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1984-08-10 - Orange Coast Pilot
Cllll lllTlll - f-RIOA Y, AUGUST 10. 1984 0 A ANG F C 0 UN T V CAL I f 0 FI NI A ~ '1 C E N T S N.B's ·f~ke reef expanded 'Form et UC Irvine dis- tance runner Steve · Scott goes for the gold Sa turi:lay after shak- ing off pre-race jitters. Page Bl .. CoUt Laguna' a tram service may keep rolling untll Labor Day./ A3 California AIDSvlctlmwtth 105 degree temperature, was . tranferred by friends 200 • mHes to Bay Area hospl-. tal./A4 .· Natl.on Two women described as 'man haters' accused ot kllllng one man, Injuring another .I A5 World Four passengers on hi- jacked plane In Rome are mlsslng./M People 'Leave It to John Wiison to develop a weightlifter with muscles like mar&hf!lallows./85 Entertaining for corpor- ate VIPs has become another marathon at the orymplcs.nss- Sporta The pitching of Orel Hershlser and two re- lievers and Greg Brock's homer gives Dodgers 1-0 wln./82 Ex-Corona del Mar High tennis standout Jessica Algazl la ready to test professlonal competl- tton ./84 Entertainment If you think the opening ceremony of the Olym- pics was something, wait tlll you see the grand flnale./87 Sawdust Festival has grown up and Into the hearts of Laguna tourists as a summer tradition. /WMkenct.1' Bualneu Real estate brokers ap- plaud court ruling on commissions./ A7 INDEX Auto Piiot Erma&om~k Bridge Bulletin Board Bt.ialneet Callf0tnla Newt ~ coma Croaaword OMthNotlCM Gerdenlng Help YoutMtf Hof'oeoc>pe Ann L8ndttt Mut\191 Fundt NatlonaJNewa OplnlOn ' P8'*UZI People Polee Log Publlc Notleee Aeltaurenta Sport• 8tOC1C Marketa T~ Theltet'I w ..... .. C1·8 ee 88 A3' A7 A4 <*7 88 C7 C3 87 ee ce ae A7 A4 A8 85 e&-e A3 ~ W•.nd« 81 ... Al 87 WMker\det A2. A4 Get out your pole and tac le, because ftshin' should improve with rubble By JERRY llJRSCll °' .. ...., ........ A major addition to a~ artificial reef off Newport Beach, due to start next week. should imprQve local fi~hing. accordjng to a California Department of Fash and Garno of- ficial. • · More than 16,000 tons of concrete and rubble will be dumped in the ocean about l '14 miles west of New- port Pter starting next Wednctday. Gold Within their grasp Coacb Monte Nltncnnkl of Banttncton Beacb and mem- ben of Illa u.e. water polo team erupt wtth enthualum u ·the Americana Dip Weet Germany 8 -7 Th~~ earn a allot at tile fold medal &Caiut Tqoela'ria to t. Prom N•gasaki Day marked by vigil in Seal Beach Pacifists ·satisfied• no nukes are stored at weapons station By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' ... ...., ........ Dcmonstratina continued opposi- tion to nuclear weapons. about 200 people panicipatcd in a Nagasaki Day Candlehlht Memorial at the Seal Beach Naval Weapo_n.s.Swion Thurg. day. iThe event marked the 39th an- niversary of the droppin1 of the atomic bomb on Napsak1, Japan. Seal Beach police said the demon- stration, sponsortd by the Orange County Alliance for Survival. went smoothly and there were DO unusual inctdents. Earlier in the day, the a.llia:ncc held a press conf~ncc to announce that the orpnization is satisfied that no nuclear weapons arc now stored at the Seal Beach base. The aroup claimed community pressure caused the Navy to move the nuclear weapons to othCT locations. Fourteen months qo, a federal study requested ~ U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, 0-Cah ~ cStatcd that the_ Seal Beach base no longer had .. the capability" for handhna and loading nuclear weapons. The rcvclatton was a strona departure from the Navy's lona·standing policy of refusin1 to confirm •r deny the existence of (Pleue eee Alttl~/ A2) Donations start the ·ball rolling for UCI Events Center said Pat Moore. spokesman for the Long Beach office of the Fish and Game department. It is part of the continuing Ocean Enhancement Project conducted by the department, he said. There arc seven artificial recf1 in Oranic County waters. Six arc off Huntm1too Beach and one is off· Newport. · . The Newport reef consists of 8-to tO-icct high rubble pilts d1str1buted throUlhout a S. crw area. in about 70 feet of water, Moore said. The reef will be expanded to bout 101Cf'CS. Moore said. .. It attract• ft b and other manoc hfc .. The rCCf ICts up ab ecological food chain and at the top of that chain are the large pme fish,.. Moore uplai'Md. As soon as the rubble is (jumped. left are DoUC Burke. uaiatantcoach Ken Llnclpen-alao a Banthifton Beacb reaident. Nltakowakl. Gary l"jflieroa (bldden1. Cbrla Dont and wiatant coacb SteYe Beuton. StoryonPa&eBl. ............ _,,__ ........ AW.ance for SUrri'ftl memben •lnl oatalde maln ••te of Seal Beacb Weapon• Statton durlni C&ndleU,htmemorla.l forN.,uUl bOmblng.tctimaof 1045. fisherman sbould 1ee 'an 1acnate an kclpbaa, !Sbeepibcad, taalp\n .S b&ncd sand '*'· ••Jbc fish arc attl'lded IO die vcnacaJ shapes." Moore laid, ~ lhn at will take a httle lonter btfoft the other fonm of reef life settle on the rubble. .. The Ncwpqrt rtef alr'Cl(f)' hau lol of bam:d sand bell wbidl 11 a Ya'J (PleeM .. aar /A2> Irvine _crash closes freeway Young gtrl hurl«¥ over embankment near ~gu?a Caqyon BJ SIDE llABBI.& °' .............. Patrolmen biod:Cd all joijthbognd traftk oo t.bc Saa Diq.o frce"tay io Irvine for mon: than an hour t.bd morning foUCJWina a traffic 11Ccident that injured four persons includit'f.1 youna girl -ho was burled over a 60€ foot embankment. autbonties re- ported. .. - The i...o-car accident near t1ai Lacuna Canyon ROid exit snarled • mld-moming traffic -hidl was . blocked from using the freeway between the offramp and its intcr4 section witb the Santa Ana fll'CQ~ , to the south. Thdc was DO information avall· able on what trigered the 10:30 a.m: conision. Rosalyn MO)er. 8, was rushed to the trauma c:en tcr at W cstem Medical Center in Santa Ana alon& with bet Uodc. identif_ied J()lq)b ~ .CCOrdina to OrUge-Count)" Fu~ Capt. Mark Reinbold. The youna &irl reponedly ...as thrown from hCT uncle's car and tumbled do..,n a 60-foot embank- ment near the offramp. autbontics said. Firefighters rc9CUCd her from the ravine. ....- Two unidentified persons ridina in the second car were taken to ~ back Community Hospital . The· freeway's southbound lanes were reopened shortly before noon. Swells swell alo:11g Coast ~ Surfs up aJona the Orange CoasL ~ Llfesuard stations from Hunt- inaton Beach to Laauna Beach ~ repoftina the surf is the hi&hcst It.pi been this summer. • • . The best urfma lS ofT NC'WJ)Ort Beach where lifcsuards were repon- ing g:. to 10-foot swells at the famed Wcdie on the Balboa Peninsula and · a• tl\e+8th Street Beach. , Other beaches up and down th• coast have waves of between 3 an ~ feet and bu1ldma with aood surfina cond1uons. "This could last throuah the week .. end." said Buddy Bel he. a Newport (Pleue eee StJllP"S/ A2J P111L SIEllEllAI NEWS BACKGROUND Friends praise slain CM youth : as a 'geod kid' . MARBLE .. ail breaks at CSUF Games· High clouds and clear skies .. About 1:.? people fell, omc on top o otbcn," ad Fullen n PQha: t I?) Lewis •• me got up and walked '" >· AJI v.crc tttatrd and t balizcd by the 01) mpac medt I taff t the venue." Four oft he 'i>CCUUors were taken to Martin Luther Ho pitAl an Anaheim and >Aert released c ~ly this momin a ho p1cal spok~woman said. one of the injuri wt're . rious, ad ·red Nucsch, ~PQke man for the Lo~ A.naetes Olympic Organizing Commattet. • The incident occumd about 11 :40 .. ... . p.m t the Tiltan G)mn aum ofCnl State Fullenon after Yu o 14, 11 beat an to d temunc the final medal 5tand1n Thcaocidentoccurrcdon temp_or- ry "oodcn structure about .SO ft>et long. Onl)' the raihna nd faC'llde bearin banner fell . The ~Ulnds thcmsth cs did not fall. About 3.000 ~oplc attended the ~cnt and 'pectators haCi pthercd IS deep behind the 10.foot section of pipe metal ratling that pve way, Tom Mcgonigal, ijandball comm1 Stoner, said. Coa•tal Tldea ~ .n 04 11 •1 n II 7J ., .. 93 04 .. u .. 11 " .. .. .. ., .. 71 • 11 ., " If " u H .. '.71 .. 14 11 TO .. It ea Ill 7l 50 .. 03 .. H = SLAIN YOUTH WELL LIKED •.• TOOAV 307•111 • 13p"' ·n .. .. IO N " 11 70 • 73 " " &an ""°" p ft 70 U SI $1• MA<I• II n " $1 12 61 From Al .. team captain ttus ~ear.· Zucker. who counted ~a)e as a friend as wtll a a valued employee. REEF .•• From Al desirable game lish." Moore ~1<.I. The rubble comes from t"'o de- molished berths at the Port of Los Angeles. The port is ~building a section of berths to accommodate lareer ships, Moore explained. -"' ' .. TbeywiJI be shipping at down here on barees. Something has to be done with it and this puts 1t to valuable use," he said. - The rubble is scheduled to be brou&ht down Wednesday and wcatfier permitting, it should take only about a week to drop mto place. ~Moore said. . said the handsome }Outh lived a clean life and excelled in almost all sPorts "You could tell he was the kind who was going 10 &O far,·· said Zucler. "It "'as just a summer job he had here but I a Iced him at least once 1f he'd keep \\-Orking after Khool." The day before Ka}e was killed. the :touth's motherobtained a restraining order in Orange County Superior Court meant to prevent Ralph from either visiting or phoning the house where the mother and ~n lived. Court documents show Ralph and Kaye's mother were divorced nearly two years ago. They tned but failed to reconcile af\crcoming to thjs country, friends said. According to Deputy District At- torney Rick Kin,g, Ralph has been diagnosed an th~ past as a manic depressive. He took medication for his condition. accordin1 to Kiog. He reportedly 1s a ctt1zen of EnglaAd who came to this countf) by way of South Afnca Young Ka~e was last seen on Aug. I when he left his job at Ktoncdy Plastics Corp. in Irvine. He was driving an orangt 1976 Mercury Capri. I The sa1je day. a handful of motor- ists reported seeing the car parked off Bon at.a Canyon Road near the county dump. Wttnesscs reponed also seeing what appeared to be a body sprawled near the car and a man who they later identified as Ralph. Kay_e's body was discovered SC\'· eral days later by workers who were preparing to fill in a sewer line ditch in lrvme's Turtle Rock community. The Capn still has not been located. A memorial service for Kaye is to be held Monday at 3:30 p.m. at Harbor Lawn Memonal Park in Costa Mesa. tAT\MDAY 4-llLm 1050•111 340am l41pm Temps .. Le 11 73 12 • 10 12 10 $4 It "'70 17 71 91 76 .. 72 .. 17 eo so 101 12 16 17 11 70 Eztended " ., '°' .. ea .. 17 17 ., 1t IO .. eo to .. IO 13 IOI IT UIO ~ .. 12 73 .. 73 74 " • 12 10 71 74 73 72 11 11 12 10 71 to II ttle 77 17 5~ 11 71 SIOU• f'alla 17 &4 SpokaM et II 8~ t3 71 'ropou 103 '3 T~ t3 71 TUIM 94 71 Wlll!qton 13 17 Wietl!la 94 76 w-....a.re 76 11 WMmlnglon De. 11 &6 IO 75 eo SI 14 •• 17 72 ti .. 17 73 17 10 II 1' 92 19 &!I 71 t2 74 ~NTl-NUKE DEMONSTRA. TION HELD ••• From Al nuclear weapons at Seal Be h . But Tim Qrpcnter, rspolcnman ror the allia:nce. said rus group was unwilling to accept that report. prepared by the Government Ac- count101 Office During the past }Car Da"1d L>nn. the alhanc:e's director of research. has been requesting the support docu- ments that led the GAO to its conclusions. Jn addition. L)-nn and other al- liance members have obscl'ed ac- ttv1tiesat the Seal Beach base. looking for signs of the storage of nuclear weapons, including the containers and security patrols associated with such devices. Some obsel'at1on was done wi1h telescopes pos1t1oned outside the base. he said "We now know there are no nuclear weaPons at Seal Beach." Carpenter said at the ne-i$ CQn ~- "'But t)'!ln claimed the GAO docu- ments did reveal other safety hazards at the 5,000-acre base, which still supplies conventional weaponry to the Navy's Pacific fleet. He said the safety prob1ems include the improper storage of hazardous matcnals and the case with which sabot.age could occur in Anaheim Bay. which serves as an entry to the base and to the Huntington Harbour residential area Thursd:Sy's news conference, which took place at the home of anll- nuclear activist Mary Lou Brophr. had· political overtones. Brophy 1s running for the U.S. congressionaJ scat in the 42nd D1stnct against Dan Lungren. R-Long Beach. During the conference. she accepted a campaign contribution from the Seal Beach SURF'S UP FOR OC ••• From Al Beach lifeguard captain. "This l!i. best surf we have had all summer." A humcaneoff of BaJa California 1!> n:spons1ble for the good ~a-.c:s he said "For two .or three days tl was heading toward Hawa11 but 11 turned back into an area we call 'the window' where storms give us good surf, Belshe said Water temperatures through the ~eekend should be in the low-70s and 1he air temperature should be an the hlgh-70s making for some nice beach weather. JJ('lnr Action Group and pledged to vote against nuclear weapons and for~-cU:~.:::: a nuclcarfrccze, if elected. l..cgJslahon that would have giveri E befi · h 1· · 1 much of Orange and San Diego ven ore cntcnng t c po Jllca counties o .... ater shares of Metro-racc, however. Brophy had been r~ pressing for Information about nu-pofitan Water District watersupplics clear weaponry at the Seal Beach base. dunnJ droughts was dccp-s1x.cd in the In 198 I, she was among the residents state L..cgulature this week · who sued the Navy in federal coun. After lobbying from legislators · "' d · · ... _ representing Los Angeles County, trying to 1orcc an a m1ss1on tnat which opposed the plan. the Senate ~l~r weapons were stored at Seal Aariculturc and Water Resources The. lawsuit was dismissed the Committee rejected the new cmerg- followmg year by a federal Judge. ency allocation plan submitted by the promptma a change of tactics. That MWD. Southern California's giant led Cranston to request the GAO watcr-distributin& agency. than on property taxes. the old basis. If the plan had been a~provcd most of orange ~ and san Diego counties would have received increased emergency allocations in case of a drought while Los Angeles County, whicfi purchases less water from MWD but has a arcatcr property tax base, would lose a oonion of !ts share. Among Orange County water agen- c1es that would have ~med under lbe revised plan were the Coastal Munici- pal Water Distnct. scrvioa Newpon Beach, Laguna Beach, portions of Costa Mesa and points south, the Municipal Water Distnct of Orange County, serving most of Costa Mesa. Huntington·Beach. Fountain Valley, and partsofNewport Beach, as well a5 the cities of Santa Ana. Anaheim and Fullerton. Post-Olympics traffic jam feared study. which produced the 1983 In a letter to the committee. Senate disclosure that nuclear weapons were President Pro Tcmporc David Rob- no longer at the base. erti. D-Los Angeles. suggested the By tbe Aasoclatd Preti explained that Montreal experienced "All of this was a Dav1d·-and-matt.er was "far too important" to be traffic taeups after the end.ofthe 1976 Goliath situation... Broph> said deaJt with "hastily" in the waning The last weekday mom mg rush Olympics. Thursday ... It did rtot make me a days of the I 984 lcgislatjvc session. hour of the 1984 Olympics saw Traffic flowed freely on most popular woman in Seal Beach... He also pointed out that since the smooth sailing on most Southern freeways this morning, with some Brophy S3td she believes the Navy cxjsting plan has worked for the past California freeways today. but an l~ght but still below-normal conges- dec1ded to move its nuclear w~apons 51 years. urgency was not an issue. official warned that departing tourists t1on reported around the -downtown from Scat Beach at the tame her The plan would have sruf\ed the could snarl traffic Monday. area and in Oran~e County. lawsuit was being considered. formula so that water allocations "There could be some buildup of He noted that officials expected Alliance for Sunwal spokesman under the preferential riahts system traffic Monday," said California De-heavy congestion this evening on Carpenter said his group will now would be based on the amount of panment of Transpartation spoke~ freeways leading to the ·Olympic press for the removal of all wea~nry water purchased from MWD rather man W.T. ··0oc• Maloney, who soccer site at Pasadena's Rose Bowl. ~mt~~IBe~ba~~~h~ ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~ said 1s too close to a densel>-popu- lated area "Dus~ no place for the Navy to be storing ammunition -nuclear or conventional," hesaid * NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY WEEKEND * . ' UCI EVENTS CENTER FUNDING ••• 20% OfF ALL 'POTTERY From A l Orange Coutlt)' 1s full of worthy causes that could use a milhon-dollar donauon. Why did Bren pick the l Cl Events Center'! "Mr. Bren has had a long-standing interest tn bnngJng the univers1t)' and the community together." ex plained Gary Hunt, who 1s an Irvine Co vice president and assistant te Bren Hunt also is co-chaJrman of a comm11tee ra1S1na commun1t} fund" for the Events Center. "I believe (Bren) understand!. the pos1t1vc benefits that l ('f bnng<i to Orange County as a "'hole.'' Hunt said "The more the bus1ne!>'> com- munity can support UCI . the better the un1vers1ty can pro.,.1<.k a1hkt1c and cultural e'ent' tha1 other\ can enjoy." He added. "If thl·rc \\J\ one program that would do more to bring the communll> in1o 1hl' uni,l'r\11\ and let the umversm reach oul lo the communtt). 1t "-OUld be the E:H·ntr, Center.'' Hunt also acknu\\lc:dgcd thal Bren usual three quarters annually. Uni- versity officials said the fee wilJ be collected for 30 years, t>epnning when the Events Center is bu1ll Still, the student commitment has been known for some time. To move the project out of the planning stages. more community donations are needed "Mr Bren thought has million- dollar i!ft would be a shot in the arm to the community fund-raisine pro- gram," Hunt said. "I think this gift bnngs the type of focus that's necess- ary (to secure additional donations)." That's what UCI officials are hoping as well. Athletic director Caine said the community fund 1s now about $2 ma Ilion away of its goal. But he said the remaining money must at least be pledged before construc11on of the Events Center can ~~ ~1d the hm1ted seating in Crawford Hall has been a source of nagaing frustration. panacularly to students students to attend. Crawford Hall's shortcominas have also hurt the umvcrstty's efforts to recruit first-rate athletes. UCl's 1.500-seat facility has trouble st.ack- mg up against, say, the new l 8,000- seat arena used by the University of Nevada -Las Vegas. Caine said UNLV basketball games draw an average of 16,000 spectators. The athletic director said the new UCl Campus Events Center is now beinJ designed by the Los Angeles architectural firm of Parkin As- sociates. It wall be built to easily allow future expansion to 8,500 seats. University offietals hope construc- tion can begin late this year or early next year. • Came said the university has promised the Paeafic Coast Athlettc Association that the new fac1hty will be ready for the t 986-87 basketball season. That would require the center to be finished by December 1986. SALE INCLUDES: • POTTERY • R•DWOOD TUBS • SAUCIRS • WIR• BASKETS • BARR•LS • STRAW BAIK•TI • AND POTTING SOIL TOOi • 1s an avid sportsman h1msdl: enJO\- ing tennis. sk11ng. -.ailing and 1ogg1ng . 'I Hunt said Bren alr,o \\as 1mpre~sed .•,that UCI student\ were "1ll1ng 10 impose an additwnal fee on them- -.u:selves to ra1w $7 million for the ce nter. "There ha'e been 11mes "'hen the\ couldn't get tickets to S« their own team pla>-." Came said The baske1ball team has e\- penmen1cd with larger off-campus Sites. with little success. he said The .\nahl'1m Convention Center 1s often booked "'1th con"entions. and the Long Beach \rena 11. too far for many But the Campus Events Center would not be restricted to basketball games. Came said the fac1ht} wtll be available for general physical educa- tion acuv1t1es and organ11ed sports such as men's and women's vol- leyball. exhibition tennis. and indoor soccer. Faculty convocations and events open to the non-univers1t}' community may also be scheduled 1U the Events Center. .. The fee I\ s~"' a quarter or S611 per year for \ludcnt\ ~ho enroll 1n the Just Call 642-6086 What do you llb about Uae Dally PUot? Wllat don't you like? Call' tile numbtr at left aod your messafe will be recorded, transcribed and dcllvtred to tht appropriate editor. - The 1ame U·bour auswerln& service may be us d to record 1euen to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must l.nclade tbtlr name and telephone namber for verlflcatioo. No drcula&loo call1, pltase. Ttll • what's" your mi.nd. DaUJ Piiot O.lln ry 11 Ouarantuct ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. l . Schwertz HI PubJ1sher Lorne Bruchet Aoaemery Churchman Advert1s ng Director Control! r Steph.n 'F. Cerezo Pr oduction Manag r ~---~ ' Clrculatlon 714/142!4333 ct .. tJfted edwert111no 11.,M2~sen Alf othet .,,-.ttment1 142-4321 MAIN OFFtCI r I AMLING Newpon ursecy and Garden IB tw en MacArthur and Jamboree) •~REE • Loc•I Oe11very \ Open Mon thru 11 8 30·5 30 unClay 9 00·5 ' s e nter EJ OQ..us1 coaat highway • MWPOr.& beaGh e1tlf0trna • -1-14, 64•· 510 ' Club sched ules college picnic Smith Colleie Club of Oran;e County w1U host an ··Au Eastern" collese picnic to introduce east-bound collcae studenta, men and women to each other on Sunday, Aug 1_9, from 4 to 7 p.m. at.Green Valley Home P rk, Los Jardines West and La Londra treet. Fountain Valley. . Guests arc welcome but reservations a.re reque ttd. Smtth Collett for women is located in Northampton, Mass. For further information, call Pcgy Bloom at 839-7656. Tennl• leaon• a valla bJe Te~nis lessons are ayailible from the Lquna Beach Recreation Department in two-week sessions for playe~ ofall ability levels bepnnina Aua. 20. Instructor Blair Roberts will conduct the classes each momina. Monday throuah Thursday. For information call 497-33 l l, Ext. 20 I. Heal th .creealng offered · A selection of health scrccn1na clinics arc currently beina.ofTercd free of charie to the community br Doctors Hospital of Santa Ana and Santa Ana Hospita Medical ~MU I For tnore infonnation rcpidina date, time and location for these scrccninp,call S47-256S, E:u. 108, Monda>:, throuab Friday, between 10 a.m. and 5 pm. Financial talk .cJJeduJed Ann Calvert, president ofThe Financ1al Forum, Inc., Newpon Beach, will address the Oranae County Chapter of Women in Manaaement on Thursday, Aug. 22, at the Rcaistry Hotel, 18800 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine, at 6 p.m. Calvert, who holds numerous licenses in financial fields and owns three corporations, will speak on "Winnina at Salary Negotiation:• For more infonnation, call Dr. Barbara Ardinger at 636-1702. Slagle. 'ml.zer' In Mea The Orange County Catholic Alumni Oub 1s sponsoring a "mixer" for sinales in their 20's and 30's on Friday, Aui. 24 at the We$tin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. The band "Good Company" will play from 9 p.m. to I a.m., and Becky Little will perform dunna the social hour from .8 to 9 p.m. - The "Squeeze-in" is open to all over 21 and dress is dressy-sport. Pre-sale tickets at SS are available by~· · na Lydia Wilms, 6S Streamwood, Irvine, 92714, prior t l\ug. 17. Tickets will be $8 at the door. For more info ation, call Mike Hanfield at 975-6482 (days) or 957-0125 (evenings). Open JJouse spon.ared World Travel Institute will sponsor an open house on Thursday, Aua. 23, at 7 p.m. m its Corporate Head- quarters, 620 N . Main St., Santa Ana. Those interested in makinJ sound decisions about bc&inning a career in the travel mdustry are requested to R.S.V.P. to Cindy Fehrenbach before Wednesday, Aug. 22. at 835-8111 . Work•IJop for tutors slated The South Coast Literacy Council will begin lls 15th year with an in-service workshop for its1Utors who will get together Saturday, Aug. 25, at 9:30 a.m. for coffee and socializing at Mercury Savmgs and Loan Buildina, 2302 I Lake Center Dnve, El Toro. This will be followed at 9 a.m. by a session on "How to Use the Newspaper in Teact\ina." led by Geraldine Banarer, publicity chairman. Group sessions on tips on teaching the vanous Skill Books Wtll be led by Hazel Painter, center director, Skill Book. I; Betty-Kent, tutor trainer, Skill Book 11; Ooalce Carter, vacc president in charge-of tutor ttaining, Skill Book JJJ; and Estelle Rosenthal, tutor trainer, Skill Book IV. For more information, call 493-3800. "Evening With Joy" set The Women's Opportunities Center, 2811 Maio St., Irvine. is offering a workshop entitled "An Evenina With Joy" on Thursday, Aug. 16, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Orange County attorney Joy Dickerson will discuss the risks of joint tenancy laws and the necessity of pre- marital and cohabitation agreements. There is no charJC. Call 856-7128 for prc-reg1strauon and information. Good way to cool off KeDy Jl'i8elier, 7, of Hantbuiton Beach ride. down• a man-made mud alfde d~ a Ylait to Adve nture Pl&JIJ'OUDd ID Banilngton Beach tht. week. Lciguna Beach tram service may run through Labor Day Chamber asking merchants for funds to keep buses r olltng after festival closes By DAVID BISHOP Dtllr ..... C..1 ., ..... City trams and trolleys will get an extended holiday run in Laguna Beach if enou&h merchants join in supporting a Otamber of Commerce proposal to keep them rolling over the Labor Day weekend. busy off-season weekends. Chamber transportallon chairman Tim Howell said local businesses are being asked to contribute $50 m return for 50 ride tickets that they may distribute free to customers or as they wish. "We're looking for enough response by Aug. 15 to make it work." said Howell. who credited local restaurateur Harry Moon with gener- aung the idea. "We'll sec what happens, and ifit doesn't work at least we tried." -Loast Highway from-Ownonci!)tn:et to Beverly Street WJth a loop throuab the downtown business district. Howell, an architect who 1s also a member of the city's Pa.rbna. Trans- ponation and Circulation Commit- tee, said the chamber would like to make a profit on the Labor Day bus venture, which would be put into a fund for the following year. CALEN DAR r. The City of Laguna Beach operates the trams and trolleys dunng the crowded summer festival season, but when the festivals close the third week of August the trams and trolleys are usually put into mothballs until ------the followina season. But now the Chamber of Com- Howell also said that Laguna Beach residents would be offered a S 15 package of five three-day passes for the entire weekend. The single nde fare would be 50 cents, same as the city charaes. On the Saturday before Labor Day the chamber will employ one trolley to augment the city's bus service. Howell said. On Sunday and Monday the Chamber as luring the trolley and the aty's two trams. NonnaDy the city bus service is shut down on weekends and holidays. "On Sunday and Monday we'll be ~ only act in town," Howell said. Howell ad.matted the packa&ed rates for merchants and residents don't provide much saviJll.' over the rqularfare. "We need to find out how much people really want bus service," he sajd. Friday, Aug. 10 No meetlnp scbeduled today. merce is tryina to raise S 1,300 to hire the vehicles and drivers to "assist the city system" in alleviatinadowntown traffic problems during peak hours on Pou cE Loe The proposed route would be along COut DAILY PILOT /FrJfWJ A19aet 10 18M .M Teen:.ager adml ldlling 'Bee Lady' An Anaheim teen G JU t)' IO lint ..... murder an Jhe death o a 96-ycar-old womu ~ u .. The Bee Lady•• and bet daupun. ~~~~UIM:fl7year.()JdfJ~~:s~~--t to ll\O covnts of robbery and one count of bwJlalY llid lDVC$Uptor Tom lee~ :1'--1-v.-n. Vlloa was sentenced to the caluunu• • ~ Authority unul be is 2S ears old. The sent.e:AOC, •= eyQranatCouncy uperiorCourtJucStcJamnJ. • was the maximum lbe JUvCnile can be tenieOced to CY A cuatody. ' --'" ..... .. There was · no plea~barpinina invotv~ an "~ dc'clsion by lhe ddcndai:n IO cbanF hh pk.a ~ .. Icenogle Ald. Ulloa wa one of three people cbarsd witbiiil the women, who ere round ti&htly bound and with aocki on A9g. 8. 1983 m 1the borne the Y occupied since 1919. .. Last month, Oscar Torres 11. of Anaheim. wu · convicted of the murdcn aM l'Obber}• and will be sentenced Aua. 31. Edward Barrios.· 23, hu ~ innocent and is scheduled for trial Aua. 20 10 onb Oranae County Superior Court in Fullcnon. "'"rbere was a stronaer case apmst Ulloa than lhm was gainst Torres," lcenoale said. Torres could rective l:S ye.an'° life for 1be do le murder, but he will not face the death tentence because he is a juvenile. · Elizal>Wl Schaf er became known as .. The Bee Lady.of Aria.brim .. in 1979, when she def ea.led DCilhl>otS' attempts to force.her to pve up her bee ruves ancfroadside bo stand. " OC broad~ wk UccmM BJ tile AllodaW Pren The Roman Catholic dioccK Of Frnno and in Oranac Count} Christian broadcastina corporanon ~ve applied for a federal hcense to open a new tcleVlSlon nation ia V i.salia. 1bc diocese propoted broadcutina mostly educe· tional prosrams with shows in Ellllisb. Spanish, Vitt· namese and Hmona. . C•mmunity Educational Television Inc. of Tusu planned to offer 70 ~t relipous and. 30 ~l educational prosra.mnuna wi!h some shoWI m ~ The Tustin company .1S an .,. of:;&beJruwy Broadcastma-N~rt.; .irich owns d.t uatioas natio~1!~"~.-. ly. 9 Both are vyina for a license to operate Cbanncl 4 seven days a week . Bl Toro ao'-e ma7 mc.reae fli&bt practice at the Marine Corps Air Station, 'tl Toro could increase dayl.iaht noite levels in the EJ Toro- 1..ake Forest areas, the Marine Corp1 reported.. Two squadrons of the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wuia arc practicin& carrier landinp at the base thi month. before conductioJ actual earner landiQP at tea. a MuiDe spokesman said. · . . . Because ofcrosswtnds. be Wd, ll mi&ht be neoessuy for the aircraft to use Runway 25 on a limited basis This would bring the jct fiabtcn over the El Toro-Lake Forat areas. Cormt,. jaJI a.o.aer approved As pan of its effort to reduoe o""CT-crowdina in the Oranac County Jail, the Board ofSupnviSOf'S appro~ construction of a $2.S million low-secunty Jail annex to built adjacent to the Theo Lacy facility in Ora.nae. The 18~bed annex jail supervison hope to bu1ld would house inmates ass~ed to the county's work furlough program. fttei.DJ u'p aMitKm.al beds in the Theo Lacy facility for other pn.soners. Althou&b supervisors TucsdaY. ~that plannina for the 21,~squa,re.footjail build.in.a proceed, fund.ins for the jail addillon remains in question, at least until the board approves a new budact. Hearings on the I 9S.-85 budatt arc slated to get under way next week. _ J1V A to cla.e for two dap John Wayne Airport's mam runway will be closed to air traffic for two days during November as~ of a SI 8 million resurUcin&~~cct. While'-the b of the raurfactn& wilt be ac- complished at night, ov. 3 and 4 have been set aside for dayume construC1.1on, aooordtna to Supervisor Thomas Riley. whose d.istnct includes the airport. During those two days. all arr traffic will be diverted to Ontano Airport. Riley said. The runway, suffering from hazardous surface crackin&. is in need of resurfacina to prevent pavement fa.Uurc, be said. Coa8t man on atate water board Gov. George OcukmeJ1an has appointed Edwin "Ted" Finster of Corona Del Mar to the state Water RcsoWt':CS Control Board. > The state board post pays $55,000 annually. Finster, 60, is a retired engineer who worked 29 r.ears for Boyle Engincerina Corp. ofNewpon Beach. He will fill a vacant post on the S-membcr board. "It has been m the m1U for several months and I look forward to it." Finster said. Trio hold man at. gunpoint, clean. out apartment in HB Adams Ave Pohce sa1d the women apparently were usmg .. booster baa,s" to steal items from the store. • • •• A restored 1964 Chevrolet Impala "'onh about $7,000 wa stolen from the 15000 block of Plymouth Lane • • • A burglar broke into a residence on Street. • • • A burglar entered o residence on the 17000 block. of Keelson Lane and took a tclevmon stt IA&1ID& Beach . ported mi 1na from a shop in the 200 block of Park A venue Thunday afternoon. • • • A paintma v.:orth $640 was ~ ported stolen Thunday 2ftcrnoon from a booth at An-A-F11r. Canyon Acres Dnve and Laauna C.anyon Road A resident of the Woodlake Apan-· mcnts on Edinacr Avenue in Hunt- ington Beach reported that three men, one of whom he knew, held him at aunpoint while they cleaned out his residence. police said today. The man told told police the three men took two pair of water skis, two pair of snow skis, two 'urfbOards, a surfboard rack, a video cassette recorder, a stereo, two pictures. tapes and records during the Thursday ttiaht incident. They loaded 1he man•s possessions into his van and drove off. according to police, thouah \he van was later returned. the 8400 block of Jenny Lane and took a stereo. a tclc" i$ion. speakers, Jewelry. clothing and liquor. Police said the crook broke in the front door. • • • An unlocked pr.age door OI} the 16000 block of Hiasns Cude provided entry to burglan who mad_e off with a microwave oven, an 11r compressor. two tool boxes, two clcctnc anndcrs and an assonmcnt of tools. Jay Alan Sanders. 30, was arrested at Broadway a'nd Oiff Dnve Thurs- day ruaht and charged .. ,th dn' 101 under the influence of alcohol "He wu released on S 1,500 bail. • • • Fred Clark Chandkr. 27. was arrested at El Camino Del Mar and Qlcnne) re Suttt Thursday niaht and chaflC<l wdi dnv1na under the in- fluence of alcohol. He was ~leased on ••• Bnan Scott Huddleston. 19. T.'as arttstcd and charged with pod thef\ auto at South M11n Beach Thursday mommg. He was held on $5.000 bail. • • • A buralarY "' reponed at a bustDCSS fo the 200 block of Broad- way Thursday mornin&-Someone apparently broke in dunna the niaht and took S62.S in cash. Newport Beach James Andrew Peykolf. 2S. an unemployed man from Oranac. was anuted on suspicion of indecent exposure near the inte~tion of McFadden and Ocean Front about 10:30p.m. Thursday. • • • Whecltand. 30' Palm, reported the thef\ of two katcboai'da with a combined valued of S 107.80 Thurs- day. • • • Recycled Ras • 2731 E. Coast Hi&hway, repO,rtcd the theft of a woman' fur coat valued at $4,SOO Thursday. • • • • Bullock at Fa h1on I land rt· pont'd the thctl of a d11mond rin& valued at $4,000 from the tore's jewelry department Thui'lday, -... Ncwpon Beath woman reported the theft ofS2, 1001njcwtlry from her home an the 400 block of Baywood Thunday. en Edward Kroll. 37, of Newpon Beach. was arrested about I 1:30 p.m. for ta.kin& off his pants at the Villqe Inn on Balboa Island. He was charaed with public nudity and was released on his own recognizance. • • • A Ncwpon Beach woman ~~ntd Thunday that someone stoic two win: whccl1 valued at S2SO each from het Cadillac parked on Backbay Drive. The lo swas placed at $8j2S. • • • A front door VtlS pned open Thursday at a home on the SOO block of Wendy Lane and $160 wonh of valuable were rcponcd stolen. A television set, clock radio and about SI O worth of change were amona the item s rnmina. • • • About $2,SSO tn cash wu stolen earl)' this week from a home on the 3000 btoc.k of Coll A "cnue. An unlatched window providC'd entry for thieves, pOlice said. Baatlncton Beacb retidcnt of 1h~~8-~ bl of Arnett Ori\'c ~necrma1 m~nc broke inlo the bou while the famtly wu on vacatton and took a video cas ttc tte0n.1cr and a tcrco ~ ~ivcr. Policc id it ap~ ~e crooks entered lhrouah a rear sh<la &I door. • • • Ab<iut S 1.soo wonh of1c ICI') .,,, rq>oncd m1 na from a 1 on the I · f • • • A 1h1cr 1973 Camero 9o'Onh about $4,000 wa tot.en from its parlcina place near the intcrsecuon of Brookhurst trttt and Indianapolis S I. SOO bail. • • • Jew try worth $82S ..-as ~ported stolen Thursday_ nl&ht from a resi- dtnce in the 600 block of Slttpy Hollowlane .. • • • Ice cream -.onh S4.000 was ~ • • • Divin& ~uipment wonh $6,000 was reported stolen from a vehiclt parked in the 800 bloc of Can)on View Drive Tucsda)l afternoon. Cooper dismissal motion denieGl .. , Ayatollah on mines: Don't l>lame us tHow_ could we support something which ts ·against world feeling , against Islam ... ?' them to an I 1:1mic. anti-Wcsttm e"remist &roup. However, on Thursdayj_ Khomeini was quoted by the ofticial new gcncy IRNA as cntkizing the radio reports because they made Iran look bad. quoted as saying .. 1 ook and see what a problem we have. Whate\'tr happen . they bl me us," he was quoted u sayina. by Tbt A11octated Pre11 Iranian lead« Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini complained that, "What- C\er hapsten tbC) blame us" and a U.S. official ~id Iran and Libya arc con~1dercd prime su~pccts 1n a RC'd Sea mine-laying operation. The Reagan dminhtration 1s not makina any public nccusalions until the U.S. Navy investigates explosions that have damaged at least l 3 ships in the Red Sef and the Suez Canal in the past two •ks . But a U.S. government official an Washington; who declined to be ntified. said Thursday that Iran 'add Libya. both w11h radical Islamic . ·mes, are .. the logical-candid.ates" far suspicion becau~ they arc angry the status quo." The official Libyan new aiency JANA said today that the United States had planted the bombs. It did not elaborate. · • A U.S. Navy surve) ship has been in the Gulf of Suez since last week. hctpina seareh for min" and scrvtna as a base for l S American experts. . But until mines or other ex.pfosi\e devices arc found and examined, the U.S. official said the United States- Jike Eaypt, Saudi Arabia, Britain and other affected nations -is not "Any corrupt ction whicb takes (place) in the world. (they say) Iranians and lhe Iranian ovemment have a band in it:• Khomeini w.as "Ho~ could we suppon something which is again t world fetlin&$, llJ.Bin t htam and apinst reason~" Khome1ni'a statement id. "Minina someplace means an innocent aroup would be annihilated. How could Iran permit this." AIDS victim transferred 200 ·m _iles to SF ho.splt{il prepared to make an official accusa-SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ An officials said. lion. AIDS patient who had a fever of 105 The am val of Richard Lee Brower. Part of the doubt anses from an degrees and a deadly form of pocu-29, at San Francisco General sparked Iranian about-face this week moma after a 200-mile drive to San controversy after doctors there • at Egypt for siamng a pe;ice treaty with Israel and they "want to upset On Tuesday. Iran's 'state radio Francisco General Hospital was re-.charged that he was too ill to be praised the attacks and attribut,ed ported 1n serious butstable condition, tranported from San Luis Obispo :....-.....-----------------------__;_ ______________ General Hospital. They further charged tha& doctors 10 San Luss Obispo failed to ask for permission to transfer Brower -a THREE BOOKCASES: s179 12"d boolc.Case Choose from three <lurab e tin snes 'o\111e dark ::iu1cner block and oak Each unit stanos n·n 1 30 " • 12 0 Smote bookca!e S75 Also available rn 16 • depth 3 lor $239 or 595 each common practice amona hospitals. Dr. David Chernoff. San hanc1sco General's chief medical resident , called the tranfer "completely inap- propriate." He said Brower arrived at his hospital at 3 a.rn . on Saturday with a high fever and a deadly pneumonia related to AIDS. Acqutred lmmun~Deficicncy Syn- drome attacks the 6ody's ability to fl&ht infection. Brower arrived at San Francisco General with two friends who had driven him and a tank of oxygen supplied by San Luis Obispo General Hospital The oxyaen ran out during the 2()().milc drive, hospital officials said. San Francisco General .. would have been willmi to accept him, but under the conditton that be was well enough to travel and that the transfer was done in an ambulance and that this hotpital wu i'cady for him." Chernoff said. . House adopts bill to close controversial landfill site By A1aorl1ted Pre11 WASHINGTON·-'rhe BK.K Landfill in West Covana where uplosave and cartinoae01c fUmc1 have routed more than 60 nearby residents t'tom their home would be shut down under an amendment to a House.. uperfund" bill. But tatc health officials say theclo ure order in Thursday's amendment would have little eff«t on conuollina methane ps and "Vinyl cbtoride fumes already leaking from the ite 20 miles east of downtown Los Angel . The House adopted.the amendment introduced by Rep. Esteban E. Torres, O.la Puente, who twice in the last month had.a kcd Wilham D. Ruckdshau1. administrator of the Environmental, to close BK.K to further dumpina. 1 ne House w•s c~pected to pa the legislation today which would boost the S<>oCallcd supCifund. the aovemment's chief tool for cleanina up abendoned toxic chemical dumps, from $1.6 billion to S l 0 2 .billion over the next five years. Mo~er lea~ to death NEW YORK -A woman chnchina her:4-year-old son 1Hi her arms released him at the urging of onlookers then leaped to her death from a busy brid&c into a nver 1 SO below while her two other children watched in horror, police said. P~ Washin.Jton. 38, stopped her car on the southbound side of the Bronx-Whnestonc bridge between Queens and the Bronx about 4 p.m . Thursday and went to the railing clutching her son, Dennis, according to Sat. Peter Ruane, a police spokesman. She left her other child.ten, John, 10, and Yvette. 7. inside the car, he sa.ui.. Lawrence race riots co.atbJae LA WR ENCE. Mass. -Scores of heavily armed police patrolled streets acnd with the smell of tear gas today, forcin& a tense calm ~fter Hispanics and whites traded ethnic insuhs1 rocks and Molotov cocktails m a second stra1Jht niaht of.riotina. Despite a massive police pte1tnct, ~olence flared apin Thursday night in the ~r. six-block area called Tower H1ll where officials say tensions have been build.mg for months. Police at the scene said about a dozen people were hurt in the latest round offighting. with inj uries rangina from cut~. to tear gas inhalation. CALIFORNIA Rev. Jac~llOn offtoRaula? A units come •1o11'1 'our She ves tn•ee ol 1.h1Ctl a•e ddtu~tdbte Op11011a1 d~ctssor1e 1~1\sp.t.C~!llel - doors crop ltd Jnd e,tra SAN FRANCISCO -The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who has repeatedly asked to travel to the Soviet Union to check on the health of dissident Andrei Sakharov, says there are "strona andicauons" his request will ~ granted. Talking to reporten Thursday before a speech to rcpresentat~ves of the National Alliance of Postal and Federal Employees, Jackson also saud he would urge the nation's postal worken to stay on their JObs, saying they could be fired or replaced by machines if they went on strike. Jack.son said his "peace mission" to the Soviet Union ts necessary to encourage dialogue and reduce tensioos ·between the two .tu~wCS'$ "so m,t we can move from the possibility of ... nuclear conftontatton to one of trade, education, dial~nd t"..---1-0-f-f•E-LL-'S __ _..... agricultural development." UPHOLSTERY, lllC. Character actor Deacon dead f• n. aat Of Yw lie LOS ANGELES -Character actor Richard 1922 lWl80I auo .. COSTA EA _ 541-U5' Deacon, who ap~ in numerous telcv1S1on series Silt \f'S Assembly and delivery ertra ~============-t includinJ "Leave It to Beaver" and "The Dick Van Dyke Show," 1s dead of an apparent bean attack at age 62. A ... Danica Open Da11y 10-6 Sunday 12-5 3015 Bristol Street Costa Mesa (714) 751-2977 Happy Summer Snc. 195 ~ f? IAllITT llSlllUCE 'Ct>. ~ :-.. Non-smoker . ,~~-Rates 1tb a1-n40 441 Old .... port 81Yd. Newport -..ch. Ca. hospital spokesman said Deacon's death was of "apparent natural causes," possibly a heart seizure. Deacon was a rqular on seven series 1n the 1950s and '60s, including "Leave It to Beaver," in which he played the father of Wally's sidekick Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford. and "The Dick Van Dyke Show," where he played the ·overbearing producer Melvin Cooley . Deacon's bald pate, black-rimmed glasses and stern demeanor made him a natural for portrayina stuffy DEACON bureaucrats in more than 100 films and hundreds of tclcvisJOn shows. "He was always the guy with the pocket watch who would look down his nose on people. which was so far from what Richard was really like," said Deacon's manaaer, -=----------------------------------------L--------------1 Robert Prete. Deacon is survived by his father, Joseph Deacon of San ENTER 0 Annual Summer Sidewalk Sale One of the largest sidewalk sales along the coast. JAMBOREE & BAYSIDE-------=~ BYENTRANCE TO BALBOA ISLAND Clemente. and a nephew and niece. TW'o set. of quadruplet. born LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two women gave birth to quadruplets within a seven-hour period, offic1als said. with all eight infants reported in aood condition. The rare births occurred late Wednesday at Glendale Adventist Hospital in suburban Glendale and early Thursday at Cedars.Sinai Medical Center-inWest HollywOOd. County hcaITh officials could not say bow many quadruple births have occurred in the county, but sa1d multiple btrths so close together were unusual. WoRL O • Four lq/ack paue.agers mJubJg ROME -Four men who missed a Thursday night flight retumina 284 passengers of a hijacked Iranian jct LO Tehran want to ~':Jin Italy and plan to ask the United Nations for help, anJta~ lcaislator · today. Two franian teen-agers were arrested for the hiJackina of the plane, filled mostly with Iranians on their way to the Saudi Arabian holy cities of Mecca and Medina for a Moslem pilarimaae. The teen-agers freed the hostages and surrendered Wednesday ,J>u~ there were newspaper reports sugesting that other pa.ssenaers may have provided some support. Sov1et. halt saperjet pla.a• MOSCOW -The Soviet Union has halted development of the supenonic TU-144 jet, a model of which exploded and crashed at a Paris air show 1 I yean aao. a senior official of the Soviet airline Aeroflot says. Nikolai K. Poluyanchik, dircctor-iencral of the airline's internauonal department, confirmed the move Thursday as a press conference commemorating the 2Stb anniversary of the opening of Shcremetyevo International Airport. Blots rock Belrut BEIRUT, Lebanon -A sencs of bomb and grenade blasts rocked Beirut ovem1aht and the ~rmy command said today an attempt was under way to "sabotage the secun~y pla~" des~ed to end Lebanon's cml war. Police saud five. blasts ~urred 1n.vanous neighborhoods of mostly Moslem west Beirut dunna the nsJ)lt, causing damage to shops but no casualties. One was a 11 · ~u~d explosive charge that damaged a clothing shop in the city's commercial d1stn~t of Hamra. The rest were caused by hand grenades thrown from spcedi?• ca.rs.or rocket-propelled grenades fired from undl5Closed locations. authonues said. (}Vewp<)rt Surf c& Sport, Inc. Back-To-School-Sa le NIWPOlrr8 ...,. • IMGCIUT •LacnoN Ofl MA~ STARTS FRI. AUG. 10°'1 :g,~""' 25 70~ 0 :~~ • MALI • 0 "Tl • CATC>ff •• l tL9()NO "II • ' MIN'• • WOMIN'• • •ov ... WIT8UIT9 ACCl•a<>FUle • IU .. f'eOAlltOe ON eALI TOO -•a.oo 0'" ftLU• , .... T·8HIRT n2•~9wd N.wpon 9Not\. CA •:l'M:a 87&-787•. 816-7177 AU,gUtt 10 1914 Figu~es show inflation '.s still under contro Wholesale prices climb a mere .3% for month of July WASHINGTON (AP) -Whole· sale price•: up Tot tho first time in' three months, rose a modest 0.3 percent in July as food costs posted their fint increase since March, the government said today. Still, wholesale prices for the year's finl seven month pined at an 2 'man haters' held in slaying VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) - Two women de~bed as "man haters" turned themselves in today to police after a double date with two Turkish students in Pennsylvania ended with one man shot dead and the other wounded. Authorities said the women, listed on extradition papers as Sara Mae Richardson, 20, oflmperial, Pa., and Charmaine Lynn Pfender, 18, of Pitubutlh. were beina held without bond in the jail of this Atlantic coast resort city. The two suspcctS arc memben of a group called Peck's Bad Girls, a disbanded softball team and an anti- male aroup, Allegheny County, Pa., Homicide Inspector Floyd Nevling said Thursday. The wom~n.called police from an · • unidentified rtlative•s home here, 3SO miles from Pittsburgh, about 1 a.ln. to tum themselves in, said Virainia Beach Police Lt. J.W. Pritchard. "The name of the JfOUp has surfaced several times in the in- vestiption," Nevlingsaid. "We don't know if it is a formal orpnization, a loose confederation or a softball team." Police said the women were wear- In& blue softball uniforms when they picked up the two men at PittsbulJh's Point State Park Tuesday night ID a yellow Plymouth hatchback. "It looks hke we're lookfof for a couple of v1Clous men haters,' Nevi· ina said. Police issued warrants for the two women late Thursday after findina the body ofEnam Aydin, 24, buried in a shallow grave ID a remote wooded area near the Greater Putsburah International Aarpon. The search began after Suat Erdopn, 2S, emefJCd from the woods Wednesday monung with a bullet in his shoulder, telling police ofa double date that he said "went sour." Erdogan told police he and Aydin drove to the woods with the two, women after one suggested the group visit her relatives near the airpon. After reaching the rural area, one woman put a knife to Erdopn•s neck, promptmg him to offer his wallet, which she refused, Nevling said. The other woman then pulled a aun, shot Erdopn in the shoulder and lcilJed Aydin, Nevlina said. Another shot missed Erdopn and be was able to escape, police said. annual rate of JU t 2.9 pucent. well belo~ analysts' cnrher p~ict ons of a pm from 4.S PCrQent to S percent for the full )Car. Today"s repon, which noted that psoline prices fell at their fastell chp m IS month , was the late t tn a rie of signs that inflation 1s rcmainina at modest level' dC$pite the economy•1 unexpected strenglh. Robert Gou&h, economist at Data Resources lnc. in uxington, Mass., said in advance of the report, "lnfla. tion is very much under control. .. In its new "report, the Labor Department sajd food prices rose 1.4 percent, their steepest climb since January. Those prices had fallen 0.6 perctnt in June and 1.2 percent in :May, the steepest drop in nearly two years. Much of the blame for last month's food price hike went to a IS. I peicent pin in vegetable pricts, which fol- lowed a 10.S percent pin in June, ~leted. however, PU this sum· mer are risin,g. __ _ Offi tti the ........... _ rn food pnces was n unu l 3.1 penicnt dcchne an sohne pn ' iht ond monthly fall. 