give logic "equal time .'' People and eventS tend to make ·
4 pm. Pertonnel Oftlca. c111 6'42-5678 indelible impressions -your psychic abilities surge to forefront.
Emphasis on romance, speculation, greater self-expresmon. Newspaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PBIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK
We llO• hne I!> OC>e11111CS lor yoona urer
beavers to secure reJdefs IOI The Ounae Coast
Dally Pilot Our crews start at 3 30 pm and
work unbl 8 30 p m •et~days On Sllurelay, wt
work 1 lew more hours You .,~ earn many 111ps
and pm,s. alone with tarnma your own money ,
tllere is no delm11nc 01 collectJOn mwotwed.
'II JOU ait 1ntilested, please taH Mr. Earl
(714) 548-7058
..
SALES
OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING ...
... to the tune of $30-$35,000 a year at United
L•boretorles. ·Th1t'a how much our aales-
people averaoe tllelr flrat year with ua. and you
can alto, II you're eltperlenced In Industrial and
lnetltutlonal Mies.
At United, we'll train you completely, then
autgn you to your local •rN wtt11e a number
of accounts ¥• already •t•blllhed. Then It'•
up to,you; The hard« you wont. tne more you'll
mal<e. Plus, you'll be ellglble f()(,.DUr mariage-
ment opportunity program. u well u our
comprlhenalve beneflll p~age.
II you're wllllng to work herd, we're wllllng to
Invest In your future. To arrange a confldentlat.
Interview, oell Monday or Tuesd•y between the
hours of 9AM and 5PM:
VERNE BRADRICK
Regional Sales Manager
(714) 634-4998
UNITED LABORATORIES
Regional Sales ManaQer
Orange, CA 92668
Equal Oppartunlly Employer M/F
Epallon la a growing data bue manage-
ment and direct mall marl<ttlng com-
pany baaed In Bo•ton and op90lng new
office near -Orange County 1lrpart.
We are lool<lng for an energetic perton
Who 1111 3 yeara' secretarial experience,
pasaesa1ng good typing and lhorlhand
tl<llla. This Individual ahould be well
organlted. have the ablllty to Interface
with cilenta and communlC8te with other
Epetton offices.
If you are ready for a challenging and
exciting opportunity, thl• could be the
Job for you.
Epsllon offers good health, denlel and
Ille lnauranai. dl1&blllty lnturanoe. va-
cation. sick, holiday, and tuition relm·
bursement benefits, as well as prollt
sharing plan.
PleMe Mftd reeume wHh ..tary hie·
tory, In con~. to Epellon, 901
DoH I t., I Ulte 190, New• ~ pcH1 8Mch, CA t2'IO M ;A;,."> .......
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Long distance call brings
messafle of reassuranc,?. Focus on security, long-range nego-
tiations, ability to inspire trust, confidence. Popularity increases .
you could receive invitation to travel. Geminj and another
Sagittarian Hgure prominently.
CAPRICORNU>ec. 22-Jan. 19); Circumstances take slrange
twist, result in greater freedom, you thus are enabled to
participate in activity requiring travel, additional funds. Ride
with tide, realize that "important people" do have your welfare
at heart.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Check source material,
reView bµdget, make special effort to locate item that has been
lost, missing or stolen. Cycle moves up, sense of perception is
heightened, member of opposite sex proves loyalty. Sagitt.arian
figures prominently.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Past favors are returned -
popularity increases, you gain allies and you'll make nght move
at crucial moment. Moon in your sign highltghts vitalny,
personality, charisma, gain through direct appeals. Taurus plays
paramount role. ...
Belt Wutt4 1100 Btlt Waat.. 5100 1111 !aat.. 5100
llllnUY /UIEn, TELEPHONE WELDER, Apply 7 em only OIST& MU APPT MAKER MllCGregor Y1etil Corp.
Full/time. $l200/mo to EltPlf, S.t IOlar IPPI• for 1631 Plaeentla, Co1ta
1tert. Immediate open· top CIOllf'. WOii< at N.B. M ....
Ing, Do not apply unlesa toe. Hrty & bonu .. 1.J =,~M,--W""".,...u-tt4-.--~S="'l,..,O=s
experienced wltn Word· 720-1840. 9·12.
1tar so1tw1r1 Conllden· T ......... •-•le...... LIVE IN, DRIVER. HANDY--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~ ....................... .i. ............ ;;..;.;;Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ . • ,..... ......... n MAN GARDENER Ms~ • tlal. Mr. Trowbridge. Wanted. to make apptm'e, 40 Wiii relocate.
" 642-3997 no Mltlng. Call 873-9421 547-4088 Oon.
A Salute to • • Notable
Businesswomen
Coming
Sunday
Oct. 30, 1983
in t he
Daily Pilot
A tribute to the
Orange Co88t's
SUCCESSFUL
WOMEN
in business.
For more
information
call the
•
Daily Pilot
642-5678
'
•
sob
11•n&11Y t>etwn 12.5 Fred A11e1re --------Dane. Studio Prec:llcal Nurs.e & House-Sharp gal needed to w0tk · __ k9'pef. e11p9..1e1I08d '
In tut pecesd N-PQf"t TtU~E seuorTH 1o c 11 re t ere n c es
Beaeti real eatate office. Hour1y + Commlt.slon PIT 673-5100
Mull h•ve excel. typing He area Call Mr Hunt ..,......__.----...,,.---,.... (minimum 75wpm) & die-· · 84 t-4 110 Rellel>fl C9I -ks 11"9-ln
tapllone lkllls. Contec:I --------pos u COOl</nulrttlonlst .
Peggy 11 i.1 833-2900. TILIPIME MUOITH ~rf.:.Cr~~~..S:,~
llO'f /PUllAIEIT P /T s~~~t" ec'ti ~~C'~~,M~ "'-ssos
For Mktg Service Agency Hunt 84 1-41 10 -·· In N.B. Need expel'lenoe --·------§9;C1aJ bidet Kl"-1
r"P<>fl. pereon, Wlxlnl Tl~ Clle need n1119onllbMI ln-
aecretarlal ~1111. Front lllftYwtll 1ld1 homo Neu-
otflce appearance. Must teredtllhote.839-7019 have car. Call M1 Giiien No experience neoeal8ry • =-------=::-=-: (714) 752-9013 wlll tr1ln No Mlllng !era 5510
S1l1ry. PI T evening•. m a;m; Shee> 110'1/IEOEn. Cell Joan. 662·5843 1250' upiu;_793~r·
lpr growing company Telephone
bated In Newport Beach. Pereon with pleannt voice Beaut AKC. ~ MalteM Mull be experlenoed In and good lltllude 10 u-1tud, exit blood llnea.
office procedure1 and "" 111411 repreMntetlvea P~ of litter for brMdlng precllcee. Candidate In contec:tlng their pro-fee. Rita 496-2572
need• good o/ganlzatlon, tllllonal cllent1. Relue<I Mele Shih Tzu, 1 yr old, Blk
typlng, bkkp g and writ-atmotpllere, early houre. & Wiit, S250 962·7520 ten end verbal com-and congenial peopl• 1-:--:------..,...,..,.
munlcatlon ekllls. Flex· make up this otfloe. Call ti H 10 'Ible l'lrl. C1ll B. Goris Judy IOI' eppt 636-9335 646-1823 ' TIU .... Wlll lllYIOl •EOIWllO 3 polltlon• evall1ble tor Plle0m1t1c background. eettlng eppo!ntment1. No
S 100 O Imo + car . Nltlng. lalary. Company
114-845-7811 wlll tr.in. PfT e11enlng1
Servloe Station Attendant, For Appointment. call
PIT, E11ea & Wknd•. Neal Mra. JoMIOfl. 682-5842
appesranoe and hand· TOP
writing only nHd to FemalM Pref. Models &
epply. 2590 Newport &cortl. (213) ee&-1g54
Blvd. Costa Mela.
............ TUlllJll
Full/time. WIH trlin. Cotte •W Tl lfll
1_MIM __ . _e._5-33 __ 50 ___ Help glYe them e heed
Soolal/AC'tlvlllH director atart. Earn lop SSS part
* WAITEI Tl llY .........
*IUT&melU .............
o...lpmHt"
llllallllaMll
llt-I014
WESTMINSTER ABBEY ANTIQUE MALL
1175 t Wntmln1ter Ave
GARDEN OAOVE
554-6103 for major prlvlle time evening•. Only
1port1/t1tneu club. Send poelllve. dependeble. reeume to: Sport1 Club, outgoing adult• needl ............... .
PO Bolt 20080. Fountain apply. Phone 84&-7021. hHtlfml EmcthltW
I/alley, 92728 2:30 to 8 Pm Mondey Oreeeer w/ca~ mirror.
Stationery Store In Corona tllrv Friday. $300. 842·28&4
def Mar needs FIT e11·
perlenced H le•pereon.
875-1010
TUYIL&IEIT Mull hive 2 yr1 exper. PRIVATE SALE-ANTIOUE wlcomputlf'9. N.B. IQlf'l• Furn .. chine. brUI, prlnte. ITIHI UUI cy Send retume to: Ad orlenlllt, etc. Bl apptm
Good opportunity tor No. 987, Dally Pilot, Bolt MO~
energetic, run people. 1580, Cott• Me11 92626.
Xlnl $$,cull paid dally. nPEIETTEI iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-
Call now, 831·8391 Comp. edll, 5900. H · WILllllll.U
perlenee 1 muel. Full or I .. IPlllll ITlll llAll OLlll pert time. 6'42-0878 F"turlng country pine &
Requlrea: typing ekllla for entlqu.. 4 14·A 3111 ST.
dall entry, ..crow ex· Ve.lei Parking at1endanl1. CANNERY VILLAGE
Ptrtenc. or benk tt\llt S..lllr to 1tart. No tip• Newport Beech. Open
department netplul. Apply In pertOn. Ru•s'Y 11-5 Tu..-Sat. 87s.-c>e25 Salery negotl1ble. Pellean. 1830 Main t.( ......... _ .. __
wtrelM In 90 deya. In-IMM. No Phone Calle •Ml; Ml l
1YrW1Ce benelttl. Con· ~ ~
1eot Elelne vauallo, PART-TIME. Varied hou<• "'8R AREA
72G-0202 f()( eppt. to lnolUCS. Mr1y A.M. APPLIANCE SERVICE
lwMtllll1d1Hf. ==··~~·'(:m~ _;:.e.,':.~~n Part/Im.. !JIPtf. flelpfut, truck, van, 1tetlon aaa WllT AAA~
wtll train rloht '*"°"· wagon) to Ulllt new.-.._. ..... ' Call &46-158& paper deeltf In IMnl IPft..llm
.,_ Muet be «Mc>en· NOW 21.0CA flOH8
dable. Oon1101 Orto 1980 Harbor Blvd CM pand~ llUdto manutec-~~~=F::;& 850-T071cwe50-7082
turer. 2~ ~ & lll8loQ a rn ::'.:: 9''1i2l 1"2 So. Mein. St .. Orange el9ct. deelred, eppty 1n · • ::'••-.. 134,...200cw~2 peraon It 192t Plll:ienlll ~ FWrtolr.,Of'I
Ave Coett Mela, Aeetlul'ent F'""'11/W~ ' WUTllll/W&ITD 3 MontM Wftltfl\tt, Pen• T.......,......_ wtth Oii' tor wlctter l>Ul<et &LAbOf.OelwryA"911.
p,._que1,,... WMt 9cl. lunch ....-, 9 am· 1 MIC & V .... Mon-eat M
Prof .• ..-Ue<I etmoephere, pm, Mon-Fr'I. !am apo
plMMnt eurrou1'dtnoe. proltlmat.iy 1150-1175 ..... ,.
Slla(V + comm. + bonu.. wMll:ly. Mwt be ,,..t 762--0851eftlt5e>m ='°"~~111 C::: P •' • 0~ •J>.:. •few a n d Compect ~rtglfr.ww, ~\. =NINO & :=t:.nt ~ 'fo hnyo.1 •e MW, unOlr
d!IYftme 1hlft1. Chuck am Md 12 noon or 2-4 werr.•121. en-eeeo
llWldOlpll. 491-760 I pm. LOflll'• 1<1tcH!N, lftlQtdl!N ~ "<*· .....
)011 8o Hlrbof. tent a t YT" «*I, 11 0.hlnt OOftd
1Cla11llleO Adi ere lhe Ana (Harbor at c.trllige) '300. 17l-HIO lft I
•n•wef to 1 1ucce11fut 979-4747
gerwoe Of ywd ulel 11'1 a --------H-10m9ttllna ~ W1111
b91ttr w•Y 10 tell m0t• l'lnd w1111~ou want In to Mlf? CC•.iftld .,,. do P90t*I OaltY Piiot Crnl"IC'm, " ....... , ... .,.
r
Da Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Sunday. Oct. 16. 1983 ,~ ~~(Tir.ru~~·~.,.~~~~~~~;:::~H2~fffJ~1u~g·~t!~i•~•ug::~1~ua~ ... i~~~·~1Jta!ii!ui1·::~11fi1!1~t...i!!l•i•:::::Jeu!!l1!JJ!iii!::J!!i!!~~:niiiiJiii~C:::l1Al!!!ii!~.! .... ;!~l!!!i::: f.11~-l :; _....... au::.~CXM (2)lWln = wlo-nulM SOii , Ml U. MutlolanlcompoMJ mov-UHP ~I OU1t>oetd, •to '°'d Couflef dtiluJ1e bua ff)T elb!!l!a . tlU liiC tJtl ......... .,,... boetd• lnGi. plaid, wood lrlm, ,_ Ing EHi Y•m•h• ueed ll8IY llt11e 1500. Lg eotnm'I aMH utMlty MC -l ~ OWN HOMI ~ corntonett. new cono 12501000 561·2272 OM'5" Otand, et>ony, Igloo loebo• uMd once up ell mini' cond NM '70 Kar,_,,, Ghia, ,_ 18 xtn6™ jQIOj\ --f" ~,. • '3000. Mii !of $800. ....... meQnlfloenl lmllument, f76. 116--6161 ' ~1.,.. 9~ ... A•.. ......,. -....... ~... ..., w.aon ....,... '9tt9ble ·--:~\'' "1 l'.,~. r~ 8S1·76111e73·123e 8peni.ht.,..IM~room U!IOO fir Alao greel.N ..... ,.....,,,_ ;j'·~-~ &4tl*."iii.aeoe · .;-Mi .,.:--:_jf.~~;.·((L;w , ·~I .. ~7'roundOutablew/8 N~:":.W~A~~\~; Outbf1lllMnffr'111toll,w/2 t L '12CflW(3/4T l!MredO flnn.Aft.8,114-1393 .• 11 AMC~ 4 doof.
,-<, l ,
7
1 t .•, ... ~ 139& 873·1202 =-ii C.~. petf9el ltrNt , .. 9·2 d ..... , i06ded, Xlnt '71 VW Cofwwtlble, 1WW felt OOnd 71,QOo rnll9. l . ~ 1,,,_,;..----. -..,..---l'#ln bed conw unll w/tbl con IUon, ~600 firm. PROF IOXT FiAllA cones. 111( ml. 110,500. loP, '"-· ... ,, 6 MOte. ,_ bf ....... ,_ .....,
, ~ -, 8Reet.M1tcnedoon1emp AMIFMdodo.cllol150. 819-2e7~974 • CU8TOMVA::: 4"-9261 .-n/fmcw,rune&looka ~.Mwt ..... aoon
OAIAO_I $AU ADI NOW
CLAUIPllD U Clrtl
U l lUOW
• b l wfll: twn bdt, rauan "4-6128 Pleno. Llk• new Spinet. Fr .. e.1. Dave 49 & t .. ~ grHL 14360/080 M ..,.,...ble. *8001080.
tldbfd9. bOX apga/matt, WOOO DINETTE TABLE Whitney by Klmbelf mdl a "' !!!!!! 118&6-.3223 641~9
ch• dc.wre. dak/chr: with 4 l'l8W1Y upt\oll1ered Allwood Urso 941-311f m,.1 Delkl TIU .... 1117 um ......., ........ ----~= ~~~~un a 12 5 ctlelral7!1obo. 241·,1508 Story 6 ~.fk ~11410 Con-a 1i ;u;; rcx rent. AWPi . 011m '72 vw ~ Westfella ..... 1111 C.... .... ~S;ltld aol4I walnu1 Kint cond ~ evall now. S2llO/mo. ' n ' dome 1oP. Xlnl cond .. 'ff Mi:a &;( cona ~ 1ktm f CJ • m wOOI . 135 Bulcll« iiOCil a Chrome Jnt H14 noo 942-4901• ~11141 ~ lo-6ed.1:1!'l'Y ~ _... 13100. MW349 t 7200. 4K.t261 .•
....._ q(I. , IO a._., 2 x ruga Table, 4 cane back • amon . O UIUtn8 • l30 ... &. '81 VW 8Qbk Hew= uphol. cnr.. mi.c. 930 M ., r.cllMr 1100, Eno-ctlaif'I 3e"1t69" w/leeves ft C:.:. re1.i1 a1000' near I Uprlghr plan~, reel cond, 45 off ah«• moorlt\Q, mo. 132-6482, 981-0411 ..... -• -bfeleee/ba1I__, 11 , '11llU&.Lll11111 r--.-. Sal/Sun 11th rode• $80, 2 nlQht lllSO .:." ....... a • • at NII • 760 82"7 good loo. with boel. ..... -• ... ,. • ....__ ........ ...,.. .. -:::--=--="""-"'-=--=----~·--....,,. 1tand1 uo ea. io HP ·~ M50/otr.8424e32 mu ·• · • v 111,ooo.c al1e1&-0740 ID tlll lll•D*' calt7&l-3t7f _..wt1a1a ...... ._r.., ...
