HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-14 - Orange Coast Pilot''
Eatancla 17. La.gun& Hille 14
Mater Del 30, Santa Ana Valley O
Tustin 21, Woodbrl,tge 7
.
Ne~ort Harbor 20,.Irvtne 7
~ .... ~.,.,...c......
I.nine'• Jeff Blelman (11) avolda Newport'• rtet.on
Anderson (65). &ff Paae. Bl. 83 for detalli.
. .
For~••t• on A2
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Janet Gaynor
deadat77
COAST IDlllON
FRIDAY SEPTEMBFA 1·1 1984 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
..
You'll find the
beat auto buya along
the Orange Coaat In
today'• Auto Piiot
-PageC1
110-unlt hilltop project In
Laguna raises Ire of city
offlcl~ls./ A3 · .
A convicted drunken
driver picks up a 10-year
term In the sf am mer./ A4
;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;::::;:,:;~=~~:::·:-:·:·~::-:·:·:·:·:·:<·:·:·
Nation
Contractor tells etaerly
woman he can fix leaky
toilet for $50,000./ A5
World
A quake measuring 6.9
rattles Japan's mid-
section./ A4
People
Paul Conrad will explain
how polltlcal satire af-
fects the ' 84 electlon In a
lecture at UC lrvlne./85
Center of cable TV •torm
Former Marina High .
quarterback Ken Laszlo
will direct Orange Coast's
wlshbone against Golden
West Saturday ./81
8Uila Leailtt of Ban~ Beach JIU
been threatened wltb . rnctlOn from her
mobile home O'Yer her i'efiaia1 to pay for an
unwanted cable TV RJ'Yice. Story Paae AS.
The Woodbridge Invita-
tional, set for Saturday
morning, Is the first Im-
portant high school cross
country meet of the •
season.182
Entertainment
Legendary Ella Fitzgerald
starts the Laguna Beach
Pop Music Festival.
IWMkender
Biotechnolo~ ·
wave of the fllture
for -rr:S itidUstcy~
Scientist outlines
potentl_al advances
at UCI symposium
acneticaJly engineered to resist pests.
These are amo ng the break-
throughs that may be achieved in the
very near future, a leading scientist
told' local "business leaders pthercd
Thutsday at a UC Irvine symposium
on gene research and biotcchnolJY. By PHIL SNEIDERMAN But the speaker also wamed that
OftMo.llr,...!teft U.S. companies. if they want to keep
Re.aenerataon of lost huf!\an limbs. pace with biotcch experts ih Japan.
Surgical tr2nsplant techmqucs that must establish close ttes with un1ver-
could help a damaged brain repair sity researcher:s at institutions such as · it~lf. airy cows that produce sia-~CI.
Auto Piiot
Bridge
·c1
88 A3
A7
A4
nificantly more milk from the sam e . " ... Joint researdi efforts between
amount of feed. Plants that arc (Pleueeee8CIENCB/A2) Howa.rdA.Scbne!derman
BuJletln Board
Bualneaa
California NeWa
Clualfled
Com let
Crouword
Death Nottcea
Gardening
H .. pYourMlf
Horoecope
Ann Landefa
Mutual Funds
National Newt
Opinion
P~ml
People
Pola log
PubllC Notlcee
Antaurantt
Sport a
Stock Marketa
TMYttlOn
Theatera
WMther
World News
.
C5·7
88
• ' C7
. C3
87
His crusa8.e: Execute ·state
I 88 ce murderers all of them
ee ·--=-----,-....-.---~---.....--!---.~...,,,.......,.:.~--~~.:-..----...,._~
A7 County optometrist leading a vocate
A4 ~g of what he calls ·penal euthanasia'
85-e
A3
C3"4
Weekend«
'81""4 Al ee w•tndtr A2
A4
..
..
u .. s. _deficit~
spe~din' top
.Coast gripes
Survey shows 40th District residents •
favor cutbacks off ederal programs
By JEFF ADLER survey ranked federal deficits ~
0t ... °"",....... No. I cone.cm, followed by aovcm~
Rcsidenis of the Oranec Coast's meot spend~ (34 percent), mili~
40th Congressional District arc con-preparedness(9pcrccnt)andcrime(~
cemcd most about skyrocketinJ fed-ftt).
eral deficits and unbridled govern-High interest rates, income tuesl'i
mcnt spending. according to a survey innauon and unemployment ~
The solutions to both concern is Stlectcd by survey rnpondeo.ts as U»
cutting back on all federal proerams isucs by less than S percent ofthoW
and spending less on social programs, who ranked the issues. .
accordinJ. to those responding to the The survey results arc based upon a:
unscientific survey. conducted by · t2ndom sampleof SOO questionnaire;.
Rep. Robert Badhain. R-Newport from those returned to Badham'
Beach. office. explained Argyle Nelson. a.:
Badham, in a 40th district new~ ' Badham aide. The newsletters wcte'
·fdttr,-asktd residents of the -con-· mailed in early Scptembtt.
servative coastal district to rank the Badbam. who is up for re-electi(u~
··most pressing issues facing the in November. is oppoted by DCtno...
ted&ates today .. and '° IC$l)Ond crat C.arol Ann Bradford. •
to a series of questions concerning To reduce federal deficits. survey
. defense and the economy. rlspondenb ovcnvhclmingly o~
More than 35 percent ofthedistnct po~ raising income taus (87 per
residents who responded to the (Pleue eee D&P'JCITS/ A2
Colte kingpin ~
plead~ guilty ~
Huntington's Mobley
15th to admit guilt ----1 n huge cocaine ring_
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... o.111 .... ....,
Alan Charles Mobley, the 24-ycar-
old Huntington Beach man who has
been described as the ~in of the
largest cocaine ring on the West
Coast, faces 45 ¥Cars tn prison after . ..
pleading guilty Thursday to drui
charges. · •
Mobley is the t Sth person to enter l
guilty pica iD the drua case. believed
to be the third largest io the nation•
htstory.
A Fullerton High School graduate
who allegedly beCamc a multi•
millionaire from cocaine sales!
Mobley faces a maximum of 1 S yean
in prison oo each of the three co~ ne plcade<i guilty to.as wClliilifetim
• . (PleueMeCOKE/
Ex-Mesa officer
given light term ~
-s_a.ys-prosecutor~ ~
By STEVE MARBLE
Ofh"-.........
. Former Costa ~'esa Police Officer William l..auchlan was given a hght
sentence but is bema severely punish-
ed in other ways, said the prosecutor
in the sex case after the ex-patrolman
was ordered to serve 60 da}S in Jail.
"He lost hi job and his hfe. in
effect, has been ruined," said Deputy
Oistncl Attorney Carl Annbru t.
who had recommended a sentence tn
.. l
STEVE
MUILE
NEWSMAKERS
Irvine .Co.
fights tax
appraisal
El
L
DEFICITS, SPENDINQ TOP CO CERNS •••
ecnt), hne l xe5 or busrnes wes.
The) alSQopposcd pending lesson
dcfen program , but suppottcd
cutdl\8 .. all federal prQSnlm '' (64
percent) and pending less on SOQlaJ
;>r<>sram• (60'PC~nt).
More th n ~ percent of d1stnct
sidcm who ' re ponded to the
survey .rtponed tbcy were cconomi ...
Uy better off now than they wcrt
our years a o, while 36 percent said
they were the same and 17.S percent
-
ind1 ted the) "ere wo e off.
The que uon "are you better off
than ) ou were tour years ao?" was
the oncn·repeated refrain Ronald
RcaP.n successfully u d in hi I ?80
presidential victory over thcn·Prcsi·
· dent Jimmy Caner.
Tumina to defense issue • the
Badham survey found 76 per~nt of
district re1idents who answered the
questionnaire favored strenathenina national defense while 85 pcn:cnt said
• they do not behc"c the Unncd STates
should make conccs ions to the
Soviets on ama control.
A bilateral nuclear builddown as
proposed b>: the. Rea,aan Admini •
trat1on received 1uppon from 81
percent of all respondents.
However fully SS percent of those
answerina the questions said they do
not believe the United States shouJd
pro\fide military and civilian foreicn
aid toemef'linaThird World nation .
IRVINE CO. FIGHTS REVALUATION •Al• · Jl'romAl
Under As~sor Bradle)' L. Jacob's
revaluation, the compants property
Wtes would sk)tocket from about
17 million annual!}· to about SS 1
million annually. The revaluation
pplies to the I 984.8S tax ) ear.
The formal petitions of protest
filed Thursday with the Oranae
.County Clerk's office consist of a blanket appeal covering all Irvine Co.
parcels as well as separate appeals for
individual parcels, according to a
statement released by the company.
The company did not file individ-
ual appeals on residential leasehold
properties, the statement read, be-
cause they were not subject to the
revaluation
The company's appeal centers on com~ny president. .
its contentton that a revaluation, · Nielsen also objected ~ to the
which under l 978's pro(>Cny tax-. assessor's appraisal of ufldeveloped
cunina Proposition 13 ts tnaaercd by partels on the 68,000-acre Jrvine Co.
a sale of real estate. was not nt'C~~TY· .. _ property accordi!'4 to "their thcorcti·
The a essor's office "inoorRCtly cal Iona-term, ~lumat~ uses, rather
reprdcd a 1983 sale of Irvine co: than on the bas~ of their current and
k 1 f I tat .. h near-term uses. stoc as a sa e o rta cs e, 1 c The company president said the
company statement charaes. propeny, beina developed over a
The sale: in April 1983, transferred penod of decades and within the
a m&Jority of the company's stock to constraints of phued acneral plans,
board chairman and now principal will not reach the value appraised by
owner Donald L. Bren, who hves on the assessor for many yean, if ever.
Newport's Linda Isle. Robert E. Currie, legal counsel to
"This, by definition. was a stock the Irvine Co. on the assessment
transfer, not a sale of real estate, and appeal, said the bulk of the revalua·
hence not a cause for a total rcvalua· uons may take· more than a year to
tion," said Thomas H Nielsen, settle in separate appeal bcarinas.
~
DEAT H PENALT Y ADVOCATE •••
From Al
"If you have a tumor, you remove
It."
Garber secs convicted murderers
as a health catt problem and death as
the proper prcsciption, the proper
treatment to the problem.
Amon1 Garber's subscribers arc three immatcs on death row. All have
written to Garber claim1na they arc
interested m having their sentences
carried out - a la Gary Gilmore.
One of the men, Robert L. Massie,
has asked for Garber's help in getting
the American Civil Liberties Union
out of his hair so that he can be
executed.
A two-time killer, Massie
murdered a San Francisco liquor
store clerk only a year after being
paroled for slaying a San Gabriel
woman. ·
Garber !las corrtsppnded wllh the
death row im mate and recently met
him dunng an intervtew at San
Oucnun State Pnson. He adnuts
Massie is an articulate, intenige·nr
man who has a lawyer-like under-
standing of the law.
Still, Garbcr's onl)' interest 10
Massie is seeing him dead.
'"The guy's nice. The guy's in-
telligent. Big deal. What's that have to
do with anything. He's a menace to
society ancf that should be the only
~-"ls he really interested in beina
executed? l don't know and I really
don't &ivc a damn. ·
''But I'll take his word for it, and I'll
do my best to help him down the path
to his termination, to his final day.
''It's not that I hate the guy. Why
shOuld I be mad at him? What I'm
upset about is a system that lets
peo~lc hkc ham back out on the street
to kill again."
Garber will not even entenam the
notion that Massie or Watson or
Freeway Killer Wilham Bonin or any
of the other 164 1mmates on death
row can be rehab1htatcd.
"Do they have the nght to be
redeemed? Hell no There are certain
things in life that arc not reversible.
"If you decide to commit suicide,
that's a final decision. You can't
chan1e your mind afterward. When
you take a gun . put It to someone's
head and pull the tnaaer, that's
irreversible. You are thought of as
bem& dangerous and you'll never be
washed free of that."
U nhke some, Garber does not sec
the cxecutto'Jf of a cnminal as a form
of punishment. Nor docs he believe
that the gas chamber 1s a deterrent to
other criminals.
"If you have a rat wtth buQ<>nic
plague, killing ham 1sn 't going to deter
the rats across the street But 1t sure
will deter him. If you have a menace.
you deal with that menancc.
'"Termination 1s an absolute deter-
rent." he adds
So, who 1s this man so passionate
about emptying death ro"" in the
name of medicine?
. Garbtr is not an attome} nor is he a
direct victim of cnme. He's a
Berkeley-educated father of four who
t>epn writina letters to th.e ednor.20
years aao to express his arowing
Just Call
642-6086
~l'tl.ellNto.,T_.K_
Howard Garber leada cruade to empty Death Row.
consternation with thCJusuce system:.
As B'n11 B'rith Anti-Defamation
League committee chairman in 1964,
Garber drafted a ringing law and
order proclamation that was adopted
by his lodge.
In 1972. he was a co-chairman of
the Death Penalty lniuauvc and four
years later he helped found the
Orange County Chapter of C1l1Zcns
for Law and Order. Then came Rose
Bird. the paroleheanngs. and oppos.i-
t1on to the proposed butldina of a
county jail site near Anaheim Hills.
Garber is not alone an his fiahts and
his feelina.s. On the other hand, he is
not universally admired. The ACLU
and the Coalition Apinst the Death
Penalty regard the man as being
"misinformed." Even the American
Medical Association is opposed to the
death penalty.
"Garber would have us increase the
number of homicides in the country
by 20.000 a year." says Hullkower of
the Coalition. "That's insane."
The death penalty opponent views
Garbcras a man fascinated by k:illin1
murderers and says he 1s turned off
has analogies between pnson 1mmatcs
as variou$ rodents and animals.
"There are many intelliacnt, hu-
mane thina.s that can be done with
some of the 1mmatcs on death row.
Throwing .a few thousand volts
throug.h their bodies doesn't repair
the rip in society created by cnme,"
Hullkowcr say!I
He says Garber is guilty of "aross
generalities" when be insists that the
death row population is beyond
rehabilitation.
"There are people like Charles
Manson and others who arc probably
beyond our reach," Hullkower sua· acsts. "Others, however, can be made
to function probabl} in an institu·
tional scttina." Thouah some have dismissed
Garber andJtis ilk as a "bunch of
kooks" and ·•unfeeling naht
winacrs," he insists he's not a hateful
or vengeful person.
He claims that the forms of c~ccution used in the United States
arc primitive, cruel and unusual.
"If r.ou had a pit bull that attacks
and kills a youna child, what would
you do? Would you hang the pit bull?
Hell no, you wouldn't. Y ct in this
country we would do things to
humans that we'd never consider
doina to an animal," Garber says.
"The notion that they should feel
pain is archaic. I'm not interested in
mihcttna-bruta:l, cruel J>Uni1bmem.
They shouldn't have to feel anythina.
He advocates lethal injccuon -
the twilight sleep approach. .
"There should be no emouon
attached to iL It's not a rcliaious issue
or a political issue. It's a tiealth care
i sue," he says.
.. Why should be treat this mena~
to soc1ctY any different that some bacteria?''
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number atleft and your me11a1e will bi recorClect, tran1crlbid and delivered
to Uae appropriate editor.
Tbe same U·bour an1werlD1 service may be used to record letters to tbe
editor on any topk. Contributors to our Letter• cohuna mutt include tbelr
name and telephone number for verUlca loo. No drclllatlon call1, please.
Tell us what's on your mind .
ORANGE COAST Delly Piiot
Dell very
11 Ouerentffd
...
Ot•
"'"
Clrculetlon
T•l•phonn
..,
I
l
Daily Pilat
H. L. SchW9rtZ Ill
Pubhsner
Rosemary Churchman
Centro I r
Stephen F. Cerezo
Producmcn 1
Manager
Don Id L. Wllll1m1
Ciroul 11on
Ma gr
I
VOL. n, NO. 258
'
It's heating up f or weekend
Coaatal
8-ldtow TOOAY
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EX-COP GETS LIGHT TERM •••
From Al
bold a JOb and sutlers ruabtmares of -police department in February. two
the incident last January, ac.cordini · weeks after bis arrest.
to the prosecutor. Judge ordered Lauchlan t~ sur-
Armbrust araued for a heavy render himself at the county Jilli on
sentence. He described Laucblan as a Sept. 28. The delay was IJ'lnted for
man who ••made of habit of preyina Lauchlan's attorney, Matt Kurilich,
on women who were alone at night to file an appeal. . during his patrol." · Lauchlan did not stop to talk with
He said Lauchlan appean to be reporters following scntenci_na. His
"obsessed with seit" and told the mother said, "There'• nothina he's
court that "be may be even more going to say that's printable anyway."
dangerous outside his uniform. The wavy-haired former police-
"Hc may have been a Jood officer man bas been adamant about his
but if he was, it was only from the belt innocence. Kuriiicb complained that
up," said Armbrust during a con-bis client was convicted on the claims
vcrsation after sentencing. .. Below ofa woman he allcacs had just had an
the belt he was a menace." emotional breakup with her
The proseclttor conceded that he boyfriend. .
had mixed f~lmp about how heavy a laucblan allegedly stopped the
sentence the 33-yea.r-old former woman on the Costa Mesa Freeway
policeman should receive. durina the early momina hours last
"... he's beinJ punished ju.st by January and told berto follow him to
bean& revealed," said Judac prior to a darkened industrial park. He rc-
sentencing. "He will have to hve with portedly molested her while detain-
that. He has been an embarotssment ma her inside his car.
and disaaracc to himself." Though be on&inally was arrested.
Lauchlan, the father of two ~rls, is on suspicion of sexually assaultmg
separated from his wife and children, four women, all but one of the
according to a probation report. It allegations fell by the wa)'side during
notes he also is m extreme financial the proceedings. The most serious
straitsand has had little luck landina a chlfle -that be raped a woman in
full-time job. He was fired by the the front scat of his sQuad car -was
tlU 1-3 1
1 nat
1·2
1
1 Swtl Oottctlotl' 90\I~
William Lauchlan
11 ., ,,
., 71
• ., 12
fl H 10 .. .. .. ., ,.
71 ti = :: " .. II 71 • 104 .,. ., 10
tot '* .. .. .. ,, ,, ti
" 70
" 71 " .. .. ., a 10 a 14
" 11 IO ti .... " .. 11 71 .. u .. 7t .. u
10 ... .. .
10 10 .. u
74 10 12 ..
" 72 .. 11 .,. 71
101 72 n 11 71 70
tossed out by a Municipal Counjudl
who said he found the woman
testimony unbelievable.
Armbrust brought three othc
women forward Thursday prior t
sentencing. All testified tba
Laucblan had made sugcstive con
mcnts to them such as "How about
quickie?" and "Gosh, you're beaut
ful."
Kurilich said the testimony wa
laughable and added, "I say won
things than that on a daily basis."
COKE KINGPIN ADMITS GUILT ••• From Al ..
probation after his release. Mobley,
who is held on $4 million bail, will be
sentenced Nov. S.
More than a ton of cocaine was
seized in May and 31 defendants were
char&cd after a massive Orange
County druJ sweep that closed a two-
car mvcst1ption. Th. e trial was to n Tuesday.
is Ukcly a tnal will not be
necessary and that other defendants
m the case-except for those who arc
sun fugitives -will enter pleas
before Tuesday_, federal prosecutor
John Kuray saio today.
"This worked the way it's supposed
to work," Assistant U.S. Attorney
Mark H. Bonner told the Associated
Press, contrastina the prosecution of
the case to the recent John Z. De
Lorean cocaine trial that ended in
acquittal.
As part of the deal for Mobley's
auilty plca1 about SS other federal
charaes agiunst the Huntington Beach
man were dropped.
Mobley also aarced to Jive the
federal government milhons of
dollars wonh of property he
purchased with allcaed drug profits.
The land included three waterfront
lots in Huntington Harbour, property
near Bia Bear, and land in at least
three other counties.
He also relinquished ownership to
more than a dozen expensive cars he
purchased durin' trips to Germany.
Four Colombians named in the
case -three of whom are related to
Mobley throu~ marriage -have
been fu&itives since the federal indict·
ments were,issued. They arc believed
to be bidina out in Colombia
A bench warrant for his arrest was
issued. for a fifth defendant, Michael
serrano, 26, of El Toro1 who failed to
appear in court Thurso.ay.
The prosecution's case qamst
Mobley rested on federal wircutps o(
Mobley and dthcr defendants, with
thousand& of tape. recorded conversa-
tions.
Thirteen defendants had already
pleaded guilty in the case by Thurs-
day when defense attorneys made a
last-ditch effort to have the wiretaps
thrown out. The judge denied the
motion.
Mobley then entered his pica. Al o
pleadina auilty Thursday to con·
s irac~ characs was Mobley'
motTtcr-in-law. Belen Puerta
Machado, 39. She could get up t
ciibt years in prison. Mobley's wif
Afcyda Mobley, and his sister, Ciod
Lee Croley of Ncwpon Bcacl
pleaded guilty last month and face u
to fi vc years m prison.
All picas, includina Mobley's, we•
conditional pendina an appeal of th
wiretap issue 10 the U.S. 9th Circu
Coun of Appeals.
One of the fu11tives being sou&ht
Moblcy's father-in-law, Heri&cn
Machado Velasquez, SO, ofMcdilli1
Colombia.
More than 4()() law enforccmer
officers wer-c involved in the casi
iocludina 186 FBI aaents, 38 DnJ
Enforcement aacnts, 48 Internal Re'
cnuc Service agents and l SO Orana
County officers.
One of the defendants, Ro
"Turbo" Tina, 2S, of Corona del Ma
was critically injured when he WI
shot by an FBI aaent. Tina reportedl
was reaching for a weapon when b
was shot in the chest with a shotgun
Ting, .,qbo is paralyzed from th
shoulders down, entered a auilty pie
from ..Eou.nt.aiJL Y.alley Comm unit
Hospital.
. SCIENC~. INDUSTRY LOOK TO FUTURE •••
From Al
America's areat universities and
America's · research-driven com-
panies promise to accelerate both
basic rcscarth uself and its com-
mercial application•," said Howard
A. Schneiderman, senior vice pttsi·
dent and chief scientist for the
Monsanto Co. · 1 •
"It should enable us to discover
cures for diseases in shorter times,
improve crop yields more quickly1 create new materials with unexpeclea
and useful propenies and devise new
and more efficient production pro-
cesses."