'fJ: Normally, line a ore ex- pensive durina the sum driving season. Th J uty line JPntt drop the or a •nil~ month mce March 19 3. Potato prices alone were up 44,2 percent in July, said department analyst Craia Howell, as wholesalen further drew down wt year's stocks at the same time new potatos have yet to appear on the market. . But oil and psoline pnc:cs have been· fallina inc.e sprina. in part because demand dunna lhe peak vacation months has not lived up to expectation' and because, analysu believe, the OPE nation have been producana more than a million bar- rels a day above their self-imposed . limit of 17.S million barrels. In today's rq>0n on the Producer Price Index fOT finished good , the official name for the whol le pnoc mea urc, the department revised at calculation for P/lce ctivafy an April from · the prev1ou ly reported no 'C:hailgc to a 0.1 J)Crcent gain. The index measures month·t<>- month cha in the pnccs paid to producers for food, en rgy products and other uem . The prices con-Pork prices were up 8.3 percent. the result of hrinkina supplies at a time of steady demand. Last year, farmers had sold off tatae numbers of pip, driving prices down. 'With herds l/2PRICE A VE '280 TO s450 PER ET () ~ POSTl THE L'1PERIAL REGE~CY 99~~ Twm size. each piece Full size. each piece Queen size set Full size set ~OUM>Ano... Reg 239 95 SALE 99 88 Reg 279 95 SALE 139 88 Reg 699 95 SALE 349 88 Reg 899 95 SALE 449 88 SAVE ~ioo ~39·988 SAVE 8100 s19988 umen actually pay -u ually 10 rctatlen -are measured by the Consumer Price Index. ThC produccf price measure often g,ivn a sood idea Reg 499 95 This casual contempo- rary sofa features contoured padded cushions ii'faRercu oo--.,.fpotyester blend accented with oak tnm and leather straps Matching loveseat Reg 449 95 SALE 369 88 Reg 299 95 This comfortable mult1- posrtion recliner has a deep diamond luffed back wrth rolled arms in a durable vinyl Reg 449 95 This smart dinette has a beautiful 41" x 41 " high pressure laminated wood grain top and extends to 59~ The 4 swivel chairs are oovered in a supported vinyl. Cl 'S'lll)IEH . Hefp li9 ~· ~ bMter with •ny commtnta Of concern Phont 1•800·WICKES·l •• ,Wtekn Furniture It dediCattd to total customer ut fectioft > Detadmg st month's pnce actav.a &y, the Labor &kparuncnt sai4 rrtU frutt pnccs were down 10.8 ~ the b st drop forany(:()tnponenl Of the: food .pr.tte measure ' Beef and vqJ pnces rote 6 percent Fiih pn~ revutiaa a 19 percent dro_p were up 6 9 percent. f4i pnocs fell o.9 percent: pc>pluy pnftS were down 0.4 percent . New car pnces ett up 0 2 ~t Light truck priCC1 ~ 0.-4 percent Natunll ps -pnccs rose 0.8 pctqnt whi uel oH-i off ,J ;-L perecnt. • :Let's keep traffic light, frlendliness still in place :ro the Editor. ~With'areat 1memt I've bttn read· in& (and also.hearing on news pro- ~ms on the radio & TV) how traffic ba! moved $0 well both an Orange and Los Anielcs counties dunng the flr:st week o1 the Olympics l'm not 1 transpartation spcciahst but it ap- pears to me n's possible that most ptople uufizcd the public transpar· tat ion system for the f ollowina Mson : I ) Buses were plentiful at each bus stop and were operating on "schedule; 2) Each bu~ was making a .. direct run" to only one location; 3) Most riders were app:irenlly "on good t;ebavior:• possibly trying to impress ~ople from other st.ates and coun· tnes. I realize that no public transit system can afford to have extra vehicles operating at a loss. but rm wonderina if various companies. &()vemment facilities, etc. can now try to work together with public trans.it 'YSlems to alter $0JJle working hours constantly sn order to continue, helpina to keep our freeways and surface streeb ''uncloaacd" J funher wonder if there is any way to get all of our people to continue to show the patrioti1m that's .. come alive" and seemed to help e"'eryone get along better with other people. to rcmem ber each of us usually ttturns kindness when lcindness is offemi, with kind· ness Without love and care for the Amencans we meet daily how can any of us hope to be loved and cared for by people from other countnes. It seems t keep hearing .. 2 peroent of the world's people are uncanna" -how good it would be if the 98 percent who care would contanue to ihow it even after the 1984 Summer Olympics are completed. Just bet everyone would enjoy life more. DOROTHY MCAVAY Costa Mesa Quick action on park problem !'\ To the Edi tor: A difficult problem bas been solved It Te Winkle Park thanks to the quick respanse of Councilwoman Nonna Hertzog. Our famtly bad cnsaaed a permit for the Tot Lot area at TeWinkle P..ark. Upon amvai. we fu\tnd that a lJOn·EnglLSh speaking family had taken over our ass1sned area for their own party. They were uninformed al>out the permit procedure. ancf refused to move. Because of the unfortunate situation, I finally had to enlist the aid of a Spanish·spealc.ing police officer from Costa Mesa Police Department. He quickJy helped me ameliorate the situation. Th.is unfortunate situation tn· dicated to me that there wasa need for a sign to be posted at the Tot Lot area. It should give permit information in three languages: EnaJisb, Spanish and Vietnamese. I discussed my concerns with Mrs. ~Hertzo&.-'hc wonned me two day' later that .such a sign was definitely needed and the problem was alread)' bem& resolved. r would like to commend Mrs. Hertzog for such a quick response to the problem. I also hope that this letter will belpmform the co mmunity about the permit procedure. INDA S WHlNERY Santa Ana Irvine Co. 's tares overdue To the Editor: Isn't it too bad that the Irvine Co. is "shocked" by their new assessed values for property ta"es Perhaps someone should explain to their president Thomas Nielsen that sell· •IOI pnce and market value arc not synonymous. The delinfoops of full cash value. market value and true market value are all listed for all to see in the vanous textbooks on lhl' subJCCt and spelled out as law 10 the California Revenue and Taxation Code: Fora company that appears 10 ha\e been pay10~ taxes on undervalued real estate in Orange Count} for a long Clmn-appTaud me -:£SS6SUrfor- h1s recent action. P L HUMMEL ( orona del ~far Right track for transportation To the Editor: "Jfwe were to get preoccupied wt th building new freeway corridors ... we are going to give up on the ex1stmg communities." and ''too much atten- tion aoes to building freeways and too little attention (to) improving exist- ing systems." Environmentalists speaking? Defeaters of Proposition A? No. Although we said that, 1t was before the voters slaughtered Prop- osition A. But now who's this talk.Jog? Somebody that was hstenmg to the · voters. That's who Or perhaps he Jiarbored these sentiments all along but who wants to fight count y hall'> I mean, the press quotes new chairman of the Orange Count} T ransportauon : <::'ommiss1on Damel E.'Gnsct vo1cmg "what the 300 thousand plus voters • expressed on June 5 Whether or not the voters believed the proposed San Joaquin and Foot-• hall freeways were boondoggles the taxpayers were asked to fun<ffo fatten a few developers' profits; whether they thought the road repair tidbits Proposition A offered were carrots to · rude the cake of freeways ; or whether some voters d1dn 't want JUSt another tax. 1s unimp6rtant now. What is important now 1s that an Orange County Transportation leader 1s ad· vancing reasonable transportation ideas. reasonable ideas we happened to suggest 10 letters to f reewa} backers. Fact 1s. we offered to con- sider supporting Proposition A 1f the new freeways were cut from Prop- osiuon A. Nobody was hstemng. Thank goodness for Mr Gnset. He's listerung. Let's hope the poh- t1c1ans are hstenmg to him. TOM ALEXANDER ~cretary, Laguna Greenbelt, In c Laguna Beach :closing Prop. 13 loopholes To the editor- ln 1978, California \Oters strong)} ' pproved Prop. I 3. hoping to slow down rapidly increasing taxes. fasl growth of governments and waste of • our ta" mone} Our .courts and politicians found loopholes in the propos1uon and we ha\e had duect tax increases and other increases b\ callinf taxes fees . The cost of go\ern·- ment IS arowing much faster than the income of the citizens and ""e 'illll have waste of our tax dollars. Howard Jan.is ""•II have a measure on the November ballot that will plug up some of the loopholes 10 Prop. 13 . Without this amendment 10 the California Const1tut1on. we can e.\- • peel to sec many tax increases Some will be called "fees," but w1ll still be an additional cost to us. , Prop. I 3 limited taxes based on the value of real property. so poh t1c1ans ,. added taxes per parcel. The new amendmenl will !>top this practice unless notapprovcd b} the voters. After I 3. propert}' taxes were assessed about 6 percent higher than the intent of 13 The new amendment Wlll require a refund of the excess charges It ""ill stop an 1nceasc of propert) taxes because of rebuilding after a p1sas1er It requires that propert) ta~ not be increased because of a change of ownership w1th1n the famtl}. Since man) pohtmans appear nol to understand the difference between a tax and a fee 11 clanfic'i the difference so the poht1c1ans can't circumvent Article XIIJA of the C'onsutuuon by calling taxes fees Without this amendment to our Const1tut1on. we can expect more and more taxes and continuous fast growth of government and its costs. BOB DINSEN Garden Grove . Bookstore's end lamented To the Editor· The tnbute to Chm Creeley you published on the front paJ.C of the 20 June 1984 edition of the Ptlot cheered me a amit deal on the one hand: I really admire the man and has reading and his knowlcdac ... but I feel reaJI) sad. too: When f return home. I will no lon r find the Crccle\ls' Book· ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat store - a place to da us vanou wntcrs. to order book , to talk with a bookseller. to find new till~ and writers. Chns Crttley may, not la· ment. but I do!! CLARICE M . TRAYLOR L1muru Girls' School L1muru, Kcn)-a Ea~tAfnca H. L. Schwartz Ill Frank Zlnl '-'nl'l11g.t1g F C ~ Tom Tait 'v ( IC>! ,. Craig 8hetf t I II ( "E\' n wfl ri the ;p J J ~ l ofthJ untqu llfornl ummerare ov r,thestatewlll~tJlloffcrAm Hca' w/d tpotpourrJofpotentJ l t rget forterror-ew!ryt,hlnglrom diplomatic ml Ions from nation like Turkey. Israel and theSoir/ t Union to Super Bowls In the Rose Bowl and Stanford St.ad/um.•· , SO THE BCM3 BACK, IN WASHINGTON GOT TO WONC&INO IP TEAM U6.A. v.wu>HELP WIPE OOT THE FEDERAL ruDGET DEFICIT .... Palestinians are moving into Lebanon once again Return represents success for Syria, in control of PLO WASHINGTON -The State Department stunned Congress re· cent I) by claiming that S) na was now playms a "helpful" role m Lebanon. This abrupt reversal of the official attitude toward Syna was unveiled by R1chard Murphy, the assistant sec· retary for Middle Eastern affairs. "Times change," he e:ii:plained. This 1s certainly true -but not in the sense Murphy 1mphed. The bigaest change in Lebanon as that the Palestine Liberation Organization - driven out of Beirut by the lsraehs two years ago -is quietly moving back into Lebanon in strength. "In fact." a confidential intelligence re· port warns, "the reconstruction of a Palestinian st.ate within Lebanon today is only a question of time." The report. obtained by my as- sociate Donald Goldberg. minces no words, dcclanng: "Beirut is once again witnessing the systematic re- turn of the arm .Palestinian or· gan1zauons ... su ported both b} Syna and Lebanese orpnazat1ons. Lebanese secunty sources e"pcct this PLO mflux to develop very qu1ckl) into a massive return of the enure PLO mfrastructure to the capital of Lebanon with renewed PLO act1v1ty to the pohucal, financial, m 11itary and propaaanda fields " This means that the Israeli tn· vas1on and the su~uent sacnfice of 241 Mannes at the Beirut airpon were all for nought. Lebanon wlll soon be in the same chaotic condition it was in before the last two· years of blood hed: a state powerless to con· trol a quam:lsomc, heavily armed alien population W1thin its bordm. In fact. the significant difference is that now the warring Palestinian faction will almost certainly be the urrogates of ynan Ptesident Hafu. Assad. In that respect, times have indeed chan"'Cd -for the worse. "The return of the PLO to Beirut -.;u bC 1 ~orsucccss forS}ri.a, ~"en the fac:t that moat of the PLO orpniuuons arc today to some e~tcnt ·under yrian control," the antcll~nce report uplain_s, 1ddina; "With this new situauon, A JACK ANDERSON international terrorism, one could expect that the areas under PLO control m Lebanon would once again be used as bases for international terronst act1vuy" Here 1s some of the detailed (fev1dence of the PLO's resurgence cited m the report: -Fatah, the group loyal to PLO Chairman Yasir Arafat, reHmed its activities in Tripoli and Beirut early this year, sending arms and money to the secret cadres left behind last summer. Known members of Fatah and its covert action arm, The 17th Brigade, ha ve been spotted arriving 1n Beirut in recent months. -On June 13, a high·level "com- mand" mcetJng amona leading dissi· dent PLO members, including Abou Moussa. qrced on the return of armed Palestinians to West Beirut. Two platoons were promptly dis- patched -The General Command of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. a aroup. with close Sov1et and Synan ues. recently bcpn re· cruitma efforts m the Sabra and Shat1la refugee c.amps. On June 9. representatives of the General C.om· mand, other PLO groups and Druse factions met to plan a major military action 10 Beirut. -On May 8, a com~ny of 200 Saiqa soldiers -PaJesunians train· ed. equipped and commanded by Syrian Army officers-entered West Beirut and deployed 1lona the coast. Military ccll1 we~ let up,..,,and 1n official of the Women'• Lca&ue of Saiqa went into the refugee camps to recruit PaJcstloian women. UNDER THE DOME: Sens. Steve Symms, R·ldaho, Orrin Hatch, R· Utah, and John Glenn, 0-0hio, were exchanging pleasantries on the Senate subway the other da_y. If only, Symms said, be bad been Glenn's campaign manager, Glenn could have become president. "Of course, you would have bad to run as a Republican." Symms added. -A Democratic convention foot· note: Glenn was phoned by Walter Mondale's people and asked to ap- pear with Sen. Alan Cranston, D- Calif .. in a presentation t1tled "War and Peace." Covering the mouth· piece, Glenn told staff aides, ''I think that makes me ·war."' He then declined the opponunity. •Senate Sergeant-at-Arms Larry E. Smith recently smglcd out two of his Service Office employees, Frank Curtis and Mick Cotten, for helping to track down a crooked co-worker who was scllinaaovemment furniture stored in the office's suburban ware- house. •Rep. Mickey Edwards, R-OkJa., has asked his collcaaues to use some of their one-minute speeches - which are widely televised by cable and public TV stations-to pubhc1zc cases of missing children m their own or another member·s district. SRI LANKA REVISITED: The United States is "m" qam in Sn lank.a. Gen. Vernon Walters. a former CIA offic11J who is now a rov1nadi~lomat forthe White Hou~. bad cor(fJaJ talks durina a four-day visit to Colombo late last year. Now the Peace Corps is beina allowed back for the first time smcc 1963 (when Sri Lanka was known u Ceylon). Furthermore, Sn Lanka has aareed to install a 2.Somillion-watt Voice of America transmitter. Meanwhile, India as "out," thanks to the Sri Lanka government's suspi· cion that Indian agents pr()voked the terrorist ambush last year that led to a ~loody ractal back.lash ~inst the ethnic Tamil minority an Which dozens of ptnons died. Jae• .Udel'IOll I• • 1yodlcatH col•ma11t. Slicing th~ money pie TBOllA81tLIA coluinnbt THOMAS EuAS Threat of terror remains a reality Olympics aren't state's only target for terrorist acts As the Olymptcs wind down toward Sunday's closina ceremonies, many Californians are sta.rtina. to breathe easier, feelina that the chances of getting caught in the midJt ofa terronstepisodewill be much less than they've been for the last month or two. After all, they reason, the Olympics are a natural target for political terrorism, with every nation in the Free World represented. So was tbe Democratic Nation.a! Convention in San Francisco. · But the sigh" of relief may tum out to be t0mewhat prematw-e. For even when the spec1al events of this unique California summer are over, the state will still offer Amen· ca's widest potpaurri of potential targets for terror -everything from diplomatic missions from nations like Turlc.cy. Israel and the Soviet Union to Super Bowls in the Rose Bowl and Stanford Stadium. In fact, once the Olympics fade into memories. this state may be even a JUieter target for terror than it was this summer. For the Democrats and the Olympics have made the world more aware than ever of )USt bow diverse a place Cahfomia as. while the ex· traordmary secunty systems set up for this summer's events will soon be dismantled. Why should terrorists wait to step up their work until after the speciaJ events, with the extensive television coverage they spurred'? Security is one reason. Another 1s that the mcreasingly sophist1cated terrorist planners arc well aware that a presidential election is upcoming. and they also know most Americans won't really focus on at until October. Anyone who hopes to influence that election through violence would be smart to wait another couple of months. And that's just when the caodidatcs will begin to spend large amounts of time in California, whose 47 electoral votes make it the faU season's bi$Sest prize. So what better place for violence, if the perpetrator thinks he can influence the election with it? What's more, except for the elaborate security at the Olympics and the Democratic convention, Califoma.a has done tulle to auard against the kind of tactics which are today's international voaue 1D terror -truck bombs, car bombs and hand· or shoulder-carried missiles. This state has none of the concrete barriers which now surround many go\'em· ment buildings in Washinaton, few roadblocks or checkpoints like those other nations use to ferret out woyld- be terrorists. All this means there is as much chance of acttina caught up in a terrorist act after the Olympics as there has been before or dunna the Games. Maybe more. For fOvemments arc becoming the world s terrorist mas· terminds, using "Sllth activitie! to replace tactics of conventional war. fare, which almost always ends in unsatisfactory stalemates in the mod· em era. .. We see at least a doun nations that arc using terrorism as an ex· tension of their diplomacy;• says Bnan Jenkins, director o~ tudics on terrorism at the Rand Corp. think tank. For c.Jifomia. this reality means that the more promaoent the state becomes in international affairs, the more diplomats and Political fiaurcs come here to drum up suppon, the more nkclythat1erronsts will choose to attack taracts here. Should this worry moat Cali· fom~s? Jenkins say1 no. &fore the Olympics, be suaested that "fear of terronsm should not become uch an oblcs.s100 that we rn:ate... an at· mospherc of tcrrorilm without ter- rorists." Even in the midst or I or a inauons like those cemod out by Armenian cxtrcmist.S qain11 Tur- kish diplomats in W Anaelcs o-.cr the la t fe yun, almcm no out td became in\'olvcd Whicti means ihat h1lc Cih· fomian :"Ould be wise not co forset terronsm now that the summer's n pro~c qaan and gain thal he as the needed leader in the Middle wt ho can bti °' nu under control, nnd that fort an powers bould ad· drns htm and di -.·uh ham • Jn the United late • 1 thud of the mone eamcrsearns 1wo-thlrd1of1he monc)!. or 66.6 pcrttnl Another third of the eamcn earns 26.9 nt, The final tl\rnl ~)lie camtr5 unusual cvenuarc w10din.a up. Ole) 'd ..._.~also befoohm tOl'O"ttmfe the level of- uuauon m le non, the future of the Pale um n and an O\'ef'lll pc4l'.f tn the M1ddl r he rcpon dd th•~ gnm w mina· "C'il~(n die 11e bctWttn &he PLO and cams 6.S pcr~nl. ~nail 1w· hcrmnphrOJ1t , Eac.'h 1 both male and tcm le. When 1wo matt. both la~ l11aua11t. Orry that ha prt\'tilcd the last two months. ,..._., Ella1 l 1 Sora MoalN· NM colnu1Jtr ••Ult l RI. HB resident honored for tgp cosmetic saleS Hunti~aton Beach rtstdent LlDda BattaoD has been honored as one of the Top Ten. tridepcndcot sales dirctlots in Mii')' &ay Cotmet1ct• 19• ()()(). met:nbtr 1nde~ndeot Illes fo.r~. Bunson exceeded retail sates of S.s0,000 dUf!n& the prcv10~ ye~r. recemna an all-expense-paid-tnp to Gl"CCOO for her achievement. •Iona with a 14-Qrat aold bar pin and 10 enpvcd plaque Bun.son has been with Mary Key since 1980. ' •••• ~ J. ~ck oflaaun~ Beach bas joined Eq.idoo oflrvane in the post · ohenior vice president. opcrati~n" Fonnerly a partner in the Jaw firm ofPalll RuUqt, Juofaky ud Walker m Los Angeles, Frick will oversee all aspects of BU'ITSON FRICK OWEN TIMMONS Equidoo's California operations and serve as gen~ counsel for the real estate firm. Frick is a member of the Urba:a Laci lutthlte, Oruae Couty Committee for tile Art.I, Lapaa Bea~ Pla:u.1111 Comm.J11loa. and the boa.rd of trustees for the Lapa Beacla MUftlll of Art. • • • BJrG11 "Do111" Owaa has joined the Anaheim office ofBubteu Pnoerrte. . Broke_rqe Co. as an in~ustrial propeTly specialist after fo!Jl' years in industrial · sales 1n the company s Newport Beach office. Owen is 1 member of the 'NiUoaal Anocladoa of Realton. BP.PC is a real estate brokcrace firm. -. .' ... hreJl Tlmmou bas been appomted coordinator of marketins for Tlae T'9Y lav•tm•& Fad, a Newport Beach-hued commercial and residential real estate developer. Timmons, who joined the firm in 1982, most recently was on-$ite lea.sine agent for Troy's office buildinas and sbopr.ina centers ~r:oughout the .state. In her ~~w post, T~on~ will be the firm 1 mar~tin.& liaison, oversecma sales actmues and working with the company's adveruaina and public relations &&ency. • • • Ricbrd E. Amtower bas joined CR Tecluaoloo, lac. of Irvine as president, chief operatina officer and director of the firm, annoUQced Dr. Cble Ro•, chairman and CEO. Amtower was previously vice president and general manager ofEOCOM, Eleetrolllcs Sy1tem1 d.lvl1Jo1l of Americu Boedaat Corp., and a leadina supplier of laser imaging systems for electronic and printina industries. • • • McC.nocla Arc1Llteet1 of Newport Beach has been selected to desian the renovation and remodehn1 of Tile c.Iver Boue on Palmyra A venue, which will be converted into the first bed and breakfast inn in Oranae. The 1-,SOO- square-foot home is one of the few examples of Victorian architecture still standin& in Oranac. It was built in 1888 as an annex to the Palmyra Hotel. • • • Cox Ir Barcia AdverthlD1 Co. of Newport Beach bas been selected to handle advertisina and public relations fol' Santa Monica-based VW.1 Savbap ud Lou Auocladon, using an estimated budget of a quarter million dollats. Supervisina the aocount is BW Halbert, vice president of client services. Bill Graef~ is creative director, Sauue Lewis is art director and Rob Waper is copywnter. • • • Vkkl Welsel-Muor bas been promoted to assistant copywriter for Mc.'Conibt Corp. of Irvine, a national real estate syndication firm. M.azor's duties include writing and coordinating broker/dealer bulletins, annual reports, press releases and aidina the public relations proa;ram. She previously worked for Pboeal'I LeaalllJ., IDc., a limited partnership in computer equipment leasina based in Mill Vallev. • • • Alplla MJcroay1tem1 of Irvine, a manufacrurer of multi-user business microcomputers, &as appointed EdmoDd FamJalletd as intematiow sales manaaer. Famialietti will manaae on-going and future business in Mexico and Latin America and develop new business opporlunities in Japan and China. ... - Changes initiated at bank Or DAILY PlLOTtF COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSIT:E TRAN8AC110N8, Al. OC Realtors should benefit f~om b roker's court victory Jury's award represents new lnterp~tatton of statewide laws concerning commissions Of COlttl"ICltt! IPcrcz . Thrir aDcutaon. be said. was that the bUY'et and the seller had conspired .. '° cul Morrow out .... ·r "By cutuna out orrow1 T IJSVSANMONARAN perccotoomm 1001 becouldlocate lnvesuneotO>: comm· onwoYld ...,,..c.1 , 1 • I buyer for lhe John Mull' Apatt· be iilcrcascd," id Perez. Real estate broker Gerard Morrow ments. OY.'lled by Joho Mutr Jo. BCs.ides aoina to coun • says be twncd a ••no-win situation vcstort. Inc. Traweek. Morrow1ttilcd out of ooun into a w.m s1tuatlon" in a coun He wa contacted 10 December of twith Grubb & Ellis for SlS.000 lnCI victory that may be shared by real 1979 by Traweek ln,estment Co., a with MuirforSI00.000. estate i&(nts throu&hout the state. syndicator that arranges agreements Perez said Momnr.'nuit baicd 1ndudjn1 at least one in OraDJC to buy property, finds in\eston to oo the concept of ""procurina caU;te." County. · make the purchase and eollcct$ which he dc$Clibed as .. 1hc caU5C Morrow & Co .• Inc .. a Sherman commission of its own. pnginatins 1n a series of eliCDU lhit, Oaks real estate brokeraic furn, without a bad faith break in their tands to collect S l.2S mdhon in But. after several weeks of dis-continuity, rcswt in the sale." lh commission, interest and punitive cussion about the propeny -which Morrow's case, be expwned, •'11Ja1 damages from 1 Marina dcl Rey-Morrow bad described but not &dent· caJI in December ra5 itbe fim ac;p 111 based real estate syodicator, unless a ificd -Traweek told Morrow it was the unbroken chain of n·cnts that led Contra Costa County Superior Coun not iDterestcd and asked him to stop to the sale." jury's decision is ovenumcd on workina 00 the project.. which he dad. Richard D. Williams, 1 Bc\•Crfy ~1 Several months later, however. Hills attorney representiQS Traweclc ap)A'GJ. Morrow learned Traweek was aoing fortheappeal,saidheth1nk$Tra...eek The commission, Morrow e~-to buy the apartment buildina for will win its a~. plained recently at a meeting hosted $27.9 million. Grubb a Ellis Com-.. The most lDlporwn point i . Can by Certified Commercial Investment mcrcia.l Brokerqc Co. was to tteeive a real estate agent recover in Memben, is SS30,000 that Morrow a S2SO,OOO commission as broker io ableoce of a written ~ Significant chaniCs for Capistrano and bis at mey, Richard L Perez., the transaction. California law is dear tbat be c:amiOt Nationil Bank were put in pl.ace at a claim in e sale of an apartment Perez, a partner in an Orinda La.., I thj-L •"'-..1.-..:..: -.:11 '--_,. rt'cent bank boa.rd meetina that saw building. ~ admiued that, ICCOrdiJll to the O~ a~~~QIOD ~w ~f'CV.-;i;:111;111 ~~i~tt:i. s= ~~ ~fba~ Realtors from Oranae County -California Statute of Frauds, an Wl:ie11 asked if be would have done board. where San Diego-based Comps lnc. agreement between • broker 1.11d a anythina differently -oow that be th 1983 d llar I f buyernrsellermustbein writi~tobt bas the benefit of flindsi&bt ~ The bank has a branch in Irvine. !3~e~t house ~~:Se ..:S enforceable. However, the suit Mor-Morrow said, ·1 would ha\-e sent St~s replaces_ Donald Doualas, .. •pPtOximately $260 million_ were row filed ,was not for breach of something in writing to Traweek U> who ~~res as c~ of the bank among those on hand for the the contract. but for .. interference with vcri{y our convenanon..s.. But like tny ~~~~~~,;::-n~ 'presentation,hcldinMontebello. ~~~~~~J:.~~ ~~~"Yo~ won -wtiy bees named chairman ~mentus. That $2601IU.llion could traJUla&e -:,a!,:.....,.._...__,,..~-_,.,-......,,.,,,-........ ~----~~~-... .. ~-=- Ross Pirasteh, who was named into substaotiaf commissions for the ·d d hi f · ffi real estate qents mvolved. but Mor· presi ~t an c e ex~tl~e o cer row says that losing a commission in of ?'P•StranC? Bancofl? m SCptember the ableoce of a written qreement .. is ~f 83 and chief ~xecuuve of the bank a very common problem in the real tn Jl!nuary o~ 84, has now ~n estate business." appointed chairman of the holdma company. Pirasteh was a former Several other real estate agents Chase Manhattan Bank seruor vice agreed, includina Howard S. president, and one-time finance min· Wainbcra of Santa Ana, who said, uter oflran. ..We wen= always led to believe that if . Pi~teb was responsible for bri?a· you don't have 1 listina in writing, !-DJ in a croup to the bank which you don't have a chance to collect." in,ectcd more than SS million into the . institution as of March L984. Aareed Mtlto~ A. R~e~. ----owne1foperatorofHillcrcst Realty m CM builder e8.rnstop 20ranking The 1983 residential real-ettate activity of American Diversified bas earned it the ranking of sixth largest multifamily housina developer and 16th taraest overall development firm in the nation in the 17th annual "Housin1's Giants" report, published in the July issue of Professional Builder mapzine . Fullerton, ··Anr broker today bas to be really carcfu about the changes in laws in the last couple of years. If you're aoina to survive ... you've got to know what's aoing on. Some lav.'S arc very confusing. .. Fullerton aacnt Rhea said he is currently in a situation similar to Morrow·s and "I know now there m1f}lt be a c;hance to win 1t if I take action." The story that offers hoi>c to Rhea and other realton bcpn in 1979. when Morrow was promised a 2 UPs AND OowNs -- NEW YORK (APl -The following nst show• the Over-the-Counter sloc:.kS tnd werrants 11\tt ht•• OOfte UP the most a~Wl'I the most btMd on NrC9nt Of for -Thundt No securllift trlldlno below l2 or 1000 wres .,... Included Net encl ~1"9 c:Mnoes ~re he difference ti. t~ prevlQus no bid Of'IC» encl urtdav s tast bid 1 UJllS Last ... I .·a l,i4 v. 1,4 Medical Optics start& Irvine construction American Hospital Supply Corp. of Evanstoo, ll. bas announced the st.art of construction on a new facility for its American Medical Optics Division in-the lrv10e Industrial Center. Groundbrealc.ina for the facility, to be located on a five-acre Sltc purchased from The Irvine Co .• qs beldAua. 6. American Medical Optics manu- factures, markets and distributes ophthalmic products wortd..-.de to surseoos and medical peaahsts. tmsp1Uts and taboratones. The new facility m The Itvine Co. 's 900-acre Industrial Center will de· velop, manufacture and distribute - s 7%.CXXl • t Eana· inuaocular lemes. SU1'1Jc&I I.um. d.iaanostic equipmea.t and disposlblc ophthalmic products. .. American Medical Opfics is a very welcome addition to the Irvine Industrial Cent.er," said Robert H. Qsbrink. senior director of sales and markctina for The Irvine Compan)'.'s Industrial Division.. '1lle selection of American HOSJ)i1al S~y ~ ltion to locate thiS facility in center reaffirms the belief that this location is ideal for raearch and development activities. .. Total agrcpte vafue ortliC trau~ action was approximately S 1.6 million. Brokers on the project wcrt Jim DeGraw and Peter~ of ColdweU Banker. Newport Beach. s s G HD On -~the ,.. .. , -·..-;_- .. Dow JoNE s A~ERAGES Urs ~~o DowNs ---- WHAT AM EX Orn NEW YORK (AP) Auo. 10 AME x LEAD ERS Pel. sm 11 .~ 00 f·l il l! 4.0 • ., t ~ • • • -• GoLD Qu oTlS ---- M Ei~Ls Quons I -- t Her8hlw, lrock help Dodgera bNtAtlMta eo••n. 1-0. 112. Scott takes his first step towardmeda Brisco-Hooks. Thompso,n se~ Olympic marks ' By HOWARD L. HANDY ............ .,..,,... LOS ANGELES -Goins into the Olympic Games was a downer for Steve Scott, the former UC Irvine distance runner and America's premier I ,SOO.meter competitor. But the chills and doubu of pre- race jjucrs have been overcome and Scott is now on course as be beads for the final be hopes will brina him a aold medal on Saturday. Scott finished second in his heat race to Joaquim Cruz of Brazil, winner of the 800. Cruz PQSted a 3:41.01 to Scott's 3:41.02 Thursday. Scott was the 17th qualifier out of 24. ··1 didn't have a sood prepantion race comi~ in here," Scott said following h1's race . .. It was a downer and I was quite .nervous and hesitant coming in here. Getting the fll'St raoc out of the way makes me feel very relieved. This one ' set lhe ~ for the· rest of the Olympics. .. -, • . quihty athlctei in the race for lh(!:!( positions. I was kind of SW'Pfi• when it went so sJow. • •x:omina down the homeStretdi, didn•t see any IUtOft to expend .o more enersy than ~r). I ~ where Cruz was all tht ti~. I watching his shadow. "I called him to win the 800 and tie did. He could be a ckfinite tbra1 (Pleue ... 8COTTta.f) Terry 8chroeder'(10) of the U.S. helpe,oalle Crate WU.On clear allot away dartna Thanday'• s~ nctory ~ Wmt . . ................... ........ Germany. The American• ao for the &old meclal aaatut Yqe>UaYla at 9 tonl&ht at P-epperdlne. In other action J>n the track: •Valerie Brisco-Hoob claimed an Olympic and -'nierican record in the women's 200.met.er race. A golden opportunity for pOloists •Daley Thompson of Great Britain set another Olympic mark in the decathlon with 8, 797 points. •Tim Bright of .the U.S. soared l 7-8¥• in the decathlon pole vault for another Olympic best. United States gets its long-awaited shot ~t the Olympic title against Yugoslavia By ROGER CARLSON i~ both winners with 4-0 records Of ... Dmlr,......,. going into tonight's 9 o'clock sbow- MALIBU -They've reached the down here at Pepperdine University. top of the mouftaio as United States Because of the differential in goals water polo star Craig Wilson wilJ scored for and apinst during the acknowledge, all that's left is the tournament, if tomght's game cods in Oower to bc--plucked for the cham-a tic, Yuaoslavia will win the gold pionsbip bouquet. medal. The U.S. finds itself in that position Thc-U .S .• however. doesn't play for --...... -- for the fll'St time ever in international ties, as evidenced by Thursday's competition with a shot at the aold thriller when Wilson came out from .. It was extremely risky," admitted medal tonight. • the ne·t to steal the ball with 64 Wilson, "but we're here to win and we Thunday's play found the Ameri-seconds left and the score. tied at 7, needed the ball." can team p1dli~ouu hair-raiting.8-7 _ leading to DouJ Burke's goal with 26 "I just knew if anyone was going to victory over est Germany, while seconds remaining to drop wesr-gefit, he was ~1Dft0 gefll;' said U .S: Yugoslavia routed Spain, 14-8, leav-Germany. Coach Monte Nitzkowski after the triumph over West Germany. "I •Carol LeWIS, sjster of thrce.-time dido 't think it was a gamble." medal-winner Cart, failed to qualify Despite the winning flurry, the for the finals in the women's long Americans still bad to hold on as jump and was denied a chance at a West Germany nearly tied it with a medal. Anjsoara Stanciu and Vali picture play with time running out, lonesou of Romania went 1-2 with but what appeared-to-be-the easiest · the winner leaping 22-10. Lewis shot in the world hit the cross bar and mi$scd by ooe..que.rtcr ineb of makins bounced off to frustrate the Germans. the final field. "They rubbed off our defender and Brisco-Hooks woo her second &Old sprang him," said Nitzkowski ... They medal in the 200 with a time of 2 l.81 did a beautiful job and they had it. We and Florence Griffith of the U.S. was bad scouted them many tlmes but we second at 22.04. had never seen that move." Meanwhile, Scott sees himself as a It was the kind of finish remi-definite medal winner, maybe the niS<lCnt of past frustrations, onJy this gold. time it was the opposition coming up "There isn't any clcar<ut favorite. short ... That's true," said Nitzkowki. There will be five to seven guys in the .. In the past we'd lose those kind of final who could win on any give!~~ games." "Toda~ught. lbe race (Pleue Me U.8./84) go much faster. There were five They're two veterans in search of improvement .. At 34, Jack Youngblood is still learning, and helping him."along is Larry Brooks · "Thecoach isrunnin' my butt off," sar,sJackYoungblood, the player. ·rm runnin' his butt off so I can make him a better player," says Larry Brooks. the coach. These two are more than half kidding but whatever Jack Young- blood and Larry Brooks do in the encampment of the Rams, they still do it togctherwbenever it does not violate the rules of the system. • Blood and Brooksie were together down there in the pit for 12 years. Then in 1983, Brooks was f!Vcn a chance to retire as a defensive tackle and became assistant line coach with the Rams. Youniblood is still a defensiveend-agoodoncat 34- Conover 6th ·in J;tayaking event today LAKE CASIT AS -Sheila Con- over's bid for a medal in the women's SOO-meter kayak sinates event of the 1984 Summer Olympics was shot down today when the Costa Mesa resident finished a disappointina sixth. • . Conover had a time of 2:02,38. Nine rowers competed in the event. The winner was A&neta Andersson of Sweden in 1:53.72. She was followed by Bart>ara Schuttpclz of West Germany in l:S9.93 and An· ncmiek Ocn:b ofThe Netherlands in 2:00.11 . The rest of the field included: 4. Tecla Marinescu. Romania. 2:00.12. '·Beatrice Bnson, France, 2:01.21. 6. C.onover, 2:02.38. 1. Lucie Guay, Canada, 2:02.49. 8. Elitabeth ~len· cowe, Auat.raJia. 2:02.63. a.nd 9. Leiley. Smither. Great Britain, 2:°'4.09. Meanwhile, Ian Fcrauson of New Zealand won w aold medal toda~ in the SOO.meter men's kayak sinaiei. Lani-Enk Mobctl of ~·won the silver: mCdaJ ana Btmaid Brqon of Prance took the bronu. Canadian Larry Cain won the sold medal in the SOO-mctcr men's Can· a4iaA ~ caiepy or mu~· canodnf. Hcnn1na L Jako n of Denmark finilhed &m>nd and Cost ca OlaN of Romania was third . and talks about retirement only if the RamsmakeittoSupcrSunday. "Don't ttll him I said this," Youngblood says, "but I miss him as aroomie." ThetwowerctogctherinRoom lat Cal State Fullerton for 11 summers. Room 3-a suite, act.ually-saw some pretty &ood football players come and go. The likes of Fred Dryer and Rich Saul, for instance. "Don't tell him I said this either," Blood goes on, "but I thinkBrooksie is goin• to make a bell of a good coach!' . Brooks hopes so. "lt all happened suddenly," he says, "but I recogn.ized it as a great chance to stay in football and keep doing what I love. I have a great chance to learn and move up. Maybe even become a head coach some da ... f n the meantime, there are the obvious adjustments. "The thing you notice about coaching that }'OU dido 't realize," Brooks says, "is the hours. Asa player, you got a day oft' onoc in awhile. A coach neveraets a day oft' and he works Ion& hours and he works late." And forget the old cliche about taking them one game at a time. "We are constantly looking past this game to the next on~" Brooks says." It is part ofhow the coaching staff opera res. Naturally, the players are involved in one game at a time." Youngblood says the coach is different on the road fi'om the old BuD Tucm SPORTS COLUMNIST days when Blood and Brook.sic room- ed together. "Well,"saystbeooacb, "I have to be. When you are a player, there is a guy coming around and k:nockina on your door and tellina you wbcn to go tobed. Now, lam tbeguy.'Tbat'sone of the advantages ofbeinga coach." Another is satisfaction. .. I think a coach can find areat satisfactioninbelpinga younaplay- er, .. Brooks says. .. ltl can taJcc from ., my experience and make a kid a benec player, both of us have pined someth.ina. .. How about teachin& older guys : . somet.hina? Guys like Jack Youns-'' blood. .. Ob sure, "CoacbBrootssmiles. 4 •1 will make Youngblood a better foo~ ball player.just by staying on bis' butt." About what? "Well, .. says Brooks, .. for insW>ee; you know bow be bas that habit of " sin.in& on his helmet all the time. Tbat'soneoftbe things I am tryinatoi teach him out there-to keep the .. helmet on his head and offhis butt. 1'eaching thatolddog newtri~lJ bard work.. ldon'tthinktbesalary • they are payina me is enoush. '' ... Speakinaoftricb, there would .·• (Pleue eee 11JCDlt/92) • AL West DiviSion: It's evenly matchedl A's get breaks in 5-4 victory over the Angels Padre fans upset over disbursement of playoff tickets From AP dl patclaes SAN DIEGO -While the San Diego Ill Padres arc enjoying their fim~vcr pennant race, fans arc I~~. than enthused with the club's plans for disbursini Post-season tickets. "It's a rotten deal," said one fan, who asked not to be identified because he sneaked away frqm work to ao to San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium and apply for tickets. • "They finally do good and they try to soak us." he said. 0 1 want to see the World Series. but 1 can't afford it" -- The plan gives post-season ticket priority to season ticket holders. which is common practice among major !~ague teams. But it puts a squeeze on non-season ticket holders who want to see the Padres in a playoff or pOssible World Series. Those with season passes arc eligible to. buy two post-season tickets for each seat they currently hold. Schiller said, and mini-season ticket holders caJT purchase on a one-to-one basis. . But those who don't hold season tickets have a harder time. To be guaranteed post-season ducats on the same priority as season pass holders. they must buy some form of tickets to tile Padres' remaining 19 home games this season. In addition, they have to pl.ace a $I 00 non· refundable desposit toward 1985 season ti"ckets. Those who can't afford the deal must put their names on post cards, whfoh will be randomly drawn to hand out the 25,000 to 30,000 seats expected to be available after season~olders are given their seats. ~ a.ote of tile clay . LOS ANGELES -Most media • guides at the Olympics are written by •••• public rdations experts who detail 1ho ·accomplishments of their country's ath- letes in glowing terms. But the Wen German-guide offers more honest commentary. The manual described basketbaU team member Vladimir Kadlec as "an individualistic player ... he practically decides the outcome of a mat~h -either way." As for teammate Christoph Komer, "He is not a great player but a good tryer." Basketball center Klaus Zander. it explained, could not play in the last games of the European cham- pionships because of a · .. "He had rove at e was still Germany's center No. 1 but coul not stand the pressure." Uwe Blab, who has been a high scorer throughout the Games, .. is not as talented as some other players (and) had to work hard to malce up for that." The frank guide does, however. pass out a few compliments alonJ the way. Of Blab. it satd admiringly: "He is an ambitious and excellent card player." Perle& wants White dismissed DETROIT -Michigan State football EE Coach George Perles has called for the •II• dismissal of Illinois Coach Mike White in the wake of sanctions against the Illini for recruiting violations. Perles, whose comments were aired early Thurs- day during a local television sports talk show. said White was-n~ -punished severely-enough when the NCAA put TUioois on two-year probation. "Fire him," Perles said. "You live by the rules. ff you can't -get out. Those kids are being groomed for what, to cheat? They're better off losing." White led the lllini to the 1983 Big Teo championship and a Rose Bowl berth. But the school was fnformed June 27 of the sanctions, leveled for illegally giving prospective players automobile transportation. meals. tickets and lodging. The NCAA banned the school from television and bowl appearances. In addition, the university has prohibited White and assistant coach Max McCartney from on-the-road recruiting for one year, freezin' their salaries and reducing the number of scholarships from 30 to 20. "I don't thjnk they (NCAA) hit them very hard." Perles said. "I don't think anybody would slough that stuff off in this state. It's serious stuff." When reminded the Spartans were put on probation during the 1970s for similar violations, Perles replied: "When it happened, Denny Stolz was fired. Do it right or leave. Orioles etumble in Cleveland • Andre Tbonnoo, who hi& his 24th ii home run in the founh innin doubled homo the tie-br~aking run in the fifth Thuriday night as Clevct nd sent \'i~iung Baltimore to it seventh loss in the last 10 game • 7-S. Jamie Easterly, 2·0, was the wanner II\ rdicf, timinna the Orioles to one hit in two mnmg.'i. Ernie Camachtl pitched 2'1> innin~ for his 15th save ... ~attic's Pbll Bradley ~red with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning on a wild pitch by Minnesota rchct ace Roa Davit to give the Mariners a 6-S victory over the T\\1ns; l>e.sprtc the setback. the Twins remained one-half game ahead of the sec- ond-place Angels in the West .•. WUlle Wilson blooped a smgle to right field over a drawn-in Mil· waukec infield to cap a two-run ninth-inning rally thUgave Ka11 sas-City-a -4 victory over the Brewers . . . Rookie Dennis Rasmu11en and two l'chevers nomton combined on a five-hitter and Steve Kemp and Omar Moreno a rove in two runs apiece a~ the Yankees staggered to a 7-6 vtctory over the Chicago White Sox and sJ)Oiled Toin Seaver's return to New York. Seaver. 11-7, lasted only 32/J mnio~sand had a personal ftve-gamewmning.streak snapped in his first New York appearance smce the Mets failed to proteet him and lost him to the White Sox in the free-agent compensation pool last winter . . . Frank Tanua pitched a five-hitter and Texas scored four times in the sevent~ to defeat Boston, 7-3. • Chicago loses pitching duel Andre Dawson singled home Tim ii Rames from third base with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning as Montreal edged Chicago, 1-0, Thuisday night, snap- ping the Cubs' winning streak at six. Dan Scb.atzeder, 5-3, pitched 10 inninfS, striking out 11 while yielding just four hits for the Vlctory-:-. ; However, second-place New York stayed 41/i lengths back in the t'Jat1onal League East race as Rick Rhoden pitched a two-hitter and Jolumy Ray '1ed a 14-hit attack with a double and two singles in Pittsburgh's I 1-0 romp of -the Mets. TOJIY Pena drove in three runs for the Pirates while Ray, Marvell Wynne and Lee Lacy had a _pair of RBI as the Mets lost their fifth straight ... In -Cincinnati.,DauParker drilled a · grand &lam .homer and drove io ff ve runs to. power tlle Reds io an 8-0drubbingofSan Diego ~hind Je(f Russelrs five-hitter ... Craig Reynolds slammed a three-run- Da1n0n triple and Mike LaCoss scattered six hits to lead Houston to a 6-0 wiD over San Francisco. LaCoss, 6-3, pitched his first ~utout of the seaso~. striking out three and walking four ... KJk~ Garcia 1 two-out single in the bottom of the 13th mmng scored Greg Gross from second base and gave Philadelphia a 2-1 victory over St. Louis. Dave Rucker, 1-2. walked Gross and Von Hayes to start the 13th. Jeff Lahti relieved Rucker, and after retiring two batters. Garcia lined a 1-2 pitch to center field for the game-winner. Kite, three others share lead Tom Kite, who missed the cut IO last n week's PGA tour event, fired a 6-under-par 66 Thursday to pull into a four-way tie for the lead in the first round of a PGA tournament Buick Open at Grand Blanc, Mich. Tied with Kite were Gary Hallberg, John Adams and Jodie Madd. One stroke back at 6 7 were David Ogrln, a second-year pro matching his best-ever score in a tour event, Tom Purtzer and Tony SUia .... In the LPGA Henredon Classic. Defending champion Patty Sheehan turned in a bogey-free 5-uoder-par 6 7 for a one-shot lead in the opening round at High Point. N.C..Sheehan. who ran away to victory in 1983 with a record-setting score of 272 on the Willow Creek Golf Course. posted birdies at the 16th, 17th and 18th holes en route to the top spoL Jhe 198 l rook.i.e__of the_year and this year's leading money winner also birdied No. 3 and No. 4. Televlelon, radio TELEY18ION Noon-2:30, 4-9, 9:3()..11 p.m. -OL YMPtC GAMEi: Track and fiold, wattr polo, men's votleybaH. men•a basketball, gymnastics, canoetng, diving, wr.tlmg. Channet 7. 5 p.m. -"'o f001'8AU.; Raiders at Washington. Channel ... 8 p.rn. -9A8EBALL: Dodgers at San FNlttclsCo, Channel 11. 10 p.m. ,_ 80XINQ: Azabache Mart1nez vs. Roberto Castananon from th& OlympicAudftorJum. RADIO 5 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL; Raiders at W88hlngton. KlAC (1110). 7:30 p.m. -8A8hAU.: Oakland at Angele, KMPC{710). 8 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Franci.co, KABC (790). ANGELS DEALT 5-4 LOSS BY A'S ••• From Bl Oakland's five runs in the inning. in the left-hander were back up the losing for the nirutl time this season. middle. "I pitched badfy, that's all I can "That's the way you have to bit say," he explained ... , didn't make Geoff," said OalcJand right-fielder the ~itches -that's it." Davey Lopes. whose two-run single Kison, on the other hand. struck in the sixth made the difference and out five in his 31/J innings of near ended Zahn's tormented excursion. flawless pitching. "Right back up Jhe middle -he Zahn's trouble started in the sec-wasn't around the comers tonight. I "We definitely ·ncC'd Henderson· and Lopes (who have been hurt this year), .and to keep everybody healthy," Heath added. "I think we're JUSt lucky we have everybody healthy rieJlt now. A b1g plus tn our cap is having Burgy (veteran reliever Tom Burgmc1er) back. along with ond when A's catcher Mike Heath think all of our hits were to {:Cnler * took him deep on a 1-0 for a two-run field." · ANGEL NOTES' -Rookie r111111·11ander Rtn (Bill) Caudill.". homer. The Angels. however. got on.e Heath and Rickey Henderson Remankll (10·10) came down wlll'I a IOUCl'I of back in the bottom half when DeC1-(who sin~ed twice to raise his aver-111t nu durl119 the club's flnal dtv In S.atti. · l d h Wtd,..sdav. al'ld Is • quesl1onable starttr for nces scored from third on Reggie's age to .3 J. are more Pease • ow-tonlol'lt It M's ,,111 weak bv garM time. wl'loch r:.ounder to second, and took the ever knowing their ball club is tne ctub '"'' he w111 t>e, Temmv """' CM> w111 d · th hi d · · 3 2 h heatt'hy, rather than taking perso. nal 1>hct1, moving Romenlck 10 s.rurdav. Larv ~ m e t r mnmg. -. w en lar9nMn t•-1'1 wll 1>1lt11 tor Oakt.tind 1on10111. ~drove in a pai: wit~ a grounder praise for thetr own contnbutloos u Kruaew CM) wm 00 s.ruroav and stw• LD• the hole on the right side. Thursdab. McCattv <M> wltl lac. 111e Ar>Oel!