()A"A()E I. MOVING' S kl bo4Wd 1eOO 2 BUY DIRECT FROM I l QeM 1130 Vol a.. 8«vic. '73 VW C (lBGA2&2)
SALE: 8et & Sunday 110 n::: ,1::i. l ac> ... M. MANUFACTURER •• at? ~rt •t 1 Need 4°" to 5011 lltp, 'f8 2662. 1 owner . u':c, ~ng xin1 ;:''=50 ""&:; C..lltlt IJH
6. Many bwgeln1: 2...,.. 3 IPd blcyde llO 8ft bfn anduvellOto 75%on neW Tll WILMI ECIC. do11 Cart. atr tic, idt Newport or HuntlnQ1on non-amltr, lull MtV. r.. J81118Ncih81vd. lll0·271SO or 175-7222
Ina medllnle, 1 an eleo-l.lltl\lr '°'' '225, • 4 . top que/lty bed Mlt. Twin LI~oln 300 wtnow meter con d , new b 111. H11b0r. 7 '4·875-1220 corda, nu 1nt., oi-n u 1 Hun1l"2_I~ 8MCtl 1912 WM• cadllee El·
trlC An11q1.1e Sl11get. lawn Patio atialr1 110 .... 25 Ml• }ua1 M9.95, luH eels torch. amptrOI llCl13o0 $1950/obo, 170-4889 Slip for 3811 motor yacht, wtllttll 162llO. 551-5009 (11•)1141-2111' '1• ... •wtalt Dorado (8). clun, ~ i;:s~· cu.ft Whirlpool upright lull '79.95. Save .van Of beet otfef. 6.45--0171 1mprov1 your game with $300/mo. .21 Balboa •n 320!, euto, Rec:ar09, ei.-32,000 mllea, em/Im cue. 113•950• 844-8819
b '(' .....,.. • · ..-n · ~Mi« 1165, Frigidaire mor• on queen and king Ping l'®t 3-pw Like Covea. 873-148-4 toy. air Reeed1 green Jgur Hff 4 tPd. Mini oond. See to '77 Ced s.vtlle, 1 own&f. ~.~th~~. I!.: r:. CIA~-~lgerc~':..:'r" ~19~ree dellvety lllacellut HI 1211 ~:it ~~~~II .. S285 ""''" l M10o. 0:.5-2376 . •tf2+2 E-type, v.12. 23k ~=·· M 5001080. ~··ae~~d:::i.1~n1
8e7 Preeldlo, M ... def beverage 'dtapenHr 1fid61 b91ul fine rug ' Glfl'i"26" 10 i()d ,,_..., 79•,i,528lalr,eullfoof, elloy ml. S 1&,900 r1rm, . . • Mar. 1550. 25tt cabin Crulaer co71am:or1~ dl$4~~t (l<11h1n). hend made POOi tabie, 8 It, 1111. $150 new $40. 982_451•0·;;·7 wh .. 11, 59,000 mllH. 714/49&.1&e9 '74 VW BOO 'l:'l: QOOd '19 EldotedO, wnt w/blue
GIANT MOVING a. Garage ,_ cond.·11.f;OOO, 1973 ~~~ • 8.c~h $300. from P1ret1, Sacrlllce obo. 545-314'1 110,400/0 BO 875-2500 ,73 XJe top condofedooe cond., MUSTS U500. IMthet Int, ale, emlfm
Sate: 11\1. rm f\Jm, relrtg, Flat 124 $port Con· Coffel~ $150. End lb .. 112,000. 751-7102 SKI EQUIPMENT -Ski •ettr lllt1 1 '81BMW3201 Sible U,ltan Int. saeoo: 541-6421 ' ~~ r~:·~deu
-t•bed & much more. vertlbll 11.450. 828 JS()..$100. 545-7313 BAO BACK? Try Grevltr. p a c kage . I ad I ea 180 Moto m Sebring, LO MILES-SUPER CLEAN 942·9797 eYell. P.P. '787 vw ~bk. New eng, oP. ec . 8
S•11Sun. 2003 M~ (In ClubnouMAve., 8'11 A, at Guldenoe Syaten'I (new . Roulgno t 170 skis, $295. M0-24&e Rob IMlge w/bf'wn vetor. tn1, brakH, bell. $1300, '11 llll ......
the bac:tt). 842-9432 38th St., New90f18eeeh. Cuatom tepeatry lo~I $600/obo 875-1780 pm Soloman 222 binding/a a • 1 I 5 IPd an/r1 air em/Im ...... .... 1149 751-3118 30 000 ml •Int cond Mut1
MOVING-EV91'Ythlng 1 875-5881 ~~!·aA:.=:dCfa"b~ °'Iv mag.' Scott Polee S 125. LAdle$ •ltrc,t ti eaN, Poli~ l ' painted 187 Host . MUST BELLI '78 vw pit camper van, ..-. s 1 i ,500. Mi5374
Refrlg, wether. ~. FURNITURE Sele, ,t;p. 195 & ,115 Ornate CIAI · Cab level campt tllell me 8 OU1t akl bib w/matchlng ac..ttn Ull •lloyt. radlalt . BMW 112,900. 840-5192 11118 new, atov., llnk, rel., wtlOya; a..2-e199 ._
piano, lurn11ure. mlac. pllancat, Im. Hwlng tom lempiteble $125. x 6 bed, S2Q.O. Gu a1ove, ~~· F xlnt 1~~1 ~· 1982 Yemaha )('f .125 En· s\'211~' than 14K ml. '10 280SL, YtllY c:llln, towr 2 dbl beda, l6800/obo, '11 llll •11--
Sun. 0-5. 112 Ctearbrook mac:ll, roll lop d!!_k, wtr Lampe, val. s 1000. Mii good cond, $75 Cocoa 12 ~.,., ~ a Musi ..J~ duro. at. legal trail motor-85 t..sOAo d"" & ~ mllM. $15,900. 031· 1105 Mutt Mii lmiT*I. Jaclt 28 000 ml 113 950 (an.v). ~oea trom C.M. bed, mltc.-cah .,..,ty. 14 $295/pr 831-1008 brn crp11ng 3 lrg pc's, • · · cycle. Xlnt c:ond. almoll ,. .t= "4-2359 1n 5 wkdyt, • ,gu. · · POiice Station. 979--5098 Kamalii Crt, NB. (Npl . $20 Bllhroom sink S..-5-8280 n-$750 llrm. 6411-3564 '83 BMW 3201, lull euro-'70 ;;Q0sEL-OOODCOND. 891-1.443, e11t 437 wtldyt. (lCHDGN)MS.2963 dlr
Crea11wnhM). Supetlor Delk Wl lyplng table $75. w/vanlly. $20. Misc Women's ski b01ris. az 7, ~n upgrade. Ou1llty $4300. 873-0158 Tll WIEST
MOVING SALE a Tteonde<oga, Sun. noon 496-5558 furniture. Chenglng tbl & $175 val./$.49 831-1098 llO MIU OHml carried through to 11'18 79 2400 lmmec cond '79 Convenlbll, xlnt cond, ~72 Val~ Road Llke new Furniture sale. Girl's French Proveotial, oth-J" baby access V •·ii N-palnl , 8315 kit, Iola of •me 11e•1 de ta I I. 88 000 ;.,,11.. $12 995' red, lmmec, am/Im eaaa. llLllTilll
verylh goeal Mirrored tablet. $250 ea; !'#In canopy bdrm Ml 4 542·2238 T l - ., Chrr-· run• good~ 1800 Metk:uloully maintained cau 875--1387 . . $7700. (213)433· 7773 ollll• model, low mllMge --IALJ Pool I able and cu ea, pe'1, good oond, extra CORDLESS TELEPHONE lltrH ll32 8 I 989-1221 111 Oam by a determined pl(· , '79 VW Del Rabbit dlx air C.dlll1ca In Sou1hern
Furniture, appllanoM, etc. $1250; Beautlful din table 1cce11. S300 ob o Like new, sao 548-5318 2111 remore control RCA '82 HONDA ATC 250 ~~~oi;1~!·..J~m· By 8!.:WC:,~y~O:, ~ ... ~~~ 4apd, 4dr, 11ereo . .ism'. Calllornlll S.. uatodayl
Younemelt.-probably w/4 chalre. complete Berble,875-5080 0 11 "-·· 1 F _ .. 3 pon.color TV,$250. Xlnlsnape,$1300 P/P ....,... mo 556-3131wltd"" 24Kml.M700.851·3922 11101
have· 111 Sal/Sun. 908 boyt and girts room; GE ar ng """d 1
11 f'Y ran .... ,. 1 873-1236/631-75 11 720-9895 or 863--0701 Convenlanlly Located · ,. Aa .. WO
hnana Place. John big ac:reen TV. S 1750. I Ill nllmlE llory o lho11se nc · --& Comp11lt1vety Pr1ced All< abou1 1he me>My -'88 BUG. aunrf, xtnt. .,..,
557-8677 Sunday. 11•5• 203 1 Lea 957_8133 mlnllure furniture, tights. BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA '82 Su:wkl RM125, xlnl i;an 11ve YO!' thru our $2195/blt. 642-9259 2600Harl>of8tvd
S
ya c h 1 0 e 1 ender , wallpaper, cplt. $275 Color TV, 2 yr wrnty oond .. trade for XR250 or &' purctl ... & i..,. plant COSTA MESA · un Only 10-4. 3034 Col· 848-2215 King sz bed complete, Incl. 720·1704 or 851·9135. $148. Free del Open DR2.50or S900. 498-9258 M .. ._ · '80 Rebbl1 Convert. IJIO lllO
lege. Anllquea too. Olf heedboerd )!,Int co11d Genera.I Hardware, 8198 Sun, TV John's 846-1786 QZlll Wt/blk top, ale, cue. gld • • Biker by Fedco. Walnut din tbl. pad1, 15 s125. 556-8378 att. lp~ Salet-Servlce-Leastno ,...,.. mega 17500, 64~30 ch,..; dlne1te ael, 6 ch1'9; Garden Grove Blvd .. Gar-New uaed 1 wk Ski 1111.111lllT1111 1301 Quall Streit •80 n-b""" ...... 5 ..,.,. hlK.,.,....._-t..,..ltt---~.-3-1-• ·
Yard Sale, Lota of goodlel. colfee & end Ibis· patio Leaving Country· Mtac den Grove. (FREE) Cottee Pre 1600 GSP. 727 Bind· Good tor rebuilding or tor fY"'tV CARVER NEWPORT BEACH ""' "'1 .,..,u•. ...,.., 11"1.., ...... ..,iioiiii._ __ _.-.-•
ATC a. Toyota P.U. 3065 .. t: bullet; pictures; furniture & awllanoea: a Oonu1 with every lngs $300 firm 497-2266 part1, n-knobblel, $50 l'\L/ I lll·llll ~~[~~·ou~l•r:i· ~"'pm~c '11 c:m:ro RllllY Sport
Royce Ln. Sal/Sun 9.5 hdboarda; mllCl ltema; Chest drwrs $50 ea. purchase Sal/Sun Panoaonlc Port Video R• Bill G89-1221 an. 10em ~lli ~JICE·Htv1W 13950 obO 840-1289g . Mii or trade for PU truci<. lut. ltac• hanging t1mp1; elec dinette M1 $75, chrs S75 HoulMI lull ol furniture thll corder wl color video '"" ·:':1 '~1" ... ...w .,. ,.,,. Mer<*Sea '159, 200 0 , Tan, · Evea 494-5040 • d 19. X j lralne. Saturda)'. ea. Pool !urn. (11 pea) must be told. Call camera. $500. 644-7183 • 1 8 HM ....... '""' "" .,., ....... ..., XLNT Cond. $4200. '81 Rabbit delMI plc:kup '71 El Cemlno, 11lnt oond.
arege 11 · nt quH, 1600 Llnooln Ln 11 $200, bookahelves $20, 645~260 E level oven • er tatl ~ .1'9l"91n 213-983-9755 delux, elr, 1181'*>, 5 tPd. c11m lint enr1 t 11 ~1h~ng,k pl~no. 2':~2 Hampahlre. 548-4326 king a matt $50. Mlae Rel Mop$ lvg roo~ RCA 19" vista color TV. FOR RENT, 81 Tioga mini ~YILP.'l Ml 1141 runa.-.ISOmpg.$4195. 12800/~tr S31-ae'1211 r 9=-~ 0c1~7~and ie: wui-. dryer, fr&R•. an-984-2794 lur~. 2 bdrmi, etc. $199 obo 536-1561 alt 6 mo1ot home. Stpa s-e 8.,.._S«vlc»-LMalng 1 &40-12e9 , __ 11_1_1_·1_F_l_l_m __
llquea, ar1, jewelry, MOVING: q-8*lper LAwn mower, lrzr. Sony. 6 It color TV ~rator, air, awning, ·WMIT 79 MGB convert. 42K ml, 'II u.T MIWllT
More lemllt9a lie getting furniture, 880. king, couch, Ilka MW, $145. bullk bedl. lurn. ~7s $2400 obo. 552-4360 5-3009 °' 850-0858 caaa., 1tln1 concl. 13150. Green wltan top & ln1 We haYI a good Mllctlon
the camping "bug" thlt queen & twin m111r..... Loveeeat.185. Gold dble 975.11se ZENITH COLOR TV. IV'• I022 lmlTllY 891.g355· Por9Ctle Ltd. .-nttm CM1, on1y 12.300 of NEW ' UMd Chev·
year. 11 you he ve e 8Jl8fclM equip, dealgner con10Uf chair, $85. N-S 165 527-12851 *'78 530!; 4 tpd, SI R '80MGB, rune great, CW, ml, IUt)8ft> cond. 19500. rot.I.ti See UI todayf
Cllm98f' lllet'• not gen Ing clothe&. Sat/Sun, 9-5. queen malt. & springs, MadarM Ale•ander Doll•. 25 Molot Hoo., n-. ( 1ACLllO 1 c I e en I 4 5 o o o b.o 87S-l370 .n. 8:30
uMd, Mil 11 now wllh 1 50e Pirie Ave. Balboa $85. S..UI. slate top col-$55to 198 548-7584 ltatt, Cbrltr/ :!::' ~0,:1~! hol.ld•re-*'79 5281; A/T, A/C 850-4049 •82 Rabbit Conv, 1mm'..c
Claatfled Ad. llland. 873-a04l ~~~cir 't'~m~ Membership In exclualve Ital 7011 $.475/wk or $70/dey. J':, (~85ZCE). hnc•t illf cond, 11keover IMM.
lers S225 957-0498 Magic Island Private •M••na •••fl Ir" mllet. 714-957-8071 * 19' 3201, 4 IP<f, A/C. notNng down '272/mo • · Club. Mutt Mii I<>< •,i,2 --(994XEO) ... Pen• 111 553-0268 72o-048o •
&nlJUHI Mil C..rttn Mll MUST SELL TV, tamps, price or beal o tter. B)' Hour/Dey/Week. Wed· Tr1Utr1t *'80 3201; 5 IP<f, AIC 975-e1170 &45-e757 °' ~~~~~~~!!~
I llY IPPWlm f :atT 100 a;no;y ei;e: :--~~,~~ S48-~873 ~~~~~~rBg,:~ Tr1"1 HM ~~~~ 5 IP<f. s1R :b1 112 ~orectie. 5 IPd. Mus~~E~:"' .J,T~11m
Lee 957.,a133 Ironic lypewrlter word lo\llleeet, aole bed. Solid Moving Sate. Oct 16. 15 Call lot ra1es. Tn.ist Me 26H 173 Cavalter 118Ji:r. (10MH&e5) Ivory w/blk Int, 211d c:ua, aunroof, u1. wetT. lftiipiil!•--... r;;.;.;-.