Before he joined Monsanto in
1979, Schneiderman conducted re·
arch at UCI m developmental
bioloay and gcnct1cs, studyingarowth
control, con~nital malformation
and cancer. He joined the UCI faculty
in J 969 and later bceame dean of
university's hool of Biolqgical Sci-
ence and duutor of the Center for
Pathobioloay.
Thouah now emplo)ed b>
1onsanto, he ma1nuun clo
a uon wnh the Irvine campu1
hnead rman wa the kernote
pcalcer at Thursday's symPosium,
which was dcsi ncd to familiarize
local bu inc s and communhy
le den \\llb1 the biotefhnoloay re·
rch undtt way t UCI. The
pro mm wa al~o part of n onaoana
11Mt he untVffltW to MO •
Joint research projects involvina the Hatfield noted that Oran,c Cour
school and area businesses. · ty, with more than 1 so biotcct
In line with this, university officials related businesses, is bccomina
said UCI is scckina t>rivatc industry leader in this field. He also point
..w.tance in cstabltsh1na a world out that UCI has more than-a
era-is biot.tchnolog~ c.entcr that will affiliations with industry and ho~
t\nclude the nation 1 first university to increase SllCh tics.
r:rnmcnt ofbioche",'ical en&mccr-In his . keynote addre11
Addrc ina the symposium au-Sehncidcrman admitted that joii
dicncc. O. WC1lcy Hatfield, director indunry-univcrsity rcscarch projec!
of UCl's acne research and carry risks.
biotcchnoloay pr~m. acknowl-"Are our universitiea moraU
cdied that the term 'biotechnoloay" tron1 enoua,h to withstand what I
is a bu1l:word with a '\lricty of construed by some to be the corrupr mcanin~. , • ina influences of bi& busu~essT' b He defined at as a de_ nption of a kcd.
"any technique that usea liyina or· Schneiderman said some litholat
pnisms, or P._art of orpn!-Jms. to fear that compani will pras univej
make or mod if~ products, to improve sity researchers to focu on narro1
plants or animal and to develop product-onented aoals rather Iha
m1croorgan1 m for pccific: u s:· more basic rescarCh,
Hatfield said the baotech 1ndustcy .. If, in the antcttSl of hon·teftl
alrc d) has developed macro· reward . corporauons damqe th
ora.an1 m , ctll and plan use6 by baSJc intellectual structure of,Ameri industry to produce valuable ca's univeni11es. &hey 111 kill t)l
Chcm1 ls nd fuel uch meth nc oosc that lays aoldcn .•• h
aas and cth)l alcohol. He 1d warned.
enct1 lly enJinecrcd orpn15ms are But he added, .. t m oonvincC'd tbl also~&ll$Cd for 011 rte<>\ CO' nd 10 America's ~or corporauons "
produce hydroaen ~ ~izc thi and arc sen 1tivc to
In the future, he 111d, b otechnol&y 1mponance of of the univenity • oan be used to help the worldwiCJc society's ma n arena for the dlJCO\o'Ct
fOod hortaae and n> produ c 1mpon-of faru. explanation and dcasand •
nt phannaccuucals u has 1n uhn the gro•1n1 ground for our ncbe1
interferon, growth hormone and vac-n1u1ral re ourcc, crcauvc 1n
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, Lecture to :view
teen alcoholism
Mich cl OcMu:co, M.D., medical dim:tor or the
ol nt drua recovery center at Anaheim Mtmorial Ho pnaJ, will ~ the featured apealicr at a free lecture on tccn~lcohohs~ on Wednesday, Sept. l9, tt 7:l0 p.m. ~r DcM1cco, who has been instrumental 11 establiahma aeveml tttatmcntp~mt for &dolcsoents ~tate1 that there arc more t~an 33,000 alcoholic yount.steri
tn OtinJe County. He w1U ape k in the Double Eleven
AAu ht~num of the hospita) at 1211 W. La Palma Ave na c1m. • .,
For more infonn taon, call 999-6061 .
•smokenden' proaram offered
fountain Valley Community Hospital. comer of
Euchd and Warner, is offerina a free introductory meetina
to the "Smokenden" proaram on Wednesday ~...-. 19 a-t 7:30 p.m. · • ..,.,..,.. •
The.proaran:i is a proven service that tttais the causes
or smokina.. We1aht control is also addressed for those conce~ed about the effects of their wei&ht. Those
plannapa ~o attend should call the Health Resoun:e CCnter at 966-1006. •
I
NOW to present peat •Peaker
. The South Coast Chapter of the National Oraaniza-u~n for Women willprescnt Rosalie Abrams foundcr1Dd dir~or of Orange Coan Feminist Theater ind lona·time
acllv!st, as auest spea.ker on Wednesllay. Sept. f9, at 7:30 p.m. m the El Toro Library. El Toro Road and R.Aymend.
. Abrams conte.nds that an underlyina theme of sexiam h~b Ad<?lph Hitler. Larry Aynt, Chile•s military
d1ctatonh1p and the Mafquia de Sade and will auament
her talk with colored slides. Free child care and
refreshments will be available. Fore more information
call S86-2727. '
Free aemlnar scheduled
Fullenon Mortpge and Escrow Co., 90S S. Euclid St.,
FUilerton. will host a free seminar on °Pros and Cons of
VA. FHA. Adjustable and Conventional LOans" on
Thursday, Sept 20, at 7 p.m. ·
. Space is limited, so call 870-+41 l early for reser-
vations.
Cit 11 •t t d agreed to approve no more than 70 y ear er reJec e homes, citina the inability of tbe only
l ~ 11 0 h two streets that would serve the p an 1 or om es project to handle the increased traffic.
at Alta Laguna Blvd. Ncsotiations broke down com--pletely last year when Carina-Sand·
By DA VJD BISHOP lina insisted that the project would not work unless they could build at
Oelr""C.11•1'*"' · least 110 homes.. County flannina commissioners Carma-Sandlin& went back to the
sot an ea.rfu of protest this week from county, and on Wednesday planners
Lquna Beach city officials over plans bepn hearinp on a zone chanae and
to bwld 110 homes on a county environmental impact repon for the
Olym I fn la1 t ~• 1. hilltop adjaccntto the city. 110.unit proposal because the prop-draft EIR is "completely dcfcnSible,·• P C 0 C 0 •~ The Carma-Sandlin& Group's plan eny. remains in an unincorporated addina thAt the 110 .. bisb~ity,
. ~ Countv Advertisina Federation will present for a housma development at the coun~ area. custom-home .. lots oo 28 acres would
Ri h:. ..... .:-;. / . f north end of Alta Laguna Boulevard • · e.. lave 92 ,_...,.. t f ... ..--..tv · c 111u .,.raent; vice president o operations for the Los is the same one that City Council An now bitter city officials re1u1C _ ...... n o .we ., .... _. •:r in
Anaelcs Olym_pic Orpnizing Committee. at a luncheon to cooperate with the tounty and open space. ' on Thursday, SeP.t. 20, at the Airporter Inn Hotel in Irvine. members rejected in 1983 when •twas developer by rcfusina access to the frank asked the commission on
Saraent wtll tell how the LAOOC developed proposed for annexation to the city of c1tfs roads and services. Wednesday to make another attempt
sponsorships. how they manaaed the Olympic Games on a Laauna Beach. At the county's urama. The city of Laguna Beach owns a at gettina the city and Carma-
budaet. less than that still owed by the 1976 Montreal Canna-Sandlin1 asked for anneu-small piece of land between the Sandlin& talking ap.in.
Olympics, and what it took to tum the nation-and the tion in return for approval of llO im>posed building site and the end of ••we're not happy to be here,"
world on to the most successful Olympiad yet. homes. Afta LaiuM ulevard which ah cs Frank -said; ~'l hope.the commission Social time be&.ins at 11:30, lunch at noon, and the A stalemate resulted when the city them an opportunity to block access forces the parttes beck toaethcr." He
proaram at l 2:4S. Cost to members is S 12 and guests S l S. ------------to city roads and services. said &1:1 the othct: unsubdivided ~~~,,r:a6tl8'().on3s60mlu. st be made no later than Sept. 18 by LB clinic helps . "We have no choice but to oppose properues on the hilltop have had \;OU~.. the zone chanaes " Laguna Beach their development plans reduced, ·. famllle& COpe City Manager Ken' Frank said ... The including propert~ owned by t!>e project would impose financial 41un1 Beach Un1fied School Di~ •Evening With Joy• announced
The Women's Opponunities Center of UC Irvine is
otrerina a free workshop entitled "An Evening With Joy ..
on Thursdayl ~pt. 20, from 1:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the
Center, 2811 Main St, Irvine.
Joy Dickerson, attorney, will discuss joint tenancy
laws and the necessity of pre-marital and cohabitation
aareements. Call 8S6-7128 for pre-rqistration and
infonnation.
, Frlday •. Sept. 14 .
No meet1Dc• 1clledlled.
burdens on the·city for fire and police • tnCL -
Families that have a continuing protection wihtout compensation. "Be _careful about bcin.f too sym-
difficult problem with one of its It's unfair." patbellc to the developer, he added,
members, such as an elederly family Laauna Beach City Council mem-sayina he•s seen documents showing
member who suffers from ber .'Roben Gentry saul .. We art that Carma-Sandliq purcba$Cd the
Alzheimer's disease orothercripplina puzzled as to how the project would property for $4.000 ~a~. . condition, may now seek help from obtain access." F~nk and three aty ~dentsat~
the Laauna Beach Free Oinic. Commission Chamnan Wilham R. addiuonal co~ccrns with potential ~e rree Oinic's newly-developed MacDoupl ~med Cann1-Sandlin1 water .runoff ~nto Laguna Can~on.
Family Support proaram is also that constructlon of an access road exCCSSlve aradina. la~ of sewer li_nes
desianed to help families wath a . from the project in the opposite a~d a water rcscrvorr o~ the proj~
member who has problems with direction west to Lquna Canyon ~tte, n~. affordabl~ housina. se<>l~c
alcohohsm, depreuion or teaming Road wowd be costly and dtfficult to 1nstab1bty and uwlequatc public
and behavioral disorders. aet11pproved. access.
Emphasis is placed first on trt'lting But Jotm Allday, director of plan-AJldaysaidCarm.-Sandlinawou.td
the !tress plae<!d on the family in such t\ina for Carma..S.ndlina, said. "We provide the information for the ~ s.1t~tion,. then on .treatina the wo~d~'tbehereif~ed.idn'tthink~he PlanninaCommissionwhenthehear-
ind1v1dual with the spec1~c problem, project could exist 10 the . umn-in& resumes ~n Ocl 1 in the county"
• prowam spokesman said. corporated area." Allday said the Hall of Adrrunistration.
I
Po ucE Loe
8 y ROBERT BARK.Ea °' ... ..., .........
· A Huntinaton Beach civic activisl PfOlnited Thurs.
day to lead a bomcownen• revolt ll*inst Dickinson
Padric CablcsySlems if two women are Cvicud &om lbeir
mobik homes because of a dispute over cabk ldcvision.
Dean-Albright, a member of the ci~s Environmental
Board and former Cit) Couilc::il ca.nd1datc •. uid be ud
about. IS people hc•s cd with are upset about ae
threateoed eviction hanaina over the beads of senior
citiz.ens Sarah Lra\itt and Betty Teeters.
.. 1t•s a form ofbarusment and it's a Shame it hid
to ao this far.'' Albri&bt. a S2-year-old elcctriciaA. said ... If
these two ladies~ evicted from their tiomes, we arepna
to cancel our subsCriptions v.ith Dktinson Pacific.•
· laVJn and T ect.ers, v•ho balbd wbeo fdJow i&mlDU
at the Cabrillo Mobile Home Part at Plci.fic Coul
Hifbway and cwl.and SUttt approled a five-year multi·
unit contract to hook up the park to the cable television
S} tcm last September, face eviction by the park's
manqa:ment.
All tenanuin. the park's 4S units were assnsedS 1 Oper
month to cover the costs. But the two women refusied IO
take the service and refused to pay the ell ti'a fee. They were
threatened W'lth eviction in May.
The two holdouts stuck to their guns and were
informed by letter that their rent is bein&hiked S 10toS180
on Oct: l.
Apin,. they•re refusina to pay and a lawyer
reprcseotina senior citizen intcrats is threaten.in& \cul
action on their behalf1 claimiaa the increase is tied to 1he
cable TV service and is not lcpl. ·
Albri&bt says that be believes \ht bi&ca.bltitle\ ·on
company, with rqional bcadquanen in Garden Grove.·
rcspoDS1ble for the dilemma because it "'tries to use fcRc
to act the services into compklles and parks. ..
Dickinson Pacifit rcprnentatives Mn anavailable
for comment today.
Alb~t claimed the company •'kind or uled
blackmail by alle&edly tellinJ pe.rt man.-meot if it
didn't book up last Fall for service on a multi-unit basis, it
would be passed over until 1 laterda~
"It is a sad case that they (Leavin and Tecten) could
be threatened this way. If they won•t want cable -TV and
den•t have it they shouldn't have to pay for il"
estimated at $S89. • • • A resident of the 10000 block of San
Jewell') valued at $50 was taken
from an apanment in the 21000 block
of Pacific Coast Hi&hway. • • •
tmne
'i. siher bi(')cle wonh about $400
was stolco from the 14000 block of
Harvard . • • •
Missing mental patient
found unharn1ed in Mesa
Miauel Court reported Wednesday
that someone broke mto her blue
1983 Honda Accord. The burglar did
1200 dimage to ilie vehicle and tool:
clothina worth S l 9S. stereo equip-ment wonh $400 and other property
worth $200.
• 'i. male adult was taken into ~> for alleacdl} stcaliQg an S85
te11nis racquet. from Spon.man. 7'JJ
Edi~rA,e.-
Radna ~m-wnc-stele& from •--.:i.;.i
A 47-year-old resident of a Santa
Ana ~ntal hospital was found in
Costa Mesa Thunday momina after
she wandered awa)' from a bus outina
Wednesday evening near the New-
pon Pier.
The woman, who was described as
paranoid and po 1bly suicidal. had
been reported missina Wtd.nesday
after the bus she was travehn& in
broke down and she walked off,
Newport Beach police said.
An elltensive helicopter search of
the beach and surrounding area failed
to tum up the woman Wednesday
Coeta Meea AbOutSl,160worth .ofpossc sion ,
Buralars lowered themselves into includina a camera and .evcral len •
Art's Cleaners, 737 w. 17th St., after were $tOlen from a~ idence on the
they pried off an air vent on the roof .SOO block of Paularino. The crook
of the business. Police aaid about reportedly smashed out a bedroom
$1601n cash was 1toltn. The crooks window to pin :n~~ce·;
apparently used a wooden ladder A 17-year..otd Jirl from Oranae \VU
stored nut to the bu1ldina to climb amsted on susp1don of petty theft at
onto the roof. Bullock's at South Coast Plan. The
A stereo 1yst:m• ~nh about $500 airl ttponedly stuned 1 $40 black
wu stolen from a car parked at 3030 sv.uter into her hoppina baa.
Harbor Blvd. Poli~ said the thief Ne...nftrt Beach npped ofT a door handle and th m -~
pn'.A O""n lhc lock A flight attendant ho Its IWI)' ~ ~ • .-· • from her home on the I 00 block of
A crowbar apparently wu used by Baywood Drive last week returned to
buralan to break into an office find her mink coat atoten. Pohce said buifdina at 750 W. 17th t. The there wa1 no forced enU)' in tht t.hcf\
intrudcn m de off wilh • tclcvi1 on and the U .000 coat wauht onl item
set and 1 video cu tte recorder. ml lina. . . ., . . ..
·A man trom pokan • W1!~:1 A Radio hack tore t.-as 1tnick by
dlacovued lhlt 10mC9nc bid hel~ rioplif\ua ho walked out Yiith 1
themselves to cnalnc paru otrllis $600 ponable computer Thunday. •t961 Volkswqen van. He told police Employees told PQllc:c they did not thanhedi1tnbutor~p. the fuel pump an)'Ont uke the computer.
and the {lnltiion wirt were mt1 na. • n • 'fhe van 'II par!ked at 0 6 Harbor 'lwo1lassjarafi I dWlthco1n1wrR
Bh'd. totcn Wtdnesdt> from a home on ~=~~-~c~~·~·~·~----~ ~hf ~100 lod: of Rhcr A n
niaht. but she called her sister from a
Bob's Bia Boy restaurant in Costa
Mesa Thursday momina. accordilll
to Sgt. Doua Aetcher.
The woman, who was unharmed,
had apparently walked to the Bob's
restaurant, Aetcher said.
.
Thieves pushed open an utl.locked
window and pried open a locked
bedroom door to pin access to the
coins. The loss wausti mated at SI 00. • • • A · pune. conta'inina cash 1nd valuables. wu stolen Thursday from
an unlocked car parked on the 1600
block of West Balboa Bo~levard. The
lo was estimated at $466.
Foantala Valley
A nta na relldent voho worknt
the Zod)'s tore at 16111 Halbor
81\'d, told polioe Tburida) bis pen
Volks\\'llCn Rabbit was 1tokn '&om
the store parkina. ~lot. The lou u
estimated 1t S 1,500. • • • mtonc ro e into 1 bro~'n 1970
Podte Dtn parted ~hunda) on the
18300 block of Los Canlrios Street.
The I Included steRO uipment
nhJSO. • • • An emDlo>tt ofa health ~on \ht I 000 block of Mqnolia ll"ttt rtpon~ that someone tole a alft· ~j! men's told and diamond n n m the her desk t()p ""htl her
o ce wu unattended TM I
Lapna Beach
Stereo equipment \\Onh s l. aro
v.as reported stolen from 122 Oeo St.
Thursda) afternoon. • • • Glen Marshall Hall. 26. was ar·
re ted at Myrtle Street and South Coa~t Hiahway Thursday niaht and
charged with driving under the in-
fluence of alcohol. He was released on
$1,SOO ball, • • • A residential burtlaey reponed in
the 400 block of' cYpress Drive
resulted in the Jo o( ttems \I.Orth
S 1.000 Thundar ~ftemoon. ,.
Jefftt} Kent Johnson, 23, was
arrested for po ion of a tolen
credit card Thunday in the 1100
block of uth Coast HW\.tA'ly. He
was bcina held on Sl.SOO 6&il.
lhuatinitc>D Beach
A m1dent of ~he 4000 bl of
Wamer A ICl\UC id his UOO cOlor
TV tet was 1tolen and b\Mt gtOptrt)
Yr'al au fd p out11dt the 1ho~1 Df'obabl)~ "by I butlW ho QIO become fri&htcned by someone com-ma home. • • • A S 130 tc1tphonc 1n1 n ma·
ch M wt1 u en from • n the 17000 Jock of Pacific __ ..._.~.
WI)'• It • • bout 300 In old co and h
rt taken from 1 container ln the
16000 bloc of Ba hort la • •
• . .
Thle,cs tole tv.o cameras and a
Walk.man radio from a residence m
the 11000 block of Broo'-hurst trcet. • • •
Someone ran ked a home 1n the
600 block of 11th Strcet after entering
throuab an unlocked din1na room
window and stcahna S 1500 1n jew-
elr).
P1"ll" on wooa . • • • A v.hitcshirt ndapairofpants
stolen from a car parl.cd on the l 5000
block of Moulin~. • • • A red Sch 'lnD beacht'r cr\llSCT'
bicycle was tolen from the t 4000
block ofCulvtr Drive. The bite bad
an cst1mlltcd value ors.ex>. • • • paramedics responded to Yale
l..oOp ~be.re a woman collapsed.
Baseball bat bandits
hold up jewel y store
30 holdup t 1 Buena Park all lOftl an \\bich~ fhc men armed \\itb a han~n and cdathammcr uied.
but f11led. to mash 1 watcb ca
Popcorn shop worker raped
...
""" '
' J
,
lnflatiozi. still in check
as wholesale prices dip Cuo1no to Catholics: Don't
JDake your la\Y& for others
WASHINGTON (AP)_: Whole:
pnces, falling for the first umc in
nanc month , dropped O. l percent in
UIU t as aasoline prices staged their
tccpcst decline sinoe March 1983,
the aovemment said toda). Food prices. off lightly after a
sharp climb in Jul)', fdl Tor \he founb__
time in five months.
The overall drop left inflation at the
Wholesale level runnina at a mett 2:4 ~rcent. calculated annually. for the
first ci&ht months' of 1984.
NonnaHy. psohnc pnccs n dunn,g
the pc -drhring summer month
But, this ye r. thosc pnccs h vc fallen throughout.
Q,·er the last 12 months, gasolin .Today'~ surpru1n aood new prices t the whok le level are down provides some of the best evidence to 11 2 pc;rccnt. ·
date that the uncllpccted ctonomic But anul)s1s·taiit1on dr')Vers not to
resurgence has no as m ny analy ts expt."Ct further drops and add that
feared; led to a renewal. of the price may even pick up a httlc in the
inOationar)' puul. • coming month . · .•
..Inflation rema?ps .exceptionally · As for food, the labor Depart·
\\ell under control ad Mach el K~ent's Producer Price ln.dcx for
Evan~. a private economacconsultant fin1 hed toods recorded a drop of 0.1
here, m ~dvan~ of the report. pcrccnumer 1.4 percent rise m July. Gasohn~ pnocs pl~mmet~ 4.2 Leading the "' ) last month were
percent. v.1th th,e dechne attnbu~ed declines of S.9 percent for pork, 4.9
largely io plentiful world upphes. percent for poulrry and 4. 7 pcroeni for
t&&S· Prices for fresh vegetable~.
ho\\ever, rose l 1.3 percent. their third monthly pin in a row.
Since August 19113. food priCC$ -
m0tt volatile than psoline - h ve
nsen 5.2 percent.
In a 5eparate repon, the Commerce
Depanment said retail sales last
month were off 0.8 percent. The
report. which revised July's sales drop to 2 percent, was' seen as fresh
evideoce that the economy is cooling
from its torrid January-June per-
formance.
The aovtmment was also rel~asing
later in the day its latest calculation of
production at the nation's mines,
factories and utilities.