~!..im ~~. (4·SI In IM fin.le Sutldtv .. , Red ..-.w, Wuv s Zahn somehow made it to the "Our iggest key is LO get every-Wfftrl"9 from • olncMd nerve •n Ills ..a. was sixth inning. His inability to keep the body healthy." Henderson said. "If uamlned Thundav l>V ortl'IOPedist Or. U.ls hiiill th ob ·o sly hurt we can do that, then I think we can Y.am He oi.o"OMd ttie situation, 1>u1 nothlfl9 ~ on e comers VI u was flnanied , Carew ww undet'oo more ''"'' i:m~. ~a~s ~aJ~J~o·f~O·a~lcllalin~d•'•s 1siixiibii,ts~o~ffij~dio~thieijjo~b.~"jj_iiijilijiiiiiiiif"l 1octav, He's al.o 11111 suttarlno tr11m a rlnOllno MnaatlOtl OOwn the s10. Of Ills left arm uuseo bv the nerve In nia ntek ••• RtPOM from Edmonton. l'ranll LaCwtit, wl'IO's on • ~dev rtn.~'tHatlOn auionmtnt wltl'I .leflft Cu'11s al ttw Triole•A alflllata, has worUd In Mvtn oel'Tlts and oilCIOd ra lnnlnOs. allOwlt>O u aarlltd l'\IM f« • 12. 11 EltA. MaanwllUa, Cur.ls has 01tched fltt trmlllv; In nine Oamtl. allowlnt tour tarnta n.N 1120 ERAI TUCKER. • • J'romBl Agony of defeat Cbm*:f.he Tiozzo of France refuaea to hide ~modon• u be cries on the •boulder of a member of hie team aftet loaina deciaion to Shawn o•&a.UlTaD. Saturday TELEVISION 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Oakland at Angels, KMPC (710). 7. 7·30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. -OLYMPIC GAMES, Channel Sunday -. 11 a.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Montreal. TELEVISION 10.a.m.-3 p.m. -OLYMPIC GAMES, Channel 7. 12:30 y.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Clay Court Cbam- Channel 4, I p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco, Channel 11. P.ionship, Channel 2. _ • I p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco, Channel 11. 1:30 p.m. -SPORTS SPECIAL: International Race of Champions (delayed), Channel 2. 2 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Los Angeles Raiders vs. Washington Redskins (tape), Channel 4. 3 p.m. -BOWLING: Women's tournament at Rochester, N.Y .. Channel 4. 2 p.m.-SOCCER: Uruguay vs. England(playedJune 13 in Uruguay), Channel 34. ~ 2:30 p.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Clay Court cham- pionships, Channel 2. 4-9 p.m . -OL VMPIC GAMES, Channel 7. 4 p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Boxing -John Mugabi vs. Frank Fletcher in middlewe~t bout from Tampa, Fla.; Mixed pairs world bodybuildmg championship from Toronto, Channel 4. 4-9 p.m. -OL VMPIC GAMES, Channel 7. -4 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Interviews with .drag racer Gary Burgin and road racer Lee Mueller; film pieces on thunderboats, Channel 56. 4-9 p.m . -OLYMPIC GAMES: Closing ceremony, Channel 7. RADIO 9:30-11 p.m. -OLYMPIC GAMES. Channel 7. 1 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco. KABC(790). RADIO 1 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco. 1 p.m. -BASEBALL: Oakland at Angels, KMPC (710). KA BC C 790). Dodgers perforin Athletea some Orel s-urg-ery talt:I Hershiser makes Brock's home run stand up in 1-0 win ATLANTA (AP)-Orel Hershiser of the Los Angeles Dodgers got a measure of revenge against the Atlan- ta Braves with a 1-0 victory Thursday night. "The Braves have been my nemesis this season,'"said Hersbiser. who lost his previous two decisions against the Braves but pitched four-hit ball through 8113 innin~s Thursday. "This was the first time I ve had any success against them." Hershiser left the game after yield- ing his fourth bit, a one-out single by Claudell Washington, in the ninth inning. "I would have liked to finish." Hershiser said. "But I'll take it the way it turned out. Other then getting tired running the bases. I think I did as well as I have all season." Hershiser. who had two hits in four ~-bats, said he doesn't think the Dodgers are out of the National League West race. "We've picked up three games on the Padres in three days," he said "l figure 1f we can pick up one game on them every five days. we can catch them. But we need some help from the Braves. I hope they sweep the senes." Hersh1ser was refemng to the series belw,een the Padres and the Braves starting with a doubleheader in Atlanta today. The Dodgers. mean- while. open a weekend set io San Francisco tonight (Channel 11 at 8). Crea Bt'Ol..k hit his 11th home run for all the sconng in the aame. Hershiscr. 8-4. struck out four and , sterol-...--: Orel Henhiaer walked one before needing reli~elp in the ninth with one out. With runners on first and third, Ken Howell struck out Dale Murphy for the second out and Jerry Reuss got Rufino Linares on a bouncer to record his first save. Hershiser got the only run he needed when Br~ connected against Rick Camp, 3-4, in the fourth inning. "Sending a drive over the nght- ficld fence. · The Braves threatened to tie the game in the fifth when Chris Cbambhss. led off with a double and advanced to third on a fly to right by Randy Johnson. But Hershiser in- duC>Cd G lenn Hubbard to ground out and Bruce Bene-diet to fly out. Hcrshiser left the aame after $1Vtng up a walk and a one-out smglc m the ntntti. Flick to get ch~nce vs. Rai.ms · KJRKJ .AND, Ohio (AP) -Torn Aick. in a nrugalc · "But before. I did, I wanted to act a \«On~ opinion. I went Wlth two others in his quc t to be a Cleveland Browns to a dcxtor 1n Seattle who presnbed rest. backup quanerback. 1 to get a chance to sho"". what he can Flick said he shunned using his riiht arm for about a do under fire when the Browns play the Ram~ ma National . year. Football wauc prescason p.meMond.ay niaht. •. · --b "When we brought him in last Januar:t. every coach . I auc~s you ~ould say I went throuah ~lot. but l th1"" on our tafTwa imprdscd w1th him," said Brvwns C04Ch 11 wns the ngru th1na t~ do. btta!l~.~ow Im tbro~na the hardlybunymovesYoung IOOd am Rutigliano. ''l· think he has all the mgttd1enb to way I used to throw, flick said. Lord knows Im the ~~~~ult that Brooks wouldn•t know become 1 good quarterback. Now 1 want to~ u.'' . ~:rl.!~~t guy out there now whenever I tep on a football .. y h .. B k "hk th fiN The 6·3, tRO.pound F.ltck was drafted an the fourth , timcfi!adto~k~!'~cht;ko~ round ~Y the Washington Red kins tn 1081 afier an Tw!J w~b ago. tbough, he suffered 'l~OJhtr}nJUI')'. SATURDAY. AUGUST 11, 1984 12,30 • 3.30 p.m. THE REGISTRY HOTEL (ACtOU ltOM OIMIOt ec>llHIT AlffOIJ) 1410 MocAfthwJlyd. • lMnL.Callfomlo • < 'l/,\f\fl\c,S A.Vt.> ti.'°.''< >c '/"'\'/T.S (714) 752-6757 . . h m I scardicd the air vent and umlcr 1mprcr;s1ve f0<ltball performance at the Un1vcrs1ty of While p1vollng to throw. he pullrd a muscle an his rilht hip o!eruaand •vcrypla~.1 haf.,n _ Wa hington, but he was trad d away to tile New England and ha~ 10 be taken off the practice field on a smdier. k ~. PatnoK year later, the Pa1nots released him. f-11ck nct'dcd a quick n:c;ovcry, Since rOokie "fem sn~h~~~~~ he lookan for'' "In New England. I was di no d a havinu Qrttr· Nu ena and veteran Rick Troano arc 1n the runnana for .. 1 hat had best ao u~said." • cnd1n• tllJlll)i," Fltck '\a,1d. ~tun. told htm he had ulna two h ck up rot behind .stan1na quandblck Paul a k · la ih · a · nrunt1'\ the same 1n ury that forced longtime Pittsburgh McDonald "" _ _.._,.....---~-;;--~,...-...,-••-:"" -r~n 1~~~~'ns ~cl11~ori'•t tclf "'\:ty-'f-ttttm'quancrbatr "")' BradshaW"lnto m ,1,rC'n1 nt. • I don't 1 in '9 term ~f maklna 1 e team, .. Flack Alutxi u · ••( wa \J.P~)O~ to ha c an opera Mn. f11d; said :\Id ··1~v~ behcn'tl all atona I m 01nJ to ma~c t. ,. , .... _---= She.'s become just a fan after taking 3 golds Tracy Cati kins .seeing the s.tghts, Olympic events • By HOWARD L. HANDY .......... 0.., ..... LOS ANGELES -What do the athletes do with their time when their 5pon is concluded and the Olympic Games are still 1oin1 on? If you are Tracy C..ulkins. winner of three cold mcdalt in sw1mmina; y~~ do a variety of thinp includinJ a vmt to Newport Beach to .be wnh friends. · "I'm ID awe1)f these swimmers in the synchromzed swimming com- petition,'' Caulkins said after viewing the duet finals. Attired in shorts and lightwei&ht sweater with a handbag sluna over her shoulder, Caulkins was just like any other youna American girl as she visited with newsmen, friends and others at the site of her accomplish- ments in swimmina. .. I've been to a baseball pme, volleyball match, been to track and field and synchronized swimming amona other thinas," she said. "I've been doing a lot of walking and my legs are sore. Yes, they are sore from walkina. "Canada had a very imaamauve oerformance today but I thought Tracie (Ruiz) and Candy (Costie) did a great job and had an outstanding performance. They work so hard and Holyfield ousted; Ten Americans advance in boxing LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wel- terweight Mark Breland. wmnmg for the fifth time in the tournament and the 109th tame m his career. led 10 U.S. boxers into the Olympic finals Thursday n~ht. But another. Evander Holytleld. was disqualified. touchlnJ off an uproar. Holytleld was in control of his 178- pound bout apmst Kevin Barry of New Zealand, and the two were comins out or a clinch when referee Ghaonja Novic1c of Yugoslavia called "stop" -twice -to halt the act1on. But Holyfield of Atlanta knocked down Barry with a left-ri&ht to the jaw, and Novicic disqualified him. The Unit!d States protested, saying the referee was halting the action to warn Barry for holdina for the third time in the round-and that a fi&hter was automatically disqualified for three warnings in a round. When the decision was announced, the crowt'I of l 1, 729 at the Sports Arena launched into a chorus of boos and burled objects into the ring. The jeering lasted into the next bout, and when the referee left ringside several minutes later he was escorted by police. they did a great JOb. I don't know 1f I would like that or not. "rm going to the beach (Ncwf"'n Beach) but 1 won't go in the water. I have some friends who live down there and maybe I'll iet some sun." While Caulk.ms. wmnerofthe gold ID the 200 and 400 individual medJcy along with a third in the 400 medley relay, was talking, others from the swimming world "'ere seated nearby and planning their next three days in the Los Angeles area. A videotape of the fight showed Novicic twice calling for a halt before Holyfield unleashed has knockdown blow. Holyfield said he never heard the first command and heard the second only after he had thrown the punch. Tyrell Biggs. the super hcavwe1ght champion, gave the United States its 10th finalist when he boxed his wa} to a 5-0 decision over Sahhu Az1s of Yugoslavia m the 24th and final semifinal bout. The United States. 10 placing 10 fighters into the finals. broke the record of e1ght1inahsts set by Cuba in the 1980 games which were boycotted by the United States. Cuba. which is boycotting these Games. won a record su gold medals in 1980 The United States had five finalist when It won four gold medals in the 1952 Olympics at HelsinkJ. and ll had six finalists when it had five golds m 1976 in Montreal. Breland, the 147-pound world champion from Brooklyn who has lost only once in his career, knocked down Luciano Bruno of Italy and scored a 5-0 decision. Also winning Thursday mght were 17-year-old Meldriclc Taylor, who scored a 5-0 verdict over Omar Catan of Venezuela at 125-pounds; Paul Gonzales, 106, who beat Jose Marcelino Bolivar, alsp ofV enezucta. and Pernell Whitaker, the 132-pound class world champion, who counter- punched his way to a 5-0 decision . Trio of American wrestlers grab gold From AP cll1patcbea Americans Ed Banach, Bobby Weaver and Randy Lewis, swept the Olympic aold medals Thursday ni&ht at the Anaheim Convention Center, beating a trio of Japanese freestyle competitors. Weaver and Lewis were the only U.S. wrestlers retumin,g from the 1980 team that boycotted the Mos- cow Games. But officials set aside the victory of another Amencan, Mark Schultz. rulina he'd used a banned arm lock and fractured the elbow of his Turkish opponent. They warned Schultz and hi5 brother Dave -who injured· the knee of a Yuaoslav wttstler-that their future bouts will be closely watched. Banach powered past Akira Ohta, 1 S-3, takina the l 98-pound match on technical superiority at 4:02 to com- plete the evenina's gold-medal sweep. Earlier, Weaver panned Takasbi Irie at 2:58 of their l OS1h meeting, and Lewis, who was pushed bard by Kosei Akaishi, won by a score of 24-11 at 4:52 of the match. • Banach, a · 1~ycar-old from Pon Jervis. N.Y .• broke away from a 3-3 tie in the first 30 attonds of the final match and quickly moved oot to a 9.3 lead. Ohta took an iryury timeout with 58 seconds left in the first period because ofa sore wrist, but was able to continue. He trailed 12-3 at the end of the period and was totally under Banach's control at the end of the match. Lewis. 25. and hke Banach, a thrce-- ume NCAA champion at Iowa. completed a sweep of his five Olym- pic matches, winmna each of them on technical superiorit)' -scorina 12 or more points more than his opponent. The aggressive Amencan from Rapid Cit}. S.D., led throu&hout the match, but had trouble shakina the tenacious Akatsh1, who trailed 1.5-9 after the first penod. Lewis. however, began to wear down Akaishi after the break, finally open1na up the match with a three-point take-down with 1:30rcmammg thatpvc him a 22-11 lead. Lewis, who was very outspoken over the weak field 10 his weight class created by the Soviet-led boycott. still was jubilant after the victory. dancina around the mat wavm& to the wildly ch«rina crowd at the Anaheim Convention Center. Chinese pair top q~alifiers 01a Olympics schedule XXtll OLY~AO MH9fJ,.... MIGtlt tot.II tlV0\11111 ThurlQv'I meclal evtntt 11 !lit ,,.. $11m!Nr Olvmob wltn collntry, oold ' Iver, btOtllt and tot., mecltls won Sher ar.ne .,. .... un1ee1Stetn W"t GfirmellY 1torn:an1a Cntne Gru t ltllaln GtN " 11 1, 14 • so 21 lJO 14 17 ., 13 10 '° 7 ., 21 ' n1 21 Canada ' JtPatl A trt a lttlv llranca Finland SW'tden SoutllKO<ff Netntrlll!lft Ne-.Ji z .. 11rte1 lrun Y "°°"'vlt Swllzmtnd Mexico ..... ""' Au1tr a • N«wl\I o.nmJ•k $Peft GrHCt Jemalet Monxco Colombia 1v~yCoa11 Peru • leeltlld Pof'IUOtl Ta iwan V1n11uela ' 7 • H • • 0 3 J • l t 0 I 1 ' 0 0 ' 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 ' ,, 7 11 u 1 11 n l 7 11 3 it 11 l 4 II s • " 4 l 10 2 • ' 0 2 6 3 l • I 2 S J t s 2 l 4 I 1 4 ' 1 J 1 , 3 l 2 l ' 0 1 L I 1 0 'l 'l 0 0 1 I 0 I I 0 I I 0 I 0 l I 0 I I 0 1 I 0 1 ' WatwPGto (It,. ......... , Un1tM Ste1el t. Wea Germany 1 scwew~ United Stales 1 1 4 2'-t WHI GerfNl'IV l 2 2 2-7 Uruted States scorinv SChroeder 2, P. CamllOeU I, McDonald I. Sttnell I, J CampOel I, FIOU«oa I, Burke 1. WHt ~many scoring L~ 3, Otto 3, Stamm I MEOAL ROUND STANDINGS TMm W L T Gff GA P'ts ' Yuoc>1lavia 4 0 era 30 I UnilM Slti.t 4 • 0 ll 2' I WHI Germa1w ' 2 t 'l4' 31 3 SHln I 2 1 l2 36 3 Aintralla I 3 O 27 JI 2 Holland o 4 o n 33 o 'nlunci.V'1 SCOf'fl. 'united States I, West Germanv 7 China 11, 8razll 9 Au1lralla I, Holland 7 Canada I, JaPan S ll•IV I, Greece 8 vuoostavla "· S1>11ln I Tedtv'I ScMdUla 1;30 a.m. -Wtst Germanv 115. Holland 10 a m -Ja11an "''· Brazil 1:30 p,m -SPaln v1. Australla 3 o m -Canada v1 lltlV 7 30 o m. -China n GrffCe 9 om -United States .,, Yugoslavlt Track end fletd (atlM~I MaN r 09CallllCM'I -I. Otle'f Tl'IOmololl. lr1t1•n, l ,797 (Olvmotc record, Old rlCO"d l ,6 II, Bruce Je1111er. U'llfled Starts. 1976) 2 Jur~n H11191en. West Germanv. l.6n J S•eefrled Wentt, Wtsl Genntnv. 1.412, 4 Guido Kratldlmer. West Germany, 1.326 S WIHl1m Motti, France, 1,266; 6. JOlln Crist Unlled Slates. I, 130, 7. Jim W004lno, United Stilts, l ,°'I; I Dave StHn, Canada, 1,047, t Geor11 Werttmer, Austria, l,012; 10 Mlehale Auefentdll....1wlltwltncl, 7,924, 11 BradleY McStravk:k, Britain, 7,'90; 12. Tim BrloM, United States, 7.162; 13. Patrick Vetterll, Swlturltnd, 7.nt; 14. Peter Htd· lleld, Austria, 7,"3, IS. Weno Kanoqlano. China, 7,642 16 Guu Jlnlhoel, Taiwan, 7 ,651; 17 Trond Skramstad, Norway, 7,S79, 11. OcMHI Fernandez. v-1uela, 7,553, It. L" Fu- an, Ttlwen. 7,512; 20. Cotln . Borel'ltm. Britain, 7,415, 21. Menu~ Stien, Qetar. 6.519. 22 Claudio EKturlza, Paravuav 6,5'6; 23 Fidel SOloruno. Ecuador, 6,Slt, 24 Anoete Olt1·Granlllo, Guatemala, 6.342, 2S Vivian Corane, Mturlllin, 6,0l4, 26 Aftiert Mo r Fiii, S.07' WOMEN 200 -' Valerie BrlK'O·Hooks LOI Anvees. 2111 (Otvmc>lc: rlCO"d, old rlCO"d, 8arbll Wocket, East Gtrmanv, 22.03. 19'0), 2 Florence Griffith, LOI Anlleln, 22.04. 3 Merlene Ottev·Pave, Jamal<t, 22°'· • Katnrvn Cook GrHt Britain, 22 10 s Grace Jackson, Jamaica, 22.20, 6. Rtndv Glwm, Amltvvllle, NY.. 22.36; 7 AOM Aimee 8t<oul, France, 2? 71; t. Liiiane GaKf\et, France. 22.M Lono lumCI -\ Anl-r• Stanctu, ltorntnlt, 22· 10, 2 Vall Ionescu, Romania, 22·4 .; 3. $uwn HH rnww. Gr .. 1 Britain, 22·3'°; C.. Anoett Thtdler, St LOUii, 22·3, s Jackie Jovner, East SI. Louis, IK .. 22-2\'J, 6 ltobyn Lorrawav. Aintrallt, 21·1~ Alto· t Carot Lewis, w 1111newo. N.J., 21·1'. FrMSMe Wf'ftttint <•• AMMll'n c~ c...-1 105\'\ POUNDS Geld-.. 80b«IY WffVtr, Euton, P•. Oinll9d Ttllasll Irle, Jtotn. at 2-'9 of first roulld lrlAI• MMll SOii Gab·Oo, South KorH, def Gao WeMe. Cllna, 13·7. 1>6..., llOUNDS Geld MMlil ltanov Lewis, Rao;o CllY, S 0 , Gel Kosel Aka.1111. Jae>al\, 74· 11. 9Anle Midi! i..-Juno·lttun. Soutti Korea. def. Chris arown. Austra..a. 11·6 1'1 POUNDS o.~ Ed Btnt<h, Port ,,.,.,,IS, N Y. def. Aklra Olltt, Japen, 15·3 lnnJe~ Nail Lovan, GrMI 1r11e111, def Clark Devis, Canada, S•I, Todav ARCHIRY ,., Leae9ttdl) 10 t .m,.12i'5 o.m. -Worntn • 70m ano rnfn11 fOtn 2 ~ P f'I\ -Womt 'I tOITI and m.n'a '°"' IASklT9ALL · ,., ""''"'"" ..... , ' 10 • m. -S.Yll!th oltce ~ (Ai.ntrall• ... Wt1I GtrmtnY) NOOfl -FHlh olKe ftll'll IUruCNtt vJ lltlY) 7 om. -Criamtllonsn o "'1'! (U,1 Yt SNlnl • CAHOllNG Ctf Vtntwel I· I0-3' • m -Met!'• ano women'• 500l'll ~ DIVtHO (at USC) 4;30-6:>0 0 tn. -WOIMll'I llta~m flrlell llQUllSTltlAN (at Ateacla) t •S • m -lndlvlC 1 or .. ..- COl'Nlelitloll ,llNCING (tfLaN ... di) 10-em •4 Ptn. -, M¥! I ... !M'l4'imlnar H f'll!LD HOCKe-Y Cat •ast L .. .,_.., MEN t e.m -11111 P'tce Damt IU S vs Mt1ay1·11 MS om -N1lllh P'tct oame ICanaoa vs Kann> 4 15 pm -S...enlll o<tc. oame INe..., Z.alend "'' SP• nl WOMIH t 30 a m -Ctnad• vt New ZHland -2 45 pm -Nelllerlancl• vs Austratlt GYMNASTICS (at UCU) 6.3CH0;30 om -Women's ryt~mlc pnllmlnarl" TEAM HANDBALL Mell (at Ctl State ll '*"911 > 11 1 m. -S.ventn o<tce 11me ISwll1trtand v1 Spain) 12:30 o.m. -Fifth otac:e oa'Tlt llctltM v1 Sweden) 6:.>0 om -Ninth Oltce tame (US "" Jte>anl IP m -1111'1 oo.ce nme (Al0tr11 vs Soultl ICorM) JUDO Cat Ctl Stlte LA) 4·1 o m -Hetvv-ei91'111 SOCCER (ttR ... 9-1) 7 om. -Th•rd OllCI 11ame (lta'Y vs Yuoos11vi1) TENNIS (If UCU) t t .m ·S:30 P.tn -Four matenes :ntACK AND FlllLD -------(at LA Celltllm) I a.m.·12:30 pm. and 4·745 pm Finals In 3,000·meter ateePlectltw. wom.n's 3,000, women't 1•me1er 114.frdlft, men'' discus, women'' hJon lumo VOLLEYBALL Me (tt Ltftt lltedl) 6.30 o.m. -seventh o1tce vama (China v1. Jaoanl 1:30 o.m -Fifth oltct nme CSoutll ICorH VI Arventlnt) WATER POLO , .. ~ $$ .. ,~) 1.30 a m. -Wnt Ger-many "" Holland 10 a .m -Jeoan n . BrHil 1:30 o.m -SH•n v• Austrt 1 7:l0 o.m -Chil\t "'"' Greece t om. -United Sttltl YI YUOOlltv,. ,.,. )>'- MMt'' btlsJretbal Cat tltl ffeniml THUtlSDA Y'S SCOAIS '""1• Medal Vuoo11tvie II, Ctntdt 12 .... "'9C9 Braill N, China 76 ltewnttl "8ce France ICl'l, Eoyot 71 TODAY'S GAMES Sevenltl ~ 10 a m -Auslrtllt vs West Germanv fflMI ~ce Noon -UrUOUtY "'" lltlV Gat Medlll 7 o.m -United Slates n SHln Jude (II Ctl State L• Allelift) 119 POUNDS Half H"vvwelltl1s Myou119•100 Ht, South Kortt def C>ouotts Vieira. Brain lnftle--•larnl Frldrlkuon, lceltl'ld, def Yuri Fail, lltlY Gunter Neuuvtrier, Well Germany. def Joe Mell, Canada Nott· lolh Frldrlkuon and Neureuttler won bronze medt ts. Team handba (et Ctl State ,.....,...) WOMIN lttllM It.., Gem.. Un''° Ste•u 2S A111trit 21 South KOf'U 26 Well Getma·w 17 Vuoo11tv a ]I, Ch-25 Not• Yuoos'av11 wir.1 90tCI medt . South KorH IMr •!Id Cll1nt lronH SHO~UT MEN'S ANO WOMEN'S SIZES WO M( N s c.;.1 co1 Diameter.• 11• in W ... ht: 8.8 lb$ ~ 811eblll i 1shown for sca1e1 I Ml N ~ ~HO l Oiameltr: S •n W1l9hl: '6 lh..~ AP N MHTUNG (It~) Noon•J o -Frtnt Saturday - ARCHllltV • (st 1.41111 ltilcll) It •ml om -Women ' JOrn and men'• .SClm • UO·S 1$ itlT'I -Women's *" tdWI ""'1'1 »n CAHOaJMG (" V...,_) I \0:)0 •m. -Mcn'lt , DIVING le1 US.CJ 10 t tn noon -Mlfl'I rln l ·S 11.m orritninar -Men'& oltttorm .... FENClNG {tt '--9 a.di) IO un.·6· om. -Meft't l"'7\ ,... prellmNrlft 1-ll Ol'I' -MM1'1._m_ 'IELD HOCKIY Cet•astL .. .,_..) t 15·\rn.·2 45 o~ -i11r .. "*'a• Otrnl'I. ,0 deCIOe'hl tlW'OVV'I "" OCtctl GYMNASTICS la1 UCLA) I· 10:30 • m -Women'• rv111m1e f!lltlt HANDIALL (It"" ,tnll'/\, .......... ) 2•S o.m -Two ,.,,,..,., 1111111 Ntntt to deeldl hi l!W'OUOh tUI JKaCft JUDO (at Cal Stitt LA I •·• o.m -OPlll cateeory SOCCER • (ti httdMa) 7·• o.m. -FrMICI .. , arum (dltmPIOl!Sllip) TENNIS Ctt UCL.A) 10 a.m ·3 pm -Two me•c:hel, l'lnalt. TRACK AND FIELD (at LA CtilMum) I t fl\.•1UO om. 91'CS 4·1 Plft..-Flnall In WOf'r*l'I dllCUI, 400 relitY~, \,.00 rlltv, ,,_., MIGi Piii, 511 ' er, a r11ay, hit'\ lumO, 1.-rtlar, l,SOO,, S.000 VOLLEYI ALL (If 1.41111 -..ca) Noon -~ VS ttalv (ttlircl OlllcaJ 6:l0 -Brun vs UnltM sr1•11 lctlarnoiOMll p""-~~- WRESTLING (8t ~) NQln•Tp,m; -P.rCrn\ • _ 4·UO o.m .. -Strnlflftels end ni.\J, tour -~·cltlMI Sunday DIVING (ti USC) 11 t .m. • 1 o.m. -Men's Plelform finals EOUES11UAN (ti Arcadl) 7 a.m.•2 P.m. -lncllvldutl lumo.nt ' comoetillofl TRAQ( ANO Fl•LD (at LA CtilMurn) 3:30 om -F n•lll of meri's maratl\ofl CLOSING CEREMONY (at LA~) 3.30 0 m. • )~ Mlttffs wlevtMI Cit Lene a..dt AAM) Ttdav'I GMlllS 6 30 p m -Olilla "'' Jaoen lwventll otac:e) l:30 o.m. -~ Kent ii A~ lflflll Piece) Stturda\"I 0.- Noon -Cantell v1. Italy (bronze medal) 6:30 om -Unllad Stal• vt. 8ra1ll lootd medttl SvndtroniUd swlrnmlnt (at USC> OUETC~H 1 CandV COit.. S..1111 and Tr.cit Ruiz Bot".... Wash.. 1'5.514 OOll\11, 1 Sl'laron HambrOOk and Kelv Kl'YCIU Ctntelt 1'4.234 3 Stello IOmun encl M.lwtko Motovoshl. AM"· 111 '9'2 4 Ct~oi 119 HolmYtrO and Ctt'OIY'I Wiiton, Gr-Ml 8rittln, IM.050, 5 Edltll Boll tl'IO Katin SIPOer, Swltunend llO lot, 6. C1lrlen Ellktft and MM kt EllOeten, Netllentnds, 119 051, 7, PalQle 9ftson Ind Murltl Hermine, France, 176.7", t Cltucht NovtlO and Piiar 1tam1re1. Mexico. 17' 409 Ftlld Mdlrt (at •alt LM ~) MaN ~ Stmlflrllh Pt l11an 1. Aus.!r&llt 0 West Garnla"Y '· Grttl l rtla II 0 '""" "-ce ~' Ind a 1, .,._.,, Zaa.ancl 0 Nttflentncsa 10. SM 4 lot) WOMaN •...i•-.owne U'I Itel S•atft IL-Wiil Gtrmanv l ~-1,1,-,,...... (~Int,.,... ..... , I. Tra111 (Gf'MI Brlfaln), 4:23.IS. t CJtot!\), Ul.73, 3 Looel (Soalnl. ~.511; ~ (Sweden), Ul OC.. ~-2.·1,..,..... '"'"' Tlrw • Alli) I Scitln, 3;5113, 2. c.n.cit, 3::54.M. MllOCO, 3;511'0, 4 J9Nft, 4.10.n. E~ (tis..-Aala) TIA.M OllHSAGE .,... wn1 Germany (Or Al!Mr tc. u-. St.M • ....,,,.,.. Krull. 4.HS ~. 1'! Sw tl•la.!14, 4,673; J. S...a.n. 4AJO, • Ne~!ICI\, 4,516. S. ~. 4.574,, United Slalel CHb Gurnrf, .., St!'dV Pflueeer·ClerM, ~ It~ Oo't«, it.lext ndrla Va.), 4,sst. 1 ~tdC)O;, 4,503 • GrHI Britain. 4,463; '· Austr Utt. 10 YllOOsltvia, 4,311; 11. Mn 3.977 . II=' .... Cat LMw a.ell> MaWS TEAM SAJ"E (Lew SC*'9 wtna) ....... 111¥ def Frt!'m, l·f .,_. Medml lt~n a ~ 11\otsl G...,.,.,,.,, 7·1 DllCUI MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SIZES Ml N S 0 1~1( U S WCl MI N S D ISC US Dlamtttr: 8 .6-8. 7 tn. Dl.,.ttr: 7 1n Welthl: ti lbs 6 SS oz Welfht: 2 lbs 3 25 oz MAMMl LIAGU• ITAJllOO•GS Al'IWtcM L-... WIST £MVIUOM W L fOd. Ga JI M $It • ts Sf) li'J 17 II '°' lh S6 17 4'6 1.,.. ... '2 .. . $1 ...... . 4' '' 00 ,0 •AST or/WON °'''°"' 1• .. ~ TOtOl!!O .. C7 .fl7 I a.itlmore '4 11 .Sl I 13 1ot1on " w .m " fMw Von. " U 11 IA'l'l 0.V..ftlll 41 6S «2' U _, Mllweulwe • 67 01 ,. tlluf'NltW'• SC.... OtlUellf s ........ Cln9iend 7. tatt1mofe ~ New y~ 7, Ollu9o' THM 7, ... ,°" l l(.naaa Cllv S, Milw.W.M • S..Mie 6. ~· S 110 inn.1111.i • T .. Y's~ OallllftO IS-~ • 111 at .,._ Cltomalllet. 10-101. In> Pffw Yori& CCo#ln 1· I aN1 Font-1 5-61 al C..., elatld I Hut on I · II 6fld SCl'IUl1t Ml, 2. (l·n) e.itlmort CO 11MrllM1 •·SI al Toronto (Aleundw f •SI. In) M11•4Wk• (Cald .. tll 4 ·IOI 11 Cnlcaoo tOotlotl 12-t). (n) So.Ion (Oieda , • ., •• THH lHouon 11-101, (nl Ottto11 CPetrv I• St at !Cans.as City IJonn 1-21. (I'll Mlnnnota (Schrom •·SI at Sffllle IVan· oaoere 1-111, 1n1 SetunieY's 0- 0e«iancl al Ane.a. lnl Balllmort at Toronto Hew Yorll al Cleveland MllwauaM at Cllavo, (nl to.Ion at THH, (n) Detroit at ICanses Cltv, In> Mlnnipe>la at S..llle, (1'1) .._ftenll LMtue WUTOfVlSIOM W L ftct. Ga s.n Dievo •7 " m ,. ,. Atlanta 51 56 509 t , ~ 57 SI CN 11 • Hoution S4 '1 '70 U • • ClndnNll 4f 65 '30 llh Sall Frenctw:io 64 '7 .JM ?2 aAST Dfvmo.. .. " " .. " S2 5' 51 1S SI so 65 'nMWIV'• $af'H "' ~ 1, Ananta o Cincinnati I, San Oltoo o Monttael I. CNceoo O I 10 lnnlnQsl Pttts«1urprl1, ,,._ Yont O • Ptilla<leloflla 2, SI Louis l ( 13 lnnlnQS) Houston '· San Frencltco O TMn'sG-DNewl (Valenll.llle t-12) at Sen Fran· ti.co (C.l\'9rl HI. (11! San Olto0 (Ore....cllv l·S alld Hawltlns 6-4) at Atlanta (Bedrosian 7·6 •!\Cl Falco,,. S-61. 2, (l·n) Houlton (Htallro I 1-t and KMPHr 10-11 ., Cincinnati ITlbl>• 2-0 and PHtOl't 3-61, 2. (l·nl C111c.eoo Uteusd\tl S.-Sl al Montreal IH~etll 0-0), (n) fJlttM>uroll (TudOr 6·1) el Hew VOl'k (Ft<nandeJ 3-0), (n) SI Louis (Kec>Sh•re 3·2) •I Pl\11.M*Dn•• (Denny 4·31, (n) SllturelY'• Gam.t o.dlelr1 at Sen Franc1w:o Cnic.oo •' Montreat Houston at Cincinnati In) San Diego at Ati.nta. lnl P!lllbufoll et Hew Vorll tn) St Louis at Pnl aelefiin•• In> AMERICAN LEA~UE A's S, Anelts 4 OAKLAND CAUFottNIA ltHncnn If Lanalrd JO Moroan 1tl Knomnon Murpnyd LO!Mtrf MDevltrf Heatnc &odlte lb PtllltlPtU altrltlll ' I 2 0 • 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 3 I 0 0 4 1 I I 3 I 2 2 I 0 0 0 4 I 1 2 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 8entC1<.11 rf Scon1n lb Lvnn cf O.Cncs Jb Oown+nolf ReJktn dh Grlet't 1t1 Wllfono2b loont c scnotlld 51 Narron p11 iJ SIS T.,_.. k-bYlnlllna UHll bl 4 I I 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 I 7 3 ' 2 0 3 I I 0 • 0 ' 2 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 2 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 l2 • ' 4 ~ 020 OOJ 000-S Ollfenlla 012 IOI IOO-4 Game Winning RBI -LOClft (3) E'-ftH41!1Wton OP-Oaklalld 2 Call· fwnle 1 LOB~lt141nd •. C•litornl• 6 2&-0.clnc:ft, Oownlno HR-H .. 111 ( 121 ~fQutl I,. H It l!lt Bl SO OeldMd CVouno W,S-1 Raine¥ Buromi.r C.udllS,2' 6 • 1-3 0 1 1-3 1 1 1-3 0 • 4 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ~ Zahn L, 10-9 S 2-3 6 2 Klaon l 1-J 2 0 0 I CVouno Pltcnt<t to 1 ~lier In 7th HBP-Stnofielel, Lvnn (t>y CYouno> Pe-Heatl'I T-7 33 A-24, lU A"9lll avenees IATTING A• Ill " Hit ltll ,.Cf ltnlQIAI 221 3' 7S 6 30 339 Carew :m l4 ... 3 21 302 Brown 106 13 )() 6 17 213 $C()(lltrt IO 10 12 3 9 17S O.Clncei m SS 101 13 SS 212 Lvnn 3s.:J SS " 13 4S 272 Wiifong 120 71 S6 3 21 m Narron " 7 2S J 10 2SS Oownlno 362 .. ti 16 61 251 Re J•ckwn 3SI . , 16 .. SI 2.0 Pell It 327 SI ,. 2 2S 232 Grlcn ns ll 49 ' 21 211 PlcclolO 111 1• 23 I 9 201 Boone l2I 23 6S 2 23 207 SchOfiald 771 19 S4 3 II; 199 Ro Jae-son fl s IS 0 s 165 htllh )llS 47l tS4 101 440 2SO ,.ITCHING ,, H II SO W·LER.A Corlwtt ~ .. " 26 3 I 2 IJ ...... 17'1> " • 9 1 1 2 19 For\Cll ""' .. 3 10 1-1 210 Sanchez S7 1'.1 s. 22 •2 7·3 235 Zann ISS '> 152 39 4S IO•t 3 13 Romanoe• 1741., "' ., '7 10·10 H I Witt 11lilt , .. .. 1'3 11•9 3'3 Jonn 1s2i) 171 •• 3' 7·9 ) 77 I( son ni, n 10 ls 2 1 • OI Kaufman '31! lt 13 17 1·2 4 IS Slaton "~ 121 31 )1 4·S S06 CUf'll\ • 14 ) • O·O 5'3 LaCortt ,......, )0 12 13 M '7S Swan s I 0 2 0 1 IOIO Olhen 11 " t s 0 I '00 Tet.11 llU 1156 Jl6 ... M·H l.1$ SavM San<11t1 10, Corbett •. A•sa 2 IClton 2. K•ufman I NATIONAL L&AGUI Oed9en l, Bravn o LOS ANGaL•S ATl.AH'TA S.1121> Wllllllkl rl L..lnont ct Mlrltll If 1 klOKla t YNOtf'C 9'00 lit ltl'191'1 lb A.lldnll H Herllllv• Howdll "'"". altrlllll HrltlW • 0 1 0 P«rv N ) O O O • 0 2 0 ltRl'nf& u • 0 1 0 • o 7 o Wsnetn rl • o 1 o 3 0 • 0 Mi./ffttly ci • 0 ' 0 2 0 0 0 Cnmblt lb J 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 Lln9r'H ft\ I 0 0 0 4 I 1 1 JOIW!tOll>ll ) 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 Hul>brd lb J 0 0 0 , •• o 8tMdlclt )000 •120 c.,,,.. 2000 0 t 0 0 WalMn llf! 1 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 ,Ottlar 0 I 0 0 I Garwo • o o o »If 1 T.... JI t t I SC...lrw ....... L4'1.,.... -lit --• A...... ----· G-WlmlN 11111 -lrodt 121, ., ~Anent• I Loe-\.M _.,..... I. A llanl I S llt-CNl\"llllQM, lt1vwre H'l.-..0 1111 ~ {1') ... .. •• 11 IO IMUelln HertlllMrW.I ·• 01•:1 • • • 1 ' ~-M • 0 0 • 1 tteuus.1 M 0 0 0 • 0 ..... Ce,,. L~·· 1 ' y) u.ra ·c.Jtatic• IOrllRJ iA!M recild L f!Y, ~ Senator. OvnuNelcl, forty Femts $Mt11Jn, Puoa't ltM Time: l:W :JIJ. IS aXACTA ti ti Mld 17100. llXTI4 ltACE. 1 II I• m11t1 ltaMIUe tur ttflv l 00 l 10 ~knee (Ha,_.,J 2M lftl In l...oYe CVaierQ ..... ) Vk:kJ on C.ua ., RoblnWi PYnt DotGcnnallt Jani~ MarfNINa ~IMUY Ctndy "'"'1 ,,,,.,..., kftl lii I U i iEl I .... P.ll tt\Jn Soaltv u tie JoaMtc.ar r \..ort~ Donnleuuw A lgazihits the big tilDe Nan.net LMtue BATTING (2'5 al bait) Gwvnn, Se" o;..o, 3". S.ndb«e, ChlCffO, l14, Dernier. cn1c-. 320, Rav. P1ttt0vre1n, 313, Bren.Iv. San Francisco. 312, WHll•no· ton. Atlanta, .312 ltUNS Sandbere. Oloeaoo. 111. Semi* PNladale>n141, 76, Wloe1nt San Oleoo. 7' Gwvnn, San OleeO. 75, o.rn1er, Clllcaeo 70, Ralnft, Montr .. I, 70 RBI. GC•rlef', Monlraat, ll, J0•111s, ChlQeo, 75, Schmidt, PtiltadelPllla, 11. Hernanci.1, Hew Yorlt, 61. Sandllero, Cl'll '"°' '7 HITS. Gwvnn, San OlaOO. 163. Sancsbaro. ClllQeo, IS2; Samuel, Phlladell>hle . 144, wvn,.,., Plllsourefl, 137. Cr111, H«mon. 1:n OOUBLES· Hut>Oerd, Atlama. 2• R1ln-"· Montreal, 25, S.ndt>ef"o, Chltaoo, 25, Hendrick, StLoul•, 24, Samuel, PllllaOef· Piiia. 2'. TRIPLES Sandbare. ClllQeo, 16, s.tmiei, PN!edeblnta, 14, Cruz, Houaton, 10, Cltevnolcb, Houston, t, Doren, Houtton, I. Gwvm. San Oleoo. I, N\c:GM, StLoula, I HOME RUNS. Murlltlv, Allal\la, 2'. GCarfer, Montreal, 22; Sdvnldt, Pt'lllacMI· pnJa, 22; ~ DMewl. It,• are'*' ""'"" 17 -STOLEN BASES s.muti PlllladelPNa, ss. Wle9iN. San oi.oo. 47, RalnH, Mon· trNI, 42, Radin, Cincinnati, lt, Def,,._ C'1lcltoo. 34 PITCHING (10 0.Cfalons). Sulcllffe, Clll· c.eoo. f-1, 2.91, Oroteo, H-Yori&, 1·3, 2 04. PPerez. Allant1, 10-4, 3 fl, Soto, Cincinnati. 12-S, 3 12, WlllllOfl, San Olavo. lt·S, 1'2 .,. STJUICEOt.JT$ ~. ~ YOtlo., 1711 v~. Oedew'I. 167. Rven Hov"on. 13', SOio, Clnc;lnlwlll, 131, ,.ana, ~.· 116; Qfllon, Pttlta~ia. 116, JO.leoll Plttll:MJrgl!, 116 • AIM racw T~. ~ COflClel'dl • Tftle 1 .. ti .l MV•nM ltACL 6~ NriOllOI 5-rl'I Otltol'tt fV'6111l\IW) 1.60 HO UO Wftelh (~er! JIO UO Liile cm c~uava> 2JO AIM rK*I Nortlt Seawav. Quao Quedl Qwcll, Tlle •• One T 111'11 1.16 11 S. U •XACTA ('3·6) OliCI UUIO ., l'tCK sue. {'·7·J· 1·WI Hid S121 '° With n wlnnlne llc:Mfs ('111 l!Onnl. 12 Pldt She COlftOllllOfl Nici UUO wltfl U" wlM!fto tlc:ltatt <nv. llorMt), •IGHTM UCll. ""min on tun LYlltlaff'• ~ (Toro) 1170 t OI S JO Dec:ertllll l""-Y) Mf Ml Foooy Mo«! tDele!IOUueval :uo AllO r ICM F...-... l(.aryn'• Lari>, R effl PntMl!lalloft, Domlnenl LM, Mymltltiulltt Time'. 1 "' 21 s Nl#TM RACa. I 1/16 m11ts A Soarkle (Vaien!uela) ta 4 '° 3 01 Olvmcwc ~ (LOJOVa) UO UO Gvci.v KeMe l~•lllerl ) 20 41to l'9C9CS ~ Of Oer'lulcu, MMry ~aeallner, Time to Rule, PrltNrv ACI TllNI 1 '-II l· S U Ix.ACTA (J·61 NICI 1132 00 Allandana IC,942 Men'• toumament Cat CH.lld l&anc, Mid\.) Garv Hallberg 35-31-.a JOM 4damt 34-~ Tom l(tte l4-~ Joel .. MUOCI 3'·32-.a Dave Oerln 33·34-67 Tom Purftar 34-~7 Tonv Slits 33.,...._., O.A W••llrlno ,..,......... 8oO E .. IWOOCI 34·J.t--60 ltOd NUCk.011$ 30 • .._., Jeck ltentW 34-J.t--60 Fuuv Zoelter 33·3s--.I CO-Seuers 34·3'--41 Jim Ke,,. 34-~ T.C.Chell 34-~ lsao AOkl -Jr3s--.t Run Cothran 33·3'-1f Mika~ 37-~ 8oO Boyd l.4·35-69 Jim Tnori>e _ 34·35-69 l\Mrk O'MHre 33·~ Jim Hiiiel 34-3Hf ClllP 9edl 36·~· BOl>Ov Clami>ett lS· 3'11--49 Pevne Siewert • J4-~9 Petet' Jeco&Mn 3S-~t Joey Sindelar 3S-~9 Oan Pont 34-3r-6f Sieve Bradv 36·33-6f Alia It 11 ltnall OM Kattly Wl'llflllillflll Pam Ofet &an '-"'ffln Soelleer. OtYlin NiMYOtiont .... llYH•'J'ft Call't«l,,. l'anton o-i. C.IQnl A'Fll!kO ~tmOI• /Mrlt Wtllnffaltn Aleundr a lteinMrdl S.IY Quinlan • a.rbrt Mltrtlllt a • Lalll'ia lurl'll Clndv H• Kay KefllltdV G1llHlra1e-.-~ Cero/'r1'1 H I klllDartiel !Mvern Klau Lauri Pettf&OI' J«llvll lrlf1 M4#:ll BrWf' Ce11>v Marino Mlfldy Moolt Marv Owvar hY«leY Oav11 Nano ltub•n lt11tllJMtan o.tlbie Autflll Terri Carttf 8a'1> lunllow$1o.v Connie c1111tm1 Colleen Wa*ef' HaathlrOttw Amv Banl LYMStronav Jan Staonenson Allee Miii« Martv Olclo.artori Vlcltl Fereon J•n Flynn Katllrvn Vouno Cllfol'totte Grmnt Cvntllla Fite OtObla Mll&tarlln DenlM Streblo Kath'( Baker Sandra Palmer CINtv LlflCOln Vivien 9'o""nlM Ja,.,. llalodl htty l(lng Oll11e Aris-Lano 8ar~Thomal Pat~• Ja,.,.Craftar Joen Jovc:e Sherri Turner Sue Footeman Myra Van HooM t<er an P9rmezat Saral'ILeveoue Susie McANlll•r Linda HUlll L Y1W1 Cook .. Perllef' Jeannette Kefr Valerie Sltlnner Ot09<1h S~ltlner Jacltle Bertscll Ex-CdM standout t es pro tourney after USTA win . EDrrOR'S NOTE; J~ sic• A/jJlui, a formerCoroM de/ Mar Hi1h tennis sra.ndour now playia' at UCl,.;A1 is on ~ur for six '4-tt-b, pl•yilJI m the N11ion1J Amlfeur •nd r.he USTA Women's Pioffflional dt'C'ull'-She lives her reactJons 1n tho foWTh of• r,cries of articles. By J~ICA ALGAZJ .,..., ..... 0.., ..... So ends lhy journey on the USTA Amateur Tennis Circuit! After thrtt wcxlcs.. three toumamcna. and 2S Big Macs, rm on a four-<iay sabbaticaJ in New.York. Next. I challenge my~lf on the USTA's Women's Professional circuit at Laver's International Ten- nis Reson in CXI Ray Beach, Aonda There, 1 wiU be com{>Cuna with the pros for SI 0.000 in pnze money. To keep my amateur status, I'll be allowed to w10 only up to the amount this tour has cost me My opt1ntism 1s coming through. Actually, I would be excited beyond belief to make it through the qualify- ing rounds and through one Wln an the mamdraw. Thepnzcforwinnmathat one round 1s $80. I think I'd frame the check! New York 1s wonderful. I got to work out on the clay courts an Central Park this momnma and then found time to make sure my Dad's credit card dtd not get dusty. What fun 1t 1s to shop rn Bloomingdalcs. I vtSlted the lobbl of the Plaza Hotel in New York. It s a real contrast from the Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge in Ocveland I may not hav~ loved the city of · 0~.vcland, but 1 will always re- membu it fondly a' the city where l won my first nauonal 1itle. My J)4-nncr, Diane Do~. (rom the University of Texas. and I captured the 'National Amateur Hardcourt • OoublC'S Champiolllbip, 1t was a biahliaht in my tenni1 CIJ'etr c.o be lht center ohutntion for a IV c:ttw, umpires, ball boYI, aod a Wat chectina crowd. f0f'P11 the ayang. .. Winnina i1n•1 evttything." It 1uR feels like every. t'h'ina tOday. I suppose that it'•jU,st the ·same as in ma.nyothtnporu.ifherri1 DO middle .,.ound between Manin& aod losina and af\er the &ct no one really cares about how close a match has been ptayed. AU that counts is who has won. The USTA rankina committee docs not even considet the scores. Althouab I found the amateur circuit to be quite social, at least' on one level, it's become even more clear to me that winnjnaand playina well at tennss comes first for everybody. Comma out on top 10 Cleveland makes me feel that I've really ac- complished somethina speeial. I thank I've gained a new under- standinJ . about the seriousness of compeuuon tennis. Moving on now to the all women's UST A Professional Tennas Circuit should be a very different experience. l expect even a suonac:r feelina of competitiveness. The tournament at Del Ray Beach and theooe followinaat Key Biscayne should be particutarly exciti.na ~ cause they are the one's which precede the U.S. Open. Many of the top players arc expected to enter in order to get pre-U.S. Open pract.ice. Now this is raJJythc bia time. A final note to all you California Tcnms plar.ers. lfyou move with your current skill level to the East CC>alt, my auess 1s you'd be ranked a step h'lher. To those of you who play at the B lc!vel., you miaht-eveo bt encQuraaed to JOin the circu.it. There Just seem$ to be snore good tennis being played in California. SAVES Suiter, SILoult, 30; Holland, PtillaOelPftla, 2S, LaSmllll Clllcaoo, 2S, Orosco. New YOl'lc, 22, Gon•oa, San OlaClo. 21 Garv Krueoer 34·3s--.f Midi Soll 35·3'-69 AandY E'nklnt J3·~ JOlln COOk 37-32-69 Betll Solomon ~ Jove• l(aimltrtkl Laurie Ru.it·S.wett MJ Smlln . Maroaret Ward llMrvHatem.n OMclee La,A.ef' Marttna Flovd Catherina Oueoan KYie O'Brien ThlrH8 HHSIOn Cnrls Lehmann Allison Finney U.S. PO LOIS TS. • • Lon Hinkle 3'·»-69 Victor Raoalado lS·lC-69 Lannv Wadk Int 35· J.f-69 Marti C.lcavecchll l4-3S--.9 LM Rlnltw 37·JJ-70 Sltvt Llet>6er lS· lS-70 Oavld Graham 34-36-70 l\Mrll Havn 3S-3S-70 Pat Llndsev 36·34-70 L.91 Alamitos Grao Powari l1·JJ-70 THUtUDA Y'S ltlSUL TS Leflny Cleme<ltJ 3'-3.-70 (11lt1 el '1·nllht ~ rMetvlf) Ll!\dv M llltr 3S·3S-70 FlllST RACE 3SO venls Boo SlleMar 3'·34-70 Ramblln Moonstar ICrgrl 4 "1 300 2'0 ~ o·Greelv 3'·34-70 AHi Easy $199 (Ada If) l 20 2 IO Ronnie &tack 33·37-70 Oeln Turn (Fryday) • 60 Ron SlrKk 36·34-70 AllO raced· Rtt>ett Saont, At<ll t<k>, LM Trevino 34·36-70 B10oi1'n Dust, Cro Ber M.oon, Oon L• Feme, Marti McCumt>et 37-D-70 Ttte Cr•wdlel Kid Forrnt Feller 3'3·37-70 ITl'ftl;1tlllr Scott W.llo.lna 36-34-70 U EXACTA 19·71 i>a.·d $1UO Gavin ~!MOii 3'·34-70 SEC.ONO ltACa. lSO vare1s Loren ROt>ert• 3S·3S-70 Roaring Peu ICrtfftf/ S 20 • 00 2 .a Denis Watson 36-34-70 Get Awev Outci< (Wardl · S 00 2 60 Scon Hoell 3'-34-70 Judy Nortn ITreHur•J 2 20 Clll Clll ROC1rioue1 3'·J.t-70 Atto rec.a Rosie Lu J()(l, Perky Blue, Miiie Smltll 3S-l6-7l t<.armarella Ralph Landrum 36·lS-7l T 17 '' t<.an Brown l64S-71 ime. · Larrv ZltO!er lS·l6-71 THIAO RACE. 350 vardt Oeve Barr lS-36--11 Sul'ICHly Soldier !Creager ) 1310 S.00 J ID Hut>erLGrMn 34·37-11 My L .. 1 Girl (Ward) • 00 3 00 Kurt Co• 34·37-71 Time Of Riches CCerdoza) S 60 Cnrlt Pefr; 36·3S-71 Also raced· A111re Dlelit, Tiiis Dream• Oavld P8CH>les 3S·36-71 On l\Aa, Stuff Of Oream1, Annles Tomor· Jim Ntlford 36-lS-71 row, Petts Full House, 011ds Favorl!e, Bruce Fleltlltr 37·~7 I Good For Nutllln Ed Flori 36-lS-71 Time 11.39. COl'ty Pa11l11 37·J.t-71 FOURTH ltACe. 440 nrels Fred Coul>fft 36·3S-71 LYM Adam• J•M Lotk Ttrrl LUCllllunl a·S.re AMe Timms Carole Cllarbonnoer Jovce 8«1JOn Nenette Clrco Brenda Goldtm•lh Ka11ww11111m• Jana Sirmons Gtf08 Boykin l\Mroa StubblehelCI Otbor all Petriu I Det>OteHa• Su.Ertl Dianne Othev Jtn"•'tf MllccUf'ratfl LOl'l Wtst Lori D•llf StePllanie ICOl'lltHV e·Jult• Flynn •-mattur Tuot>oal Te (Ruiz) 12 60 S 60 2'0 Ptill Hancoclt 37·34-71 U.S. CJaV Ceurt -.Umament Unolo 8ov (Ward) 660 390 S.Vt BallaltfCK lS-36-71 Wll~ Lumtt Lumc> ICardo11) 1.0 ~· f~wNtll 37·3t-71 MM'~8k. ,,.._...::l..... ""° raced Tu Tun JOlln, Red Hawk r mo. ullv 36·3S-71 Lll>or Plmtll (CtKnOtlovakla) Clti Pan, Nlvl!t Mood. Sa Mure Tt River Fern Wooav Blldlburn lS·36-7l Aaron Krlclttteln (US I. 3·6, 6·4, 6·3, Pablo Buo. Azure CllallenOe. Jim Gallffller 34·37-71 Time· 22.32 llMNln Sc:hJtne 37.Jt-71 Arrey1 !Peru) def Juen A9Uller• (Spain), U Ix.ACTA (~-9) i>a.ld s93.30 Jedi Frtnt 3s-36-7l 6·4, 6·4, Heinl Gunll'llfdl (Swltttrlencll Clti •-11 u Joaklm Nvstrom IS""edenl. 6-2, 2·6. 6·1, P'I~ RACE. uo verdt -· """ 3s-»-71 Tlllwrv Tula"'9 (Francel def Helli Porte Fan (Adair> 13 20 6 40 3 .a Ge«t11 BurM 3'-lS-7 I Scllwal4M' (Wtsl G«manv l. 7·6, 6· l, Mcir11n Silent Cat ITre11ure) f 20 • 00 Howard TwillY 3S-l6-7I Jail• (Art11ntlnal o.f. Aleiancl<o G1n11bal Atesc.edet'o (Fryday) 2 40 Jim SltnOM ll·»-71 (Aroenttna), 6·3, 4·1, rtllred · A e •• JOtln Mahlffev ll·J.t-71 tat11 ~;~"" 11torHon. Pr .. m Buo Vin J.tf Mltchall 37•3S-72 WtrMlt'• ~ ,.... nme 22 17 Tom Lehman 3'·36-n Manuelt llMIMY• Clu!Nrlal Clti. Kathy u l!"''"CT 2 Oannv Edward\ 3'·l6-n Alnatdl CU S.). 6·2, 6-4, AnctrH Tamesverl """ A I ·SI Paid SIS SO Kelli! Fergus 34.Jt-72 (HungaN) C1ti Twry PhalPS (US ), 6·4, SIXTH ttACE 400 vard\ Wavnt Levi 39-33-n· 7·6. Pam Cat.tie CU.SI def Zina Garrison A Oanov Sh••• 1e Grc) l•S IO 26 '° 7 IO AndY North 3'-36-72 IU s ). , .•. 6-2, LIH 8ond9f' IU $.) Clef Afltf Burnera (H G•rtla) uo 2 60 Allen Mllllt 31·3+-n Mlchelle TOl'rH IU S.). 6·2. 1 s Crimson Fi.wr (TreesureJ 3 IO Leonard TllomPS>On )5-37-72 From Bl Thursday's wannup for tonight's gold medal game saw the U.S. playana fluid ball again and N1tzkowsk1's earlier concerns appear to be over The Americans are playrng with confidence and with the kind of balance nccessai; to deal with the huge Yugoslavtans. who also enter with a nch background (one gold and four silvers in the past eight Olym- piads). Whatever nervousness that plagued the U.S. 1n the earl) going is history, accordmg to Wilson. who said: .. We talked about this after the game. The hardest thinf 1s getting to the gold medal pmc. It s the hardest mountam to chmb. This 1s the one · we've wanted to play, to finally get m the water and play for tt. I think we'll give a 100 percent show," Nnzkowskl, too. is confident going in. ..1 feel we'll P.laY well." says Nitzkowski. ..I will be the most surprised man in the world if we don't. This is the end of the line." The silver medal, whkh 1s guaran- teed, represents without question the greatest achievement m Untted States water polo history. but as Nitzkowski admits, "ThCTC isn't a kid here, or the Yugoslavians either. that 1s thinking sjlvcr." The German coach, Nicolai Firo1u, disgusted wtth the offiaatina which found his goahe ejected JUSt before Burke scored the wmner, declined to say who be felt would win, but wd whoever Wlns Wlll need some luck. Nitzkowski said he was disap- pointed only Wlth his team's lack of momentum in the victory over Holland earlier in the week. and as for tonight,. from a coaching standpoint. he has rcw womes. • "You worry a lot less about a prne hkc: ttus, the finals," says the Hunt- ington Beach resident and five-tune Olympian. .. Tonaght you know you're playing a areat team ... He also feels the play of the prne toflllht will be more physical with fewer klckouts, because "whi:n it's th.ts important the officials usually let them play. But, of course, you never know for sure." The U.S. team consistsofWuson m the net, Kevin RoberUo~ Doua Burke and Gary Figueroa as drivers, Terry Schroeder in the hole (alter- naUna with Jody Camp6eID and Peter Campbell and Drew McDonald on defense, in addition to Joe Varps, Jon Svendse~ John Siman, Tim Shaw and Chris Dorst. Eiaht were turned away when the U.S. boycotted the Soviet Games in ; 980 and for most, w path to tonight's aame bas been six or seven years in the making. "The boycott wasa bitter, bitter pill to swallow," says Nitzkowski "It blew their minds, but it cemented them as a aroup." So it au boils down to four seven- mmute quarters tonight .. Tb.is game's not for a dime," McDonald said Thursday. "Just a gold medal.·' SCOTT QUALIFIES ••• "''° rlCICI ScrHmino Skies, Mike Ma Mike McCullouon 35-37-72 Wntetn Open CHn, Pellerll\ Pride. Tiie Joe Ooo. l\Mrk Greo Farrow 3'·34-12 (at c:a.vtlaM) Him Gone, Sir RamrllOCI, t<lptvdUClelelo Biii GtasJOn 36-36-n s.c.ld ltlUlld ~ Time 20.12 Petw 0ot1wfiu1s 37·3S-72 Jefi l(lae>trda CU.S l o.f. BIM Scanlon From Bl SIVaNTH ltACI. 400 yard•. Oouo T-ell 37-lS-72 (U.$ ), 6-2, 6-3; O.vlel Pal• (Us) def Vll•Y Gofor R8QUtlt (H Garcia) 4.40 3 oo 260 11n Kr•U•t 35-37-72 Am<llral (llldlal. 6·3, 6•3, Mall MllChefj Two Noln (Bard) 4 oo 3 60 Curt lvrum 31·3+-72 tU.S.I def. Robert Van'! Hof (US.), 6·3, 6-3, th 500 'f . Futurity Jet (Tr .. sur1) 10 ID Griff MoodY lt-34-72 Mika O.Palmer (U.S I def erlclt l~er•kv c 1, I it's a slow race. He has a Also raced· Sf\awl'!ef'o, Buci.a Brotlltf. Rick Datoos 37·36-73 (U.S ), 6•3, 6·4. good kick at the end. Wranoklr Gofen 8ov, Cllarm EHv, Rebell JCIM ChalfH 36·37-73 "f think rd have been much better Georo•. Juen Real, Croll• Go Bla11 Adam Adems 3'·37-73 Time 20.co Jim Booro• lS-lt-73 ofTto have run a 3:39 in Europe after u EXACTA 1•·7> paid 12110 Jav Cudd lS·ll-73 the trials instead ohtaying home and EIGHTH ttACE 350 va•d• Tommv Valentina 37·»-73 training the way I did. But that's all the men's 3,000 steeplechase and discus along with the womcn'a 3 ()()(). meter run and women's hialljurhp . CHocan (Harmon/ 1 .a s ~ 3 ao Mlkt Hol*'d lS-30-73 cnurp N Go I Adair I I 00 s 40 Calvln PMI• 14·39-73 behind me now ... said Scott. WYSOCKI Nono1me Pau (Creaoer> , .a Oav• Hin 14·39-73 Great Bntain's StcvcOvett won his • • • "''° receel Hera Tru Rtotf. Stlawnt Paul Azltlotr 3'-34-73 I 500 h d Seba C fi ..__ 81 Na1111e. How R""· L-11.Kk ... r. Pan"' Brad ervll'lt 37·l6-73 • cat an sllan oc m1shed r .-um Print llv()(lt Cl'IO•ce, Vul<on Ramt>,.r 8ob MIJrOflY 31·3S-73 oee. WINnt second In hi Time 17 ts Rooar "'-"1>11 37-3'-73 t>AVIY'S LOC~" c~ leaclt> "I feel a lot bttter than I did an the order not to be boxed in dunna n ~ SIX no·M·•·•·21 P••d JOhn FOU(lflt ls-»-73 -111 anotef'• 77 barrKUCSa. m t>on•to. ss 800 fU'lal. .. Ovett said. ··But I've .... _ .. n the race. I was happy with a steady S2.47S 10 .. oh ••Ofll wtnn1110 llCkth (lt>it Randy Welkins 36-37-73 vellowlall, 10 rOC'I llUI, .., taltco beU, 10 UI;~ ,..,. .. but I would have lik-• ,_..,, carrvover POOi '" 90166 Ttiomas Grev Jl·3S-7l t.tnd ban, tl4 mac11are1. 12 ~ad throur. some prc\ty extensive tests .,...... ""' c1v0t 1t990 3'-JS-7• 1 --T and JUSt got out of the hospi'•.,I stronger fimsh to see what I can NINTH RACE. '70 varo. Clarence Row ll·lr-74 N w,...,.. LANDI NG CNaw_.n -do M'91'1tv Marcu• I Harmon> 110 4 oo 3 20 Tom Jeokln• 37·l1-7• a.di> -ti •llO*'• 154 bonito, in bass, yesttTda}. • Gracious Rab 1£ Ganie) I'° 'to Tom L.amo<t 31·3'-74 , •n..otl!MCI. l Kutoln. n mackerel "Conventional Wlsdom would die· .. , hope I don't have to do au Scramllno Joe IBrOOlltl 3 '° Ml~• Putnam 31·36-74 the work in lhe fin.al.s. At the 800 "''° rec.o sw1u a.n11tf', El Potrefol lueldv Whitten 30·l6-7• lllC that I shouldn •t be runnina and I GOid, JuUCM>• cowbov Milt• Gove 37-37-74 was advised b~ vanous members of mark today, I saw that the four of Time "14 John Hamar11t 3'-JS.-74 the medical faculty that 1 shouldn'L us were out pretty much &Jone n EXACTA IS-61 Hid i1120 KtMv Kno• 30-3'-74 and I JUSt want__. 1·t to "•y that Attanoance s.no 111 '""°" co-u-14 They assured me there werr no ~ ·- Dee Ma Maril 1reo11s •-»-7' serious problems that would keel) me war,. THUIUDAY'S tt~SULTS =:~= n=~~: from taking pan, however. •When WC walked OUt On the < 1"" .. u-•• tNim• " ,,...,,,., oavlO Zlllk )'"41-75 "I don't thank I could have come track. 1 heard everybody yellina. r:•n ttAca. 1 •urlonft K'" l( .... v »-,,_7s out of the Olv~ics runninaas bad as 'Oo Ruth. Oo Ruth.' I thou•ht to 1r1111 Bemer CM.tu> "oo 100 soo KMCorllu n -»-7s Th~V'• tnnMCftem ;, kifiself. these """"pie·-11nran'a •o Roval St Gaort:1t <Hawtev> uo uo 11" c.H.. 31•17-75 1 dtd in the 8 . After that. I had to _... ... .. ,,.... ~ Herbie Ouavtt cc.s1anec1a1 uo 0, .. e>owi.u lMt-lS IAWULL come back," said Oven. · me if I don't make at to the Co"~!~1 ~"!.~ulhla!;}4°"Tg, .-.r1~t L.arryMlit ll·>7-7S NEW VOR~·=~teel Oouo ~ltll, Tonsght'~ r.chcdulc fin"'· finals 1'n finals. # 11-• -• on .• _,..... re.,.,. • oner· ,.,, Tim Notrla J0·37-75 11!1cllfol'. on Iha tS·dn dlul>led 11" Ac· w. "I think I have as,.......,.. a chan-Pef'UHr, MU"'81 8ov. MUia Cuming Jt•40-7' 8"""" -Time in 21s Joftl!Steuot11er >f-37-7' llva1tes ltOll G11oeM1r•4 I~. H anyone 10 win a medal. c.ome s•CONo 1tAa. 6~ •urtone• To11YJOM.i0N .,,._,. N......,~u.L..eque Saturday we'll have to site what Tr ... wnev lellt (Hawley) t 60 00 UO Jey Horton Jl·)l--7' DEHVE• a1tOHCO$-Walvt0 AerOl'I ha~nS ,. Truly ,ency cOtfetloun•va> 440 2eo 0eve1:~ i1·~n ""' .. • <ohWlleill. 'T'omahawk tied O..tlMr• (Pinc.av) '" Garv Manowl ct-..11-n KANSAI C:ITY ~HlliF$-&'9N41 '°' J. I • ')'SOCki fin1'h.ed SlXt.b lo lht Abo '"* ttl'inc.t• Dv~. LUNr'a G.rv Pinnt Jt·»-n """'· canltl', ,. a twt•VMr contrae1. cut h C 800 finals and fi1wes to finish ll'l\lff, UMWMMNd, w.uml. ~. luddvo.t'dMf' U•42-77 $tevt Poller.~. all hote, wlcie Twrtt heckmate e\i h"•&... . .... CJV\<"~ rda c;1er1ou1 0t .. m. h•ct an 0r11t1t11. Lo•• .,.~ •1'-'n receiver, Mite G~. 9'18rttr'Mtx. Al w J en 1., ... nnUK ,.nN~lu y. °"' Jennv, .,,.... AdnWll ,,.. ~ Jt·»-n u.oii. .. ... .,. .,,. H'orm tte .. 1a, 119111 Her family feel1 that way, too. Time.1:11J1s M••edtnoftcl •• .._71 '"'Pia~ o.vicl ~,_,, wide re· HONOLULU 1 h ~-•SI .. My Ded bo•••t.t th---T-., DAI y OOUll.a , .. ,, HlG •11UG Mlll•Hll •·41)-11 cei••· •1141 .. ,,., W"1MI!, tornf(IHICk, on -0 0 l'U\;ns • ..... ·-l ..V TI4ao uca. '~" ""'°"" *"-* 4N•-n 1t1e tnlufed ~14 1 foot sloop Tomahawk ou1 of Balboa shuu that have the words 'R un Elld DIUllv CTttoJ ,., uo ~• :=-.:... ::"_: N w 0tt1.EANt $AINTs.