Litton dbl Ov.n Slov.
procalac)( with display In-Oak; Coffee lbl•. wall 'f.,e53 1h~~·bo1evLery1hlng1. Marine Co. 984-4800 Mll-eontalned. gd cond. *'82 320!; 5 tpd, S/R owner. Ev.tythlng MW Me50. PI P &40-5023 nreal. So:;Oo or' =~
terfecable 11tr11. New unite bar l1ootl din.et " .._ ene, • · p IN 7012 $4500obo53&-e142 (1EVF483) 18500 875-8838,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •
w /m lcrowave $415 cond. 11450/0BO. bdrm. All ml~t. pp' Hun11ngton B ch. ""' II A Serti / *'79320l·41P<f 11Unrool 845-2375 11 offer.MO-l057
559.-0188 .a. 788--4099 912..,.695 &-48-5990 14' win-20 hp Chry&ie(. ate CH (001YPZ) ' .70 911T. LIKE NEW 'M ftl UllfYI '88 Dodge Convt. OOod
Philco SIS 21C!i tt relrlg. ''" It Tea HU NEW Whlrlpool wahr Off white Queen lleec> Sota Wd dck, trlr. gd cond, Part1 Ml S *'79 320!: 4 apd. sunroof. M500/obo M2-o259 .. l11e cono. $925/olr. 531-9397
gold, $125. 946-7682 3 fabb!( kl"ena. 1 Mom. dryer, lreeier, kln.g: $225. 2 ~/brown n-S1800/obo. 844--5785 PAINT XND tidHf BODY (487289) ---~·-----.. lllWJ feri tllt
Recond relrlgl, all u . lull Before Mon. 850·5160 queen ' twin m111 •. ctlllM s 1 each. writing 18 11 Duttleld Bay boel WORK: Save .. &. In· ~~~uJ~fl; All. A/C M '72 ROASCHE 914 '831 OISCOl"MTEDI wrnly. Fr.. del. ~ 873-8041 desk $90. 2 antique lire-$7000 548-9526 eves · creue· your ear'• value ectl. good, nMdl paint. 11111 pm••lft '88 MUSTANG CONVT '-TVJ-.. • .... 17 .... Fr .. to good home Ger-aide ctialra 1126 each · by$1. Blll989-1221 *'83 320t; 5 IP<f, SI R Calf Art, 780-2528 -"-xlnt cond. 15600/olr'.
pr"""' .,..n s-... "" man Shae> Collle ml11 F 5 Pool table.. 1" llete, 4118', 5'x8· PlayhouM 185 you 1981 Bertram 38' Ill, Twin (1F2P975) •7g 911se. 25,000 ml, YllllWlm 873-7085
Relrlg. 1225. Wash-ll'O .. thota. 546-8194 • Oak lll)lth, 4• Tiffany tamp h1ul. 2 Wrought Iron Cat dais, loaded, Im· .t1111r...._T,._,. Hl-1111 Anthrlcltelten, lmmac. Sltf(':E 1053 ,..,..,......,..-------
e</dryer $135 ea. Olah-$600.988-9831 Petlo table• with chalr1 maculele. 1219.500. AreyoudtssaUalledwlthe 2oew.111,SanteAn1 S2l,000.548-9337 ...... Ill ........ '88 Muatang. Maga. 8
wUherS100 648-S848 Germ. Shep. M, Adult, S150 each 831-219 1, RobenV Staalslnc.Bkr service on your oar? CloeedSundey traclc•1•eo,Mln1Cond. =-.,...,...--~·--..,..,..-1 1 good watc h dog. On bed wlspread $75. 780-9206 26' SEARA'f E)ifreu '78, Pleue call & talk 10 us. LARGE SELECTION OF '79 911SC Metlculouaty ~~~~~~~~~I $3500obo,562-0523 ~~~.~~:: 5~309 ~~I =h~1 '!f~4 Pwr Trim 2 HP Edge<, lwn mtll'C crull8<a, 110, We have over lO yra. ell· NEW a USED BMW'SI melnlalned by Poraehe '71 MUSTANG
•orklno v..-y well. 1175 Golden Re1rlevef tamale, 5 chr1135. Olra 775·4669 11mo11new$99 673-7499 xlnl cond, $23.500. sip perlence with British & mech(7an1~c) !:·~28·2 ~ V8, euto, orig. owner. yre greet dl1poslt1on C-5 Marine Dunes N B Cara. Conllnenlel Car -v • I 1900. 9e0-8095 :e-~;~..!:,'1~9 C all 75S-l9l8 ·On sz mattl bo11 aprlnga, Radio Control Gear & Aak'tor Keith. 64l-9292 · Clfnlc 751-8880 •79 911SC Pelrol Qtue ~
··w · xlnt, $120. 548-5318 Planes $250. lnlelllvlelon a W Z0 T low 1........ 1 t ~ ~ '72 PINTO. Runs Good. s w/ce.rtrldgea & Computer 28' Sea Ray rwn eng. Jdnr naln aalt4 to Liit IUll lft 1tge, m ..... 11 I) S950 obo 842-4308
peed Queen Dryer, OOld. hra!lar• HZS Redecorating Sale· Good s200 ••5 2"70 d M I 11 VOLUME SALES cond. s21.soo. 850-ee&9 A • Qd cood. $50. 644-8S42 *•Sola & to~ ... 1. 5nt s1utl at nood prices. ._ • " c: o" u • s e Hlghat cash lmmed. tor ·73 Pinto, runs well ~-~----~~1 •• .., "' $22.000/olr. 752-1034 your venlcle, domet1llc or SERVICE & LEASING '79 911SC Targa, blk/blk, IYt. •ttriala M14 cond, very clean. Brow11 Beige COl~.?Y aola pit Red Fox coat lrom Lon· foreign. 551-8285 3870 N Cherry Ave all option•. 7'• & 8'1, $150/olr 495-5360
LOOki 2 6 :awooa a;at 1onea. Aaklng s 190, l800. r11e 19 Zenith whl don, worth $1500, Mlllor 28' Calllornlall '66. FI B, LONG BEACH $23,000. 833-970<4 dy. •Ill Wlll&'1 '74 MAVERICK. auto, I
F x ~9 1; 551-2708 al18pm. pedeatal remote TV 1500 497-5568. SOI Cruaa<Ser 250hp. fully WE Ill (No Cherry exlt-405) owner 11500. 979--9098
Ing. rom oan1tper 1300. oversized vlnyl Suede Sole 1850 8' Lthr eqp1S111,500760-8677ev ~l • 111-1111 ·79 928, a ll apec. IHTll fencing 1110. Harbor ._. Gel GREEN cash burg. recliner chair $250, couch 1250 Rauan 8Ft Dlngy, wood w/gta.s.s OLW OAll 1 ) equipped, must aell '75 Thuunderbltd, loaded,
RedWood 714/531·1317 lot WHITE .........,anll aecorator cream love-••t Tll,.ll rede-lna Welcome lmmed. Blk wllen llhr, Ollm 82K ml, run• 1tlnt $975 ..._., ... 1 •""". S·-.... 1•2788 Rock• $200. Like new , • ., hp Jotinson outbrd All .• Now <>P8fl Sun 11~ 121,750. 495-3718 891-9355 H1"9 something 10 Mii? with• Cluaffled Ad ......., -°" refrlg $350 Hendron crib motor $375 557-6934 "ILllW••lfl
Clusllled ad1 do II well Call &42-5178 dys, 673-9333 *"" 4 m atcnlng dreuer, Wellc:rafl Sc1tab aa· 1981. Dttau 11'J '79 Por9Ctla 924. pertec;t W ..W. '78 Mustang IU1back, iow
ml, 1 owner. Ill ong. flaw-
.... wnlta body • .ir • .Un·
root, 4 tpd, runs 11Upetb.
S2895.970--0648 THE NEW' APPEAL OF THE SUIT
-SOFT AND SOPHISTICATED
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YOUlll NAME. ADDlllEU. ZIP, t1'Yll HUMIElll, Ill(..
l OOtc RICH. IE THI! CllNT!.111 0 '1 ADMlllA TION In 1 l1bulolu ward
roM ol *'1111 or1C1ntl1 tlla1 rtw Qll atlord to INYI ~ attd ... , SJO to SSOO.
tmd -fo. NEW 1 .. ) PltOMlNENT DESIOND l'ATTlillN
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loid•llr iJ clalaJIJ-jKkco, ••II ll"llloln1, qullh Pattttfti, chant U.00
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011.Unlllt j.cifU, Pllllo"tfl 10 •mt, mK'"1 Sl 00
11' QVIClt 'N' I ASV TlANSl'f!lS Ill~· '" to mbtolde. 0-1111. .. _,,1,..._-11 mulll·lfllllp 1u111ln1 Al , no..~. l'l!Oft. SJ 00
12J IHVll.O'I! PATCHWOU . OVILT .... dlr«tlonf ror •• u11iqw.
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'·
mtac:. Tbl•. etc 499-5788 $50.000 X1n1 cond . '12 20l0z bat. N: piilnt, ~·.:', ~·,:7950. .._ WIU Ill
Sur p r I a e HER f or 7141752-1400 81<1 2320 body 81C. $3800, call ua · •I• Diil!"
Chtlatmu withe megnll· IN Sall ?Ol4 875-2881 an 5 pm. '80 924, loaded, 32,000 Volume8111ea,8ervlce
1c.n1 Tourmaline Mink la, ,73 2~nz rebll ml. anr1. AC. llhr Int. ,_ And LIM6ng
1troller, $1450: or 1 141 Sunltah.1681. beaCf\ '""'' eng, new tlrea, a-..me IN $335 187118Wtt81Vd. '78 Thunderbird. 13800
obo. 775--4125 ,. -•-paln1, uph04. & ahocill. b ,. I 1 500 H nrn -~ beautUul Autumn Haze roller, xlnt cond .550. w5 -• $3300/obo. 549--20t8 mo. or uy • • . u on-...
Stole, $300. 673-1202 850-1774 USEOCARS& TRUCKS 1·585-9798 (11•) 2•2800 '81 E.ac:ort, xlnt cond
TRAIN SET. 450 pieces. 21' Venture w/trlr & lllraa. COME IN OR CALL FOR '1211111 ~ '11111 ..... ---;;iiiiiiMi•--1 In/out, like MW. nu Urea
Mull Miii Wllurn !able 3 $2450 846-8266. 2300 RU UflAllAl. Anume peyrnenta of 11'1•-n imlD .tc. 111 owner. muat ... I.
engtnet a 1011 ot1rack & w. Coast Hwy, NB (In Cormler-0.Llno I 3 3 8 I mo· O AC · -ftl..-n Only S3n5. 676-3508
c•r•. 631-2987 rHr) ---•n (1EOH031) Aaeume peymenll OAC. F-..... ....,,.. LUii a-•a CEL (17Hl08) "' '81 MUSTANG GHIA.
Typewriter wanted. Men· 25' Coronado Shower. 18211 BEACH BLVD. --Llm.-all& Salea,Paru,68erv1ce Am/Fm Slereo, Conaole. ual Hermee or Facll, much more $7500/obo. HUNTINGTON BEACH 111·1111 111•1111 2lOWeatKatelllAve AIC, grM1 cond., $5300.
older model preferred. 845-7425 blwn 4-6pm Ul-tOllf IMl-1111 '75 280Z, 4 tpd, elr, m9111 , Be~Melm~~;>'1 873·5e83
788-4099 (2)HOBIE 14'I WI Plf 11f .W nu llrH. am/Im, wlll ltlla l!Jtt till In Or1lnge '82 ESCORT GU< deluxe
Unl11. Alhlellc club Equt1y Must NII one or both. FH ---••-malnt. IA500.'"4-ee38 'II• lllnlY II W IN1 wgn, ale, en.ii•. r/raclc,
mbr•hlp 1v111. $900 Cullom trallef. 240-8093 ,._. -,.1 ... Tlll ltt 1 only 18K ml .. xlnt cond .. value. Wiii Mii lot $850. ,82 C all 27, dleMI AUi UI• ·• -Xlnll 17,000. 533-4242 Sctrocoo xlnt conO 1$195. o.oe 557-3534 ~r. Porter 2131828-8385 al na . • PllNl/111&11 A1tume peymenta ot Bleupunllt am/Im CIM • 9•u wheel, loaded. 123,000. $113.85 mo. OAC 12500/080. 7 ... 099 ~ •-U11uaed Sola Bed $295, 714-881-0070 2480 Harbor Blvd. (9236). '72UW"c:"'.i.. Very :=!I
Dlnettel150 527 1"""... COSTAMESA LUii•...... Dr'IVCAR\fER WllTW """' N "" ..,.... """" · · '"" L 14*2731 on lraJler. 2 ... 1 ..-.-.,.• --l'L.11 1% A ... I I{/} cond. I 1200/obo. 111 ... Wutt4 IUO aulla Ulman .ulls . __________ 141_1_, N1·1... TY"V 'c_~ Aperaon.i end prOUO IX· T10-4lt
S 1500/obo. 49~ 179 ev. -w•-Y• l'L..Jl...l...J N...l l'-1:. Qltlve VW eoency dedl-~--=..,......,,-----w5 -· ..i I&~ •>IO-AI RO~U .. •11> Cl1td to qu4111ty aervlce, '73 CAPRI. mint cond. WllTEI L.-$800. Going crulllng ILW nu UIJ --111. NIW\'.lfl1 IU<~ •... ,("I()....... apere ~·· and I com-s 1700 obo. 543-38911
mull sell $850. 875-9280 ·-°"" SUHOAYl tM MICROWAVE Auume peymenl• of petlUve Mt.t pre .. n-'1• ~ ....
989-1221al1.8pm L-yellow hull wfllte '2 2 8 I mo , 0 A C 1:.L--•••• talion Of the unlQU8 1181-2272 '':~~~~~~=~ decll nu dolly recing Oller (1E.JHG3") ..... • Volkawegen quality ,,._ Ii 1u10 baiter carry alt b911 'lo 8 b 81 I hldle.. '14 Uncoln C8'>ft, ex.It adcaJ last. 11lnt cond. Joining Nevy LUll.-all& Wagonu :r~ adn!: 108CHALLMAN'S cond. $885. Muet ..... HONDO lea Peui wfcu. mutt Hiii 873·1650. N1·1111 bronze' w/1111 ln1erlo; @ WllTWA91N@ _8_7_3-84Kl __ 1 ____ _
& pedalt . never used 788--4082 evet. '78 280Z. eunrt. M9Qt, '4200 080 873-1955 Ecuf1e Shlr1ee COf1) '81 Grand Marqull, top
$200. 848-2610 l•4tn 11 4 em/tm, 5 apd, xlnl cond. '111 Subaru GLF 5 tpd al Beal OMI. All Weya cond. well mlln1. 1\111 om •• araltart/ Claulc racing aloop, 26' ~"1 Driftl NH 8911-7288 PP. xlot. $5500, 82&-3202 :i; 7800W ... m1Nl81'Blvd. equipped w/all elec:. pwr = .. t 12••. Loa. recent haul-oul. * 80 Bfonco. 2 112. I011 of '80 2008)( Del. Hleflbl(. 2131592-1458 Wa9tmlnet• l oontr*. emttm atereo
---845-6351 Mtrll or Chris extru, exit cond, lmmac Air tter90 lo ml top '82 Sub DL 4 l1•1YW~WllT CMI, ale, cMle oont 7 o10 a: 1, model shape, yeM/blk, am/Im ah ' ssOOo 944 2929 "" wegon, Total Perlormanca VW'a 17950. 961-8924 '°' eppt 750 $950. 2, model 770 SANTANA 525 Real Shatt> cue. pi t. p/b. wide tlt11. ape. . • wheel drive, 18100. COUGAR CONVERTIBLE
$1800 MCh. 751-8191 Mull Mii thll trlld•ln S8800 obo. Muat 1811 '81 DlllWI 280ZX 2+2, 5 073-3115 VW '79 But 7 PUI Konvt. •72 XR7 alnt condl
Oller. Schock 873-2050 lmmedi 850-4295 tPd. T·b., root, blk, llhr f~ Hit icln1 cond, c1tm pnl , 1.4500 nrm.' 533-4242 A:i~f~~~ =~I~. TEST SAIL the new Fatty ~nl,1 o'uollo pw8r5. 110100"!'· I~ RONI w AN lo::nn crpta. panelMlng, em/f\'n 0n::=:ut: fJM seoo 875 Kneel Sull 9.5 al Riddle Tr1tlrt M3t • 1 • . • "'. " "' •vvv c • I I . • t • • • . --., /obo, ·3581 dys Veen•• 87So9137 ALSO 642·5339 eVM/wknda oeo 9e0-3571 flV Of wtmd 17600/080. 850-8427 'fl Cutt:M runa l =· Md~~~ w~~~<>g~~~a~\n'. =•':i.c~~~ta~~ ~: ·~~~u~C::~~f\J~~~::. f tnari llll ·7.8m~~~OBL~J.R6i2t~ v:m11°:'~•r 11~741:.0':0 &::;2:1U: ~:2~~~·
$400/0t>O 494·8029 Vallanl 40, Peterson 44 $2900/obo. &-45-2614 188 Trt~ph (TIUX). cOI-080 951-141 f P.P. mllea. 11850. 548°7249 '19 c SS c
------------------'80 Oat Plctlup 5 ep long lec10f I eond. f«rerl red. UTLA ALAIS Plaan/~.... 1221 ... ,., bed ~1m~tlnl many new btll '°" loP. lmm.c '81 Cellca GT, loaded, xlnt Vtlft t ltl Fully loedecl, T top, xlnl - -S~ l .... 7016 t ' ,.., ,..,.:,II"""' tng I lntr, Ou1alendlng cond. Blet Otfef. Bob I cond., &5000. 842·9055 Wurlitzer lrultwood 1plnel • 811 ru,.., • .,....,. ...,.., In 1 1 '4300/ bo 71418-45-3914 72 Votvo &eden 184E. ,
piano, tuned, 111n1 cond. 1f8 . BOW·ri&I(, m%1, '80 EL CAMINO 94"!'1= 241•8087 o • $1700. Pti 751-31&e 80CU1 .... 8'gm, V8,4 dr.
17&0. 548-9214 btwn ln-G\lt drive, io. hra, 1tln1 Aulo, ale, aunrool. · f•lbwat!L tlU •14 2-dr Md. en, auntoOf. al pwr, etc, .-n..::"' C:.:-
4-7PM cond. $.4000. 851-1&42 Pvt pal1y 833--2264 I •iiiftili ""* ~. 4-apd wlOO. Nu ;;:o,::·1eo..~:r . L;jjjj-=~~~~~~=~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~=~·1'72. 1'1:1 SpyJ; 1~2 con-Choice Of 10. 642·9269 "'" front-I•, clutch, -. ----· ----r verllblt, good cond, flMl pump& thl. l.2759-IO Outlw dlWI, ~ 12.000. t28 Topaz, '83 AacltoP '9Y('lroof Mtcro 873-0231 QPtljM\, rune~. ftew-
e.lbol lei.nd 876-4792 Bua, raatOl'ld claaalc, ,80 V....._ 2•2 ., • ...,. • ie..r 'lllNll body I ten 1n1.
,.