As for last month's wholesale price
activity, the labor Departrpent re-
ported these details: Swimsuit winner
By dae A110elated Ptt
SOUTH BEND, Ind (A PJ-Ncw York Gov. Mano
Cuomo, sayioi most Americans find the use of religion
for polmcalp1n "fn~tenina. •• staked out a JX>Sition for
Roman Cathoh polmcal leaders who are at odds with
the church over the abonion is ue. "What we're argui!'*
abOut here is not what to get done but how to act it done,
• Cuomo a11d Thursday niaht durina a question-and·
answer session after hi1 address at the Univenity of Noire Dame. Cuomo said the way to stop abonions in the
United States is "not by tryina to make laws for others to
lave bt,,_.~ul by hvin& the laws alread written for us by God ~ while Catholics 1n pohtlcs milbt accept church ..
doctrine ID their lives. tho~ who don't agree "aren't a CUOMO
ruthless, callousallianoe of anti.Christians determined to overthrow our moral
standards," said Cuomo, a Catholic who deli vercd a rousing keynote addrc at
the Democratic National Convention in July.
Recovery olmlnen delayed
· • SH IELOS. Ky. -A crumblina shafe ceiliDJ forced worken to delay efforts
to recover the bodies of two mine~ killed by a huge slab of fallina rock deep
in ide a coal mine an official says. Crews. recovered two bOdies Thur5day
mor.1ing. but ran for safety about <4 p.m. when rock began falling in Bon
Trucking Co.'s No. 2 mine. said David Jones, administrator of the state
medical examiner proaram. "We couldn't hear it from ·the outside. but they
s~ned coming o~t. Tw~ or three auys indicated it was about.as scared as
th-ey've ever been an a mane,•• Jones said.
EmRloyen of alien• targeted '
WASHINGTON -Lawmakers stru.ulina to fashion a sweepina
!mmiJr&lion ~ill before Congress adjourns in ilirce weeks have aareed to make
ll a cnme to hare anyone known by the employer to have ente~ the country
alleaall)'. The aareement was the first mltjor step for a House--Senate conference
committee that beJln negotiations Thursday on the first major reform of the
nation's immisrauon laws in 30 years.
•Beef and veal priOC$ were off 0.1 ... Utah Sharl w 11 fll3 A rl na d. t · 1.. t Jt percent. Dairy product prices fell 0.4 DU.. ' ene e •• 1.adlll me ca .r-ee8JI uO em
percent Fish prices rose 0.6 percent. wu Toted the •wlm•ult com-ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -Advertisina experts predict the worSt scandal
Fresh fruit prices were up 1. 7 percent ~etttton winner dartn5 in the history of the Miss America pageant oouJd mean a 35 percent il\crease in
· •Home heating oil prices fell <4.6 handay'• prellmlnarte. o the contest's television ratinas Saturday, o~nizen said. Albert A. Marks Jr.,
percent. Natural ps prices were up the 11.lu America Pageant In the pageant's executive director, caUed n "ironic'' that the nude phot~phs ~Liii7iiipeiiiiiirceiiiiiniit.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiAiiitlaniiiiiiiiiidiiiciiiCiiiliiity._. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 which forced Vanessa Williams to relinquish her crown in July could interest
11 more people in the paaeant than ever. Convention Hall, the lS,000-seat home
DON'T IUST GO THROUGH IT -
WE HAVE MOVED TO FOUNTAIN VALLEY GROW THROUGH IT!
of Miss America since 1940, is sold out for Saturday niaht's finals, and about
6S,C>09 copi~ of the pageant's $2 p~m book are "virtually sold out and
there as no tJme to pnnt anymore; said Marks.
BACK TO
SCHOOL
FASH.IONS
GIRLS, PRETEENS
& JUNIORS
M, T. W, S 10-e
Th, F 10-7
Sunday 12-5
Divorce,,
Recovery.
Workshop
SEMINAR
FOR DIVORCED
AND SEPARATED
PERSONS OF ALL
AGES
Six Thursday Evenings
Sept. 27 -Nov. I
7:30-9:30 p.m.
18055 MAGNOLIA• FOUNTAIN VALLEY• 963-7133
ST. ANDREWS PBESBYrERIA CHURCH
Newport Beach -St. Andrews at 15th St.
CORNER MAGNOLIA & TALBERT Across from Newport Harbor HICh S20 RectstraUon
For more Information, call 631-2885 9·5 Mon-Fri.
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(I \MRNER HOME VIDEO
Wall To Wall Fun For AU
COSTA MESA
'\. 2320 Harbor Blvd.
•
UAW walkout poalble toaJglJt
DETROIT-As thousands of"very nervous" workers at United Auto
Workers locals in 27 states prepared for a possible walkout at midni&bt tonipt,
union negotiators mulled over a revised wage offer from General Motors Corp.
UAW President Owen Bieber bas informed the world's largest carmaker that
the union does not intend to work past the 1 J :S!>~m. expiration of its current
contract unless a tentative settlement is near. e contract coven lS0,000
workers ia this country -half the global wor orce of the world's largest
private employer. .
CALIFORNIA
AIDS vlctlm had blood transfusion
SAN FRANCISCO __.: An elderly woman died from AIDS appuently
contracted from a blood transfusion more than four years ago, her doctor says.
Mary Ajnes Bauer, 70, died Sept. 2 of a form of pneumonia common to victims
of acqu1~ immune deficiency syndrome. said Dr. Robert V. Illa. who bepn
trcatina her a year a&O· He said the condition was su~ by a blood test
performed at Stanford University Blood Bank;
Drunk driver gets 10 years
LOS ANGELES-:-A prison term believed to be the longest ever imposed
for drunken drivina -nearly 10 leaf!_-was im~ on a former professional bowler with a stnna o more than 20 convictions. Gary I:
Christopher, 38, was jailed in lieu of SS00,000 bond Thursday. His lawyer
called the nine-year, seven-month sentence by Municipal Judge Suzanne
Person "outrageous" and an appeal was expected. Christopher, an Encino
businessman, was sentenced Monday for several counts of drunken driving
and drivina without a license in connection with four arrests last February and
March.
Dlsease, drugs killed C.pote
LOS ANG~LES -Liver disease complicated by drug intoxication and
inflammation of the veins caused the death of prize,.winnins author Truman
Capote, accordina to the coroner's office. Capote, author ofsuch works as "In
Cold Blood" and "Breakfast at Tiffany's," suffered from liver disease,
infection in his leas, emphysema 10 the lungs and epil~)'. Ronald Kornblum,
the county's actina chief medical examiner-coroner, said Thursday. Kornblum
performed the three-hour autopsy on the S9-year-old Capote on Aus. 26, a day
after he died at the Bel-Air home of Joanne Carson, the divorced second wife of
talk show host Johnny Carson.
Kneecap •hootlng la pot field
· WILLITS-A 19-year-old Sunnyvale man was in critical condition from
gunshot .wounds in both knees 11\er apparently. wanderini too close to a
marijuana patch, authorities report. Mendocino County shenfrs officetS said
Thursday they were unable to determine if Ronald Brian Richardson was shot
from a distance or "kneecapped" at close range. They said it happened
Wednesday morning when he and three other teen-a&ers from the San
Francisco Bay area stopped their car on a remote road about 10 miles west of
Willits to urinate.
WORLD
- --
' ' Soviet. ald Br1tl&b •td.kers.
LONDON -Soviet authorities arc raisina money to help' striking British
miners and their families, BritiSh Broadcasting Corp. radio moniton reported
today. The BBCs monitorins service at Cavenham Park, west of London, said
a Moscow Radio broadcast on Sept. 2 reported that Ukrainian miners had
collected S0,000 convertible rubles, rouably $59,l80, for lbe minen who are
participatins in the six-monib walkout. Duty editor Quentin Kean said the
state-funded BBC has monitored "a whole series of broadcasts" by Moscow's
domestic network reporting the Soviet fund-raisina efforts over the past two or
three weeks
Pope hlnta at llberatJon theology
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia -Pope Jobn Paul II said tOday the work of
Roman Catholic missionaries.will always be linked to "development and
liberation" around the world. But the pontiff. preacbina to t~s oflhousands at
a Mass 0111 Halifax hillside, said the central messaae of evanaclization must
remain .. salvation in Jesus Christ." The pope's wordS1 lhouah . aeneraJ,
represented the first time he has approached the subject of hberation thcol<>IY
on his tour of Canada, a nation whose Catholic church and mi~sionarics have
often become involved in political 1ssues in the Third World.
SoatlJ Ainu clJJef ••om Jn
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -After two weeks ofbllck nots and a
fresh pate of bOm~in.,, P. W.~BOtha ~ sworn in I State presi~cnt today
under a new c:onstituuon that still denies the vote to South Africa'• blaCk
mltjority. Botha, prime minister 1ncc 1978, was the arthttect of the new sy1tem
creating separate houses of Parliament for thcA111n and mbcd-nce mtnbritics
to u alonpide thccxistina white chamber. The ParliamcntconvenesTuesday.
In the c tal city of Durhan, ''" non-white oppoaition tmdttl IOUaht by unty police remained at the Briti1h consulate today, where they took refuge
on Thursdty, BritiSh diplomat1 wd. Britain hu allowed them to Slay but
refused to intervene on thcu behalf.
More ndlactlve coat.lnen retrieved
TEND, BelJium -Salv• crews wor1dna throuah the ni&)u rctncvcd
th rte more oont11ncrs o(rad1oact1ve material from a French frei&)ltcr th t aank
1n •be North Sea nearly three wct.k• aao, and all three were led Haht, a
Iv officsal 1d today.• Myra Oiltay, a apokeswoman fot the Dutch '
lYagJna firm of mit Tak lntcmauonal, saad a total of four conwncrs filled
wnh raJioachve uranium he 1nouridc had been brought to the aurfaoi. it-y-_J~"!~~~~~!!~~~!~~·l!'!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!~~~~~!!~~~!!~~~!!~!!!!!!!!~!!~~~~~i.:"~T~h~crc~i~n~o~d~a~n~r~o~f~an~uplo on ... They arc in ,&ood cond1tton •• he td ' \ ' .
Officer
jailed
in strip
search
. MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. (AP) -A
uspendcd police officer who alleged·
ly boasted that strip sear<.·hiog women
was a "fringe benefit" of the job has
. been sentenced to six years in prison
for forcing two women to disrobe at a
p01ice station.
.. The picture p~sented to the jury
was di austing. Society gave this man
a uniform, badge and gun and he used
them not to protect society, not to
protect young women, but to humili-
ate them to sathfy his owp sexual
lust," Superior Court Judge Paul R.
Kramer·said Thursday of Sgt. Gary
tevena, 32. . . · ,
· , In addition to imP<>sing the six-
ycar jail term, Kramer fined Stevens
S22r500, calling the incidents
''heinous and depraved." He cited
testimony by a rooktc patrolman who
said that Stevens told him strU>
searches \lierc a "fnnge benefit" ofthe
job.
"It is not a fringe benefit and you
· are. aoing to prison to show you
society means that," Kramer told
Stevens, who stood quietly and
without expression at the sentencing.
Defense attorney Oscar Gaskins
had maintained that the searches
never occurred.
Stevens was convicted July 2' on
two counts of official misconduct and
one count of criminal coercion.
One misconduct charae and the
criminal coercion ch•rge stemmed from the illegal strip scirc'h of a 23-
year-old Easthampton woman on
Feb. 22. 1982.
The woman testified that Stevens
made her puJI up her blouse and lower
her pants and underprments so be
could search her for drugs.
She said the incident occurred after
Stevens responded to her telephone
call to police when she ran out of gas
in Westhampton. ·~
The other misconduct conviction
arose from an incident involving a
2S..¥ear..old Beverly ~sident who
testJfied Stevens ordered her to strip
to her underpants at police head-
quaners on Jan. I, 1981, during
questioning in a drug probe.
Both women said Stevens made
physical oontac:t with them. ,
. .
Evelyn Damzog ~lata to $6,500 wbidow repair Job. . .
#
Expensive repairs
s.park investigation
Co tr t t d she paid for in advance. ll aC Or wan e Next.shewastoldh:risandwacer
$50, 000.to. r.epatr.~ .......... : ~; ~°m~i~:1!tan~~~1Pi!~
woman ts leaky toilet company then d1d some ~nting. used putty around the windows,
CHICAGO (AP) -A 72-year-old tuckpointed and put the plastic
woman says her lite savings arc gone around the basement windows, she
after paying nearly $44,000 for home said. ~pairs to a company that told Miss Damzog later contacted Cen-
another woman it would cost S S0,000 tral to repair a leaking pipe.
to fix her leaky toilet. · A representative came out and
"Our trust fund ... my life savings... "took most of my bills fer the work
arc gone, except for $500," said and my canceled checks," she said,
Evelyn Damzog. "I hope they all and when the workers never came she
hang." complained to her pastor who con-
Miss Damzog said she paid tacted authorities.
$44,934 to Central Home Improve-On Monday, 84-year-old Rose
ment Contractors over four years for Rolek went to the bank to withdraw
miscellaneous repairs on her two-flat her $25,000 life savings to make a
home on the city's Northwest Side, down payment to Central to fix a
including a sealant on the exterior to leaky toil~t. police said. ~
cure what worlunen tenned "cancer She was to have paid another
of the brick." $25,000 in $5,000 monthly pay.
The company is owned by Willie ments, but an alert bank clerk and an
Nearn Sr., whom authorities have off-<iuty police officer who works as a
been unable to locate. guard at the bank got suspicio.us when
·IDinois Attorney General Neil she told them what lbe money was
Hartigan said Thursday that 68 for. Police accompanied her to her
complaints had been filed oy cus-home where they found a ere~ from
tomcrs againsfCCntrat. He said that a Central dfmolistung her-b;lscment-
state court last month had barred Central. and Ncarn, from doing "How wasl to krul'f.l" asked Mrs.
business in Illinois. Rolek. who already 'had paid the
Miss Damzog's accusation came company SI 6,000 for six previous
just days after anolher elderly woman visits. went to her bank to withdraw $25,000 "Every year. little by little, thcr,
for repairs to her leaky toilet. Rep-were taking my life savings away,'
rescntatives of Central Home Im-she said. "I was never suspicious, but
provement told her the job would cost the-price always-1CC1ncd too high.''
$SO 000 ·but.a second contractor said lnv~tors have been unable to
t e JOb woUld cost only$ f50. locate ~earn Sr. However, eight o(his
Oreooe eo.t1 DAILY PILOT/FtWW;f. ~ 14 1814
Hurricane-Diana calmin
following week of havoc
WILMINGTON, N • {APJ -and unt many 1n lbc water. Many
Tom:nt1al rains pounded a "kmbly streets rn coa tal towns thro\ll't)out dam•d'. North atrolina today as the area were ttll flood«! today.
thousands of coastal residents emt rJ-
ed from shelters to view Hurricane No deaths or lDJUOCS were blAmed
Diana's swath of de truct1on, whic)l :directly on the llonn One man died
. ca11seJ rnorc than S2S million 'in ·
damaics.
• • As Diana rapidly lost intensity
Thursday and was downgraded to a
tropical storm, Gov. Jim Hunt asked
President Reagan for federal as-sistan~ because adequate cleanup
from the season's first Atlantic hur-
ricane is "beyond the capability of
state and local government."
• At6a.m. PDT, the center of Diana
was estimated near ta1i1ude 35.2
North, lonaitude 77.2 West, or JUSt
north of New Bern. It was exJ>CCt:ed to
move .aoward the east-northeast at
S-10 mph, and the National Weather
Service said there was a chance Diana •
could strcn&then as it moves toward
the Atlantic,
The storm had sustained winds of
4S mph, with gusts to near hurricane
force. Gale warnings were posted
from Cape Lookout to Chiocoteague,
Va.
In this southeast coastal city,
Diana's J 10 mph winds toppled trees
and power lines that clogged many
streets, blew roofs off homes, swept
boats offtrailers on land and smashed
GENERAL ELECTRIC
WO-FROST
REFRIGERATOR
Miss Damzog said Thursday that employees, including Willie Ncarn
someone from the company called Jr., were arrested Tuesday and
her in March 1983 and suggested a charged with criminal dam~ge to
"free boiler inspection.•• She accepted propcny after they had ripped up
the offer and was told later her boiler Mrs. Rolek's basement, saying that
needed cleaning and repairs, which she had a sewer problem .
.....;.;..:. __ .;_;___,.---~~--r-=== ~~~~~~iiijiiiiiiiiiiiii1 FOOD SAVEi
SYSTEM
FO•
FRUITS AND VEGETAILH
•
17.2 cu. ft. No-Frost Refrigerator
with 4.73 cu. ft. Freezer. Sealed
snack-pack for unwrapped meats,
chffS•. 1·full width and 2·sPllt leYel
adjustable glass shelves. Energy saver switch In normal posllion helps
cut ope,.tlng cost. EQulpf*I for
optional aut°"'!atic lcemak~r ..
REUNION
Featuring Jim Pike, Ric de
Azevedo and Bob Engemann,
Connerly of TIIE LEITERMEN .
SAT. SEPT. 15
l PM • R. Moore Theatre
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
Reserved Seats: $8 Pre-sale
$9.00 at Door
Ticket lnfo/VIH·MC:
(714) 432-5527
EYER FEEL LIKE YOU
DON'T FIT II?
If you· 'If lost we12ht.
Rehttmg is our Specialty
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measures 72"1l • 30"w x
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REG. '179.95
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LESS REBATE .. 100.00
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REG. LESS
.•
\
•
..
"Th pre tdenll Ilk som ortofchlldmonarchofo1d, urroundedby
dvl ers,cutofffromthep ople .... Hegovern wlthlnabubbleol Ide,
protected from both 1 ~tlmateque Uon and. po slbly. his own
Ignorance." •.
RICHARD COHSl'f columnl•t
Famlly needs asslstance
to get through hard tlmes
AW,COMEON,RON, ·
(4ET 6~~10U~ ! RICHARD
COHEN
wh·ols.
:Ronald
Reagan.·
To the Editor: , I would Hite to present to )OU the
xtreme dire needs of our church
member, The Satins Family.
Last March Mr. John ahns nd his
wife came from India to vi it their
son, Joe, who h d migrated to the·
Stat« five years ~o. Joe and hls wife, ~ita, bave two httlc &irls nd they
saved very hard to afford this op-
P,2rtunity for his parents 'to sec 'Beautiful America" which they have
now claimed as their "homeland". Unfortunatel), two months ago,
John Satins contracted a very rare
kin disease and was extremely ill. As
a visitor, Mr. Sahns did not have an)
t)'pc of '"1cdical insurance. A
dermatolosast supested hospital-
ization since it was crucial that he
receive ·•round-the-clock" observa·
tion and treatment; however, the
youna Satins knew their financial
limitations and instead requested. a
detailed treatment schedule and
medication to treat him at home.
Semi-weekly visits to UCLA was
affecting Joe's work and there were
some church friends who volunteered
their unselfish services. Healina was
both slow and painful; the young
Salins were drained financial1¥ with
the exJ>'nsive medication rC9_u1rcd.
On Auaust 4, the semor Sahns took
a tum for the .worse, the medication
he was takina hot h s blood su r up
and he fell into scmi-consciou,ness.
The patamedics rushed him to
An hcam General Ho pital where he
" s kept m the Intensive care unu for
over a week, an(( then in an isolation
ward until Aua. 22 when he was
discharted.
It was an extreme1y dlscourqina
and painful cxP,Crience for both tht
senior and youn_&Salins. The ho!.pital
bill oared to S25,000 -and now they are faced with a bleak antici·
pat1on of inab1h&y to fulfill their
financial obhaation to the hospital. ln
fact. the hospital has been calling
.con$Clentiously . to inquire about
when payment could be made.
The SaJins family would be ex-
tremely Jrateflll if your newspaper
could assist in printing the story of the
plight and ask for the aenerosity of the general public.
I would certainly appreciate your
k.tnd cooperation and consideratton
of this family's needs and would be
ava.tlable to answer or assist wherever
necessary. I can be reached at
892·9468 after office hours.
Thank you for your kind consider·
ation and assastancc oreffdrts on your
part would be most appreciated.
STELLA K. SONG
Huntinaton Beach
Reagan Rally poorly planned
To the Editor:
A bi& "boo" for the orpnizers of
the Reapn Rally on Labor Day. We
Jmvedat 7:45 a.m. with our daughter
who was perfonnins. After she joined
her group, we moved to the entrance
to which we had directed the previous
day. We waited in a hot, crowded hne
for over three hours without even reachina the •·metal detectors." Dur· io& the entire, uncomfortable wait, we
never saw a si~e official to direct the
thousands in hne or offer an expla-
nauon. Not only did we miss secina the Pres1dent, we never knew why we
didn't act tn.
The situation was potentially ex-
plosive and dangerous. There were
too many people too close together.
and the day was hot and still. Thank
aoodncss most of the crowd was
polite and thoughtful, but it could
easily have devlopcd into tragedy.
MR. AND MRS. PAUL E.
THOMA~
Fountain Val >
Poor, elderly blacks
have it the toughest
Elderl} ampovenshed black people
are said to be the most disadvantqed
111oup in the nation . They have the
lowest suicide rate.
Catholic University in WashinJ-
ton, 0 .C., offers a master's degree m
lobbying.
On the island of Lan Yu near
Taiwan, the husband alone is blamed.
disvaccd and divorced, 1f the wife
fails to have a baby.
When false teeth were made of
inflammable ccllulo1d, h1stor') re-
cords one man's mouth cau&ht on fire
while he was smoking.
You like genuine Mexican food?
Sure you do. In the winter, three out
of five tomatoes and four out of five
cu.cumbers:9Cr'Ved north oft.he border
come from south of the border.
Oldtimers alonf the Mame coast
1004 have had their own fonnula for
Jetting by: "I fit floats, make at a bou y;
1f it sinks, make it an anchor."
The word "travel'' centunes ago
was a synon¥m for painful oppressive
labor. Trains, cars and planes
Major League baseball ~ ns
existence to trolley cars.
When a aourmet sends off to
France's Province ofBcr&undy for the
wherewhithal to prepare a chicken
dinner, what comes back is the body
of a bird with a pedigree plus a
matchina number tag. That's over·
snazzymg it, I thank. A chicken thief
m Bergundy has to be a forger.
Can you name Wah Disney's
Seven Dwarfs'> Start wtth Happy,
Dopey, Sneez>, Sleepy and Grumpy
Pollsters say a lot of people get that
far. But many can't bnng to mind
Bashful. And four out of five forget
Doc.
Our Chief Progn osticator thinks
you'll soon see hu&e shnmp farms
Mretbeuts. .ficuador already has
some. Soybean 111owers, please take
note. The shrimp farme"' are aoing to
need a lot of soybeans. • ·
Among those retirement-aae
l\mencans who move. one out of four mo ves to Aorida.
L.M. Boyd I• • 1yadlc•ted
columal~t.
··re~lly?