-<ut Oltl Yacht Oub, and Monte L.ivanpton•1 Ruth. Run: on them. My hu1o :!9: ~i~1 5• ~-= Tam D•IMM 4,.,...., ~:,~·=~~ g.~~::. ~~= SS-foot Checkmate (Cll·Bullfros)1 band (Tom) tsn't weari~ one of ""'° ra(,fd Vldorltut • .,, Oanr:• ~ LPOA tiMl"""""9t ,.,... It~, euen Ma•, •!!Cl Kt¥ n from Del Rfl y ht Club, were lhntt,_thouah .. _H • waYi111an AttKk, uvoo~. ...n L.andll't. (at """ ,...,., N...C.t lt!cclo, litf\I lfld locked lft I tic for handicap honors Amencan f1q.. ,__.,Ofl, o.iw, DluNf• ltelUM 11·• ,..rtv ~n JN~ MEW vowtc J TS-Slenecl H•foid al\cr three offive races in the Pan Am After Wysocki outran the fidd Tn.e. Tuw Hwn, 1W1 AMut '"""'' 1 H•,,,..... C..tnkflffi ... '*"""'· fll h r. f nme 1 11 Ka.I , • :an~ l'HILAOELl'H•A EAGL rwa11t• Biii Oipper Cup ncs. o over I cunt l 00 yards o the u •JC.ACT• cM1"'"1tseo L.aur'91t • ~·Jt.-tt MCHl tltftn ••••lilf fld "°"" Thomlls, Both yachuarcOa Bcntncs. raoc.shewascantcnttodroptiilek ~TH HCI. 6\.1 turtot'9• a.c.iv klrtott JNt";f ._..,. 10 ~hi~ most of the way lO the fridUtOownlPeOroza> .JIO 240 uo Jljj!Jn;srer li-~t IOCCllt Thefirs11hrecracuofthcChppcr Ii hi 1"-fi h ~ MW a lV•••uetal JOO"' MtrrarleutY••OOlll JM~ MNlrlMMrlecmr&Mwe Cudconsisttdofl\lo'Ol7-1n1lctnan•lc nt inc. IKO ntl'ICCW1' the u 1.11 (Taro> no Ka1111fl0j1Jtw :Jt,.......,. MINN SOTA sr1111 1t•-OO'••"•d tr W 1..'L d i •o. ·~ Other two Amm~lll had quilt: I A .. rac.cf T 'Mio Unln'leit !.m• .AllloAStlelrd .J6·l+-7t larrv Wt e. llefandlr, ttwn Tubt JOt t'I l'lttS Ou ll•l•I an a J mtJe bU c>fpu\h1111and Jhovin~ Ftnttf • ' ,.,.,,., lmlllhOll llr111e-sa. ·~ I... Tlf. \ll(kl Alvarn 3'·14-1' undlactOMd MIOUnf .. c.ttll Molokai 1 land race. ... didn't _, D'"' any 1n mu ...... T• Jan Girl, Vari •at.u .... UI LeftOt•Muf " n ·n-1• VANC.OUV It WHIT CA~•IMO Th //". ..... .... I --"''Sf!!!!·~ ---..11.itllYCJlls._.__,..~------: ... 10_r eta, .tt .~_,, ___ e 1ounh race. nothcr tnan race.''W~'ladillld '!l•twld -111 • s N«•F,lfl ~,.._10 ,., an unc111el0Md ''"°""' o1 ua11 race ofT W11k1 i, was JUsl flniitima cnllttlf different SaturdAy an the Thu~ayat 6 pm. (PDT> and cor-final .' n:~~a umcs rr not Tt com u1~1 _'.l~~~~~~~~~~~r= ·. . . • ' . COAsr-------------~---=-=:;: People -~~"-- Entert~iniri.g: An Olympics marathon r LOS ANGELES -Sports 11-Marc Grauer, the company's man· lustrated is doin& it at sea. Coca-C.ola &&er for s~ial events. on a movie soundaltJe. ABC aot the In. addition, the company also is • Bach Boys to play and the Southland bostin& gro1,1ps of so to t 20 sp«ial Co~. sianed up Bob Hope. . auests at a senes of panics on a It s an olympian party affair, and Burbank Studios soundstaae out-doz~ns of corporatiQns and indi"id-fitted as a New Orleans bistro and· uals are competina durina the two garden restaurant. The studio is weeks of the Games. Points are partly owned by Columbia Pictures, a awarded for good food, 1mq.inative Coca-Cola company, and guests have settinp and celebrities, but the best included such stars as Kirk Douglas way to win is to get an Olympian or and Jacqueline Bisset. two on the auest list. Games entertaining bas proved a "The athletes are the guests of bonanza for the newly renovated honor," said Los AnaeJes Tjmes Museum of Science and Industry, society editor Jody Jacobs. ''When-located in Exposition Park right near ever there's a medalist there, people the Coliseum, Sports Arena and the get very emotionaJ." U~iversitY. of Southern Cahfomia The scale of Olympic pany-Jivina swim stadium. is so buic that it's no wonder some Museum executive director Don local restauranu are reportina dcclin-Muchmore says 16 Games sponsors es jn business. Many of the estimated who contributed a total of$3 million 600,000 out-of-towners in for the have either opened hospitality rooms Games are auests of Olympics spon-or held parties in exhibition rooms son who bave aone to areat lenalhs to and a special terrace built by provide entcnainmenL · Anheuser-Busch Co. Perhaps the lar&est entertainer is Not a1J partyinj 15 corporate. The ABC, which is host not only to the Swedish Olympte Support Team sp0n.son Who helped defray the S22S h ted R al s cdi h Ball "' v · million cost of Games ''"'levt'st'on 05 a oy w 5 ior iun& "' Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia of ri&hU. but to network executives, Sweden at the .Beverly Wilsh1re afllliates ud hundreds of employees. Hotel. where Australian publisher John Wilson'• aoft ecalpture creation ahowa off hla .. muclea~· atLagan&Pe8tiftlof Arta. . . The employees are gettina a huae Rupert Murdoch last week festooned buhon thelastdayofthoOantes,but 1 bellroom with huge sails for a 8.SO: the othen have been entertained in person cocktail buffet. sbifti at a series of parties being TheLosAnae~OlympicOrpniz repeatedallo'Yeftown. There's a New inaCOmmitteeanditsmcmben have York street l>UtY at 20th Century-also bad a few affairs. Celebrities and Fox. Tex-Mex and fonnal dinners at other VlPs were entertained on the Riviera Country Oub, and a opening night by LAOOC president .. Oone With the Wind" celebration at Peter Ueberroth, chairman Paul Zif- Laird International -fonnerly fren and opening ceremonies David 0. Selznick's studio. producer David Wolper at the Bel-Air The Beach Boys entertained at a Country club. packed Beverly Hilton affair that saw The rught before, at one of the guests kickina up their heels "as if biagest Games receptions, some they were tcen.qers, but they're not S,000 joumaJists turned out for finger teen-agers. We just danocd our feet food. beer and wine at the Bonaven- off," said ABC publicist Carol ture Hotel. Aeiscber. Please do squeeze charmtn' creatures, ---says upholsterer-turned-sculptor Both extremes of the Olympics - the paunch of the armchair athletes in the TV audience and the muscle definition of the Games competitors -can be seen m John Wilson's wcighthfter. --- But the muscles arc no finner than a bag of marshmallows. And you won't find him hfung barbells in a sports arena. Look instead into a jungle of &,iant-stZed flowers that never grew out of tilt The Southland Corp., whose 7- Eleven chain is the .. officiaJ conve- nience store" of the Games, rented the liner used to film "The Love Boat" for its guests and hlred Bob Hope to perform four nigbu. Stardom outof reach? Hope 10 turn hosted a party of his own Thursday for the country's newest supentars, the U.S. gym- nastics team. Sports Illustrated 1s treating five aro11ps of SOO people each to a few niabtson the Cunard liner Sap Fjord. On one night durina each shift. the boat sails into the harbor for a dinner- dance with music by Peter Ducbin and his orchestra. The ~esu were all sent by sponsors who paid ~mi um rates for ads in the mqa.zine s speciaJ Olympics issue, explained Jaime Kelly. who is lookina after one of the five groups. Coca-Cola USA bas taken over the Sheraton Grande hotel for u esti- mated 2)500 auesu, most of them "our top customers from throughout the country and throughout the world -major srooery chains, hotels. restaurant chains and airlines," said PAPARA ZZI ~--......___ - - - -~ - Mcebew•~Ofast~Jnturned atllr.Shetay9=-organlmrahadWW1ted-Dtena RoeaorlPryce. ~d10M her lnatMd. ilhe beAeYea. b9cau•ttw/ felt an unknown in,lght be rnot9 Ink~ wtth the Ofylnpio eptrft. Stnoehei'. Game. perlormenoe, her phone ha8 beentt.'9ngffiTV~ MWIPIC*fnt~ Yet, -.Mkt;ftOmajorrecot d compenlet hawcalt8d. Tbecholr'aO~-nomtnated album, .. Usten,"waa recof'ded by MobHe FJdeftty record•. an tnc:Mpendent label that ii helJ)4ng the chotrwtth a MCOndalt>Um. Al aptaetlcfng "*"ber of a tundamentafllt ChrtstWI teet. the Nethetiend•bued Lectortum Ac*cri.iiclenum, MCCluteNY' lhe'• not lnto muaiC for the money. Howwer, en. IS pr,actlCal enough to knowthat*'04n1nn't heard unlela they become famous. . ''I dO wmitto on. rl'lyMlf up," the sakl. "'Somebody'• got to uy IOmethlng about what'• going on here. If thewortd wants tohMr, then I'm wUUng to 8CC!8Pt theconeequencea. '' ground -or even out of a flower pot. Wilson creates such thinp first in his lively imaginatiort, then physi- cally, using cloth, stuffing, paint and whatever else may be needed to create the desired effect. And what do observers at the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts think of his colorful and improbable crea- tions? For the second year in a row they find them tugbly impressive and amusing -which., of course is what the sculptor hopes for. Wilson, 33. received art education at Los Angeles VaJley College before working 10 years in the upholstery business. He also designed house and automobile interiors. did well and built up bis own busi Later he decided that such work wasn't really what he wa.nted to do. His ambition was to be creative tn the realm of art -but art of an unusual "kind, nothing run-of-the- mill would do. Gropin1foran idea. he found himself busy 1n odd moments decorating pillows with faces. That led to soft sculpture where he found a ready market for bis wdd flowers far larger than life, whimsical caricatures of humans and htghJy improbable -but reoogruz.able - animals. Stuffed, frameless fumit~ aJso sprang into being from his ingenuity and capable hands. Soon converung soft sculptures mto hard cash became so profitable and enjoyable that Wilson gave up designina recuiar furruture and devoted all his energy to ' llUlcal plaJulen LOla aablD, P'aye LeTOJ, Dibble Liebert and Dean baaca await for Je..Uh Committee members and pen. to arriYe for U.Cht buffet •apper at mueam. ·Diversity of music goes In cjrcles fQ! Ro.undtable Dllr .................. .., llelTJD Libman, Al&D Weiner and AmJ Welner en~ a eecdon of the Je'tr'L8h Committee for mon than one boa.r. hree chairmen named for garden benefit, Harvest Ball The diverse styleofJcwish music that has developed from the Renaissance to contemporary tim was illustrated by A1aa WeJatt,AaaJ SU.. Weiaerand M•IYJa l.Amu at a recent pthtrina of the Round table. Newport Harbor Art Museum wa the tuna for the concert where the more than 70 listcncR traveled mmically throuah country and time for an hourand a half. • . H . he TheWcinenarelrvin tCSJdcnt . c1st cantorll • States and Europe.. _ Prior to the concert the group, a section of the American Jewi h Committee. (men and women in thctr 20sand 30s from all over Orange County)cnjo>cd a li&ht buffet uppcrand wintin the Sculpture Garden\, Membc and au tsatthemu icalc included the planners lAb Mla.F•1e 1Avo1. DebMe 1JeM11 and Deu lsun. Others there were Len Juew , curt J1~r.OMAbram1, Barryc.Ma. Dr.RMert Dorfmu,Garyand~F Wmu, Gold- 1teln, Sally and Marty or.-11m, HowaN and CvOl hfe14,MatVtandl.9H nnu.ftos&UMR.elMt nd Robla Belur. icmplc Bat Yahm, his performed with the New Yor\: Caty ()pen and is rou~r and conductor of Ee had OhotafcinLosAn1ctc .Shel afoundcrofAdUU'I strfnsQuaTtet nd hotdu lic%ntiltdtn cdtolJ'r------a... formance from TrinatyCollqe in London. . libmanofM11 ion V1eJO, wbo~n play1ngthe planoatge4', hataivcn conccrtsthrO\l&hout the Unated his new line of products. His creations sell S1eadily at on; and specialty stores as well as ~: terics. ~Diego's.Sea World receoW, COMDlJSSlOned. him to create • Arctic scene, complete with · ud penguins. Incidentally, baedity ·may ~ account for Witson•s unU:JU.llly acti artls.ti<: imagination and k.nac:k fO( transla~~deas into the teal thin&:.~ He that his mOtber u1ccffl> make three-d.unCnslonaJ filwa ~ most notably a Nativity acne -UJ bobby, 9.'0l'k:.in& with cloth soUc:d I« starch. Like her, Wilson uses a pain to add the finishing touches to creations. lfbie ~~-ii!· P~\-~~IJJ· ~--__JU.j products, 1t ~ thit people ·are to occupied with fil1din& them amusi that they automatically assume wort to be one loo; euphoric el~ periencc. • .. .. That's not so," be said. expla.iniill that rnakml the items is a matter ;ft( sheer bar work. Naturally, he's happy that h creations sell well; even so. he:. considerina yet another chanae o• day. ..Into another art form. course," be declared.·· ... miybe fi1iii! art itself." ••• FesuvaJ visiton can see Wiho .. weightlifter and the mcn.qerie throuab Aus. 26 aJona with 1be w of l65 other artists. The festiial arounds. at 650 La&una Canytm R.oad, are open from 10 a.m. to 11; p.m. seven days a wcet. •• Bikers take trip inluxu~ y, August 10, 1984 Hls snoring's no joke " • DEAR D • OHN: 1 Used 10 think t oti 1·0 e. No .. • • • FOR MR. D.: In ·atncrat. medi I m~ fonncr bus nd { am now 01 _ _.=..:.v~o and 1 used. to a bed--- lhout ~Y problem hke snoring He Pm1 STEINCIOHI belief is that there's no testosterone dc.ficicn.cy~p0t ntmcnwhohave... diabetes. However, your own doctor will have to decide whether injections miaht help in your case. s u quiet u a lamb and so wa I. never I hetlfd friends complain at;O\lt this problem I thouaht they nilpickina. .. Why bother about ·na when there aro so many · terrible problems in the world?" How that I have remarried t bayen't had one good niaht's sleep. y husband snores loud and long. ~snetimes the only relief is when he • llOPI breathina for a few second" I've ~csted that we sleeP. in separate ~tooms, but he wont think of iL · Rtither will he agree to see a doctor. If Jhj.l ltceps_ up I have a feelina there's aneitherdivoroe on the way: Mt•. Q. OEAR MRS. Q.! A number of my patients have broken up because of Jl1e anorina J)roblem. As you say, divorce may not be far away. I aaree: it~.S no joke. Not a trivial problem. Qiie estimate is that at least 30 million husbands or wives snore to :t0me dep'ee. In varying desrces 1qbres emit wheezes, roars, buzzes, hisses or snons. A man said recently: .. You wouldn•t believe that the noise my petite, beautiful wife bnnas forth ~ . J\i&ht sounds like thunder." ~4daets rarely help the snorer. • l~~~ suaaest, Mrs. Q .. that you insist uiat your husband have a medical ~~ination. Tell htm it may be a Q~lon of personal survival. You say P' • . ~. he stops breathina at intervals? He should know that this is a medical condition called "slee_p apnea" which at times endanfcrs life. His doctor will need to di.lcover the cause of the snorin1: tonsils? adenoids? ill-fittina dentures? nasal ·polyp or deviated ~tum? Allern that causes the nasal ussue to swell? Snorina dcx.rves cardhl dia&noSJs and treatment. • • • FOR MRS. It.: It's difficult. in a column where wordqe is restricted, "to tell all" about a disease. I can understand why you wouJd want more mfonnation. Here's a SUJ&CS- tion: Wnte to the American Diabetes AsSOClabon for their new quarterly publicatton called Diabetes '83 It offers much practtcal infor- mation. It tells about what diabetes 1s, how insulin works, and how to deal wtlh diet, medication, exercise, and self-testing. It discusses treatment advances and recipe suaiestions. To receive the publication write to The American Diabetes Assocation, Two Park A venue, New York, NY I 0016. : I>·----~--------~ LEFT Mode TFF19LC 19 4 Cu 't No Frost refrigerator w•I" 6 1 cu •t zero aegree freezer "u1omat1c energy saver Equ1ppeel tor op11ona1 au1orna11c cemake• P•us many more feature~ RIGHT Model TBX23ZF 22 5 cu It of ilorage convenience 1 23 c1.1 It •reezer EQuoppeo for op11on1 ilUIOt'Jlll•C 1cemaker AelJUS!IOle 1empere<1 glass st>e•ves Space ,.,eke• OQ01 sne11 • • • FORM~. O.: Proper sh~ size is often overlooked by pucnu Of youna children. They may buy shoes every two or Jhr« months for ono-\o-two. year-olds. However, many younJ· sters aaes four to seven may suffer with shoes that are too small. A aood rouune is to have the arowing child.'• feet measured at least every stx months. • • • . -"" FOR MR. S.: I mentioned the advantages of some elderly patients usina a cane. With your history of falling, I think 1t may save you from serious iruury -besides 11vina you more confidenc.e in walk.int.. Why be "ashamed" ofusina a cane~ • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROBN: You have often suggested "get a ~ond opinion." How does one do so? MR. s. DEAR MR. S.: Simply ask for it. Don't be concerned about your doctor's reaction to .the request. Most doctors will cooperate in obtainina consultation. 30 1/2" WIDE SIDE-BY-SIDE SAVE $30.00 22.5 CU. FT. STORAGE $50.00 S.C.E. REBATE $50.00 G.E. REBATE s599es YOUR NET PRICE s779es RCA 19"COLOR TV SONY REMOTE TRINITRON FJC423S Brilliant Performance KV1357R · White or Walnut Number 1 1n. 1englh of Ille • rev.eat ~•pairs • 1owes1 service costs·na11onw1de pre•erence (Based on .. na t1ona1 survey ac;~1nq consumers ... h1Ch brand of ~asner they d ltke 10 own) • r: .mmerc1ally r r ven 1n self· ~er111ce laundries • Gentle energy Pff1c enr drying • E1PCtron1c AulO·Ory or T me Control SPECIAL s 399es SAVINGS GENERAL ELECTRIC MICROWAVE COOKING CENTER SAYE $ 124995 1100.00 • Model JHP66G-Large 1.4 cu It microwave upper oven with Dual Wave micro- wave system Electronic touoh control• Time or temperature cooking Shown with op11ona1 hood. WHIRLPOOL · UNDERCOUNT ER DISH . 1 WASHER ~, ~---=='' s259 915 ~~ PNLY l' Le[~----------'-------------~·~ ----_, WIL80N·DELAIUY A Ha\\'&Uan weddina theme s selected by Vikki Del ncy nd John Wilson, both of CJosto Me , when th~y cxc:hanaed vow on July 21 before Jud&c' Stephen e n. The Newport lkach home of the bnde' mother Toni Anni tead, set· tina for the ceremony, was decorated in white and royal blue. The bride wore a wh11e crepe Hawaiian sa.raon with a h&i on her htad1 and her husband wore the traditional wl\ite Hawaiian wcddina shirt. Attendant' were Tiffany Oelanc), dauahter of the bride, and Jerry Wilson, the bndearoom's brother. they wore matchina Hawaiian ensembles. Before the ceremony, the "Hawaiian Wedding SonJ" was suna. and ' afterward entertainment in· eluded Island music and a floor show, beaded by Aurora Napua Kaawa, formerly Min Hawaii. Tiffany Delaney nd Sandy Wilson, the bridearoqm's dauahter, 1reeted the 250 auests from Honolulu, Nevada. Utah and Palm Springs, and presented each with a l'rcsh ~lumcna lei, flown in fiom Hawaii. ' After a leisure coastal trip to Northern Califomt.a, the couple will reside in Costa Mesa. umtinjl Karen Tracy of Costa Mesa and Timothy Cannan of La Jolla. The bride, dauahter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tracy of Costa Mesa, is a graduate of Estancia Hir.h School, Costa Mesa. and UC San Oieao. UCSD, 1s the son ot Clpt. and Mrs, Jack Carman of La J olJa. The newlyweds traveled across the countl).' to Washington, D. C., where they wtll live while he attends medical school at George Washinaton Uni- versity. CARMAN-TRACY The Community Conareptional Church in Corona del Mar was the settina for the July 21 wedding rites Her husband, also a sraduate of ENGAGEMENTS BI8BOP-811ITB Pacific, McGeoraeSchool of Law. He is affiliated with Gerina &. Associates in Newport Beach. A February weddina is beina planned. GARGANO-BART araduate school. The future bridegroom. son of Mr.' and Mrs. Raymond E. Han of Modesto, is vice president of Tele- com Plus Inc. of California. He Mt. and Mn. William E. Bishop of Henry, lll., have announced the enwement of their daughter, Linda Kaye, to Sterlin& A. Smith, a Newport Beach lawyer. , The bride-to.be attended Bradley University and received her dearec from Northern llHnOl · Umversity. She is a claims representative for Farmers lnsuarance Group Inc. in ·Santa Ana. • attended Vista and Santa Maria hi&h schools and araduated from UC The engagement of Laguna Beach San Barbara residents C&rlt Garpno and Chuck ~e couple 'arc pla'nniJla to marry Hart has been announced by her Oct 6 in Heisler Park, Laguna Beach. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Hart of Modesto. Her fia.nce wn. of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley D. Smith of Sacramento, received hi$ degree in government at Cal State Sacramento and his J.D. degree from the University -of the The bri(le~lect, a management consultant, attended La Habra Hiah Scbool and John Burroughs Hish School in Burbank. She cecei~ed her bachelor's degree from San Jose State University, where she anendcd DU1'CAN-CBOUllA8 Mr. and Mrs. Btft Dun~ oflrvine bne announced th~ enpaement of their dauabter, Kimberly I.:ynn. to James Craig Choumas. The future bride attended Irvme High School and now is a computer sales represeatative for Micro Flash in Concord. Submit your wedding news Her fiance graduated magna cum laude from National University with a degree in computer science. He is a systems analyst !or Tcxtronics in northern California. The Daily Pilot wants your wedding and engagement news. To help you submit the~uircd information .. formsJUe.availableat the Daily Pilot offl~. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. For weddin,s, only a black and white ehoto of the bnde IS accept.able. Snapshots, Polaroid and color photos can t be used. His father and stepmother are Mr. and Mn. Jack Choumas of Newport Beach, and his mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mn. Jade Hershey, are Santa Ana residents. Tbepboromust be submitted no later than three weeks after the wcdd111i. othel'Wlse it will not be published. -En,a1ement information 1s 10 be submmed ar lease seven weeks before rbe weddit11-Forms and photos can be dropped off at the office or maJ/ed ro ll;Je Weddin1 Depanmenr, Dail> Piloc. P. 0. Box I 560, Cosr. Mesa, Caltl 92626. The wcddinJ will be held on Oc'l. 6 tn St. John the Baptist Greek Or· thodox Church tn Anabeun. rlospice volunteers help patients and faplilies cope DEAR ANN LANDERS: I must comment on the let- ter from "Barely A 1111 CopinainChiCifo," -IUll the woman who as exhausted from tak-I • · ina care ofher dyin1 ullDERS father. Please tell her I••••••••••• to contact Hospice. . Hospice isa team of volunteers who can be found worldwide in laraecities and small communities. They are trained to hel~ patients and their families cope with life- lhreatcnin,a diseases-especially cancer. Hospice services include bedside attendance, tran~ portation help, and pief support. There arc no cbaries for · these services. The volunteers arc wonderful, carina people. "Barely Copina" should ukher fathers physician about Hospice-or inquire at any hospital. Please print this for her and others who are crackina under the strain of carina fora tenninal relative. -REDDING DEAR REDDING: How rlpt JOU are. Tiie Bo1plce pro1ram can be 11odaend. ID muy cities tbey work lD iandem wltla tbe Vl1lttn1 Nurse Aaaoclacloa -1Dotber extremely flae service or1uJzatlon. Often Cbe fandla1 t1 provided bf tbe UaJCed Way. Home Healtb Care Suvtce1, paid for by Medicare, CID be 1Dotber t0urce of relief. Look lD tile pboae book. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since I was a )'ouna&irl I have felt it was important to remain a vi.rain until marriqe. l am 25 years old and take pride in the fact that I have misted temptation and saved myself for the man 1 marry. Yesterday I read an arttcle in a medical magazine that startled tne. lt said, "It is imperative to infonn your 1Ynecoloai1t before an exam that you arc a virgin so he will not use an instrument that will break the hyme~ thereby deprivina you of virsinity." I am terribly UPsc:t because I have bad three such exams due to yeast infections. I am also furious that all these y_ears I have imoosed strict moral standards on mysclf for notbinJ. Please Ji~e f!l~ _your opinion of this situation. -TOO EMBARRASSED TO SIGN MY NAME(CHJCAGO) DEAR EMBARRASSED: I cu'C lmapae wbat kind of medical ma1u1De wolld pablltll Hcll erroaeou tnfor· mattoa. Ftnt, JC woald be lmposalblt for I l)'Dece>lolbt to eumJ.De yoa wt""' ulq a spec11l1llll. Seco1ul, 'trslnity la a matter of aenaJ coa41ct, aot cUalcal 1tat111. U yoa bave aot eapted la aeDal latercollne, yoa are a vlflln. Yovu1eratbavta1re.traludyoanelf .. for no"-lac., ralte110mtqaeatloa1 aboat you llicerpretadoa of moral coad1ct. Savtas oa•'• self for marit•J• Uoald meu more tllu u urapwred llymea.. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: We have joined the ranks of those who are having a terrible time pa)'llll their bills. Weweretoldwecouldfilebankruptcyorwritetoour creditors and offer to pay a small amount against the debt every payday. We chose the latter. It 1eems no one read our letters. We •et two and three phone callsa day and six or sevendunmnaletterseveryweek. Themajorcreditcard companies are the worst. Does it pay to be honorable? rm bea.innina to doubt it. Please advue. -ILL. READERS DEAR READE~: Yet, It pay•. Write to yov ctedJtort apta-ud explata to man w•o pboae. Ten Cbem tbat/oa are dotac yoar beet to be boaor&blt ud deceat ID yoo wltll tlley CQDld do tbe same. . . ~ GO FOR THE GOLD ~ '84 OLYMPICS HEADQUARTERS 'twt·~,·@ •. ,.a~• . • r...iWMwttll e T•W.CMN A Na,.._ 801 W. Baker, lu•t Weet of Brletol Coeta Meea 979·8570 · Callu colorful producer Wolper finds his op ntng act at LA's Coliseum a tough--one to follow By BOB THOMAS .. I •• ,.._.,.. LO ANGELES -··wbat dO 1 do for an encore:' Prooucet David Wolper mused over the how bu i- ness d Che. ldo methu~gd1fl'ercnt, more of a oclebration than n extrava· pnza. .. Wolper is the man who ~uced the opemng ceremonies of the XXlllrd Olympiad, a $how thal prompted such divcr;ent per· sonahties as Cary Grant and Howard C.oscll to proclaim him a n1u . Havmac:reatcd thr t c.: l ofacu to folJow, Wolpc-r a o offer WoJ~r. veteran producer of TV ..documentaries d ch min15C1les s .. Roots.•• has spent the last lll months plannin,g <he two ccrtmorucs. Id the IO days be bas devoted full ti~ to.the dOSJn,i. him he hopes to make as beartwann1Q& as lbe cod of tbe-1%8 aamenn a1e0Gty. t bccamc a love feast. wnh athle dancing to mariachi m c an fi a atmosphere. One of Ule hiahliahts of und.ay's cettmonie. Wlll be I.he flni of I.he men's 26-milc marathon. "lbcendof the race carries 1tself a t emotional moment," Wolper ad. ----to conclulon• somethins difTen:n for SL&nctay's th~·hour closina t n.:mon1cs 11 the Memonal <;oliscum: To bcigbten the emotion, Wolper as Oyina past marathon winncn in from all over the wortd and will salute lhcm before the 1984 champion enten the ColiKUm for a final lap. Gary Grabbe u a paratrooper captain wbo•• trytna to aet • female corporal (Raebel Tfootln) oaf of bl9 unit ln tbe TV moTte .. For Love and Honor.. tontcht at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. .. We'll have 4S minutes of an unforic1tablc expenencc -a laser. space and pyrotechnical show that will be unlike anythana ever seen before. The whole event will be a ~rty for the athletes. It's their evening and we get to share it with them. The solidarity of the world's ath- letes will be dramatized a they enter the Coliseum, arm-in-arm, without n~tional flap. Six mcmbenofthe 140 teams will take pan. accord1na to tradition. ©)MOYIE • "5'1mnw Of '72" ( 1982) Annet1t Haven, Loni Sinden; "Thc~att the stars of the show, and I think they'll respond to it. After all, they danced in the openina cer- emonies. and that bas never hap- pened before in the Olympic Games. Heaven knows what they'll do in the closina ceremonies." Also traditional is presentation of a gold medal for an equestrian event beldonclosingday. The medal will be awarded by IOC J>rcsidcnt Juan Antonio Samarancb and Prince Phil- lip of Great Britain . -11;46- AOQ( OF THI 'D -12:00-1:nZONE -1:00- •MOYE ••• '"Enc" (1175) John 8evlOf; Patrtcll Helt. ... "ac-n Of,,.. Honh" (1938) Herwy Fondl. o.orge Rift. (f) MOYIE The transfer or the Antwerp Fla& D l .. EARCH OF- (J) 118~MEWI * *14 "a.ctill.s'' (1954) Tony I nOE OF THE llOHT lATBIQHf NIBIJ:.A MOYIE Qda.Frn~. . • ~:£.~~,,...,~. County press clubbers to star ~.;: ···~''The AMllllrdOn 8Lna/' ~-~ Alld, Din Rigg. I ::;:: ... -inf ou~~ gridiro~ show at.70::"1t":, .... --~...,,;;;;;~-a-••• ·:nie Reed w...w· 11111) .... ~.Ina Spence. ~ ----" •!'~YteffVIBI ~Hn'QCOCI( AU.lftleFM&Y . Will intrepid reporter Santa Ana Costa Mesa. report.en who covered lbt G MOYll Jonea learn the secret of the Z~t A ca.st of nearly SO media rcpresen-stones. AcCOtdiDj-to di~ ** "Torvt ~din" (tte7) JICk PMlncl, Ma-Mndtth. (f) AOWAN l MARTltt lAIJQH.lt • LOVE, AMENCAN ITYl! e MOYIE -1:46-of Doom and win the heart o the tatives will poke fun at themselves borab Buckelew, '1b.is )Uf'.'1 *** ''Gwdlght At,,.. o.K. Corfll'' tou&b lady editor, Lila Lawrence'? and each other, and bigbli&ht the bas adventure, romance. peat (1t57)8urtllncalter,Ki'kDougla. Will Lila fmally get the great story year's stories on a satiric note. insbortaneven.in&oflivelyeatel"CllG· CZ>MOYIE . that Orange County's been waiting Proceeds from the event are desig-menL.. ::~ -12:31--®MOYE *** "Strqer In Tht Hol.W' for? nated for Press Oub charities, includ-Music will be performed bj~ (19!_5)1<.ir~OIMI~. These and other questions will be inf scholarshiP.S and scndina under-police....._ not the rock bud .... -2:00-answered Aug. 18 at 8 p.m. when the pnvilegcd children to Disneyland &J'OU{> of Santa Ana polic:ancD~ ···~ "Gloril" (1880) Gena Aoi#-llnda. John Ad--. CB.EIAATIONorrt U.8.A. Its fourth -annual gridiron show, The irreverent behind-the-scenes Tickets are $6 and may be oftkiot I HfALnt AB.D ~ Orange County Press Oub presents each year. play in a arou~ ca.lied Blue~ .. ©)MOYE • "Ftlclty" (1978) Glory Annin. awtltopbw Mb. NEWS "Santa Ana Jones and the Ziggurat of look at the news of the day will be by callina John Westcott at US: tzt4 AOWAN&MARTIN"ILAUOtMN Doom," at South Coast Repertory in performed by some of the same or Pamela Wasz at 83S-S381. • ' GREEN THUMB Design_p a tio to extend your h oine ~ Enhance outdoor setting with complementary furniture. plants •Be Imaginative With Ac-bas briabt blue Dowers. lfOWS l-;.10 cessones: After arran110& the inches. Prefers some shade. • : furniture, select the· accessories that -Carnations and Sweet Wtlliinis: paOOd.c_ an extra dimcns.to tp _t.dd colorful summer bloo~ n bac~d dmina. You miaht to pink. white and red. Likes sun. JQ9d By CATHERINE BLACKBURN, want strong. durable tables and chairs em i7.C an el~nt look in outdoor drainage. • .. GEORGE MUNANA that are attractive, comfortable and tab e settings. with the· use of fine -PortUlac:a: A bed1fin& plant ....,,...._.,_.........., can withstand our damp coastal china. crystal and linens, rather than called Moss Rose, can withsta.o4 the .....,.. ---. ~...... weather. paper-plates and plastic utensil summer heat with low amounts bf E · · · h b k d Non-aain& and rustproof resin Linen for table covering. an antique water. • : ntertaintn& wit ac yar furniture is popular an this area. It bas cream and sugar set, and spare wme -Lobelia: Will bloom from "'92- barbccues and patto parties can be · · di 'dual h ~-' '"'" ·th ._. .... bl more enioyable when the se"'n• is a distil)ctive design and can be easily goblets also add an JD va touc mer to~ay 1&Ut wt a .... ~t .eor 'J ·~-. cleaned with a wet sponge. Available to your table. white flower. Grows~o about 6 i.nCbCs enhanced with colorful plants and only in white, resin furniture's a~ •Make Summer Gardens Part of ru,h. • • complementary outdoor furniture. pearanoe can nevertheless be quickly the Patio: As a key to your overall -Swtet Alys.sum: A favonte. The first step in designing a changed with colorful custuons. Tex-pauo design. be certa.Jn gardens are frqrant Oower available in 1C. summer patio is to consider your tiJene is a popular, manmade fabric highlighted. Perhaps you can set a rose and blue.. Suited for rock Ptdcns soal. Are you merely looking for that is offered in several colors. table next Lo an espeaally attractive and cd&in& near the patio ~·Hits additional color to bnghtcn the including peach, mauve and celadon part of the garden. Of course, you can small blosioms oo plants 2 to 6 inches backyard? Is comfon more of a IJ'CCD. also arrange contamer plaou and tall -• concern'? Planning for a new Umbrellas can be both stylish and flowers from other~ of the yard to -Zinnias: GroW well in bOMS. backyard/patio look will also involve funct.Jonal, especaally at homes be near tables and lounacs. borden and bedding areas. Avail& e an evaluation of available space and without awn1D15 because of the shade Many people cnJOY color coodinat-in a variety of types and colors. \lp,to existina furniture. and wind protecuon they provide. ing outdoor furruture and a00C$$0ries 3 feet tall. • .. Here arc some suggestions: Choose from the type that is inserted with flowers and plants. Following In addition. doo•t forset to• &ate •Complement Intcrior,IExterior: throuJh the pallo table and the free arc some of the container, border and advaniqc of your thrivina ~ Dcsip your prden and outdoor standing kind that ensures greater bedding plants/flowers that are ideal for table decorations. Carefully idlct furniture and accessories to blend shade control. Textilene is also a for summerdccoratina: some of your choice flowenandfenu naturally with the home's interior common umbrella fabric, available an -Hardy Ageratum: Pro .. ,des for example. and create an • d decor. Homeowners often fail to see numerous colors, with stripes, solids border color throu&b late summer winnina table display that will fiJ4 a that the patio, balcony or terrace is and patterns. Also known as mist flower, A&entum personal touch to entertainin&. • • actually an extension of indoor . ·r--.;;;;;;,;;:;;;;;..:=======;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;=====:.=====~~~ fuS:~~F.bcrcisasmoothtransition .,. LLOt'D },;. !i from the style of the inside to the · • ' outdoor decor. This might involve coordinatina colors as well as furniture type, and plants and flowers. For example, you miaht have Select some of ttieee colorf1il hr.!>rd calla• for your aarcten. Look for tbem ln •ol~ alOQI with the common white. There a1aci an varied•. Tbey &row well ln 911ChUJ , acid ~II an4 ~ moderate watertnc with ~e. container plants 1n the kitchen and ' d h living area, an the immediate porch oar -=-n c: op area and alona the perime~r of the ~ .-:::. patio. . •You Have a Choice in Furniture: Outdoor furniture can be found io many colors. However. you'll also Seed-collecting trip topic for gardeners •Ro will suffer in the heat. so be su~ to adequately water and mulch around the root area to conserve moisture. Also. if you want blooms An illustrated talk on a seed-collcctina tllp and a preview of plants and bulbs that will be offered for sale will hiihliaht th mectina of the a.rue.ltwaJ Society of Oraqt C.-s,. Seed mixtu res a good beginn ing U:rou·rc 1 bqinninaprdaiCr and don'I know what vanetia of no.as ao p&ant. 1ry annual flower ICCd m1atures. 'lbete'• no t paucm u to how die)' tboukl be planted. You can CbO* meedOw.,tyle. &nrom.11 or tnctitional 111ttcrn flown leed mtxtu ll't not peckcu()(~ovcn.. The lllection of t1"1 ........ -hAi''•coftCc. The ~It Wanc:e cokw, plant liJJe. leeftuturt. ICatan of'b&oont and ()ptf mum plantins tUM This ••ptekt1 !lilt of m11vles" wtU IJVC )'OU a,ood value for ur 1n tmcnt ' • Or. Harold Koopowitz. dircc~of · into and throuah fall, be sure to the UC Irvine Arboretum, will tilk fcrtihze now. abOut the arboretum's 198) trip to •Durina this hot weather be sure to· Africa to collect seeds. He al'° will check your potted plants and hancina display some plants and bulbs that baucu for mo1 ture. They will need wall be 10ld at an arboretum benefit in more water now. Stptcmber. •BOrdct an outi1de taircase "'ith il'he meeun.& will ~n at 7:30 pm. ooculents an cla) poll. Aua. 21 atthe Cahfom11 Cooperative •Keep mowing the lawn high: lt EA tension, 1000 . Harbor Bh'd., 111'111 help the root ~tay cooler and tbi "naheam. makes for a happier, better lookina • • • lawn. TheC.aa Meu-layCldalr:uda •\\h n ru1t LtcO have finisbtd el IM Nldn1l ,..elir ...... ., will bt.irina. don"t f&nore them far a bold an auction., 7:30 p.m. Mondi) watenns and fcttillzcr ls conccmcd. an the Neiabborhood Comll\unit TbeyMNlO~•sh tbcarnutnen Center. S.5 ~ ~V:·· Colla:M for nut' yars crop. Ull"f Aftican violets an &able 'Another pla!'llN of petunias, c:enterpaeca and othet anaqnnent 11nnsu an(S man,okll 11 an onscr to v.111 be ddnonstnted for 11.'fmben of cootinue the Utowofftowen into fall. the,._.._ AMeM vw.c ledet1 at -consiclet'Dlinuna dwarf alNS for 7 pm. Wed~ In \he ~ ~nd &eauty 1n lbc ptdcn. .,.. ... ~ ~1'1i~ ·f095 lrvaM Blvd.. ~.~r"be_sm.alhn taturcbutthrir --. ...... ~..----~~----------~--..t.11fUU1iJ.cd. •• Aft to Slake and UC your tomatoeS for utd1cr plan&.$ and bena-harvtS You can al! u.tc ~ire c.ees. 1va llblc at nurxn Ii r lh purpose BEDDlllG . PLAI TS White Pon~ Pak Mancold and Zmn~s Ret ggc & •p• ••• 79° IEUOlili lillllULCH 2 QI. ft. •• •3•• .UIDSCIPE PUITS Values to '16" 5gel.. 91%• .... •Clllry ........ Or1lip I ....... _ J IELLlll BARI I -Ortng I THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "One is all you con take. That's final." MARMADUKE by Brad An-derson "Good morning to you. too!" MOON MULLINS . GROWIN<& PROBLEM ··· PEANUTS TOURNAMENT GOLF CAN SE VER.Y NErNE • WRACKIN6 T MBLEWEEDS t70 VOU GET HE~OllS W~EN vou'RE ON n.IE FIRST TEE ? by Jim Davis BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) (__/ i 10 -{,; "Look. I'm not interested in what you'd do if you were Secretary of State." DENNIS THE ME~ACE Hank Ketcham 'I "1r'EW IT WAS ~NA HAPPEN 1 ~E SA'rS HER Fa.KS >PE. 00..NA TAKE HER TO OrZZY ()NO ! " by Ferd & Tom Johnson -JlJST RE'HE'ARSIN~, EMMA-- JN C.ASE MY B,ACK'l.ARD GARDEN J>o~ANYTHIN<;. ----:~ ( ~---~ ·~ -,lh \)o# . bY Charles M. Schulz I 1VE NEVER MADE IT TO TME FIRST TEE .. • Both vuln rebl . North dC'll1 WI:' T ORTH •KU ~u ~AKQ5 • QJ 104 EA T + Q IOA ~K~Ut87% OU • A·J '7 '=1 108• 0 J1080 ., •U SOV'fH ' +950 ~A ~u •AK9883 The b1dd1ng: N•rtla EHt ... th Wut I 0 Pau 2 • t <::a S • PH1 .S • P ... Pa 1 Pa1e . <lpening ll·ad: K 1ng ur c;,. · Hertt's a te11t of your an1lyt1cal 'kill'>. Did South surcet>d or fail 1n his contract of five rlubs. and v. hich trick., did hl· to~e·t BRABBLE °' CHARLES .. GOREN 1'hl!I auction waa tnu htforwaro and nuon.llly accurat • Looking at both th North and South hand you would C('rt1inly choo e tllr e no trump 11&he.optimum1pot, but It I very difficult to reach that co!llricl. Htd Weat led a 1pade thia band would have attracted no attentmn. but he made his nqrmal lead of the lunr of hrarl.I. And had detl r r .relied on flnd1nr West with •re of 1pades ror his overcall, he would have lost thrP-e trlck1 In that 1u1l. Put ~o~th wa, nut th• aort to rely I" on 1 • () pt"rrf"hl p,ruJ)Q ttion v. h('n h~ rou1d unf'ulh • iurf' trick ltnr.. Derl1rer won the a('e o( hurt~. cuhed th• king and 11ut'en of tf'ump and rufff'd. 1 hf'lrt. ;\Ht came three high diamonds. Declarer sluffed a spad• from hand and. when Wt' t d1 urdtd a hParl on tht' third diamond, tht> cnntrart l>t'c:am"• 11~ down South s1mpl) cont1nu«d with a fourth diamond and pitched annthr·r . FOR BE'ITER OB FOR WORSE wiRE IN PLeNlVOF lfME-MtCHAELS Plf\NE \.ANDS IN -t AN t'\COR FUNKY 1'1NKERBEAN DR.SMOCK 'YOU SAY~HIS PA~leN"'f"' WAS -rhi!! ceN"'f"'eRFOL-P <SAL-IN A NA~IONALMA<SAZ.INe ?! WHICH ON!!, POC~OR?! ROSE IS ROSE rQ4I Wf. JUST SfT PWJ WAIT u~rn. WE. ~ A &ff~ ! weu.. I li'.5 C&:RiAtNL4 ~IQUE ... a \M OMAR SHUIF pad lo r from harwJ. Ea1t won, but h did not r~lish th prospect uf being on I d. If he led a r~ 11ull, CJ r r wo.uld discard • third pade rrom hAnd while ruffins on ho board. If he led a •P fi,.., th111 def ndt·n,would 1iet only onP ~ trick. • Either way. with the help o( h1a1 lo er nn luu•r pl&y South uar ahteed h11 contract of rive clubs. Hl3 only lo f'rs: a diamond and a 1pade! Well donf! if you got it right .• ~•bber brid1• d•'-• d.H..P.11t ' the CHAU')' •te t fOUMI al briq lo at. De they kaow 10•e .. bt1 yeu tloe't? Cbule1 G.,..0·1 •few· Dell Briclse .. "will teula 1" tile 1tr•~IM• aad tactic• et till• rut· paced utio• pm• that preYiclet tJae cure for u.eeDCl'-c nabbera. For a cepy Hod SJ .'75 te "G-.a.fev Deal." care ef UU. -.w1,-per, P.O.· a.. 011. Palmyra, N.J. osoes. Mab check payable to N•w1paper• bookl . by Jeff MacNelly by Kevin Fagan by Tom Batluk by George Lemont r by Pat Brady • J I . 1984 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA GL See Page 2 WE WILL NOT BE UNDER 0 ON ALL CHEVROLET CARS & TRUCKS! HIGHEST QUALITY SALES & SERVICE! THE HARD TO GET UNITS ARE IN STOCK NOW! IT 15 OUR POLlpl NOT TO ''MARK UP'' PRICES ON ANY • OUR PRICES REFLECT ONLY EQUIPMENT AND SERVICES PROVIDED WITH THE VEHICLE. 'ER CLEARANCE ~LE IS ON ALL CARS PRICID TO SELL CONGRATULAT ALL TRUCKS PRICED TO SELL CORVEnES CAPRICE CITITIOIS ClllRIS ·CELEllUII DEllS . AND BEST OF LUCK UNITED STAT 0 Y IC FROM EVERYONE AT HIC Y -~ CHEVROLET • P ...... · F==~='!f trJf.': 446 EAST CiJAST HWY.· . ... -A• a VUIWllEl --.-=-~--- 11 THE U.S.A. I I "' S-ILIZERS VOS J S-11 PICllPS El ClllllS '· .. . VW introduces luxu·ry, high-performance Jettas . year• b Jetta. even though It well-known sport• sedan from wheel• with 185/80-14 radial , h lor)Oer list of standard Munich, West Germany. Whh the high bolltered front 1port H ta equlpm t. addition of a hlgh-outl>.!!! 90-for lncnued aide su ~rt. a ~------~--~--------~--:~~-~ur aggress~ pr clng h~po~~~~c~to 6.~m~~~-~uph~ trategy didn't stop with the Gl flve..~ and GTl-type per-and a 20.5mm atabltlzer bar at N port, R.I. -Volk agen "The GTI h tohb ck sp rked mod t," Fuller said. "The 1984 fonnanoe chassis, that com-the reer, large ventilated front of America f\as nnounced the new demand for a four.(joor, entry-I el two-door Jetta, pow. parlson Is even more valld, ac-dlae brak•. recatlbrated spring detltlon of a GL nd a Glt modet hlgh·perforMan<:e VW with a ered by ourfuel-efflci nt 1.&.tlter cording to Fuller. " rates, revalved atruta and • to the Jetta Hne and a price more formal roofllne and full-dleael, Is over $1 , 100 less than "The new Jetta GU lan'tontyJ[\ larger di.meter exhau1t ayatem. reduction of up to 13 percent on alzetrunk, and the new J ta GU the comparably-equipped 1983 theaameleague-lt'tplaytngon Thenew.J4ttta GL; llkethe GLI, • the·entry-level Jetta. ts that car," said Full r. model." Suggested retall price the same court and without a 11 avallabte only •• • four-door .'4 .... The Introduction of these two He expr,lned that the GL was· for the Jetta two-door diesel la l\ ," ha ala. "We've model. Standard on the GL le new mod Is -the luxurious Inspired by the company'e mid· $7,390. The -Nef;tnte~ed matched our rtval In terms of VW'a proven 1.7-tlter fuel-In· In Ide, the GL f .. tures 1 tachometer, liquid crystal dlgh clock, conaol•mounted vott- meter ana 01T ~turl In pressure gauges, new patterned velour upholat,ry, sport steering wheel, and dual remot9-CC>ntrol outside mirrors. Standard equipment on the GL lnctUdes front-wheel drive, a 22.5-cublc-foot trunk, rear Win- dow defroster, tlntedglau, lnter- mtttent wiper function and halogen headllght1 u standard . ... aetta GL and the htgh-per-year WoUaburg Edition Jetta, gasoline base Jetta Is priced at. acceteratlon, handllng and brak-Jected guollne powef'Plant, cou- formance GLl aports aedan.-ts andnotedthatthefour·doorGL $7,540, $185 (2.4 percent) less lng."Andyet,hecontlnued,"the pied to • flve-tpMd manual In responae to the overwhelmlng ·has many of the sane luxury · than last year's. . Jetta GU, with a suggested retell transmttafon. The optional 1.&- popularl1Y of . the GTI and our appointments as the WoHeburg The Jetta's overall size, apecl· ~Ice of $8,690, costs only half as ltter, turbocharged dleeel la rated ~_.,=-->-Wolfsb8~ Limited-Edition -with an even more attractive flcatlons and tradltlonal German much." by the Envtronmental Protection ~etta," James A. Fuller, v oe price. accorolng to Fuller. notchback • styllng have otte°'"'n--'-tn a<tdltlon to the new engine Agency at M mlles per gallon on Both dleaef and gu Jettas come standard wtth five-speed transmissions (four-Speed for the dleael In California), black fender flares, remote-control ootslde mirror, center console, power front disc brakes, four-wheel Independent suspenslon, rear stabilizer bar and S'A x 1S·lnch wtieela with 175170-13 radials. • • -, 1 president of the Volkswagen The new GL carrtes the same caused automotive enthusiasts and gearbox, the GLI comes thehlghwayand41 lncltydrlvlng. division. suggeeted retail price as last to compare It directly to another equipped with a tachometer, The GL shares the GLl'a dls- consol•mounted auxlllary In-ttnctive wtde lower bOdyaJde strumentatlon, sporte steering N moldlng, but hat bright rather wheel, 6 x 1•-lnch tight alloy than black-out exterk>r trtm. 'The Jetta GL (left), VolbWaaen'• new lUhl'J' model; aDd aa tatm1or::ik0t of a.. . ·.·Maserati enters new market w1th the $26,000 Bi turbo For yeara, Maseratl has been designed for twin turbocharglng. known for producing llmlted They feature an Interior with numbers of high-performance hand-crafted ltaJlan leather up- cars with slmlrarly high price holstery and dash and an exterior tags. with the lieek llnea aasoclated · Today, Maseratl steps Into a with true performance vehicles. new market for exotic cars with U.S. Importer KJell Ovate. who the Blturbo, the first exotics ·made his name In the automotive avallable at less than the world through hta early U.S. Maseratl Quattroporte. Importations and Introductions At $26,000 the Blturbo Is leas of MG, Volktwagon and Jensen, than half the prlce of a Ferrari or describes ttte Btturbo u a "small Lamborghini, and M(),000 less sports eedan that out-performs than the Quattroporte. sports cars." In fact, this new Beach Imports, exclusive Maaeratl la the only twin turbo- Maseratl dealer for the Orange charged production vehicle cur- County area, reports that sales of rentty avallable In the U.S. the Blturbo are proceeding wetl. New performance conscious In fact, Orange County ls one of automobHe enthusiasts who for- the best Blturbo markets, ac-merly aettled for Porschea and cording to the Newport Beach· Corvett• can drive home In a baaed firm, located at 848 Dove vehlcle Which eporta a n~e that St. once was available only to the The Blturbo fQllowa the De-ellte. _ Lorean, the last automobile to The SlturbQ. waa Introduced In attempt to reach the per-Europe In 1982 and received formance-consclous market for such a favorable response that exotic cars. Production figures plans for the U.S. lnvaalon were are set at 5,000 vehlcles per year Immediately put Into play. Its West Coast Introduction, the Blturbo became a btcoastal com- modity· with 42 dealers na· tlonwlde. Maseratl Import Co. of Long Beach, headed by Bruce Qvale, ls the exclusive distributor for the seven western states . First quarter sales exceeded all expectations. As of April 30, approximately 1,000 Blturbos were brought into the United States. Of that 1,000 approx- lmatety 650 have been retailed, with sales exceeding $16 mllllon. The remaining 350 were In the pipeline, at pre-delivery Inspec- tion centers In Long Beach and Baltimore, Md, and en route to dealers. "They're moving as fast aa we get them," says Steven Bayne, owner of Grand Prix Motors In Seattle, WA. The Bl turbo featurea an Interior with hand-crafted Italian leather upholatery, dub. (with 3,500 to be Imported to the Thus, In early February the U.S.). The cars are exotic Blturbo made tta way acrou the throughbreds, powered by a new Atlantic with It• New York debut. Maseratl V-6 engine, specially Later .that month In completlng As of April, Rick Mancuso, owner of Lake Forest Sportscars Ltd. In Lake Forest, IL, sold 32 of hie 48, wtth orders tor eJght moce. Walter Glovannelll, sales man- ager of Steven Kessler Motor Cars Inc. Jn New. York, NY has aold 31 of his 36. l'tllJC NOTICE P\BJC NOTIC£ MUC NOTICE wt~ ~-::*'ty b;:'0,"~ Ml.JC NOTICE Roger M. Sherman. P,.. Mlxl ANO COMPANY, pointed u per'IO of estate u.et1 or of _____ ......_ ___ ~--• d9nt 70l1 MNdolt °'· 12, Hunt· ti ..... th '1CTIT10UI IUIMll '1C1TTIOUI IUllNHI FICTITtOUI ltUltN!U '1CT1TIOUI au.... = County on July 12, '1CTITIOU Thia atatement ... fled lnGtOtl a.di. c.ut. 12t41 repreeenta ve to .u-e petitions OI' ac- NA• ITATDllNT NAMI ITATEMENT NAMI ITATl•NT MAIM ITATIMIN'T P'2IOla .... .:.~.. with the County Cfe(ll of Of-llffany Wllfert. 7051 Mad-minilter the estate of counts mentioned ln .. _!~he= :;:non• llt The followtng per1on ti The IOllowfng P«IOll It The lollowlng P«IOfl la Pubffthed 0r-Coaat The fol1owlnO P«tonl •• ange1... County on July 11, ~Df~_!2.:..J!u1ntlngton KENNETH S. ROSS &ctlon 1200and1200.5 ...... doing bualn.. u: doing bvalMN u doing~ u · -..... ~.............. 19S. _,, ....,, •&-(under th Ind f h c lif I T E IRVINE GROUP SMALL THREADS. 10302 JIM'S TRUCK & AUTO NEW HORIZON CON· Dally Pilot July 11, 28, ....... _ u : ....., Thi•' buain... la con e epen-0 t e a orn • 3001 Redhlll Avenue L II 0 H ti t REPAIR 1701 E Edi STRUCTION 221• P·--' Augult2,9.1984 IN EANATIONAL IN· Publlahed Otano-Coat d ......... __ .............. -dentAdminiltrationof Probate Code. ~~!":._l'&.t.':e2:00 ~~~Cal; 92~n ng on Bid Fe.' Santa A~a. C:: Ln. #8, eoeta M;.., ""c;:, TH· 138 ~~:~:~TSH~~b~~e=:~:: Dal~ Piiot July 28, Auguat 2, Tl~y'Wkt"'~" F..Ni. Act). The peti.. JOAN M. R~, El· 8 ... u--~ I, Ltd .. 1 Call-Sandra J Kr~. 10302 92705 92827 Santa Ana, Caltt. 9270-4 9, 1 , 1984 Thie at .. emtnt WM ftled tion la let for b~ teltriS -· ....,....,. Lurline Or., Hun11ngton Jame1 Loul1 McBride, Jeffr~ EHiman. 2278 PtalC NOTICE l ... I " TH-158 with ....... ,.. __ ,...,.. ...... of Or in -n.... N 3 7 • Opa 'om,. Hmlt_.. part .. ~· .. lp eroy ,,.m rez Jr., 13.1 "';:~"'on--:_~~ 1,.· ~t!· o. at ~11t I ...., ........ e.acn. Call! 92848 5105 W Ouflekl, Santa Pamela . #8, Cotta M.... w Cerri #73 tinge ....,..,ty .,..,.,.. • " 3001 Redhlll Avenue This bu•lnesa II con-Ana, CAlll . .e2703 Cell\ 92827 FICTmOUl llUllNlll cailf 82~ • AMhelm, rtaJC NOnct 1914 • avtc nter Dr .. Wett. Balboa bland, CA. Elplanade IV, Sult• 200 ducted by an Individual Thia bu11ne11 11 con-Thi• butlne11 11 con· NAMe ITATEMl!NT Jw Anna Vlaovtcn 1391 ,,.... Santa Ana. CA 92701 HMl · Cotta Meaa. Callf 92828 Sandra J Krebs ducte<f by· an Individual ducted by: an lndlvldual The lollowlng persona .,. w Cerrltoe 1173 Anihelm NCT1'110U8 ~II Pubbhed Orange Coeat• on Se<rtember 5 1984 1'73 H5t Fulletton Pl&ra Ltd . I Thia llatement WH flied James LOUii McBride .,.,,rey Eatman doing bulirwta u · Cellf 92802 • • NA• ITAT'lmM'f 0.lly PllOt Juty 20, 21.1 t ... 