=~,..,.,,..._...,.~· ~--$3000. 642"'269 "'"' '" • r, ... ...,... '" 1)975. 97CMl64a ~5 X 10, AM/FM cw, , cyl, etweo, mud\ mote.
m1g1, au per clu n 73 IJUO -RESTORED Mini OOnd. ~ tanta.. Plze.. ~
l1IOO/obo 831-7149 a.t1er 1Nn MWi S2IOO. tlo. One owrlS. All orig. 'W'WtwblAllllB""'
·11 x11. IClf'I; oonct, iow ""· ~-ti5t ~ Mf7llObO. tJ0.0641 ot i.. oner. eu..a
new rldlMI. X1,., S22llO ... CA.l. LOOK aua 'IO Votto 2i40t... .-..., ·•1 Vllln1 llent. oco. )'20-4S58 wtcdyl I IS&O. &42~fl5t option, 1 O'MIS, MW ,__ 8400. 494 '40tt
l;iiiiijiiiiiii-..--..-.-.1 ·toc,~· no eng, C; Ila:~= 'ff Jli;mOUitl i. >Ont con: 'fl m . 8 i&i. :i;, l'lg • • GOOD Tredel oone. 97o.o841 dltlon. 11100 ........ 100
ar,·oonu .~~S 1 ;~--;, Ntt~AANS . .:~ ... ... ,."' IUI
MM02o Mllctl '300. 15M171 ~ • ... 'h """'"' I civt.10 Id.
•70 CMo 4 IPd 11 •et ~. MolOf A1tum1 peymentt of l"ff. toedld, IUOO/t.c new,~ Mia ';'k,~ oood. nde trene woni. I S 3 I/mo . 0 A 0 . wltdyt 41641tt
V9F/blk. MueU ell thl .. Wll le10/obo, 645-1711 IV C 11HHOOI) 'i 1 OtMCI ,.;ti; 2 ctr
11500/obo, &4""3691 • meg. 111• I II I& lolded, M,000 ml. Jdni ·eo AOCOfd M)Of Int ... iOUAAEllACK, rebtt 111. ,.. con d • ..,. 5 0 0 I 0 t,
concl. aa1C: or o:.r. eng.a1100.a.. .. 2000 ..... t iff 14t""'111'WM-
750.. 1HO; 942·as&O mag ·ee vw Bu•. 01mpet com; 1f1 I ... WWW
180 ~. 5 apo, tm/fl'n 1p1c1111 runt good . 9Mdl'• llM9t ..eacllOn
CH •. ,.unroor, red . SIS&Ototr. Mt-&4T4 or Prt'flou1ly owned
14400. Qr11t oond . 'ii VW luQ. •1100 obo. Porl0"9t. Audia end
14M714 • ~IQl6 Volle....-.,
'H Acclotd 4 Or. Spcl, ale, .. fW.. ·~ P!1 OMe ......,, mutt ..... ~f11, 11CM8U AMl'M, new tW.. ~
,11 CMC Hetdltlec* "' lntt., run• •Int. eo
_,.,, iln4. iitiQ'. l1•H . N0-4188 fl'I. ~ CIWlflld Adi t4Mt71
For Ad. AttiCll
Cll a
Daly Plat
Al).VIS(I
~ 642·5671
'--~~--~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~------------~~~----------~-=-~-"-~~~ _ .. •
I
' J
ORANGI COAST
PEANUTS • featc.Uit1~
, "Good _ol'
Charlie8romn"
~~cl/tit<:-
HEJC:E WE 60, CHAR.LIE BROWN ..• l1LL
~OLD Tl4E BALL, AND YOU COME
RUNNING up· AND KICK IT ...
GARFIELD ®
ODIE, ALL YOU EVER DO
15 5TARE AND 5L000£R
w~o COULD P05S10LY LOVE
A GRtNN,NC:r IDIOT LIKE YOU?
•r
SM e's
GOT
TO SE
. KIDDIN6 !
SUNDAY,OCTOBER1S, 1983
WHAT YOU REALLY MEAN 15, '(OU1LL
PULL THE BALL AWA'( AND I 0LL tAND
ON MY 0ACK AND Kl LL M'r'SELF !
l1M JUST 6LAD '(OU'~E T14E ONLY
i'ERSON IN TME-W.ORLD WMO
T~INK5 l'M DUMB ENOU6~ TO
FALL FOR T~AT TRICK A6AIN •••
_, .. ~-
YOU'RE TOO ~APPY, AND
THAT'5 NOT HE,ALTHY
. .
•
·.
YOUR HDMITOWI DAILY PAPIR
.. SHE MUST
Ti.\i~K l1M .
~EALLY'
DUMB ...
J
by Jim Davis ·
PEOPLE DON'T TRUST
A CHRONICALLY
HAPPY PE.RE>ON
..
-~-~--~-~ - --~~ ·~--~-----~-·-------~-~~~-~-------------,.
NANCY ~
HI, NANCY. WHAT1S
IN THE BOX'?
AND HE'S SO BORED
WITH ALL HIS TOYS
DENNIS THE MENACE
The colors are FANTASTIC' I
just lo\E the trees in A.rtumn!
JUDGE PARKER
•
A
BIRTHDAY
GIFT FOR
ROLLQ THE
R\CH KlD ·
\T MUST HAVE
BEEN A TOUGH
JOB FINDING A
GIFT FOR HIM
I ' IT WASNT EASY ----
HE'? GOT EVERYTHING
by Hank Ketcham
by Harold Ledoux
'
YOU .JUST ARRIVED HERE! WHAT
MADE YOU DECIDE TO GO BACK
: HOME TOMORROW, MOTHER?
I JUST FEEL THAT I'M IN THE NOMAN
COULD BE
SO KINDiO
DO YOU KNOW
WHY? HE ISN'T......,.~
MARRIED TO YOU!
. .
I REMEMBER THAT DAD
WAS THE SAME WAY! HE
WAS CHARMlN6 TO ALL
WOMEN ... EXCEPT YOUf
WAY, WHAT WlTH YOUR
PROBLEMS., DARLING!
• #
MEAS YOUR HUSBAND
HAS BEEN,
SHEILA!
MEANWHILE, DOWNSTAIRS RAYMOND? THIS IS I DON'T THINK SO., ABBEY! SHE
ABBEY SPENCER~ I WENT TO BED SHORTLY AFTER
HOPE I'M NOT CALLING MOTHER OLlVER AND I f: . -:
TOO LATE! IS SHElLA RETURNED FROM DINNER!
STILL AWAKE?
• ;
------------------~
... . ..
Ot<J¥.,> I fl) MAl(BE WESTV f E(}J
HIGH ~AS NEVER WON A FOOTBC\Lk.
GAME! THAT '5 ALk:1l4E MORE
~A 50Nif FOR 1HEM 110 .HAVE A
"I 5f.fJ L..I KE ME .
MOON MULLINS,.
•
·~ ~-
No, W~ SUBSCRIBE To
100 MANY MAGAZINES
ALREADY .. No ... No ...
NONE o~ THEM··· Nof
DOCTOR SMOCK r~
**
- -- ------- ---· ---- --- --------------. ' "" -------------.__,,.---
..
! ~MSOk.ll.E mA-r
' INOOIVlliABLE 5PlRrr
1fiAI cARRI E5 O~ IN
SPITE OF A'-1. OD[)9 !
I KNOW WHAi 40<iRE.
ProBABkQ 'THINKING !
A SPIRIT 1HAI NEVER GIVES
UP IN 114E FACE OF OVER.-"
WHE.k.M ING ADVER51T£.> AND
1}f Al sTRU&&LES O~ EVEN
WHEN A LL HOPE IS GONE !
1HA1'5 OJHA1 Ml.i JOB .--....
15 AL.k ABOUT f
..
QOO 11-flNK 1HAI BEi~
A MA5Wf FOR lHE
W£SfVIEW Hl&H SC.HOOL
FIGl-tftNG fl.APEGOA'TO /5 A PRET"l'Q HUMI l..IAll NG7
3>B ! --
BESIDE$ WHERE ELSE.
CAN A GOM MAKE 1HIS KIND OF MONEQ~ · .
by Ferd and Torn Johnson
No; ·"NOT INTERESTEP
IN LAkEFRONT PROPERTY.
NO. No,NOJ AT ALL --,...___, ...----~-NO.'
YES ... 'fEs .. . . . . YES ... of< .. .
YEs .. .
Yt:s .. .
you CAN
SURE' TE:LL .
WJ.IEN EMMY
CALLS ...
.. ... ·! .. • .
·:· . ..
by George Lemont
~i. .,~
eveN -rHOU<SH He WAS 'W,
GROSSING oveR FIVE=
GRANP A we.BK!
-rHeRe
IS NO
Nl!"f"!
"THE= <SROSS ~ L.-1 Ke, eu.,-.:r: PO HAVES A
GUeS"TION ..•
AN p You 't,..t,,
HAVE! YOUR
ANSWSR IN
A MOMSN.,.../
Ct...IME!:I IN!
AN 1 :X: 'p
SAY, .,-He
O'c:'PS OF
MY COMING
POWN NeAR . SOME!! L-l't,,
KIP W1-rH
A HUcSf!
CA-rCHl!R'S
<9 &...o\11!!! A.Al!
A&..Mos-r
NI&-./
,.. _____________ .._ ___________ ._..~--------------------------~~-----,-~~~----~----------
,
·. ::---------..
. ·-
~~
r)_ El~_..-.------,,
I •
EXPRESS U:mR
FOR WINKV-ftt)
FRUMP!
Go ""TELL
Pa-llL LUNC~
15
!<EADY I
-
N~ ..
. .
! .•
>
L-t=~R FOR WINKV·POO
FRUMP.-IS 11-tAI VOi),
~~JUVGE?
I SU66E:Sf'«:>O 6~AWAY
FOR A COUPL..f: OF WEE=KS.
----~___..._._ ___ .__
-...
'
---·-·----------- ---. .
~N YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? n.r. .,.. •t IH1t 1lx differ·
erices In dr•wt"11 Mt•ll1•1MtwMn top •nd bottom ia-nel1. How
qvidtly CH Yh find tMm? O.Cll •Mwen wtttt ..... below.
J .. A>'4\ \I tJl'4S • 6u1H tW It 6n1t S p.tAOW I I
&,.. PMSOJ) , ,a.o,,..., "' id•.JO c '.a."°"' u WJW ' 6u1u1w , • .AO.u1w t s.a>ua.>au1.o
~uni-rWhir~
~ ® --------by Hal Kaufman-------
• ON iTAGEI Insert missl"11 Mmes to complete the titles of these celebr•ted
Bro.dw•Y shows : 1. '1 Irish Rose. 2. Follies. 3. '1
DEMONSTRATE
MAGIC TOUGH
Place a small coin
(cent or dime) on the
bare surface of a
smooth table. about
two inches from the
edge. Challenge a
bystander to remove
the coin from the table
without touching !t.
How it's done: Simp-
ly place one hand palm
upward at the table's
edge. Bend your head
down over the coin so
that your lips are
behind it and only a
short distance away.
Blow sharply against
the edge of the coin
and it will slide easily
over the smooth sur·
face into your hand.
Sc.net.ls. 4. 's R•lndow. s. 's Aunt.
AMwerqulcllly. ~
• • .A .. J"'l:l S 1,11••110.:1 ' •.•otllM "6~ t P1•16•tl ~·'I ~
• Som Age! Five years ago. I wH five times as old ""
as young Tim . Today I am. three times as old. Ten
years from nCNtt, I 'll be twice as old. HCNtt old •m I
n<NI? No fair peeking below. ..-. "wiJ. :.Ap1111w•1
• Foot Hotel p.,t of • foot with judgment -
tr•MPOM• •nd the •nswer you'll Hod r19ht under
yeur nose. In other words, change one· word Into
•nother. What word? u111>0114>u• e6u ... :>
• Nature Study! Why Is II easy for snakes lo dance?
They have writhe·m. What fish is ready for bed? The
pajama-head shark.
SEA, HERE! Whatanyoudr•w to complete theunderw•ter
scene •bover To find out. add tines 1 to 2 to 3, etc.
•
TIME OUTI Apply colon nHfly to this hiking scene: 1-Red.
2-Lt. blue. 3-Yellow. 4-lt. brown. S-Flesh. 6-lt. green. 7-Dll.
brown. 1-Dll. green. •-~roon. 10-Dll. purple. 11-Gr•y. •
SPELLBINDE&
ICOlll 10.potnts for "''"' •It the letteN kJ the word bttow to form
two~words: .
PINTACl:I ~ . -..... .. . -. .
.,· TlllM ..,_ 2 polftts ..,_ for ell
.... of four ....... Of mor.· .....................
Try .. Mlr9atleMtlt......_ ,..., . .....,,_._......_
~-----
For Better or For Worse by L.ynn Johnston
·' l'M GOING SHOPPING,
Llt-2\E . Do You
WANT 10 COME?
t• '•
8HROG-
~ /
')OU CftN E.\tH~R COME.
SHOPPING-
WllH ME-
OR51P.Y
HoMe.WrrH
DADDY
'
\'M LEAVING-NO..U,
EL\'Z.f\BE:frl . ARe: )tX)
SURE. You'Re NOi
COMING?
\
-
-------------------------------~-----------________________________________ ..
. \JtL.\.. ~ 1 !>E.E.
~OMf.O~f.' !> 5£t.N 10
1HE ~u~MAAKE. \ ~
OAO,
'IOU
Rf-AL\..~ !>"OUL0~1I~
SHOE
<
.
'f OU Re.At..t.'I
~~ou~o~rr "~"~
\"'A\ !>OOA t'OP,
OAO.
1.' M "f Kf. f A\\-\f.R. ANO
'iOO'Rf. 1'Mf: l~\ t.O, ANO
li.t\~N oo.l'1 1'f.L.L.
1'"'£.tR fA1'\.\f.R!> \LJ~AT
1'"£,~ ~"OUL.ON' 1'
DO t . .
? .
MEL.MET, ...
PAC'PePCUIN
~'TJAV. ..
t \(NOW All. A6ou\ T~f. 5u&AR.
ANO AR"f1f1GIAL. lOL.Of<lt'll<:r,
801 rf'!> OKA'/.
tJORMAN ~Pf'fO
1\\f. 6ROCE.R1E?, ANO
M:l\Of.N1AU.'4 K\C.KEO
1'~A1' CAtJ Acr<o~5
1'~E f'ARK1t-!C, L.Of.
r.
by Gus Arriola
by Jeff MacNelly
' J,
1'
J
..
------- --.---I - ---..
Daily Pilat
.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to YOUI Health .
..
I • I
I
WUI'• tbe flnl thlDa you
do wbea )'Oil dedlle to
lmpenonate aomeone?
-G.O., Meea. Artz.
I begin by studying the char-
acter from a physicaJ aspect,
as weU as a vocal one. I notice
how he moves, what he does
with his hands, make note of
any pet phrases or manner-
isms and absorb his personali-
ty. It's impossible to mimic
someone just by listening to
him speak or sing. By watch-
ing you'll always find some
new gimmick, like the way
Johnny Carson scratches his
head. After watching; digest-
ing and memorizing, I make a
recordinj of my impression.
I Then I play it back. listen, co~
~ rect any imperfections and
I make another tape.
l
I
I
1 llllL ••
I How '911 you ,et lntereet-j eel Ill -'c.-1 -C.IC., Van-
t eoanr, WMb. When I wu In grade school,
my father -then a bassoonist
for the MetropOlitan Opera -bmuAht home a recording of
FJla l'itz8erald si~ins songs
by George Gershwtn to play
on our brand-new hi.ft . As we
1 played the record for the first
time, 1 bKa.me enchanted
, With lhe musk and al90 with
~l'&e Gershwin and FJla
Fi~. In fact, I usually
start my concerts by saying,
"I'd Uke to pay tribute now to
the men mo.a raponsible tor
my love of mUJk." Then I
launch Into a Oeoree Oersh-
wln medley.
Jan• S«ymour will ~ redoublif18 her ttrons on 1ta1f and ICrf!lm. . ar.•1111 •• ,. WTOllS
LOS ANGELES -With the
new TV season barely begun,
the networks are already pre-
paring to add some seasoning
to their schedules: ABC's
greatest brainstorm is to
replace its first loser with Blue
Thuf]ckr. based on the big-
screen hit about the L<ls
Angeles Police Department's
super-helicopter squad. NBC.
meanwhile. will be prepared to
tackle a problematic program
with Doublt Trouble, a situa-
tion a>medy now in produc·
tlon about twin teen-aee girls
who work very hard at being
as different from each other as
they can be .... And speaking
of sisters. Jane Seymoar will
be doubly visible in tile cbm-
lng months: She'll be playing
i~tical twins -one of them
a cool murderess -in an
ABC remake of the 1946
psychologkal melodrama~
Darlt. Mtrror (Olhla de
Hntlmd staned in the
original). Seymour will also be
spied portraying Mata Harl for
ABC and on the bl& screen
with 1bm Wieck In ltlssl1tr.
She aays she's glad to be able
to work In both mm and
television: "I rather like
the catter I twve. rm one of
the lucky ones because no one
has J¥ooholed me." ... The ~a....---(the
first person to win back-to-
back Oscars. for her acting in
The Creal Ziegfeld and The
Good Earth, 1936 and 1937)
will be working in L<ls An-
geles for the first lime in 38
years. Rainer will do a drama-
tic reading of Tunnyson's
poem Enoclt Arden here in
October. She11 also guest star
in a love Boat episOde.
Rainer sar,s sbe adores Los
Angeles: · I love the weather,
the vitality, the industry. But I
have a husband and have
been married for 38 years,
and he prefers to live in Switz-
erland. Switzerland is para·
dlse, but I've discovered para-
dise can be ooring. I always
thouaht I wai a country girt,
but rve discovered that I'm
really a city slicker." .. , •....-· ae. _. insists it's true thal he will make no
more movies, but the 65-year-
old director is far from retired.