~ull disclosure
demands Re~gan
re~eal more of self
WASHINGTON -In thi,, the
Age of Disclosure, where it la il'lcum·
bent upon each and every public
official tQ disclose each and every
thing about him or her self, there
remains one public official who 'is
bucki~ the trend. That could not'bc
Gerakbne Ferraro, who disclosed
herself to a fare· thee· well, not even
Walter F. Mondale, about whom
there is nothing you do not know.
No, the non-disclosce is none other
than Ronald Reagan. He will not
disclose who and what be is.
Victims want alleged Nazi
to pay for WWII atrocities
You would not know this if you
limited your readina to· pqe one of
the newspapers or only watched the
nightly news. But almost daily on the
inside pages unfolds a sap about how
almost no One ever acts close to
Reapn anymore. By no one I mean
the press which, for better or worse.
are your representatives -the OMS
who are supposed to ask the questions
that you would if you could.
The trouble is, thouah, that now
they can't, either. Slowly, the ap. a paratchiks·of the White House have
put Reagan in a contemporary ver·
sion of tbe old "$6~.000 Question".
isolation booth. The press is kept Lawsuit mar-ks first claim for money
made against alleged war criminal THnMAS back from the president when-he • ., makes public appearances so that he
Fueled by anger over what hap-
pened to them four years ago. several
of the American hostages held for
more ahan 14 months in Iran are now
tr')ina to persuade the U.S Supreme
Court to let them file damage claims
and take over some of Iran's property
m this country as com~nsauon for
their pain and suffenng.
If those tiostages are angry, imagine
the fury felt by those who believe the y
were the victims of AndnJa
Anukovic, an Orange County resa·
dent who was successively the minis.
ter of interior, justice and religion in
the World War II Nazi puppet state of
Croatia (now part of Yugoslavia). ·
The Yugoslav government says 1.2
million persons, mostly Jews and
Yu1oslav Christians of tHe Russian
Orthodox persuasion, were killed as a
result of has decrees and several
hundred thousand others tortured
and expropriated.
After 40 years of festenng, the fury
of some of those victims is now being
vented via a lawsuit claiming damaa·
es for torture. deportation to concen-
tration camps, expropriation and
wrongfol death of relatives. The case
marks the first time victims have
sued an alleged war criminal for
monetary damages after he snuck
into this country.
where the government wan\s to stage can not be asked quesuons. Some-
a war crimes trial. ELIAS times, the White House helicopter is
"If w~ win . then every time one of _ revve~ up sod tha~.,cven shouted
these Nazis who helped run the qucstJons are rown~ out.
concentration camps 1s discovered. And the other day in California. the
be can be sued. rather than just beina Lchrtr, western states counsel for the "pool .. of reponers that always is with
subJCCt to deportation hearinis wtth B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation the President was reduced. Wire·
all their delays and complications." Leaaue. which filed a friend of the service reponers were eliminated,
l h b · f · · Jca.Yinu ust one television corrtsmm· says on awycr-on t e ca5e. n ne in the Cahfomia-case. -He dent, two television technicians and The 84-year-old Anukovic, whose came here denying his pan and t b t h F Li ·-• family has built several successful doesn't have any protections giveA wo P 0 <>atlP ers. or po 11
\;&I businesses in Cahfom1a over the last other governments." rusons, the White House subscribes
30 years, argues that California's one-to the dictum that one picture is Lehrer and other lawyers behind worth a thousand words. year statute of limitations for filing the suit -which involves un-None of this would matter much, if
damaJe suits is Iona past and that specified damaaesto beset by ajudae Reagan met with the press fairly
there ts thus no case aaainst him. if Artukovic loses the case -araue of\cn. But he does not. Since the first
But only last spring. federal District that California's statute oflimitations of the year, he ha.shad only five press
Court Judge Robert Takasugi ruled in doesn't apply here any more than it conferences, and his 1nfonnal meet·
Los Angeles that a fonner Argentine did in the Argentine cases. ings With selected reporters. are in·
C1ttzen whose property was con-"These victims obviously couldn't variably held on an off.the-record
fiscated by that country's government file suit within a year because they basis -meaning that nothing about
an the 1970s is entitled to damages. were, in some cases. impnsoned, and them can be reported. A lot of aood
And a federal appeals court in New because they didn't know where that does you.
York ruled last year that a former Artukovic was," said Lehrer ... And And none of this would matter
Argentine citizen can collect damages the U.S. is bound by international much, if Rcaga"! were ... well, not
for ~ort~rc h~ suffered several years treaties which specifically prohibit a Reagan .. But he ~s. And that means
ago tn his nauvc c~untry. statute oflimitations on war crimes... that he is a .Prcs1den~ who does f'!Ot Both those episodes were acts . . . · . . work at the JOb, who is both cavalier aimed 8.$8lDSt individuals, not ac· If the OQClJme .vacums win, .11 will about facts and Policies, who is, as
t1ons apmst whole classes ofpe~ .mark the first time Anukovac has they sa • disenga.fed - a PQhte term
as the Nazi-mspared murders and actually-bam ~~~titre~ mean1n1 something more man drs:-
concentrat1on camps were in Croatia. many legal actions •aainst ham. . enpacd. It would have been both
So there is no direct precedent for the It may not have an) direct bearing interesting and a {>Ubtic service· to
ca·sc against Artukovic. on the former bostaJts' of the Ira· h4ve asked the President whether the
But Artukovic nevenheless lacks nians, but if Artukovic loses, foreign people he says want to rid the armed
the protection that ex·Prcsident dictators will at least suffer a pinprick. services of chaplains are not in fact
Jimmy Carter gave the Iranian gov-They'll know there really is no time like the storied Welfare Queen of
ernment in his hostage-release agree-limit on possible future efforts to Chica'o -hardly typical and almost
ment of January, 1981. make them pay for their actions. nonexistent. Certamly they are not
"Artukov1c didn't come here TbomH EUH 11 • S.ata Moalc•· who he says they are: critics of his
pursuant to any treaty," says David bHed colamrml1t oa 1t•te J11oe1. attempt to mix politics with religion.
~~~~~~~-----~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.-Such a-question cannot be asked, .-~ though :the-pre ident i like sorM-
l'ii va te seetor tiikes over-for-~IA in Niear-agua ~~~t.~=~f::o~:~:.~~~~=
chan&ed that, almost.
And Anukovic apparently did
sneak in, lying on the visa appltcation
forms he filled out, according to the
federal lmmilf8tion and Natural-
1zauon Service. The INS has been
trying sporadically for 32 years to
deport Artukovic back to Yugoslavia
him and the press like a referee
V i rt g 1 · g in earl)' July breaking a clinch -and he "breaks" ar OUS SUppO rOUpS are rep actn r •CAUSA has also been sendmg 4· How much cash does the when told. He governs within a , t. rehef supplies to the Indians, through governm;nt collect and spend each bubble ofaides, protected from both CIA s controversial, covert opera ion JACK Moon's Refugee Relief .Freedom wosrkday . h d' d'd h legitimate questions and, possibly,
Foundauon, Misura leaders said. · How muc ere '\ 1 t c his own ignorance. He is the person-
•Soldier of Fonune magazine has government grant in 1 ~82· • doc ification of the presidencY,, but maybe WASHINGTON -The death of
two Americans in N1caragua. lolled in
a helicopter crash during an attack on
a Sandinista training camp. i
evidence that the <?IA-directed "cov·
en'' war apinst the Managua regime
has been taken over by the private
~tor since Conare voted to halt
; official aid to Nic:Aragua "contra ..
auenillas.
Supplies for the anti-Sandinista
forces and their fam11le1 come from a
1nety of sources in this country, aina from the Rev. un M}'.una
oon'1 Unification Church to U.S.
liticians, evang~lical aroup and
onner miliwy officers.
My associates Jon Lee Anderson in
atraJ America and John Dillon in
uhington have pieced toaether
hat'• aoinJ on:·
•The aad i1 beina channeled
throuah private foundations, coun·
ells and commissions. with the coop-
ORANGE COAST
DailyPJlat
eration of mfluenttal fnends in the
Reagao admin1strat1on and Its New
R1&ht supporters.
the 1oal is to replace the CIA 's
controversial undercover operation
with a permanent. privately funded
~uppon program for Latin America's
vanous antr-<:ommnnist effons.
•At least one shipment of medical
supplies to Central Amenca, airlifted
from a Michigan military base. was
paid for by the CIA, accordina to
aovernment ~urces. But the Pen·
taaon has balked at requests from the
pnvate groups for airlifts of their
supplie .
Despite a confidential National
Security Counc1l memo authori1in_1
transport of the supplies in U.S,
plane on a "space available" basis,
Pentaaon lawyers are hesitant to
approve such flia.hts, because military
airlifts of relief supplies are illepl
except in case of severe national
AflDERsofl been providing medical supplies as 6· How many ho~51!'I unit not really the president. If he were, he
well a~ military training to the the aov mment adm1"!15ter1 would step out of the bubble and hold
contras. Another donor to refugees 7· How many vehicle d~ th• himsclfaccountable to the J>'Ople.
and fam ilies of contra fi&hters is aov~ment own, not countma the l know there are few in tatutions
disasters. evangelist Pat Robertson's Christian mJhta~? less popular than the preu. And I
Sen. Jeremiah Denton, R-la .. has Broadcasting Network and its "700 8. ow manyd meals doc the know. too, that it ia an easy thing for
introduced an amendment to the Oub" TV pr?aram. _ aov~mmcnt provi e ca~h day? the White House to portray ~m·
Defense authoriz.auon bill that would •Sources . •n Worl~ Relief, wha~h· :A.nswcrs: 1. one third. 2. 25 percent. plaints about Rcqan's isolation as
act around this legal obstacle by handles U~uted Nataons refuace·atd 3. No. u would occupy fourtimes the yet another yelp from that un-
orderina the Pcntqon to institute progran:is an the. area, said tha~ the total office space in the lO laracst American collection of complainers
" uch procedures as arc neces,.ary'' new rehef supp.he from the pnvate cities. 4. $8 billion .s. thrcc-quanera of and elitists: the national press corps.
for the airlif\s. • 1 ... · sector arc 101n& to th~ several 1 trillion doll&!'$, which was equal to But for better or wone. the press
•Key contra leaden In enjaficd thou~d contra refuaees hv1n1 near the total credit provided by the represents the people-the ve..Y onn
the principal 'ourccs of upphC -the Nacaraauan border out11de UN nation' 70 l~a!Jest commercial whottt dect a prcSJdent in November.
and casl'I -thee the CIA cutoff was c.tmos le dcrs 6 400 000 7 437 000 1 9S The decision win be baltd on a
orderN u CAUS,\, a pohtical front World Relief limits its aid to m~llion' · · • Y· number of facton. but one of them
sroup for Moon's church, and a new reJusccs who live 25 miles from an · ouaht to be whether Ronald Reapn
orpnatation called friend of the intemationalbordcr,toavoidcharaes MEDI ·CRE.4 TEO CON· at .. 73 has what it takea to be
Americas Foundation. that it is takina s des in a Political iTROVERSY?: When questioned pre 1dcnt for four more years. There
The drivina force behind the new conniC'\, But Jenkins hinkd that the abou~ the •P~~nce of Black isnortalevidencethathedottn't;but
foundation is Louisiana state Rep. 1ntemational aicncacs provide as-Mushm leader LOuis Farrakhan at then, he's been so isolated that there's
Louis Jenkins. He has been httch1ng 111t1nce m11nly to pro·Mantm refu· Oi1trkt of Columbia Mayor Marion no real evidence that he does.
rides for hiuupplics on U.S. mahtary aces. Barry'a Youth Leadership Institute, 1t'1 fine and dandy for the people,
transpQTt planes. The first bit load TAXP )'lRS' .QUIZ: Here's a the proaram'• director. Jackie Ro~ throuah-,.Lb.e. pr,e.u. to demand da1-
wa Jlo~ so H00<1uras In Ma) on a. short quu for tupayers on the inson, blamed Farrakhan's "con· closure and no apaloaica hould bo
Mis sippl Aar Nauonal Guard flight ubJCCl, "Hov. b1& ia the federal tro\tn al" atatu solely on the ores • made for that. But if Femro and
arranged bJ Denton and C'On· 10,cmment7" Tl:\C answers appcarat .. Farrakhan is contro,·cn ii be· otJtcrs are coms>'lled to disclosuhcar
rvau"c Caucus Director And) the end. cause you all hive made him con· taxes and their IOUroct of Income,
Mc llfll. -I. How much of the \J •. land O\a trovcnlal .. Robinson 1aid. "He ha then the lmt we can ex pea of the
•Jenkins' effon 1s mtcndcd to does the fcdenl aovemmcnt o~~ bctn oitina in the commun t) for pm d nt is that he di1elo1e what he
Tom Tall prov de non•mthllJ)' upphc to fam· 2. Of all U .. tc0norn1c cuvaty, 30 ycan." Rob nson cited Far· knows and how he knows h. c Y Eo;10' lliC1 oft o CIA·backed contra aroup how muth does the ovcmmcnt rakhln'• work th prison inmaies. We know that Ronald Rcqan Pl)'I
Cr.a.. lh..... t t bllshcd In Hondur near the ncratc? tit 1 d , d his tai.ca. Wh11 we don't ttnow ia ifhc '• '"' ' c bo"""c om--of M 2 C Id h r. d I fi pro u cs an 1ormcr ru.a use~. , pone Edit°' 1 uan 1w r. 1....... 1 .,, ou t c 1c era aovernmcnt 1t Pl)'l lttcnt1on ••••••••••••••r""'-1hc~t:nH 1 •~.!..'.,l.!.!'~!~.,...~·~._,t.nui al.Ltbc..a.ualabl.ci>Jlkc pace in J•tk A11d 11 • 1 'lldleatH ftlct•rd coaa 11 1 •)1HllcafMI t 21on of ood rtu s b ihe n11ion'1 10 la t cmcs'' rolum11/1t. col1m•f1r.
i
----~-
•
COM~LETE NYIE COMPOSITI TRAN8ACTIONI, AL
.
Pe~tagon·w~rr-ed over poor (iu•lity testing
exasJn~truments working around clock
to find out where rntstakes were made
mihtary equipment that m0\1." • U1e
possible complicatio¥., arc
WASHINGTON (AP).:... At the
heart of almost every Defense De-
partment weapon are tiny 0 chaps"
earryina data on everythina from wseti~ to maintenance. So the revelation that millions of chips were
inad~uately tested has sparked oon· oern .ln the Pentagon and amona
enonnous. • .
The TeltlS lnst~mcnts chips could
defense contractors. have been p!aced m cverythina from
Over the l)&St cit.ht years, millions radios, walkie-talkies and helicopters
of chips producccf by Texas Jnstru-to ~ahtcr-bombers, ta!'ks and sub-
ments were inadequately tested. Most mannes. A Navy ship eou.ld . u e
of them are expected to work. but thousands of the fingem11l·s1zed
some may fail aJ eritic:al moments. cells. \ · Pentagon officials fear. ·. Pentagon offic1lls on Monday t~ld
With chip in nearly every pi~ of defense contractors to ,stop a.CCCP\1~ • Texas instruments microchips until '!'9--1111111---... -~---------------·the problem can be solved. The Texas,
Architects complete plans
'for new Cheroltee build.tng
computer finn has sold millions of
chips to more than 80 other contraC·
tors for installations in a wide variety
of weapons systems.
Officials admit they don't know
how wid~sprcad the problem is.
However, Donald E. Moore, quality
control chief of the PentaJon's De-
fense Logistics Agency, c1tcd com-
puters aboard the B-S2 as one place
where the Texas Instruments chips
were located. The big planes are the
heart of the nation's nuclear bomber
force.
Hastinas-Lundstrom Architects of
Costa Mesa has completed drawinp
for a new co~rporate headquarters in
Irvine for Cherokee International,
Inc., a leading manufacturer of elec-
tric switchina power supplies.
Jon Lundstrom, panner, said the
new buildiqg will occupy nearly an
acre in the Irvine East Industrial
Complex at the San Diego Freeway
(405) and Lake Forest Drive, and is
desianed to "reflect cherokee's high
technoloay presence with contem-
poraiy soft tones of green and peach."
the building witl allow 17. 721 sq~ feet of space for corporate
offices, research and development.,
sales, engineering and manufacturing
facilities. Occupancy is scheduled
later this year. Lundstrom said con-
tractor for theproject is Charles Lung
'Of Westminister.
Olerokee President Ganpat Patel
founded the company in 1979 in a ~square.foot facilities in Laguna
Hills. The company. which rec!ntly
established a manufacturing division
in Bombay, India, last year showed $3
million in revenues and expects $8
million this year.
•
A.D.nuaJ report reJeued
A substantial arowth in the deposit
.base, provess in real estate financina,
a dramatic turnaround of brokered
depbsits, and the introduction of
several marketini prof.'lms and
"cash manaaement tools • are high-
lights of the recently released Annual
Report of South Bay Savings,
capsulizing what S&L executives
there call the results of a carefully
orchestrated marketing plan to pos·
ition South Bay favorably in the
evolving savinas and loan market.
0 W,,e're very atalified with our
progress," says Jack Thompson,
President of South Bay, a Sou them
Calif omia-bascd 1saving.s and loan
with regional offices in Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Gardena and an
office soon to open in Santa Monica.
"We recotnized a year ago that this
was a very uncenain market and that
to survive and prosper in the lona run
we bad to have consumer and capital
markets, but insulate South Bay from
the s_ystem shocks the banlcina indus-
try 1s experiencing. We also were
detennined to turnaround and have
achiced a turnaround in our brokered
deposits. As the Annual Report
~ indicate, we feel we're on the
ngbt track."
-11m-·
NEW YORK (AP) 1100
"IASOAQ ·ouot•llona """' ll'loWlne hl~I bids Cl tnd lowftl Oft«t bV 0 m11r'ktt m11ktn n Of 4 •
11.rn. Tl'turtdtv. Prk:91 dO ~I~ rtlall rn.rtr.uo rn.rtldoWn « commlulon for T11undav. A~e A XP}t ~"fM1CP ~~ ~·.
~' A Gr A
/t •
•
Mort than 15 million of 4, 700
varieties of the suspect chips were
sold to IBM, Pentagon officials say.
Millions more may have been sold to
other contractors.
"Any weapon that contains a
sophisticated electronic part" could
have some of the suspect chips inside,
Moore said.
The tiny information-carrying
chips aren't confined to the defense
industry, and are common in con·
sumers goods ranging from cars to
calculators. In weapons, the chips
provide data that "tells" a weapon
when, where and how to work.
Texas Instruments vice president
Norman Neureiter said the company
is work.in& "night and day" to find out
what went wrong and where the chips
were sent.
At first, Neureiter said, the com-
pany thought the situation was simp-
ly a "paper problem" but "later we
began to conclude that p,erhaps some
tests had been omitted. •
"There is the possibility of criminal
..
invcili;ation: o( Tl" said chief Pen-
tagon $P9kesman Michael Burch:
The Pentaaon ban on TCJtdlnstru· ments chips is the second ume this year that the Defense Depanment has
had a problem with a microchip supplier. ·
National Semiconductor Corp.
. paid S 1. 7 million in fines and P.tnal-
ties in March after plcadina auilty to
40 federal criminal eharaes that it had
inadequately tested microchips sold
to ihe P-tntason between 1978 and
1981 ••
The Defense Department orig-
inally proposed to ban National
Semiconductor from doing aoy more
Golden West sets
computer seminar
on spreadsheets
Personal computer spreadsheets
have transformed tbc way business
owners and professionals plan and
analyze their activities, according to
business consultant Philip Ponder.
Work that took days to complete can
now be done in minutes.
Ponder will conduct, "Personal
Computer Spreadsheets for Business
Planning," a Golden West College
two-part seminar, Sept. 18 and 2S, 7
to 9 p.m., in Fine Arts 138.
Topics to be discussed include sales
forecasting, budgeting, casb flow pro-
jections. investment returns and
financial statement returns.
Program fee is $30 and advance
registration in the owe admissions
and records office is requested.
Bank schedules
seminar on Deflcit
Reduction Act
Eldorado Bank. will· sponsor a
seminar on The Deficit Reduction
Act of 1984 at 4 p:m .. Sept. 18, at the
Airporter lnn Hore!. lrvme. The two
hour seminar is open to all interested .
prof essiona.ls and businessmen.
Subjects to be covered include
provisions affecting individuals. cor-
porations, partnerships and em-
ployee benefits. The topics of ex-
ectstive compensation and fordgn
operations will also be covered.
The seminar wiU be presented by
Alexander Grant and Company.
Certified Public Accountants. A qu~
· ~sion will follow
the presentation. Admission charge for the seminar
1s $25 at the door. To reserve a seat at
the seminar, phone Eldorado Bank's
Marketing Depan at 830..8800.
Seminar planned
for the PLCK
Operating System
: UPs AND DowN s
I
us.iness witli the Pcnll&On. bUt ~ fllaficauon o(,'..Sal
dropped that idea afttr the company aloJll With ldltqa fotdan·.rmde ~
took ~hat the Pcniaaon called .. sia-u domestic-made aftcI ldliq com·
nificani corrective acuon&.:" . mt:rdat~ chipS miead of mW-
Ddense Department oftici&li ~ tar)'~ chips.
now demandina better work at a time The chips boulJit by the Pen~
when the Reapn admm1suation'• •arc required to meei more st~t . miliW)' bu1kl-up is uriller fire for standards than thMe produced tor
reports of &hoddy work and hfah oommcrcial Ult •
pnc:cs. · Moore said it was 1 bid Teus
The Navy last week refu~ to Instruments chip Which caused ~
accept 14 jet enainn built by General computer to .. hiccup" on lbe ,.._
Electric and the Pentaa0n last moath shuttle Discovery an(l J>9SlPOftit lbe
5uspended payment ofS3S million to . llunch. But a NASA oftidal sai(l1itter
Huahes Aircraft because of .. poor that the chip problem was not cc&ited wotk.manship" on three types of to inadequate testiq and wu m'*d
missiles. · • by a microscopic crack wbidi colild
The Texas Instruments ca~ came not haw been detec.'led by UStS.
to liJht more than a year ~o when a Asked ~b) so many chips .:tlte
rouune check by lntemat1onal Busi· produced before J.h~ problem wa
ness Machines found that chips IBM found, Moore said; ••1 can"t an~
was purchasina from the Tex.as com· for executivn who don•t pa a~
pany had not been adcq~ teated. attention to their responsibilities. Penta~n officials who ioed to He later cited a ••lack of discipline""At
be idenufied noted that there arc now Teus lnstnJmcnts.
a number of investiptions into ... When IBM 5J>9tted the problem ·
possible inqularities in other micro-last year, the company lOld ~
chip suppliers to the miliwy. Pentaaon and then tried t.0 worth qui
Some of the invest\ptions involve with:T(. Moore said.