3 "'M • p. Cellfomla llmlted partner with the County Clerk of Or-Thi• 1tatement wu Ille<! Thia atatetMnt wu flied A R G 0 N A u T A 8 • Thi. bualneat la con· The followtng ~ .,. AUOU*t 3. 10, 1"4 a 1r: "' · ublithed Oran1e ~3!: ~::,1:_~ ·~ County on July 13. wtth the County Clerk 01 Or· with the County Clent of Or-SOCIATES. 2192 Dupont ducted "Y' a general l*t· ra ~ u: . F·148 IF YOU OBJECT to Coast Dally Pilot April Cotta Mete.Calif 92828 111 anoe County on June 20 anoe County on July 11. Drlw.Sulte111.1rv1ne,Catlf nerthlp M CK-WEST, LTD .. • the &ranting of the 11, 12, 18, 1984 2,. Avecedo L d Cat F2IC*1 l98-4 1113-4 92715 Leroy Ramtra Jr lfornla Umlted Partner· "8.IC llJTIC( petition you should Uf~9 84 1 ,!..· 1 1 Publt1hed Orange Coalt F2o4l72I F2SOlll Spartlng lnw.tment Cor· Thia t tatement wu llled tl'llp, 1500 Quall Street, -'-".-;.. ' th -..-.nerthip D*'Y Piiot July 28. August 2. Publiahed Orange Com Pubbhed Orange Cou1 po!'ltton, A California Cor-with the County Cl«tl of Of· Suite 250, Newport Beech, PICTrnOUe .,lllllM cu.•~· appear at e Ill ~venue 9, 18 1113-4 Dally Piiot July 19, 28 Dally Piiot July 20, 27, poratlon, 2 192 Dupont. ange County on .M-f 12, Cellf. 92MO MW •TATW he~ and state you ~,. Me9a. C..1r ~~2:00 Th-178 August 2, 11, 1984 Augutl 3, 10, 198-4 OrlV9. Sult• 111, lrvlM, Callf 1113-4 Mackin ~ 0.. The~ l*90M .. ob)eciions or file wti~ S.aned0Ltd.:,Cakf0f'r111 MLIC NOTICE TH-152 IHHfC NOTICE F-152 82J~!n·Marle Sparling Publllhed Orange': =~.1&o:,ncc:>u: ~.,=:eae:IUSIHESS ten object.Ions with the == l: ~~:; FIC TITIOUl ltU ... U "8.IC NOTICE f'UUI. 2192 Dupont om.. Suite Dauy Piiot July 19, 28, 8trM1, Newport Beech, TELUttOHES. 3137 IRh court before the hear- 1v Suite 200, Co.t. M... NAMR ITATEMENT FICTITIOU••UIMll FICTTTIOUI IUllNlll 111. !Mne. Calif 92715 August 2. 9, 1914 c~:2:°11Cemor~ =· t::' ~ ~ tna. Your appearance Calif 92121 The loltowtng penone "' NAm ITATIMINT N.u. •TATlllENT Andr..,,~•S'J· 211~f TH·137 d ucted iv~-= 11mf:>:d H••port:lrvlne Com· may be 1ri penon or by GDLN Ltd, a Cal1lorn1a doing butlMM aa The folowtng l*IOtll 1t• The lolowtng per.one ara 0upon!,__,_ 92·7 5 ite · •nalC MnTM'r pen'*'11p rnunlcaUoftl. Inc a Cal-your attorney. 11m11ed per1nerthlp, 3001 GREAT EXPECTATIONS. doing buWleee u · dOlnO t>Ullnem aa ll'Ylne, ..,...f. 1 · ~ "'".w; Alc:Nird E Mdlln ~ tornte cors>otat.O 3117 IF YOU Aedhll A¥9nU9, Elplan8M 4501 Birch St . Suite 110, PACIFIC POINTE COK-SHERM CO, 250-4 W. Thl1 bu1IMM It con· dent . ' llfroh It,... tu~' 211 ARE A 1v, Sutt• 200, Coat• Meea N9wpor1 Beectl, Cllllf 92MO OOMINIUM ASSOCIATION. MM:Ar1tM Blvd Unit E. ducied b)" • mlted P«tner-~~A~f• Thie ai.t«Mnt ... tMM l\lllwpor1 ~ c.JJA• t2MO CREDMOR or a cont· Calif 92829 Wallh & SturOIR. Inc .• Call-2220 P9Clflc A"·· Coeta S111ta Ana. Caltt. thlP . ·-wttl\ the County Cl«tl of Or Thie ~ ti oon lncent creditor of the DVM . Inc .. a Calrlornta tornla Corp.. .-!01 Birch St, Meea. Calif 92827 Lucind• Gulllano, 28732 Andrew Swavely, Vic• dolThe !..~11 P«tona.,.. ange County on JUiy 1i duCted by: a corporatton • deceued you must fil corporation. 3001 RedhUI Sutt• 110, N9wpor1 Beectl, Newport Harbor Bulldert, Via L'"-•· Mlleion Viejo, Pr~t tlG"" neee •: 1tl-4 ' c.,..,. C c.m.ron Prell-' • Avenu., Elplenade IV, Sult• Cattt 92MO Inc. California , 1539 C.llf Thi• atatement ••flied 00181E·V088 IM· dent • • your claim With the 200, Coeta MMa. Callf Thl1 bualneaa It con-Monr0¥la A" , Suite 1t . Bemard Stwman. 2504 wlth the County Cferll of Of· '°ATS. 423 31at. Hewpor1 Publlahed ": Th6t ....,.,,..., WM tM9d court or preeent lt to 92821 ducted by. a corporation N9Wpor1 lacfl, c.tlf. 92M3 W. MacArthur Blvd Unit E. rec County on July 12. ~· ~: ~':1 UO Dally Piiot ~O 27 wtth the County Ctert1 of Or· the peridnal repr..-n- Thtt butlnett 11 con· Rlohard A Sturglll. s.c... Th. It bualn•" la con-Santt AM, cam P'2IOUO 8 ~·A · A ~ AuguSt 3 10 19k ' ' .,. ~ on -Mt 12 tative a .....i .. ted bv tb•L-dueted by' a general pert. retwy ducted by. a c:orpot9tlon Tr\la bualneu 11 con· an M ~ • .....,...... ' ' F 147 1N4 ' P..-.• 'Y WK' neranlp Thia 11atemen1 waa filed John L PMtna ducted by. a Q«lf.., Par1· PublllMd Otano-COMt a.en, Cellf. t2M3 -,_ court within four Thotnal e. WilllnQham, with the County Clerk of Or· Thi. ttat.-nent WM flied nerthlp DaJJy Pilot July 19, 28, Sandra Voee Ouellet1e. """*'*' Orllnfe oo.c mcinttia from the dai. Vice Preeldent 8tlOI County on July 19, wttn the County CWk of Or· LuQnda OuflllnO August 2. t , 11.,. "'21 NrtlMI Ad • Cor Deir Not .Nii/, 20 11 f tint 1..;..._.;.;;_ f ,_ Tht9 statement WU hied 188• • ltlg9 County on July 12, Thi• tlatement WU ftled TK-140 det M•, Cellf. neas PM:MICMll••••• ~I '° 1M4 • • 0 --0 -t· wtttithe COul'ltyCWl<ofOf. fW7 19&4 WlthlheCounty Cl«tl ofOf. Thia butlneee It con MAmtTAf p n ' ' ,., .. ~uProvktedinSec· llllG9 County on Juty 12. Publllhed Orange COMt ,_ ange County on Jl'y tt, .....C NOTJC( ~ bY • ,.,_., '*' Tiie ~ ,.,-.on 11 d6n 700 of the Probate 191-4 Dally PllOt July 28, August 2, Publlatled <>renot COMt 1114 ·~-.... ~ ~ s Code Of caJlf otnla ~ 9, 16. 11M TH-187 Dally Piiot July 19, 21 , W • ftOTmOUe ....... = ;~ ... C HIT fllfllUGIA-nag lmCE 'nie time f« ftti ... .: Pubhhid Otangt Coul Augutt 2. 9, 1"'4 fH·131 Publltled Ol'lnQ9 Co.t ..._ ITA~ ATI N Cb>91TTE" "I· • ._. Dally Piiot Jut'/ 19. 21 Ml.IC NOTICE .. _M'" Mnf'M'r Dt1yPlotN1r 2t.~2. Thetolow4noPtnON.,. .-ittie=a.ti~r, rNGPAtlON. tat= NOTICS OP D&ATll dalnw wW not expire AUOU8t2.l, 111' TH·1"1 trlCTlTIOUllUIMn ... ~ nul!IK 1.1•, 1~ dolnG~• = on Dr .. ~....... . or &SNNBT• I prkr to four monlhe rtaJC NOTICE ..._.,..TDmn" Aennou•...,..... TIM'3 P1"!CAEEK iNvHr-.... .,. AND"'..,,; trc... the dlile or UM Tne loftOWlnO P«wont.. NAm ITAT'llmfl Ml.JC NOTICI: ~~~u.1!r.: ""'=-'•~ or"==i::!.= 'IDf TO ADlllNJI.. hwinl D6doed abow. ~.=· "1:v~~ HOME-.11 ~penon .. PICTnlCM ...... '"1:n~ ~~:.on 21 ~. '* -= .... .,... ...... ?D ..... m. ~n NO. YOU MAY EXAM- .. fheeoitowlng pettonaate OWNERS AS80CIATIO ~WPOAT·MUA TU · NAmlTATlmMT l.oc:timoor L11M, ~ TH· ~9nl11dM1flt1 a• INE the fDe kept by ddtna bUllMli'• 2941 EJcSen A.,., eo.tt to NG. 210 E. wu.on Tl'lefo!IOwtnO,,......., 8actl.call t2llO .. _ICMMIH ~ !l'.p all h•lre, die court. If 1'0'I an I A(SULTI UNLIMITED ........ Calif 12027 Slf9'1 Coeta M ... Ctlil 001ng aa ,hllllp N. Lyon1. II .....,_ ffllM: Thia at.-..nt..,.. flled ~credit.on lli\en!9'ed In the M • ll01 hUtlOte l..IN, New· NftPOft H•bor Sulldert 92127 ILEU COTTON PHO• HarbOf l1land, Newport '1CTTTIOU9 ....... -"tittle County OWtl of Or· and :--=t Cftdi. tale P«18-Cft. c.ot 92MO Inc • Calllornla, t538 Oeborall S '•guaoti. 270 T 001' A pH y. 2117 ~ IMcfl. Cellf 82MO MAim ITAft WJT anoe Cou1ny on June 2'. of _. S ~ mlY. lerW Aob!n ,....,,. , 365 Monrom Ave . Sutte 111, E Wiiton Str"t, Cotta BfOO lllJrat •• 11 Hunt• T bl»ln... 11 con• The lolowtnl ,.,_,..,. tll4 '°'9 111.1 n • '-pon \ht execuUll" U ca HettMr Pt.,_~ eeact1, ~ BMctl C.11 92&13 ~ c.111 t2121 , '02148 ~ by a ,.,..... '*1· ~ • ,._ ROSS aAd P9nont adm1niltraior, or upon t caw em1 "Tl'lit t>u11ne11 • con-Tfii• ou•111"1 • con· rue• '•m•• Cotton, nerttNp ~EAICAN OATA'OfW. ~ OrlftOt CotlC Who mtr be ot.h9lwlle &he at~ for the g AObln H upMt ducted by·. OOl'poflhon Cl\lcled by. an lnaMdUlll 2'372 lfOOklMtt •f1G, .ilOM L CUttion noO lrte10I 8"tt. .. o.lly Not July 20, 21, lnt.ee4'td 11' •\...:.. ... 111 tor ,_ ... _,_,_ J. Trilt ttattrT*\t ... Ned John L Peterka Deborah ,.,gwon HunllnQton aeh. Calif Tlllt "atement .,.. flted ..... ,.,~ ' ~ ~ I , 10, 1M4 -VIiii' ""Pf. exenJ °" ---with the County~ ot Of• Thia 1tat.,,,.,t w• flied Thll 1tat*'*lt WM flied 92141 wtt!t 119 Coufity Cltl1\ of Ot· :~·· _..,a MtM, -F·11M awd/f//t .... te: trator, R file whh • _,. ~ on Jutt 1t. With Ille COunty Oerk ol Of. wftl'I the County~ °'Or· Kat.hlean Reo-n Cotton, ange COuntJ on J11tt 12, &Mfman·E>ouftaa lro• ' A petldon hM belt\ the~ With Pf.OC>f ol 1™ ~~ County on July 12. ~ County on JUiy 1•· 21372 1too111wrtt 1118, 'tNC k•ra or lnauranoe, Ml.IC llJT1C( fli.d by JOAN M Mf'Vke, a written - ,..,, ~ ,_ Huntl~ton act1 Cant ~ inc /Nevad• corp , 2100 ROSS ln the Su= ==that Vt'W.• Pu If*' ..,..nge....,... 92a. Pub1lthed Or9nQe.,,.,... atmOIStreet,Sufle#C.'204, ---...-.. ~......... ~--Deily Pf1Ct ~ l f Auouat 2, Pubhlhed Orenge Cout Publlehed Orange Cout Ttli. ~tine ft con-0.lly Piiot M'f 20, 27, CO.ti MeM Callf 921M r-.,,...._ Court of...,...,...., n6tict of t tf, ,... Dlllly Pilot July 11, 28. Deify Piiot July 21. AUQU t 2, esucted by: rrutbltn4 l .We Augotl 3. 10, 191-4 Tfllt butlnett It ~· The~TI n II ty requ~1tln1 that the filinf of an li\ven nMre August i • 1•~ TH ·o 1• 11· ,..,_ TH 16f lruce J oouon •l dUC1.0 by a eotSIOf•llon .__.. .. .., ""°" JOAN M ROSS be a -and a aliernent Pl&.IC NOTICE O~ Coul DAU~Y PIL.OT/Fnday Augcilll 10, 1114 Cl • ~LAW.... MT. Ollvt Monuary • c.m.twy Cremalory t625Glsler Ave Costa M ... 540-5554 NRCe POT'HEtl KUDOADWAY llOflTUMV 110 Broedwtly Cos1a Mesa 8'2-9150 ... 1-. l C NOTICE Ptml.IC NOTICE .......,,"" °' PlCtmaU• .,._.. flCTmOUt ..,..... CflP.''191 cm Of! Motlot" ADOl'TID ~ eTAtnmn NAm ITA~ M011CS OfJ lftVINll 1,_..... .. .,2d1Nnc:ie14~21 .. Clhl!IJ. 119 ~1n0 S)ettona Me TlMt 'ollowlt10 l*toft le TRUST'll .. 8AU CALIFONM YOU AM .. DVAULT ._. lo be In Ml fatct WJid M dOtl'1a M1nNe u · T .a. w.; MOTICE UND1J1 A DUD Of' TNMT '"9ct30CltY9ffonl ~ · NSULA PUMP I OAANGE COIJHTV IN· NOTtCI at'ilTINOH>I DAT'f0Nlr¥Mlbeftt,tm. Uon on A~ ....... 9ftd QU11!1MENT. 7 H w ..... TPNATio...Al CENTER AT YOU ... IN OUAUU' NOTICc IS Hl!!AHY UNUU \'OU fAICI AC. ---·l na .0 ed by Che tQl!owo H\lntlnglon heel!. C•llf, TH! UNIVEASllV OF UNDO A D Oft ""11f Gl\lfN that Dtoa d noM TO MOtlCT Y<Mlf' lflG rill cell YOta• C0uneU t2_.1 PHOENOC 125WtrSlr .... DATID -1 1-. U.: 119'90elv.dbytll0Clb~ *-rTllAY•90l.DA1 Mtrnt!ers AYES· tt John. .i.m. HW11«1 a.ioet. eo.ta MIM. Celli tta28 LIA YOU TAK& ACnoN Of tM City of 1n11ne, Call· A ~ IALI. • YOU aon, "-11oa. Mct'atlat\d 828? Atlel\ta, Hunti~{on, Mra. Anita H ~. ll2S1 TO MOT'ICT VOIM P'RCMJ. totnla I fu Ian u NU0 AN EOLAHATIOll N~~N~AHEm~o~ ~~~~H~~~~rTllAYMl~u~·~~~~Ofl~~~Ofl~~~~~--~!!~!!!,!!~1111-111~~,!!!!ll!!~ ~=-..... .A• ~ A. Victory, 2t0 8-:fl, Ctllf, tte47 A i-UiUC IM.I. • \'OU t•lal~ tocq;_11qui.11intru.. PROCllDbfO AQAlHll __ ,..,..,.... LITtf.i.td Av.. lia, hn Thi-bull It C!Off· ~ IJlllUJU1'IOllf ~ tran~IOn Ill , To.T'"IHCIUL.lt =,,or tN Colli.a ...... Ftenc!IOO, Calif H.080 Mied by: an Ind~ OP THI NATUM Of' THI IO• end .. ottlet tleme~. TACT A uwva ~~~~~~~~~H.~ ~~~UAQ~T~~~·~~~~~~I····~---~·-·••&~~~~=~~~~--~~=~~~~-~ ty end t.btr ~In dUcied lby. e ~ ~ fllla 1t•!9ment _..flied YOU YOU llHOUU> CDfil. •~Ill the oontrec1 ATION a c.ittomla 0orpor. l11 IMCLl.Onll; 1'9qvlrtiee eon,. nerehlp With the County Cler1c of Of. TACt A LAWYP CSooumenta, torUNIVERSITY t!IOn, ' .. Ouly tPPOfn1ed dftlonal U.. Pwmit tor,..._ Jan.~ •"04t County on July 24. On August 3t, 1tl4, at ORIV! &oUNO ATTENUA· Trutt• undat the followlf'c i.urant1 llnd U!Mt,.. wt1hln Thia ltltement ... Iii.ct 1tl4 , :15 e.m., 8ENEFAOT, • TION PAOOAAM IOll4fl'* deecfll>eCS deed of lrull T HE D ILY PI LOT Cl.:.AS 'IFIED OFFICE HO 200 '"1 or reeld.ntlally Wltlt the County Clel1( Of Or· ..... dllly appointed Truat .. wilt\~ Iller to \flu. 8fLL AT PUBllC = r:,~nd~~ = County Ott Juty 25, Pubu.tled Or~ Coat llnd4itandPWtU&ntlOo..d lnlirlc:tac:cotdanceWllh.tht AUCTIONTOTHEHIGHEST Telephon e~a···e ·. ng1 t . ...__ 1 o.ltyPllot Juty27,AYQUtt3, of Tnm recotded JUiy 1, apeallcatiOnl on me at Ille BIOOER FOR CASA or-. • .... lO .,. 1n cont~ Wlttl Jl'91111 10, 17, 1tl4 tNO, .. lnlt. No e151', In olflcltlof the Dnctor of Pub-... '°""In &ae11on 2t24h Of M d F 'd theetllfomlaAdtnlnlaltaUw Publtetled <Mnge Cou1 F-113 t>ook 13057 •• ~ l'4t.2 ot lie WOl::ka. , 1he CMI Coda. all tight, title on ay-fl &y ~ mnd ·~ Ulat D*1IYPUOtJWy27,1'~at:S, Offlclal'*°'dtli'IU-..otftel DATEOfOPENtNOBIOS· and tnt9'991 conYe)'9(1 10 8 00 A •f 5 30 p "1 proptrtlMlnU.M1Zonebe tO, 17. 1"'4 •-1c llt\fliM of me County Aecotdef o1 Bldt Wiii be fWCllWd at the and now held b)' It Undef : •1' •• : ·" • prO(;•tHd •lieordlno to F-117 ..--nu "~ OrMoe. at.I• of Cellfomla ottaofl"9Clty~o1the SIMS Died of Tf'\111 In tht Business Counter: ~ltlona f0t lhe MG ione. '1CTIT10Ua au.-.a e11eout.cl 0y ROBERT D. City of lnllne looat.cl at pto.,.rty herelnafttr de· M '"" , ••• of '"' MAMtlTAft•NT CHAPMAN WILL SELL Al 17200 Jambor .. Aoed. ec:tlbed: .Monday-Friday :::r::'he~~..Z·:"' ~ Plll.JC N01lC£ TM tollowlng per1IOl'I 11 PUBLIC AUCTION TO lr..-lne, California, 92713, TRUSTOR PAUL J , 8 OQ A M .,0 {> nq. _, 77 F•lr Of'I~ eo.( dOlng bue1nee. •· HIGHEST BIDDER FOR untll 2:00 p.m. °"' A"O'* 29, ZUKOW •nd BEVERLIE A ; • • -!):;., . M. Mltu. ' a ITATEBNT OI' COMPUTER NAUTICAL, CASH (payable at time ot 11184, at ·wt'lletl tllM and ZUKOW. ~ end Witt ellEEN p p ..,~'E A~ Oft 735 W 18 fA Cotta Meea, Nie In llWM "'OMV of the plllQe bid• Wiii be Pl.lbllciy • .IOlnt tenent• DEADLINE Os.,__., • HI"" Y, City ,. •• -.._.._......_ Callf. ,;..., • ..,. ' United Stat•) al the front °'*""'and relld •I-"' ·"Id• liENEFICIAAV. .7..H E Mi'ftM!i 0 • c ut ~u'Nm Alf:-0::ttetn. 735 w 18 entranoe to the Old Orange enlll b .. uDmltted l;';ffled WESTLANDS BANK,• can. Pl flUt: T IO:\ U t:A UJ.l~t: C>allyPllotA~u!'.0f0, ,:a. The loll= peraona IA, Coeta M•••. Callt. Counsty~ttou.eB.~ed en\'91~ marked on ttie 10~.!!~•Ntlon ... _..... \lotl .... !l\, S I) l(' F 1ee haw at>Md the u .. of 112628 Ofl anti "na Iv.,. ~ outside, Bid• tor Unl~y ,,_.,....., ovem.,... '"· u . . at. ::, r u.m. • the FlcUlloue BualneH Thi.I bu•ln•H 11 con, twHn Sycamore St l Drive Sound Attenuation 11183uln1tr.No.83·63885-4 Tut'"fhl\. \fotl. l 'SO N~; WINEBAQ.LTO Wit ducted by. an lndhlldual Br<*Swty, Sant~ Ant, Call· Pr~am" ClP 521.30. of 01Tlolal Aecordl ln tn. Of. • :. p.m. 1000 Ca1 Hwy, ~rt Allan Ger•leln fomll IH right, tllle, and L CATION OF THE flee o~~ Recorder ol Of \\ t•rlJlt>"idtH Tut•:-.. l::~O p.rn . ee.ch CA 92863 now 885 Thi• •t•t'"*1t WN 111«1 lntereet conv~ to and WORI<. The work to bt .,_,. 1nge """'n1y. aald dMd OI Tl · Prod1ittlon Pl., '"'••port 111tttitheCountyClerkofOf. now Mt<f by It under Nld fofrnadhereunde<lltoceted tN1t~btt1t1tto11ow1ng aur\tfa, \\'ed. k:io p .m. 's••.u llE .. •. eeacn, CA t2ee3 1nge County on ~uly 31. DMd ot Trust In the PfOP«tY In the City of lrvlne, Count)I property. Fr j fht '· · T t J 'iO ~'1 " Rott Engen Inc. tC•lf· 11114 t1tua1tldlnMldC<>unty1nd of Or1nge: at Unlwralty Thelandreferredtolnlhlf 1ur.... :. p.m. LOOKllG FOi lbi fltln.JC NOTICE tomli) 88s-Production Pl F211111 State deec:rlbtd u : Dflve between Culver and guarantM 11 lltualed In the '°la I u rdH ~ F riria, ·i 00 I hl M •U• -------Newp0n Beach CA ll2M3 ·• Publllhed Orange Co< PARCEL 1: Alf that portion 405 FrMW&y. Stat• of Callfomla, Count) • ; '· • C:IEEIEI PASTUlrS? - -NOllCEOfl The ActltloUt Bullneu C>allyPllotAuguet3, 10.11 olLollofTracto.484,lnthe OESCFUPl'IONOFWORK: otOrange,andlsdeacrlbtcl ~uruhn Fri. :~:00 p.m. " • PllHITLllA• PUaLIC IALE Name referred to aboW wu 24. 10M City ot Cotti Meu. 11 Tri. WO!'k 10 bt perlormed u followa: Unique Homes hU cul-1 _ _. __ .. fl ~I MA Notice i.'hereby given that flied In Orange County on F.165 lhown Ofl a mllf) r9CC>fded In 9'1111 Include bl.It not bt Um-Thtl portlOfl ot lot 15 OI tlvated numeroua field• .... ,....,, the underaloned wm aell It 1113182 FILE NO F1aoeae 8()()1( 4111, Paget 43, 44 and lted to CIMrlng and grub-BIOcit B of the Betry Traci CA ."'!CL'LLATION & ucl 5 Bdrma. 3 bat lnckJdee public: euctfon pureoant 10 Kip Engen · 45 ot Mllc4llJ~ Mapa. bing. demO ot exlallng wait•, u lhown on a map recordec • ~ c. that .,. now prod ~ m•t• euH• *"' lerge Sectlon21700ChaptarlOof Thi• t>ullneea wu con-Pl&.JC NOTICE recOf'dt ot .. Id County. lncludlngtr•remova/a,wall In 8()()1( 9. Page e of Mi. CORR E. CTIONS: abund ant returna.Her9• famlly room and off· tl'le bualnen and pro· duc:ted-Oy • llmlted Pat1Mr· FtC-·r= lhown •• Unit 4 on • eon-c;onstructlon, landacaplng, c.11aneou1 R~d• of Lot Why: An accelerated i tr..cgettclng for up to 7 ,r,aionlcodeoHtleStateof lhlp "'""' ••U domlnlum Plan recOf~ In lrrlgallonfYltemeandmaln· Angetet CO\lnty. C.lllornla ( II . d . commla1lon echedule; an, nly 4 doon from ICaJllornlatri.followlngmll-This ltatement wu flied NAMEITA 8()()1( 12"57, Paot 15of0f. tenance improvement• In· delcfll>e0ulollow9: .anc·t• a l10n~ an ('nrrt•c·trou~ llllt~ creative marketing con-the entranc9 to Main cetlaenou1 per90nne1 prap-wtttittleC<>untyClarkofOf. The followlng pertOn II t\clalReeordaofMldC<>unty ataJled together with ep-Beginning at I P<>lnt or ht> marlt> on i.auu• dt-ucllitw a:, ahmt-. capta;aVaJue Command BNotl.HOWon themat· arty to wit: ange County July 12 dOlng bl.lslneet •: and .. defined In that CW• purtenancM " the Nltarly llne ot Lot 15 1>1 k r II . Cent..-; a Staff Dellgner lcet at only $461,000. Robert Bouer Sp•c• 1tl4 on • AMERICAN FINANCIAL lain Declaration of~ COMPLETIONOFWORK: dl9tantSoulh0daQ.38'47' t'aM' as or R c·ant•t> a l m n and a reputation ftv ···1111 #f164A and 1 t74 p btl h J LIQUIDATORS. 18531 8olaa nant1, condltlont and r• All work It to be QOmpleted WM1, 1.00 feet 'from the h h -\ ...-Miry Eequlvel Space A~:olO ~~64 20, 27, Chlca,Sul1e315,Huntlngf0fl atrlctlont~Novem· Wlthln100conMCUtlYaWOl'k· northealteo<MrotaaldlOI llUnl t'f ~ t'll c·ant·ellitt~ \OUr ad. q uality Work have . •1018 • • Beactl.Cllf.112640 bet29, 19T7,ln8ooll 12'47f. lngdaysfromlhedat•~ 15;tl'lenoeNorth811deQ.21 ERROR · produoed abumpercrop Phllllp lrvtne Spec. #142 F·14ll Lawranc. E. Dobblna, Paot 1205 of Offlclel R4t-fled In lh• Notice 10 '47" Welt along a nne par• : of l!Mllee and lllUnga. If Chari•• Manning 5901 Pinon OJ., Huntington eo<daofaaldCounty. PrOCMd Thll 100 wotldng llel with ano 7.00 IHt Cht>l'k vour ad daih and rt'norl you are lnt.,..ted ln1~~~~~~~!!1!!L (C.,peta) s~ #52 BNch, Calif. 112849 PARCEL 2: An undMded days lnciudel a eo calendar IOUUMwiy of the northart) .. d. I . T h r helpl.ng wtth the hatveet ';: .. 11 ---A ..... ·~·-c ... JC>hnFleidSpace#54 D11Dt 1C NOTICE Thia bu11,,... '' con· ~fourteenth (1/14th) , .. day1encs.capema1ntenanc:. llM..Of.idL0115adi.tanot errors 1mmP I Ble ~· t' ().\fl.) pleue call Jim Wood, 2'"br-&"'·..::.·;::::·,"~·-.:,."11 Thll Nie wlll buy c;om. .--. ducted by. an Individual lnt«•t u t.,.,,I In com-period of 152.87 tMI to a point Ir e?S-6000 .,..., """" .. , petltlve bidding on the 25th Lawrence E. Dobbin• mon In and 10 lot 1 of Trecl AWARD OF CONTRACT: the8Nl•ly rlgt\l.of·Wa)' lln« r. I l OT ass. ume&. liabil it ~· Cur l ht' fi r!. I "'"'I()• 19' 11() ..... IU'. !Inane.. (819)728-5 51 Oay of Auguat, al 11:00 A.M. IUMllARY °' Thll statement wu flied 9'64, u lhown· on a map The Owner rewvea the of Bear StrMt .. Oeeerlbto Ur-. ..,.. tTWL3 Ofl the prernlaee where Mid ADOPTfD OROINA.NCI! with the County Clettl ol Or· recorOed In Book 418. right. after opening bide, to Ina DMdtotheCltyof Colltt tnt•p rrec·t mserl10n unly. RMltora 87Mooo 11•1 TllllOI• property ii 1tored and Which Ordlnancea.4-31 laleheO-lnQe County on JUiy 2. 8, Paga 43, «and 45 of Ml• reject any or all bide, to MeN, recorded August 10 CLASSIFIED 642 -5678 ' , ....... -. ... __ i. located at lntematlon&I uled lo bt In lull force end 1984 cellanaou• Mapa, recotdl of w.ive any lnfomwlty In a 11118. In Book 1279', Pagt - Self Storage.. 17801 Morgan effect 30 day1 from ltudop. '251A1 Mid County. l>kl. to make award• 111 the 147 of Offlclal Aeco«11 In the ~IOU II• PAii IPll 1·1 lllLY Lane, In the City of Hunt-lion on Augutt e. 1984, and Publlthed Orange Cout EJcoeptlng therefrom Unit• lnl ..... t of Ult Own« and to office of ttle County Re--~·-··-·-.. ~-"-...-.-al-•.._ __ In!!! •• kit $245,000. m 11 Oypr.... BeautlfUI Bay vi.w lngton Beech, County ot Or· waa aclopted by ttie tonow-Dally Piiot Auguet 3. 10, 11, 1to14 lnclullve. 1-0 10 14-reject all oth« bid•. c«der or Uld County, Ale '*-au·' 100,. .. u-• llU S.A. 1.&a1..hts, 6'45.2847 Alfy4 8drm & *• s beth, tnge, State of California. Ing roll can vote: Councll 24. 11184 · G lndullve. 1--0 to 14--0 fn. PROPOSAi. GUARANTEE point being on a non· '" u • u '--v at home 1400 000 The landlord ,.......... the Membere: AVES: Hall, John· F-1511 clullve and 1·Y and 14-V In-AND BONDS· Each bid lhall tangent curve, concavt "":;;::i:ii:i:ii:iii~I:::;..;;;;;;;:= Ill 111-llYll llllEl. ~ ~ltnd t10t, 1~.· rlgtlt to bid ·at the aale. :'8es~· M~:~anc1NT: clullve on a condominium be accompanied by a •outhHaterly, 11~.vlng • 'Thia 2 bedf'Oom, 2 ba "-·ti y.:....-1_.....__ ~rc:h.... """1 be made Schaf • one " · plan recorded In Book certified or calhler'• ctledc radlua of 211.00 feet, 1 rediue Deane ownhOmt ,,_.. .,. .. _ ._..,. wiltl eaah and paid '°' at ., 12457, Page 15 of Otflolal °' by a IUVftiV••e ... .,..., from Mid Point beara touth t lot 0 • a Jl .. 1H•/•J1JLt•lt Um• ot ..,urchu1. Atl Ordlnuce~1.~ PllK.JC NOTICt Rec:otda cfl&ld.Countyand bond on thi'~r'n rum~ 43'deg.5T 57" wt, thenol epeck>\11 lna~Prl-& .-: • purchaMd good• are told. the zonlng ol -pro~rty u defined In that certain by tht Ownw u guarantM alonQtheeuterlyandnorth-vateloutJonat•ml..low celta ILil lifi "u la" and mull be ,.. located at 887-877 W•t C""·1'MIO Dectarat)!:io ot Covenanll, 1tia1 the bidder wlll, tt· an erty fine ol Nf4 tight-of· ~ .. ~.!.'!....t3!.!.~ * ,1 .... · WI* moveo at time of tale. Thia 181h StrMt from A3 to R4. In NOTICa.Qfl condition• ~ rea1rtctton. award 11 macs. to him In ao-'Y the followlnQ ~ .. ,.,, _,,_ ,,._,,.... uHI It subject to canc:ell• connec1lon wllh Rezone TIWl.,_E .. I ALE reeordad November 29, cordance wtlh ttle term• ol aouthweaterty afong .. 10 Ing.Denny Bibb 8-«-7200 Pool, 3 BR. 28a, OWC tlon In the event of aettt. Petition R-84-12. T.I . No. «IT 1977, In 8()()1( 12411, Page hie bid promptly aecure curve through I central $ OSK 2 5% 30 ment between landlord and The lull text ol tht YOU ARE IN DEFAULT 1205, of Official ~d• ot Workm9n'e Com~nNtlOfl angle of 30 deg. 35' 23" an 1 at 1 ' 7'981 ot>llaated pany. proposed orOlnance .may be UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, Mid County. Insurance and lla.blllty In-arc dlltanca of 15.48 feet to fflllllU PlllJ ... • .. -AAft HIJ1eh Agt Mt-1 ~blllned Orange Coast reao In the City Clertl •office DATED 8/20/82. UNLESS The street add,... and suranoe titec:ul• a contract a pOln1 on a non-tangent ~,~ Ill W YA II •I t D.lly Pilot August 10, t7, •ElL7E7EFNalrPDrlvePH.IColNNEYtaM .... CI YOU TAl<E ACTION TO othet' common detlgnatlon. In the ~equlred form and curve. concave north· 50' pier/slip · 5 BR, 5~ Baths -e'12% ~-IT I i0&4 • ty PROTECT YOUR PROP· II any, ol the rNI property furnish aatlltactory bondl ... t.,ly, having e radlut Of d d tail fro h f f at + Int.,_, ry a F-185 Clerk ERTV. IT MAY BE SOLD AT oucrlbeO 1bova 11 '°'the talthtul pertormanoe 275.00 feet, • radlal from won erous e • mt e roo 0 MW2ndtNatdeed,emall Publllhed Orange COHI A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU pu(por'led to be" 103& SM of the contract and for the llld point on ltle 275.00 foot copper gutters, invisible solar pan--· IWID down. Low peyrntntt. 3 Dally Piiot Augu•t 10. 11184 NEED AN EXPLANATION Breeze. Colt• M .... CA payment of cllllmt of ma-tedlu• curve btar'I north 11 els. to a basement for all the en-• -a·t>Ctli Bedroom. Upgraded.Call F· l87 OF THE NATUAE OF THE The undertlgned TruatM terlal·m•n anO fibore" deg. 33' 43" ... 1; thenoe Big 5 Bdrm beth with qulokly1 thll won't lMt •t PROCEEDING AGAINST dllclalma any llablllty for any thereunder. Said check or aoutheuterly alono aaJo vironmental control systems. A ter-MPW•t. Fmly rm and S 104,150. C all now vou. YOU SHOULD CON· 1ncorrt1C1net1 of the ttl'M1 bidder• bond lhllll be In an curve 1hr0U9ll a central race for outdoor dining. Grass & format dining ""'*' be 5-48-2313 ..,,------------------TACT A LAWVER ador ... and othet common amount of not 1a1 than ten angle ot 41 deg. oo· 28" 1 l told fut. It'• vacant and Pla.JC NOTICE PtBLJC NOTICE On 8131184 at 11:15 1.m .• Oealgnatlon. 11 any, lhoWn (10)percentoftheamountot dlatance 01 19e.82 feel to• roses PUS sandy terrace for ou tdoor In great etlape bu1 the ------------------ATTORNEYS EQUITY COR· herein. the bid The Falt.hful P•· point of revetM CUNatur• dining. This is our most exquisite owner hu to get It off the THE !<EAL ESTATE RS NOTICE Of NOCPPTlC-72250f1 ~R~IOTN, .. Outy ap-··" ~ ule wlll be made, bl.It ~ormance Bono shall be not wtth,• cu, rveh '!.,.onca~ .. IOUlu th· home. ~ • ..._.~· Full ~ TAUIT'Ee'I I ALE "' ""'nt... rustee uncl., and .. ,1 • .....,t covenant or Wlr· .. than one hundred (100) wes ~· a .... ., a r.., • ot ...., ....vw compare..._: T.I. No. MN TRUSTl'FI IALE puraoant to DMd of Tru11 r1nty. •itPf ... or Implied, re-cent of the total amount ~~,75. feet, a redlal trom S 178,000. Don't wait. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT T.I. No. ....... recorded 8127 /82 ... Oocu· gardlng !Ille. potMUlon, or of the blO prlCt named In the ... d point beer• IOUth 3e 751-311>1 -· ~,. ... ,-.---·~···· UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE ment no. 82-304528. In book enc:umbraooee. lo pay the contract The Lal><>f and Ma· deg 33' 15" weet; thenol !pSE ECT -DA TED January 17. 1978. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT 11182, page 304528 of Of. remaining principal tum ot terlals Bond shall be not 1esa aouthealterly along Mid l ---.• ... .,.•,..._....,. ..... IJNLESS YOU TAKE AC· UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. flclal Recor01 In the office of lh• note(•) MCUred by ta.Id than one hundred t tOO) per. curve through • canttal PROPERTIES ; - TION TO PROTECT YOUR DATED 3/31182. UNLESS the County RecorOer of Of. Deed of Trutt, with lnter•t cent of the total amount ot angle of 3 deg. 38' 21" 1 PROPERTY IT MAY BE YOU TAKE ACTION TO ange, Stale Cit Callfomla 911-lhereon, es prO'llded In Mid ttle 1>k1 price named tn ttle dlllance. of 88.28 feet to a Hlllllfll WQI SOl.D AT A PUBLIC SAl.E. PROTECT YOUR PROP· ecuted by l<ENNETH nota(1), ..ovanc.a. If any. contract p()jnt on the east«ly tine ot --·--tF YOU NEED AN EXPLA ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT CARLYLE HOLLOWAY Ill, A unoarttletermtofNICIDetld PREVAILING RATES OF ti.Id l.ot 15; thence leaving ;~!!!~~!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!~J •lilfllttr·Ql,ll0 UPIOll-NATION OF THE NATURE A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU SINGLE MANWILL SELL AT of Trust, ..... Chatgetl and WAGES: In acoo<dance wilh Niel aoutheut«ly right-of. ~ Great looatlonl Near E'•t.<-·-2 .,,.,,, ..... 2 5 OF THE PROCEEDING NEED AN EXPLANATION PUBLIC .. ~'UCTION TO e11pen ... ofttleTru•tMancl the provielonl or S.Ctlon wayllnenorth0~.38'47" beach, lhOpplng center ---·1 4Uf • AGAINST YOU. YOU OF THE NATURE OF THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR oflhetruat1createdbyaeld 1773ollheCalllomlalabor eut.215.38fMtalongNiCI UIOllLI and itc:hool a. Many bath•. Aaaume flnan. SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· PROCEEDING AGAINST CASH (payable ., time of DMd of Truat. Code, the gentfal prevalllng euterly llna of I.DI 15 to ttle 101 YI• U4t Seu .,. lally 11·1 amenltlet Include eom-A9klng $135,000. YER YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· ule In lawful money of the The total amount of the ratn ol pe.-diem tat• and point of beglnnlsg. munlty poof, tennla , ASK FOR DEBI BIBB On Aug1iat 11, 1964, at TACT A LAWYER. United Statu) at the tront ~ tJlrinoa of the obll· holld•yanclovertlmtwMln MAY BE Al.S KNOWN Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78, on bay, pool, bHketball, clubhoui e, ........ 9 15 A.M .. GATEWAY On 8/31/M al 11:15 a.m., ent~ to the Old Orange gallon aecured by ttle prap-11telocalltylnwhlcl'ltheWOl'k AS: Southeut comer 01 lOO' boa park & p1cmc area. Call E.Sld• owner-'ln. a 2 MORTGAGE CORPOR· GUARANTY NATIONAL County C<>ut1houae, located erty to bt tOld and re.uon· t. to bt ~ormed hu been Baker and B.ar Slr .. 11. spa t space. Xlnt Fin. $4,850,000. -. " .ATION. A California Corpor-MORGTAGE CORPOR-on Senta Ana Blvd .. .,.. able. estlm•ted co.ts, &X· obtained from the Director Colt• M .... CA. 92826. No -Sally .Shipley .« t 110K Ctlatm ltff 28-+ atlon, 81 duly appointed ATION, u duly app()jnted tween Sycamore St. l pen1e1 aDC1 adv~ at the or the Oepantnen1 of lndut-other ~nation known to Channing Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45' lot, lrg Daboft. S"°P9-tt.,,...,75-00t7 TruatM under and purauant Trustee under and pur1c.1an1 BroadW1y. Santa Ana. CaH· time of the Initial publlcallon trlal Relatlona, a C9PY ot TruttM. rec:tlon• to the deck, courtyard, pi' er & slip. S l, lOO.OOO. GE 159.9100 to Deed ol Trust recorded to DMd of Truat recorded fornla all right. lltle. and of 1119 Notice ol Sale i. which le on Ille In the offlct •bow property may be ot>- January 25. l978. u lnit 4/20/82, H inel. no. tnterHt conveywd to and S9.ll03.S4. by the City Clerk of tht City lllned by reqUMtlng Mme. • ........ I IDlm• No. 33845. In book 12542, 82·134ll08, of Official R4t-now held by It under Nld Thebeneflclaryunderl&k! of Irvine and w111 bt made In writing, from th• Beautiful 3 Bf, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace, ..... , .. ----- page 1818. 01 Official ,._ cord• In the offloe of the Deed of TrU#t In the property DMd of Trust ""9tofora ••· available to any lntereated btneflclaty Within 10 daye beam ceili .. .-. Xlnt , ............. , ..... 20,000. Tl 1111,111 c«d• In lhe office of ttle County R41COfdtw of Orange, lltuated in aald County, Call-ec:uted and del~to the l)at1y upon request. The from ttle #lr1t P\lbllcatlon of ...... -a.. .._. ...... , .,... wen maintained homot In County Rec:«oer 01 Orange State of Calllomla e11ecuted tornta delcl'lblng the land undersigned a written Dec-contractor and any tubcon· thll notice. W..-cland• Bink. ••JSIH lllft u-... --aa•M••ir •m College palt( .,.. ,.._ COunty, State of Calllomla by Oavtd W. Stark, an un-therein: -i larlUon of default and De-tractor under him ahall pay 21100 Sou111 Harbor -•r"-'.,.... • ........, turee•Bdrms2 batM ..., EJCecuteO by DANA H. married man WILL SELL AT PARCEL 1· Unit # 18, u mend for Sale, and I written not .... thin the tpeelfltld Boulevard, Santa Ana, CA. J tt & Ba · l d Dramatic Plan '4 with tOaf• · • ._ SMITH Ind SANDI w. PUBLIC AUCTION TO lhown ancJ defined on that Notice of Default Ind Bee-prevalllng rat• of weigea to 92104, Attention: BodU e y y view, new y ecorated Mai Ing 2•t0f'/ «*llng entry. yard, qutet 111Mt, con....- SMITH. WILL SELL AT PUB-HIGHEST BIDDER FOR certain Conclomlnlum Plan tlon to Sell. The undefllgned alt wo<kmen employed In the Krl1tenaen. Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. Now $645,000. llland kltc:hen, br.Ufaat ~c. c:J ahOpplngfor ........ • fnlwya, LIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST CASH (payable al Um• Of r41COfded on March 18, 11182 cauled Aid Notice of 0. execu11on ol the .contract "(IL • 11r .. 1 addr... or ar.. and 1)9Uo. Prtvata _,.. BIDDEA FOR CASH or Hie In lawlul money of the •• ln•trument No. fault·and Election lo S4tlJ to l.ABOR REGULATIONS: common dHlgnlllon I• PllllllU 1111 IOUIFlllJ corner location, lntwest· lm lfM.ft Calhter'a Chectt (payible at United Stat .. ) at the frOflt 82--09'4758 of Official R4t-bt recorded In ttle county The contrector lhall comply lhown •t>ova. no warnanty II Ocean & J etty views, marine room, 4 Br, tng teveta and 3 total 171-lHA ume of Nie In lawful money entrance to the Old Orange c«d• of Oftnge County, Where the r•I property It With all the requlramenla of given u to lta completeneu btdroomi. Community .,.. of the United Stat•) at the County CourthOuM, located CalHornia. located. s.ctlon 1777 .5 toeether wtth or oorrectnett)." 3 Ba, 3700 sq. ft .. car parking. ·$1,285,000. pool and tennle. Prlotd to ------••• front entrance 10 the OLD on Santa Ana Bllld., ~ PARCEL 2: An undivided Oat•: Auguat 2. 11184 all other appflcable requlr• The beneficiary under Aid Mii with 1 Orange County CourthOUM, tween Sycamore St. & 1118th lnuweet In and.to lot CLIENT REF: C,..APMAN ment1 of Iha Calllornl1 Deed of Trull.~ reuon of I Ufllll PUOI UYFlllT &MUm. oan. REPOS 2 on IOt t14e,OOO. tocated on Santa Ana Broadway, Santa Ana, Call-1 of Tract No. 10ll28 u BENEFACT Labor Code. breach or defau In the obll-Spectacular bay!ront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up, $299,000. 831-1400. HOUM S 122,500. Low B 0 u I e v., d . be I ween fornla all right, tltle. and lhown Ofl a map ~rded In u Mid TrutlM DRAWINGS ANO SPECI· gatlon• aecured thereby, -down. > 648-7739 Sycamore SI & Broadway, lntereel con\19yed to and Boole 496, Pagee 8 through 22891 Lambert, Suite 520 FICATIONS: A lull Mt ol heretofore executed and de-2 Br. 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1.250,000 WATERFRONT FOR SALE BY OWNER Santa Ana, Calllornla, 1111 now held by 11 under Mid 10 of Mlacellaneou1 Mapa. El Toro, CA. 112830 orawtno1 Ind &peelflcalloni hvered to Ille underllgned a HOMl-.S S-. 4'Br M ... Del Mar. QWet tight tltle and lnler•t con· Deed of Tru.t In the property recoroa of Ortnge County. By: SharOfl c. Lefever• I• available tor ln199C1lon wrlnen Dec:laratlon of 0.. UllU IUOI lfLL.1111 REAL ESTATE ltreet New lntldt a t veyed 10 and now held by II eltuateo In Mid County. and Calllornla, together with all Publllhecl Orange Cout wlthOUt Charge at the ofllc:e fault and Demand fOf Sale, p . & . U1·1..00 •1•9 ooo· .. _. OU • 1inder aald Dead 01 Trust In 1state delcflbtd u . Improvement• thereon, ex· Dally Pilot August 10. 11. 24. of the Director of Pubtlc ano written notloe or bf-.ctl anoramic ocean city view. 5 Br 3 Ba, • ~Mo ·Ht ..... ra Way the property lltuated In uld Lot 9 of Tract No. 10513 cepllng therefrom Con· 1984 Wortc• ol ttle City of lrvtne. and ol eleetlon to c:auae the spacious enter taining home. $1, l 00,000. 5-CS. 8; 432...a451 County and State deec:rlbed u lhown Ofl •map recorded domlnlum Unit• 1 through F· 188 Complete Mt• of aald un<lertlgned to Mil tald Piii Ull ... u 1n 8()()1( «8. P1ge145, •e & 18, lnclullve. localed lh«• drawing•. apecltlcatlona and property to ut11ty Mid obll-3 Bd 2'A ba. dbl gw, oom-But. IHe~ . lMI Lot 4 Trect 114e u per ·47 of Mllc*llMOUI Mac>1. Ofl. PlltUC NOTICE bid document• may ba gatlon&. and thereatt• the ....... 1tv..,...,,. 112~7.6"" WA map r~ded In eOot< 38 record• of Orange County, PARCEL 3: An Delullve purehaled ltom the Depart· under1lgned c:.UMCS Hid "''""'' """"' ......... 4B 3Ba 2800 n..ia IOt W"' Page 35, Mltcellaneou~ Callfornll. eaement appurtenant to IUMMMY Of'' ment of Publlc Work•. City notice of brNCh and of a4eo-1111LIT .. 1171 dn 119oK owe 1 int •o Mai>•. In the office of lhe The llreet eddr., and each unit for the use end NOPOMD ORDtMAJICE of Irvine, 17200 Jamboree tlon to bt recorded Aprll 18, with good 3 SR, n~ ba bch. Bkr CoOp ff3.1812 County Recorder of aalO other common Ofllgnatlon, occupancyottlloMportlont A propoMCI ordltwl()9 11 Road, lrvlne, Cantornla, 1118'4, u lntlr. No. l"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!J home. t199,500. County. If any, of the real property ol tne rMtrlc:ted common ac:heduled tor adoption at 112713.Anon-refundablefM 114-1591123, of Aid Offlclal 1..;; ltJlltOar .. IJtr Jnia llM The street aodreu and O e • c r I b • d • b o v e 11 aree dnlgnated In the Dec-the regular City C<>unctl of $85.00 Wiii be charged for Rec:«da. • other common ~nation, purpot1ed to be. 30&11 Klon· larallon of Reltr1ci1on1 and meeting of Auguat 20. 1e-.. uch Mt of documenla. Said Nie Wlll bt med•. but IU-TJH If any, ol the reill property Olke Avenue. Colla M .... lhown on the Condominium being Ofdlnancie 84-33, lo Drawing•. tpeeltlcatlon1 and without covenant Of ww· deacrlbeO above 11 CA 92829 Ptan for uch unit. rezone propertl•• a1 bid cfocumen11 wlll bt mall· ranty.e11prua0f'lmplled.r• purported 10 be· 842 w t8th The underllgned Trull• The atreet eddr... and t e 1 5. 1 8 311 N • w p 0 r 1 ed. upon receipt of requeat1 oardlng tltle, po9MNlon, Ot Street Coale Mesa c111• Oleclalm• any llablllty for any other common Oealgnatle>ft, Boulev*rd Al\d at 500-527 no l•t• than 10 calenel1r encumbrance., to pay the fornl• '112827 · lncorrec:tnau of the '''"' It any, ol lhe real property Center StrMt from C2 (Gen· daye prior to the date Mt fat remalnln; prlnelp1I tum ot The under•lgned T ruatee adOreu and other common d ea c r I b • d 1 b o v • I a eral Butlneu D11trlet) to oe>enlng bid•. tor an ad· the nole(I) MC:Ured by uld dlaclalm• any llablllty for any dealgnatlon. If any, thown purported to be. 93& W 18th PDC (Planned OeYelopment dltlOnal charge of '5.00. DMd of Truat, WIUI lnt~t incorrec:tn•a of the •treet herein St. B·2, Colla Mesa. CA. Commercial) In connection SECURITY FOR COM· &I In Aid note provided, ed· aOdr .. •1nd other common Saldulewlllbtma<ll,bl.lt 92627 with Rezone Petition Pl.ETtON OF WORK: Tile VlnoM, It lf'IY, under lhe o .. ionatlon. if any. atiown without covenant or war· The underligned Truat• R·84-14. oootract dooul!'lenl• Cfll for term• of aald Died Of Truat, herein ranty. e11pr.., or Implied. r• Olaclalm• any ll•bllfty tor any The motion to give OrOI· monthly progfiia paymerite '"'· chargea and expeneee Said Nie will be made but garOlng lltle, polMNlon. or lncorractnen of the. atreet nanca 84-33 nral reading bated upon ttle tnglnMr'I ol lhe Tru11ee and of the without covenant or ~er· enc:umbrancee. to pay 11'19 addr ... anO other common carrltd by lht following roll eatlmate ot the percentage truata cr .. ted by Nici Deed ranty, uprtM or lmplled, re-remaining principal aum ol dellgnatlon, If any, lhown call vote: Councfl Members:· of work cornoleted The City of Truel. gardlng title. poaaeulon, °' tf"le note(•) MCUred by Mid heraln. AYES: Hall. JOllnaon, w111 retaln 10% of Md'I pro-Said tale wlll be held on eneumbrtne98, to pay the Dead ol Tru•I. with lnter•t • Said NI• wlll be made, bl.It Hertzog, McFarland. NOES: or ... payment u MCUJlty Auguet 20, 11184, at 11:00 remtlnln; principal aum of thereon, as provided In ~d without covenant or war· Nooe. ABSENT· Scfllfer. for comoietlOl'I of the bU-A.M .. at the UU\-6treet en· th9 note(•) aecured by Nld note(t). 1dv1nOM, If cany, ranty, e11pr-. or lmplled.,. i'he tull text ol Ill• ance of the wortl. At ttle ,.. lfance to Stan·Sha.w COt· DMd ol Truit wtth lnlereet unde< lhe lerm.• of the DMd 11ardlng lltle. l)OMMllOn. or propoeed ordlnanoe IMY bt queet and upen .. of the por1tlOl'I, 1570 Eut 17th lfleraon. u provided In Mid ot Tru•t. IMI, chargea anc1 encumbfanoee. 10 P'Y the rMd In the City Clerk'• Of· eucceeaful blclOar. the City StrMI. Santa Ana, CA. note(•) advancaf 11 lily axpenaea ol the TruttM and remalnln; prtnc:tpal tum of no. et 77 Fair OrlYe Coeta will pay the amount "° r• 112701 Uf'ldtlr the term• ol ~Id 0..0 of the lruel• CfHled by aald the note(a) eecured by Mid Meta. • talned upon compliance with The total amount of the of Truat. ..... dlarget •nd Deed of Tru91 Deed of Trutt. l!Wftll lnleteet EIU:EN p PHINNEY, Cl1Y ttle ,..-qutrementf'of OoYafn.. 11npald balence of the obll· axpenMa of lhe T """" and The total amount of the thereon, u . provided ltt l&ld Cter'k ment Code Section 14402 gallon eecur.ct by Mid prap. of ttle '"''" crMled by Hid unpaiq balance of lhe obll-nota(a). edvancee, It any, Publllhed Ora~ Cout and ttie provltiOM or the erty to bt aold. toget• With OMcl ofTruel gallon aecured by lhe prap. under the tenna Of the DMd o.ny Piiot AUVU'f 10 1984 con tr act doeumentt lnt••t. late c:tiwoee, and The total amount ol lhe 8'ty to be told and reeaon-of Tru11. r .... ctlatgee and 'f -184 pertaining to "SubftlMIOn eellmeted c:osta. •xpenMt. unpaid btlance of lhe obll· •ble ee11mated coeta, a11· e11penM1 or the Tni1 ... and of Sttcurl6aa." and~. aa of the dale gallon aecured by ltle prap. l>tnMI and eCIVlllOll 11 the ~f the truttt CTMl.o by Nkl PlllJC NOTICE PROJECT ADMINl8· hereof, 11 $303,1182.23 let U1 Help You Sell Yoar Propertrl The Daly Plot off en you this 111ct size ad Ofl ow "Pictwe Pac•" w11bnds for Just s25 per day. or 2 d1y1 for 145. Sobmlt a plctwe, or wt'I pholocr1ph It for you at a ~ chars•. ar1Y to be told and r.uon-time of the lnltlal publatlon Oe9d of Trutt. to·wll TAATIOH. Altqueetlonarel• Date: July 20. 11114 able •ttmated coet•. 0 • of the Notice of Sti. 11 1117,841 17 8UMMARY Of' tlve to tl\11 proieot prior to 8TAN·8HAW CORPOR· fllA,~!t .. lc"•' ~/'A ~ ~" .( -f) C f'.uC.. pen ... and advano. at tht 137 ,8111 51 • The benef1ei«Y under Mid PROPOAD ~ opening bid• a hall b• ATION •• ;:>~ l"Qt.J ~ ~ ~ i:J <r ;:J time of the tnltlal pubflcatlon Th• beneficiary under lal<I DMd of Truet l\efetOfore •· A Pfot>OMd otdlnanee i. dlNeted to Sage Davit (11'4) aa Mid Tniat• w • ., •• c1•r • '°''" .. ----- of ltle Notlot of Sale 11 DMd Of Truat httetofore ex· ec:uted ancs dellvtred to the acheduled for ad0p11on al M0-3655 1'70 EHi 8eventMnth O tw•o"\I~. '-•••·• 01 •ht s5 t • 11 ee ecuted and dellvered to the undetllgned • wrtttan Det> the ..-gui.t City Councll Dated. A41autt 8, 1914 8tr99t ,...,, ,,, .... ".,,; ,... • .;, i... The ~lclary Uncl4tr laJd und«tfOned 1 wrttten Dec-laratlon of dtf•ult Md O. meetlnQ of Aug1.1tt 20, 1914. Cl'fY OF 1AVIH Santa Ana. CA. 112701 -... ~ ... •ow• • "'P'• ..,~ Geed of TNtt httetof«• ax laratlon Of def au" and O.. mend for lala. and a wrttt.n btlnG OrdNnOt 844'4, 10 ay /I/Nancy c. ~ (71'4) 542..U n llCUted and deUWfed to the mane! for Stle, and 1 Wf'ltten Notice of o.ttuh and E1ac-•t•6flafl a epeecS flnlll of 30 City C.-8y: LYl'lfl Bnlnnet, I undettlOfled a written Dec-No11ce of Dettult end El«> tlon to Sell. The 11ndeniQned mu.. Pflf hour, wt111e main-Publlahtd Orane• Coa1t AMlatlllt Gec:tetll)' ...,.,_,..,.....,,__._ __ -...._ ._ration of Default and o.. 11on to h!I The undenlontld caUMd Mid Notice of o.. t•lltlng 1 IPeed llmlt or 25 o.iey Plot AuQUat 10. 17, Publl Md Orenee Cot•t ... --~,__....._....._.....,, rnand for sai.. encl • wntlen cau9td Mid N01tol of 0.. fault end Election to W to M11e1 I* hour tor me tQhool 1914 Da.lty Pltot Juty 27, Augu•t 3, Notlol of Detault and Elec> ta.ult Ind Etectlon 10 Sall to bt reootded In lhe county rone. on PaulMlno Av.nu. F-1et 10, 10M I tlon to Sell. The unoaralQned be recorded In the county where the reel propeny It t>et..n 8tf910f and a., llo 1711 t-· --.,..,...,--....... ~ t~ &lld Mota Of 0.. Whert the ,...1 proptrty JI located. Streel• fau" and [lec:tJOl'I to Sell to located DATE: 7127/a. IT IS INTENDED Tl4AT TM motlon to GM Ordl· Pf•fl• ._...__.__._-.._. Pe recOfded In lhe cotJnty GUARANTY NATIONAL TH£ SAl.E WILL 8l CON nance 1444 t1t11 · '99dlng I wnere the r..i propeny 11 MORTGAGE CORP DUCTED ON BEHALf °' Clttled ~ the fOllOWlnO roll .... •f tutt• f i--.... N_O ... R_E ...,0.,...... Jocaled TRUSTEE TH! TRUSTEE BY CALIP. calf vow. Courd M..-nberi • , , ~ 1· I I I~ De1•. July t , 1GM IY CIMARRON SERVICE P08TINO & PU81.ISHINO AVU: Hall. Jollnton. I-For"'~·~..... ...-. ......... __...__.._..._. OAT!WAV MORTOAOE CORPORATION CO.. 1028 H. I.AKE AVL, H...Uog; ~atlilnd NO •·.· .__,_""' COAPOAATIOH AGENT ST! 201, PASADENA. CA. None. A881HT, Sc:haf«, ' 'J ACllON 1 800 Hort.fl ltand m No RlwrllOI Ave , 10 tl10•, 2131h1·4541 Tl'le full ta11t ot the Call 1---.,..,.-,_.,........._....,.,.-r G*'Cla CA t12o3 A~lto.CA t2378 DATE:l /10114 ptopo.d~maybt A t.u.Y .. LOT . ftt8)9 710oht 2512 t4JIT~5~10 VICl(fl!l ADAMS ,_dlnlMCilyCletlil'tofflol AD-Y?SOl ..._...__.__ ...... _..........., 8y Lela I And«IOft 'I Paula ,,.cCord Truatee ATTOANE'Y IN FACT •• 71r.it0t"4. Colt•..... '4l-l611 -:"":':':~~~:'::!lllt.1':'::':":"'lr-'W-~h-~,._,-,.,_, AutllOt'u..cJ a.gnatin S i. Omc.t ATTOAN!\'8 fOUITY COR-EIWH rt P+ilNH , ~ Pubtl heel Or•nga Co.at Pwbllthed Oranoe CoMI POAATION Clefl! Oenv Pllol Juty %7. AUQ\11t3, Dally Piiot AUOUtt fO. 17, 24. PublttheO Ofange Coast Pubh-'*1 Or•nv• CoMt 1o lGl4 Ula. Dally Pilot AUQllll.f.0. 17..24.. J>a1¥~ AU911M lG, ,._. · ,,,,, r.1" 1oa4 r .. 1a '·1 • ...... ,. .. ., .......... Clutlc colonial on 3 Iott, In Old ODM; whit• With green ahutteral Oufft hOUM with frplce. Pool apa.1895,000 l Jfllilll{)lJf' t1 ~l:i Realtora, 17&.eoOO unLlmMI Um.T 1111' Llaan.I on the Ridge. 2 bdrm • 2+12 ba. Plan C In TlffUe Rock Ridge TOwnhOmet. Prof...ionatly decorat9d and With !WI unbtllevable vrew.S3ea. ~110!] •Realty 786-1172 Otder2.-tcwy,6bdrm,.... Lapu..... IMI dtf'IOe 1n. ,.,,, .. tie v1EW I.I rm :a toca11on to 18'1.• *"'• -.. , ,. Of 8C1Mty of t.he ... """ Pli ~ water and llghtt •• pn.-/W...., ntgght. A wondwtl.ll op-oWMit M.l.JMDi · portunlty to own a~ W ............ on ~ U11le lallnd Md .,_., ~o ~ ~~ ~'~ ... ~'~"~l"".!'ll~pl=•~•= to IHO.Ooo. Catt U:llU•lllT• 1134900 1 ldfm, ,.a,. petlo, ...., Mein Beach. 11::.'r ~ .. 7 ' trln • J!I• _ 111 CJ11al11 11 ••••ll•t 11 1111 iw::;•~tt~•:;;:•11i• ........ ~~!!"""I E C.CON1AACTOAtrM AMERICAN HANDYPttAN BRENDA' PROF.HOOS -•IMIYIH H .. Pal ln9 l/.Ol -"tl.!lffl PVt utOf~ I ~~~~ -. au.uiy worK Wn• ~e>et•try ~RtNO m .. tewdY9 ClEAHtEXPERT u rat 1°"'1 rat•' .m RbtkNXfikff = .,. ... ., "' :C Mor• ,FW10tPIT'4 $5 i'3783478Wl9ft7· 113 plum,,. lnt~lanof•nc• OS*' In .cNdule Prof. OY9f25yMtU~ ,., .... t 01"9'°42~~83 APPRAI AL. t31·"7370 ........ j51e21a • Gtandmoti. BabysiU«. Claln;utts FNM Etllmat•. Grt POO. etc. YE J IUS JS LORD worllfOf' Prof people only. lie. T • 111,428 ?30· 1353 PAINTl!A NEE OS WORK! Steve Venn REAL TOR .,..---__ ... _, _. ----0.Yt. Pf•fe< nlghla NMr RHld'l/comm'l/lnduet'I ~ 130405 "'41·~91 ~able + xtnt ,.fl, Vlct«ta c .M. ~ .. ane c~~R~~ In 6=f #"48031 "8-3189 a1n the Retll'*I HOUMhold c.it at.nda at 154-1340 ITllYIM Ill.Liil Int/Ext, Clfllngs, rettn C9b. lAL TY lenlce ...... Cl Don't put It offl Fot FREE tnt " arcla H~ alto • haUI· CLEANING, )'C EKEEPIN. Q m11m •VI•.. i:~.tfk;g w::.c::· &ia!lty R&inng. £.Citizen TV sEJ\Viets Fr• ...... • , coneuttatlon Q0.2273 a•~ tai Ing ~al* 761·9039 WhatfOO*Ufyrt MP OrangaCo Oflalnal dltc, Atfl, Uc. #'48877. eomegOod TV'I fOt Mia. UNSUIT$. Tan all owr. IW"I• II~ LIM, 548-W7 &tudenl MO'lel'I. Tntured QUALITY PAINTING, FAIR I(, FUnll• 6115-0103 Pet• eam-7pm 640·8057 BOdY Bu.it. Salon 22311 ltulat Ct ts:n Gkiev i X:0C fnc c;;:-~~o~~ .. CC::t.8: EXPERT JAPANESE ~TJ.i~~ ~i!~ ~:ll~~~n ~-~~mat•. REPAIR Spaclallt\4200 & 1--------- Broollhum HB 083~18 "'" Oltul111tn1.. •P9Ciallltl In .. .,.mngt r••ld. repair•. 20 yra HOUSECL.EANNER 1-FrM tit 30yrs ~. Tnf~ltmct ... , Mmt. ~tlal & C«nmerclal profeMIOMll "3-3050 upar. 751·3"2 Uc 751-1033 ITAi ,, mum 10'• ........... , .. , 710-2725 anytime Walt t ~a p;oc;:Jng ltnlct •· No Job too b'O °' snd" NUift Concrete OrlYeWtYt, a1-. HomectMnina By JODI • It H .. Piil . Naldantlal, .. Commw • .. Al A Aoot Rep ale i"c Ale • tehool l pet· Zlmmerm.,, Boat Main-Low Att• aso:;101 t aft 5 EEi walk, atuco, bf1ctc, home PIMN call rot ,,.. Calltornla'1 Original ph .... llC. 853.,.203 PTI. 1200/ot 1 ... Sr. Cltlun• aonal pro)ac:t1. 85 M041 plue the IRVINE MIRROR and the HUNTINGTON BEACHCOMBER evary tenance from TOP TO Sharon'• Cl•anlng s~c. repair. ,,.. .. t. 758· 1229 e1t1mate ffe·H-49 Student Mo~ra • Top Quality Work· Dlacnt. SSVE S.44·7018 F h • • ..-111tz1 T09pad/ramoY9d CIMn· Lie.CAL T1aeetllnlUNd Intl .. , Ree/COmm. RMI IV W-"' t Wednaaday at BOTTOM. &334&9t or omea • ...-• no 1 751 3478 Ex~ Rapalra 15yrUl!p. HouM wortc by the d•'I ••<1 141,.1~101 •• ratea. LIO. Ken 834-6405 t1r11t eu IJ!!l•I ... t I J. In move-<MJtll 873..&448 up, MW awnt • Gen. rnalnt . elec;tlcal, Own trat1Spc)t1atlon. Call llfHH&H * w@orn §A6U(D * no eJ1tra Ohll0-1 CALL TODAYll ~u C 1 b lyat CIMllUp1•Tr•Trtmm1ng plumb Cralg53M119 *.G10flt"'48-01H* I l It-' Pa ••..._. *HANO TOGETHER* lLtisOihJXRiNE Me t OS I Ill Yard Mllnt •HaullnQ an II mctt R,V, Stor~• SpaoN evall. '3MJ730 ANYTIME lllFllLllS Your Dally Pllo1 S9'Vlce Directory Rapreeentall"9 Flbarglul, '*'coat'• ~•t •ulitL MIKE 850-3283 L=n7=c~~':!,~.':~ p~~=~ ~~MC.leanl,,_u ... ,:. (j119 In•, CNA'•· eAAX'. HANGINQ/STRfPPING ~A~Heo~'f: Vlll~g •. 1-=-==------.---.paln~All typet.o boll S..UUM •wetc~.fOf --o--......, PU78~'"'"' w/1ld• .. -;;:ard1 •· K h a 7•"'7 rfRded for home care VISA MO 81 .. 1512 · at wy " P ·• • 1 "'"""'" .. "''"' '"""'"',""" ....., ·uu ea ... at 'I • "'" 41•. "284 __ • .... 873·t33t Mon·Frl 9~pm Wla•tw Cltul•t r9P•lr1. enqn .. • na vour client• 2JC2 In. 30 Malnt.Clnup .. Tr .... Sod 24hr an1 Rich 831-0955 ....., . 142..al1 tit. IOI wortc ~. 845-e015 Col()(I aa MUOI\. Prlc;ed 1•1 ...... QUALITY HOUMCINlln!ng T taJ f Id I Ex~ Watlcovetlng In-.__._,~··1111"'1u WHIT' WMbo -&.•--a M-LJ•I tor the prof'I The COlof • ,..,. Rapalra, P11n1tng, Drywall, thorough, rellab6e, local 0 car• or • •r 'I ttaJlatlon. Real CC>ntult· ..... "" 0 00 .. WASHING ..... , .... , _ Company 751-0719 Gardening RMsonable a etc Fr" asttmat•. ref1 Pat 497~254 WO"*' Of' man. or con-ant Alllgnmt. 581-8590 A. ERXTioRs WIN w. ™ C&bi11e11, ref8Cing, C 1ccomadatlni. 8 yra . Qary 845·15271 PTL ValalC«\I people In their PICK UP ANO Ol!LIVER QUALITY' 831-2020 l!IA•m-u·ti~.·!----European kllc .. rormlca 11tr1ntra Fr .... t TIM 45-5133 SERVIREPAIRS for )IOUr ~~~~p~ =I~· home. Ref• 6-4&-9303 *"AlllU/lllllYIL (71•) 75~5459 . ' ...... 'P!l'!'limltl""'"""i.-.""'9 counterlopa. M 9•5747 Gcatsal LANDSCAPE & Cl"''"N· home/but. Rau no Job Ample rllfl. 173--7227 p l 1-12 Yf'9HP MIKE 8l5t.1800 ltl11 Eat'I • Wl .. tw • .ACCOUNT! G SVCS-low ""' I ataaf ' NORMS WALLGOVERJNG •-:.1 t•t• for Im t>usllndlV Back•t-HlnH-Johnaon 1111m-11101 CllST. UP 5 Yrt Hpet. frM .. , IO lml·fr .. •t 050""304 RICHARD SlNotU Fr• Est 10 per roll soLXR 8 viei CTR lflllll'"" .. '"'•'c"·~l'Mrir...,. can Un Gaar 97M88.5 Fina Furniture. KltChanl. RMlodel/Aepaira: comml Dl"9 780·9077 e .... ~··· a.men Newport Cultom Painting #330981 780-7211 . Homeownarl/Contractora wlRBOw clEXNINd i Yac:hta. 831-6397 and reald Llc'd, botlded. LANDSCAPE SERVICE 81aliaJ HMhOld s:ctY:mailouta 18 yra ol happv cu1tomar1. 