He simply appears to be shift-
ing the focus of his career.
He'll be directing a television
any dietaJy guidelines. He
consumes a pint of ice cream
a day, topped with candy.
-Anita Summer
body, but he wasn 't prfued
with the way the September
rover of Tht Washingtonian
magazi~ shaped up. Waller
says he thought he modeled
for the cover to promote
physkll fitness. When he saw
his well-Qlled p~ue beside the headline " Bodies,"
however, he apparently had a nt and threatened to stop
publlc:atlon of 11\e issue. But
the Irate lawyer and The
Woshlnstonian chairman of
the board PMllp. Mirrlll rvanaaed to work thltlp out
when Merrill offered Waller a
dinner tor two a Le Pavilion.
Weshln1on's choicest and
moll expensive restaurant.
-Kothl«n Maxo andJaM~
I
I
SEAN .
CONNERY
SHOOTS FROM THE HIP
BY ROBERT WARD
S ean Connery Is s1u1na
beneath pink blot.toms on the
terr.ace of the fabulous
M.a.rbeUa Oub all atwitter
wtth birds and chipmunks ln the biue-
plnk twtlllht of Ma.rbella. Soaln. Hd
domn't loolt much like.James bond !Ult
now, mcxe like the bakllng. wortdly 1V ~ he played In the dls.attrous
Wlotlf Is RltlN. He doean~ have on his
toupee. and' hi.a hair, which h-. been
thlnnfna for 20 years. has these little
wilpl tha& blow ln the warm Mediterra-
nean bfee:ze. AJ 53. he still h11 the
fabulous~ jaw thouafl, and oe>
clllionaJ a.hes of the killer 8onctian
eyes, t>..a -IMhtully, you muld eMily
mi.ate him '°' Jutt another one of the
rich internationals sucking on melon
and~· · ng cappuccino during another
bori a ln paradise.
"O . ~at new biography written
about me," he says, referring 10 the
book by Aeet Street editor Kenneth
Passingham, "I mean. he calls the first
chapter 'Big Tammy' and makes it
sound like I was some character out of
Studs Lonigan. The truth is, I was
always a little b(g. but I wasn't any
giant running amok .... "
Connery's eyes dart nervously away
from my own. He's friendJy, but hardly
relaxed, and there is a kind or bored.
disengaged quality to his voice.
"Speaking of that bio," I say, trying to
strike up a little rapport, "I think he
says you slept in a drawer. Sounds very
show bizzy -'I was born in a trunk'
and all that... .
Connery rolls his eyes. shakes his
great head.
"l know. That's a nice story but it's
not true. There are quite a few things
not true in Passingham's book. The
whole thing is depressing."
There is a long silence. Connery is
not enPYing this at all, and I recall the
''II you wrllJe a llCrlpt
shoU1lng me aa a male
chamJlnlllt pig and it'•
good, ru act 1n 11."
words of Denise Breton, Connery's
sleepy-eyed Ftench P.R. lady who told
me, ''Sean has too many things on his
mind to spend much time with )our·
nalists. He is a very private man."
"Great," I told her, a bit annoyed
about having had my time with him
cut in half. "He should have remained
a cotftn polisher."
''You are'° Insensitive," Breton said.
''Sean i.s an artist"
Who knows. maybe she's fi&ht.
Given the standanb that apply to male
superstars today -col\sider Sytvester
Stallone, John 'l~ta. David Bowie
-hell, maybe Coonety is the
Prince of Players. C.ertainly, u his new
film Ntwr Say Ntwr Asoin illustrates.
he's the best James BOnd ever to drive
an Aslon Martin. Roger Moore is about
u deadly and 1eXY u ~Welk.
His adion ~ ln Octopcmy pro-
voked howts of laughter trOm the au-
dience thll I a.aw It with In New York
Clty. Connery, who returns ln his sixth
001 ftJm llter a 12-ye.ar abeenc::e from
the role, hu always given the impra-
lk>l'I thll, (livUl half • ch.aoo!, he muld
act. We're not talking Albert ftnney or
Richard Burton or f>eter O'lbolf), but If
you catJ8ht Connery In Sidney lumet's
UtdHeen (.and llttle-undmlood) ~
Hill (1965) °' John Hldton'1 ~ Mon
~ MOuld 8t Kin, (1975), then II
tomethlna there. IOfnethfna •nauJar
and surprising. Even if you look dosefy
at his Bond films. you can see a dead·
on realism. Wh.en Bond fights Robert
Shaw in the famous train battle in
From Russia With love (1963), he ac·
rually looks afraid sometimes. like he
might not be as invincible as he
pretends to be. _
"That's my training," Connery says.
"I came from a very tough slum In
Scolwnan 007~ llOll pne t. on a par
with h& ~fonnlns. ..
Edinbw&h. and if you aoc .a fty up your
nme a.bout !'Omethlng, you might have
to ftght. I tried to get realism into those
Bond flshts. I don't care who you are.
any fight ls scary.'' B
When Connery delivers this llne1 j
thett is none of the James Bona
bravado. It ls said in a modest, almost
apologetic way, and I begin to under·
stand that, in Connery's cue. "a .very
private man" ls not a P.R. penon's
euphemism for Inarticulate or stupid.
One semes a tough modesty behind
Connery's unease. Ptr~lt ls a modesty born of his raw nninp In that Edinburgh slum
-the Uy lived in a two-room ftat,
and C.0000)''1 fath«, .loleph, worked
In a rubber factory -hardly the kind
of environment In which you would ex·
ped to ftnd ~ 007. But Con'nery doeln' -.endffieritaliiie hla pall.
"I'm not uytna .It wun' to~ It
WU. But I went to qukl I ~ iChool
-eYef\ If It was by aCddent -the only .
good school in the area."
Connery doesn't think of his youthful
years as rebellious. "I did a lot of jobs
-drove a truck, delivered milk and
even did s6me time polishing coffins.
Eventually I joined the Navy for a
3-year stint. I thought I was enjoying it,
but I ~ a terrible duodenal ulcer and
was discharQed. It made me realize that
there were ~rces working inside that I
didn't understand."
After getting out of the service, Con-
.. nery continued his odd jobs, but also
devoted a lot of time to body building,
eventuallY. entering the Mr. Universe
contest as~r. Scotland. He didn't win,
but he did find out from other con-
testants that the Theatre Royal on Lon-
don 's Drury Lane was running chorus-
boy auditions for a production of South
Pacific. Connery won himself a part,
and after touring through England and
Scotland. he eventually got a break
when Jack P~ had to back out of a
BBC production of Rod Setiing's R~
quiem !or a Heavywejsht (1956i Con-
nery won the part of the heavyweight
Mountain McUntock, and the day alter
the telec~. he was on his way to
becoming a star.
Now, talking about that era. Connery
stiJI sh udders a little.
"Of course, it was extremely exciting.
Live television was crazy. I remember
6ne time Robert Shaw and I were in a
play where we had to bail out of a
plane t()Rether. Well , he fixed my straps
so that T fell out and Just hung there
and got all tangled up -and I panicked.
It was embarrassing, so I told him to
come down and deal with me .... He
wouldn 't. But after we got that
straightened out. we became good
friends. I think It was Spanish brandy
that killed him. He was a great
storyteller, though,~ fun."
One might expect a sadness in Con-
nery's tone, a nostalgia, but aQ&ln there
is a curious documentaty styie to his
deJlvery, neither false!r. sentimental
nor overly harsh. It's as 1f he's recount·
lng his life -the triumphs and heart·
breaks -with a rare detachment.
"It wu a year or so later thal I started
the Bond films. I don't think Ian Aem-in& had me - a wortcJn&<Jm Soot -
In mind for agent 007. BUt he came to
appreciate me. I th.Ink he said that at
ftrsl he couldn't iJna8ine me as Bond,
but later he always thoUQht of me as
Bond."
"So many people wrote spy novels.
Why did Bond catch onr· I uk.
"Frank.ty. I think it was because of
flemi~'• iffi18ination. He wa1 a greal
joumallll. He knew the perticularities
ol thlnQa. He made It real. That's
lllWl)'t 6een my approach. too. lt"'s fan·
tuy,. but you tr)'. to make It re.ti."
"What about Roger Moore's lnterpre-
tlUon(
Connery doesn't hesitate~
"Rofltr makes other cho6ca. He
playt i "8flter. It'• been IUOOelltul. and
what's wron& wtth that? It'• a job."
Connery smiles and shakes his head.
"It's like the feminists in your roun-
try. They all get confused about the ac·
tor's part. For a while Germaine Greer,
who is a brilliant and witty writer, and
Erica Jong were criticizing me for play-
ing Bond. I think they were confusina
me with the part. I told them, 'Hey, 11
you want to write a script shdwing me
as a male chauvinist pis. go ahead,
write it, and if it's good, 111 act in ii.' I
I'm a secretive man, and by the same
token, as an actor I ask one thing: ls
the part any good?"
Connery sll)iles, and suddenly his
role switches from the honest,
working<lass Scot to the sophisticated,
amoral European.
'Well," I say, "it's undoubtedly true
thal we are too moralistic in our coun-
try. but on the other hand. you have
promoted an lmase of yoursetf that
inju7 or is being incttdibly vicious.
But think it should work both ways,
mind you. And I'm not talking about a
hit that would really break something.
But I expect a kind of constancy. I think
that's the most important thing in any
relationship ...
Connery smiles at a middJe.aged
woman s.tting nearby who has on a
pair of maximum sunglasses. the kind
that obscure even her upper lip.
"My 90n adores you. Could I have i
your aut08faph for himr' z
"You don't want it. ehr' Connery ) asks • The woman blushes and Connery j
gradou.sly goes over to her table and
signs her napkin. Mer a brief chat. he
returns.
"You were married to Diane alento,
who many people thought could have
been, and was, a great·actres.s," I say. ·was that a· painful relationship?"
"She's immensely talented," he says.
"Her whole family was talented .... I
don't keep in touch with her, except
through our son, Jason. She's a
brilliant, talented person, though."
There is a kind of awe in his voice.
~'/""' the netD Bond lllm
bemtrw I lllred the «rlpt
anti bf'JI. mue I mlcred the
old boy In «Nne may&,,
perhaps still the voice of a workifl8-
da.1s boy who doesn't quite belong.
'Whal of your new wife?"
"Her name Is Micheline Roque-
brune, and she's French and an art·
lst." He shows me a phOcostat ·black
and white reprint of a Plintin& she did
of him with lour eyes. Ver; Dal~.
"I can't look at it," he saya.-~·lt1i-a
joke."
There is some doubt In hls voice,
some wlnerabillty, and there ls
IOmethinS quite appealing about It,
IOlnelhlng aentle and human, that he
bcralionaJly aets Into James Bond. For
some reason, I think of ~ QWJt
GcDby. Poor boy at the party.
Connety rubs hi.a chin and smiles.
There II a warmth In hls tmile that I
have never seen In his 61ms. J
"I met my wife on the golf COUl'le.
We both &<we ~f so much. You know J what I realty believe about golf?"
'Wh11'1 th•r·
"lt ouaht to be ll\ll\dlloty ln ~
9Chool."
"Of c:oune," 1 uy, amt!':.
Connery shakes hit .
''\bu tee, it's the only tpOrt, the onty
one that t~ 10'1 thlt whal )'OU
chell, you're~ younelf. '1btJ tee
whit t me.nr
"Wei. not~ -..
"BeclM• it't the only one 1'l'1 Niiiy
do llone. Thlt'I' why. See?"
P111taXWlllLr·~ 11• 1• 5
AANCONNlllY
Connery taps his finger on the table
and begins to shruA his shoulders, sud·
denly looking less 1ike the cool, impec-
cable Bond and more like a wired and
nervous method actor.
"I remembef' a picture taken of you
in a clinic in Oslo in the 60's." I say. "I
think it wa.s after >bu Only Live Twia
(1967). You were all hunched over and
looked tike you were in excrucialing
pain. walking in a grove of trees. The
acoompanying article said you were in
the hands of a Dr. Ola Rakne, a student
of Dr. Walhelm Reich, and that you had
suffered an identity crisis due to the
Bond films, people expecting you lo be
superhuman and whatnoc. And yet
here you are playing Bond again."
Connery shakes his head and smiles:
"First of all. I have always read
everything. You can chalk ii up lo my
poor background or whatever you like.
but I read Wolfe and Hardy and
Shakespeare and Joyce and Jung and
Reich -anything I oould set my hands
on. It was the 60's. Millions of people
were interested in Reich's teachings. so
1 went lo see Rakne because I was
fascinated by her writings about Reich
-you · know. his annored-Oody
theories and all that. A photographer
took a picture al me getting out of the
car. cropped out the car and put trees
in. The car was too small for me , so I
looked all hunched over.11Jimacing ...
and people thought it ~as because 1
was in mental anguish. It was
ridiculous! The Bond films made me
wealthy and famous. and I love doing
them. I don't pretend they're the ar·
tistic challe.nge ol The Hill, or a pidure
a.bout a child molestor I did with Lumet
called The Offmce. which few people
saw. But you team to stretch what you
-:an wilhm the genre. I did the new
&nd film because I liked the script.
because I had casting approval and
because I.missed the old boy in some
ways. I brougbt new things to Never
Say Nt!Uer Again. I didn't plan on let-
ting my audience down."
fhis month, Connery returns to the ·
screen in the role he once said he'd
never play again. And with him. in true
Bcndian style, aie Barbara C-amn as
the stni.sler Fatima Blush, a SPEcrRE
assa.Wn who pursues Bond halfway
around the world; Max von Sydow.
another evil villain; Edward Fox as
"M," Bond's boss; Kim Basinger as the
focus of Bond's romantic interest and
the naive mistress of Larae>. 007's arch
~~ is played by Klaus Maria
"It's a terrif\c Bond film," says Con·
nery. He smiles, obviously plea,,ed with
hhnlelf. ~ .
But he's also fidaet.ing, anxious to~
out to the aolf lln~.
"Usten." I say as we slta.ke hands
and , part, '"rou've had · the most
beau'tilul women 1n the world as your
leading ladies. Ursula Andress and
Honor Blackman and Lesley-Anne
Down and Candice Bergen. The list
goes on and on. Who do you think was
the most 91eX'fl'' Conneiy smiles, that flash ol warmth
one rarefy lftS.
"Of all ol them. rd have to say the
sexiest and most lovely was my CD-Star
ln TM Man Who Would be Kirw -by
far, Michael Caine."
He winks at rM and turns and Walks
away toward the green hills
beyond. IW ·
& , Am.Y Wlllll.Y. OCT'09D •••••
..
CAN BASHFUL
TYPF.s BE
THEUFE
OF THE PARTY?
By John E. Gibson
TRUE OR f Al.SE?
1. Most shy people daim to errjoy be-
ing bashful.
2. Shy people are inhibited around
friends as well as strangers.
3. Women tend to be more shy than
men.
4. Shy people think about themselves
constantly and tend to neglect the
world around them.
5. Shy people don't know how to ex-
press t~oughts. -
ANS~
1. False. More than 40 percent of the
~ndents in Florida International
University studies consider themselves
shy; and although some of them say
they've learned to live with the condi-
tion, most confess that they do not en-
joy being shy. Ninety percent of those
claiming to have overcome shyness
also admit that they were once op-
pressed by the condition, especially in
their youth. And more than half of the
shy adults and children in the study ad-
mitted that they would like 'help in
overcom ing the problem.
2. Fal~. Many people are extremely
embarra$Sed when strangers watch
them. especially when they are in awk-
W>fd situations or attempting some-
• thing for the first time. according to
University of London researchers. But
with trlends, a shy person is less in-
hibited because he has the opportunity
to explain the situation. whereas this
opportunity may never arise with a
stranger.
S. False. Although studies indicate that
adolescent girls tend to be more 1hy
than boys. as adults men are generally
more shy than women. according to a
Stank>rd University study. Especially in
male-female encounters where the
man ls expected to take the initiative.
interaction is more dllfkult for shy men
than tor shy women . WhUe shy women
nod their heads and smile more in
these encounters, shy men tend to talk
and gaze at the women less and try to
avoid any eye contact.
4. 7hle. Studies at the University of
Dayton and Kent State University lndl·
cate that there Is a great deal of seU-
conaclousness that goes hand In hand
with shyness, .and It diverts a shy per·
900'5 attention away from his environ-
ment and soclal slruaUons, focusing In
on hl~lf and what people are thrnJ<.
F N&YWfDJ,.Y • OC'T'Ola ... ,.., 7
ing and saying about him.
5. True. Shy peopl~ says Gerald M.
Phillips. Ph.D .. professor or speech com-
munication at Pennsylvania State Uni·
versity, are constantly frustrated because
· they cannot say what they need to.
Their problem does not stem from any
charac:rer ftaw -they simply have not
learned how to talk well enough with
others. and they may have deci that
it is not worth the effort. Althoogh some
people are more verbally talented than
others, says Dt Phillips, everyone can
learn. if they apply themselves, the
basic skill ol talking with people. fW
i vnacoMm--f AJAl·Fll.... I
LOVE ADDICTS:
WHEN ROMANCE TURNS
DANGEROUS .
By Stephani Cook
S ometimes
what OP;
pears to~
a passion-
Ole love for another
person is aaually an unhealthy ad-
dktion. accorcfinf to Howard M. Ha].
pmr, Ph.D.. o col-Dr. u..-..
umnist and author · • ....,...... ..
of the reant book How to Break Your
Addiction to a Person (McGraw-Hill).
Such attachments. says Dr. Halpern.
01T de:slrudlue both to the Individuals
lnoolued and to posslbilfties for a gen-
uine rrlationship. ~ tallled with Dr.