Thornton named controller
at Westin South Coast Plaza .
MJCbel Tllora&M bas beeo promoted from allistant controUer 10 the pqst
of controller at ne Wettta So•~ CoU& Pina. witb rcsponsibiliry :for tbe COsQ
Mesa hotel's accounting activities. Tbomum, Who beaan hl1 can:er with
Westin as TM Wettfa Cfen cater in KaDlas City, bas been Ytith the Costa
Mesa hotel since 1980. ·
Bob a Ad.tlu bas joined Amerkaa ow •• -.. Savlllp am or Cc:*a
Mesaas~or of m~mcnt control I~ bis acw ~he will ~&:f°""1* for audits and reVJtW of company-wide KUVJbeS. A ccna publiC
MODtcomery Aotne TlaomtoD
aocountant, Adkins comes to ADSB from a position as controller of F..alll
Capital Corp. in Los Anldcs· ADSB is an aftilia.tc of American Divcrslfied, a
multifaceted financial services and real estate development company. • • • , Irvine resident Gan-Rouoa is the DC'Wi>' named aci>eral manaecr of TLC
Coanes7 Coacll. a meCiical transportation service based in Garden Grove.
Ronon u a fonner medical transpon.ation sp«ialist for the Couty of <>naae.
where he helped develop the Medical Disaster Response Plan, ~md o_n~e
executive offieer of Goldea Wat EmertetaCJ Se.nices. IDe. TLC 1s desigiitd to
transport the handicapped, elderly and inform who require non-emerge~
medical transportation. ~ • • • Laguna Beach resident Jiai Moatpmery bas been appointed vice
president of development fo(l"be Wooclward Computes ofNewport Bca~b: In
his new post, Montgomery will oversee construcUon of more than S 100 millton
in residential development elanned for the next three )'Caf'S., and Will bC responsible for processini pTOJCCU and prod\1\.1 development He was formerly
with lrTlDe Pacific Developmeat C.., a diVlsion of the~ 1ri1ie Co.
Newport Beach resident Jtea Wllloa -who owtied the local Cris Ciaft
dealership in 1946-has sold his original delauship lcx:ation to the Marlaer'1
Mlle MartDe Center limited partnership. The site consists of 110 feet of
bayfront property at 2SOS W. Coast Highway, adjioent to Marlatt'• Mlle
Slalpfant. owned by TvntoDe Corp., general partner of the Mariner's Mlle
Manne Center. Harbor Rull)' of Corona del Mar ~ttsented the buyers. • • • The newly opened Irvine office of Lee. A.noclatel bas added five sales
associates to its staff. Gffffrey S1m.Dklu, James Say•er and Ed Dea wtll
market industrial properties, while Carea Saday and OD4ra GUbertsoawill
concentrate on office leasing. • • • Owner Slaeq·h Lee, along with T•Y Lee and Nucy Buq o~tbc B~t
Watern Newport Mesa 1DD in Costa Mesa, recently ~ttended ~n on~nta\Jon
seminar for Best Western owners and operators, held 10 Phoerux, Ariz. • • • ~{I.It} Alltrlm has been named directot...!lf marketin for Hotel
Mericlla Newport Beau, with responsibility (or tra.iruna.. mis.tenna a
supervisina the nl:w hotel.'s sales st.aft' and. for .P~ and oversecins sales
policies and pl'OIJ'llD. The Newpon Beach res.ident u a member of the Hotel
u4 Sales Manaaemeat Auoda~~ and a former professional tennis play~.
He was formerly director of assoaauon sales for the Sbaatea Plaza la R.dDa m
Los Angeles. · • • • Gre1ory LeJunu is the new publisher of Costa M~-based Oraue Coaty
GENTRY MaPll.De and J~ Marpll.lne ~s been named director~( sales •?d
marketing. Nora i.e.mH 1s editor-in-chief. Bal. Ldmu remains as vice
president of finance an<S BrUtaet Lellmaa as &sSOClate publlsher. • • • ~-L~ ... ....Mlac.IUU&te:Ll:lill..~~APlxwllt.ll~~LIJ'~lLl~.'3J.¥JD-An<d~~--.
trainina for MSI Daia Corp. of Cos~ esa. \:/h1~h has introduced a ~e".'I
prosram emphasinna customer educauon and trairuna on MSI data coJlCC'aon
terminal$ and S¥$temS. MacAUistct is responsible or d · · a 1>~ to
support hardware and software implementation. and operation, ~cld ser;Y2ce
activities and new p_roduct tntroducuons.. MSI's band·held termmals pthcr
information throuah keyboard entr')' or bar code scanning. then transmit the
in(onnation over phon lines to a host computer for proccss1na. • • • ~ Commlllkatlou Groap of Lake Forest bas been chosen to b.an e
advettiSln& and public relations for Ocua Breeie Vlllal, a Costa Mesa
townhome community by DSversUted P...Jeett Denlopmaat Co. of El Toro. • • • AlldettOD Commuteattoa1 Co. of Newpon Beach ha been ~lected 10
prepare an advcrtisin& and public relations program for Newport Wa1tMN
Medical Gro•p. IDC.; an ursency care oocration m Ne-.pon Center. . ' . JettJ Brewer and e S.Wvu arc the new o\\:ners of ~ mut
RecNlt rs latenatloDal, I.De. of C<>1t.a Mesa. Management Rccnuttts i a
continaency search and recrui,tment O!l&niz.ation. Brewer is a former. a1t1the
captain with C..mteatal Air'U... wtuch he tcr\.'cd as chief p1toi for
Anad"' Sullh"an pent t S )"Cars in technical s&Jn. markctina an<l sales and
mmetina man.qcment ia the ceramics andultr)· . • • • •
PURCHASERS OF.
IRVINE COMPANY
LEASEHOLD LAND
An residents and homeowners In L nda sle,
Corona del Mar and Newport Beach who
purchased the1r leased land from The lrvlne Com-
pany before January 1, 1979 and were not Included
In the receat class action settlement. ptease r~
epond to P. O. Box 2290. New.port Beach, Call·
forn1a 92658. Homeowner, who In th sltuadon,
1 looking for othera faced with his problem. AU
rept confid ntlal. .
W·249
On
the , • '
WHAT NYSE Orn
NYSE LE ADE RS
WHAT AMEX Orn
NEW YORK. tAP> Seo. 14
NASDAQ SUMMARY
---~--
.. MET~Ls Quon s
That's an aptdescriptioA of both bu 1nessand
bu iness people along the Ora11g Coast. Tok ep track of
wh r companies are. oingand wl1tch p oplear helping
them get there.ju twat h 'Cr ditLh ' -v rydaylnth
Bu t n ss s tton of your DlilJ Pilat .
ll
Woodbridge
Invitational
croaa country
meet lurea 72. 82.
With LaSzlo, DCC gets its wlBh
Former. Marina QB will guide Pirates Little did Laszlo know th t the
creek in ht kulf " the least of h1
problcms. He had broken h1 neck \\hen he tut his head. in Saturday's opener with Rustlers
By ClJRT SEEDEN
Of .. o.tr ........
One of the reasons Orn~nge st
College football coach Dick Tucker 1
so keen on his wishbone offcn this
year is the presence of former Marina
High quarterback Ken Lo zlo ..
A running .quarterback is what
Tucker needed, and wzlo howed
up on the Coast campus with creden-
tials that included1 30 touchdowns,
including_ I~ on the ground while he
was a senior for Coach Da"c :Yh<>mp.
son's V1kirigs. .
.·And Las~lo i n't womed about
taking his ~are of t>ruises when the
NeWport,won't
be celebrating
this·triumph
Irvine plays bigger
Turs nose-to-nose
in 20-7 setback
at the Irvine 33 early in the period.
Nine running plays later quar-
terback Shane Foley nudged into the
end zone after Kevin McClelland had
set things up with six carries for 24
yards.
Two plays later, linebacker Chns
Parks intercepted at the Irvine 34 and
By ROGER CARUON the Sailors were off to an easy drive °'""Mir,... • .,. again, going the distance in four plays
Newpon Hatbot'ffigh'sSailorsleft with Foley passing first to
with a 20. 7 non-teque football de· McClelland for 12 yards and capping
cision over visitina Irvine Thursday it with a 16-yard strike to the 214-
night, but there was little celebration pound junior halfback.
in the winner's locker room -rather, McClelland's return to the lineup
it was like a wake, at least prior to aftcrarthoscopicknccsuraery(a week
Coach Mike Giddinp' entry. ahcadofschedule)wasoneofthc very
"We were outcoached and few bright spots for Giddmp.
outplayed, but somehow we .. 1 shudder to th1nk what would
outscored them," said a decidedly have happened if he wasn't back."
upset Giddinp, who saw bis team said Giddmp.
held scoreless in the first half before McClelland rambled for I 05 yards
beina set up for two shon third· on 18 carries, and scored the Sailors'
quarter touchdown drives by a stub-final touchdown on a one-yard burst,
bom band of Vaqueros. who akhough and he ran with authority.
obviously very small in size, ap. His appearance was timely, since
pcared to play the bi~r Sailors nose· starting fullback Fritz Howser went
to-nose. out with a hip pointer after ju t one
"I'm proud of the kids," said Irvine carry, and before it was over the
Coach Terry Henipn. "We told our Sailors were out offullbacks, with Joe
kids we couldn't make the turnovers Johnson (wrist) banged up, too.
and. well, this is our second game and As a final blow of frustration for
we'll get better.'' Giddinas the Vaqueros broke into the
Henipn'screwdugitsownsravein scoring column with nine seconds left
the third quancr, beginning with a after taking over at the Sailors' one-
six-yard punt which set the Sailors up • (Pleue aee NEWPORT /83)
Pirates square off with arch-rival
Goldcn West Saturday niiJlt in the
community college opener for both
teams.
la521o proved his toughness a )car
before earning All·CIF honors and
the Sunset l..eagut' MVP title.
An innocent dive into the famJly
wimming pool creatid mbre'tfian
five months of misery for Laszlo.
"When T dove in, I hit the bottom of
the pool with my head; LasLlo
recounts of the summer 1980 acci-
dent. "I just got out of the poof and
asked my mom if my head was
bleeding. She said it was. so I went to
the hospital."
.
.. The whole time. I started to feel
my neck suffen up. My dad Just told
me not to move 1t. It ne~cr was that
painful, JJUSt uncomfonable," Laszlo
~ic pent five days in the ~o pi1al
and five months an a ncck brace -
but Still managed to attend school and st_ill.Jta~ ~opes of pla>i~ football in his mor year. •
••Right from the mn. the i:loc:tor
told me I'd play again," he add .
So Laszlo completed his 1m·
pressive senior son by picking up
60 I yards on I 17 carries and connect·
ing on 79 of 153 passes for 1,664
ya_rds. He guided the Vikings into the
th1i'd round of the CIF Big Five
Junior Ke'Yin McClelland hurdle. throqh an opentna to
eet op the Sailors at the Irrine one-yard line, wliere.
playoffi ore falhng to olton, 2S.9.
But What ham>encd l.&i?to
followmg the t9 J season nd du· auon' •
In somethlng of n aronic 1wist.
Laszlo had 'Pl nned to lend Golden
West, wb1dh 1sn•1 Car from Manna.
.. But I l 1 d1dn°1 ha'e my head on
smHght,' he admits. -i sle:ippcd two
• years but I alwa)'S felt hke playmg. ••
So after two years of" onang 1 a
piu.a ~nor and o ~upcr:martet.
ll.:ilsilo ho -ed up at OCC with a
dC$trc to pla> footb:lll and qwtc r bit
knowledge ofa ~r o1Ten~ .
.. The wash bone's a dot off un, .. h
says. "J ran the option m hif!l school
so I don't mind taking a hit. •
Saturda) ni&ht (7:30) at OCC.
Laszlo will be me No. I targct.ofthe
Golden WCSl def ense1 and &everal
Ru~tl~ ~familiar with Laszlo.
'
.. yeah, I ~a lot of tlleir p)'l-
Ron ~-Marget Wcile _.
Tom PieehOta -I 1ee tbem evwy once an 1wh1k ... b£ ays.
Malemciaand Wax~io•a lototl.aszloSa~ ~•Ila 6-0. 22s-pe>und vc Uanaa.
Wette a dchuve a.ct.
LimlO 15 IOOki~ Col ntd IO lilaY·
inR his first pme an 'two yan.
""'r·11 lhouJd be a IOOd ..-. " be
'~ "COKh Tuckr -JUll been · aemna us to so out lbett ud me ow
heads. We ~ know Gokkll
West IS a food It.am. •
··0ur bisll ~· .. lhdr' of. fense. 1bcYlhave 1 pat Cl~
an John Heinle.." Luzlo adda.
Laszlo 1Clmi11 tbCR .m,IM Ilea Iii*
more pressure on hina SMurdmy ·wida
the unc.crtainity ol tailbect knill .._.. .. ,.eno,_,
..., ............... 0.....
quarterback Shane Foley took It ba for Kew port oa tbe Jlat
play, Barbor'• ftnt toachdoWD ill a 20-7 trln•pla.
Slaton steps in and eilds ·another slump The Wlld, Wild Weat
M.W..-
• L Pict. -14 71 .SlO -" -~-· 1• 71 .SlO n n .-,~ nw .. nsc... Veteran snaps another Angel tailspin;
Lynn gets healthy with two home runs
By RICHARD DUNN
DllJ""C.I JI .....
•
When the AnJcls arc in need of a
wio in this September suspense story.
they ask themselves, .. Who ya sonna
call? ..
The answer? Slumpbuster Jim
Slaton.
For the third time this season,
Slaton ended an AnieJs' tailspin
Thursday night, bcatina Oeveland at
Anaheim Stadium, 7-3 to move bis
team a half..pme closer to Minnesota
and Kansas City, both of wbich were
idle.
Fred Lynn, bedridden Wednesday
\_because of a strep throat, supplied
most of the offense with two home
runs and four RBI. But it was Slaton,
who earlier in the stretch drive halted
a seven-pme slide in New York and
stopped.a thrcc--proe skid when he
beat Baltimore, who delivered what
the Angels needed.
"He's come up with some bi~ wins.
especially after we'd Jost a few,''
Manager lohn McNamara said. "He
had thrown a 134 or 137 pitches by
ttie ninth inning and he was stru&&l· ing."
"The team seems to score a lot of
runs when I'm on the mound," said
Slaton1 who walked three while
achicv1oi a personal season-high of seven strikeouts.
The Anaels will host Chicaao for
tonight in the stan of a thre-gamc
series. They now have just l 8 games
remainini. Thursday's win put the
Angels back at . 500 (72· 72), but more
importantly, they're only one game
down in the loss column.
Slaton worked until two were out in
the ninth inning when he needed help
from Don Aase for the final out He
had allowed just t"-O runs in eight
inninas. one coming on Joe Carter's
solo homer in the fourth and the other
when Julio frani::o's scoring fly ball to
center in the fifth brouaht Bren Butler
home from third.
"I wanted to finish (the game) real
bad so J could gi vc the bullpen a rest and Aase wouldn't have lo work,"
Slaton said. "McNamara stayed with
me as Iona as he could, but he saw my
fastball was gcnina up.''
His teammates supported him with
all the artillery he needed m the first
two innings, thanks to Jose Roman's
conuoucd tryout in the big leagues.
Roman, who faced the Aogcls last
..,.eek in his major leaaue debut and
surrendered five ea.med runs in 31/J
inninp. apin had trouble wtlb the
strike zone. The 20.)ear-old Roman v.<alked
four batters in less than two inninp
and by the time Manager Par Corrales
brought the book, C1eveland was in a
quick. S-0 hole..
Lynn's thJtt..run home run 10 the
second innina p\lt an end to Roman,
and his soto·shot in the seventh, the
third time he bas hit two an a pme
this. season and the I Sth time io bis
career, concluded the Angels' scorini.
Lynn now hu seven home runs in
(Pleue tee AKGELS/82)
--7, C1'wlllNI , K-.. City,--.,. Wiii
.T ......... S-Otlc:Mo (....., '2-f) .. ......
(l.eM IHI ~ CWllem& Nl al T.._
Otoulfl 11-tll
"-City UIOMft l·S) .. s.ftllt (......,... ... ,, ll•• , ..... .-au c•1-Home c IOI: s.e. w. u, '6 O.C:..O; 11, •• 1'. a K-Oly, Jl,
22 • .D Teat; Awn Cl~ s.LJ.C W. JS. • K--Ctrv; t7, 11, 2', • T...._
ltANSA.S art (17) -Home <11: s.t. 21, 22. D OlktlMS; 2• (2), U. N .._..., Awey Hot: s.t ,._ IS. l6 $eetda.; 11, , "·•""-II: a. n. •~ ...._SOTA (17)-Home en. s.t. l1,
Jt. 1', 20 ~ 21, Z2, D a.. 111 ~
Awn ( lOI: 5'PI 1•, tS, 16 TeU5; 24. U. M
Clllaleo, f7, 11, 29, • 0........
hlerest-ing-prep-feetba-1-1-matehu-ps te~i~t
Gauchos
face new
challenges
B1CURTSEEDEN .... D.tlr .........
ddleback Collcg~ will fa~-c ~me
new ChaUenacs m the M1 ion Con·
ference football race this season. in
the form of Oransc COi t and San
Di!IO Mesa colltse .
The two former South Coast Con·
·ference cnmcs wcrc watched to the
Mission durina the off. son, and
the move r11urcs to make the M1 on more competitive than, ... cy .... c ... r __ _
Ooech Ken wcannacn·s Gaucho
1lto hl~e to worry •bOut pcrcnmally
tou&h Citrus and Rh'tl'Sidc u well
as 1Southwestcm whidl defeated El
Camino la t son an the n Di
Soulh Biy Kiwanis Bowt.
Jn shon, ' ddleba k '4111 hard·
pre ICd to capturt tts eighth tntlJht
conference football t tic.
(Pl_.. eee OAUCHOl)/83)
Major con rontation bct"'ecn
hiahly·rqardc<i prep foothall teams ta~e place on several front tonight a
the non-league portion of thc sea~on
completes it ~ond week.
Among the "attraction : Edi"H>n vs.
Colton: Fountain Valley,, .. El Toro;
and Servite vs. Marina. They all begin
at 7:30 and here' a rundown on each
of I 0 non-league pme :
Servile shelled Colton, 32-0 last" eek.
Manna's forte is speed, with Shawn
Masse) running and Chap Rtsh
catching. h 's at Westminster.
La Qa.lata vs. Ocu.a View: Ocean
View wall be tr)ina to make it 2-0 for
the first time ever against a team
which held Westminster to a field
goal in a 3-0 loss. Ocean Vit'w's
Scahawks feature the triple stad.ed I
'<'ith double tieftt ends "ith the
obvious cmpha 1<1 on the run. h's' at
Huntington Beach. .
Ha.ntlaaton Buel• v1. Damlea:
Damien was a bia-loscr to San
Gorionio last week , and the Oilers art
hckana their "-Ound . too. after lo jna
to Corona del Mar. Huntington's
Dcla\lilf'C·\li anacd T IS directed by
quarterback Joe: Nap<>h wtth Scott
Elliott the kc) runner. h 's at Damien,
lcx"atcd 1n La Vemt'.
Con. a del tar vs. Su C1emHte:
The Tntons await \\Ith a ~mev.hat
re vamped offense (thcy•re pus1n1 no~. too), and ha\c bttn thorns io
Corona' 1dc m the pa t. CdM is led
b the runnina and pa ang or quar-
terback Bobb~ Hatfield. combined
with a touah defcn . If at San
Clemcntt'. · ·
UDlv nlly v1. ti iOD Viejo: Un1-
vcrs1ty'~ TroJans are tr)1ng to ct on
the ng,ht tra k :after running into
1
lf"\i~e, but Mission Viejo po~ JUSt
as b11 an o~tacle. U nl\ c~1ty s game
no" behind quarterback nd) Mtll·
erand runner Kalama Gohara Uni is
0-1 . Miss.ion is 1-0 lt'sat lf"\1ne High.
ElslHre vs. Lapu Bffc~ Coach
Dennis Hat\un ts hopeful bts
Lquna Beach team ha all of its
pcnah~ behind it fter a 14-0 lo to
Buena Park. Elsinore 1s ltd b)'
quarttrbacl Tim o .. e. Laguna Beach
quanerback Jim O'Donnell wa one
of lhe fc bright J)Ots for tht' mm
la t week. ~{'I at liSuna.
SUUaco v1. Co ta esa: Both are
0-1, and tht me ;., con\idcttd a
to up Co ta icsa's oung ~u d 1s
k-d b QU nt' .. 1tl-C ShU<'.k, ~ith
ca Au.-.. Sa~ Saddle-
d.: is 1-0 and featuru si:iecCly
runner Teddy Baker. CJ~6n ·
Camf)bell and Earl Jones. Santa !t\na
bich ms dropped by cwpon
Harbor. 27-8. counters .. ,th tcve
ha". h's at the Santa Ana Bo.,l.
utmtuter vs. PacUica: Pacifi · ·
is on a tbrce-pmc winnina ~rcak
qain~t the Lions and enters on the
ta.1ls of a 17-10 victory over Villa
Par!(. Westminster dropped La Qui.-
ta la~t v.'CCk, 3-0. If• at Bolsa Grande.
Eagles dodge a bulletin 17-14 victozy
Hoclge'sfieldgoal enough to win,
but Laguna Hills nearly pu ls it out ..
.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOTIFrfday, pttmber U, 19M ,
..
outhcm California. World cla s
runnen hiavc been a con tanl feature
of the race. In 1983. Kirk Pfeffer won
with a record time of 2 :'38 and Liz
Baker won the "omeD 's di' mon wuh
a llmc or 34:27. •
Last year' event ·~atured uch
w rtd-cla" runners as Steve Scott,
tom Wysocki, Ralph Serna, Ed
Mendoza and Herb Lutdsay.
Rcsi$tration on the day of the race
as from 6:30 to 7:4S a.m. in the
parking lot of the Westin South Coast
Plua Hotel at Bristol and Anton
streets with parktni available in the
multi·level parkina structure. * * * This Saturday, the YMCA New
Youngster finds
a bathtub ring:
Tl.gen' ~agtc D1llDber now ab .