1 Low rat ... rel. 842·7358' SCREENS 8 Yrt aJCp, Raf, M•itloatJ1tat4elia1 Cl!J!atry Ina F0t .. t: 552-9142. Tree trim, Lawn Mlllnt. ate. odbP Jdes 1 bkkplng.errand1,orgen1 Lie. 280844. 875-0383 Pa~r ltanal trlakltll Ina. John 95..,..825 eulld/IGmoa; Spec: kit, XIT'l>n...ao# ™no kt ud frM .. 1. Juan 1548-9448 SMALL MOVINQ JOBS zatlon 830-9, 55-broetlur• RAINBOW PAINTING • wXtli>XPER REMoVXt --- bath. ofc, rm add, patio P P 1 • p . C MIKE848-1391 ----a•·-"t 11 pol & pr_.. ontv. Alto do Sprlnkl«a lntlalled and y11• lltlattaHct cov/dcks, bay wndw Lie I Fencea. 1tlo'a, a ntlng IM ntlt Mow_. Edge. Tt1m, Clean-B ll l ..... Y our «:y ...... Repaired FIJr Ratn • \ "40485. s1 ..... 547-80711 Aw pnc:e .... 1-1990 o;a;,, PatlO co:;;;; Upa, Haul Aways, Ru1 . HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE .... tt ., 850..e84e JEFF UC HU painting. 838"1197° Call Cal 842·11711t Mlk•'• Yard Ualnt. f, .. 11t CLASS CONST BEST FOR LESS Ouallty work, aNordabla Rellabla Jim 9M-9024 Furniture. Trash, Tr"' VXCXTioN Hl5°ME CARE. CUSTOM Painting lnt/ex1. P111ttr/lt~r Ttlt!~Ol~t h Ir trim. clean uft. Hauling. A*nodellng & New Conti. Cerptry. Concrete. Orywtll prices. r•f'I 754-1020 Shrub11Trea Trim. Compl 963-S415 NORM We T•k• Care 01 Your Exterior wood tr .. tment eb's PLASTERING. - -Low prlcat e 5.-3930 tor Comm. & Reaid. Llc'd, 12vr exp Dave 840-2090 gardening competltlYa Oumplng·Haullng-Movlng Peta, Plante, Paper, Mall Fr" at. Stan S4~50ee Addition•. Reatuocoa. Fran Te Repair Insured & bonded Com-Expert Carpentry s.rvtce Dot lneafat prk*. Chuck 842-2873 PU /Dehvety Bat Rat• ate. Howard 5'48-34lO uparlencad p ·ntara nd Patchaa,frte .. t.845-8258 & lnataltatlon. 1 S 2 flM ltatt AW -patetl'te rates 751-w2 Re()alr·Ramod-Addttlon• 14-.y &;1510:115 Tiie lree1 Soe1e F,... .. t 24hr 631-1063 L!tal ltntm . wor .. t1mk.aAu.loNbt•. R'·" !!l,...1e•~ PJ ... la =P~t °":.r.= '"s""ta""'t.e"'la•w .... req-ul,., .. -,•fi-at""Aii• htipn 000r1 .. tc. 54M980 (GROOMING SCHOOL) Lawn-lhrub-tr .... tnltall LT HAULING • MOVING B mp mmllll ""' v....--contractora who perform s.c.lntaf'fOrt Antiques c ..... Coacsttt T~e-~~~ exp. Tr .. trimming & RemoYal. Gerag• & Yard Clnup1 for ~pt In your l'loma EXTERIOR-TOP QUALITY =t:h,t~;.'~a !!1t :::. = ~~~":~ l Palntlngt. Public whote bmys. patk);, patht, Rototllllng-Lawn malnt Jon &-45-l 192 Cell (818)785-1158 JC1 963 wotk for vour S. Fr .... t • 1 Do Plumbing Right• Countan, tloorl, lhewet9, be llcanMd Unltoenaed 9'a Pfi<*. 1173--9235 etc No Job too smatl n-. ti A i FrM "' 5"8-e085 Raf'•· Dale 848-5637 patloa. AV TILE Uc'd contraotora lhould 80 • Rea Mlcil~3S-0553 -an C ~CH Tr" Trtm. Clun-Upa llA.LTI Lim l FINE FINISH PAINTING Crain• ct.ar from 1115 559--8150 Free •t. ttate In their advatttllng. ~ •"-let · ESCecOf1Ve 66Qesf1Cs Yard Main. a Haullng Get HerbaiG9d. LON 16 to Ht •• lntl••t-1tucco-plHtar-Repair ra~tt. dlap. •to. Contractor• and con· r;oa;u,..., riiers. [oga.. Conerat• drl'teway, side-Reduced,.., cuttom per-Leo 557-4508 29 lb• par mo. Cati Graoe flOll LlllllllE cablnett-ac:couttlcele»ll-Anyllma M&M e.2.9033 Trff ltnlct 1umera, cont1et Mary Ada, ate. Conception to walkl, atucco & brlcil · Hm IOl'lnel MNlcet 855-72<>e 891-9020 °' 897 -3833 9111919-4139 wallpaper removal. a yra. DRAINS CIMrad. Plum,,. ·JXYCEE ~REE SERVJCE' · Gtondlut 558~0118 With Completion • 831-8092 repair. Free "t 758-l229 1 .. 71111 local raft 953-1788 Ing Repair Low Rat-. Tr ... Trtm-Remov.Haul· MY, queatlonl. Contrac--Aa~I ••let lltctrlcal calpentry Paining Repelra e .... CJuaJ!I •11••2 IUIJIEU P&llTlll. p D Q 850 ... 150 • Ing.Clean ups 979-7595 ~~. ~~a~vlcl1g:: MJnO xr ...• Q,. 0Nio0E am •. C1.11tom Pllllll ELEmtO 10 yra •XP all Ph .... Incl ROBtN1S CLElNiNG CU1tom BilCil:Stone lnt/el!t. free .... Local,., Expert Sarvtce & R9palr PALM TREE TRIMMING Plaza. Room 890. Stnta Aeaurfaclng-s..tcoatlng ordera, pereonattzld Xmu Oualltvwortl, frM•t. =~~#~C95~;<;3 ~~ SERVICE: a thoroughly Block.Concret•Stucco 10'/rle>Cp. bOndad, lneur. 31 '/f'I up. 1'0 'If'• In arM. e!!p'd, rellabta, moat Ana. CA 12701. ,_.,.ind. S&S e.31 ... 199 orn. Reu.,842-2080 425513 908-7401 cladn hOUN. S40-0857 Raf'•. Fr .... t. 54&-9492 #457130(714)$38-8911 Uc #409035 9&4-1910 palmt. 752-2308 -------- C'."4!~~~--~~ ....., .... ......,.......,~~ Rtlr W11tt4 9100 ltlt WutM 9100 Rtl1 Wutt4 5100 ltlp Waat.. 51 WaatN 9100 Btg Wt1t.. 1100 8111 W11t.. S Btlp Wuttt IDEU1.tmOI tiMiceaperl/HouMMen IOUOIJPTUITll PllCIUllllll . -:IOEPTllllsT DOUBLEDAY SOOK 1111nuw. 11 .... nUYIDIGITIH SECRETARY ' IPEOl&UIT PIT m6mlng1. Sm busy Super Jobt ,...dy nowl If Mutt be EXPERT In AnawtWlng ,arvloe axper, NB Ltw Flrrnt Mekl r• SHOP Nekt PIT pa,.. Salee otflca COOldlnatlon '"' RECEPTIONLST. Gal Fri· I 14 2 8 -S 17 3 9 mo. Marine ofc In NB. Phone vou can cook-olean-11av• BASIC GRAMMAR. flu. hra. N.B. 780-830.6 cepUonltt TuHdal & Qual applcnlwill POMM MCr.tary. HMvy IVPlng. lrnmec:l=let•~fotf·, day polltlon ettong ~· _Kn()wl9daQe of Feder· & typing. 831-M&O , refa-drlV•. you can wn Pv1-P Tai.~ irrnt comm lkllll and tam-Surf & Sand Hotel Lao (5·7 Yre m n aral otno. l phone efcllla. &I/State llnanciat ald4I UI WOUllT up to $250 par wt<. PhotOQfaphera Aaslltant Thur9d9)' 11:30 to :30. lllltlty with boOka. Satee Bch. 497•2005 EOE ndlvfduaJ In fut paced, 415wpm. llte book-' 1 ti Cou I.Ive In and N\18 $$ Marine Mechanic. ax-Elm extra lnc:orna for T'/PlnQ, filing. talephonel, and cufllertng bckgrnd a pll.llh corPO<at• omc:.. keeping, min 2 yra exp. pgm regu a on. t 8 30 To Noon Never I dull NEWPORT DOMESTICS penanc.d. Apply 7-9am Chrl9tmu Mutt enJo'I good front office IPPM'· plua. Apply In para. EOE Secretary 1·2 'J1'I exp no MUlt he\19 piofMllonal hi.Iman WVtca 9XP ~ • Community CollegH. moment In butY amall. ~GENCV Mon·Frl 075-2837 working w/achOOI chll· ance and manner re-87 FUhlon 11. NB a/h •Int typlat. die-t1PPHranoa &. attitude. sired. 11000/mo min + ~:.~~d=tina C~·~ lrlendl'J, NB aafe9 office. ~2-8142 Patty MECHANIC-Datsun dren-Publlc & private. quired. Pie.,. compi.te ROT C D S p~• Ion t~tlonet. 10 key w/traln Top lklllt & pleasant full benaflta. 5-42-8380 · AM'• for now, mavt>e tull s.aaonal part-time, l!lnt 1ppllcatlon at: 4000 H HIL ' . ..,..t • on IBM PC 6 prop mgt phone m111ner required. PM 8121 EOE MFH time later Lota or phof'8I ln1U<anc. Phone WOOl·No Toyota, b1.11Y lndpnt. lh09. Job for houeewlfe. ••· MecAnhl.lr Blvd. Ste 450, avall1ble Appl'J In pet· Salery neg. Reaum•i Submit re1um• and OllTllY Aotlst needed lmmedi.. a numbers. 831-8480 aelllngl .$4 p/hr/bonu• mo n ·Fr I. be n • f 1 t • teacher°' tMCher'• aide Newpon S..Ch. ton 2407 E Cout Hwy, only pleaM to: Roa.A-PO ulary requlramntt to. •. •tel'J, 10me•xpar helpful 848-7750 wkda)'9 831-2383 Sept 15 to Dec 1 Co<ona Dal Mar Box 1080 N 8ch 82eeo Paraonnal, 1111 Town & to wortc with lhe Salee Dept. of a IMdlng Hew· j)Ort S..ch firm. Call Mr Clarke or Mr. McKav Call 4-0 875-2335 IEIEIAL OFFICE INSURANCE S35/day APPi'/ at our ol-HOEPTIOlllT S&ILllllll/lt I Country Rd • Sult• 111, FHl IDVICI T'/Plno. flllng. computer READY TO CHANGE IEDOllOl/IUlll flee Augull 15 & 10 PBX. llt• t'/Pfng. •harp •• 11 11unut Orange. CA 920&8 n data entry, OA.M-3PM. CAREERS? I DIDI Nawpon Beech Shipyard hm· 1 pm 1515 W agreaal\19 Mlf·atarter, Wiii EJCJ)9r. preferred but not Ad Agency naer O.C Alr-WUUlll $850-$1000. mo Non· H you own .,....,..., & Engine Shop need• MacArthur Blvd Unit 1. train on computer S5 00 nac:etaalY 1175-1823 _ ___. hlAhly kll'--' IEO•n•-On call po11t1on11n an ave r -.--·-· quaUfled.pa & dleael en-Costa M... p/hr Whan phoning Uk Sacre1artal POf'1 ,_,, "" 1 _, " -• IEOTlnlRY (714) 478-8800 bar at Or~ • gin• mechanic• with ~<!~7K8a1t1h'/ or Mere. m11OLElll1 typist full time, work pro-Full time departmental 1 11 tfl Good ....... Growtng financial Ml'Vk:a PL--_.,.. caulng al!par d•· role In John Wayne Air-gir 0 ce. .,...,ng. leg• SS 6 /hr Co111 11 rm '• • k • sec. mMlun_!.mhuamve o3wn"r1'001•1l!. ~ ••Hn• $1207-S1MO/mo alretble. Non-amok•r port .,... Engln .. rlng Pr;~!'~11'1 anld7/genar+ al_",!· Community Coll•gH, ratary/otflce maneg8f tor com.'mensurate with ... 1-1111 • Aemod91lng ••per Poaltlon currently avall In Call Nancv 883-1910 firm. Self-motivated, With ,... -11 1 05c 'h17rr7 +~ •x..-~~~~~~~JE 't~H C.M. Executive ONlce Need• JOH WAYIE 1 el!per Group Medi~ & ! ~~=:. REPORTER Newport S..Ch Pubtlc LI-pleaHnt peraonallty _bena __ t_•· __ .,.. __ .. ____ 10 have atrong typing & THiii CLll Uta Ina, Vacation pay. • $400-800 p/wk With 2 veara dally H· brary •dmlnlatratlon ofc, IEOIETUY ~ht Good typing. SECTY /RECEPTIONIST F• IVO WHIR I clerical skt111. lhonhand. Paid holldfYI & sick pav. •Call !Of' appt 642_7358 !*lenoe. tor .,, lmmedl· Newport Center. P•r· Key poeitlon available at th0f'1hand & telephone for CPA Office In CM 30 Hour/wk. 7 AM· 1 30 good 1elephon• pres-11 Interviewing tor Jr s ate opening on a so. lorm1 variety or cleflc:ll l lklll• Apply In peraon pleuant working con- PM M·F. SS OO·S6 90 ence. excellent people Pro/Jr Program 01rwc:1or Profit .narlng pl1t1. end PRESCHOOL TEACHER Calif. newapaper. Sand ateno wk or avel'aga dlf· tot:> r .. I •1ate oNlce In with reauma to complete dltlon1. Salerv •P· p/hr. Orange Cout Col· 1klll1. Contact Barb111a or Appllcat1nt• mu•t1 bd• ~~~ rV::~ ~~'t ! 11~·~ MC01ture .~ ~!~~~ f IT resume and cttpa to Box llculty. AMllt aecratary =~ =t•. ~= application. Contac1 Mr proprlate to •"'*lance, laoa anack bar Cout Patti tor lntormatton energ• c, organize • BOATSWAIN'S LOCKER eta ....... ..---..1.. •203 C/O DaUy Pl4o1. w/board meeting• & work1,.,. condition•. Call Tom Fuant•, or ROB-xlnt banefttt 833-8084 Communltv Collagaa, 470-2828 hard working Resumn C P.O eo. 1580.· CO.ta mlnut•, & department """ ERT BEIN, WILLIAM --------1370 Adama, CM 1ccapted 8/5/84 1hru INC · 2431 West out PlllllOTill Me11, CA 92020 e.O E personnel mattert,..,..,. Carol Van Riper . FROST & ASSOCIATES. It", StlflHltt14111 432·5007 ONdllna 4:30 UlllWUE SILll 8/12/84 E!!parlencad tiwy, N.B 92683• ettn UCllH llOP H receptlonltt. Req'a 844•9080 1401 Quall St .. ~ wanted 30 to "8 hrt week PM. 8/21 EOE MFH FIT •xper. pref apply In only nd appl'J Contact Mery hll lmmed. openlnga tor High SohOOI qrad w/1 Vr Beach, Ca. 92883 Clotlng lhlft. 499-4141 FIU/Tlll Plf paraon. K«m Rima Hard· ~~·~.:.mtdb~IB 1171 rull & part-time machine RESTAURANT recent FIT pcl atano exp. ·-or,.....__ .. ,_ ,••T/Till Wiil ware. 2880 Herbor Bl.CM IEllOIL u11n operatora, no •XI* nee. IUTUllll/Earr'tl 50Dlct~~ ~.:!?:"at'~onng COLO Well BAN~eRO ---------Kennel Attandentl Bactc office. EllP9f. req Wiii train Pref« 18-25yra FuU time ...,.. •. --_, OpportunltlH avaflabl• lllTICILTlllE nwd.O. 2 Pit positions Otc In Orange 833-0012 olda. TARAS CORP. WllTIEll/EH/lr··r'tl elec:trlc 1ypewr1t« req'd. With the LOS ANOELES Exper. profe11lon1I for Prk>f Hotpltal expertanoe Medical Front office. Full 111591 Mllllk•n Av•. Full time. ...,, IBM mag card HP help- tlMES Clrculatlon 0.. mllntenanc. of el!terlor preferred lnt•rvlawa time or "•rt-time. "'-. lrvlne. 803-9077 or F Id ful. For complete datall1 ----· ,. .... ment In our door to color bed1, pou, ..-<;A 8•" 907" Apply Mon thru r •vat & 1ppllcat1on contact::.========-...-' from 3-5PM Tue1-Frl. parlence In Mecflear• & .....,. • Beach HouM R•taurant. door new1pap4tr ulet baakata. 852·811 t 125 Meta Dr Co.ti Maaa Me I-Cat Laguna S..Ch Paraonnel Dept City of lllllT&IY program. Guaranteed HOTEL 031.'1030 .::111 p::::::im:. PIJCROLOIJ Newpol1 8Mch PO BoJC PIT momlng1. Sm bUIY mhoul~ w. egaHour1plu14pmcom,o-..... , .. _ _..'lo"' 1 ... rt L~al Seer ... .,., .... At..,. portable X-rav orrtc• ON-CALL Relief Staff r•taurant 1708 3300 Newport Marina ofc ln NB. Phone ,._,., _.,.."' • ••-, .. _,...., N_,.,. .. ___ .. ...,.7 .""" neededtoworkwtth Exp'dwaltr ... wantedPIT Blvd , Ca 92003 . &typl"".831-8480 9 pm. Tr a In Ing I 1 FIT. 3pm-11pm For App uat ha"9 good typing "".,"" ._....,""' ..,..,., FIT Patio Cafe NB Cell 840-2101 EOE M/F. ... provided. Potent111 to 155~ S. 'i::'~ EH~~-lklll• & mutt be avalt1ble ~:r:,~~ disabled Joae or Shanti 873-1401 llOlnUY urn $300 plu• per week. wey aguna c_._. lmmedletelv Start at 1mEl'S llELPll Experience pref«red. reataurant Th• faat••t draw In the Sala otfloa ooordlnantlon For an lntervlaW. call. Hotel S 1250/mo e55-0953 for 2 IChOOI glrla. 2 to Bpm, Call 714/850-0536 HOST /HOSTESS .. xper'd WHt. • .1 Dally Piiot aecratary. heavy typing. 957-2301 ext. 1204 SwnCIU&ll IPEI. 5 dty1, good Mlary. Own only. pit BOB BURNS Ct .... flad Ad. Cd Today Suri & Sand Hotel, Lag. GAL FRIDAY S..ch ret0rt Hra Mon-lllmUIOE tranaportatlon. Corona PIT lllLllll IRPEI 37 Fuhlon 1, NB 142-58711. Bch. EOE 497-2005 nlUC&TIOllOO Wed. 3pm-11pm. Sat. a. exper. In 111 phlMI of dal Mar. Write to K-T. To organize & pkga ma--------- lnt«•llng, van.d work In Sun. 7am-3pm. For app. maintenance at hotel on 1200 Quall St Sta 180, terlal Incl. tranap. boJC" r•tuerant HB. Mull type 115 wpm, 1555 S Co11t Hwy. the bHch Laguna Newport Bcti, Ca. 92080 to Poat Offc Own tran1. EXP'OUnacook-applybe- c:IJI Linda 84&-0202 Laguna BMch E 0 E. Beech. 497-3074 NOW TAKING APPLI· ~· apprO!! .. 20 hTrs r =::8(,"g Tt;l~Ph'I SYDNEY 01111 CATIONS tor Newport .... orn or a .. n. YP ng Check CHhlng Store. helpful. SA hr non amkr. Hollow Lana. Lao 8ch Mutt be bond1ble & Wiii· A.II ... 873'""227 Reltuarant Ing to take a polvgraph Quad need• 11,.1n aide for •W 111111 tat 1823 Newport Blvd.. PIT duty In exchange for •WaJtort-Cootl•* Coata Maaa room & board 031-1708 •Hol1t ..... eu1t>oy 1111111 11111 Oualltv control lnapector *p~~D~E ~'r Certified or HP9f. 7-3 & tor growing medlcal d.-Cen "'"' 11-7, full or part time vice co 1 vr min 11Cp In 800 Newport ter ""1119 M ... Varda Conv Hoap. food. med ~ or Reatuarant Sandwich 081 Center St , Costa pharmecuetleala. Call for lhop PIT Count• help Sacurday, Aaguat 11 _ M ... 548-5585 awt 492-8t42 955-1247 971-1739~ ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Accent on fnendshtp, tendency to be IKl/lllW IEllYIOE RECEPTIONIST for bul'/ Retell greganous, to be trusting where romance is concerned. You '11 get what gravayrd. awing, F /Pt ~~ =~n~.C:=~ fH IPl 1111 1P 11 nWI you want following in1t1al dela}. Domestic adjustment takes place. }Ou Exp purt. 540-1771 Who enjoys people white - receive unusual gift. Libra plays ke} role. Painter needed 5 vr• ••P working In a profeaalonal Experienced crMtlve par. TAUR US (Apnl 20-Ma} 20): What seemed out of reac h becomes minimum req No el!cep-environment Pie ... tub· eon with ttrong Mlea available. Mam tam pnde, self-esteem h 1s not necessan. for vou to Oona SM-1701 m 11 r ••um e 1 o background required lor 1 Mclachlan high f11hlon 1pec:l1llty -play second fiddle. Focus on achievement. career. standin~ in PAINTERS WANTED lnveatmant Companv lhop Career opportunl· community. Pisces. Virgo natives figure in what could be an exciting Experienced Own trans-1400 Dove St, tv Call 547-3925 scenano. portatlon Call 751·9103 Newport a.ach 92660 GEMINI (May 21-June 20)' Good lunar aspect coincides with ••••••-RRllLOWIWllTU travel, communication fulfillment and reahzat1on that spantual PART-TIME. Varied houre llEOEPT/TILEPIOIE E!~al~=:':Or!.° matters should now take precedence Means you learn that money will to Include uriv A.M PERUllllT PIT Huvy .. u water aJCpar be forthcoming, but other assets are also important and ncce sary. wea6<end1 Mua1 ha"9 de-Newport 8Mch executive needed R•f• necaaury. CANCER (June 21-Jul} :?2); Let go of losing propos1t1on A. new pend1bla "9hlcle <•mall suite needa lndlvldual to Bond1bla 073-4t50 II I • be f truck. van. station work 1-530PMM·F.who --------~greement w1 evo "e. }OU 11 nd o unnecessaf) expense and wagon) 10 llli•t newt· can handle bu1y t.... IR&IL IHIT emotional turmoil Set ;tour own pace. 1mpnnt }our own style. You'll piper dealer In lrvlna phonea & gr"t gue111 In ASSISTANT MANAGER learn more about resources of others. you'll obtain add1t1onal funds. erea. Mutt be depan· lovely ofltoe Ca II urrent open1nc with future mty LEO(July :?3-i\ug. 22) You are "cut loose" from legal obhgatton dable Con11c1 Greg 714-780-8070 lo! store m1r11111 Musi ht focus on new stan. greater degree o f independence. Emphasis on Hyde Monday thru Friday ---tl*lflic' tnttl11S1Utic: ~ lof II between O 30 and 10·30 Mike your lhopplng ...., Mi M.i"ll. 6420912 p1onecnng sp1nt, courage w1 ingness to invest in }Our own talents. am. onty· &..2...s21 .., by utlno the Daltv Pl-HICA(OR'f FARMS Aquanus and another Leo play outstanding roles llillillil-lllilliliilliiii•• lot Ctaaalnad Ad•. W£STCllff PlAZA VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22): You gain add1t1onal information -1Piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii and alljes Be practical. define terms. outline special services Health Newapaper improves as you pay m ore attention to diet and nul.fluon. lntu1t100 1 KIDS·E•RN GREAT TRIPS •ND PRIZES! on target. hunch pays o ff and you'll be m ore emotionally and " n n financially sccurc ~ LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c.t 22): Take in1uauve. make new contacts. realize that creative energies require outlets Focus on change. travel, vanety and increased social activity Member of opposite SC1t makes you more aware of body image. • SCORPIO (Oct. 2 3-Nov. 21) Obtain valuable hint by 1'udyma VuJO mes'8ac. Be aware of small pnnt, check details. be willing to revise, review and rebuild 1f necessary Someone behind scene is 6ghuna fJrtour cause -know n. be arateful and confident. ~. SAO ARIUS (Nov. 22-0ec 21) Plenty of movement today, '* 1ncludin1 po 1ble short journey Calls and messaacs multiply -you could have mlt\lelous tame 1f you don't scatter forces You'll be dcalina with lively alcn. productive people. Gemtni plays stamficant role. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Keep track or upense . Focus on 11f\ , money caminp. uvinas and vaJuable ot?Jccts which )OU tend to lo 1( carclc . General pro peca a.re 1ood Cydc h1$h. )ou'll know 1What to do and ou 'W111 be at right pla~ at .. spccutl" 11mc. AQUARIV (Jan 20.r cb. 18)· Moon in your s1an high.Ii u Chansma. popularity. Judament and 1ntuiti.on Study Capncom me saic for valuable hmt. In m on dcfin1uon of temu Take noth1n1 for arantcd where contractual UTlnacments arc concerned. Pi~cs play' key role. -1 • • PISCES CFeb. 19·M rch 20). You could bt ofTcttd adm1ni trativc post tn unique or nruuon our qr ho PJW. Much r.t htnd SC'CTIC • ClpriCCim 1n IVlaua promot )Our rau\C' and this cCluld lead to maJor carC'tr advanctmcnt. P • n I 1tl1110nsh1p 8fO't'' trofl er. , •aily Pilot · · · · · · · · · ·· · ·., lllEDIATE lllllEIEIT DPPDRTUlln Ag.vestiYe creative telephone- alea penoo for retail advertising phone room. upenilOry 1killa a molt. Top dollar -bate phu bonus. Send re11ume to1 Adverti ing Director ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 Wtsl Bav Strl'et Costa \f ~. CA 92627 EOE .. . . • . • • • • • . • . • • • • • . .. • ,. .••••••••.•.• •·• ... ·-=·=-=· '..-......i.. 12 TRAIN NOW FOR EXAMS FOR JOBS in U.S. Postal Service No Experience, No High School, Allen resTdenta with Green card acceptable. Postal Clerks/ Carriers Start as Hi&h as . Keep Your Pres~nt Job Whlle Training. For Appt Call O.C. Of- fices Mr. Jackson WESTMINSTER (714) 891-6723 Train with the LARGEST Civil Service Training institute m the Wesl District Managers II you tn1oy wo1k1ng w1ltl young boys & gtrls ond dt.k 1ob' or• not for you con11der o corffr in th• n.wspoper circulo lion field. Thi' 1s o unique po111ton w11h dOll'I cnollengH & rtword1 Our open•nf~I ore 1mrned1ote Appl1conh mu1t ho" o van, notionwogon or truck Wt offer an ucellent solory wilt! o bonus pion ond got ollowonct. Wt hov'. on e1tcellen1 beMf1t pion ltlot 1nclud•• h~i · tol11ot•on 1nsuro"<•, l1berol v0cotion ond holidoys Condidott1 mutt hove o d ire to bt su<ctuful ond be w1lhno to work hord If you m1(1k you ho... th• qval1f1cohon1, pleo.-apply II\ penon to the llllJ Pilat Moildoy 1>tru fr1doy 9 1 t om or '2·4 pm 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 TODAY'S . CROSSWORD PUZZLE 1 EgyptlM CIWtltWi SFtlt llWlly 10Ac:tOfWell• 14Allw\t...., 15 Aevolt 11 Klno Of eompa.a 17 COl'llC)Ullon 110utlttt 1t COfttlnetll. com0 form 20111•'•~ 21 Studied 22 $QApt()I', • g i4.___ __ 21 Aimed IOtce 27M_... It loiN t..m.c PlinllftOll 32(~ 33 CIOdt.O ~ 19erk tC/Mm JS1tr.c191 MFtaednm 37 "*" tor S80r9ndl 3tW-tc*ed .01'r9t "o.l!On• 43 l.l1wnllll• 1 -Horn 2FMIOMIM 3 "9ttrtd 41e1~ 5 -tme>lor IOI•~ 1 Ill • .,., ol• • ·~N.cl 101'-111nen~ wsy 12 Trer111..,..1111r11•1•11 13 '1lttly lwc:r• 21"'-n us dlplo<Mt WM .... -26._. 21c.or1ted 210u1lllwt l)llrtutr"t PMVIOUa PUZZL1 IOLffD 2t~aar- 2t M of mpll ,30s.1ow1 31 Frtglll~ 33 l(ldl .,., H WoocN U'*1 37 SolMY\' 3t Rope INllllnQ9 40~• 42 Filltd With -.dtment 43~ .,....._ ... Gant MMOllO lfW 47W~llirf 41FOOCb9il9'111 Tlm - 50~ •t AofMl'tp ~ Vafllly S$ Coquettlatl II JI 13 ·, USED CARS l TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR nu IPfUllll. Connter-Oellto mYlll.IT 18211 BEACHILVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 141-t01lal41-1111 nWllTJlm &UlallUIJ s.. Ronald oece THEODORE ROBINS FORD JOI'"' HAll\01 llt1o1D C0\1A 11111\A t> 1' 1010 LARGE SELECTION Ofl NEW & USED BMW'SI Lm---VOLVME SALES SER'IK:E & Lv.stNG 34170 N. °'*'Y AV9. LONG BEACH Air, CHMtt•. MliJI, Ctui1e Tiit. Automatic •111 ... IJl.11/• + tu eo mo CEL . TOP 13.12t·A...S S046 IO. l.---r--:.....,------~mri pAP 12.117 • I A&kl8ob in l9Nlng 18711 Beach Blvd 184018-dl Hunt 147·1707 a Hortaon dr, .no.*• PIS. mdl. $3250. a 1 t ..... ,aswwwxa Only 10,000 MllH, LOADED, I Cr' CSM7•> -· . ASK ABOUT OUR 5 YUR /50 ,000 MllE SERVICE ·CONTRACT NEW '84 CORDIA (Ser #552238) ¥ t I g NEW '84 TREDIA . (Ser. #550888) TRIPLE DIAMOND USED CARS 1982 HOllDA lllGHTHAWI MC 450cc. Excellent Condition (1W4645) 1980 POllTIAC GRAllD PRIX Auto Trans, AM/FM Stereo Cass, Power Steer & Brakes, Air Cond, Cruise Control, Tiit Wheel, MUCH MOREi (532906) 197 4 FORD PlllTO SQUIRE Wl&Oll Economy 4 cy1, Auto Trani, AM Radio, Roof Rack (333MCB) 1982 TOYOTA TERCEL 4 door, 5 speed, Air Con- dition, Radio (1FGF018) 1917 HOIDA CIVIC 5 spd, Radio, Heater, Econ- omy Special. Extra Sharpl (137TEK) 1982 DATSUll · SEllTRA Economy, 4 cyt, Auto Trans, M/FM Radio, Power Steer & Brakes, Air Cond (1EBK161) 1979 CHEVROLO LUV PICKUP 4 Whl Drive, Radio, Heater, Custom Wheefs, Tires, Extra Clean. Low Miies (1$46718) 1982 TOYOTA CELICA 5 spd, AM/FM Stereo Cassette, Power Steer & Brakes, Air Cond, Tiit whl, Cruise Control (1ECR211) SL 6 1 i JU 2 LOW . ' I MOllHLY \ \' PAiMENTS ~ NEW '84 MIGHn MAX 1980 TOYOTA CO ROW SPORT COUPE Auto Trans, Air Cond, AM/FM Stereo Cassette (1AKB884) 1983 MITSUBISHI CHiil LI AM/FM Digital CU., AJr Cond, CrulM Cont, Digital Duh, Tilt, POW« Steer & Brak.. & Windows, Cu1t Wheels, Factory Exec Car ( 1 FZR939) 1979 HOIDA PRELUDE Black Beauty, Automatic Transmission, Moon Roof (532ZCS) 1984 MITSUBISHI MOITERO SAN DIEGO FWY STORE HOURS: 8:30 Al ·• 9 Pl Ion-Sit 10 Al • 8 Pl SUllDIY EXTEtiDED s1•v1c1 CONTRACT AVAIABLE ON QUALIFllD UllD CARI ... caum11m11 -FRIDA 't AUGIJS T 10. 1984 - ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA ~5 CENT S .BB crash vietiiD c·lings to lifj / Former UC lrvlne dis- tance runner Steve Scott goes for the gold Satuiday after shak- ing off pre-rac'e jitters. PageBl. Laguna's tram service may keep rolllng untll Labor Day./ AS Callf ornla · AIDS victim with 105 degree temperature, was tranferred by friends 200 miles to Bay Area hospl- taJ./ A4 ·-~==-:·-===~ Nation Two women described as •man haters' accused of kllllng one man, Injuring another./AS World Four passengers on hi- jacked plane In Rome are missing./ AA People Leave It to John Wiison to develop a welghtllfter with muscles like marshmallows./85 Entertaining for corpor- ate VIPs haa become another marathon at the Otymplcs./85 Sporta The pitching of Orel Hershlser and two re- lievers and Greg Brock's homerglvesOodgers 1-0 wln./82 Ex-Corona del Mar High tennis standout Jessica AlgazJ Is ready to test professional competl- tlon./84 Entertainment If you think the opening ceremony of the Olym- pics was something, wait till you see the grand flnale./87 Sawdust Festrval has grown up and Into the hearts of Laguna tourists as a summer tradition. /Weekender Bualneu Real estate brokers ap- plaud court ruling on commlaslons.1•7 INDEX Auto Piiot C 1-8 Erma Bomb.ck Be Bridge 88 Bulletin Board A3 Bu~neea A7 CaHfornla News . A• CIUll"-d c.t-7 Comlct 88 Crouword C7 Death Notlcel C3 ~ 87 Help Younett BfS Horoecope ce Ann landera Be Mutuet Fund1 A7 NatlOnal Ntwl A4 Oplnlart AfS Peper UZI 85 p~ 854 Poke Log A3 Publle Notlca C3-4 AeltMWlntt WMkendtir Police hol drunken driver suspe~t · a ter early morning car collision By STEVE MARBLE . °' .. ...., ......... A 20-year-old man who was help- ing push a disabled car off a roadway in Huntington Beach early tOday was critically injured when he was struck from behind by a suspected drunken driver, police reponed. Frank Huey, a Cypreu resident. was fiJhting for his life today at the Fountain Valley Community Hospi- tal trauma center where he is listed in extremely criticar condition. accord- ing to a hospital spokeswoman. Gold within their grasp Coach Monte l'flt&kcnnkl of Banttnaton Beach and mem- ben of Illa u.a. water polo team erupt --~ ent.ba•l••m u the Americana nip We.t Germany 8-7 Thanctay to earn a •hot at the &old medal acatmt YqoelaYI& tom,Jit. From N-.gasaki Day marked by vigil in Seal Beach Pacifists 'satisfied' no nukes are stored- at weapons station By PHIL SNEIDEBM.AN Of .. ...., ..... ...., Demonstrating continued opposi- tion to nuclear weap<>ns, about 200 people participated in a Napsak1 Day Candlelight Memorial \rt he Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station Thurs-d~. The event marked the 39th an- niversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Napsaki, Japan. Seal Beach pohce said the demon- stration, sponsored by the Orange County AJliance for Survival. went smoothly and there were no unusual incidents. Earlier in the day. the alliance held a press conferen~ to announce that the orpnizahon is satisfied that no nuclear weapons arc now stored at the Seal Beach base. The group <:!aimed community pressure caused the Navy to move the nuclear weapons to other locations. Fourteen months ago. a federal study requested by U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, [).Calif:, stated that the Seal Beach base no longer had "the capability" for handling and loading nuclear weapons. The revelation was a strong depanure from the Navy's long-standing policy of refusing to confirm or deny the existence of (Pleue tee APITl-NUU/ A2) Donations start the· ball rolHng for UCI Events Center Campus Events Cclller capable of accommodatina S,000 or more &>«- tators. The tdca has been tossed :around for a number of ycan. Coach Mullipn reportedly was lured to UCI four years aao .,ith a promitc that UC Irvine's Anteater blsketblll antiquated Crawford Hall would team lw 1ttr1CtCd nationwide atten· soon be rcpla~. Mullipa•s still tion overthepestfour~n under the waitina. leadenhip of Coteh 81U Mulhpn. A coupl of years aao. U I students But, tronically, While the nauon has even 'oted to th m \es an ~ 81·4 '~eta--~----~ looked on, many students bave bcc.n add1t1onal '4 to help Pl) for tM unable attend t0me oft.he Anteaters' center, Which Id be a pthenna most ucitina home pm . That's place forcvcf')1h1 from pcech b)' bec:aute sauna 11 UCl 1 home coun. An Buchwald to coQCltn by rock Crawford Hall, 11 1im11Cd to a scant stars. The tudcnts,. too. arc suit -r.600. waffina. To provide the basketball t m and But no th ball s to be ~ Weekender =:rc,n;;.. ~ other U I 1cuv1t1cs wtth an ex· rollina, campus officials say. ~nded, improved howcasc. un1\ er· ThC center 1 cxPcc1cd to t'O t S 13.~ sily and commun1t) lcadcr1 have m1lhon. Th ne tudcnt f« and n PtC$ 1 fl r con U\1ct1on of 1 . um\I 1t)' contnbuuon wtll CO\ICr . . . . Huntington &nch police said Huey and two other ntcn were pushing the Baja-style Volkswagen bug off Warner Avenue near Meadowlark Airport when a aedan driven by David Mark Zemeck1, 30. ploy,cd into the disabled car . "The other two guys apparently heard the car coming and were able to move owt of the way," sai. Jeff Cope ~1d. •·Hueywasn't able to get away." Zcmeck1 , a Buena Park residtnL was arresttd at the scene of the 2:3S a.m. actidCnt on sutp1cion 'of felony drunken driving, Cope id. H~ reportedly was knocked into the air by the impact and hurled onto the hood of' Zemed1'1 I~ Mazda, police wd. The Qyj>rcu man hn the windshield oftht Mazda before being thrown to the pavement. offiocn added. • ""TJie Ba,a bug was hit so hard it knock~ off' the roadv.'a)' into. a d1i-t left are Doq Barke, aulata.ilt coach Kea Lindlren -al80 a Ranttniton Beach resident. l'fltskowakl, Gary F.J,ueroa (hidden1. Ch.rt• Dont and Ual•tant coach Stne Beuton. Story OD Pa&e Bl. • 0.-,Nmt ................... Alliance for Sarrinl membenal.nf oatalde main &ate of Seal Beach WeapouStadon durlni candleJJ&htmemorlal for l'f &Cuaki bombln&Tlcthm of 1145. ticld," Cope id. Gale RObctti. 25, of Gardai GfO¥e and a woman idenufiod u Felicia Rose lffee1 16, Of ~ GIO¥C ustamed minor inJuncs. Both WR ridina inside the YW when dW atcidcnt t00k place. ~cco~::J to witnesses. die VW was trav west on Warner Ava-w t.'ben its engine died aoma up ....... hill nnr Bo1J3 Chica Ava-I.I(. Hwy (Pl--.... C&AU/AS) Ftiends recall slain youtti JJ STEVE MARBLE °' ... ....,,... ... At~~~ •"'" EijliSti.maii witJi a crisp accent ea .. ~--=-*=II proper bearina. his friends remcmbe(_ bjm u an all-American type. .. .. He was just a darn sood Icici: Athletic, outioing, polite, frietldly~ Everyone liked him." said Jtrr) Zucker, a sales malf8&Cr at an lrVino industriaJ firm ..,here l 8-year-old Ka_r.; worked. · • "' He was your all-American ty~ kid," he added. -.. Kaye was murdefcd last week. ,.. His body was found putially- buried in a sewer ditch at an Irvine' construction site days aft.Cr' be bad. been reported miss.int. Policic said•~ appcan the youth was shot once irr the heart and then buried under abou 20 inches of loose sand. • The l 8-)ur-old's ru-pfather, Bruer Bradley Ralefl. S7. has been IJ'1'eStc4 for the cnme. Ralph, held oo SS00,000 bail, ,..ill be ~ Olf murder ctwJ,CS Thursday. • AJthou&h police have not dcwJed a motive for the fatal sbootina. &milt friends sa¥-JC,aye was caughL"1 the middJc of a falliD& out between hit mother and his stepfather. • The youth. who would have been a senior at Newport Harbor Hi~ this fall, lived to Costa Mesa WJtb hi mother to whom be was very elate. friends said. • (Pleue-SLAIN/~ Swells swell along ·coast • • • .. • • • • .. • " • " " Surfs up along the Orange Coast." Lifeguard stations from Hunt miton Beach to Laguna Beach were reporting the surf is the hi&hest it ha• been this summer. The best surfing is off Newport Beach where lifeguards were repon- ina 8-to l ().foot swells at the famed Wcd&c on the BaJbQa Peninsula and at the 18th Street BcAch. ~ Other beaches up and down the coast have waves ofbct't.-ttn 3 and S feet· and buildina "-ith & surfinc conditions. • ''This couJd last throuJh tb'c week- end." said Buddy Bclsbe. a Newport (Pleue eee SUD'S/ A.2) PHIL S1EIDEllAI NEWS BA CKGROUND Railing collapse t CSUF' Olymp handball hurt • lZ Worst Olympic trcifficmay come · ext week when visi1tors leave -"tbc l kda> momtna ru h ur of the 19 4 Olympic w mooth 1hna on mo t Southern c.ti!omi free > today, but an official warned lhat dcpartina touri t • eouJd an rt uuflie Monday, "There could be some buildup of \nlflic Monday," 1d Cnlifomia De- pattment of Transpartat1on spok~· man W.T. ''Doc' Maloney, who ellplained that Montrtal expcnenccd unflkt.icups a!teuheJtnd I Olymp~cs Traffic flowed frttl) on mosi freeway~ chis mommg, w1lh some hght but sull below-normal ron1cs· tton reported around the downtown area and m Orange County, Maloney said. He noted that officials e~~ctcd heavy conaestion this tvenins on freeways leadina to the Olympic soccer site-at Pasadena's Rose Bowl. but only typical "liaht-to-medium•: SLAIN YOUTH WELL LIKED ... .Prom Al .. He ~as one of the be:>t kids I've • ever met." -;aid Brick· Bailey. the wrtsthna coach at the high school. "He was probably goinf to be varsit) team captain this year.' Zucker, who counted Ka)e as a flirnl'I "" , .... 11 --~" • -il•1r<1 em!'lo~ee. HBCRASH •.. From Al and the other two men ndmg 10 the car got out of" the vehicle and started pushing tt toward the curb, police s~ud. Others at the accident scene said the disabled car's headlights were on and that the vehicle was platnly visible from both d1rect1on~. Zcmcck1 reportedly told offl.C'ers at lhe scene that he didn't see the car. , said the handsome youth lived a clean hfe and excelled in almost all sports. "You could tell he was the kind who wasgomg to go far." s~ud Zucker. "lt was JU St a summer job he had here but I asked him at least once 1f he'd keep working after school." The day before Kaye was killed, the youth's mother obtained a restraining order in Orange County Supenor Coun meant to prevent Ralph from either visiting or phoning the hou\C where the mother and son lived. Court documents' show Ralph and Kaye's mother were divorced nearly two years ago. They tried but fajJed to reconcile after coming to this country, friends said. According to Deputy D1stnct At- torney Rick King. Ralph has bttn diagnosed m the past as a manic depressive. He took medication for bis condition, accordinit to Kin,,_ He Fri f\ m n ~ \lt~ ~ e sew ere, with no notable conaes· tion. Wtth the Ol}·mpics endin Sunday, outhern California commuters con- tinued their low fall off the wagon this w~k. ndinJ the frte~ya in full force and bringina traffic ~olume 10 above normal for the fiflt time since the Olympics began. But conaestion remained below averag.c because motorists continued to staagcr their work and travel hou,.,, reportedly is a citizen o(England who came to this country by way of South Africa. Young Kaye was last seen on Aug. I when he left his job at Kennedy Plastics Corp. in lrvine. He was dri vina an orange J 976 Mercury Capri. The same day. a handful of motor- ists reported ~ing the car parked off Boni La Canyon Road near the county dump. Witnesses reported also seeing what appeared to be a body sprawled near the car and a mao who they later identified as Ralph. Kaye's body was discovered scv· eral days later by workers who were prepanng to fill in a sewer line ditch in lrvtne's Turtle Rock community. The Capri sull has not been located. A memonal service for Kaye 1s to be held Monday at 3:30 p.m. at Harbor Lawn Memorial Park in Costa Mesa. ;ANTI-NUKE DEMONSTRATION HELD ••• P'romAl nuclear weapons at Seal Beach · .But Tim Carpenter. a spokesman (or the alhancc. said hts group was unwilling to acce_pt that report, prepared by the Government Ac- counting Office. · During the past year, David Lynn. the alliance's director of research, has been rcquesltn9' the support docu- ments that led the GAO to its conclus1ons ln add1t1on. Lynn and other al- liance members ha.,.e observed ac· tivaties at the Seal Beach base. looking for signs of the storage of nuclear weapons. including the contatners and sccunty patrols associated with such devices Some obscn.at1on was done with telescopes pos1t1oned outside the base. he said. "We nov. know there are no nuclear weapons at Seal Beach.'' Carpenter said at the news conference. But L~n clain:lcd the GAO docu- ments did reveal other safety hazards at the 5,000-acre base. which itill supplies conventional weaponry to the Navy's Pacific fleet. He said the safety problems include the improper storage of hazardous materials and the case with which sabotage could occur in Anaheim Bay. which serves as an entry to the base and to the Huntington Harbour rcs1dent1al area. Thursday's news conference. which took place at the home of antt- nuclear activist Mary Lou Brophy. had polittcal overtones. Brophy 1s running for the U.S. congressional scat in the 42nd D1stnct agamst Dan Lungren. R-Long Beach. During the conference. she accepted a campaign contributton from the ~I Beach Nuclear Action Group and pledged to vote a&Ainst nuclear wca_pons and for a nuclear freeze. if elected. Even before entering the political race, nowever:' Brophy had been pressing for information about nu- clear weaponry at the Seal Beach base. In 1981, she was among the residents who sued the Navy in federal court, trying to force an admission that nuclear weapons were stored at Seal Beach. The lawsuit was dismissed the following year by a federal judge, prompting a change of tactics. That led Cranston to request the GAO study, which produced the t 983 disclosure that nuclear weapons were no longer at the base. "All of lb.is was a David-and- Goliath situation," Brpphy said Thursday. ':Jt did not make me a popular woman m Seal Beach." SURF'S UP FOR OC .•. Brophy said she bchevcs the Navy dectded to move its nuclear weapons from Seal Beach at the time her lawsuit was being considered. From Al Beach lifeguard captam "This 1s best surf we h&\C had all summer " A hurncaneoff ofBa1aCaltfom1a 1s responsible for the good waves. he said. "For t'-'O or three days 1t was heading lO"'-ard Hawa11 but tl turned back into an area we call 'the window' where storms give us good surf, Belshe said. Water temperatures throuih the weekend should be in the low-fOs and the air temperature should be m the high-70s making fo r some nice beach weather. Alliance for Survival spokesman Carpenter said his group wiU now press for the removal of all wea~nry from the Seal Beach base, which he said 1s too close to a densely popu- lated area. "This 1s no place for the Navy to be storing ammunition -nuclear or conventional," he said. UCI EVENTS CENTER FUNDING •.• From Al Orange Count) •'> full ot worthy causes that could use a m1llton-dollar donation. Why did Bren pick the UCI Events Center,, "Mr. Bren has had a long-standing interest tn bnnging the uni\'ers1ty and the communit) together." explained Gary Hunt. who 1s an Irvine Co vice president and assistant to Bren Hunt also 1s co-chairman of a commmee raising communily funds for the Events Center. "[ believe (Bren) understands the positive benefits that UCI brings to Orange Count) as a whole.'' Hunt said. "The more the business com- munity can support UC I, the better the university can provide athletic and cultural events that others can enJOY" He added. "If lherc ""as one program that would do more to bnng the communat) into the unl\erslt> and let the un1\ers11\ reach out to the community. 11 "'-Ouid be the EH~nts • Center." Hunt also ackno~l~gcd that Bren 11 an a-.1d sportsman himself enJO\· ing tennis. sk11ng. sailing and Jogging. Hunt said Bren also ""as impressed ·that L (I students were willing to impose an add1t1onal fee on them- selves to raise $7 m1lhon for the center The fee 1s S2J a quarter or S69 per )car for students who enroll in the Just Call 642-6086 D•llY Piiot O.llvery I• Quarante.d usual three quarters annually. Uni- versity officials said the fee wtll be collected for 30 years, beginning when the Events Center is built. Still, the student commitment has been known for some u me. To move the project out of the planmog stages. more communtty donauons are needed "Mr. Bren thought his m1lhon- dollar gift would be a shot m the arm to the community fund-ra1s1ni pro- gram," Hunt said. "I think this 11ft brings the type of focus that's necess- ary (to secure additional donations).'' That's what UCI officials are hoping as well. Athletic director Caine said the community fund is now about S2 million away of its goal. But he said the remaining money must at least be pledged before constructton of the Events (enter can beg.in. I He s.a1d the limned seating m Crawford Hall has been a source of naggmg frustration. particularly to students "There ha\e been times when the} couldn't get tickets to see their own team play." Came said. The basketball team has ex- pcnmented with larger off-campus snes. with little success. he said The .\nahe1m Convention Center is of\en booked with conventions. and the Long Beach Arena 15 too far for man) students to attend. Crawford Hall's shortcomings have also hurt the university's efforts to recruit first-rate athletes. ucrs 1,500-scat facility has trouble stack- ing up against, say, the new 18,000- scat arena used by the University of Nevada -Las Vegas. Caine said UNLV basketball games draw an average of 16,000 spectatofl. The athletic director said the new UCI Campus Events Center is now beinJ designed by the Los An&cles archnectural firm of Parkin As. sociates. It will be built to easily allow future expansion to 8,500 sea~. University officials hope construc- tion can begin late tt1is year or early next year. Came said the university has promised the Pacific Coast Athletic Assoc1at1on that the new facility will be ready for the 1986-87 basketball season. That would require the center to.be finished by December I 986. But the Campus Events Center would not be restricted to basketball games. Caine said the facility will be available for general physical educa- tion acuv1ucs and orgaruzed sports such as men's and women's vol- levball. exh1b1uon tenms. and indoor soccer f acuity convocations and C\Cnts open to the non-university community may also be scheduled at the Events Center. What do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe number at left and your me11a1e will be recorded, trao1crtbed and delivered to t.be appropriate editor. .. The same U·bour answering urvlce may be used to record letter• to the editor on any topic. Contributor• to our Lettert column mast lDclade their name and telephone oum~r for verification. No clrculatlon calls, plHlt'. Tell us what'• on your mlDd. · ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Clrculatlon 71•1'42~· Clntlfled ed¥ertltlng 714/'42·1171 All oth« ct.pertment• M2..a21 MAIN OFffCI )JO Wn1 , 61 Cos•1 ....,. CA M.i -Ga> I~ H. L. Schwartz Ill Pubtlsher Clrculallon Te .. phOn•• Lorne Bruchet Advert1s1ng Director Roumary Churchman Controll r Bt~ban.E.....Car-t-DO aid l , Wllllam• Production C1rculahon Managev-Mana~r .. Tldea TODAY S-07 a.m t tsp"' IATIMOAV 4211.m Temps '° 50•.m ll..O•m t4tpm ... 2 2 3 11 ~-'n~ ... -1 II JI '' n IO '9 ., .. . .. .. .. .. T1 11 .. 1• .. .. ,, .. 10 .. .. 11 N .. .. ft .. n rt 10 50 ... .. 11 U 11 .. .. .. u .. N IS ---..__,• fll .. 71 .. 10 IO • "n II a. ., .. 103 12 " n ll .. . .. n 17 14 17 11 t2 • 71 12 10 10 .. 11 10 14 IO 7' .. 72 to It a 11 10t '2 17 70 , 1no 11 a 2 a 2 ,, 11 .. 11 a M to 7J IO M " . 17 72 " .. 17 73 -17 70 • ,, 11 t2 • .. 71 12 74 Water qi.d plan for county killed in ·state committee Leaislation that would ha~e given much of Orange and San Diego coumics ~ter shares of Metro-· politan Water District water supplies during droughts was dcep-sixcd in the state Legislature this week. After lobbying from legislators rcprcscotin& Los An&eles County, which opposed the plan, the Senate Agriculture and Water Resources Committee rejected the new emerg· ency allocation plan submitted by the MWD, Southern Cahfornia's giant water-distributing aicncy. In a letter to the committee, Senate President Pro Temporc David Rob- erti. D-Los Ansclei, sugested the matter was "far too import.ant" to be dealt W1th "hastily" in the waning days of the 1984 legislative ses.s1on. He also pomted out that since the existtn& plan hu worked for the past 57 years. urgency was not an issue. The plan would have shifted the formula so that water allocations under the prcfercnual rights system would be based on the amount of water purchased from MWD rather If the 9-lan bad been approved most of Orange and San D1qo counties would have received increased emergency allocations in case of a drought while Los An&elcs COunty, which purchases less water from MWD but has a &realer pro~y tax base. would tose a portion of its share. Among Oranse County water asen· cies that would have gamed under tile revised plan were the Coastal Munici· oal Wattr Dillrict. IUVllti Newport beach, Laguna Beach, portions of Costa Mesa and poinu south, the Municipal Water District of Orange County, serving most of Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, and parts of Newport Beach, as well u the cities of Santa Ana, Anaheim and Fullerton. Crash close~ freeway in Irvine Patrolmen blocked all southbound traffic on the San Diego Freeway in Irvine late this momin& following 1 traffic accident at the La1una Canyon road offramp that left three persons trapped in the wreck..,e of a car, officers reported. Details about the 10:30 a.m . acci- dent were sketchy. There were no report.S on who was tnJured, how senous the inJ unes were and how many vehicles were in· volvcd. Orange County paramedics and firefighters were brought to the scene to free the injured The California Hi&Jiway Pauol said all southbound lanes of the San Deigd Freeway between the offramp and the freeway's intersection with the Sant.a Ana Freeway to the south had been closed. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ * NOW"THROUGH L:ABOR DAY WEEKEND * 20% OF:F ALL POTTERY SALE INCLUDES: •POTTERY • SAUC•RS • BARR•LS • R•DWOOD TUBS • WIR• BASK•TS •STRAW BASK•TS • AND POTTING SOIL TOOi AMLING ' s ewport Nur ery and Garden Center (Between MacArthur and Jambor I- SQ . , - FRIDAY. AUGUST 10. 1984 Former UC lrvlne dis- tance runner Steve Scott goes for the gold Saturday after shak- ing off pre-race jitters. PageBl. Cout Laguna's tram servtce may keep rolling until Labor Day .I A3 Calif om la AIDS victim with 105 degree temperature, was tranferred by friends 200 miles to Bay Area hospl- tal./ M Nation Two women described as 'man haters' accused of killing one man, Injuring another./ A5 World Four passengers on hi-· jacked plane In Rome are missing./ A4 Pe0ple Leave It to John Wiison to develop a weightlifter with muscles like marshmallowa./85 EntertaJnlng for corpor- ate VIPs has become another marathon at the Olymprcs./85 ~ Sports The pitching of Orel Herahlser and two re- lievers and Greg Brock's homer gives Dodgers 1-0 wln./82 Ex-Corona del Mar High tennis standout Jessica Algazl Is ready to test professional competl- tlon./84 Entertainment If you think the opening ceremony of the Olym- pics was something, waJt tlll you see the grand flnaJe./87 Sawdust Festival has grown up and Into the hearts of Laguna tourists as a summer tradition. IWMkender Bulneu Real estate brokers ap- . ptaud court ruling on commissions./ A7 C1-8 88 B8 A3 A7 A-4 C4-7 ea C7 C3 87 ee ce 88 A7 A4 AS 85 BM A3 C3..t Weekender 81 .. A8 87 WMktinder A2 A4 . Gold Within their IJ'UP eo.ch lloate Rltakcnnkl of BUDdJICton Beacb and mem- ben of Illa U.8. water polo team erupt witll entllulaem u tile Americana nJp Weet Oerinany 8--7 Th~f',: earn a ahot at tbe &old medal 8'.m.t Yqoela'ria to t. Fr0m N~gasaki ·nay marked by vigil in· Seal Beach · Pacifists 'satisfied' no nukes are stored at weapons station By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. °"' P'9t .... Dcmonstratina continued opposi- tion to nuclear weapons. about 200 people participated in a Nagasaki Day Candleli&ht Memorial at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station Thurs- day. The event marked the 39th an- niversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan. Seal Beach police said the demon- stration, sPQnsorcd by the Orange County Alliance for Survival. went · smoothly and there were no unusual incidents. f.arlier in the day, the alliance held a press conference to announce that the orpnization is satisfied that no nuclear weapons are now stored •t the Seal Beach base. The group ct.aimed community pressure caused the Navy to move the nuclear weapons to other . locations. Fourteen monttis ago, a federal · study requested by U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Cahf., stated that the Seal Beach base no longer had "the capability" for handlina and loading nuclear weapons. The revelation was • strona depl(ture from the Navy's long-standing pohcy of refusmg to confirm or deny the existence of (Pleue eee AJlfTJ.IWU/ A2) Irvine Co. starts the ball rolling for UCI Ev:ents Center a 13 million project for la er f aclllty 11111111• CH~ A NG [ C 0 UN T Y l A L If 0 ~~ NI A } c, C F N l "-i e' .. Drunken driver suspect held In morning incident By STEVE MARBLE ............... A 20-year-old man who was help. ing push a disabled car off a roadway in Huntiqion Beach earl)' today was criticall> injured when he was strudk from ~nd by a su~ dnmUn driver, police reported, Frank Huey, a C)'pl'elliJ .resident, was fi&bting for bis life tdday at the Fountain Valley Community Hospi· ta1 trauma cmter ,.,'here be~ listed in extRmely critical cooditioft. aax>rd- ing to a hospital spokesworg,an. Huntington Beach poqce said (Plcue Me BB CaABB/A.2) BJ STEVE MARBLE Of .. .., ........ Althousll Bradley Kaye was an Enalishman with a crisp accent and a bcarina. bis friends remember ~an all-American type. .. He was just a darn aood kid. Athktic, outgoing. polite, friendly. Everyone liked ~.. said Jerry Zucker1 a sales ~ at an lrviDe industrial firm where 11-ycar..old ·Kaye worked. .. He was your all-American type kid. .. be added. Kaye was muritercd last week. His body wu fowid pa.rtialJy buried in a sewer ditch at an Irvine construction site days after he bad ..-.--...