.. Halpem about what constitutes a love
addiction, the sJsns by wltkh one can
m:ogniu the condition and tht causes
ol ~ng hooked on low.
~I C0oot ii th« aulhor of He.t11riy Sex
1 • And IC.eePnc • TM Way (Simon and Sch.,,_ ,.,,,,,~
8 , AMl.V Wwr.u • ocroeD ••• IN>
Q: Dr. Halpern. you distinguish be-
tween true love and addid.lon by point-
ins out that love must be a free choice,
and that free choice Is precisely what
an addiction does not Include. What
are the sisn_s of a love addiction?
A: The main sign is Its compulsive
nature, the feeling of desperation, of
beins driven to aHachment to the love
object: "I can't live without him (or J
her)" beoo~ a literal statement in an r
addiction. -' Q: But doesn't passionate love involve
the· same feeling? . .
A: It Is Important to reaJlze that power-
ful feelin~ are not enouah. No one
could say that John Hinckley Jr. was
truly In love with Jodie Foster. because
there was no real caring. No matter
how intenJe his feel lnlJ, It wasn't based
on anythlns real. This Is typical of ad-
diction, to love the image rather than
the reality. Q: What e1'e does an addiction in-
votve?
A: Panic ... when the peoon even
lhinlts about ending It. The Individual
intends to break up, and then the panic
takes over and he or she can't do it.
A third sign that's very clear is when
one does take steps to end an 'addictive
reJationship, there are real withdrawal
symptoms: sleep and eating disorders,
the shakes, confusion, weeping. Unfor-
tunately, this often leads the "addict" to
try to reconnect: If he or she stayed
away lortf enough, the symptoms
would eventually play themselves
out ... and then there would be the
feeling of liberation. or triumph; that is
the fourt h indication of what was an
addictive relationship. Q: This sounds like what happens in
lots of relationships.
A: That's true. Many relationships do
have an addictive element. but if the
other thinss are s<>OO. I wouldn't be too
concerned. There is so much now-
adays of "If it doesn't feel s<>OO. who
needs itr' Relationships are precious
and do take work ... and addktlve ele-
ments can be modified. The thing is to
recognize whether they are just limit-
ing or outright destructive.
Q: What do you call destructive?
Where do you draw the line?
A: Destructive is when you want out
and just can't make It. I see people who
~ in horrible relationships. The best
exampje might be the battered wife
who knows that her lire may be in
danger and yec keeps hanging in there.
Q: When do we stop trying to make it
work? So often we ere urged to keep at
it.
A: You stop tryins when you have ob-
jective evidence that nothing is really
changing. The othei person may OOI
even express a desire to cha,nee. U
there is no ftexibility to move in the
direction you'd like, then you have to
recognize the addictive nature of the at·
tachment. A sood example is a person
in love with someone who is married.
who promises and promises but makes
no moves to leave the spouse. You
have to look at the real evidence and not live on false hopes. Q: ls this what you call "attachment
hunger''?
A: Yes, and this is the key to the addic-
tion, because the addictive element is
not in the other person -or in a sub-
stance. like alcohol or drugs -the
addictive element is within the addict.
Addicts feel inner emptiness and in-
completeness, insecurity and anxiety,
and then look for that one thing that
will make it all better. And frequently,
in the case of love addictions. the
fascination is with the task itself of
making an unlovins person loving, an
ungiving person IJiving: If that person
turns around finally and says "I love
you," the addict loses all interest. The
,task is completed. f'eoJ>'e have to
recognize that the mue is not the rela-
tionship with thispc:uticuJar_P-Crson and
look within thertlllelves. M
J\DISHTHAT
DESERVFB
TOBE SERVED •
By Marilyn Hansen
f you're ~ on pies, cookies and
other sugary•treats, you'll warm up to
Old Fashioned Desserts by Richard Sax,
a newfy published cook.book in the
~ American Cooking School series.
Sax is author of the recent best seller
Cooking Great Meals
Every Day (Random
House), has worked as
director of test kitchens 0 tor Food and ~ne -i
magazjne and currently ~
writes a monthly col-!
umn ror Cuisine maga-K __ __, zine. "I found this book i
/&hard Sax a joy to work on." he
$ays. "Desserts have an automatic appeal
for people. People just love them."
So srart a tradition in your kitchen with
this de!icious recipe from Old Fashioned
Desserts. If you have questions about
your PostaJ Service. you're not
alone. With all the services we
offer. things can get a little con·
fosing. So we'd like to eitplain
just what we can do for you.
for example. what if you
want to mail something you
consider Irreplaceable? Send it
we·d like you to meet a friend-
your carrier. Because
now your Postal
Service is panici-
pating in a program
designed just to help
: people like you: Carrier
Alert. Linder the Carrier
Alert Program. local sponsoring
agencies, such as the Red Cross
or United Way, will infonn the
.Postal Service of senior
or handicapped citizens
who would like to
r~ceive specia attention
from their mail carriers
Once notified. ma.ii
carriel"S will watch the panlci·
pants' homes carefully for
a ccumulated mail, which might
indicate sickness or injury.
So call your local Red Cross
or United Way about the new
Carrier Alert Program
by regis1ered mall. to provide ---.Lj(IJ
make
your
neighbor-
hood a
nicer
place
protection against lo$$ or
damage. Whatever item .
you reglsler will -~---..
be closely
monitored from
point of mailing
to point of delivery. and
you'll receive a mailing receipl.
You can also purchase opttonal
postal IMurance worth up to
$25.000 for the actual value of
any item in case of loss or dam·
age. So whether you plan to
m&tl a gold watch or an heir-
loom dock, use reatstered mail
and have no second thoughts.
If you· re a senior citizen or
handicapped person living alope.
to live in.
How to meet an OMnoic athlete &t yOur ""Poet Ollice.
Get an early stan on The
Games at your post office with
the new 1983-84 Oltmplc
Stamp Series. Each of the 24
stamps depicts &n Olympic
event In beeuttful color illustration.
And to aet your collection off
10 a running st an. tust drop Into
stan co ectmg now an experi·
ence the Olympics as you never
have before
How to talk with
your Poet Office.
Postal ~ople know that an
imponam pan or helping you is
listening. So our clerks are
always ready 10 answer your
questions. in person or over the
phone. ~·ve also provided post
offices wilh Consumer Service
Cards that you can fill out with
your comments.
But what if you still need
help. or want more Information'?
Just wrue to your
Consumer Advocate
lJ.S . Postal Service
Washington. DC 20260
There are lots of other
ways your Post~ ~~rvlce can
work for you. And we want you
to know about them
So reel free to talk to our
e mployees about any questions
you may have.
~·11 help you g~t our best
wen heJp you eet our best.
'
.. .
__,.;---~~~~--~~~~~_;;;;:=;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;:================!!!!!!=-------------------------------------------------------------... ~
••
'
I ,.
I ' -
I
I
l
' I I
J
15 SPACE-STRETCHING
IDEAS By Evan Frances Agnew
O nly 10 yearngo you could
add a room to your home -
replete with paneling. vinyl
flooring. built-in lighting
ana oath -for under SS,000. Or you
could move to an apartment with one
more room for just S40 a month more
in rent. Today, the Remodeling and
Rehabilitation Division of the National
Association of Home Builders esti-
mates the former would cost S20,000";
the latter, S200 a month!
Here are 15 ideas to enhance your
existing space by visually expanding
rooms or by making full use of space.
I. Paint your living room's long wall
white or a pastel hue, and use a
darker tint of the same hue on the a,-
posiie wall 10 visually stretch the
space between walls.
2. Slipcover your upholstered pieces
with the same color as walls -the
monochromatic scheme will "expand"
the room's size in all directions.
3. Substitute a glass-topped cocktail
table for a wood, plastic or marbl~
Evon Ftoncn Asn~ 11 a mem~r o1 the
Alnmcan ~y ol lnttnar ~nm
topped one. Because glass is translu·
cent, it visually enlarges space.
4. Paint your ceilings white or a very
pale blue to "raise'' them and make
your room look higher.
5. Choose glass-topped dining and
breakfast tables to expand spoce. and
use chairs with pedestal bases. rather
than legs, to avoid what the great Am·
erican architect Eero Saarinen called
"if slum of legs:.· that "tightens" space.
6. Get wall-to-wall carpeting to
"stretch " space. If you can't afford
carpet, buy a room-size rug in a
neutral hue (beige, brown, gray. white)
and either paint or lacquer any un·
covered areas in the color of the rug. or
use peel-and-stick flooring squares in a
oolor dose to that of the rug.
7. Add a long mirror or a vertical
grouping of mirror squares in the cor·
ner of a wall at right angle to a wall
that has a window in it. The long mir·
rored wall will reflect the actual win·
dow and not only "enlarge" the room
but also give you more light.
8. Avoid a plethora of tables in a liv·
ing room. Place a aedenza behind
your sofa (same height as the sofa. iJ
Window Quality!
It can make or break
your remodeling project.
Quality building products insure~ remodeling.
Poor-quality products can tum a dream p&an into a
nightmare.
Chcx&ng q\Wity windows is CM)'.
It's AndetiCrt 1be word for window quality for over
80 years.
Easy to imtall Andersen• windows, roof windows
and glX1ing patio doors bring the best to au job:
Beauty-through their famous slim lines. ~ efficiency
-with double-insula . glim. Maintena.noe
freedom-with ~nna.Shie~vinyl, a thick,
ex~y hard exterior oovering that won't need . ting..
possible} instead of flanking it with two
tables. ihen place a table between two
chairs -to service both -rather than
placing them opposite each other. so
that each needs a table and lamp.
9. Choose ceiling or wall lighting fix·
lures and/or tracks to avoid a slew of
lamps. This way you also obviate your
need for tables to support lamps ...
and then the tables you "absolutely
cannot do without" can be much
smaller.
10. Skinny living room? Choose
fabrics with "railroaded" stripes or
patterns that run horizontally and
visuaily broaden the room.
11. For an end table and a coffee
table, use a nest composed of four
square tables or of curved sections
that form a round one. That way. when
you serve food . each guest has his or
her own table.
12. Avoid heavy draperies: they
"compress" space. Instead. choose
translucent curtains if privacy is not
imperative. or blinds if privacy is 1m·
portapt. Or you can leave the win-
dows bare and hang plants in front of
them for a truly open look.
13. Choose low-lying furniture -
both in upholstery (especially in
modular groupings) or case goods
(wood pieces such as tables, chests. o
cabinets, desks) to give your room the I
appearance of height and breadth. 0
14. Place a desk with one of its short ~
sides abutting a wall. That way two
can use its work surface or its long
side can act as an end table to a sof9
while its opposite long side serves as a
desk with desk chair.
15. In a family room, second
bedroom or kid's room. place two
33-inch-deep box springs and mat-
tresses or mattresses on flat boards at·
tached to casters at rtght angles to
each other in a corner. Then place a
four·lesged table (34-or 40-inch
square) over the corner area of the
right-angled beds. The table will serve
both beds and free oceans or space. M
~·re home irn~vinadon't leave
anything to chance. Build-in Andersen
qu8.tity. Sec an Andersen dealer-in the
Yellow ~under Windows.
................ ..,,.._..,..,_...,..,_ ••c-·--~·-·"" ---------------------------..... ------
Chy ____________ ,. ... _______ zi, ______ _
"-<• A~~~IW :=.----------rw~~ ·~-==~==:!I _____________ __,, ______ .... ____________________________ ~ .. --.-----------
1VIARRIAGE
VERSUS ·
PARENTHOOD
By Norman Lobsenz
Many studies show that. on the
average. couples with children in the
home are less satisfied with their mar-
riages than are couples without them.
or those whose ch.ildren have srown
and left the ~1. Most family-life ex-
perts usually attribute this to the pres-
sures of raising children, the tendency
of you~ers to interfere with the
spouses' mtimacy and the competition
from the children for each parent's at·
tention and affection.
But now two sociologists -Prof.
Norval Glenn of the University of Texas
and Prof. Sara Mclanahan of the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin -report that "the
major reason" may be that the pres-
ence of a child in a household deters
many unhappily married couples from
divorce.
Nowadays it is less common for cou-
ples to stay together "for the sake of the
children," explain the sodoloSists, but
because of the emotional and financial
alSts of divorce, c.hildren still serve as
the glue that holds many marriages t<r
gether.
Gkmn and Mclanahan conclude
that, "In view of the evidence that
children tend to"lower their parents'
marltal happiness as long as they live
at ho~, and even alter they lea
home, 11 is ironic that most Americans
desir~ and do have children."
STEPFAMIUES:
WHO PAYS
FOR WHAT?
How remanied rouples handle their
finances can show how they feel about
their commitment to each other and to
each other's children, according to
famlJy therapist Barbara Fishman of
Bala Cynwyd, Penn. "Loyalties may
often be divided when two households meree." she says.
In 1 study of mlddl~-st~
families. f"IShman found that half of the
oouples pool their money in a common
pot ''They IJ>enl their relOUrces on all
members of the family att.erdlna to
need. reprdla. of biol<J8k:al relailo~
'ships/ she says. In "two-pot" families,
eed\ pannft puts a apedflc amollnt of
money Into runnlns the hom;, but
each Utes hit or her own money to
tupport his or her biok:J81Ca1 children.
Aocx>fdtn& to Fishman, the two-pot
system "ensures a measure of Jn-
F Ma_Y WllXl.Y • OC'TOIP 1• • 1• 1 t
dependence" for people who fear a sec-
ond marital failure. And while com-
mon-pot families often must make dif·
ftcult decisiOns over how to allocate
their money, the responsibilities of tw~
pot families are quite clear. "Couples do
not argue." says rishman, "because
each partner is in control of his or her
own money."
The thetapist SlJ88eSlS that stepfami-
The
Moisturized
Shine
Old English Aerosol does
more than give furniture a
beautiful high-gloss
shine. ll iJI formulated
wtt.b a combination of fine moisturizers that
actually penetrate into the finish of wood to
help maintain the
natural moisture le~I
of the wood. With
The
Creamy Spray
Old En~lish Aerosol spmvs on
rich, thick and cn.·amv. It'
contairui no fo""-•r than seven
ingredients that the furn iture
experts at Old English consider
essential in a fine furniture
polish. Each oft.he sewn
ingredients in Old English
Aerosol plays a specific role.
Some clean. Some shine. Some
moist u riie. Tu~ther, they
dela~r a multifaceted furniture
care program that maku; wood
look good now, Wld with re~lar
care. helps insure that it w11l
rontmul' to look JCOOd in the
future ,
Old !:;ngh&h the wood
takes on a special kind
of look, best described as radiant. Glowing.
Natural We refer to that special Old £ngliah
Aerosol look as '"The Moisturized Shine~
Wood furniture is oft.en ell'p(>led to
environmental changes that may aJter it.a
moisture haJance. The moisturizing aa•nte
in Old English AeT0801 work to help prevent
a molStul'e imbalance by retiiating the lou of
moisture from changM tn hurnldfty. direct
sunlight or extremes in tempnatu~.
MolstUTe 1088 ia a m~r reuon why wood
may loee iii-naturaJ beauty, dry out or crack.
The Protective Shield
lies should ball\nce their financial
methods. using a) common-pot econ:
omy when it unifies the family and the
two-pot approach when ~rsonal inde-
pendence is Important. IW
Smear Removal
Every time you polish. the combination of
·waxes and silicone~ in Old English Aeroi;ol
removes smt.•ars, smudge~ and fingermarks
ll alllO provides a surface thnt makes 1l l'<l:!Y
to remove those unsightly blemishes ht-tween
polU;hings with Just a few wipes of a dot.b.
Water Repellency and
Stain Resistance
The L'Ombination of waxeA in Old Engh sh
Aerosol provide a hu1h-in waU>r repellency
The sih~neA intenio;i~v the liquid repdk•nt
prupcrtU.'8 of the wa;11 even further. belpmE? to
provide effective pml«tlon agnmst
diS<:olorallons cau!W'd hy spills nnd tho:;(.•
un~ightly. hard-to-remove white rin1ts lt·l1 h'
glaSSt.·s.
. .
•
. .
Oeans as it Beautifies
For wood to look beautiful, it should also be
clettn. Old F.nglish Aem601 cleans the wood
surface a11 it polishes and lcnvcs 1t clc1.1n.
Furniture looks clean and beautiful.
The .f'reslt Scent
Old English Aerosol has a
~h lemon scent that'll
plc~ing to use and.fill11
the whole room with o
"just cleaned" fre11h
fragrance. It's the unm1s-
t.akable scent of a wcl l-
ea.red-for home.
Caring for Furniture
A few 11mpte prccauhone will help luep your
fumttUI'\' looking beautiful now 11nd for y1•1m1
tot.'Ome.
• Sin~ utnmes in t.mperaturc and
humidity adversely affect yuur furniture do
not place your furniture In dfrert sunlight
or clOtW to hot or cold air 800~8.
•The buett of lamp&. aahtray1 and the hkc
thould ha~ a felt bAcklns to prt'vent
gouging and ICl'lltehinll. Old English Aeroeol not only mak•
f\m1itul'l' look beautiful. It h•ls» protect and
preeerve the look, too. Old Englieh Aerot0l
U8el a special fonnula of waxee and 1illconca
in just the ri.rht comb1natlon to J)~ the
1urface, and provide "The Moisturized
• Synthedc rubber or pla1tlc ~should
not be placed on fumituni sin~ they ol\en
: contain chomical1 that can damage Uie flniah.
• 1I liquida are epilled on fumltun!, wipe up
... q~'*1y .. pc>1Mtiblo with. eon dry cloth. ~lith and buff ll1htly. .. Shlnl'~ The 11licone$ act. aa a lubricant to
permit the wax to be sprt•d "ully and
uniformly in a oontinuous prot.«tlvt t..Ytr
t111er t.N tntlre 1urface and help provide
pl'Otection Olfahut AUrf'act tbretlon.