It's JiID Otto's
1..ongsbot Woody Blackburn, who last n season lost his ptaymg rights because his
·dismal play. fired a career-best, 8-under-
par 64 and established the first-round lead
Honeycutt to undergo surgery
Thursday in the Greater Milwaukee Open. Blackbum.,
33, who struggled throughout a seven-year PGA Tour
career. does not now have an Approved Player card and
got into this toJJrnament orily off the last qualifying
catcaory, past champions. He held a one-shot lead over
Du Pola.I, while Gary Hallberg was nexl with a 66, 6-
under-par on the 7,010.yard Tuck.away CounlS)' Club
course ... Jn the LPGA event at Kent, Wash., Maffia
Speacer-De\lliD and Marta Fipera1-Dotti of Spain
fired 6-under-par 66s and tied for the first-round lead.
Each used only 28 putts over the 6,202-yard, par 72
Meridian Valley Country Oub course. Sweden's Pia
NU110D, Be\lerely Dnit and Lyu St.roaey ~tied for
third place at 68, 4-under, followed by LPGA HalJ of
Farner Katby Whltwortb, with a 69 ... At Charlotte,
N.C., AustraJian Kel Na1le, who has finished no better
than 21st in his last five tournaments, shot a 4-under-
par 68 to crab a one-stroke lead after the first round of
the World Seniors Invitational golf tournament. LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles
Dodgers announced Thursday that pitcher
Rack Honeycutt. will undergo surgery to
correct an arthntic condition m his left
shoulder
The left-handed pitcher will have the up of the
clavicle of his left shoulder removed in the operation.
which will be performed Tuesday at the Centmela
Hospital Medical Center. The name of the surgeon
performing the operation was not released.
Dr. Frank Jobe, the Dodgers' team phys1c1an
expects Honeycutt to be ready for spring training
without any limitations.
This season Honeycutt was 10-9 with a 2.87 ERA
while pitching 181 li'unnings forthe Dodgers. starting28
times with six complete games and two shutouts.
Laker tickets on sale Monday
LOS ANGELES -Tickets for all Los ·m Angeles Lakers games for the 1984-85
season will go on sale Monday at the
Forum ticket office and Ticketmaster
outlets, the National Basketball Assoc1ation team
announced Thursday.
The Lakers, who lost the NBA championship
series in seven games last season to the Boston Celtics,
play their first regular season home game on Oct. 10
against Golden State.
Meanwhllc, the Los Angeles Chppen added
another game to their pre-season schedule.
The Clippers, who moved to Los Angeles from San Pell won't fight NCAA charges Dicao this season, will play the Golden State Warriors
· Oct. 6atCal Poly Pomona aria benefit game for the Casa ~ Colina Foundation, a rehabilitation clinic for the
~ handicapped.
GAINESVILLE. Fla . -Coach
Charley Pell claims many of the 107 alleged
violations filed against the University of
Aonda football program are false. but he
said he won't fight the NCAA.
Florida released a list of 107 v1olauons Tuesday
against the Gator football program. Pell said he
considered man) of the NC AA charges inaccurate. but
he would not elaborate
"'If I fight it. a lot of good people will be hun," he
said
Pell did not den> charges of spying on the practice
-iields of oppusmg teams. but he said a number of other
schools alw do 1t
Pagel, Bell earn AFC honora
NEW YORK -Quarterback Mike
Pagel of the Indianapolis Colts and
defensive end Mike Bell of the Kansas City
Chiefs have been named the American
Football Conference's players of the week in the
National Football League ·
Pagel completed I 5 of 20 passes for 21 S yards last
Sunday as the Colts beat the Houston Oilers, 35-21. He
had {nother 26 yards oo the ground an seven carries.
Bell had three of the Chiefs' five ckl a the Chief!
defeated the Cincinnati Bengals, 27-22. He also had
four unassisted tackles.
Canada stun• Soviets In OT
CALGARY. i\lberta-Paul Coffey's fil Iona slap shot deflected off Mdce Bossy's '
shoulder and into the Soviet net 12:29 into
overtime, hftmg Team Canada to a
stunnina 3·2 upset of the Olympic champions and into
the Canada Cup finals.
Soviet ~tender Vladimir Myshkin -performed
heroicalb'. but was victimized by bad luck as Canada
avenged a 6-3 loss to the Russians on Monday night.
Mysbkm lost his stick during a scramble and
Coffey pounced on a loose puck. The Edmonton Oilers'
defenseman sent a wicked shot at the net and it bounced
10 off Bossy, the New York Islanders' stat forward
•
----
RUNN ING
Horizons in Santa Ana will present a
Sk Fun Run and ,pancake breakfa ta
part of New Horiions 10th An·
mversary Celebration. •
Chtck in and late re11stration "'ill
be at 6:30 a.m. to race tame at
Centennial Park on Edinaer and
Fairview in Santa Ana. The race is set
for7:30. ~ith the pancake breakfasut
8:30.
* * * RUNNIN<J SCH DUL
S.tvr•v flNf ,. .. Onlk. , SOk ' l·Mlt-
Clllna Cuo Sirin No. t. IH!MJ a.m. (Sf.), t 1.m. (IOI\! 1ne t un <Klch' l'U!ll 11 Yorn
RfflONtl fttrk lfl Yort1t l.lno1 Fiii c:O\lrM FH b
Sf wllll T •alllrt end U wllh0\11 wllll t 1 tale '" 1111 d•Y ot Ille ttCt, Kl~,· run" with T•alllrl, •dCI" div of rlQC For more lntortNllO!!, ttldnt 1111
NIW'°'1 l .. OI ltlollllltf1 AUOClflio(f ti "6•0556
YMCA NtW HttfJtm Sil '"" "Ull -~ na MO • m • fOllO*td by Ml!Cllkt brukt11I ti • JO
Cl'lt(k•ln 1nd lilt rt0T1T" . w111 t>t at UO Im rtct dav at Ctnltnnlal ark on l!dll\Otl' and
Fairview In Santa Ana An 1111ra,,t1 wm raca1v1 • runntr'a hat •nd oe!lCtkt llfnkfHI Entry ftt It
t10 CIO'llllOn to YMCA Ntw Hor110M. For more
lnform.llOtl, Ofl«lt j.17·•121
Sl"A TAC M Ob~ ~ -~!tit t am at Ille p<cnlc erH tbovt 11'11 Grtek
All enlr"nts waU _.,.·1ve a runner's T,,.1ttl', Grlfflt11 Park MOdtl'ttttv l'llDY, dOtilll•· .. '""" IOOP courH Fff 11 SS, "ce dn onty, For mor• hat and a pancake breakfast following 1n1orme11on, phOne '"' or1tt11t1 P1rk At111111c: c1ub the race. Entry fee is a SI 0 donatiOI\ to " mt1 nM01s. ; •
YMCA New Honzons. • • · 's"""~ , \ · La ~ IOll l"lrl L .. HIMS -lt0lt11 I (:"ornplementary refrcshmenb 'w1lf am 11 Los AAllflft City Hrf, CO\lt" .. llH some
I be I bl r mild ti!Ds l'ld runs lhrOUO!I dOwnto*n Slrttts Ftt a SO aV&l a e. It tlO wllti T•ll\irl will! 51 '-It fff Cash 1>4'1lH 10 . ......__
* ~· * 11r.i 10 malt and ftm1i. 11n1111tn Procnds
bt~ll Pare Los Nino• Oavc1rt Proorem. For
more lnlorrm1t1on. PllOM (113) 74·11'1,
Wilma Maddock of Costa Mesa has on Tiit ,,_. T• GoM """" s 1nc1 1oei -
entered the seventh "annual Avon ''°'"' • •"' "G111 '· s.,,1. ~""' 1t1u Trec1;., • • • Tl'le looP count er.uncs 11'11 lf1ck his • .ilol'I• Jnternat1onal Maratl\on to be held 1ndine FM'• .. with T·shtrl, s,. wlll'IOUI, with S2 Sept 23 in Pans, France. 11111" on r.u e11v. For mor11111cKmellon. l>flOflt
Nearly 1,000 women from more <tlll UMS2•
than 30 countnes are expected to TM 1914 Ma,.,..~v HtntV« C«'llerate
participate in this race wtiich will be °""'*• J\., """ -Htld In Grtfflth Perk, Loa run through the streets of western Anffll• F111 C1MW WIMtnv •ttma cornoett in
Paris. passing the Eiffel Tower and ~~'°;~~i!=.1:~~~;=,:.;
the Trocadero alon~ the way. · coroor111c1111111noe11 <213l •76-llU.
~ports on TV for weekend
Saturday UCLA, KMPC (7l0). 4:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBAIL: 8YU vs. Tulsa,
K.FOX-FM (93~). delayed. TELEVISION
9 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Washington at
Michigan, Channel 2.
7 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: CS Sacramento vs.
CS Northridge, KSCN-FM (88.S).
12: 15 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago at Angels,
Channel 4. Sunday
TELEVISION 12:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Illinois at
Stanford, Channel 5, Oklahoma at Pittsburgh, Channel 7.
I p.m. -T : Pacific Southwest Open. Channel
2.
I 0 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Chicago vs. Greco Bay,
Channel 2; LA Raiders vs.. Kansas City, Channel 4.
I l:lS a.m. -BASEBALL. Dodgers at Cincinnati,
Channel 11. •
2 pm. -SOCCER: Brazil vs. Uruguay. Channel 34
(taped). . 3 p.m. -SPORTS SPECIAL: Boxing. Thomas
Hearns vs. Fred Hutchings (delayed), and horse racing, 7.
Woodward/Futurity Stakes at Belmont (dela>'ed). Chan-
Noon -BASEBALL: Minnesota vs. Texas, Channel
nel 2; BOWLING: Amateur tournament, Channel 4.
I p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Rams vs Pittsbura,h,
Channel 2.
4 p.m. -TENNIS: Pacific Southwest Open, Channel
2.
6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Denver vs. Oeveland, RADIO
10 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Notre Dame vs.
Mich•pn State, KFOX-FM (93.5). Channel?. ·
RADIO 11:30 a.m.-COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Mmnesota vs.
Nebraska. K.JEV (870). 12: IS p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago at Angels. KMPC
(710).
I 0 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: LA Raiders vs. Kansas
Caty. K.Rl..A (I I 10).
11 :15 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodge~ at Cincinnati.
KABC(790). 12:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Oklahoma vs.
Pittsburgh, KLAC (570); Illinoi~ vs. Stanford, KGIL
(1260).
Noon -BASEBALL: Chicago vs. Angels. K.LAC
(S70).
1 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Idaho v5. CS
Fullerton, KWVE-FM (107.9).
I p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Rams at Pm.sburJh,
KMPC(7l0).
4 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Cincannau. KABC
(790): COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Long Beach State at
6p.m. PRO FOOTBALL: Denver vs. Oeveland, KNX
( 1070).
I VoLLEYBA LL
--~
·Warriors fini·sh fast
to turn back Ediso·n
Woodbridge High ralhed to pin the
first Joss of the season on Edison.
Corona del Mar stopped Fountain
Valley to cam ats first win. Laguna
Beach was extended to the limit
before edgini Bishop Montgomery,
and Irvine dasP<?sed of Mater Dei an
high school girls' volleyball actaon
Thursday.
UC Irvine posted a 16-14, tS-10,
IS· 11 victory over visiting Oeveland
State and Sou them California College
evened its record at 2-2-with a I 7-15,
15-4, l 5-4 win over Whittier College.
Jo a tight match at Woodbridge, the
Warriors scored the final four points
of the match to down Edison, 16-14,
10-15, 15-9. 9-15, 16-14 for their
second victory of the season.
With her team trailing 14-12 in the
dec1S1ve final pme, sophomore
Loren Newman served out the match
for Woodbridge to cap an excellent
serving niaht.
The tint game set the tone for the
evening as.neither team owned more
than a two-point lead at any tame. The
second game was also. close with
. Edison evening the match. The two
team split the next two games at I S-9
LASZLO. • • From Bl
Bradley' availablility. Bradley is till
trying co return to form following an
ankle injury which sidelined him for
most of the '83 season.
•
0 But we have some other fine
runnina backs 1n John Ca taneda, Bill
Brown and Chri Cook," Laszlo add .
. And, if nothing else, La~zlo won't
mmd runnina with the ball.
to set the stage for the decider.
The standouts for Woodbridae included sophomore middle blocker
Mindee Adams who did an excellent
JOb at the net.junior hitter Jill Daniels
who had 19 kills and Newman.
For Edison, Erin Tomblin had an
outstanding niabt scttina and was
credited with 43 assists. Outstde
hitter Kathy Stewart contnbuted I 5
kills for the Chargers, who fell to 1-1 .
Both teams are entered in the
Orange County Championships.
hosted by We tminster High, begin-
ning Saturday. The top 16 teams in
th3t tournament wlll advance to the
champ1onsh1p round Sept. 22.
Corona del Mar turned back Foun-
tain VaJley, tS-12, 15-4, 15-8, as
outside hatter Cristy Moiso and
middle blocker Andrea Redick
sparked the Sea Kmgs (I· I).
Chri\ty Svalsted played well for
Fountain VaJley, which dropped to
0-2 overall.
-la&una Beaeh claimed an 8•1 S,
15-10". 12-lS, 15-8, IS-11 decision at
Bishop Montgomery in the Arti ts'
opener. • "
Senior outside . hitter Annette
Juptncr, junior outside hitter
Vallery foley and senior setter Brook
Binley were the standouts for Laauna
Beach, which resume action Sltur-
day in the Oransc County Cham·
pionships.
Setter Nancy Bower and back-row
specialist Kristi Moothan were in-
trumental in lrvine·s 15-5, I 5--4, l S-6
triumph over Mater Dei,
Irr I college match, UC ti-vine
recovered from a lul&llh tart to
sweep idc Cleveland State. Gina
Elchuck had 10 kills and Lyn·
nda Kelley added nine .
Jim Slaton
ANGELS ... From Bl
his last 12 pmes, and ha.s batting
average since July 29 has raised 27
. points (.248 to .285). Abo, Lynn as
hittina .395 (15-for-l8) in his last 10
aamcs .
"I didn't have a lot of ene'1)' and l
didn't have a lot ofstrenath, but it all
worked out anyway, .. Lynn said. "It's
soma to take some consistent play for
us to win this thma. We haven't put
toaether a winnina streak all year and
now is the ti me to do it or we won't be
there at the end,"
"I {Cally admire~i or · out and playing. He was le and w~"
said McNamara.
• The ma{\l&cr also revcttd Slaton's
effort, which fell one out hy of a
complelc aamc when first baseman
Rod Carew misplayed pmch·hiuer Jcrr Willard's arounetcr for a two-out
error.
Baseball groping for answers on brawls
The Anacls thus salvl&_Cd the final
pme of a three.game scnes with the
.Indians, who have seven pm
rcmainina with the Ropt1 and hope
to continue in a ~poiler s role.
OUR LONG TERM
LEASE OR PURCHASE,
lARG INVENTORY
ASSURES CHOIC
ltM UJ UM> • 1'Wrti0l~ • 11 ~ Alli! .. ,·-•
• A
*
• I ·-·
-Webster's definition of family: Win
By I.Oii MUNION --o ... , .....
The Tuailn Hiah School football
coaches have an emblem on their
lhlna which 11)'1 .. 1ht family". It
reptctenta the attitude that Coach
Marijon Antich wants to instill in his ie~m • a ctoxneu, a "Let'• win thil
1hana toaether .. t~ of motto.
I.Ast year the Tillers of Tustin
manqed only one win durina the
course of tti. season. But as of Jltu~ niahl, Tustin had doubled n1 l 983 vlctory output, a1 the Tillers powc~ their way to a 21-7 victory
over the Woodbrid&e Warriors at
Irvine Hi&h School.
Tustin f'u.llback barren Webster led
the attack, 11 the senior ICOred three
touchdown11 w1tlte runnlna for 143
yards on 27 carries.
Ottpite the maraln of victory for
the Tillers, Woodbridp was C1J1&ble
ofat 1 Ht ryina the aarno in tile rounh
quaner, bUt turned ·the ball over to
Tustin with 3:47 let\.
Woodbrid&e held a 7-6 lead soina
into the fiilal 12 minuie. of the same, but on the first ~lay of the quaner
Webster drove lefl for flve yaid1 and
into the end zone. Tu1Un added a tw~point conversion, aivina the
Tillers a seven-point advantqe with 11:56 left.
"Overall we did well" said Wood·
bridae Coach Gene Nojl. .. I'm sure we
NEWPORT TOPS IRVINE ••• PromBl . · · . . .
yard line becaute the snap on a
puntina situation· could not be handled. ·
For Jood me~urt the ~rs were rocked for 153 ants on I) penalties.
Onoe it was for 2 playen on the field.
Another time it was for J 3 players on
the field. One flaa nepted ·what
would have been a l 3·yard touch·
down run by McClelland.
"I was embamssed," continued Oiddinp. "They were beating us to
the punch in the tint half. "We were
OK for a while in the third quarter,
then •.. , " Giddinas stopped talk.ins
and simply tm>jectcd a bronx cheer as an ex.planauon.
Althouah the Sailors looked better
on paper, Oidd~ must have had an
intuition about this one, even kic~na
ofTat the outset aj\cr winnina the coin
tlipt in hopes of ~ttina the better field
position.
were knock1n1 on the door apin, but
after SCttins to the Irvine 1 lA they had
to settle for a 29-yard neld 1011
attempt by Sterlin& Coberly, but the
. attempt hit the .let\ upriaht and
bounced back.
Irvine·• deepest penetration in the
first half was the Newpon 3S, and in
the second hal( it was to the NH 48
(with the help of penalties) before the sift touchdown at the end.
Newport Harbor quarterback
Shane Foley tume~ in a solid eft'on1 completina 9of20 for 16S yards ana
no interceptions, and he ran for 20
yardt on three carries.
But what turned the Sailon' antici·
pated victory celebration into a wake
-was the fact they fell outhit by the
Vaqueros, and oettainly outexccuted
in terms of penalties (Irvine had four flap for 42 yards). For the most pan the blue·<:lad
hosta played it close to the vest, Newl*'t H•rw 20, trvtne 7
runnina out of a full house T and a ac.... w Qvartwt power I. lrvlne o o o 7-7
"I told my coaches we were in for a N':::"~~~ run <Cowiv :lckr ,. ._20
bad one," said Giddinas. NH-McCltllel\CI 1' .,. .. tron'I Fotv• <c~1v
Irvine's Remy Rahmatulla was a klckJH-McCltlllnd 1 run (klek SNIP rnufftd) small packa&e of dynamite in a on~ 1rv-«11u·ne1ut1a 1 ni11 (HtnlNn kk:ll) on-everybody situation and sparkled A1ttnc11nce: >,500 <tatltntttd>
with S9 yards on IS carries, but lhe •NOIVID~~~Anmcs
Vaqueros• passina aame self-destruc-lrv-fttlll'NIUllt, 15-Sf; Frank, 3•12;
ted. killina .any reasonable upset · ar~!'~~. 1t·1os; GUP1111, ..is; Jolln· hopes for lrvtne. · '°"• 5-22; e>swlld, l ·20; Fottv. 1·20; P. Howw. Also pickinJ off passes for the MO; F. Howa.r. i-.; SIOl'Mlllln, l·O; V•ncltman,
Sailors were Iohn Oswald and Ho Hor·mlnu• 13· P•lllllt
Truona. irv-eltlmtn,.,.25·3, .._ Oswald's set the Sailors up on the NH-Fotev, MO·O, l6S.
Harbor 42, but after drivina to the . 1rv-1te11rne1u11t~~.nk, 1-1s; ...,,!tan, Irvine 12, the Tars blew their chances N ; Tllomu, 1·1. . with penalties NH-McClelland, Ml; Jamet, M•; Soooner,
La . th · ti h If the Sail l·<l2, GUPllll, 1·>0; TrUO!)I, 1-15, Oswald, 1-141 tcr ll1 e tnt a ors Motet. Ht ·
hid bener •~t• on paper lhan them1 3:47 lef\.
but they lhut u1 down.'' • inc play1 later Web tcr po red
Woodbridte ~ned ~ 1d ion on over from the left aide, aJlna the
&ti 25-yard Une followi~ Webster's vactory for the Tillefl
second score of the pme· and "o/cb1ter' a to~ auy,'' d
promptly drove the ball 1nto Tustin Anctch. "'He's the best f'Wlback &hat's
territory. Fint it was Mark PblOlps ever played .at 1h11 scbopl. Our
brukina some iackles in picJOna up offen1lve line played excellent.
20 yards for the Warrior1, and then "Hetk, 1wo -w1n1 will make these
teammate Dan Saqer added another JU)'I thln_k th t they can play gaanst
nine. . anyone1 pos blyevcn. ~. wdl, rdon't But Woodbridae t.urntd the ball want to say who:·
over at the Tiller 40, as a bad snap • The Wamon' only 1COre of the
from center cautcd quarterback Matt pmc came 1n tho third quancr, arld
Cornwell to fumble the ball. was set up by a fine m:eption by Eric
On the next terie1 the Warrior . Spivm. defense JtifTcned• forcina Tustin to No i-0~ toj)asson fourth-down·
punt. But Mark Lieaenhqen placed and· ive from thc-Tmtin 30, and hJS
the ball on tho Woodbridae 4-yard plan worked. Spivey, who sprinted to
line with an eitcellent kick. the aoal line. saw that Comwell's .PUS
The Warriors manaaed to drive the waf short, so the senior came back for ball upfield, but saw tneir drive awl the ball, dove and pulJed in the aerial
·on their own 49-~ard line with only at the .. yard line ..
On lhe t pla) Phllli.P' ran :riaht
for Che touchdoWn, and Jay addle.
ton added the extra Point ah'°' WoodbndJc she lea4
. Bryan Guptill ramblea for 7ar~e, bat
Irrine'• Rick Wauon (23) leacta a pack of
................. c...... ctefencten to keep him uder control. Gap-
tlll ft.nlahed with 25 prda OD ala curlee.
EAGLES •••
From81
l4-0 lead.
Eltanda, however, was UDlble eut \ht verdiC'l in I vice, II I
first down at the ~uoa Hllh' l line hit. a receiver an the cbell
bounced away and 1be iep..,..-
ally were turned away an91Y'1:=I when a 21..0 lead .as I Cl pcssibility. .