-.....:'--beeD reponed missiae. Police aid 1t left are~ Barke, ..i.tantcoachllen LID~ -al90a Bantt.nitOn Beach resident. l'fllskcnraki, QUy Ftaaeroa (hidde,nl. Chrla Dont and u.letant coach Sten lleutoJi. &tory OD Pace Bl. ........... ., ........... Alll&.oce fer Sumftl membenetnc oat.tdemaln &ate of Seal Beach Weapona Station dlirlni candleU,ht memorial forNa&uakl bomb~Ylcttmaof 1~5. appears tbc youtb ~ shot once in the beartaild then buncd under about 20 mcbes of IOOIC sand. · The 18-year..old's stepfather, Bruce (Pleue Me SLA.111/A.2) Swells swell along Coast Surfs up alona the Oranse Coast. Lifeguard stations from Hunt- ington Beach to l...quna 8cacb 9"CrC reportina the surf is the highest it bas been this summer. The best surfing is off Newport Beach where lifquards were report- 1111 8-to 10-foot swells at the famed Wed&e on the Balboa Peninsula and at the 18th Street Beach. Other beaches up and down the coast have v.-avcs of between 3 and S feet and bu11dina with aood surfin& conditJons. "ThtS could last through the week- end.·· said Buddy Belsbe. a Newport (Pleue eee sUJUt•s1 A2) P11L S1E1De111 NEWS BACK GROUND ailing collapse at CSUF Olyi;nplc handball hurt 4 • Orengo Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Frldey, AUllUl110, 188-4 • CoNTINUlU SroR1Es ·'SLAIN YOUTH WELL LIKED ••• From Al Bradley Ralttb, 57, has ~n armted llfeand cxctUed 1n almost 1ll 1poru. ca~c to this country by way of South for the cnmc. Ralph~ld on ''You could tcU he was the ktnd Afnca. $JOO OOOOiit; Wilrlie -arraaantdOn -wfi.o "'"IO'lll fo&Ofir-aard-z:~iiiiii . ....;"'l'iio:iion"'a""•'Y'' ""1l$ llST: nonAl.ll-I murlier charaes Thursday. ..It wujusta summer}'ob he had here when he Id\ his job at Kennedy Altho ...... r.hct"havenotdewleda but I ask~ him at least o~ce if he'd Plastics Corp. io Irvine. He was • • ,..., • 1: il "e<t> wor"'••after-hool. dn'v1'•• an oran•• 1976 Me-·ry ~olive fort e fatal tboo11n,. i_am Y a. Tbcda,Yb:rore ~e was killtd, the ca ri:----'"'" iJ1 1~nds $&( Kah~ was cauabt in ~~e youth'\_molherob1a1ncd.1 rcstrainina !fhc same day1 a hand!UJ of motor-tn1ddle o • {ahna out bei~n ·~ otder .1n Orange County Superior istsreportedtee1ngthecarparkedoff' mother and his stepfather. Coun mean1 to prevent Ralph from Boni1a Canyon Road near the county i.. The youth, who Would have been a ci1her visitina or phonina the house dump. Witnesses reported also k.Cina ,senior at Newpon Harbor HiJ)_J this wbete lbc mother-andlbn tlvcd. Wba"t appearc<ft~ lbOdy sprawled ;fall, lived ·in Costa Mesa with his Court documents show Ralph and near the c:arand a man who I.hey later mother to whom ·he was very cl0$C, Kaye's mother were divorced nearly identified as Ralph. · ,friends said. two ycanago. They tried but failed to Kaye's body was discovered sev~ '"He wai one of the best kids I've reconcileaftercominatothiscountry, eral days later by workers who wete 'ever met," said Brick Bailey, the friends said. r,repanngto fill inasewerlineditch in ,.wrntling coach at the hi&h school. According 10 Deputy Districl At· rv1nc's Turtle Rock community. ,:·He was probably goinJ to be varsity tomey Ric:k King, Ralph has been The Capri still has not been located. 1tram captain this year. di~oscd in the past ·as a manic-A memorial scrvict for Kaye is to Zucker. who counted Kaye as a dipressivc. Ke took medication for be held Monday at 3:-30 p.m. at ,friend as well as a valued employee. bis condition~ accordina to King. He Harbor Lawn Memorial Partc in said the handsome you th Jivedaclcan reportedly is a citizen of Eng.land who Costa Mesa. HB CRASH VICTIM CRITICAL ••• ·From Al ifucy and two other men were h • High clouds and clear skies Tides ----... ..... So01 Liii. 9:1111.111 .. IATUMIA't ..... ::!:tic. -.. ... 4.11 .. 111. I0'.60 .... S·«l a.111. l;tlp.1111. .. " " T .. .. .. " " " ti ... .. " • .. • .. • .. .. " .. " .. " .. .. " .. " .. .. " .. .. .. " .. n " .. :1 .. .. .. ::· .. ·Q~~ FlllONTI•' .. • .. WtJtr1-COICI.,. • .. • " SPIC>,,,,.<& lllaitl FIUf••t Sno* oc~o..., S1•~Y .,.. ·= " ,. " .. .. ::=r-" 64 ... .......,IJ_ft. .. " " ............ .. .. .. _ .. .. ,,_ .. .. • P1oAdlla " ;~== .. "' .. :::::r ... .. .. N 'n .,. .. _.. .. .. .. -.. 11 9yrkUl9 " .. " -.. 71 TDjMM .. " " --"' ",_ " " .. .. ._ .. " -" .. • ........ , ..... .. .. w-.. " .. ........ "" .. " -" .. 10 ........... .. 7& w. .......... .. .. " ... _ " " Wllr!*"IJIOl'l,0... H .. 1• ... ~ n 11·-.. " = '" .. " " .. " .. .. n • " 10 " .. " " • pushing the Baja-style Volkswagen bug off Warner A venue near ~Meadowlark Airport when a sedan driven by David Mark Zemccki, 30, plowed into the disabled car. the air by the impaC1 and hurled onto the hood of Zemccki's 1984 Mazda, police said. The Cyprus man hit the windshield of the Mar.da before being thrown to the pavement,. officers added. Temps accidenl took place. , According to witnCSSC$. the VW "' La wastraveledwcstonWamerAvcnuc ~ 11 11 .. " "' .. " " .... " when its enginedicdgoing up a slight =:::(IUll ~ =: hill near Bolsa Chica Avenue. Huey ~=· 10 5<4 a.oc.t.noM '"The other two guys apparently heard the car coming and were able 10 move out of the way," Sgt. JtfTCope ~$8.id. ""Huey wasn't able to get away." "The Baja bug was hit so hard it was knocked off the roadway in10 a din field." Cooc said. and the other two metl'riding in the ~ai,. :; ~ E_. ded --car got out of the vehicle and started AY1C1n " 1s .a"eD ::'.::.~ -t: ... ••• .... ... ... pushing it toward the curb, police ~ : ~ '°"""""''""*'*"'Wllliow =:=:••P001 said. "'"-<* IO 50 doudll_;'.!!!:~1'Dt= ~lwfl Zemcck1, a Buena Park resident, was arrested at 1hc scene of the 2:35 Jl.m. accident on suspicion of felony .drunken driving, Cope said. Gale RObcns, 25, of Garden Grove and a woman identified as Felicia Rose l..eYCC, 1-6, j)( G..ankn Grove sustained minor injuries. Both were riding inside the VW when the Others at tbe accidenl scene said :=.. i: ~~ ::::Zonuatib~wii..'--:r'...,~.,, the disabled car's headlights were on ""'*' 11 10 ,_.,,~a .... ~90UCll ... and that the vehicle was plainly ~~~~~====~~=:::::::=:::=~==========~~===== vili!lk_f_rpm both directiQl!h_ __ · ~ Zcmccki rcponedly told officers at the scene that he didn't see the car. Huey reportedly was knocked into .. ANTI-NUKE DEMONSTRATION HELD ••• 'll'TomAl . -nuclear ~capo~j ~t .Scal fka~h.:. · 8ut_Tun C?afpC:nt.cr~.a s.polisman for the alliance, said his group was unwilling to accept that repon, ,prepa~-by t.he .Government Ac· rount1ng Office. During the past year. David Lynn , 1.the alliance's dirCClor of research, has occn requesting the support docu- ments that led the GAO to its 'conclusions. / .. In addition, Lynn and other al- ·tiancc members have ·Observed ac- tivities at the Seal Beach base, looking ''for signs of the storage of nuclear weapons, including the containers and security patrols associated with such devices. Some observation was done with telescopes positioned outside the base, he said. "We now know there are no nuclear weapons at Seal Beach." Carpenter • said at the news conference:. Bui.LY!""~cd-tllc GAO docu· mentS dtd re" cal ·other safety hazards at the S,QOO..acrc base, which still , supplies_conven1ional weaponry 10 the Navy's-J>acifre fleet . - Ke said the safety problems include the improper storage of hazardous materials and the cast with which sabotage could occur in Anaheim Bay, which serves as an-entry 10 the base and to the Huntington Harbour residential area. Thursday's news conference. which took place at the home of anti- nuclear activist Mary Lou Brophy, had political overtones. Brophy is running for the U.S. congccssional ~~t in the 42nd District against Dan Lungren. R-Long Beach. During the conference. she accepted a campaign contribution from the Seal Beach Nuclear Action Group and pledged lO vot_~ns~car weapons &!!d for a nuclear freeze, if elected. Even before entering the Political race ,_ ho~v~r~ B~p.hy _had _been pressing for-1nlonna11on -abou1 nu• clear weaponry at the Seal Bcai:h base. In 1981, she was among the residents who sued the Navy in federal coun., trying to force an admission that nuclear weapons were stored at Seal Beach .. The lawsuit was dismissed the following year by a federal judge, prompting a change of tactics. That led Cranston to request the GAO study, which produced the 1983 disclosure that nucleir weapons were no longer at the base. '"All of this was a David-and- Goliath situation," Brophy said Thursday. "It did not make me a popular woman in Seal Beach." SURF'S UP FOR nr. ... t FromAl \- Brophy said she believH the Navy decided to move its nuclear weapons from Seal Beach at the time her lawsuit was being considered. Beach lifeguard caPtain. '"This 1s best ·surf we ha ve had an summer." A hurricancoffofBaJa Califomia is responsible for the good wa ves. he said. · _ "for two or three days it was heading toward Hawaii but it turned back into an area we call 'lhe w1ndo"•' where stonns give us good surf, Belshe said. Water tempera1ures through the weekend should be 1n the low-70s and the air temperature should be in the high.70s making for some-nice beach weather. All!ancc for Survival spokesman Carpenter said his group will now press for the removal of all wea~nry from the Seal Beach base, which. he said is 100 close to a densely popu- la1ed area. "This is no place for the Navy to be storing ammuni1ion -nuclear or conventional :' he said. UCI EVENTS CENTER FUNDING ... From Al Orange Counry 1s full of worthy causes that could use a m1lhon-dollar donation. Why did Bren pick the UCI Events Ccnter1 "Mr. Bren has had a long-standing 1ruerest Ill bnnging the un1ve1"11ly and the community toge I her.·· explained Gal) Hunt, who is an Irvine Co. vice president and assistant to Bren. Hunt also is co-chainnan of a committee ra1s1ng commun11~ funds for the Events Center. ··1 bcheve (Bren) understands the posnive benefits that UCI brings to Orange County as a whole." Hunt said. "The more the business com- munity can support UC!, the better the uni versity can provide athletic and cultural events that others can enJOy." He added. ··1r there was one '' program that would do more lo bnng • the commun11~ into the university and let the university reach out to the commun1ty. 11 would be the E'ents . Center." .;.. Hunt also acknowledged that Bren ,,.1s an avid sportsman himself. enJOY· ' "ing tennis. skung. sa1hng and Jogging. Hunt said Bren also was impressed .. that UCI students were w1ll1ng to 11 impose an add1t1onal fee on them- ;~lv~ to raise $7 million for the . ctnter. . The fee is $23 a quarter or S69 per --,_year for students who enroll in the • .. •• . • Just Call 642-6086 D=I .. ou.r.nteed .......,._,..._,. II I'°" 11D /IOI' -J'llUI .... ~ usual three quaners annually. Uni- versity offi cials said the fee will be collected for lO years, bc&inning when t6e Events Center is built. Still, the student commitment has been known for some time. To move the project out of the planning stages. more community donations arc needed. "Mr. Bren thought his million· dollar gift would be a shot in thC:arm to the community fund-raisini pro- gram," Hunt said. "I think this gift brings the type of focus that's necess- ary (to secure additional donations)." Thafs what UCI officials arc hoping as well. Athletic director Caine said the community fl!nd is now about $2 million away of its goal. But he said the remaining money must at least be pledged before construction of the Events Center can begin. He said the hm1ted seating 1n Crawford Hall has been a source of nagging frustration, particularly to s1 udcnts. .. There have been times when they couldn't get tickets 10 see their own team play." Caine said . The basketball team has CK· penmented w11h larger o!T-campus sues. with little success. he-uad. The Anaheim Con vention Center 1s often booked with conventions, and th e Long Beach Arena 1s 100 far for many students to attend. Crawford Hall's shoncomings have also hurt the university's efforts to recruit fi1"1t-rate athletes. UCJ's 1,500-scat facility'has trouble stack- ing up against,..say, the new 18,()()(} seat arena used by the University of Nevada -Las Vegas. Caine said UNLV basketball games draw an average of 16.000 spectators. The athletic director said the new UCI Campus Eyents Center is now bcinJ designed by the Los Anicles architectural finn of Park.in As- sociates. It will be built to easily allow future e1tpansion to 8,500 scats. University officials hope construc- tion can begin late" this year or early next )'Car. ·Caine said the ·university has promised the Pacific Coast Athletic Association that the new facility will be ready ror the 1986-87 basketball season. That would require the center to be finished by Dca:mber 1986 . But the Campus Events Center would not be restricted to basketball games. Cai ne said the facility will be available for general physic.al educa- tion activiues and organized sports such as men's and women's vol- leyball. e1t hibition tennis, and indoor soccer. Faculty convocaiions and events open to the non·uni versity community may also be scheduled at the Events Center. What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you Uke? Call the number at left and your me11age will be recorded, lran1cribed and delivered to 1be appropriate editor. The same !4-hollr aa1werlng 1ervlce may bt used 10 record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters .columo mutt Include tlaelr name and telephone number for verification. No clrculatloo calls, ple11e. Tell u1 what'• on your mlad. . QA.ANGE COAST Daily Pilat Clrcut.tk»n 71•tl42a4333 Cl••ttned lldVertl1lng 71'1M2·1171 All otMr depl;rtment1 84#~1 • MAIN OFFICE NO W. 8-J 11 Coll• "'-· CA-Mtl tcl*-· ... tMO CON..._.. CA ._. ..... , .... ~7plfl _,. .,... _,. .. N -...... ..ii._., " H. l . Schwol'lz 111 PubhSl"ter ~ 11U () .. c-,.,,..,.... ~ "" -.. °"""-.,.,,.!Olt. tdlor• ,..,,.. • .,..,_ _.....__,,"'~~--... .,ow••~.,_ ' ...,..,.,.,,. _ ..... , •• ,., _, "°"' -.io .... ·-ctrc411otton T1taplt1nM -=-·~ -...... --, &.orn• Bruchet Advertising Director ateph•n F. C•rlZO Production Manager" ; • Aoeemery Churchmen Controller . Donold L. Wllllom1 • Circulation Manager --~-... VOL, n, llO • ' Water aid plan for county killed 'in state commlttee ' . . ' bcgislari()n that would have give much or Orange and San Diego counties arcatcr shares or Met~ .PQlitan-Water District-water-su{Wljei -durinJdr.oughts was dcep-sfxcd tn the state Legislature this week. After lobbying from legislators representing Los Angeles County, which opposed the plan, the Senate Agriculture and .Water Resources Committee rejected the new emerg- ency allocation plan submitted by the MWD, Southern California's giant water-distributing agency. ban otf pr~pc:rty ta:t 1be ota basi's. If the plan had been a~proved m<K\ of Oran&e .and San l)iego counties 'WOUid have received · increatcd emcriency allocations in case of a drouaht while" Los Angeles County, which .~bases. less water from MWD J1(i\ ~as a greater ~peny tax base, would lost a oortioa of 1.t.1 S:hare. Among Orange County watcrqen- cics that would have gained under the revised plan were the Coastal Munici- pal Water District, serving Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, ponions or Costa Mesa and pgiri.t$. south, the Municipal Water District of Ora.nae County, serving most of Costa Mesa., Huntilll!O• Beach; fountain VaUey;- lnd partsofNewpon Beach, as well as the cities of Santa Ana, Anaheim and Fullerton. The revised plan was adopted by MWO dirctors several weeks ago after a coalition of dircctors from Orange and San ·Di~· o counties pulled together enou votes to defeat Los AngelH unt_y boa(d members who favored funhertd study of the plan. In a letter to the committee, Senate President Pro Tc:mpore David Ro~ erti, 0-Los Angcles, suggested the matter was ••far too imponant'' to be dealt with "hastily" in the waning days of the 1984 legislative session. He also pointed out that since: the existing plan has worked for the pa.st S1 ycan., uracncy was not an issue. Traffic snarl could come Monday The plan would ·have shif\cd the formula so that water allocations under the preferential rights system would be based on the amount of water purchased from MWD rather By tlt.e A1tocl1ted Pras The last weekday momina rush hour of the 1984 Olympics u.w smooth sailina on most Southern California freeways today, but an official warned that departing tourists could snarl traffic Monday. .. There could be some buildup of traffic Monday," said California De- partment of Transpcnation spckcs- man W.T. "Doc" Maloney, who explained that Montreal expcfimced traffic tieups after the end of tlie 1976 Olympics. * NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY WEEKEND! .. ~20% OFF ALL POTTERY SALE INCLUDES: • POTIIERY e SAUCERS •BARRELS • REDWOOD TUBS e .WIRE BASKETS e STRAW BASKETS • AND POTIING SOIL TOOi AM LING ' s Newport Nursery jind Garden Center I (Between M1cArthur and J1mboree1 • FREE• Loc•I D•ltvery Open Mon 1r,ru Sat I 30-S 30, Sunday 1.00-5:30 1500 out coast highway • newpor beech. cotllor.nta • (714f 6<14·9510 • I -·--- - .. 2 PUot WW.ender/ Friday. August 10, 1984 Visitors added to family at ~a wd~st BJ DAVID BISHOP nowbelievcthelhreecvcntscomplcmcntoncanotbeu..ndsimply o.1J,.,.. c.r • •• • COVER PROTO: Sealp1or Dlou Wrtglat, one of dae ortpna.I attract more people to all three. What bepn as an artistic product of protest. survival and the Sawdalt Festival ex.ldbltora, welds a I-foot metal flib iJl ~wc•re notat au hurting one anotbcT,'' said Wngbt .. The floweringalttrnativclifestylcsofthc•60s.1scominaofaieinthe bis ltOolfa dalJ year. Daily. Pilot Pboto by Terri Jtean. competition helps everybody." 'SOI. On weekends the Sawdust has featured entcnainment on a The La&una Bcac.h~wdust FcatJval is haPJ>ilysuccessfv) bandstand in tbecenteroflhetiny villa&e. which iJ built each year after I l)'C&tlof comb1mn1art. fun and a down-home feeling Tor Wri,cht, who iscurrcndysculptinaa 6-foot metal fish that was from the ground up by the artists themselves. . fmlily aoa toseibemct in an annual art show nestled among the rcoentlypurcha.sed bya ma1orrestaurant chain for public display, "The boothsarcthecoreoftheSawdust'sappeal, .. Wright eucalyptusgro¥csofl..aguna Canyon. ·thinks the lOgetbemcss en~def'cd among the Sawdust exrubi-says ... Often you see mo~creativity in the architecture of the "Wc•re an expcrimen t m communny ... uys mcLal ~lptor tors is what has kept them going throu&b the years. u well as what booth than in the product." Dion Wright, one of the ft)any local artists m the f'esti val this year · bas made the Sawdust different from tbe other festivals. Well, perhaps in a few cases, but mostly the Sawdust's artists whowercalsothereintbe~nnina. "We'vewatchedo'1rkids .. Wchaveour.problcms~butweworktbemouLAllofuslovc producefiiieoilpa.intinasandwatercolorsmtraditionaland =-lrOWiit> he~ sopt~ ~.hl:rtJl'u.~dicalcotnmunity. being.~ 100m~ toii&ht .. ·~KS Wi:tghh .. fl'uon-jwied, bUi: abstractttylts.-handaafted lea~ clothing; fum1tutt • .. lthankwedoevcrytbistghereonthegroundsbutbury wccn.dupdoinasomcpolicingofwbatgocsintotheshow!' .· blown~andporteryindistinctive,unusualandcrcauve peopfe, .. Wrightjoked. • · Sfmority IWalottodowith who makes the final listof200 designs. Visitorsmi&hte"pect tosccanythin&from t~rings to Sinceiuu~0ti&i4uaprocestamonearti$l$and uhibiton.thcJ:lalot~ishdd.OdeieriJuncwhogetsthe st.ain&last-andwoocfk.aleid0teopesoo~y. -- craltsnitn11p1ct wjtJt lftesia;dwaysofth~Fcstival of AN, the mnainn'8b00lhs. Ttito111y requircmenuarc that thcartiSU1ive • TbeFcstivaJ people also like visitor participatioit with SawdustFestivaJevotvedintoaun~summcraruandcrafts ioLaunaBcacbandthatthcirproductisbamknt.ftcd. evcryoneinvitedtoenp&Ctbea.niltsincoovcrsation(ifthey cntcrtainmentanraction in Laguna bas cherished a local The Festival is a non-profit orpni.zatioo that manqes the don't e~ you 6nt). to examine their works or smg-along with tradition as any event in th.is picturetque community. cventwitb member-artist.son us board of director&. thecntertainmentandjom in the fwi. 1t•ucoey,tolksycooaJomerat1ono11uuyarcl'HUlC'turc -Moretb.an200,000peoptewillptobab1ypasstbrougbtbe Soexpecttohavea.OOcfttmeatlheSawdustFestival,and providiJIJtheshowcaseforbundred.sofarti,ts'wotks. Sawdust'sdirunctivetowercnttancconLacunaCanyonRoad don•tbesurprisedifyou rcircatedlikejustanothergoodfriendof Addin1to1heatmospbtn,m1n1trels,juglenandotheracts thisycar. • thefamily. wandertheuwdU'1~cwnpathumon1tbcrusticbooths, .Witht•ven~bfe-,SO..ycar~ldFcstivalofArtslessthana Avarietyoffoodandsnacksa.reavailabJConthegrounds,as entertaininavisitonandexhibitonalikealongtheway.Fillina rriileawayinonedirection.andtbcArt·A·Fait,aoothcryouna. wellasbccrandwine,and&dmissionisSl.SOforadults.Hoursa.rc the air are t6csi&bts, soundund smells of wood, leather, atus and $UCCC$Sfulsummcran show a sbortudislanc.c away in the other l Oa.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays-Thursdays, and until 11 p.m. on mctaJartiansasthcyworktntbc11boothloD1he6bjeculheysell direaion.acc~inrivalryellistsamongthem,butmanyartists FndaysandSaturdays,througbAua-26. Outcome of dream ctuis#e was short on choreography By TOM TITUS from Huntington Beach -M'Cre given a day's notJc.e to °' .. ...,,...... pack~and bead out. So much for Denise's plans toauuc Den.ix Dales had It all fi'ured our. thtou the Panama Canal and eventually bead up the She was goiq to put the singing and dancing talents ~aci 1c Coui to Alaska. she'd developed at UC Irvine, and honed for more than a Whtie they were stuck, however, the performers made decade of professional perfomuna experience, to work for good use of their time. They put together a benefit show heraboardacruiseship-and baveafantasticsummerat which raised $11 .000 for a children's swimming.pool in the same time. Grand Cayman. But even Lhat ~ its drawback-lbc What she dJdn•t fiJUrt on .wcre-me-rou&b Onbban skTcs open up during the pcTfonnance and the outdoor waves that wuhed her ship onto a sand bar where she and. show went on in the pouring rain. the rest of the crew were hteraJly stuck for three weeks. The benefit sealed some friendsh1~ wnh the natives, Donise. now back in fountain VaJlcy and choreo-b~t the pa~sengers aboard the Rhapsody were another &raphma the upoomana musical .. IGimet'~ at Scbasfi.an•s matter. W~ Dinner Playhouse, was among the puise staff .. They were ready to lynch us." Denise rccallcct mcmbeB aboard the French vessel Rhapsody, which did .. Every time we'd set foot out or our cabin, we'd have to us impression of Gilligan's boat off the Cayman Islands brace ourselves forthc onslaught. As if we were personally near Jamaica last Mar1,:h. responsible." .. They kept the cruise staff on board after the Denise wasn't on board when the sh1p came to a passenien had left. while theytried to free the ship,'' screcchina halt. That happened durinJ a shore tour u the Denise related. "Naturally, they had ho~ to put it back 10 vessel was tuminJ around in preparation for debarkation: service, and we 1i vcd on a ghost ship wa1tina to sec whether As she describes 1t: we had our jobs or not." 0 We didn•t know what had happened at fint. only that As it turned out, they didn't, and the entertainers -we couJdn'l get back aboard right away. It was hot end who abo included Bill Davis, a onetime UCI classmate (Pleue Me DAftCER/,.,e 14) Gooo TASTES ------ The delight of diningreturns Pronto! BJ BEVERLY BUSR SMITS o.llrNlfC.111111 ... With so many restaurants to choose from in th1urea, many of us tend not to return to one where we've experienced anythina less than wonderful dining. But restaurani.chanse. and if wc•rc smart: wewiUtry111in. <!ase in point: Pronto Ristorant.c in Souih Coast Plaza. After last year's visit, J could oot share my fellow writers' enthusiasm. But they continued to enthuse. Sol returned. And it was ~ry close to wonderful. We bcpn our meal with carpaccio, tbin-shced bee(, "cannibal style!' u our waiter dtscri bed it. Pron to does not marinate tbe meat beforehand, as some rest.aura nu do, but serves itpmi1hed with capera. shredded cheese and watercress. You add ~()urown olive oil and squeeze fresh lemon. ·The bedwas superior qua1iry; the do-it-yourself approach satisfactory. And with it amvcd the piece de resi1t4ncefor this bread· Jover. Pronto•• own bak~before-your-very-eycs rolls. GUstenina, aolden, tMy wteevtn better than they took. From the a la cat1C menu J ordered salad dell• cau. A delectable oil/vinepr d~11ingcomplcmcnu this outstandinJ UIOrtmntt of five lettuces, including the rosy Italian radicchio. M Cf Chote the stru:ciat.clli alla Romana, a consomme not u ch1cken·y atone miiht wish but steam int and comfortin · a gcncrousquantityoffresh spinach and ca drops. From a wine last of about 70 French, Italian an(l California vintage~ we enjoyed a Pino Grigio Cavite. Of couoe, there:• full barscrv1~. too. Prontootrenat>cauilinaaMOrtmentofcntrces,inclUdina nine made·right·therc pastas. These vary from spllhetti with mussels, shnmp, calamari.1ea scallQPS and mannara •ucc (S8.75)tofcttucc1newith vcaJand wild musbrooms(S9). Then, JUJt when you think you've made your seleetion. you find two more paswlistcd on the menu under 1pedalir& That'• whcTe-1 discovered my ravioli with lobster filling. fmh bastl. butter'laU<lC(S9. 75). There's not a lot oOobster inside, but the ravioli is tender, the sauce nch and sentJe and the whole lovelydishpmisbed with toutcdoincnutsand that rarity, pec/edfrcthtomatocs.Jt'sel~nt. • My~rtner•sfresbPecilicsalmonwupoacbcdtoperfectton, served wnh an excellent sauce. arecn with fresh besil. plus the texture contrast of red caviar ... a winnerat S 14. Otbet temptin1 en trees from the one.pqe, euy-to-read menu are the nouvelleanael hair pasta with pt cbeete, salmon, fmhdtll;frilledswordfiah witholivco1I, lemon,~ hetbl; artlledlhnmpwithaarlicbilttcrandpanncun,andveal ecaloppine with ttd pepper, cream .. uc.e spinach and l'OICflWY. Ourwtiter1 COll&fltulatiname on What I'd consumedaltt&dy {"Foratkinnyhttle,irl.youdidaood!")wheeledoverthedeacn can. . . One look and thouaJ1ts of zabulione, spumone. tononi and tclali ... all listed on the menu ... fted.1 BeUdel, be uaured me the cannoli was .. bish in protein.•• The paatty ns perbapa not u delicat.cusome.tbuttheliaJadychocolatefiJlinawu*81ant. Tbeawardrordecadeftce,howeiver,wenttomyhusband's chocolate tndle-a croa between cake aad candy. and ablolutdr. marvek>us. Weliketbuettinaat Pronto: the mirrored walls, hanaina chiff'on•pedlampawhichallowe11Y"*1inaofttiemenu,the friendly IUVice. Out crisp.dotbcd table for two 1eemed at first a bit small, yet functioned wdl. Pronto Rittorant.c alto preeenu a 50-itan Sunday bnanch • buffet with both Italian and Americ::an specialties and com- plementary champaaoe for St 2. 9S. LUncb featwes mOlt of the dinner appetii.ers. en trees and ~W. at .-oiilewhat IOwer prices. Qr 11)' IUCb appealmt luncheon sa1idt u fetiucine with cbickm, waaerae.. red oaion and Otaft&C -.men11(S6. 75);avocado with Wimp, alloP.I, calamari and crab meat(S7. 75)ora Cobb Mlacl. The ani1t in tlae kitc:Mn ilcbefllic:bard Robul1dli, formetty with Crown Poi11t, Antonello and Swallow'aCove. The amable Johnl.Ooel~bUd. P80NTO South Coilt 1'111.a. ICICOnd level; J'CICtVltions: ,S40.I038. Lunch, :11 :JO.~ Mon.&t; Suact.y bNDdl, 10:3().3:».diDncr, 5:30-9:30, Mon.·Tbu.;.$:JO.IO:JO, Fri., Sat.; 4:J0..8:30, SUn . Calendar • Fri. CIUelcal DOUGLAS MAJOR. organ tat of Ulc C&thf'dral Church of St.a. Peter and Paul In Wuhlngton 0 C .• performs a eolo recital on the Hazel Wrfltht Organ at the Cryatal catbed,... .Ill 8 p.m., ~ Saata Ana and Ga~n Grove free-ways In Garot-n Grove. 'S44 5679. OllSGOil"l COLEllAlf, cl.aulcal atultarl&t, entertain In La Palme reataw:ant. The. Newporter. 1107 i;J.I..-'-"--"'Jambi>rce Road. Nf'.'WpOrt Beach , 'Mon.•Sllt. 7·11p.m.644 1700. "TBB GUAT AMltalCAJ'f C01'- CERT,'' Hollywood Bowl'a neweat Ol'nlork spectacular, ts offered to· nl(ht and tomorrow with Ench Kunul conducting Also, nuust Jamee Walker with P'rcc Fllihl. an 11r<"la1mf'd cSU.lcal/.)au enscmbl<'. and trumpeter Rob McGregor are eolotsta 8 :30 p m (213) 856·5400. 8 p.m.-mldnf«iht. 858 S, Coast High· way, Laauna licach. 497., . COffft&Y PllD.UP9 h trto In an e:xclustvc e~nt. P'rt.-Sat. 9 p.m ·I a.m., Tues.·Thun. 8:30 p.m.-12:.30a.m .. Ubrary Lou,.,~ • Newporter. 1107 Jamboree Road. Newport Bc•ch. Through Sepe. 15 . 644·1700. WATllE WAYR pla)'1l ~ eax· oe.i:ne and nute, and aJCll SJIMA!I Ja on the kt~ • .9 p.m. ... 1~-..m .• Cafe Udo, NcW port Blvd .. Newport Beach. 875-2968. R0"1'fllt BROWl'I and hta trto fea· lutt cla.Nlcal and Latin ja%2. ·We'<!.· Sat. 8:30 P..m .·12:30 a.m .. Cope de Oro;. 683 . nwn. CMl.a M 662-2672. . 8ftPllAKIB A~ a l"RDPID8 and the a.u. Price Trio perform Thun.-Sun. evcnlngt. Ron'• In Jaguna, 1464 S . CO. t Highway. i.a,tuna Beach. 497-4871. . 4BELLY llOOU a TIUO perform jazz vocals. Frt.-SaL 8;.10 p.m.-12~ a.m .. Noel's Seafood. 16281 Pacific Coe Highway. Sunad f:kach. In· ddlnlle. (213) 592·2051 .1 • Pilo1 Weekender/ Friday, August 10, 1ee.t TD WJlQ C&LLAJl iutaurant features cla cal reron:llng dunng dinner. TuC9 ·Sat. from 7 pm. The Newpos1er. 1107 Jambortt Road, Newport Beach. 644-1700. LU cznmga pcrfonna Jazz piano Tues.-Sat. from 8 p.m.-1 a .m. Nleport 17, 1615 E. 17th St .. Sant.a Ana. lndef\ntte. 547•951 l . 'Jop Toica1 poap Alabama atngs tcmJcJit at lrriDe llead.cnn Amphitheatre. CoaD_try_,._~---~--~--~- TD TllA VIS YOO'NO BAKD pe-r· forms from 8:30 p.m -1:30 a.m. To- nl,ltht abo fcalurH 'Happy Hour enter· taJnment from 5-8 p.m. Crazy Hone, 1580 Orookhollow. Santa Ana. 549·1512. Jau PlAJlfl8T DI.LY LellAUa ap- peara Tuea.·Sat.. 8 p.m .-mld· ntght. cano'a. 2241 w. Coast High· w~ewport Scach. 631-1381. mvnu llAJlalOTT features dgbt houna of conunuou.s Jive jaZ2 each Friday ~enlng th~ the aummerwlth "The Wlituarcl. a nve· pl~ Jazz group. perform I contem· porary and pop ~lectlons from 4:30-8:30 p m. and the"Mlchael JOr. dan Trto" perf'onntog standard. La Un and contemporary~ Jazz rrom 8 :30 p .m.-12:30 a.m . 18000 Von Karman. l.rvlne. 720-0330. nm LUSB u:rs nm appears at Cafe Las{una fresh rrom a year of • fonnaJ .Sfudy and club datea tn San f'ranciKO Th~ Augu.L Frt.•Sat! Pop days and Sundays at 7 and 9 , through ALABAMA appeana tontght at Sef!· 9. 751 1344. lrvtne Meadowa Amphitheatre. •TBS 8 S 8 T LITT Lg 740-2000. WllC)UllOVU ll'f TZU8" at the TED a &.&UY perform at The Karlrquln Dinner Playhousc. 3503 S. Splodrlfler Wed.-Sat. Hours Fri.-Sat. Harbor Blvd . Santa Ana. nlgbUy 9 p.m.-1 a.m.. Wed -Thul'9. 8;30 etlmxceptthM~onda=; .. ~ary17~gc cu51rtaJ1 n p.m.·12:30a.m.3333W.CoutHlgh· es Sc --~97-.. · Nl'.'Wnnrt Bea h 642 229"' "CIUTIC cg" by the Irvine ~1aisD9"--Pen'o~· Top 40 'lmustc Community Theater, Turtle Rock Tues.-Sat. bcglnnlng at 9 p.m. at the Community Park. Sunnyhlll Road off R ubenE Lee. 151 E CoutHI h Turtle Rock Dnvc, lrvtne, Fridays and e · · i way. S.turdayaat8,Sun~andAud. 19at Newport Beach. 675-5790. ~ DIAJllA aoee appean through 2. th~ Au«i 25. 7 ·5496. Sunday at the Unlveraal "nDnl.&Rl>1' TBSaOO:r" at the Amphtthcatre:-830 and $20. (213) Grand Dinner ~tcr, 7 -F-ttedtnan 980-9421 Way. Anaheim. tonight through Sun· ..l''O~_Aim, BILL'' p1at~agoodto N~t • c:;~;~;~~r§.curta1nu~unWAug "' m....,_, rom coun •J "'' "BAllLST" t th G Diamond and Prealey for dancing. a e rove Fr1.-Sat. 9 p.m.-1:30' a.m .. WeG.-Shake.peatt F'C8llvaJ Amphitheater. Thurs. 8:~ p.m .J a.m .• SwaDowa 12852 Main St .• ~n Grove. Cove In the Sen Clemente Inn. Thul"8daya th~ Saturdays at 8:30 "AMI IBING GOa'' aboard the ~ O tn Dana Point Harbor, ThUnda)'ll and FT1da)'ll at 9. S.tur· unlll Sept. J . 636=7213. "LA ft!mlta re>LLmS'' at Sd>u- ua.n's Weitt OJnner Playhouse. 140 Ave. Ptco. Sa.n Clemente. Wfdncsdays th~ Saturdays at 8. Su~ at I and 7 through Sept. 9. 49'2-. "llL llOlllllS' VACATIO"" by the Ana·Modjcska Playera at the nahetm Cultural Center. 931 N. Harbor Blvd .. Anaheim. Frtda)'ll and Saturdaya at 8 p.m. through Aug. 18. 991-4135. •'TB& llU8IC llAlf'' at the CUrtaJ n cau Otnna Theater. 690 El camtno Real, Tustin. nightly except Monda)'ll throuDJ Aug. 1 tJ: 838-1540. "SlfOOl'T.. at the Westminster CommunltyThater. 7272 Maple St •. Westminster. tonight and Saturday at 8:30. cloalng thl• weekend, 995-4113 • ~SVPPOllTUIOeAST~at the ea.ta Meu Civic Playhouse. 661 Hammon St., ea.ta M~. Frtdaysand Sa.turdaya at 8 30 through Aug. 25. 650-5269. ··waTSIDS81'0ar• at the Hunt· lngton Beach P\ayhouae. Main and Yorktown. Hunttn&ton Beach, Frtdays. Sa.turdaya anCt Aug .. 9-16 at 8:30. Aug. 5· l 2-19 at 2:.30. through Aug. 25. 832· 1405 ''TBS &ACK 8T ALLIOJll.'' Br1ng rood and low backed ~h chatrafor a pCcnJc dJnner. 6:30 p.m .• Colden w~ College Amphitheater. 15744 Cioldm We.t St.. Hunungton Beach. 81.;50 admlaalOn. &6 ma.xJmum per famUy 891-3991. ''llL BU'LOT"9 BOUDAT' wtth Jacquce Tau. Part oC FatJva.l ol Arts and Pageant of the Mastera wtth no cha.r2e ··except the 8 I ~rounds ad· mtaefon. Fcrimll Forum Theattt. 650 La«una Canyon Rd , Laguna ec.c-h. 8:Bp.m. ms.ct• WDSL or ntJ&KDSlllP. for stng1es over 45. mttts at the Jolly ROiler In Garden Grove at 5:30 p.m . 52.4;;3327. CAalJIO COllWSCTIOJIJS, for rnend&hlpa and romantJc rel•· UonshJpa, gathers for a gct·ac· qualnted party tonight at 8 pm. 810 Includes mresh.ments and pro· fC91donally led gct·acqualnte'<f K· UY1Ues. Ages 25-55. 18682 ~ Viet.a Ave •• Yorba Unda.. M,5-0840. 11188 All01&'9 8DIGLU DAJllCS CUJB Invites ~ngks to come dantt and get acquainted tonight from 8:30-fl :30 pm. with the Frank Amoaa Trto Lafayette Hotel, 144 Unden Ave .• Long Beach. (213} 435-6311. 800Tm.1' 1fBltltL OY n.l&JllD. 8BIP med.s for Happy Hour at the Monterey Bay Canners In Laguna Hills. S-7 p.m .. ror 45 or over. 768-4130. Btc. TD PA.O&AJllT OP TBS 11.AS- 'l'ZU and the FatJval of An. run th~ Au«. 26 The pageant Is the creeuon ol lf".ln« pictures wtth narra· Uonanda ll~ orchestra. 8:30 p.m dally. The f. I· 9aJ lnduck:s hundreds ol artf-,u o1 vartous worlt.s exhibiting ln booth Daily lOa.m;-l l :OOp m. 650 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. 494-1147. AaT-A·FAia rDllVAL. Jun(d outdoor Uhlblt by California arttst wtth week.end mtert.alnment and ~· freah~nls, fl'T1.-5at.10a.m.-1 Ip m •• Sun.-Thuni IOa.m.·lOp.m. Through AUC 26. J.A«una canyon Road. ~Beach. 494-'t514. ·'l'aa LAST Oa&AT DUIJUa C.1118& aboarcl t~ "Connorant" toura Newport Harbor Crom 7 to 10 p.m Dtnna a"" entertained by a comkal musical te'V\Je. f"or$30dlnnc-r reacrvaUons, p~ 675-1481 . TD UWDOST f'DTIVAL rMI lure.a hundltds of Uhlblt.a ol art• and crafb for sale aucb as paintings. «'T'amlc:9, custom Je~lry, handmade dol and loya. and .ta.Jncd Al9o rcaturcd entertainment, Ood dem· on\lltnUona and conccrta evny Mon· day C'ftftlng Th~ AU(t 27. Frt.- t. lOa m.-l Ip m, SUn.·Thura 10 -~-. f 4' Pffot Weekender/ Ft1day. August 10. 1984 Calendar a.m.-10 p.m. 935 ~ Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. 494-3030. Sat. TD LU8B LDZ TIDO. aee Friday Lia~ czonuta • .ec Friday usung. OOJD'UY PHILLIPS. 111Ce Fr1d&y Usttna. DAJlVS't' TJlA 'l'LOt. Thureday and Saturday n1'0lta. lndeflnJte. Max- cl&la:!cal well's. 317 Paclnc Coast Highway, .-& HunUnaton Beach. 536-2555. GJISGOR't' COLEllAll. 8tt Friday a01f1US UO'Wlf and hi• tr10. ett usuna. FridayLllstlL't'ng. ftft8• a -""" PAUL SDIOR, renowned slngeT and performer, appears In a aolo/acouatlc concert tonUO'at at 8 p.m Paci.fie Amphitheatre. 10-0 Falr Or., Costa Mesa 816.50 and 810. 634-1300. DlA.lfA aoea. eee Frtday uaung. '-ODK> ARD an.L... aee Fr1day listing. ··uoe.·· aec Fr1day llsttng. -------Theater ••TD GHAT AllZlllCAJll COPI-9llB ' -._,_ uu.v , see c11taT.0 eee ~listing. Fri~~ .. Alt1'TBINO oou .. aboard the TllB WIB LL~. sec Fr1dfy &n~ the aatll ~TS8nt!; ~1:8y Pllgr1m In Dana Point Harbor. Sec Usung. uaung FnClay nsung. · ---. '''TB& BEST LITTLE Country _ ~ WBOUllOOS& m nLU•' at the TD TR.A Via TOUJIQ BAJU>, eee ----...... ._ ...... ..,.,,.,_ ..... H.arlequln Dinner Playbouae. See Frt- Frlday listing. TD Q().-0()'8 appear at lrvlne dav Uaung. Meadows Amphitheatre tonight. '"CllJTIC•a CBOICS" at the lrv1ne Jaa 740-2000. · Community Theater. Sec Friday llat- . LAUllA BllAl'OOAJlf ~rfonns to-lmt. PJAllflST DLLT Lell.Ama. at night. 8 p.m , at the Greek Theatre In . v.P1DDLSR 01' TIDt ROOP" at the Cano's. see Friday listing. Loe Anj{cles. 815. 814 and 8 IO Grand Dinner Theater. Sec Friday WA't'lf& WAYNS and RICK 634-1300. llsUng. 8JUIUIAJll,seeFr1dayllsUng. TSDaDRRT,seeFndayU.Ung. "ICAMLltT" at the Grove --------=----"''---------'--....;;_--=-;...;,_-..;;..;;;::.....;;;...;,,,;,_;;.;iz;.._ Shakcs6ea~ Festival Amphitheater "RICHLY ATMOSPHERIC ... '' -Shflta ~. L.A. n- " A VERY dREAT FILM." -Judi~ Cri••· WOR·TV "A MARVELOUS MOVIE. .. " See Friday Uaung ''LAWJO>&R'POLLIES .. atSebaa- Uan's West Dinner Playhouse See Frt~llatlnft " 80888' VACATIOPf" at lhe Anaheim Cultural Center. See Friday listing "TllE llUSIC llA.ft" at the Curtain CaU Dinner Theater. See f"r1day list· LlOllel Rampton, known for hla ftmloeo talenta OD the ••.tba, '' wt11 perform at Dla- neyland '•Piasa Oudena for a week. atartha& Sunday. 1~· at t.be Westminster Community Theater. See ~Y lJst. 1"*n.SVPtO•TIRO CAST'• at the Costa Mesa CMc Playhol.IM Sec ~.~UO•r'atlheHunt· lngton Beach Playhouse. See Friday ltsUO.g. , . 1"l1ma .. •"TD LA VSJIDSR BILL MOB." with.Alec -Ou1nncu. l"eaUval Forum Theatre, 650 Leafuna Canyon Rd .. ~ Beach .. 8:15 p.m. Part or the FeaUval or Arts and ~t of The Muten cdebraUon.t.:pi{(,, adml on charge, except 81 entrance to grounds. 8AILDfG 8DIGLD\.offers Sun Worshlpere Boat Tripi for non- amokera 2 l yeara and over every Saturday through the aummer. IO a.m.-4 p.m .• Newport Beach. Bring lunch and dr1nk. 820 673-3282. Etc. -Dino Wll, KNBC Chann~I 4 N~•• TD LAST QUAT DIKJ!fBR Ca018& offen a cocld.all crul~ (87.50) With ptano bar from 2 to 4 p.m .: dinnercrul.e ($32.50) from 6 to 98.m. and nightclub crulse (8 l 0) from 1----------------------------l 1p.m.tola.m 675~1481. 11IS SA1f'DOST PUTIVAL, Stt Friday UstJng. WINN'Ell OP ElGllT OI' Al.JSTLU1A'S M.\l()a f1lM AWA&DS .__,. 8IST PtCruU. u:sr Olaa'TOll -86T ACl'IU.>to f n. 6:00, 8:15, 10:20 Sat./Sun. 1:30, 3:45, . 6:00, 8:15, 10:20 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGODT edwards LIDO CINEMA NIWPQIT 10 .. •l••IC 673 8350 .. , ••• 1,.100 • ·•••01' •••<.. .. ''Stunning t Not since the Beatles burst off the screen in 'A Hard Day's Night' has the sense of a new generation's arrival on the pop scene been so vividly and ex.dting.ly conveyed:' ~tf ''."''"" ....... '"~ in hi' llrc;t motion piltun.· ~~ AMlll87~9SSO El TOIO SSI SUO Pacific AAlllelM Dr .... £iwlf* Slddieblck r., '1 "l-ow.., ...... mu 990-4021 "'tlllT'MTCll 11.Aat 84Ul8I UA MD..a 4 Edwatdl Hin~ ... ..., ,,....,,., ...... ,, ... ,0. ~A IEA '31·lSOI .. 5$1"°'5$ [bards IQitW '""' c ....... ........ -llnlKt ""' l " C4IW econa IEA 546-2111 LMUM 1rACH 497· l 111 ~So.llC.-t =SollllC.-rlln111111111 ........ nar..i..., .. ......, -mMll 634-ZSSl ~ O.-•SA fwy llJWIU 891-3693 raa1c lhllJ 3' Dr a. ......... u,., IOIWfU 893-0S46 UA~IW u ,., .... tail *Nl.SUfTEO .. D<UY STtJlO Hes ~ raised by~ Captu~ by~ Hunted b-,1 a boy ~\mg tiger And adopled by a bombhng bear named Baloo Who d ha\lt' thought the JUOQle could be 50 much tun' PAG&AJlfT OI' TD llASTSRS and FesUval al Arts. ace Friday Usll ng OLD WS&T AaTISTS• a.oUJU>UP. pruented by the Buena Art Guild, featuru hundreds of ortglnal pjlstels. watercolora. oils and acrylics from 20 ofSouthem CalJfomla'e finest artists on dlsplay and for sale. SaL-SUn. 9 a.m...-7 pm., .Knott:• Berry Fann.. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. ~200. ..:l .... Wlll-.. ~~ .. ,~::M.a""8TIVAL,,..F'1· ~~OLOR· Sun Watt Disney ... _, ------NOW PLAYING e ANAHEIM COSTA MESA LAGUNA HILLS ORANGE BroollhurS1 Edwards Bns10I Edwafds/Sallbom ~ City Cinema m-6446 S40-7444 ,Laguna Hills Mall 768-6611 634-3911 BAEA FOUNTAIN VALLEY LA MIRADA ORANGE Mann Brea Plaza Edw.lrdsFountaln Valley SAO Gateway siadlumom.ln 529-5339 839-1500 S23-1s11 639-ano COSTA MESA IRVINE ORANGE WESTMINSTER Edwards Cinema Cent• Edwatds Woodbridge ANf, (hnge Mall UA Cinema 979-41.Cl 551~ 637-03.c() 893--0546 TD BAllBOllLITD CllAPTBR OP awaaT AD&LllUt8. a barbershop harmony ensemble of 55 talented women, perform today at 4:30 p.m . "Pruented by the lrvlne Symphony Ottheat.ra through the coopenUon of UC lrv1ne as part of a Sunday_~ Serles. Brtng a picnic tiukct With rdreshmenta and t--------------------------__j your lawn chair or aunplnal bedroll and JJsten to the muatc. Aldrich Park The experiment that ~hould never have happened 4 J years ago ••. Is stJll going on. TbePbiladelpbia Ezpei'imeal An adventu~ beyond time. on campus. 786-0412. =-a..-----~-- Ccnmtl'J ......_..._...._ ........ =--- A CCKJ111'8T JAllBOU& BBQ Buffet ta held by Crazy Hone from 2·'5 p.m. With the Eddie Montana Show and the Ste.ma Reunion Band. 1580 Brookhollow. Santa Ana. 549-1512 Jaa TU 00.LD&R SAOL& .JAZZ BAJID playa at the "Amtrak Depot.'' 3-~i& .. San Jtan CaplStrano 80UTB COAST TaJO per- forms fotk muek from 8 p.m.·mld· night C11ery SUnday. Capistrano Otj>ot. 26701 VfTC:tu&o, San Juan Ca~. 831--0232. ST. MAmD.l& plays the euophone and .JOJlf OAaDDR perfonnaont.bepWK>Jaaandllght pop for euy ltatent~ and dancing.. 4..S p.rn,, AJexander • Jtallan Re. taurant. I~ Adame Ave.. COet.a Mela. lDddkltte. 241~123. nAJllll ._.. AJID TD Illa. WIPft lltJtcm• perlonn Dtx- idand mu.ec. &:30 p.m .. Be..lboa Pier Park O'I Ba.lbc-u put o( the 8alboa Summer Coooert Sttta. Eking a ptc- nJc batket and blanket. 673-5245' •. UDO.LUZ ALL ITAIUI. 4·8 p.m. and e.11 p.m ., Cale Udo. 2GOO Newport Blvd.. Newport Bcacb. 875-2981. GIMJ90S.,,,... eUiophoM, and eT&ll MSCS:S.Jm.IDOS, planO. ,. --~ .-~-----~-- ,. Calendar 2:30-7 p.m .. The Park. 2615 E. Coaat Hi,o,way. Corona de1 Mar. lndeflnJte. 6'15'"'6577. STBPllA!lfllt ATS8 a nu&RDe and the--. Plt.ce Trio, eee Friday llattng. J'&bY WLA8CO, a very talented musJctan. hosts a weekly 'Jam' aeaslon from 5 p.m. at the Swallows Cove Loul\lle In the San Clemente Inn. BOB ltAllO appears from-S-7 p.m .. Cafe l..agµna, 858 S. Cout Hwy .• ·l.a,l(una Beach. 497-5404. 1'D GILLIAll GAIUUt '1AZZ QtJAllTET • ..7·J l p.m ... Indefinite. AlfSio'e. 1870 Newport Blvd .• eo.ta Mesa. 642-8293. . JACIDAlm. 3. 7 p.m .• lndeflnJte. Rusty Pelican. 2735 Padnc coast Hlmtway. Newport Beach. 642-3431. AAoa llAJtTUfSOlf AlfD TD RllTTIDI tDCnOlf, afternoons. Old Dana Point Cafe. 24720 Del Prado. Dana Point. 661-6003. STUDIO CAJP& features an after- noon Jazz session. l 00 MaJn St .. Balboa. 675·7760. . Pop BILLY IDOL performs tonlj(ht and tomorTOw at the Irvine M'eadows Amphitheatre. 740-2000. OaOOVJt TIT Alf8, afternoons at Baxt«'s, 14346 CUlver Drive, lrvine. lndeflnlte. 857-2103. LAO'aA BRAJOGAK perfonna to- night at the Pactflc Amphitheatre at 8 p.m. $13.50 and"S8.50. 100 Fair Dr .. Costa Mesa. 634-1300. CAL YP90 STBltL D&Ull BAJlfD appears at Cano'a. 2-6 p.m., 2241 w. Coast Highway. Newport Beach. 631-1381. DlA!fA ROSS, see Friday IJBttng. DUlce ----~~~~~~~-Tit A DAJlfCJJIO to the mualc of Guy Halferty and the $ociety Combo from 1 :30-4:30 p.m. throtAgh Sept. 2. Jewel Court Inside South COaat Plaza. .Ray Charle. and bla Or- chestra appear with the Rayettes In two ahcnn at 7 ancl 10 p.m; Monday at the CIUJ Bone In Santa Ana. TBS OaAJlfQ& COAST COL· LB0&'8 Btg Band performs mustc from the swing era durtng a dance today from 4-7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Newport HarboT Chapter of the City of Hope. 810 admtsston. lrvtne Marriott Hotel. 18000 Von Karman. lrtlne. 551-9343. Theater .. AIU I llJMO GOES" aboanl the Pllgrtm In Dana Point Harbor. See Frt<tay'a llsllng. "TBlt lSBST LJTTL& WBOJUtllOUSlt Uf TEXAS" at the H'arleQuln Dinner Playhouse. See f'rt· dav's ftsung. "nDDL&a 01' TB& ROOF" at the Grand Dtnncc Theater . .See FrJday IJ.Ulll{. "S-AllLBT" at the Grove THE UNOFFICIAL SUMMER GAMES MOVIE! MUD639-8770 Slldiu111 Or-Ill ~-~ FOlll'f• vaun m.1soo lhvds rounlall Yeley ........... ( .... IRWE854-8811 Edwlrds llnlwnlty c.._o. a.-r-llCI a TOIOS81WO £Alw1td1 Saddlebld 01 ..... -... ... "*1• WM.UY 962 2481 rovni. v.-., Dr• s.o1., ........... ~· --:T--' ._._ Sbak~ Festival Amphitheater. ~LA~~Lllt8" at Sebas- tian's WCllt Dinner Playhouse. See Frl~iil.sttng. • llU8IC MAR'' at the CurtaJn Call Dinner Theater. See F11<!3Y llst- tng. l'Uma "TB& ADV&lfTURlt8 OF SBSllLOCK llOLllES," with Basu Rathbone. Part of the FesUval of Arts and Pageant o( The Masters' cel- ebl'atton. 8:15 p.m .. Fe.slim Forum Theatre. 650 Laguna canyon Rd .. Lagl,,Ula Beach. No admlss.lon charge. except SJ grc>4nds entrance. SI.ogles SOUTIDtlllf WllBltL OF nu:&.Jm. 8BJP ~ls for Ha..epy Hour and an optional dinner fi::iaay at 4 p.m . .at ffie Jolly Roger. Oyer at Newport Fwy. AR.~ 45 or over. 768-4130. "'l'Blt SAILJKO 8Df0Llt8, for non- llsttno. • Td LAST Oa&AT DDfnav __ ... __________ _ CS111S& off era a two-bou~ jazz DAVJD ltAL&lllll perform. on the brunch ($19.50) and a 6 p.m. dl.riner piano. Mon.-Wed. evenJnf•· In· crutae ($30) ·of Newpon Harbor. deflnltL. 0 on's tn 1............ ~It!~ S 675-1481 ... -& ... -. ....... . -• .:.-n-u ,Coaat Hwy .• Laguna Beach. AU.. --UV•& -&&Y_, 8Ce t 497-4871. Friday llatlng. Tait LIDO .JAZZ AU. STARS per- form from 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at Cafe Mon. Cluelcal · GllBGORTCOLEllAK. see'F.rlday U.sttng. . • Udo. 2900 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. 675·2968. Pop smoking singles over 21, gathers In ~nrJ the Newport Beach for day, sailing. 10 • a.m.-4 g .m. $20. For current location i:::i~~l, :=~~rn'f~ ~::; ___ ~_~_.'fM_J_~_-_i_fl __ ~_'J!_trJ,_ri_..,_~_'ltiJi_n_IJl~i_1""_.....:.;:__, ~~32~.r brunch at 11 :30 a.m. [PG!~ A~l OCME _..-· , 11188 A1'Gllt'8 BIO BA1fD SOUIU> • NOW PLAYING -~=~·. I Dance Club gathers tonight for free dance lessons by candl Davis. 7 ·8 170 p.m.: and Rusty Higgins plays for your M da.nclng pleasure from 8-t l p.m . LaTayefterrotel. T<R S. Linden. Long Beach.'213) 428-8780. Etc. AllT·A·P'Alll FltSTIVAL, Stt Fri- day listing. OLD WUT A.R1UT8' R0011DUP, see Saturda~l!sttng. PAOBAlfT or TD llA8TltR8 and Festival of Arts. see Friday SIX-TRACK [DIOOlBVsma>l-PRESENTATION • lA MIRADA NEWPORT IEACH 0WG£ C1ne(lome Pac1f1c s La ~·raaa 994 2400 Edwards Newport Cinema 644 0760 634 2553 •IREA MaM Brea Pim 529-5339 • COST A 'MESA • WESTMINSTER • Pllt:S£1'1fTfl) IN Edwards SOUlh Cmst Edwards Cttrni West ~ !PJ• Plaza 5'6-2711 891 ·3935 (NO~..CC:f'"'lO_f_OOGAGl@ Ruff Hewn at Al's Garage ... The Fahef a True American wec:x Hece we feoiuJS 100'I. cotton pleated trousers ond shOOs Top It off wilh 0 100'I. Colton modlos comp shtrt &~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND· NEVJPORT BEACH • (714) 644-5070 • Pilot Weekender/ Friday, August 10, 19M Calendar appear with The Rayettes. Mon.-grounda entrance. Claulcal Tues 7 and l O p.m .. Crazy Horae, 1580 Brookhollow Or., Santa Ana Etc. 1 LJKDA R01'8TADT appears with 549-1512. DAVBra LOCDR. located at the Nelson RlddJe and hls Orchestra and BU.LY IDOL, see Sunday Lt.sung Balboa Pavilion , feat~ Monday peclalgueststar Ronn Lucas. 8 p.m .. • '-tall •~'dw1 th Pactnc Amphitheatre. 100 Fair Or., Workah,,__ --r -_-even ing coca cru....,.. ng e Costa Mesa. 817 50 and &10. -r-summer. 673-5245. J'llARTISBK BOl'fUS co-hosta a RODJJKY DA1'G£1lrutLD ap-634-1300. speclal work.shop with the Laguna pears ton~t and tomorrow at the Jau Folkdancers and the Orange CoUn ty Unlveraal Amphitheatre In Universal Folkdancera at 7·30 p.m. 80nus was City. 8 17 50 and 815. (21~) PIAJUST OLLY LellAISJl. 9eC one ol the ~ teachers at the 980-942 l. F~* listing. · • t..aguna Folkclancers Fest.tval tn the PAGEAJllT 01' TID llAS'l'ltRS l.IDOJAZZALLSTAU,eee late l 970's. He wJll be teachlng and Festival or Arts. see Frtday list-MondaJii!sUna. Czechoslovakian dances. Chapman Ing. · DA RALEIOB. see Monday College Dan ce Studio, 333 N. Claaeell. AJtT-A-l'AllU'DllVAL, &ee P'tf~ listing. · Orange. 543-5928 da~J.':lfl$l. 'COVREY PHILLIPS. see f'rtdly lrvtne. 250·1077. aAY CHAtu.u and hi• Or- chestra, att Monday listing. Theater -8AW008T l"UTIVAL, see lrstlng Ftlma Friday II.sting. LES a;tMBER, 11tt Friday listing 0 TU LADTIDJ.l.,SU," with Alce "1101' OPICU," with Jacques Culnees. Festival Forum Tht"alre. Tall. FesUval Forum Theatre, 650 ------------. Pop Llnda, Ron•tadt appean 650 Laguna canyon Rd.. Laguna Laguna canyon Rd .. ~na Beach. Tues.· "DDS." Stt Fr1day listing. wttb lfel8on lliCldle-a.nd bt8 Beach. 8': 15 e.m. Part .o{ the Fcsllval Part of the FesttvaJ 91 Arts and A "SWUIO COlfl"EST l'fJOBT" ts ol Arta and ~nt al The Maattrs Pagean t of the Mastera cdebraUon. featured every Tuesday night at orchatra at 8 p.a. Taeeclay celebntt.lon. No admlulon ch rg~ ex-~No~~ad~m~t~ss~~~o~ch~arge~~ex~ce~p<~8~1~_::__::::_:::::::_::_.:_ ______ __,~H~a~p~py~Da!z~~~-~l 7~92~7~M~a~cA~rt~hu~r~B~(v~dG .. :..__~•!t !Pa~d~ftc~~AID~!P~hl~~~·~--r.ceiiiiptm8•1•grouiiii~nd.s~~en•trance!iiiiiii~· iiiiiiliiil owe ~ and Golden West College Present Directed by ALEXCOBA Adi• ..... •: 16 ~-$4 Students Tlclket Sales. Gotdll'I w ... Colege 15744 Got01n W... Sn.t Hunt.lngton 8eecti, CA 92647 eel (714) ~71 Joan OUQ VIDCO ClUf> now I CLUI MIMIERSHIP FREI FREE MOVIE PISS Witlt Udt Pudl89 Or EWf'( 5 R111ab No Tidclt Required For Entrance To Video Center From Amonpt Your Favorite Tides: * Nortti l y Ntrthwlst • *''~ Oauy R-* Silkweod t kllle Ritin S.ff *T•maOf • *RUMnOfTlle E......... lest A,. C .. T.._ M ...,,,_.It f., t flll Rnlll n.. ........ UM....._... .... ....., Ulit .. (l) r.. ....... c... ..... .,..._,,_U.TeUN lUXWY 1HIA1HS fnt T llltilMe a.... * WALK-INS* OILY RH.,........,. •CD DAWW 0"9-HJ SllOWI •• 12:JO J :OO S :JO a :OO • 10:JO ..,_f'LEIUU•DO AT 12:45 J :OS - S:2S 7:4 1 • 10:05 •Ill Murr1y O.n-Aykroyll 8HOST1IUS1'UIS .. , SltoW1 at U :2S 2:40 4:U 7 :21 t :S0/10 MM ......... (lllQJ Sllow1 et 12:JO 3:00 S:JO 1 100 lo JO:JO 1'N1E LAST NID&MIA ~ & Tiie STAaf'WNiUi tNJ ~aows:: ,er.::~~) ~~3~2~2~..': S:O~~:~: ~~0:00 «;i'1«i)0;12)~~1 }~ .... ) 9EST DID'1EJISll[ .. , I ..,,.. El1C 1118 Al 12:204:0S7:SS STOllY...a 111SO Top Secret(~) 2:10 1:40 J :SO C:OO 1 :00 • t :SO 1 :10 lo 10:20 DRIVE-INS m~ STADIUm [;, llJ llM ttt!t !ur SW-- m.AttOO UllZAI s ... )~eC•Hlt Twlli911t Zone (l"G} CUMUt&OAeaca .. , "'-• C..