• U1t Old En1li1h Atiroeol ~larly to help
protect the fini1h and auanf aplon
moi1ture lou.
..
•
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----~~~----~----------------------
\
FOR THESE
VIDEO
WIZARDS,
MAKING $
IS CHILD'S
PLAY
BY CHERRI SENDERS
At the ripe old age of 21 , Mark
Turmel! may well become one of the
new teen idols of _the BO's. Already he
receives hundreds of fan letters each
year. including marriage proposals
from 16-and 17-year-<>ld girls across
the country.
It all began while he was a student in
Bay City. Mich. The precocious
Turmell, who graduated from high
school and junior collese simuJtane-
ously al 17. produced his first video
game just 10 months after his parents
bought him an Apple computer. -
"Sneakers" quickly became a video-
game classic. and Turmel!. who had
never had a job, was soon banking
SJ0,000 in royalty checks.
Since then he has written six more
games: Beer Run, Free Fall, Fast Eddie,
Turmoil, Gas Hogs and Ozzy 07.one.
Now earning more than S 100.000 -
"but less than $200,000 a year" -In
salary plus royalties at his--new job at
Activision in Sacramento, Tunnell is
one of the newly wealthy vid"°1Jame
designers who are having fun doing ex-
actly what they want.
Raised on computers. today's young
videophlles often tum up thelr noses at
rock stars and movie Idols. Instead
they look to heroes like Tunnell and
hope to get rich by the lime they tum
18. While mosl of their peers att goof.
ing off durtna summers. these young-
sters spend their time hunkered over
their computers, trying to oome up
with The Great American Video Game.
Although the majority of successful
Pf08rammers In the field are ancient -
in their late 20's and early 30's -a
good many are 21 and under.
Tom Momin!, a 17-year-old high
IChool tenlor. ls one of the youngest
• -proerammers at the Sacramento-bated
50ftware ftnn Sirius. Author of Dark
Forest. 1 model'llHelllns strategy
pine. he woru on ltT'llght comtnb-
lion. Nurtured by Sirius president J!ny
Jtwell. thlt vld kid hu tpent the put
F.uim.vWm&.r•OCTOIU tt• t• 13
----
two years honing his skill as a pro-
grammer. Now he is ¥(Prking on a
maze game with a playing field six
' times the size of the video screen, and
he predicts that for future games play·
ers will need to deve.lop more lhan one
skill.
Even at so young an age, Mornini
feels comfortable discussing royalty
percent~, gross receipts and sliding
scales. "Im banking on myself and go-
ing for the big payoff, .. he says. ex-
plaining that 20 percent. or $3 a prod·
uct. ts standard for the industry.
He is also oounting on a job offer
after he graduates high school next
year. And il that doesn't come through,
''I'll continue doing what I'm doing and
go to college. I'll need to learn to man-
age all the money I'm going to make,"
he says with a laugh.
Mark Riley, a 19-year-old vid~ame
creator at Datamosl, a software firm In
O.atsworth, says he's not in it for the
money: "Even if I never make a million
dollars, I would still stay in the industry.
I'm not worried about making lots of
money. but about being happy." Riley
has doodled with computers since age
12. and so far he has authored five
games, indudins Tumblebugs. Shoot-
in~ Arcade and his newesl , O'Riley's
Mmd. Living at home with his parents.
Riley freely admits he has no expenses
and spends his royalty checks on lots of
toys. 'The more money you have. the
more hobbies and toys you have," he
says. Already he's thinking about in·
vesling In a condo or a hou~. Collese
can always come later. With work,
motorcycling, backpacking and 5'ar·
gazing keeping him busy, he laments
that, "I just wish I had the h°me to go (to
college)."
But with the marketplace fluctuating
as much as it is now, Riley couldn't be
assured of a job alter graduating from
college anyway. Recently the game in·
dustry has been plagued by lasging
sales in hardware [computers). Game
salel,'"however, are stlll strong, despite
record I098eS at Atari and Mattel.
Richard P. Simon. an analyst at Gold-
man, Sachs & Co. In New York, goes so
far as to predict that video-game sales
will rise 35 peroent over Wt year.
Sales wlll continue strong because
video !1'm~ represent an evolvins art
form, mslsU Ernie Brock. vice presi-
dent of product development at Sl.rlus.
The market i9 in transition. he ex-
plains. ''We're going to more complex
games wtth better sound ~. better
graphia and more memory. We've sat-
urated the market with the sames al-
ready out, but we've hardly scratched
the surface as tar as sophlstkatlon
QOfS."
'The market used to be shoot-'em-
outs. and the trick was in who oould do
it faster," llYI 21-yeai .. ~d game creator
Bob f1anlpll of Re9eda. whote credits
... FMlll.'r WrJllJ.Y. OOOID , •• ,.,
SO years from now. I've been support· $100,000 on this program," he smiles.
ing myself this last year programming. "I have big goals for myself ....
and he still worries." "I control computing, it doesn't con·
Flanagan has also become sensitive trol me," he adds. That is not true for a
to the label of "programmer." Prefer· lot of other people in the industry, and
ring the title video-game designer, he he doesn't appreciate the stigma usual·
explains that their jobs demand much ly associated with programmers.
more creativity than simple pro-Flanagan is referring to what Brock has
gramming. Another change that has dubbed as the syndrome of the "digi-
resulted ln the industry during the last nerd."
year: Companies are now putting their "Most programmers can't... deal with
designers' names on their packages. people. The computer won't fight
"We deserve the credit," Flanagan them," Flanagan says. Brock concedes
adds. "Some companies are beginning that "digi-nerds" do exist in the in-
to promote their designers like rock dustry. but "our most successful pro-
stars. What we do Is just as ~tive." grarnmers don't fit into that mold. You
Tunnell also believes ~rs don't need social skills. and people who only
get the respect they deserve. But the work with computers tend to tum out
fact that his employer. Activision, pro-g!mes too difficult fo1 the masses."
motes its creative people in its 1V Van Hoozer says that the nerdy be-
advettising pl~ him. "Companies havior doesn't usually last very long
no longer draw a following automati· after they've published a game. "It's
include Thief. Inspector. Guardian and cally." Tunnell explains. "but in-just a result of lack of social inter·
Speedway. "Games are becoming more dividual programmers do. Kids write to action," he explains. "Once they're
realistic and interesling. using multi· me all the Ume saying they want to see published and money from royalties
screens,and a lot of different skills and my next game." starts coming in. they think about
play tec.hniques... With so many software companies in thtng.s besides the computer."
There's no doutx that the industry is the marketplace today, the competition But with succes.s comes fear of fai l-
experienc.iog growing pains. Prices of has become much more cutthroat. and ure, as some of the programmers find
the games are coming down. and royal· many of the more sua:essful finns are oul. Whiz kid Turmell says he doesn't
ties may soon follow, says whiz kid reorganizing to stay on the cutt ing edge always want to be a designer. His goals
Tunnell. "A year ago. if you asked, I of technology. Companies like Activi-Include owning a sports team or per-
would have said I'll make a million dol· sion and Datamost are developing haps using his computer skills to do
lars in this business. Tha1's not true team specialists to work on projects. some special effects for the movie in·
anymore." The life span of an average "We're fighting for shelf space. so we dustry. Driving around in his new
game runs three months now, and peo-put our teams onto projects," Van Porsche and reading the Wall Strttt
pie spend their SIS or $30 more se!~ Hooi.er says. Sometimes that entails Journal everyday gees to him so~
ively, he says. rewriting a pr<>8fam from top to bot-times. "I would do anything to be 16 or
To translate these larger games to the tom. while other times only certain 17 again. This industry is so young that
video screen takes a lot of skUl and per-aspects -like the graphics -have to I'm starting to feel old. And the worst
severance. Brock says. "Video design· be reworked. , part about f,1?Wing up is that I have to
ers need to be cartoonists. pro-F1anapn is wotidng on Space Ark. ·shave now.· he moans.
srammers, psychologists, technical his new adventure game. with a com· Becoming more serious for a mo-
wizards and have a lot of imagination. puter artist. 'The graphics will be very ment, Turmell comments on some--
These kids are artists -they have so sophisticaled on this one -it will be thing that plagues many young prodi·
much Imagination -and their games arcade quality." One of the first such gies: burnout. "I've never had a job in
are very playable." products marketed by Datamost, Space my life except prosramming. Some-
And Just like most artists, they (&1t Ark has already sold 3,500 copies In times. especially between projects. I
tap their creativity 40 hows a week. advance orders. f>rosrammlng for siJc wake up in the middle of the night wor·
Nor can they be dealt with In a asual years now. Flanagan hopes this will be rying that I'll end up having to work at
manner. Brock has found . "Part of the his jackpot. "I want to make over 7·Elev~ ... IW
art of workin8 w\th thtm is to c.Mer to ,====i!!i!!i!!i!!i!!i!!~====iji!!~===~=~~ their egos but keep them in place at 1he Ii:
SCtme time. ~ of them are very
youns and nal~. so we have 10 bring
them along through ·the exper1~nces In
the business world."
Datamost's former special projed dj..
rector Dewayne Van Homer ooncurs. The
young p~rammers work 32 to 40
hours stra.iant on a PT'Oft'IJ"· Slaying up
all nlaht until it's jult r18ht. he admits.
but st1JI, thfl)' have a myopic view of
the wor1d. which hlndm them. "They
are caU(lht up ln de9lrucsk>n games -
It's vf.f')' hard for them to make that
leap to making their pmes playable for
girls."
And. as with mo.1t artilta, the parents
of thete video mavens.WOO')'. Program-
mer F1anag1n says his dad thinks he's·
wMtlns hlS tlrM. "I'm 11111 b~ln.
and I work like an art1st -a oou of
weeks on. 1 couple ol WMkJ . My
dad ls worried about whit 111 be dolng
Just because you won't
settle for less than total
luxury, ~oesn't mean you
can't save on your cruise
vacation.
Sitmar Super Savers
are back for 1984.
Book by March 31,
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departing between Janu--
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If you've cruised with
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Fairwind and the beautirw
Sit11iar·
•
new 38,000 ton Fairsky-
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Spacious cabins, delightful
dining, exciting entertainment
and 24-hour service in the
ItaJian style are as much a part
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giving you the best value for
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Fly free, too.
And there's more. Even
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Saver savin~, the pnce of ~ your cruise mcludes free air
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Sitmar offers you
three of the world's most
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settle for less. Just book by
March 31 and pa_y less. ~The Sitmar Experience
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professional travel agents.
Consult yours today.
Savers
•
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EN
"I'M SICK"
MEANS SICK
OF SCHOOL
By Susan Lapinski
M om. I've got a tummy
ache!" &-year-0ld Danny
wails on a Monday morn-
ing. just as the
school bus pulls into view. Is Danny_
sick -or sick of school? Parents
should examine this situation closely.
If a child is running a temperature. a
physician should undoubtedly be con-
sulted and the youngster allowed to
stay home. But the most common com-
plaints voiced by school-age children
are of stomachaches or headaches, ail-
ments that cannot be readily mea-
sured. Consequently, parents often
don't know whether a child like Danny
is actually ill or only hopes to avoid a
day in class.
"A headache could indicate eye-
strain. a stomach pain could be cau<ed
by a urinary-tract infection or in-
tolerance to lactose [a substance in
milk]," says Dr. Martin Finkelman. a
pediatrician in Brooklyn. N.Y.
While a physician may find nothing
physically wrong, tension arising from
a situation at sehool or at home 'can
produce aches, cramps. nausea. Or
even if a child only feigns illness. he or
she may still have a valid claim to
parents' attention and concern.
Liiiian Weger, a family social worker
in St. Louis, mentions a few situations
that might trigger a child's need for
emotional first aid: ''It a parent has
been hcgpitalized, if there has been
marital conflict, or the birth of a baby
has made a child feel disp~"'ed. that
child may need some attention, too."
A day at home may provide the heal-
ing time that a child needs. Sharing an
activity with a parent, such as baking
cookies or working on a crafts project.
can sometimes create the right en-
vironment for discvssing the child's
feelin~. •
Common school-related prot>lems
that can cause him or her to want to
skip classes include a dash with a
teacher ,or another student . or fear of a
test.
But children who habitually claim to
be sick are another matter. A parent
may recognize a pattern in which a
chlld frequently complains of illness on
Mondays, alter being well all weekend.
''Almost all kids have some anxiety
about going back to school after a
weekend. a ~acallon or a bout wirh &he
Sulon Lapin,./ It tht «>0t11hor. with ~ hus,
bond. olo dlaryolnftJlporrnthood. In a Famlly
Way (Ultlc. Brown/
f MAY WIJIU' • OCTOllJI It • 1• J 7
flu." says Jonathan Kellerman. a child CJ'.W. Norton). Kellerman distinguishes debilitating to a teen-ager as chronic
psychologist and MSOOate clinical pro-between the common type of school unemployment is to an adult. Keller-
ressor of pediatrics at the University of anxiety and chronic absenteeism. which man says. It usually signals a serious
Southern California School of Medicine. mainly alfects preadolescents and teen-psychologiciil problem. and child or
In his lxlok. Helping the Fearful Child agers. Chronic absenteeism can be as family therapy may be required. fW
How to P.lay the market without
risking your hfe.
It used to be so easy.
Risk some money in the market
for growth. Keep the rest in the
bank and buy a life insurance
policy for security. Inflation has
changed all that , and a lot of ~
people are risking that "security" ·
tOOay jU5t to stay even with
the economy.
There's another way.
John Hancock Variable Life. Unlike most other plaru, John Hancock
Variable Life lets you invest some of your premiums in stocks, bonds, or the
money market, with the opportunity to r--------:-----,
add to the value of your coverage withoUt ~~to review '
increasing your pre.. my msurance program.
rlo\t' \t'nd me morf C.:\,ll'l'lplC'IC' tnfofm,lfklfl >1nJ' l'n>\fl''" mium. At the same tus. 1n<luJini1 charjln anJ tlqle~s. l'J 1111, to l'l'aJ tKt
time, it guarantees
the face amount of
the policy you buy,
"'~ no matter what.
Send U5 the coupon for more
information, including a l'ro;pecM.
Learn how John Hancock Variable Life
can help you create a ce~in estate in an
all too uncertain world.
maienalsnrrlullv bri~ mve•t1nst.tw f~ord1na furxl
D I wuulJ i.~ .. 10 w~ • )<~111 H•nc•JCL "'~t•rt'rtd l\'f'tt"'"""""
I undcfu~nd I ~m un.kr no •ihl111•1t"n M v r0or'I('
nul'IM b----
0 I al'\ "" iruunincc "J•n1 •• l>Nkt1
I N•mc~-----------~
AdJtt"~------------
C 1fV -----::0111c ___ l •r---
MAUI tOI John I hnccxk Verl•bl~ I.If• I nwMlllCf' lo
John lt•l\<OC~ Mt« T ~. P0 Bel' Ill
l\nolc~ M,_hu>efla \Jlll7
L ~U.lrennet~ ~ 110105101883 ------------\
. We can help you nere and now. Not just hereaftei
·-
\
•\
. ff'Puppy Low"
t
f Roclung H~ Sump F1m lmxd Holly. Ml. Occ. lit IY7ff
MIL . Johll H. Jonu
4 S S Ma.lrt S.tAee.-t
An~ t , U.S.A. 12345
IWU1gilu 0W1Sitsg ma11y of tlH cnilllry's
1'10sl co/orfad arul sipifica11t officW U.S.
postage sla•Jn ... 1"'4gilu, too, °"""1ag a
colkcti<m of 100 classic Ntwma11 Rodtwell
pamtings ... Now imagi11e the two com-
bnud ;,, a cover colkctim1 of """'rpassed
IHmlty, meani#g, arul importa11U.
A 1rih11tt: 111 Rcx·k~dl a~d a salute
10 Ameril-a!
Norman Rockwell painted portraits of Amer-
ica that w ill be trnsured forever. He loved the
American people and taught us to love and
respect one another. Thar's why Norman
Rodcwell will always be our country's best-
loved artist ... and why his classics for THE
SATURDAY EVENING POST wiU never be
surpassed
Not surprisingly, many people who love
Rockwell are also fascinated bf Jtamps-and
for many of the same reasons. Stamps, too,
have a lot to say about America.
That"s why it's so narura1 to combine the
brst of RockwclJ and the finest American
stamps.
You will rttriv~ • hnuriOVt ~plleam't
Album. u no lllidirionaJ ~·
These Rockwell classics have MYcr
appeared on Commemorative Co"ers before!
In this· collection, you will sec many of your
own favorite Rockwell classics. And yet,
famous though.they att, none of these Rodc-
wdl classics has ever appeared on a Com-
memorative Cover before!
The collection includes Rodcwell paintings
from the 1920's, 30"s,40's, 50's,60's,andearly
70's-the entire span of Rodcwell's career
with the POST! The stamps, tOO. arc drawn
j
A beautiful h'crid of
Rockwell classics and
historic U .. Sr:amps.
There's hardly an as-
pect of American life
that Norman Rock·
well did not ponray-
from several dccades -
somie, in fact, arc more
than 40 years old!
-~ ..... Orn. dowe.. • .._ lk Acu.. -wil
~~ .... -· C'OWft ...-dllc 1966
Circw..-p.
and in each case we have found a stamp to
pcrfcctJy complemem the painting.
Notice, for instance, how RoclcwelJ's
1933 Christmas.painting. "R~ 'em Cowboy,"
goes ;>crfecdy with rhe 1978 Christmas
"Hobby Horse" stamp.