Laauna Kdll boWtcld bide
touchdown, tben tcend llllP :la second half, and when 0.-rU
the wo.pomt conversion the
WU tied It 14.
That ltt U,.P ~ Jut.:miftule
works u the~ worbd tbdr
into scorina ttmtory to tel Hodee for his p!M»ki¢k. only t.o see
Hawks nc&t1y pwl it out. .. Any time you win you have t.o JOOd... wd Blanton. ..Our
improved over last week and i want to do that. We were happy. Wi our performance and I --tho
Rossclin.i aboWed some poite ln
last drive:·
Monarchs present GC!-llo with first wi
Defensive charge carries Mater Dei Valley pass at the 40and returned it to
the Falcon 33. Four plays netted the Monarchs only 25 __yardLarul once
apin Coston connected, this ume
from 25 yards away.
on the next play to make the score
lJ.-0.
to 36-0-Victory over Santa Ana Valley The second oL lhL\DAPJ>iD& ~
cues came exactly 2:30 later ori fourth
down at the Falcon 19. This time
Haider recovered for the Monarchs at
the three .
Toan Cao
By CHRIS MONAHAN
. ~NltC.11••••1t
Week two of the 1984 hi&h school
football season for Mater Dei Hiah
and new coach Chuck Gallo was
almost exactly the same as week one.
The defense played well, the offense played inconsistently, but the result
was entirely different.
A week aao the Monarchs were
dealt a 17-13 loss by Fountain Valley,
but this time they presented Gallo
with his first victory, rolling over
Santa Ana Valley, 30-0, before 5,500
fans.
"Once again the defense was domi·
nant and the offense was erratic,"
Gallo said.
Flores: Kansas City
dangerous opponent
MANHA TT AN BEACH (AP) -
Coach Tom Flores of the Los Af!Jeles
Raiders says the Kansas City Chjefs
are always competjtive when they
play his team, no matter how they'~
doifl&. He ~ut it that way because the --cnrers arcn t usually doms too we .
But that's not the case so far in
1984, and Aorcs knows it as he
prepares the Raiders for a pme at
Kansas City this Sunday.
"This is _JOins to be a tremendous
challenae for us " Aorcs said. ''The
fact lhat they're '2.o is enouah to fire
them up. They're Oyina hi&}l, they're a
sood football team.
''Kansas City has always played us
tou&h and we've always played them
toup. It doesn•t matter what kind of
a season tbcy'R havina. They're a lot.
better: than last year."
The Chief\. who were ~ 10 in l 983
havcn•t &!~fled for the Nationaf
I • Football ue playoffs in 13 years.
Yet they've won five of their last nine
pme1 apinst the Raiders. The contqt will be the fint Amcri~
can Football Conference Western
Division game for both teams, and
the first home game for the Chiefs,
who have won at Pittsburah (37-27)
and at Cincinnati (27-22) thus far this
season.
"Their defensive line will be one of
the l>eit we'IJ-Iace, an t ey re
throwing the heck out of the ball,"
Aores said. "In both sames they've
played, they've jum~ out early.
That's the nature of a passillJ team.
"It's imponant we don't aive them
any bi& plays. They're aoinr to cvme
out shootina. We've sot to move the
ball better. We've sot to hold on to the
ball. We've aot to keep their offense
off the field with some consistency.''
The Raiders. also 2..() this 1tason1 have a 26· l 9~2 record in their series
qainst the Chiefs despite losina five
of the last nine aames between. th'e
teams.
"They alwaya think they can beat
ust said Los Anatles linebacker Matt
Mlllcp. "Kansas City could be 0.1 S
and you know you could walk into
Arrowhead Stadium and it would be a
tou&haame."
Edison now 4-0·in tennis·
Ediaon Hi.ah'• ~rl1 1enn11 &Um remained un6eaten in four ,,utinp
thi1 season, while fountain ~~ stumbled aaain1t Lquna Thu~y aftttnoon The Chartm dumped Captltrano
Valley, 1...-... behind the 1trona
double• pity . or Candace Kirt and Kris Shea. The •Dior pair, iA ~
teeond year 11 doubles partners at
Edison, have l0tt only once in 12 Mta
thlsMIOn. 'The Charaen were on the rold
today to mett Rollina Hill•.
Lquna Beath rebounded rrom Ill
Ion on Wednesda)' to Ecbaon witb a
12·6 verdict over Fountain Valley. ·
The Ani1t1 were Dloed by the
strona doubles Pia)'. ot r:nnners Dc:-nise Suai and Nona Tau and Joanna
Naylor and 'Wendy uaJ, who each
1wcpt their thm: matCba.
lri si!\ales. Fountain Valley'1Jenny
Weavn YtOn her thrtt matchupt, 6-0,
6-2. 6-l.
Lquna face Marina on Monda.> 1n
1t1 next ouuna. Foun~an ValltJ was
hedultd to ho t Oardcn Grove
tbda)'
Despite the lopsided final score, the
Monarchs had problems cettina their
offense started in the early eoing.
managina only two Gary Coston field
goals from two first.quarter Falcon·
turnovers.
The first break for the Monarchs
came when defensive lineman Kevin
Meehan recovered a Falcon fumble at
the Valley 29on the second play of the
game.
Three Toan Cao runs mo"ed them
to the 14, but two consecutive
penalties pushed them back and they
eventually settled for a 3S-yard field
goal from Coston.
five minutes later, defensive back
Tim Haider stepped in front of a
"A good team will put the ball in the
end zone," Gallo said. "Our defense
lS ready. but our offense needs a lot of improvement. We need these next
three aames (to act ready for league}."
The good fortune continued for
Mater Dc1 late in the seoond quarter
when Valley had bad snaps on punt
on two consecutive sets of downs.
The first c-ame with 4:42 left in the
half with the ball at the Falcon 25. Tbe
ball sailed almost a foot over Falcon
punter Tim Allison's bead. He re-
covered the ball at his O)Vll I ·yard line. ·
Allison's recovery only delayed the
Monarchs' first touchdown by two
seconds as Cao burst over right guard
BIUn•lllD6 11emlnar
A one-day 2min•r on "Billfish and
Billfishini" will be held nexl Thun<!Ay 1n lhe
matn ballroom of the Balboa Bay Club. 1221
Pacific Coast High•u). Newport Beach. Hours art 6-9 p.m
The seminar WJll feat11re 1wo 1n11~ma11onall)
rttoanized fish.in& authonues: Aulhor Ptter
Goadby of Sldnc~. Australia. and Dr. Charles
Daxbocck. scienufic director of 'the Pacific
Gamefish Foundation 1n Hawa11.
Seminar admission ·~ $25. For additionAI mformat1on. phone 261'-0360
Oft-road World Cbamplon•blp The 12th annual SCORE R1\ert1de Off-road
The Monarchs apin failed to put
the ball into the end zone and nearly
come away empty-banded. On first
down Cao pined 2 of his 114 yards to
the one.
On the next play freshman quar·
terback Todd Marinovicb was nearly
1nterttpted in the end zone and
followini that was sacked for a loss of
seven yards. Coston came on to save
the Monarchs for the third time in the
half, as be kicked a 2S-yard field goal.
For Cao, the Monarchs' offensive
leader on the njaJ1t, week two was
much more pleasant than the first
Last week he was only able to play the
· Clusic will be held Sunda) at R1vcrs1dc
lntcmauonal R1ce1Ao'1 . . OU Tree bone ncbJ6 Di~unt 1ickc1 boob•~ on alt for the 0 It T~ R1c1n&ASIOCllUOn mccunaat Dla Anita
Park, which bq1n1 OcL )
Tickets att on sale ·u the ract>v.a) and at all Ticket Master locauon . For mort 1nformauon.
phone 653·1161. The Santa na tkkct offi« is oPtn from 9 a m.·S p m. Mon<la> through Fnda). Orden are
be1na taken b ma1l 1nd b} phone. The ~1cket book OfT'Ct' 10 atntral m1w
for Sl7.SO. a. discount of more than 22 pctt'Cl)t
O\ t'r the 1nd1\1dual pnce of $2.25 per \tekct.
For more 1nforrnu1on._phonc <213> 374-16391.
r
fMJOa t.;IAGUR STAND NOS
Amtncaft LMtUt
WIJST OiYt w
74
74
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11 SlO n JOO .., " ,. •s n .. 11
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Sttl/rdllY"s G.eme1 Olice90 •• .,...
MIM4taol• et Ttl!H, (nl
Ke11111 City et SNtllt. lnl Boston ti N-York
l11tlmon 11 MllwtukM Toronto 11 O.trolt
Clevelelld el O.klelld
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WHT DCVIStON
W L ~ GI
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Attent• n 1• m t 'h Houston n 14 .m ,.,,
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C1nc:1nne11 '3 13 m "°"' Sen Frenc:llCO '1 M '21 20
Cl\lceoo
NewYorli ~ ..
SI. Lou" Montr .. 1
Pittiburllfl
•AST DIVISlON • !I ~ •1 " .m ,.,.,
,. " 531 10~ 76 70 .521 1Z
11 74 ·"° m1i .. 13 43S 2•°"'
T'lwrMlllY"s k-
Pillsbur9'1 14, lffw York 4
N\ontrffl et Cl\ieffO, ppd, rein
Pl\llldetPtll• 10. St Louts 1
T .. Y"I Gllmes DN9wl (Reuss 3·7) er Clnclnnetl (Pr1C1
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lffw Yont (Derting 12-61 11 Cl'ltcaoo
(Sutcflffe 14• 1)
Sen Frenclsco (RotllnllOl'I 7· t•> 11 Allin·
11 (Mc.Murtrv 9·15), tnl
Montr .. 1 (Gulllckaon 10·71 11 Pl\Uedtl·
Phi• ((triton 11·7), (11)
PlllatlurOl'I (0.L-6· 13) 1t St Louis
(Cox 1·101, (n)
Sen Dleoo ISl\ow 14·91 et HOl-"lon
(LeCo" 7·4), (n) Sa~Y"S GllMI DedlW1 11 Clnclnn1t1, (nl
Sen Dleoo 11 Houston
Pltliburoh II St. Loul1
N-York •• Chlceoo
Montrhl ti Pt\lltdtlllhl•, (nl
Sen Frtncl1eo 11 Allent1, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
. AMlls 7, .,_..ns 3
CLEVELAND CAU,ORNIA
1uti.ct F~u
Helcltl Tl\ornln lb
c.rterlf
Vukvdl rt
TebW3CI
hndoc FIKN1n2b
Pwlllns Pll
Nebol?I>
Wlllerd Ph Tllteb
Mrlllll Mrllbl S131 WllfOll020 40 00
4 0 0 I Ctrew lb 3 2 2 0
3000 LyMcf 3324
• 0 0 0 Thme' rt 0 0 0 0
• I 1 1 O.Cncs dh 3 I 2 O • o I o Oown•no If J o 1 2 • 0 I 0 ReJklft rl 4 0 I I
2 1 o o Pettis cf O O O O
2 0 0 0 Grid! 311 • 0 0 0
1 0 1.0 Boone c 4 0 1 0
0 0 0t 0 SCl\oflld H J I 0 0
1 0 0 0
>4 J 7 J T9fals ll 7 ' 7
Sc-llv ----OrMINI 000 110 001-l
C8lferM 240 000 IOX-1
Geme WIMlno RBI -Downing ( 10)
E-C.rew 2, C1rter DP--Clevel•nd 2,
C.llfornle 1 LO&-<leveltnO I, Cehfornl1 4.
28-8uller, T •bier, Downing 3B-8ullef
HR-<erter ( 10), LYM 2 (22). SF-f'renco.
I" H R •1t II SO
S S 4 I
PENNANT RACES
Aftw1C4tf) L..Mtue
WIEST DIVISION W L .. ct. <;I
~'• 74 71 SIO K1nsalCllV ,. 71 SID ..,... n n...soo
•EMAINING GAMES ANGELS (11)-Home (10): S.01. 14, IS,
16 Ollceoo, 17, 11, It, 20 Ke11sas City, 21, 22. »lens; Aw•v (I). Sito!. 24 12>. 2S, ·26
Kt11Ses Cltv; 27, 21, 2'. 30 Tu11 KANSAS CfTY ( 17) -Hom• (7) S.DI
21, 22, 23 0.klend; 24 (2), 1S, 26 AnlltlS,
AWIY (10)• Sel>I 14, 15. 16 SHlllll, 17. 11,
l,, 20 .Anoels; 2t, 2'. 30 O.kltlld
MINNESOTA (17) -Horne (7) S.ot 17,
11, 19, 20 Cl\lc:100. 21, 22, 23 Clevtltnd,
AwlV (10)· SePI 14, IS, 16 T .. H: 2•. 2S. 26
' ClllCltoo; 27, 21. tt. 30 Ctevllelld
O.troot
Toronto
EAST DIVISION
93 S3 '37 -
12 .. .562 n
REMAINING GAMES DITltOIT (16) -HOO"ll ttl S.Ot. 14, IS,
16 Toronto; 17, 11. 19 M~w1u11..,, 21. 22, 23
N-York; Awl'I' (7~ 24, 2S, 26
MIJWeUk ... 27, 21. 2'. :iihr.w York.
TottONTO ll•l -Horne (7) Sel>I 17,
11. If loston: 20, 21, 22. 23 Mllw•ull".
AWl'I' (ti; Seo!. 14, IS, 16 Detroit; 24, 2S. 26
Boston; n. 2', 30 MllwlUk ... ...,...,., ~
WIEST DIVISION
W L fi'ct. GI
Sall OllOO
Houston Atllnl1
11 .. .SS9 n 74 4'3 ''l n ,. m t i'>
RUMtNINGGAMSS
SAN DCEGO (17) -Home (S): Set>I. 19.
20 Sen Frtndsc:o; 21, 22. 2l Atlenlt; AWl'I'
(12): SePf. t•. IS, " Houston. T7, 11 Clnclnnell, 24 (2), 2S, U Sin Frendsco; 21.
2', 30 Allant1. HOUSTON ( 1'> -Home (10) S19t 1~.
IS, 1' Sin Oleoo; 17, 11 Sen Frendsco. 19. 20 Lo& Anoeles; 21, 22, 23 Clnclnnetl; Awn
(61: seot. 2•, ts. 26 Los Anoei.s. ti, 2', lO
Clnclnnetl.
ATLANTA (16) -Horne (10): S.ol. 14,
IS, ~ San Fttncfsco, 17, 11 LCK An~s.
It, 20 Clnclnnell; 2t, 2'. 30 Sin Oleoo;
Aw1y (6): Sept, 21, 22, 2l San Oleoo; 25, 26,
27 C1"c111nt H
EAST DIVISION
Cl\lc:tto • SI ~ -New York 11 '6 .SS I 7\'l
REMAINING OAMES
CHICAGO (IS) -Home (9): Seot. 14, IS,
16 New Vont, 11. It, 20 PlllUM.lrol\, 21, 2',
30 St Louis; Awn (6)• Sel>I, 21, 22. 23 St
Louts, 24, 2S, 26 PltlteurOll (Noll Tiie
Cl'llceoo·Montre11 t1tme reined out Sel>t 13
wlU tie llleved II encl of MalOll II II hH I
betrlnO on Ille Ot.tltome of 11\1 rtee)
NEW YOltK 115> -Homt 161. *' 21, 22 t3 Monlrffl; 24, 25, 2' Ptl~1de•Pl'I••·
AWIV (t)' Sel)l 14 IS. 16 Ch1Ceg0; 17, 11, 1'
Ptl'i.tde4ollla; 21, 29, 30 MontrHI
hMtbd's matk numben
Maolc numbers tor Cl•llCl\ino Ille division
~st!ICI In 11\1 Amer1e1n LA•out
Eest, N111one1 LA••ue W.st 1nd Netlonet
LHOut Eest (number Is 1 combination of
wins bv tl'te teeder 1nd losses bv the
sec:ond·Dlec1 tum>
Leider Second
0.lrolt Toronto
Sin OltOo HOt.1 All Cl'll~oo Cubs NY Mell
Numlltr
6 • 9
Clevtland
ltomtn L,0·2
Ferr
I 2·3 3
3 1·3 .. I I A .2---
ASmlll\
C1mecl\o
~
2 I
I I
1 I 0 1
0 0 0 0
SlelonW.7·7 12·3 7 3 2 3 7
A1ses.1 l·J o o o o o
WP-Sitton T-n2. A-20,127
8enlooez C1rew
Lvnn
Oown•no O.Clncn
~own
Sconoers
Mnler
Wllfon9
Narron
"'Grlcl\
-Rt JICl<llOl'I
... Pettis
Plcclolo BOOM Scl'lofi~
Tl\omes
ltlr1eson
T.tllts
AMII avenees ...
IATTING Al R H Hit
l03 56 105 I 307092 3
•St 12 Ill 12
47S SI 12' 20 41S 61 130 17
132 II JS • 126 13 33 J
27 3 1 0
2'S 30 16 6
140 9 JS J
lOf u n " 442 SS 107 It
378 S7 16 2
117 17 2• 1
400 l2 79 3
3S3 31 .. 4
21 2 l 0
4 I 0 0
4115 •ll 1ll2 lll
..rTCHING
R8' .. ct.
ll .347 2' .JOO
7S 21S '3 m
11 261
20 .2.S
13 242 I 2st
33 251
IS 2SO .. ..2.,
"m 2' m
' 20S . 21 1,.
" .193 2 .143
0 000
S'4 .252
'" H 81 SO W·L EltA Aese 2911) 2S IS 20 3· 1 l S3
Corbell 11'1> 11 27 "3 S· 1 2.20
Forldl 16'" 14 3 10 1· 1 2.20
S.nche1 n i-, 73 33 S6 9·6 vs
.. Zal\n '"~ 171 43 S3 11·9 us Wiii 216 20I 11 171 12·11 375
• Romenlcl< 210' ~ 211 57 11 10· 12 3 IS
• Jol'ln 170''> 20S S3 43 7· 12 • •• ~rtls n~ 26 9 12 1·2 • ,.
• IC.eufmtn S9 S9 17 :M 1·2 4 a
:Jllson SI\~ 62 27 6l 4·.4 04
$le ton 143•,., 172 49 St 7-7 4 9'
• L.9C0tlt 2~ 30 12 13 M '7S
Swen S I 0 2 0·1 lOIO
Qll\tfs 11 16 9 S 0-1 9 00
f9'als 12'4•"1 IUI 43.S U1 72-72 J.."
S.vH S.ncl\el 11. AIM 7. Corbell ••
~ I( Ison 2 K1ufmen 1
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Amtf1Qn Lee9Ue
BATTING (3S0 el bell): WKlfltlcl, New
YCH"k, 3SI; Methno1v. New Vork, :M?,
EMurrev. "lllmort, .»•. '°°°'· &ostOll, :.m. Hfbelt, MIMHOll, 311
• RUNS· OwEve11•. Boston, 112. R~, 0.kleNI. ,,, Wlnflfld. N-
York, f7, loeo•. 9oston, ,., 8uller,
Ctevllend, 93, Yount, Mltw1Uk ... 93
Rll Klngmen O.kltlld. 11•; ltlc9, '°1·
ton. 113: Armel, lo1ton, 107; EMuf'r"'.
.. tll~e, J°'; AO•"''· Sffllle, IOS
HITS MelllnolY. New '(O(k, 116. loo111.
lotlOfl, 111, Winfield. N-York, 171,
Gercle. T0ton10. 17S; Fr•nco, Clevellnd.
174, Rlpk.en, "111mor1. 17•
• DOUILES MelllnOIY, ~ York, 3',
UPerrlall, Tu ... n. lhll. Tt .. s. JS,
"' Gk", Toronto. 3'; Owl!v1na. '°''°"· )I '" TRIPLES Coftlns, Toronto, 14, MoMbY, T~Oflto, t•. l<Glbtoll, O.lro11, t, UtKt\t.,,
• T°'°"lo, t, Wl!Mlft, Ken.at Cltv, t
•• HOME RUNS Armes, lolton. 71, Kine·
tnen. 0. ftd. )I, ltUNll&kv. Mlllnaol•,
: )I. Tllofnton, Cle•tltM )I; Kllltt, CnlU •
•• a . L.NP•rrl.it, °'''°''· 1', f#41rflttY, 0.11.• • lalld,"
: $TOLIN l.UES IUitl'ldtrMft, ~lttld. :56. Ce11M. Toronto. I>. lutter, C~.
• CS, ......._ ~ '51 Oerdl Toronlo, 44
• • PtTCHIHG 02 -.C .i.M) 8~111. • C.....,.ftd, 17 6, UOJ Ale now. Toron•o.
• 14•5, I II. l!I., Tortnto, 1••6, 'JI, Wllcoll,
-Detf9il, 16-7, 011 C~ 9o410tl, f ·4 • l2
• lflt EOUTS· La~. S..t , 117,
SI itO, T orOflto, 1 Tl Wttt, Antlk, 1711
HouO'I, To•t, l.U, ~•en. C~lld
1'S
&AV I • Quhen;t,errv, K1,_1 Ct'/, 40.
• Ca Oek ftO, )I, Httn1110t1, O.troif, •en . ••· u • 111. Hew v~. .
'
Padfk Souttiwnt Open
(tt&.elAneeln) ,..,. .... ,.....
Bruce Men5ort' (Fort Wort!\) def Tim
Mevotte ($clt'ln¢ltld, Mau >, 2·6, 7-6, •·•,
Oevlc:I Pelt (Lei Veoes) def WallY Ml•ur
IAus1re111). 6· l, 4-6, 6·l, Oen Goldie (McLun, Vil dlf D1Mle VIJMr (SOull\
Atria), l·•· 6-2. 7·6, Ramnh Krlsllnen
Ondlel def. SCOll Divis (Slnl1 Monlce),
6·4, •·I, Jolln Fr1wtev (Auslrellel def
Terry Moor (~•>. ...l. 6·3; Eliot
Tett!IChlr (Pelol VwdeS) dli. Sindy Mtver
tAll'llrlon), 6· 1, 6-3, Peter Fternlno <S.•· brooli ISlend, S.C.) def Lloyd Bourne (PnedeN). 7·S. 6·1; Jimmy Connors (Sin•
llbel Hertlor, Fie.) dlf Tom GutllkllOl'I
(Pelm Coe11. Fie l. •·3, 6-4
Hklh 5Choot women
.L11tiUM IMCll 12, i"euntalft Vlllv 6 ,.....