+41t Sixt"" CJIMll .. (PG} Wett 01Ptey•1a• I W' llOOll (0) ""' Tron (PQ) Cllllll Prices •nMUMO'G) ""~ncllnt Story (~} SlltAllOV-U..s.A. PO f'1111 CO-Hit •eit D1f1n .. (9'} -"··~··TSMP\..C OP DOOM CNI Wltft Sl1yl1t9 AllH ("<af fOR THE FIRST TIME llY THEIR 75·YfAR HISTORY, COMMU/YITY COLUGES llY CALlfORIYIA AIU CllARGllYG TUITION. WllAT WILL BE TllE IMFACT??? JOllY JIM COOPfR A/YD REPRESEIYTATll'ES Of LOCAL COMMUIYITY COUfG£S AS TllEY. DISCUSS THIS A/YD OTIUR ISSUES . Af'ffCtllYG T#f fUTURt: Of OUR COMMUIYITY COLLfGES. # .... ··-. ln•ex•pen•alve • "(In lk IPlfl' IN) not high In prtco; roaaonablo. =~ ........ Classified Advertising 6;42-5$78 Tonight, B:JO p.m. l<CCE·-'C.. en ----~ ' .. Pilot Weekender/ Friday, August 10, 19fM 7 Calendar CLUB CC>lnt.JO llAGICO. an lnde· pende~ non.profit. membership travel and aoclaJ club speclallztng In affonhlblf' weekend get-aways and activities for the slngle professionals, mf'etS tonight at. 8 p.m Call 642-5586 for locatton AJlT·A·FAD. PUTIVAL. 9tt Fn· day listing, AK ALL a&A.80"8 8UIDDa CLAMIC llOaa& UIOW la p..-. ented th~ Aug. 19 at the Oran~f' County Fairgrounds Eque trlan Center. 641·1328. PAO&A!ff or TD MASTSU and Festival of Arts. aee Friday II.at· 111\oonY DAKGltUIELD, see Monday ltstlnit SA.ln'A AKA COLLEGlt1Jpon90ra a.trip to the Pageant of the Masters ton ht. Buedepilrt~at 6:30 p.m. and tttums at 11 p.m. l'tcketa $14.50. 667-3385. TD SAWDCST l'S8TJVAL, att l'rtday ll5tlng flAUllTOI Wed. Clualc:al THE WIRB CltLLAll, att Friday II ling Coan try CllA%T BOllS& hoets a Mr. Orange County Cowboy Contest tonight. Abo the Western Union Band performs TB& MAL B&ACB CllAllBSR from8:30p m.·1:30a.m.and "Free& 111J81C FSSTJVAL concludes today Eaay" dance lessons are offered by In the communJty roomor the Mary Ron and Donna from 8·8:30 p.m. Wit.On Library. Tonlllht Lawrence· 1580 Brookhollow Or., Santa Ana. Sonderllng. vlollnl £:, and Gall 549-1512. . Elchenthal. narrator. present Jan Stravtnskfa ·~ $9ldler"d TAlt:" and -------------Mozart•s 'Musical Jokl", K.522," 8 08CAJt PZT&.RS01'. llll.T .JACK· p.m •• 707 Electric-Ave •• Seal Beach. 801', itnd th~ L.A. 4 ~ In• P'rttadmlaton. (213') 596:.1749. daS&tcjau·fe"'t at theHolt~ood Bowl OJtBOORY COLltJIA.K, see Friday t 8 p.m 1213) 480-3232. listing. DAVID RALEIGH, see Monday OLYMPICS YACHTS AVAILABLE • COMPLETE CORPORATE CHARTER PLANNlf'tC • ROMANTIC V~ETIAN CO~OOLAS • EX.Cm c SPORT fl HI ·c PACKAGES • CATERl!liC SERVICES irYine C()ast-675-4704 fO• SAIC JIM CAftSTIWIO m4w •13835 P;o11cs~~111 Cliarters Located in Lido Marina Vill~e llMllEHwlrds~~561.eis m~ ..• and. STARTS TODAY .. Beings from Another Dimension have invaded your world. You can't see them •.. but they can see you. Your only hope is Buckaroo Banzai. 1HE ADVEMTURES OF SHERWOOD PRODUCTIONS "°6c"ll\A5rDN£Y BECKERMAN notU'h)h THE ADVENnru.S Of BUCKAROO BANZAI ~PETER WEUER JOHN UTHG0W Ell.EN &ARKIN ~UT9'4tlf.FF CiOlDILUM OtRlSTOPHER LLOYD '--'--SlDNEY BECKERMAN ......._.,. NEil CANTON ANO W. 0. RICHTER "'_.,EARL MAC RAUCH ,._.,~...i...tlmllOOUT KO.l o......i-. W. D. RICHT£R ™--'111-... 00--1· IB ===:-::;-;;;:, ...... a_... • e•r-a.-. ... .J • PllOt Weekender/ ~rlday, August 10, 1984 Calendar augmented by the renowned tttgac Happy Datt. 17927 MacArthur Blvd .. Pop.____________ rhythm eecuon ol drummer Sly OUn· lrvtnc. 250-1077 "Ila. llO'LOTS .BOLIDAT:' ~ Friday llsUng TSO a mJlT' eee Frtd&y UstJng. bar and basefat Robbtc Shakcepeatt. JD1f0901Uf1' ADlhndHt.a Alrtcan perform together at the Paclrtc Theater Beata. on tour for support Of their Amphltheatrclonlght.634-1300. • 'TBlt BEST LJTTLlt latcat album "Aura." and BLACK .. UDS;• eee Tueada1, ll-'1~ WBOUBOUS& m TDA&" at the Ull'UllU, a group featuring lead voCal-'-OUfO AftD BILL. ' ace day Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. See Frt- WllSBL 07 PmSl'IDSBIP, for alngteaovcr45. meets at Maree' Inn ln ~ at 6:30 p.m. for dinner. 524-9°327. 1.at MlchufRoec. harmony vocallst.s bstl~ da 11 u Duclc S nd Pu •-~ and • . .... .. .,.... I'" tont.r•ht at lV s ng. y tmpeon a ma.,....,..., -.. '6"' "rmor:.1ta OR TRJt ROOJI'" at the 80C111S1U1 WJUBL o.-nJSJIQ). r==============================::::i Grand Dinner Theater. See Friday SHIP meet.a at 5 p m at the El Adobe ln San Juan C.ptatrano. For. ~ 45 DUDLEY MOORE ~ WREST,. DEFENSE ll1Ung. "LA V&JO>Eal'tU..LIZS" at Seba.a· Uan'a WC$l Dinner Playhouse. See Frt~stlng. · • lllU8.1C llAJI" at lhe Curtain Cal~ Olnner Theater. Sec Friday list- ing. orovu. 768-4130. Etc. TOASTllA8TSR8 CLUB I 179 1-----------------------------1 ~Westmlnster.apokcsmenforpcrsonaJ and profcea1ona1 growth th~ pub-.,_~= ~· lie speaking, meet each-W nesday "'~""'""""'.,, ~ morning Trom 6:30-7 :45 a .m . COSTA MESA COSTA MW OfWeGE i•IJlHt:tJ WTA ft ll'WS Roulynn ·a RestauranL Gothard and Edv.~nlSM!'sa EdWMdsTownCenter CllyCeOler si...ss.i•o. SROL1Mnda Edi~. Huntington Beach. Thu. 646;5025 751 ~114 6.14-2553 OIWIGE Dl'Mln 523-3014 84iLll&~ 819CBOn, a leading '"l110 ____ ACCIJl'f __ l0_'04l_r.-_1_"Cl_•_ar--.i--.I ~On'ie-ln63U770 me~ of the Bay Area F1a\lnlllve ':::::.:::.'.:'.::.:.:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:.:::.:.:.:.:.:.::===============:.:.:.:.:.:.~ School. ltttures tonight at 7:"30 p.m. at the Newport HarbOr Art Museum. Bischoff embarked upon Ogurallve pr1nclplcs becauae of what they could teach him about abetractJon. His Cluelcal .. A CLASSIC. QUITE EXTRAORDINARY- PROBABLY LIKE NOTHING YOUVE SEEN SINCE ~WIZARD OF OZ':' ··ingenious, Channing. F~tasicsas original as this arc rare at the-movies. This could be a major summer hit:' DIMd Stnnu, Ctvtsuan Sc~ Monitor -WN8C lt.tdlo IN.YI '13rillian~ It's the most fascinating family film since"E.T."' MktwRt~ .._a~ '1ndiana Jones meets Alice in Wonderland." T-~ "***~*.The magic works:' ""°*'" ~~n. At Tb&' lilcMee I Ch~SwlTl-. THE NEVER ENDING STORY ... ,..u ,.,, •••11 ••••s , .. ,.. ........ ,. ...... ..U.m.ano StMln Dr-In ............. arcao~•• [dwll"ds Saddltbltk ll 141t• ........ LA HMU (213) 691..-0633 AMC fasluoft Sqylre ........... 1€Mal IUal 644.0760 u ... Nlwpoft .. ....... ClllW ... 634-2553 SYUfY City Ctllter ,., ......... LA .._ 523-1611 wra • MO , ..... SRO Gltmy 5 UW.• llftstol ur., • ....,_, ....... ......, ~ta. i.-Wtstminstet Mal 193-0SU s.o ,., ..... t.I • ... .,.,.., .. DOLIY ITWO high-keyed colors llnk him to Fauvlsl expcrtmcnta In the emoUve Inter- pretation of natural hue. 850 San Clemente Dr.. Newport Beach. 85 admlsalOn. 759· l 122. LDn>A ILODTADT, With Nel9on Riddle and Hts Orchcatra. perform through Aug. 22 except Aug. 20at the Untvcfu.I Amphitheatre. 822.50 and $20. (213) 98d~942 l . GalrOORT COLJtllAJI, ace Friday Uslln«i, "101.Aln'B.E," a comic: operetta by Gilbert and SulJJvan. Is presented by the ··Not-So-Royal Opera Company of ~"t.mll.•----1'1 '" ,. LIS. lt211 -llllaJIStJt • SO COAST PLAZA • t °"" a"' c• 'US1 mR11111r. "' U ,.,.... I~ 619 IOU .. _ --·~-CNl 1st4tl• sH010• H~a zo . tOWii ctiut• .. ,.. IMCOID u ......... .,. ....... '"' " -17 lO l ~ HS. I U ltlS m •1u -1U1•tte TOW" CCflTCR .....,. .... (N) ~· .!: ...,.. 1 10 H O rn aoo 1000 ISi OIA S1 '9 lO"OO 10WN C('l(R ~' lllnlr Cl) st 1w1 hN1 lit i II 10~~ <1 -"UOl1GI HITT" cal 1SI •114 12' s 1e, 91!0 SOUTH COASI • Dl).IY$ll•O ...... llit ~Ullr«a) '11 If~ 400 "S. ~ 1111 Ht ...... SOUIH COAST WW""' .,..., 1-.11s ••us 1ta ,_... SUt•.ltl ~2111 SOUTH COAST ---.a-• l'm\l .... f'C) -~ 1111 It IS. Ue.111 I JI. 1lll . a.•• • IRVl!l* • WOOO.l>Gl ......... ,,.. ... , "'-u1om _ wooom>Gl ........ , .... .. , ", ... .. SSI 8'SS .,. PllUlll1ll8 OPmlJll" fC) • 1uca •*' sn•o fN 600 110. lt 10 -" uo tot 1000 • WE STMINSTER • CIOM WlST 1 lWX OCUI' sttllO _... ... .... fC) _.,., 100 l~ s .. &• lllS 1'1 3'JS U JO IU 00 CNMA MST .._ 1111D a ne: -ltWU. _. 4'll --111~ l~ ,. I Jl It• ltl 3'lS UM llJllO ~-~MST c:== ~-Oto.t~UG..UI n1 3'JS u wrooo •~ 1u1 CilMA wtif "UR~ N -)lllOlt~ '-""' ~ms-nr nt >tn 1w • ., '" 111 tun•""' ....... -"" 1410lll IUnlNGJOM ....... -&! .. Mt-1311 ...,.. .._.,.., ,. ••1•• • GARDE N GROVF • ' Gruterlrvtne .. tonight-Aug l8at the Forum :Theatre of Siddlebick Col~e North. ~leate Tavera-Howans~y directs. 5500 Jrvtne ~ntcr Dr., lrvlne 83.50 evening, 82.501 matinee. 559-5440. TD 1t'Dllt CSLLAJt. e« Friday 11.atJng. Coantr)' TDWEST1tUtnQO!f 8A1'1> per· froma Crom a~:so p.m,.-1:30 a.m. Allio. a country dance contest with the Grand Prize being a Carrtbean CrulS<" Is held. Cra~y Horac. t 580 Brookhollow Dr., Santa Ana 54~JSf2. 001' 1'ILLIAJla perf onns wtt h Syl.S. at the Pactftc Amphitheatre 100 Fair Dr .. Cost.a Meaa. 834-1 300 Jau .J.U YOCAL18T 8TSPllAJQ and liVnds ~l a Uve pttfonnantt of eongs by Cole Porter. EUlngto , and Gershwin. 8·1 J p.m.. Human Equation ~otcr. 1550 S Cout Hwy .. Laguna Beaeh. 810 wlth m iuh- aient.a. 85 without. 497·7408. TOllllcLADf, eee Wedn~y list· "ta CZDRSR, eee F'i1day llsUn" K01'C&PT P80lt. 1tt Wedn~y ~~-18BSLL ARD THE RBI IBM llltCTIOlt, evenlnga, In· definite. Old Dana Point Cafe. '24720 Del Prado. Dena Point. 661-6003. lllCll SDJUIA!t, aee Wednetday uag~VBTTRA TLOt. att Saturday SADOl.£8Aftc 10 •••II " ..... UI~ SAOOUIACC , .... .. " ... ., UI~ ~--" N (II Ill HlllO~ SHCllODll .... tmlOS. lr'l IH 4«1 611. I~ 10 ~ U'91011C $AOOI C8ACK .,..... IP'lll o 1,,,. ltO JI~ i i\ 110 1010 '''•••• nw•>• StlmG • MISSION VIEJO • vuo TWIN , ...... " ,..,t ..... . llO '"' VI I() T r.llC , •... '• 'j ,., ..... IJO '"° ......, ...-fC1 , .... , ... • .. Caleildar llsll~ PIAl08T DLl.Y 1AM•IS8, .ee frida,=n«· RO DOWR and hi.I tJ1o. Re friday ll&t!n&· OODUT PlllLLIN. .ee Friday listing. S'JtPllAIUS ATU a: P'IUSJllD8 and the ll•tla PdM Trlo, .ee Friday llsUng. --~~~~~~~~....-.:.. Pop "DDS," aee'f'rtdayi1aungs:=' NlClt PTZOW, singer. guflar. har· monlca. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Blue Beet Cafe. 101 21st Place:. Newport Pter. New- port Beach. 67J;..3333. TED. DDT. aec Friday u.una. GROVER 1' A&llDIOTOR, Jt., wlth ~tal C\.&CSl "Ptecea or a Dream.· appear at lrvtne Mcadowa Amphitheatre tonf4ht. 7 40-2000. ··omo A1ID BILL," .ee Friday llstlng. -~~~-..~~-...,.-~-..---Dance ~~~-..-..-..--~~-..~ nm ntACT 1RLIA mo BAJO>, foryourdandn«pleuutt. 8 :30-11:30 pm .. The CallTomlan. 16431 Bolaa Chica. HunUnaton Beach. 82 ad- mission. 846-1347. BALLROOll DANCIRO, 8 p.m.- mldntght. Dence leuons 7-8 p.m. Abo door prtzes. Meadowlark Country Club. Craham Stred. Hunungton Beach. Theater "ANY IBIMl OO&a" on the' PtJ. itrim In Dana Point Harbor. See Friday fisting. · "TBS 8&8T LITTLE WBOUBOUU IJt TSXAS" at the Harlcquln Dinner Playhouse. See Frf· dav llsUng, · r·rmotsa OR TBS aoor" at the Grand Dinner Tbeata. See Fr1day listing. "ll'AllLST" at the Grove Shakespeare Fe.llval Amphitheater. Stt Friday IJaUna.- "LAWllfDD'?OLUSa" a.t Sebu· llan's Weal Dinner Playhouse. See rnc;&itst1ng. " MUSIC llAW' at the Cwtaln Call Dinner Theater. See Friday list· loll ~STALAG 17" by Showca9C! Pro- ductions at Golden West Coll~. Huntington Beach. Thursdays through1i.atuiday .. t8. Sundayaat3. th~ Aug, 26. 895-8378. "Wt8T SIDS 9TORY" at the Hunt· lnllton Beach Playh~. See Friday lls11ng. ~~~--..~--..-~~ Flhu ~-~..__ __ _ "TIDt LA V1t1'D&R BILL 1108," St'C Saturday ltsURg _.._ ________ _ Sm,l~e._._~~~~___:~--- 8A1Lmo autouta gathet"9 for a Newport IUrbor cru* every Thurs- day thta aummer for non-amokln& singles 21 yf'an and over. 7-10 p.m. SI <J. 673-3282. ~--..--------~ Etc. ~----------~--..-... AaT·A·FADl l'UTIVAL, Ke Fri- day ltstJng. AK ALL 8&A80R8 9lTllllSR CLASSIC aom aaow. 9tt TUes· day uaung. PAGSAln or TD llA8TSU and FeaUval ol Arta. ett Friday llstlnl{. TD LAST OUAT ounm• CRUIS&, eee P"rtday llatln«i. TD 9.AWD09T PU'ftV AL, 1tt Frtday ltstln& A4~~·~u~1~"'~-~~--- LAD TABO& AJllD UJllO are the destination ol a tr1p apon80f'ed by Santa Ana Coll•~ ~pArta 8 a.m. on Aug. 26aoo mum• at 7 p.m. on Aug. 29 8135 double occupAncy or 818?5 slntle occu~ncy lnducte. four daya and three !'dCl'ta tn Lake Tahoe which con tat.a of one nt.ght at Sarah.a Tahoe. and two night• at MGM Grand. 667-3385. AK AJnnJAI. rDIS dft COii· PSll hult, IJPOneored by the Cotta MCN Art Lee,lue, the City ol co.ta Meu and Soufh co.at Pla&a. I• hdd from Sept. 14·22. Salutlni ~rta • Month.SC,pt. '84. thedt.tdtneroralldc entrx. 11 Saturday. A limit ol three entttea per arUlt allowed. Entry ftt9 are 84 for a Coeta Meea Art League member and 66 for non-member per entry. All fine arts media. two-and three·dlmenstonal. I ncludlng ceramics, graphics, drawtng. patnt- tngs. watercolor. aculpture. ·mtxed medJa. photography. or1g1nal prtnta and texllles. are allowec:f and works must have been .executed within the tut two ye.an. Flrst place la 8500. eemn<t plaee 8300. thtnt cptace 8200 and honorable menuona are 8100. 642-3797. "A llAllV&ST OF m&AS," a pro-fesatonal 8CDltnar pre11ented by: "the Southern Callfornta Women Sn Adverttstng._ S. held Saturday, Aug. 25-, at the Emerald Hotel In Anaheim, It la open to the adverttaln& communl· ty and beings noted lecturen ln the fldd of art. fuedla. advert.laing. radio. career and flnandal management. and markettng research. 840 mem- beTs. 850 non-members wtth • reacr· vauondeadltneofA\llt 21. 631-6541. TD emGLS £DISllUJllC& ts spoMOrtng a Labor Day weekend Ln San F'ra.nct*XI for stng1es. The luxury coach det*rta Sat .. Sept. 1 at 8 a.m .. and returns Mon.. Sept. 3 at 9 p.m. 8155 double occupancy or 8175 aJngle occupancy Includes transportatJon. beveniges on the bus, two nights accommodations tn San Franc~. dlnner ln China Town. a city low\• boat r1de to Sauaa.llto. Ftaherman·a Wharf. and a stop tn-<~ma.ai...ai.AC1~.c...i Madonna Inn on the trip home. (213) 424-7325. aaJGG8 CUJllKUIGllAll -AUTO" ll011V& llt18CVll. 250 E. Baker St., Coeta Mesa. Antique can circa 1912· ~nt. 9 a .m.-5 p.m. Wed.·Sun. 5-46-7660. DAKA WllAU' at Dana Point Harbor offers haJf-day •oo three· quarter day 1portfl11htng trips. 496-5794. I DA VSY'S LOCDJlalso offers deep aea aporlt'J.ahtng ti1pa dally. 673-5245. . D19DTLAllfD, 1313 Harbor mvd., Anaheim. The park'• aummer aeaaon reatUl"CS daily perfonnanc:e9 of the Donald Duck 50th Btrthday Pande at 3and7p.m .. aspcdal"Dor\ald0uck'a Hometown Rally" l)f'amted each day at 5;15 p.m .. and "Fant.Uy ln the Sky" fireworks at 9 p.m. The Artie Shaw Orchestra. directed by Dick Johmon. perfonns tontf(ht and Satur- day at Main Slrttt'a Pr.au Gardens. Appearing at the same locaUon Sun.- Thurs. la Lionel Hampton and bta a.g Band. Houn Fr1. 9 a. m.·mldni,th.t. Sat: 9 a .m.-1 a.m .. Sun.-Thura. ~ a.m.- mJdni,ott. 999·4565. DJBhYLAJn> BOTBL. 1150 W. Cerritos Ave .. Anaheim. "Polynealan Fantuy '84." a colorful half-hour *PACIFIC WALK ·IN THEATRES* • "fWtI .. (I) l\IS "111 I Ill I w • {I) ORANGE ~ ._DAW(K.U) 1\111 ... ,..,..(PS) 0t-i.,. .. ,.....,. ... ... hfr ..... c.. • * SUPEll •AP MUTS E*Y SAT. I ""411y • • "ID> ~-(fe-U) ltOIUISlt•O Ult 1-. i• t• ltlt ':'IDT llHJIS("' {I) •••• IJI • .,., <S SD" (I) tit ~· 1t1• La HABRA .. ..:N.,. , .. olU 11'11!1 -...rrs ,. -nr<c> "a.RM IOllD'fll" (PC) WARNER Ul:l :ii .. il.:.::ri:i:c IMA ~~ ~ .,.....,. PICllc I ..... ,.," OriW Iii 111 4J70 •C111A.sA (dllAldl 54-74" Ptlot Weell.end«/ Fr1day, August 10. 1984 9 STARTS TODAY COITAWSA •INm ldW CNINC.... f ~ tl'Ut4t 8)4.11 •nTOM (Clwftl~ .. ,~ ......... ( .... •l.A9ADA SAO ~) ~1•11 --NIC.Or11111• 137.0)IO -~OIMll '3M11'0 ~· r""=~~~~~====:=::::::'I --\IA°" ()w!N U. 3911 MIWIEa UAl.&ll ~ r - 1e Piiot Weekender/ Friday, August 10, 1984 ' a .............................................................................. P.llomtmWmeekiiiienmderiiiii/lllFmrldiamym'mAiugiuismtm10m'm1i~i841.lllli'' Southern· orriiis Most HOnored Theatre Presents its Tri1¥!1~~t · ·yers~ Season 1liE lMPORTANCE OF BaNG EARNEST. "'o.c. Willt> llw -....-. condy -_, .... T'hii -y ...... win:<>I •'- '""""" _,.iully •n"'nd tlw _......,.,.._.,,~uml ......... °""""Y ... pul ..... """' ,,,,.,....ry Jf>.M.rdl JI IQIS n..tlf'tfd lobt<UllW ........... .-. THE CIQI UlNCERT l&ft r.. .... • "'"41 I<>. tiui'*' ....s • dwarf.ii.di l'fMIM-Ql p(iiilr"" ~ '111•-..-•-""' .............. ~._b _..&...dod~•w~n.. A~ "' °""'"' SClt ~ IJir A...,..._ .-wl a. ... u~n,.. lliE OEBUTANTE BAU. lly .... HtftloiY ,., .,._ -...... Sculwn ".J.tj,"' ha> .... CQly.,.. _lot ..... ~~ ...... u...1 nw.-~.__,.,.,llt"' ...... <lw.~ Cft',..,..f by llw ""'"-l'r•.tt ..................... CRIMES Of THHllAJCT An SClt ~lfl<JI.,..,,,..,.• Arni 0 M"I' 12 ICl95 now..........,."'. aw.-. --.t-tyi..ttw..-...r '""' -• -... il1iftr .... "~-·....... "" .. __ .... -.._ 1..t AMBICAN lflF .... ,.., ......... _'°" et.oM.,. Aa 5Clt ... -........ ..w ,._ ..... ,,_ tho .....t ·-_._ "' ClOSI' TIE'S •G0008VtFEDr ~ .. ...., .... MASTER HA.ROW ••• AND 1liE BOVs. llr Alhdl f_..t ......... _ .. ,..._ -~ ... -~ ..... , ............... •Snurh Alnl:al .....__...., ..,_ ._ -~........,.. ... .,.,..,.._ .. i.ctr-~A~ .......... ....__,..tik ........... '""' ,_ -cf ll!r _.,., _,., _....,. ••• 1.,. ~ ~ 2J ,._ 2l NJ TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW BY SUBSCRIPTION ONLY. DON'T BEDISAPPOIN I ED ... ACf NOW, AND SAVEllP1"a33o/o OFF BOX OFFlcr-PRICTS. -. --··-n 198~ 8~ SUBSC~IPTIO~J OISCOU ~•T PQICES ~ha '-ha ""'llt."""-&S.ha. ~u ... s-ca.· "'-~· ..,,.... "'·-"""""' * .... S* .. ft IA 1i 1" .. l~ ~ .... 1t "' " 11' SI "' TO OID£R, fill eut ttit fomi Ind "'°'1 to South Coast ~ Wnaiption\ r.o. 1c112197, Coste~~ mn · Or save time and call our subscription hotline ... (714) 751-SUBS I I I . I Name --------------, Addr~s ______ .....,_ ___ ~----------- City ......_ ____ ~----------lrp ____ _ .... rtion. ________ ~ losilltU,. ________ I rleaw ildiclll •ID• ill chekt ot ,.mr.o.c. '°Y 2. lWNSTAGE: I .r.11 ...... MAllCSlAGE. I 1 r~.1,. rJ~.._. 2 lDJ• 1 rF-,"'"9ln.1,. fJ h• CJ ~~·'· l s.dy~.h· n ~·''" a---.... no,. n s..y,.......1:t0,. l 11wwldlb1t .,_ ._ TUlSDAJ DISCUSSIOll SCllES (ftlMll .. ,...,_.-. tt.p) ll l~ .• ,. O S.W.,hm9,7l0•• I ti I WOIM iU 1 SHIOI OTIUI DISC.OUIO (TwMay ~ w S.Mly _,illle\ ... nrili<ll• llCISWYI [] 1..W lb 1 STUOlMT DISCOU#T (~ ,.._. u(lflf FriMy tr s.tdry l'fHilt\ cllfl'tll I D llCHSOfJ I IUMl£1 Of IWMSTA&f SUISCllPTIOlS .. $ -s -----I 3 nnmn 00 llOT SCltD CASH C I Oleck 11111W. (,.Me It SCI) J Y~l----~~-----rJ ...-C-1 --------- ~ ..... -----~-----~ ------------ SUBSCRIPTIONS (714) 751-SUBS ·I Subscribe to South Coast ~s 20th~ Season. And~ yourself a place to watch the drama unfold. Soi.,th Coast Repertory was the big winner at last years LA. Drama Critics Circle and Orama- Logue Awards ceremonies. And theWth Anni- versary Season is shaping up as the best ever. As an SCR Main-· stage Subscriber, you're guaranteed !>eats for a .ieries of \'\br1d Premiere. American Premiere and Clas.sic pl~ all at SCRs beautiful 507-seat Mainst~ For bold, advmturous theatre, call us for information ~ut SCR's intimate Second Stage Season. South Corot Repertory 655 Town Ct-nter DriYt' P.O Box2197 Costa Mesa. CA 92628' .. ' I -.... 12 Pnot WW.end«/ Friday, August 10, 1984 Galleries lllJ8SUll8 Mon.-sat. 10 a .m.·6 p.m.. Sun. ond Western States Exhtbtuon and 11nJUV11 Gr m O&A.JtOs JUWPOllT a+wwoa Aa1' llV· BOW'&D 110D1J11. 2002 N. Main noon-5 p.m. 972-1900. 38th Corcoran 81ennta.I o( Amertcan OOUR ii, 301 N. Pomona Ave., Full· a&'Ull, 850 San Clemente Or1ve, St .• Santa Ana. The exhtbetJon "In LAOUJlfA B&ACB llVUUll <W Patnttng."TbteexhlbttfeatureapeJ.nt· c:rton. "The Orat International Newport Beach. ThteeexhlbltloMrun f"uU Color" runs through Aug. 26 aa Aa'T, 307 Cliff Drtve. Two JOlnt togs from artists" In 10 atates whoee Marionette and Pu~ ExhJbtUon" t. concun-enUy through Sept. 9 •• part part of "Art Connectlorut '84." "Re-exhlbttlona are featured. "Contem· exploratton of vartoua etyltatlc con· ahown th'°""" • 23. It tracee the of the Olympie Art.a F'esttftl. One necttons: Patnunga or Jary Wayne E Callfomia Art.tst. 2 l" htgh· cerns within a dtatJnctJve regional devdopmcnt OI th art form from tt. exhibit. ·~Ted by The lrv1ne Co .. Downa" ta an exfilblt featurtng aur-the ceramic work or Jens aplrtt rdlect the mystique ol the Old folk ~ to the h1'thly developed ta UUed · Actlontpredaton: The Nl'W realistic works by the Coeta "Mesa maon whoee eculptural fonna are W~ coupled w1th tmagery from the theater form. Tuea.·Pl1. 10 a.m.·3 DlrectJon IQ New York. 1955"'60." A arttat about technolo«Y'• effecta o.n b&sed on architect~. humor and New Wut. Tuea.-Sui\. 11 :30 p.m .. Sat.10a.m.-6p.m .. Sun. noon·5 second. "The Fll{Urallve Mode: Bay mankind. Runs 1nde1lnttely. Houra mytbolq;ty. A190 shown ts "The See· a.m .-4:30 o.m. 494~531. p.m. 7~545. Aru PaJntlng. T956·68," was or-__________________ ;__ ________________________ __...;. __ -r-----------------------~--------'-""'-,.....;;----_.:..-------. gantzed by theGrey Art OaUery. New York University. The Chtrct. "Art .Tran_al)'IJsston'9.'' Is one In a aev~n-. part sertea of C\,lrate<f exhibits of contemporary art by Orange Co~mty art.tats collectively ttUed "Art Conn«· tlona '84." HoUra iue..-Sun. l l • a.m.-S p.m. 759-1122. ~.DISOO BALBOA PA.ll.L Mu· ecum of Photo«raphlc Art.a. San Otego A major exhl6tUOn of the lall' An~I Adams. one of the world's most celebrated photographers. ts featuf'e'd The exhibit Is a virtually com- prehensive retrospect of Adams' ca· reer. wtlh many of his bnt known portraJta and landacapea. taken be- tween 1929 and 1983. lncluded In the 125 pnnl show. Through Aug. 26 (619) 239-5262. . GALLERIES El TOl.o I.A M1MDA • ~ llAaf •WUl...-rel • ALL&l'fDALS GALUllT, 1540 S Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Highly polished bronze eculpturea by lM Bennett Brothers or Placerville In· deflnJte. Tuee.-Sun. 11 a m.·5 p .m, 497-6005. All'l'·A·PADl, Laauna' canyon Road. Laguna Beach. norte Solomon. beat known for her loose Im-_ preaalonlstlc alyle, ahow. her paint· 1ngs. along w1lh 150 other art tats and EdwltdS ~ ~~ 5 E<twm Hwpol1 Edwnl Cile1111 Wet °""'In 821~70 581 5811() 5231611 Clnenll 144 07llO 111-31135 COSTA MUA Edwarlh T OW11 Ceiltei ~ 1 ~ 1~ • OAMIGE CNdome 634·2$53 SURF WITHOUT BURNING (Th.anks to surfers!) If you read SURFER maguine. you already know about BlJLLFROGr .. Amphibious Formular .. Sunblock. If you don't know, find out. BULLFROG1 .. was developed for surfers. BU LLFROG1 .. stays on six hours in and out of the water. Won't wet off, or sweat off. l>•. Competing surfers discovered it first. Now you can find BULLFROG"' • • in surf shops and 1• coastal stores from • • San Diego to BULLFROG,. AMPHIBIOUS FORMULA'• SUNBLOCK, Patent Pend1na ·SPF 18 • (213) 375-8004 •~J)INCO:-- lhetr works. Thro A 26. HTHREE CHEERSKJR~ERDS1 This is great stuff I Carradines performance is a comedy marvel. 'Nerds: rah!" "I laughed my head off! One of the funniest films of che year!" ~~ s...r ..... ~ "REVENGE OF THE NERDS is a delicious. gratify- ing underdog fantasy and a raunchy, uproari- ous satire. The Nerds triumph!" -MW\~ lOSA1'9t~ T.mn COSJA IEA S40-0594 Ul Soulll Coast IMIW....,.. . "Really, really funny! I was rolling on the floor. as did all the other members of the audience. I laughed until I cried:' limlJI.,. ~J0.4401 £dwam Westbrook ....... l ....... ~ON BUCH 847 3591 Pecific Warn. Dr_., ................... ..asoau CMdl~ c..• a....r-uci llSD-..>49S-6220 (dWd MlsaioA v. fllAU lp ,., It c.-....., OU.6343911 ~ Crt, Center Ill !I" Cl!,..,.,. c... ... 6S7~ .(){ ........ r.-s. 111_. Galleries 11C 8PAC& Q+'IDY. ~ Forat Avt , ~Beach. "Ne.speak," a mtxtd rDedla exhlbtt, reatura the work of 17 nationally known art1ata from acroes the country.whOle woru art concerned wtth 90d&l and pollUcal ISSUt'S Throwlh Au&. l8. 'fuea.-Sat. 1 I 30 a.m.·5:!0 p.m. 49T-T88G. BOB IJSllOM AllT GAU.DY. I 166 Sunflower. Coeta Meaa. Crata Purslrr featuree ht• oti. exhtbtl · Spor Scene ·e•." and Joan c hrtstensen ahowa watrrcolors and acryllca. Mon.~t. 10 •·fn ~ st;m. ThroU$lh AlJ,11 . .29. 675-4945. CBJlJSTL(R TBOllAI OALL&ll'I', 1001 W.17th$t.,SulteT.eo.taM~ An l'XhlblUon of at.tract a.culptural , fl~ures featuring the work ol Annle Healy Is featuri.d Alao abttn.ct oil palnllnjls by John Badger. lnddlnlte. Tut'S Silt. 9 a.m.·5 p .m. DE810N8 aECYCL&D OALLllltaY, 619 N Harbor Blvd.. FUJJ.erton. Glass Summer '84." the O.Uery'• • mnwl summer '2,1au ahow, Teatures works or 13 oufatandln& A~rtcan g1.w1 artists Thl'Olllh Aug. 25. Mon.· !'>JI IOa.m.-60.m '879-1391. i.m1ll. IDIUNI~. ""1111 • piea1111t ·~ 1111100 '""I« •lid t.t of 111 lllOod tOod - Du,.~ 121)) 927.0IH ,,.,.., ""'"'~t_, .. ,....._, ................. &oTra 1'mASOm, 1540 s. Cout K!Oway. Suite 104. Laguna Beach .. Tlie w,e.t prtvate coUcCUon ol jade and Ivory carvtnga la on dlal>lay. ~.-Sun 10 a.m.-5 pm 494-4193. &I.Alf OAU,S•nta. 1492 S. Cout Highway, #7, La«una Beach. Palr1ck N~el. known forfilaaleek and aenauous."l>layboy lllnstraUona. ta cummtly ahowtng hi• worka. Wed.· Sun. 11 a .m.-5 p.m. 494-1902. -SLIZAl.J>lt GALI.UY DITSR- RAnOl'f.AL, 38-4 Forest Ave .. #I 3A. LMuna 8-ch. The Gallery fealuree Lafin-Amerrcan~eorporatt Art wtth Armandina Lozano prceenuna paint· tnga ln putel. Vernon Ten')' exhlbt· Ungeculplurealnca.stcement, bronu ana afati'aster, and Antonio Steinhardt featurtng photOifaphy In color and black aild' white. Opens Saturday With a reception from 4-8 p.m. Through Sept. 30. Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. and by appointment. 497.5303 TBS anma WELLS COLLSC- noR, The Chama Building. 1390 s. Coast Hlgltway, Laguna Beach. An exhtbtt featuring MW works by R.A. BeMOn and tntrOducinQyou"" artJst.s 8111 Pttklna and Paul "OU~, la shown thf'OUlth Sunday. 4sw;:u97. OAL&IUA CAP18'111AJ1tO, 31681 Camino Caplatrano. San. Juan Capistrano. The "Ftbml ol TI:me" reature. 8 rare colleciJon of mUKUm· quality NaUve Amerk:an bukeb from pre-1900 to the pruent. Cloees Sun- day. Al10exhtblled I "Poetn-Extrava· ganza," an annual ahowtng of NaUve ~mertcan poetera by numerous art- lata. Th~hAug. 31. Daily lOa.m.-5 p.m. 66f-f?8l. Ol&J'IDAL& J'&DSLU.. J 00 New- port Cmter01' .. Newport Beach. an-fomta artist Larry OulT demonstrates hta techniques at a receptton In hla honor W~neadayfrom l ·3 P·"'· In the last two years, he hu oompiel~ many successful montages of famous sports, polJUcal an<S enkrtatnment pert10naflt1es, and usea charcoaJ. art- lat.9' crayon or the traditional oils. Hla works will di play through Aug. 31. Mon.· Thurs 9 a.m -4:30 p.m .. 'Frt. 9 a.m.-6 p.m , Sat. 9 a.m.·l p.m. 833-3606 OUAT Y&STltU 8AVUIG8 A.l'fD LOAR, 450 Newport ~nter Dr .. Newport Bc:ach A special showtnQ of . ~OrlTHE The .IOU. Y ROGER Restaurant Cotporatk>n haS just put the flnllhlng touc:he9 on acutar new look at their r~ant In LM• i:or.1. The fr99h .. ,.. look" turee a ~ "greenhouM" dining ., .. and • fabutouS "19'end t>tw" cod(tal lounge. The Jolly Roget'• brand new "all day" menus have a deMdOua .. ,,_,, .. ~and attractive l«Vfng co.tumee and atatM>f-the-ert 90Und system complete the "new look" restaurant. The Jolly Roger It toc:ated just oft 1-5 at 22873 L.Me Forest Drive, B Toro, CA 92630. Phone (714) 7M-4999 STARRING PAUL MtCHAEL • DIRECTED BY JACK BUNCH Book by Joseph Stein Music by Jetry Bock Lvriu by Sheldon Harn1dt LIVE ON STAGE •u11111• .. 1 •-Ciiis 2 1 ..... ,_~ 7 FREEDMAN WAY ANAH EIM fAc1~111om D1"'9~ .· ,,, ~Lr?;~·.rr ·' ~~E,~~~n· •• :. • ... (714) 772· 7710 • H l I . <(· Jo Pattereon '•art fealw-ea eorne ol'Mr- lawnte a.dJtecU LncJudJng l.and- acapea, bamboo. JU.nka. Kot but· terruee. flora19. btrda and anllDala. She la an exponent olthe tndlUonal or dauk:a1 echool ol Chtne. brush palnlJnC and a former atudmt ol the farnowa Muttt A.rtJa Po Nung Uu. Th~ At.q(UR. 842·5453._. ---OlVDU l11lflllt Allft CUlD. "801 Walnut Ave .. lrvtne. "Some ol OUr Best: An EclectJc Selection o( Contemporary PaJntlog" by~ County .,u.ta, ie fe&tu.red .. part oc ~rt Connection. '84." curated by Helen ~I. Aleo on exhibit la "Portfolio, cenmk9 by Theraa Needds. whtch tnvolvd eeveTti 1arse bowls that appear to be funcUon&l unW cJoeu Jnapectlon. and "UndeT' a1.ua:· ea doO. ·made by Yoehlko Teraoka Of Onomlchl, Japan. The dolls.dcp&cungamura.t.C--· chU· drr:n. and monu. are el.a tdy and authentJcally ~ tn tradJUonaJ Japane.e clothlnc. T'hrou&tt Aug. 22. Mon.-Thun 9 a.m.·9 p.m .. F"n. 9 a.m.~ pm.. Sat. 9 a .m.·3 pm. 552-1078. llJLL8 llOU8& A.RT OAUA RY. 2732 Ma.lo St .. Garden Grove. "Drll•· IDC-A Pbwonal V&saoo: Worb by or.,. <:ounty ArUaa'' ta exhlbUCld .. part of "Art Cannectlons '84:· ~AU£ 28. Wed.S.t. noon-4 p.m. ~-12!2. N&WHMT DACB cnT BAU. QAI I PT. 3300 W. Ntwport Blvd . Newport Beach. Selected artl$ta' Worb from the Newport City Art Collection are exhtblted u part of lhe c:onUnulng exhibits ol tht Newport Beach ArtlPeatJval.. ~ Wedne&- da,y. ·~·Frt-& •• md > p.m., 1)2lJ-1~ •• ~--~-~~.~~~~:'"""' l'SJU1'8ULA GAU.UY. 428 31 •t St .. Newport Beach. An tnnovauve UK ol oC1 paatel. normally used only ror portratts. hu produced a aend . or beauUlul landllcape patnttno by Lot Munford on exhlbtt. 673-l :tl 6 goOROll. 374 N. Cout HllOlway. Laguna Beach. Mur1ele ENrch a aayllca an<! Albert Landeros' water· colors are ahown-throulOl Sept. 1. 10 a.m~daUy. 4~22. 8 Rcau.&a'I', 384-A N . Coast Hlgbway. Laguna Bea.ch. "Coutal lmpreseions" repre9Cnta an effort by 1 o-artJat membcn to pn:!Cnl 4-MOST FOR DINING Continental Cuisine • Dally Lunch and Dinner • Cocktails Seafopd Bar •.Sunday Brunch • Entertainment • Dancing Banquet Facilities • Chauffered Limousine Service On Request Dinner SeMCe To 11..30 P .M ' Seafood Bars Open To 1.30 ),.M 32802 S Pacific Coast Hwy. Monarch Bay Plaza Laguna Niguel 499-2626 1496-5773 2331 I Mu r&ands etR~ Route Lake Forest Vil El Toro 770 3222 384 For~ Ave Lumbetyard Ptaza Laguna Beach 4~9491 752-85~8 24-199 Dona ~ Dena Point Marina lsJand W"f -West Basan Oona POdlt 661-9722 Guest Boet Slips Delly Buffet Fesllv•I • 11:00 A.M.·l-00 P.M In T?le Upst.aln lkftltw•ter ~ - - •• 14 Piiot Weekendet/ Friday, August 10, 198-4 Picks of the plays "ART1'BING GOBS,'' the Cole Porter musk:e.l. ts being st.aged aboard the ship PU01m ll to Dana Point Harbor (751 • f344). Performances will be'glven ThUl'lldays and Frtdays at 9 p.m .. Saturdays and Sundays at 7 and 9 p.m. througti Sept. 9. "TBlt BEST LITTLE WBOUBOUSIUl'f TEXAS." a coun· try-flavored musical. Is the attraction a( the Ha.rlcqwn Dinner PJayhou.!c. 3503 S. Harbor 81\ld.i-Santa Ana (97g..5s 11 ). Performances arc given ntghUy except M<Jndays at varytnJl curtain limes throUgh Sept. 23. v v v presented by the lrvtne Community Theater In Che audttonum of Turtle Rock Community Park. SunnyhlJJ Road off Turtle Rock Drive tn lrvtnc (857-5496). ~onnanc:es wm be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. lhroul2ll Aug.. 25 with a matinee at 2 p.m. Kug. 19. v"" v "FIDDLER O!I TBS ROOY," a mustcaJ about early-century Russia. Is the new show at the Grand Dtnner Thcatet'~ 7 trecdman Way. Anaheim (772-7710). Performances a~ gtven nightly excq>t Jotondays al varytng. rurtaln Umes through Aug. I 9. ••eAlll.&T," Shakespeare's "CRITIC'S CBOICE," a comedy cla.sslc lraKtdy. opcm tonight at the about the New York theater. Is betng Grove Shakespeare FcsUval, 12852 --------------------------------------------------~. SMASH HIT MUSCAL COMEDY ....... Lll>A llcCt.URE llNI CMYPITTS ............... T-. lhnl luft.. ........ ~ _ ................... tnlil "----°"""""' --·-••• Seating on first come. first served basis on 2 tor 1 nights. Offer good on Wednesdays. Thursdays, and Fridays 5 -7 P.M . thru 8-3 1-84 Main St .. Garden Grove (636·7213). Performances wtll be given Thuradays through Sundays at 8:30 unUI SepL 2. "LAVltJfDD 9'0LLIB8:' a revue by female lmper90nators. la ~ng presented at Sebastian's West Dtnner Playhouse. 140 Ave. Pico. San CJcmentc (492·9950}. Performan~ will be gtyen Wednesdays through Seturdaysat8 p.m .. Sundaysat I and 7 p.m • through~ 9. v ...,.. ~ formances are tonight and Saturday at8:30. v ....-"" ... •'TJIS euPPOaTIJtQ CAST:· a modem comedy. Is the fare at the Costa Mcea Ctvlc P.lay'houae, 661 Hamilton St .• O:>eta Mesa (645-4985) .. Performances are given Fridays and Salurdaya at 8:30 through Aug. 25 '."1JBST 8D>l!t STORY, .. a musical ""=~-~. ...... BOBBS' VACAnOR. a fam· Uy comedy. ts belngprescnted by the Ana-ModJcska Playoe In the Anaheim Cultural Arta Center. 931 N. Harbor Blvd .. Anaheim (991-4135). Pcrforman~ art Frtdays and Satur· days at 8 p.m . th...ougJ'I Aug. 18. "THE MUSIC lllA.Jlf," a musical set In early~entury Iowa. ls on stage at the CurtaJn Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real. Tustin (838·1540). Pcrfonnances w1ll be glvrn nJghUy except Mondays al varying curtaJn Umcs through Aug. 19 v "" ''SllfOOPT," a mWJtcal w'lth the Pcanutscomlc str1pcharactera, wtnds up this •ttknld at the Westmtnster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St .. Westminster (99$-4113}. Flnal per- muggy and three women fainted before we got everybody on. .. They tried tugboats, they Ocw m divers. but nothing worked. You never knew when the ship was going tP be rocked suddenly. Once I was 1n the shower when we took. this big jolt -bam! I got it ri&ht in ll\e nose.' When the company finally told Denise and her fricods it was au over, she Jlew to New Yorlc where she was offered an uodmtudy;s role in the musical "LitlleSbopofHorrora." But a summons from an old friend, Dan Trevino of the new South Coast See Saturday Paper ror SUNDAY BRUNCH GUIDE drama ad on the New York sttteta. rs betng presented al the Huntington BcaCh Playhou&c, Mmn. Street at Yorktown'Avcnue. Huntington Beach (832-1405). Performances W111 be gtven fl'rldays and Sat\.atdays at 8:30 through Aug. 25 with a Thu.nday atagtnO at 8:30 Aug. and Sunday maunies at 2:30 Aug.12 and l 9 .,... v ., "" Musical Theater an lrvioe, brought, her back to Southern Cal.lfomia to choreograph the musical "Dames at Sea." Despite the ironic title, the show ..as 3 happy cxpcn cnec for Deni who, just four years ago, played the prima donoa Broadway star an the same musical for the Hatlequjn Dinner Playhouse. The Daily Pilot's review termed her a .. shinins stand· out" and heralded her "superb show- manship ... Last year she played the same role on four days' notice at jbc Pasadena Playhouse. She received much the same sort of tribute a decade earlier when she played SaUy Bowles in UCJ's .. Cabaret" and Laura in .. l.oo.k Homeward, An.,:J." She went on to become the lead dancer 1.n the national tour of the musical .. P1p- pin"under Bob Posse's direction. "lt was the best money I ever made in the r:;;::;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;=;::=========;A;::======:::;J business,•• she recalls fondly. Now Denise, who had taupit at ''flrUlllft TUr:-#~llr...._..1..1.-1-•otversityftigb~ootin Irvtnefor-oc,n Ill II I nc, .J 111;11 c,, seven years. is again pursuing a career in education. She'll be doing the With choreography for Uni fbgb's fall production of .. Runaways" once she lrttMla Clfl••ra f'lllishC$ with .. Kismet ... Restaurant Account Executive As for cruising the Caribbean -maybe som~ other time. A.s a passen- ger. GALLERIES work& tdlttUog the California 9Ce'.J\C Through Au«u&t With frequent ad· dlllone. Oa1ly 11 a .m.·5 p.m. 497-6775. SAR JUAl't CAPISTllAllO LI· BllAJtT, 31495 El CamJno Real. San Juan Capistrano. An exhtbltlOn UUed "HISpaolc Ottoralfve Arta" Is pres· cnted with Items choeen for this show featur1ng four major periods In lime and oonta1n1ng fumJtutt. pottery • .tenUea, silver, pa1nungs. pr1nla and 8<'Ulpture. Th~ A~. 1 A.. Tues.-Sun. 11 a .m.-3 p.m. 493· 1 752. 811&1lWOOD' OALL&Jl'f, 460 S. Coaat Hwy.. Laguna 8cach. Well· known SOuthttn California arttat John Ramos fcaturea the ttleaee of three new limited edlllol1 prtnts at a f'C'CCPtlori Saturday from 1 9 p.m . Works Include ··F'laml~:· "Tht Amertca.n Wtld Turkey.' and "The Royal Btnol T'IRcr. ··one wttk Show· t~ only. ·'97-2$768. TL& OAl.UUlY. 611 Anton Blvd .. Suite 120, Coata Mesa. New s-1ot1ng.. al)d dRwtr9 by award-Winning SOuthern CaBfomta artlat• Rlc:haril Bunkall and an e:xhtbltlon al laml· nated cardbO&id aculpture by noted San Dteao arttat John R~ an fcalun:d . .,.,..~ Aug. I 8. TUes. ·Sat. 11 a.m.·5:30p.m. S45·ARTS ~AL GAU.all'!'. 326 QIC'n• neyre.1ACt1na Ocacb. Pkt lkkatrt. a contemporary FlemWl l"'paetonlet whoee 1>9tnung la rTmln~t of Monet with deltcate~rdt:n a«'nc:s awuh wtlh aall 1 t. ahows h WOtbe:xcl~tn UnltedStatea atone With The hl al V«p&J. a ona1c:c1ton ~ aomt a1 the nnc.t p1~ repreaenUn« the pJltty. Through Sept, 2.1\.e..-Thure. 10 a m.-6 p.m . P'ri . .S.t. 10 a.m.~ p.m. 494·9'4 I • Movie reviews THE BOUl'fTY: Rated PG. A flne myaler1ous &JI-consuming force. tumouttobealq.,tplucklerthantheir rrtrlltnlt of the poptilar story of Splendid apeclaJ pttlaJ effecta. Solld no-non~nK training ofncer (G. W. F.n~ltsh sallora who muUny aga.Jn t dltteUon by Wolf gang Petersen (''Das Bailey) uapects. Lota of crude· but their harsh captain after getUng a Boot .. ) • ..,..,., funny gags. If you're t.aate runs to ta!tlf' of paradtst' on the Island-of POLIC& ACADEMY: Jr you en· more aophl ttcate'd humor, don·t Tahiti Anthony Hopklrui and Mel joyed "Animal House" and bother with this one. Dtrttted by Gtb!.On are excellent a Wllltam Bligh "Porky'e," you'll probably get a kick HL.gh Wilson. c~ator of "WKRP In ,1nd fletcher Chr1~ttan. lf anything. oul lhls sendup of poUce training A Cincinnati " ..,., till'• vrrston. WT1tten by Robert Boll. new woman mayor has opened the PURPLE RAl1': Rated R. Semi· prrc;c-nts a more eym~thetJe portrait academy lo. all sorts of mtsnta, who autoblogrnphlcaJ mm atarrfn~ char· Piiot Weekender/ Frtday, August 10. 19S. 1$ ~matlc Pr1nce aa the talented but self-centered leader ol a Mlnneapoll.s funk·rock band. The night club pt'rformance Sttnes and Prince'• soundtrack are a knockout. But lhe~·s aliO a sllly, mek>dramattc storyline Involving the . etar·a troubled pattnls ana hi rocky ro- mance with a m19tertou• woman (Appolonia Kotero). Prlnce fans wlll 1ove IL Others may noc • .,., SIXT&< CA!fDl,..&8: Rated PG. Molly Ringwald stars tn this comedy about a l~n-•r who9c parTnts forget her special birthday. She alao has a crush on a handsome Rnlor but ts pursued by a fa.st·talktng "Geck " Wr1tcr-dtrcctor John Hughes. who wrote "National Lampc~cm's Va· 11 1 All~h. Stunning photography. wtth ~~~;i~~;;;~ii~iii.i~~~~~~~~~;;~~;;;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~L)~~~·~~;= i:.l\l llful direction -.l>y • Roger I~ ==-.,... .. .,.,..,..,..,,===--=·==;1 Donaldson. "'"'"' FOOTLOOSE: Rated PG. The dance sequences are fun. but be· tween them ~·u have to endure a ponderous. predictable story aooul c;mall-town moraJJty and lttn·agc fnic;tratlons. Kevtn Bacon ehlne. tn thrleadro~.JohnLlthgow maJtea 1-------------------,--..,..--------....-----.,........---'--.----:---:------:----,-----:-~ t hr most of a thankleu role u the '>tride nt town mlnlatcr. Not u prrtrnllous as "Flas)ldancc," but not as Interesting lo watch either . .,., DmlAJlfA .JOJlll:8 ARD TBS T&ll· PLE OP DOOllJ Rated PG. tfArlUon ford ~turns In a worthy follow-up to 'Raiders of the Lost Ark.'' The fUm has trademark Luc:aamm Virtues: thrilling non-atop action. colorful .. r111ngs and atate-of·lhe·art effects and stunt work. 1l abo ha.a the l.ucasfllm drawback• or ahaJlo• rharacter1zatlon and lmpllsUc plot· tin~ Director Steven SplelbttJt sldl· llully mixes the humorous ana acary mnm,nta. eapeclally dunng a marvelous opening nightclub attne. Thr more violent scene. may be too frl~htentng for younger children. .,.,.... . GHOSTB1J8T&U: Raled PO A first -rate contemporary comedy with c;upertor s~lal effceta. Bill Murray. Dan Aykroyd and Harold"ltamls are thrre bumbling parapsychologlSts trvlng to rtd New York of Jihost.s. Murray's constant wl9ecracb are hilarious, and Stgoumey' Weaver. ~hose apartment la haunted. proves .,he's more than an tnteUectuaJ tee lady. The ulttmate monster that finally attack• New York la too funny • • FEATURING-Dinner Cruise GOURMET DINNERS Cocktail Cruises, and Sunday Brunch whilst at sea aboard the 'Cormorant Newport Beach resenting ... "a little West of Broadway" a fun filled Broadway review Reserve your Boa~ding TIGIC ~.....,..~ Pass now by calling -, , • , , < •• , ••• (714) 675-1481 -::.:u~.~4~':.~ tn give away . ..,..,....,.., GUlllLDf8: RatC'd PO . Thcac 1ltUe 1--------------------------1 c reaturcs start out cute but eventu· ally tum Into dangeroua ml8CbJef makers who wrcall fiavoc In a emall town at Christmastime. Bringing the Gremlins to vMd life ta an amazing frat In this Splelberg·pl"'Oduccd film. directed by Joe Dante ( .. The Howl- ing"). But Dante and llCttenwrtter Chris C.olumbua have eo much fun with the Gremlins and wtth trtbutes to past movloe that the human storyllncs att len eadJy unM.veloped. EntertalnJng but f;J.~table. ~ "' TD KAaAT& Rated PO. A predJctable crowd·pleUt"r for anyone who's ever been picked on by a bully. Ralph Macchio plays the new kJd at a Ca"fornla school who becomes a target of teen martial arts expert.a. Nor1yukl "Pat" Morita play• an ec- centric cu todtan who Inda Macchio through eome offbeat kara~ train· Ing. Morita and Macchio ,ive nne performances. and dlrtttor John Avlldaen pulls the r111,ht emOUonal atr1ng:s. as he did In •·lfocky.'' "'"'"' TDllATV&AL& Rated PO. Robert Redford mums In an appealt.ng baseball fairy ~ that youngatera and many adult• wtll probably en.JOY. More jackd movtcgoera may~ put Off by the •ll-conadoUa myth·mak•na andheavy·handtdaymbollam.Afilm with no gray area• Robert Duvall. Wilford Srimley. Kim Ba Inger and Glenn CJoec co«ar. O.rry L.hfneon ("Diner") dtrecta. "'"'"' TBS DVSUJlfDIRO SIOaT: Rated PO. An enchanting children'• mm lhat wm hook a lot or adult.a. too. Barret Oliver pla19 a boy who eecapee his real·world troublee (the death of hi• mother. haruement by bulllee) when he begin• raicttna a book about the m .. 1cal land of Fantaala. Another boy (NOah Hathaway) ta trytna to aave thte world from a THE . REUBEN E. LEE ()n The Bay PRESENTS SIZZLING SUMMER NIGHTS thf' RED Ladie & Genalemen the REDS ~ T.-dey thtu Seturdty llwv~ ,, DEXTER August 14 thru September 1 151 East Coast Highway, Newport Beach 675-5811 e Dinners as good as our breakfasts. London Broil Shrimp Fry --~ ·international Salad Sauteed Fish Fillet Golden Rotisserie Chicken Steak & Shrimp Seafood Omelette Nachos Stuffed Potato Skins Spaghetti & Meatballs Bacon Cheeseburger Vegetable & Cheese Delight Italian Omelette ... Stir-fried Vegetable Omelette Seafood Platter Mushroom Burger Steak Dinner Come to our House after 4 p.m. for our new dinner menur .329 t:. 17th Street. at Santa Ana Ave. In Costa Mesa now.open 'tit midnight. .. , - .. I _. •• I Pilot Weekender/ Friday, August 10, 1984 Movies ... Villa Swedel) Smorsaabord Rea,au.rant and Bakery cation" and "Mr. Mom." 9ttme u .,._. u ··Star Trek n:· ..,...,,.,_ keenly aware al the awkwaidne. 81'1JllQ 8111PT1 Rated PG. A naive and frulllraUOn factnc adoleeccnta. houee'Wife (Goldie Hawn) matura on Unfortunately. heal90gtve.ualotaof an atrcraft a.embly Une during cheap and otrenaJve ~· ..,...,, World War D and hu an affatr "1th a Since 1961 WIDE SCREEN IV 8PLASB: Rated JI(); A delightful co-worker (Kurt Ruaeell). Un· comedy about a New York produce fortunately. the rum veen wtldty dealer (Tom Hanka) who falls for a fromoomed)'toeoapopcratoht9tot1· beauttful blond mermaid (Daryl Han-cal drama to fem.ln'9t tract without nah). The m.)'9t~oua mennaJd re.oMng any theme •tiafactonly. aprouta legs on land and learn• DlsappotntJng. despite 90me cbarm- En«Jlah f,rom a bank of tf.levlaJon eeta ·tog momenta . .,,.,, lhowln9 OlymP-lc lwents ,., wt llloomT'-ld:t« Ron Heward '!SW M &llDltAmll'l'a dlttCta Wft a •ure Hind. eat&bHah, Ri eOPC;Debra WtAger and Shirley tog a etrOna central love 8lory and MacLalne give-O.CU-callber prr- lefiJ'18 SCT\' veterana John Candy formanc:es In thla funny and touch-' and ~n· Levy handle~ CJ{ the . trrg rum. which traoee a rnothtt- be8t roon= .,, ..... .,, daughter relatJonshlp over 30 years. .. "W• ,,,.. to maintain our SOtM ~ular prlds and SOtM fri«>clly .ma during ,,.. Olympic ..ason.,, 522 Main StrMt Huntington Beach 536-3033 American THI! BARN American. lunctt M-F 11-2:30 Dinner M-S from 5 PM Happy Hour M-F 4:30 10 7 PM. Sun Champagne Buffet Brunch 10-2:30. Entertainment & Dancing, Banquet FacJ(lties. 14982 Redhtlt, Tustin 73C>-0115. THE OAtGtNAL BARN FARMER STEAKHOUSE The original. Featunng display bfOll- Jog. lunch Mon.-Frt. 11·2. OiMet nightly Mon -Fri. tromop.m., Sat & Sun from • p m 2001 Hatbot Blvd .. Costa Mesa 642-9777 HAMBURGER HAMLET Famous vatlety of hambufgers, saloon steak sandwiChea. lobster bisque. onion IOUp f~ and cherry cot>- bler. Lunch & dinnel from 11 :30 M·Sat . Sun 10-10. Special Sunday Breaklasl Gf•t i:.r & happy hour. 1545 A"-ms at Harbot. Costa Mesa. 546-7392. HARBOR HOUSE CAFE Establllhed&lnce 1939 C>n'*ttes, 25 vane11.. S.C*I 24 houri. Sand-wichea. 30 varieties. Heated garden petlO dinner served 5-10 PM. 34157 Coast Hwy. Dana Point (714) 496-9270. Also 16341 Coast Hwy .. Sun&et Beach. (213) 592-5404. PARADISE CAFE San Franciscan style. Fresh fish and pasta. PatlO dininQ.. Lunch M-F 11-3. Oinnef Mon -$at from 5 p.m. Happy Hr M-F 5-7 Wed. Ladies nite 5°' well drinltt from 3 p.m. Banquet facitltle$ 600 Newpof1 Center br., Fashion Island, Newport Beach. 644-1237. POOR RICHARDS KITCHEN Breekfast. lunch. dinner Patio dlfWlg with oc.n WWW. Modest prieel S.. /wine. FSIMd tor Belgian wafflM. Open ddy from 8 AM. 1198S Coat Hwy In Vllage F&Ke Mal. Laguna Beech 497-1667. Chinese JADE~QON Szechwan Mandafln CCJlslnes of Old Chine. t Wdece Lee. Chef Yr a.n. t dining. Lunch, Dinner. Sat. & Sun. Olm Sum (Ctilnele Tea Cake Brunch) Banquets, Beer & Wine. ~ Prices. 12100 a..cn Blvd , Si.nton 898-8933. Open T~esday thru Sunday from 11 :30 A.M. 8TAJl m-TBBUAllCB Jac.i Nlcholaon, aa a pau=, J'Oll UOC&: Rated PG. AdmJral drunken aatronaut, la aJao au . K.Jrk (Wllliam Shatnct) and hta aging The .moua twtat that occure two- it.Sdektck.a muat .teal the damaged thirds thl"O\Ulh la manJpulaUve, but atarahtp ltnterprt.e In a daring you'll proba6Jy auccumb to It any· • Banquet Facilities Up to 100 Penont mlU1on to revtve the late Mr. Spock. way • ..,...,,..,.. · whoee body wu lef\ on the unstable · aene.i.pJ.anet.Theyabomustfacea ..,...,,.,,..,.. -Excellent . .,,.,.,. - band ol bloodthlraty Kltngoos. Fan• Very good . ..,.. v -GoOd. "' -Not eo ol lbe eerte. ahOWd love tt. Not quite good. ORANGE COAST RESTAURANT DI RECTO.RY Continental AIRPORTER INN. ti I • Pr•IW' Roolw ContinentaN..unctt M-F 11.30 • 2 30 Sun Brunctl 10 -3 00 Dinner from 5 30 Happy HOUf M·F Entertainment & Danciog 7 nlghtl a week Valet P8'king. Banquet Facllities 18700 MacArthur, IMne 833-2770 CAFE UDO Newpoft'1 Cannery VIiiage Jazz spot. Cozy atmoaphere American, Italian & ConUnental menu Lunch M·F 11..:J Dinner nightly 5-11 Entertain- ment nightly &-1·30 Sun. Ian MS8ion ~7 Ample parking. 2900 Newport Blvd , ~ Beach 675-2968. MARCEL'S Volar lllltoel. Dancing Wad thru Sal niaht• to Buzzy Bo1t, 9 00 P M to 1:30 A.l.4 , Top 40'1 Live Reggae every Fri & Sat. from 9:30P.M.'13ackgammon Happy hour •·7 P.M Come 888 our bfand new look. Serving aendwiches. aoupa, INfood and etocsaants. 130 E. 17th St., Colla Mela. 646-3666 RIVIERA Continental Chef RiCbatd Bergner lirlOe 1970 Internet• Dining lunch 11:30-3.00 dWl8f from 6 PM. Cloeed Sun. & Holidays Banquet rooms. 3333 S. Brtalol, Coate Mesa S4()..384() F ren c h BORDEAUX . 100 win.. SllYer Award Winner. LuncheaTuaa ·Fri. Oinnar M-S. Cloeed a & holldeya Off lklstol and (between Baker and 8Mr) then on1o St. Clair. 758 St, Clair. '. co.ta Mesa S4C>-3841 . Italian DONATEW'I The otlglnal ~ 1973. Now opun In our new location. Sen/Ing OUf famous pa:za and pata Oirw In ot take out 9430 Wamet at Bulhaf<!·.-FountO'I Veley. Behind the Smlar vo~S965. MAACEU.01 Family owned. Establlhed lir'ICe 1973 Pastas. ...al, pan. Specla!Wng "' CloC>pinO. Beer & Wine ~ Salad bar. Lunch Mon thru Fri dinnef 7 nights. week. Sundey Brunch 10-3 p.m. 17502 a.ch Blvd. at Sleter , Huntington Beech. 842-5505. Mexican •CASA •XICAN RESTAURANT 0.. food II • trtp to Mexico! Est. llnce 1972 Open delly from 11 a.m lof kMlCh & ~. Cocktall. Entert• ment Wed thru Set. ~ta In the Burro Room 298 E. 17th St.. Costa Meta. Cel 645-782e TORTLLA FLATS Award Winner~ after yeet. Same $Onof8 •1Y't ~ lira 1949. Opef'I cWy 11.30 to fo PM. Sunday bNoch 10:30 to 3. Happy how 4 to e .l PM weekday•. Complimentary bot....._ Cantine open ti 2 AM 17 40 s. Coat Hwy.. ~ B4iec:ll 494-6588. TR!SAMI008 A piece fot people who IPP!'adl1a good Maxlcati food at 8Ufl)fillngty low pr1clea; Open dally 11 a.m., Ulc:h ' dinner. CWv loocheon lf*)lell o.no- lng Tu-. thru Set. 10 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Top 40'• mu* Ceteriog. 2200 Harb« Blvd , K Met1 Piel.a. Cotta. 042-827418278 Natural/Healthy FORTY CARROTS DalicioU8 fuNon food per Henry Segemrom A great plac:e tor dinner 7 days from 11 a.m. SUnday ~ pagne Brvnch. Between Bullocks and I M&Qnin. So. Coast Plaza, lowef leVel. 556-9700. ' PUFFINS "Naturally" cooked foo<Js. from pan- cakes to Cft!Pft to steaks An adven- turt In nat\JCal eat~ ~ Sun thru Thurs. 8 am to 11 pm. Frf. & S.t. 8 am to 12 midnight. Visa/MC Ce9ual Mod- «•I• Prices. 3050 E. ea.st Hwy .. Corona del MM 64C>-1573 Seafood & Steak aLACKBEARDS Heerty Beef Entreee & S.fooc<t Lunch 11..:3;00 Drnner from 5 PM. Haol>Y Hour M-F ExtenlM Oyater Bar •. 1'wo ~ aouth of John Wayne Airport. 833-0080. THE CANNERY Features freah local seafood, eastam beef. Lunch. dlMef, Sonday brunch and chempegne brunch. harbor crullea. Entertainment nightly and Sunday afterrnooo. Lounge food gal- ley. Hla1orlc waterfront landmart( In , Newport'. Cannery VIiiage. 3010 Lafayette. 675-5711 RUSTY PELICAN Freeh ... food and Iota of It. Newport Beacti • Lunch, diMar. Suiday bfunch. CMr1ooka Newpof1 Bay 2735 w eo.st Hwy 642..:3431. lt'llne • Lunch. dinner. happy hour. 1830 Main. ~4n4. TALE Of THE WHAL.I Open 7 O.ys Braektaat :r a.m. M-F, lunch 11-.4 M..f. Dinner 4-11 M-S. Set & &#\. brunch 7 ..... Oyater bet Frl. S.t .. Sun. Banquet e.cllt• up to 600. Entar1alnmant WetJ.-Sun. P8110femie bey . vtew. 400 Mall'I St., e.1boe. 673-4e33. THEWAMHOUU Freet) S.food 6 International ~ Waterfront dining Chef Chal'le8 Kaleglen. lunctl. Olrinet, sat 6 Sun. Award Winning 8runc:tl ~,,_ quet• & Clltetlng, OySter Bat, Enter· lalnmant lido \IMtlga. Newport 8Mch 873-4700.