N otice, coo, how a 1922 Rockwell
}>ainting -"Ship Ahoy" -is comple-
mented by the 19n stamp paying trib-
ute"' to the craft of Shipbuildin3.
Each Rodc~tl painting will be
ma1enificendy lichogtaptwd
in full color.
So equal care will be taken in producing chesc
paintings on philacelic covers for the very
firsr time. Each cover will be .richly litho-
graphed in full color on specially crafted
paper-to caprure the significant details and
subde shadings of color chat make Roc.lcwell's
paintings such a delight!
Con"enicnt acqu1s111on at a
favorable gwran\ttod pr1~.
Covers will be issued at the convenient rate of
three per month. Your favorable original
issue pritt will be just S4.25 per cover -
guaranteed fo r the entire collection. You need
send no mo ney now -we will bill you prior to
your first month's shipment .
AdvanCt' Resef'V1lcion ~dline:
N 0 ''Cmber .\0, l 98'
Please note that m any of the stamps in this
coUeccion go back 20, 30, and even 40 years -
cbcy ace oo longer available from the Postal
Service and we have managed to obtain only a
limited supply. Accordingly, reservations for
the collection can be guaranteed only until
N ovember 30, 1983.
"
............. __.. --o1-old .... .... ,_..tio,...,._tO-. Rockwell lavished cxtnordinary care on
each canvas he painted for rhe POST. •51t•p AtioJ.· wil t. cc-"1-.1 • •
"41•Ml•llll•Ml•M' ~ widl ... 1'1'1 Sflli,._.Udi .. ~
I Nonnan Rockwell Commemorative Covers
P01ul C.omnvmonrM Society Guata.otttd ~pcan«
47 Rldwda Aft'Ne only ii postm1rbd
Norwalk, Conn. 068'7 br Noftmber ,0, 198}.
Pin.le enroll mt u • Nblcri.ber ro dw Nonnan RoctttU C.ommemoracift C.0Ytn C.OUcction contisrin&ol
100 cown mmbinin, duaic Nonnan ~U iUumations with hisiork U.S. 1wnp1. I undentaod th11
my C'Oftn w1U be K'.ftr to l'M 1r die n~ °' 'C:OYen per monrh, wirh my foul shipment to c:ooc1in '4 CO't'ffa,
•t • price ol "4.25 per COft:r (pl111 •.50 pc-r co-.er th•ppinc end hendJi"I) A aisrom C.Oll«1ot'1 Album will
bt ""' ro me " no .ddirionaJ chup. , I need ICOd no money now. I will bt biUtd prior to my flnt mooth'a wptnent. I undenrand rh•c ei~r
pl"J 11181 cancel rhlt tublcrlpdoo llCftrMnr 1r any timt.
Mt., Mn., Miu----------...,.....,------------------l'\.IMI PalHT <UA&l. y
Addttu-----------------------------~
Ory/Sure Zip -----
1 would lib my"°"": OUnaddmted, or OPenoNllzcd nectlJ 111tio-n above.
0 As 1 c:onvenJence, I pttkr to ha.-f'llCh monthly 1hipmcnr ch•rpd, ac thr rimt ol 1hlpmenc, t0 m1:
CMuraeud " OVl.SA
016
•
•
It takes more than love to make
a haNIY marriage.
/
Stran~ how the last thing many couples think about in
planning their marriage is the matter of religion. Only
after the caterer, the photographer, the printer have been
provided for. only then is church mentioned. And church
often is more a matter of social custom than real
religious conviction. No wonder so many marriages get
into trouble. God barely makes the guest list.
If you are about to be married and religion is not impor-
tant to you, do you know what your chances for a happy
life are? The odds are not good. If you are 'already married
and religion has been packed away with the bridal gown.
do you wonder that life has become a bore or a battte7
Maybe you are one of those unhappy people who has
decided that life is meant to be boring and absurd. If so. we
invite you to look into our pamphlet "The Real Secret of
Successful Marriage'.' Write today. No one will call on you.
--FREE-Mail Coupon Todayf -----------
PleaH send Free Pamphlet entitled
'The Real Secret of Successful Marriage." FM 19
Tiii• ofle• •S tlm•tecl 10 one ''" ~mohlet
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CATHOLIC INFORMATION SERVICE
1 KRIGHTS OF COLU•BUS ,
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STRAIGHTEN OVERLAPPING TOES
WITHOUT SURGERY
•TO. IT"NOHTl .... _....,, .. ,1 4 ._ lmff:I a .. ,,..,, .,,,., ...... ~ .................
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·~ ...... ~ .......... Md eotfedl ........ .._IMM I ,,....... .. ,..,..
• »OAY .,_Y-MC. OUAMllTSll
TO .... YM T• IT ... Tl•ll SIM •• ,_, ... ,.._..,_.~ •&UICI C)Cllr two I«. If pM 11,11 8",, I: ,.., ... 1116 rialldllng 8'1111 lltlllt & Ncl'"6. lllf .,. ..... MIJll le'
T °"' LI~.,.,._ l"W·t4 .. , .........
•oe111100.NY11m
By Michael D' Antonio
Doctors know the
story very well. An
anxious mother
brings her child into
the office. The diagnosis is
that the child has a flu that on-
ly time can cure, but the
mother insists there must be
some shot or pill that will
work. The doctor finally offers
an "elixir" of sugar water, or a
sugar pill. to iE the mother. Surpris! , the child
recovers ahead schedule,
confirming the mother's in-
stinct and confounding medi-
cal science.
Chances are the cure was
prompted by a phe~ornenon
known as the placeDo effect.
In the purest sense. placebos
are inactive substances given
as medicines. even though
there's no evidence that theSe
harmless substances tt.ve
healing powers. But mysleri-
ously, they often relieve pain
and reduce the symptoms of a
disme. Studies show that
anywhere from 15 to 80 per-
cent of patients report some
relief when taldn& placebos •
and practlclns physicians
tt.ve pracribed them for
post.IUrtfCTY pain, lower-back
pain and other problems. Recendy. however, critks of
placebo treatment• have
questk>ned their me ln ten"
eral medk::ine, and IO dodon
11e now debadne the ethics
involved in "foollnc'' their p.-
tlents lnto good health.
The controversy goes be-
yond prescribing suaar pills.
Dr. Sally Gadow. an as50Ciare
professor of medical ethics al
the University of Texas
Medical School In Galveston,
says many active drugs that
have serious side effects, and
even unnecessary su~ical
procedures, are sometimes
prescribed as "a kind of pla-
cebo." "For example, pedt-
atrlc surgeons have been
known to perform a great
number of tonsillectomies to
placate parents," Or. Gadow
explains, "although som~
times the medlcal procedure
ls not abtolutely nfJCeSMl'y.
Often the surgery is done to
treat parents more than
children."
Gadow's oppo9ed to pla-
cebos In general because she
feels they Involve deception.
"I see them as an lnh1~
ment of a patient's rl&ht to
have all the important things
about his treatment explained
to him," she adds. Beca1.11e no
large-scale survey has ever
been done. Gldow doesn't
know pttdlely how often
doctors prescribe plac.ebol:
however. she believes It's a
common practice: But she
also contends that this Is
"j\dttfled only when a patient deleffatea the authority to the
doctor." by granting him per-
mlMion to piac:ribe a placebo
In m.te1 Where he feds It
would be Ulf!fU).
MedlCl1 ~ first
documented the placebo ef.
fed during trials of active
drup. They found that even
though some patients received
an active drug while others
Sot an Inactive one serving as
a placebo, both groups had
some positive results. In a few
cases patients even repprted
that placebos caused side ef.
fects, including headaches
and drowsiness. And patients
taking the placebo said they
had relief from problems
ranging from seasickness to
heart pain .
Experts remain divided on
the question of just why
placebos do work. Many point
to a German study showing
that the effect varied accord-Ins to what physicians said
when gjvin~ a patient the
placebo. Patients given firm
assurance that the pills were "real; (active df\.13S~rted better results, 90 as-
swned the root .of. a pl~ effect to be psythC>I08iCal.
But a study completed at
the Univer9l?y of CalifOmia's
San Frand.9co Medkal Center
pointed to a plryfloloffaJ/
basls for the pl6c:ebo elm.
That 1978 study lln~lacebos with the body's 'IC-
tlon ol endorphins, 11' own
pa1n~trne chemicals. Re-searmen said petienta daimld
their pain was reUeved with
placebos but returned when
. thfl)' were lblo atven ~
that .uppre11 the endorphins.
The endorphin theofy con-
tributes to the Q>flt1ndon ttt.
I
placebos may stimulate the body's own
abilities to fight pain and disease. Dr.
Jean Goodwin of the University of New
Mexico's School of Medicine says a
connection could exist between place-
bos "and higher functions of the brain
that have to do with pain and well-
ness:· Dr. Goodwin. who has studied
the use of placebos by physicians in
New MeJcico. says that placebos may
enhance all treatments. She contends
that generally placebos are good medi·
cine. that they have a good margin of
safety. And just as many doctors feel
patients respond better when doctors
are confident and reassuring. Goodwin
says the belief that a drug will work
may actually prompt recovery.
In her research, Goodwin found that
87 percent of the doctors surveyed had
used placebos on patients who asked
for more pain medication than the doc-
tors thought was necessary:She doubts
any of the doctors obtained patients'
consent before trying the placebo.
While many doctors told Goodwin
they thought that discussing the pla-
cebo treatment would limit its effec·
tivenes.s. she says that's not always
true. Doctors sometimes ~ell a patient
he may or may not receive placebos
while being treated. and they then ask
permission to make that decision and
conceal it from the patient. A1so, some
d9ctors feel that allowing a patient to
make a final decision on the use of a
placebo may place too great a burden
on the patient, adds Or. Goodwin.
When people havt!I long-standing rela-
tionships with general practitioners. br.
Goodwin suggests. they can bring up
the subject and decide together wheth-
er a placebo treatment may be used in
the future.
The Health Research Group (H.R.G.).
an organization in Washington created
by consumer advocate Ralph Nader,
has expressed concern over active
drugs (possibly having hazardous side
effects) being dispensed as ·placebos.
The H.R.G. also takes issue with the
practJce of prescribing a d~ that
won't do any good, just for the sake of
placating the patient. "Sometimes doc·
tors prescribe penicillin for colds,'' says
Joel Kaufman. author of H.R.G.'s Ouer·
the-Counter Pills That Don~ ~ (Pan-
theon). 'This won't help the problem.''
In addition, penicillin can kill bacteria
and leave the body open to new infec.
tions. he adds. And frequent doses can
encourA8e the evolution of germs resis-
tant to the drug.
The American' Medical Association's
(AM.A.) council on scientlflc activities
-has also discussed the ethics of placebo
treatment. The council may soon give
recommendations for doctors usin(I
them ln their· pract~ces.
Rl(lht now, thougll, many doctors do
believe placebos can be a valuable
medical tool. Placebo Inhalers, for ex·
ample, can help aslhmatica reduce
1 lheir dependern on drugs that can
cause cardiac arrhythmias. And pla-
FAMILY WmLY. ClCTl*Jl ... ,.., 21
cebos can be used for patients who feeJ
that if they don't leave with some kind
of drug, the doctor has rejected them.
In general. doctors feel the best prac-
tice is to advise patients that placebos
might be used. But even when that
can't be done, placebos should not be
eliminated from the medical arsenal.
· According to an A.M.A. spokesman:
"All placebos are given for a reason. To
close the door on them is also unfair to
patients." IW
Midroel D'AnronJ is a frttlance wnrer who
often ff!P()r1s Oii htolth tSSuts.
L
Roa' pU
fliers as former Secretary of
Defense James Schleslnser.
raced across a salt marsh to
meet their feathered friend.
"It was freezing cold,'' Far·
rand reCalls, "and we broke
out bottles of whiskey and
champagne risht there on the
marsh. rt was truly a great mo-
ment In blrdlns.'
22 fAl&Y WDlll.Y. OCl'OIQ " •••
t81"°'""
W at's the stuff lead-•
ers are made ofl
Aax>rdlf18 IO Dr.
IL~.AllT
Here's a college that of-
fers the ultimate in
ftnandal aid. At Pep-
perdlne University in Malibu,
Calli., the student government
promises to cover bad checks
ol up to $20 written by stu-
dents to local merchants. Stu-
dents are required to pay up
eventually -if they don't,
their names are added to a list
of check bouncers circulated
to all merchant$.
Sounds like a fair deal to us,
but some students aren't hold-
ing up their end of the bar-
gain. The student government
fs often unable to collect from
debtors. and it usually sets
stuck for about
$1 SO a ·semester.
But student gov·
ernment presi·
dent Uz Whatley
oontends the pro-
gram Is worth It
betause "it makes
students' lives
easier and keeps
local merchants
happy."
re-
for
oool.
bllt It you'd like to
have one that's a
bit more cuddly
than usual, Eileen Karsh, a l
Temple University psycholo-!
gist, advises you to start i
handling it as early as 3 weeks i
of age. ~
Karsh took 26 kittens at a
birth and randomly aMign~
them to one of three groups.
The first group were cuddled
from ages 3 to 14 weeks; the
second from ages 7 to 14
weeks; and the final sroup
were not cuddled at all. The
results show that the more af.
fection the ~Ines receive as
kittens, the more affection
they show as adults. The
kittens handled earliest were
the friendliest; those that re-
ceived no cuddling were the
least attentive to humans, and
the group petted from the age
of 7 weeks measured some-
where in between.
8111111DAYI I
(All Ubra) Sunday -Angela i
lansbury 58; Suzanne Somers l
'36. Monday -Rita Hayworth
65; Arthur MUler 68; Jean Ar-
thur 75: Tuesday -George C.
Soott 56; Melina Meroourt 58:
Martina Navralllova 27.
Wedneaday -Amy Carter
16. Thunday-Mickey Man-
lie 52; Arlene Francis 75; Art
Buc:hwaJd 58. Friday -Car-
rie Fisher 27; Dizzy Gillespie
66. Saturday -Joan Fon·
talne 66; Annette Funicello
41 : Catheri~ Oeneuve 40.
-For the first time : ..
an in'ternaticmally renowned floral artist
creates an originarsculptured bell.
<Che
c5onf{l 9?ose
BY J EANNE HOLGATE
Life-si2.e sculpture of intricate beauty
in hand-painted porcelain ...
at the very attractive price of $60.
Painted by[hand.
Hand-decorated with pure 24 karat gold.
Issued in limited edition.
Fresh and arrei.ting, rhL Soma Roft is a triumph of two
great traditions. Combining the beauty of floral sculpture
... and the lilting grace of a bell ... in an enchanting nC!W
work in line porul<tin to enjoy and treasure always.
The creator of this delight fol sculpturt". Jeanne
Holgate, has been acclaimed as Americ.t's llnest floral
anist. Imernat.ionally admired, her work is rcpresc:nt.td in
the great floral art colJcctions or the world. including t.hc
British Mu8Cum , America's famous Hum Collect.ion. and
the private colltttion of Her Majesty Queen F.lizabeth,
the Queen Mother.
Herc. the anist has captured a rose in the rloldiant
blush or first bloom. With t'ntrancing prttision, the
!CUlpturc ponrayA cvcry vein or each leaf. every curve of
each petal-even the tiny thorns growing o ut of the
stem. The colon arc of a subtlety that rivals natu~ itself.
And the coni.position is su~rbly united by the bell or
fine porcclafn, which iA hand~mbellished with fl"rt
24 Amat pld.
ln the tradition or the finest floral ICUlpturcs. Tiu Sonia
&u is depicted fully life-si.z.e. Each impon.ed bell will
be individually handcrafted under tM sapervision of
franklin Porcelain. As an indication of t.M care that will
be tak.cn, the sculpture will be assembled by hand.
And this intric.tte work. will then be •killfuUy painted
by hand.
lmporuntJy for colltttora, this is the first sculptured
bell by jean~ Hol~. h will be iMucd in a single,
limited 'edftion. A rutriction of just one tculp<ured bell
per pcnon will be enforced. and the tncaJ edition will be
limited forC"Vcr to the CX4tCt number of individuals who
enter ordera by the end o f 1985. l~n . IO Insure the
edition remains permanentJy cle>ted, the porcelain
molda will be ~.
lh brighten your home with a work of unusual beauty
. . . and ro acquire a future heirloom for your family ...
you nttd only rnum your application M later than the
o J"nt.ion ~ k heli&rt: December"· 198~. No payment
ia requin:d with your rettrvat.ion. But please be sure h is
potunarked by December 5 I st.
Shvwll •ppt'V...i...cty ~ olJ1t
r---------·--------------·~av~JQH """·'CATION---------.\-' I I
I I
I
I
I
THE SONIA ROSE
Walid only if potbntl1tol by Dtambtr 31, 1983.
Limit: °"' ~ pmon.
Fnnlillo Po,roelaln
Franklin ~Iller. Pmntylvania 19091
Mr. M".
I
I
I I
I I I
I
I
Plcue accept my Y'ftervuion for ~ ~
Rtw by Jeanne Holgate. This original eculp-
1ured ~U wlU ~ cnf\ed for aw In fine, hand·
painted porulain. Miff--~------~-->
I need tend no~ 1111 1hla lime. I wlll
be billed ln chrw monthly lnllUl.lmcnu of t tO.• pfut t I. tor 1hfppm1 8bd handling.
wllh the n,... payment dU. wforc •he work it
IClll to~ . .,.,.. ., ...., ...,, -
Sisn••u~----------·-~ ... ...,.,.. ,. ........_.
r ........... , ...........
City
Slate------_ Zip ___ _
31'6
L-------------------------~-----------·------··----,--------------~
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