L.Mch (LB) loll to Wt1vtt, 0·6, def
SMflon, 6-1, def Cadelll, •·O; Wlll1t11 ILl l
lost, 2·6, won, 6·1, 6·0, 8r11m (L8) lost,
l·t, 4•6, WOii, 6-3.
Deubles
0 Suol·T1ul (LBI def Oercli·Llol'lf, •·•.
def Gorumk•·Culltr, 6-2, def DllPOI
Price. 6·1; Nevlor·W Suol (Li l won, 7·5,
6·4, 6· I; Terbell·GOldsleln (LBI wo11, 6·4,
tost, S·7, 3·6.
Edhen 14, Ceptstrene v ... y 4
"""" Goldberoer (E) lost to Mllcl'ltll, 3·6, dtl
5-1\derburll. 6-1. def O.n1sl'I. 6·2, Sletterv
IE ) IOI!, 2·6, won, •·3. 6·2, Smith CE) lost, I·•· won, 6·3, 7-6
o.utlM1 Klrk·srite (El def Goerero-Wolvneu.
6·2. def Glessrnen·Puccl, 6·2. def Foster·
Llnflart. 6·2, F11noold ·S1mmons IEI won, 6·1 6·2, 6·4; Alllson·ChriKOPUlo6 IE) IOll,
1·6 won, 7·S, 6·3
Wernen't VoitVbd
CO\.L•G•
UC trvlne def. Clewlend Stilt, 16· 14,
15--10. ls-11
SOUl!lern C.Mfornle COlleot dlt. Whittler,
17· 15, 15·4, 15·4
Hl4H SCHOO\.
WoodbfldOt def Edl.on, 16•14, IO•IS,
15..f. 9·15, 16•14
COtOM del Mer dtl FOUt1lei11 V1U1Y,
IS-12, IS>4. 1J·I L..Mulll 8aecl'I def, Blsllotl MonlOOl'fttrY,
l ·IS. IS-IG, lt·lS, IS-I, 15•11.
trvlnt def Mel« Oti, 15 S. IS·•, 15·•
... "-AIMftnel •
TitUIUDA't'S •IWLn Cllld.r64.flllM ..... ,,_l
Flltfl RACE. One milt MC'9
MY Aunt RH (MerCl\tlldt 2 IO 220 2.20
L II Ctvlstme <~> l IO UO cu.ti ROH lMl~t ) t1 .0
Alto rtcld aumO¥ $11.IPPlt', F4Y f'lr ' ~. Soc! .. Ledy, 0"1CI Hit, FOl!tellt
Prince"• Aletl II ettt Time 2·01 u &XACTA a .. , oetd t1UO.
SICOHO ltACW. Ont m119 trot.
e•l1dv L <Grtooty) 2 tO UO 2 10
• HunlrMS Sllf (Vlndrn) uo , .0 2.10
Suh' Sltr IPll~) f 10
try
.AIM rll<'9d G J $1tr, s-1 Jamo, ~ Sllar&Me. ,.. WlllMllr. lfonlYldla.
GDMt .. utllt
Time 201 41S
tl UtACTA IM) Dllld 110.IO '""'o lllACI. °"' rnlle H(9, JtMH1•00 (Perkvl UO 210 2 10
PoptoNllltlle CDeMllMfl 2 IO 2 60 Wll $M~ Girl (V1lfe1WllllOl\t"') UO
AbO rteld Soon• Pw.«, Jim• ~.
"TtlDle Nine
Time l:SI 2/S
P UC ACTA ( 1-l) "lcf at 00.
,OURTH RACa. Ont milt C>ICll.
0n TOI.If <Crool\l.nl 'oo 2.40 no • Jll fuef lreVO (ICueblef) 2.AO UO
Lord Almlhurll (Wllll•m•> 2 20
Alao rec.Id: Prine• Dolle<, Rove• Stier.
Mount1tn lvrd, Burn O -Oii. PeoesU1
Almehur~I
Time· 2-00 • ,...,.H RACE. One mite pace.
Otlono Wey Home (Mello> UO UO UO
M1lrfx (O'Owverl 4.6CI 4 20
D111ney (Rllclllel UO
Also rtced Belle Oletull; Ju1nelle, Trfft
Voursd. Flor• Denice, Covntrv tov11n,
.ArmltdlUO
Time. 2:01 215 • P iXACTA (3·S) pefd l2'.40.
SIXTH RACE. Ont mlle pece.
snck (GruncM 4 00 2 . .0 UO
80""°' (Desomerl 2.10 3.00
Skipper• l11Y1def (J. AVbln) 3.60 Also receo T1tciue11, Ltvlt To ~.
Montero Mlrt09, M«"" Hiii, u 8tllt
Felli, Silt Acrou.
Time 2:02 21s.
S3 EX.ACTA CS·3) Dtld tlUO.
SIVENTM llAC•. One mlle PICL T1 .. Letona(~) 6.10 00 3.00
Soobv Trep (Crootlen) UO 3.00
Countess Rov11e (V1111ndinlltllm) UO
Alao reced FldeloO, St "lllin, Mv
Tl\ll\h Atwood, Sc.ePUla. J Btker, 5lllM
AllNd
Time u• J1s. s.J l!XACTA (4·11 Pllcl $.31.,20.
llGH1" RACE, Ont n'llle trot
lllude (Pt111er) ' 7.llJ 4M l.JO
A' Atwns (l{uetll«) 4.llJ 3.tO
Sllvtr Lobell (Anderson) . 14.00
Alao rtcld: Berrien County, l.C.P .. J1ys
• N\emorles, /Mon CIOUd, Sktlool. Steo BoWI.
Time· 2-00 21 S.
$3 l!XACTA (1-7) 11tld SS7.00.
NINTH ltAC•. Ont mlle DllC'I. Mntry Prerlt (Grfldy) 77.IO 16.60 lUO
Amys Pe,. (P9ttrMn) 7.00 6.00 Wllll• S1101 LOt.tlt (Trembley) lS.00
Alao rec.cl: Top Jimmy, Rocky Scolefl,
Veutfln, M T'J E)(J)(fiS, Accoml)llce,
Hitched To Win. Time~ 2:00 2/S. tl EXACTA (5-1) Plld $390.70.
52 ft!CK SIX (115-3-S-.·l•Sl Nkf ln4.40
wlll\ IS wlMftlo llckels (1h1 hot1.es). 12 Plcil
SI• consol1tlol1 Nld t4UO with 290 wlnnlne
uc:klts (rive 11or111>
T•NTH RACE. Ont mite pece,
LHD YHr (Pertter) 6.00 3.tO 3 '°
.Andvs LIIV (GrundYl l.20 UO El Totento (WIPiems) 3-60
Al50 rlCld Stokes. Andv'I Pec>DV.
Reotl Mont.,..,, SuNr Ted, I v• Bve
SCottv, Gooeller JOlll'I.
Time 2'01 31S.
U EXACTA 1'·1) oeld Slt.10.
All.-.CS.llCt 4,"5
Pomona
THURSDAY'S ltESULTS
(ht ...... y telr IMltlne)
Af .. ALOOSAS
,lttST ltACS. ·~ tunonos Sure Ottlverv (Ocfloe) 10.40 5'0 3.20
Premedl1911on I Dominguez.) 100 4.20
Sporty Klno (Smith) ~ 20
.AllO rtcld· Double Perk. Lucky Duck,
I'm • Duer Too. Wl\lrll-YllOllDf·
Time. S5 115 U IXACTA (3·2) peld $214.50.
OUARTEAHOASU
SECOND ltACE. 350 vtrds.
Rtll EHV Sleo (Herl) 3.60 3.00 2.60
Swfftebo (Sellllle) 10 20 SAO
Ftvlno Paa.sem (Mvtesl 3.60
Al50 rteld Rid Hewk PHI, Cl\lcedo
Rib, F1lller Alono. Miss Fen Jet. H1tf
Humble, Adee Ooo
Time IUO.
1"11tD RACE. 350 Ytrds.
Mr /Monllrk (G1rcle ) 1.20 3 60 UO
Touoh Guvs (Htrmonl 3.00 2.10
Oiektvs Blue Denim (Ade Ir I 2.20
AlsO r1cect Smoktm Tlmv. ~ luue,
Jets 81dulno, B.itedenn• Time 17 IO
SS iXACT A (S·•l r>eld "3.50.
THOltOUGHUEDS
'°'-"'TH RACE. 6 furlongs.
P1be IBllClll IUO 7.to S.00
8YllOtedv (Hansen) 7.20 SOO
PrHrtnoe (0.191<11llol •.to
Also flCtd AVlltr Ledv, 81emt II °"
Me, Ml•ml Len, Pelnled Sands, Mlw1ko
Time 112 4/S
FlnH llAC•~ 1 111' mllts •
81,on Bird (H1nsenl UO •M 3 .0
Montfort (8urn1) 6.10 •.20
Sflero Advice (Crull UO Also rt<»d' tron Allv, Cellfornl• Rehm,
Htnetel Prine:., Joey Bebe, Prince
P1tefeu \
Time: 1:• 3/S. S2 DAILY DOUBLE (?·!l peld '122.00.
SIXTH RACE. 6 furlone1.
Swoonsttr (Mene) 6.20 2.10 2 40
Ml• Profes.or1 IDeto1dlllo) 2 . .0 2.20
K"o Dating (Lamance) 2.AO
Atso rte9d FIYlno Catch, Sile's ReoeJ,
Timi's Duet, Tracie's Cholc9
Tlmr. 1 13 215
U IEXACTA (4•11 Hid m 50.
SIVUfTH RACa. 6 lulionoi.
S.ouero Rose (Hensen! •IO 2 IO 2 40
Pelset11 ( Deto•d•llol 320 2 IO Se~• WO\Jd COllveresl l 20
AIJO raced CelUll Fenc:v, Ahov Wllcil,
Mldnllt Dewn. K .... v K., Miu Sl'IO Down.
Time 111 J IS
•tGH1" ltACE. • furtono1 0111Clne Ribot (Ortt01l S 00 3 00 2.20
Im Ill Ace (Smith> SOO 260 Cl\e~ (llldll 2.40
AIM rtct<I Mardi S...O. Pleza N1tlve,
Pttwnel .. ,.., • RIAIM Position.
Timi MO 4fS.
U IXACTA Cl·7) oe•d M2.50
NINTH RAC•. 6 f\Ktonoi. Doc Ort>h (Blectl) lUO 6 40 00
U11h1 llueberrv <Lemenc.> • SOO JIO
EmotlOnll'Trek IDalfeellllo) ''° · Al50 recacl 8ook End. Wlnnlno Tri,
Sltlln on Go. ltlMl'I Tldl. Haf)C)v Ba>.tt.
Ttmt 1'11 •1s
Tltn'tf RACE. "" mlles Lou LffW <Om1are•I .. oo to 20 'oo
c.rro Pinto <Menel '60 S.20 Pirell (Ptdrol•I IUO
A"° rtct<I Mt1ttr Ace, Denlll ltlclot.
PWWIDi•no. Sllnol"GIV, Htft>le QueVle, Hv
Fir•. EH't Mo..,., '
Time ,'OS
U •XACTA <t·1l "Id Sl.217 )0 1 n ,ICK SlX <J 4 ' 3•4•9) N•d tl02 .0
wilt\ M wlM!flo ltet11ts lfl¥• hor'Mll.
c.trvovtt llOOf '11.19112
•L&VINTH aAca •• IUflontL
YwiliOll't St (Ol9dll 77 tO 7 ~ 4 70
M'1tt1 FIN Gold lHelMI\) dO J 10
~nut 1 ... AIM~ fl'OOie Fury,~!, s.fl'a
O«IO'll • l!IM 110 3 J
IS IJ! C:TA "~I otld •mJO.
TWl&.nH •ACL 11116 mllH
Marl .. Line COomll'!QUldrt 640 C10 N t (ROCW1o\litJ) UO U0
Re IOll\ilfnl 4 20
-JM .raced CIOuclv Ptsl, WIDI RfMf• VlllOn~ Now Victory, ht F19t!ter, Sll!lfO•
tvoe
Time 1 A1
d IXACTA "''' " 1meo Aftendtllte 11,100 '"' ttdl
..
..
• Gnettt M1Wau1r .. <>I*'
wooc:sv b\ltf\ 31 ·~
n Pdll l2•U-.S
Gtrv t4alltifto 33 »-66
Mlrk O'Meare -»-67
OeorotArctltr • Ji-31-67
Ml!it N'CO!fllt :M-3)-67
Dalt Douolen l6•31...,.7
111 t<rtttetl ,H•U 9'1
Donnt• H1r't1f'l\Ond :M·u-.1 . COttYPtYlf\ 33.,.....,
Tom W1lt0n Jl•3,_. Pt~S11w1rt U 3~
Jim Ntlfafd • :JJ·U-...
ltOd Nuckott• 33.3,_..
P1ul AdMtr 3S•u-.I
Scoll Wtlkln• M ,.._....
Keith Ferv-"' :M•u-61
Blll.S.ndt{ ~-34-il Ired F 11.PtL JA ·~
Gtrv ~ 35·~9
LI'!" Mite 4 32· 31-69
0.ft HalldOtton 37·)1--ft
Andy lttn 36•33-69
Jeff MJ!d:IOll .)3 • l6-ff
Jim Kint 3S·.,._..t
J1yCudd 36·U-.9
Jim GI ~ J3·~ Grev Powers JI ·3 .._,.,
Att6v Norlll 34•3S-.9
Merk MCCumoet 36· l:t-!-69 LOii Hll'lkle :S.·~
Morris Hatal~y 35-:i..-.t
0 A WelbMt • J3·~
truce Flel"'9f 3S·3'=-6t
'"" u-33•,......, JOIV Slncleier , 33•J6.-"6'
Tottv Sln1 34·36-70
Rlctt 01\POI 34·3'-70 M.lke $mllh 3S·3S-10
Forr111 Fe111r M·»-70 yrrv l.leolet lS·U-70
Grier Jones 36·3'-70 Jey HIH 34 ·~10
Gr'llf MOOdy 34·3'-"70
Gtrv ICrewer 33·;J7-70
Merl< Celc1vecdtl• 3S•JS-70
• Jtck Ferenz • 34·36-70 Mick SOii 31•31'-70
L.«111 ROMrlS 3S·»-70 Ron Str«k 37·U-70
W1yneGredV M·S.-70
Mllo.t Pullltlft 3S·36-n
Grto Oidl 37·U-71
Chi Cl'll Rodrkluea 3'·15".-71
Cllttnee ROM 36·35-7'
Dtnl• WetsOft '6·3S-71
Mee O'Gredv 36-JS-71
811 8rllt011 35-»-71 srev. Lltbler 36·U-71
Mllc•Mut•nvl 3'--3S-71
Mtr11 lrook5 :tt·U-71
Tom Lehmln 36-JS-71
Frtnk Funrer »-JS-71 Tonv W11Qft 3'·3S-:71
G1vll\ L-3'•35-71
HowerdTwlltv 3'·35-71
Cllerles COOd'll 37·34-71
Robert Wleclmen 37.,._71 ~ Ctdle >4·37-11
Merk McNullY 3'·35-11
Jolvl Heme~ k 3'·35-71
Bii Glenon S.·3S-71
G1rv Grotl 35·37-72 Mlk• Gove 3S-J1-n
Den Forsman 37·JS-n
Jim Oeat 3'·Jt-n LtMlt Clements )1-34-n
Ronnll Black 35-37-n
Dev• Stockton 3'·»-n
Joelle Mudd 37-JS-n Tom umor• »-36-n
Curt 1m.1m u-»-n
800bv Wedl(lns Js-11-n I.OU Grellam 37·3r.72 Mlrk H•Y'I' 37-ss-n
Rootr ~ltblt 31·S.-72 urrv R(nker 3S-J7-n
Jldt ~ldlln 3'·>4-73
R1nclv WttlilM 31·35-73
Dive ElchelDeroer 35-31-73
1(111 GrMn 3'·37-73
Tllomas Grey 3'·37-73
Cetvill Petie 3S·Jt-73 Bred lrvenl l7·3'-7>
Rlcl\erd Tod! 17·36-73
LM Rinker 37·~1'3\
Dive Oerln 3'·37-»J
Nick Pr1U 3S·3t-73
Tom Kiie JJ-3t-73
W•IV Atmllrono 3S-3t-73 Mill• P«:k ls-»-n 8obOY Polllll 31·35-73 ~ S.utrl ll·3S-73
Sll .. ler Hhltl 36-37-73 TC. Olen 3'·3S-74
Andy Ma"9 36·31-74
G1rv Marlowe 3'·3S-7• Miki Cunning 37-37-74
Jim loorCK J.4· ... 74
J.C. Sneed :U·»-74
Cerl Unls 3'·35-74
OouOlls ~urTl•n U•Jt-74
Lance Ten B!'OKll 37·37-74
Bob Boyd 37·37-74
LYll LOii 35--3'-74
Ktnnv Knoll 37·37-74
8rU<lt Soulsbv 31·»-1•
llU <:atfM :W-39-74 Adtm AO.rY11 3'·31-74
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PMH1ncodl 31·37-7S
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Jim GeUOtrl 31·»-7'
01vld O'Kellv 3'· ... 7'
Dennis Tl1lt11I 31·3'-7'
Tommv V1lentlne 3'·41-n
Jon Clleffet 3'·41-n Rldll9 Kerl 31 .... 71
CIYde lteoo 37·41-71
IC.C. Liff ..0-3t-71
Mark Wltbt '1-37-71
Frll1 Gtmbtell1 4l·l7-1t
LlndV Mitter 31-.-11
O.ve ErldllOll 39-._7'
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Ken Kllltv 40-,._7'
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T1nt111 21, Woodbrkloe 7 NewPOt'I H1rt>or 20, ltvlne 7
LCK AmlOCK 23, Meonollt 0
Vtlenel1 14, Sonore f
R•ncllO Atemllos 27. S.~•Mt •
VIiie Pel'lt 27, Kettllt 1
Cenvon 21, El Oorldo o
Troy 12, Cerrllo1 7
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Founl1ln Valin vs. Et Toro et Mlatlon
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Servll1 "' Merine et Westmlnittr
HU11t1noton Beech et 01mltn
ColtOfl VI EdlSOll •• Ortn11t Coest
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Etslnor• et L..aoune e..c.11
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CIPl1tr&no Valllty "' EIPlf'an11 et
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TCl'rt'I Pinn 11 Dane Hlh El ~ vs. Kenntctv t i Western
Lono 8Mdl Poly YI. Foolhll •• Tut.tin
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Anellelm "'· LOii• al Le PlllN Per1t W1tnul 11 Bre1·0llnde '
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Top eed·
Connors
advances
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Top.
seeded Jimmy Connors brttztd past Tom Gulliksen. 6'-3, 6-4, Thutsday
ni.aht to advance to the quarterfinals ~ of th~ Pacific Southwest Tennis
Open. whiCh he has won three times.
Playing on the ctmpus of his-alma
mater, UCLA, Connol"i broke service
in the fifth aamc of the second set to
· go ahead J..2 en route to the 78-
minute victory.
Seven other players advanced to
to<lay's quarterfinals in a tournament.
in which most of the secdj havc~n
eliminated.. .
Third-seeded Eliot Teluchcr. of
Palos Verde~ beat unseeded Sandy
Mayer. of Athenon, 6-J , 6-3, and
afterward, Mayer called the Los
Angeles Tennis Center Courts ••a
joke." ''The surface Is too slow," Mayer
said. "lt'sa joke."
However, Teltscher and tour·
nament director Bob Kramer both
agreed that the concrete courts arc
playing sufficiently .. fast .. after ~ina
resurfaced after the NCAA women's
tournament.
In other matches Thursday, llth-
secded Peter Flemina. of Seabrook.
Island, S.C., defeated Lloyd Bourne,
of Pasadena. 7-S, 6-1 ~Bruce Manson1 of Fort Worth, Tex., upset 7th·seedco
Tim Mayotte, 2--6, 7--6(11·9), 6-4;and
13th-seeded Ramesh Krishnan, of
lndta. downed 8th-seeded Scott Davis, of Santa Monica, 6-4, 6-1.
Qualifier Dan Goldie, of McLean,
Va .• ralhed to oust Dannie Visser,
South Africa, 3-6. 6-2, 7--6 (7-3);
David Patcv of Las Vegas, Nev.,
downed Wally Masur, Australia, 6-1,
4--6, 6-3, and Australian John Frawley
moved past Terry Moor, of
Memphis. Tenn., 6-3, 6-2.
Marina ,
Uni p ost
polo wins
Marina High breezed and Univer-
sity survived in the first day of play
Thursday at the Moore League water
polo tournament.
At Millikan Hiah in Lona Beach~ the Vikinp broke away from a 6-3
halftime lead and bwtcd Buena.
17-4. University needed a goal in
overtime to outlast Santa Ana, 7-6.
In Manna's victory, Tom
Warde ~ured in si.xa_oals and Steve
Spanov1ch added (our to key the
Viking attack. Goaltender Mike
Armstrona worked the fint three
periods and was credited with seven
saves before aivina way to Scott
Lamb, who stopped two shots in
holdina Buena scoreless in the fourth
quaner. .
Next on tap for Marina at 3:50
today at Millikan is Crawford Kiah of
San Diqo. lfthe Vikinas win, they'll
play l&Aln at 6:40 today, 6ut a loss
means thetd play again at 5:30.
Marina 1s now 2.-0 after winnin1 a
non-tournament contest.
Marty Schlacter ICOfCd the tio-
brcaking goal I :26 into the sudden·
death overtime period to lift Univer·
.sity to its win OVCT Santa Ana.
At Lona Beach Wilson, the Trojans
had rallied with three .coals in the
founh period to tie the aame. capped
by Schlactcr's &oal with just 26
seconds remaining. The TroJan jun·
ior ha~ three aoals overall.. ·
Kevm McCollou&h talhed twice,
both in the second half. for Univcr·
sity, which 1s now 2..Q overall after
beating El Toro cattier.
The score was lied, l-1, at halftime
before Santa Ana assumed its S-3
advantaae entering the fourth period.
·State open
lures area
pro golfers
COAST
People ANN LANDERS ..
TVLllTINGI•
GARDENING 87
·A:rtlst
. proves
he can
amaze
Western painter
beats physical woes,
mural earns $5,000
"People think you·~ m pain and
they are afraid to touch y{)U, " -
Martin Leigh Hoaanson.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Unable
to walk normally, his arms and
hahds immobile, anist Martin Leigh
Hoganson works magic on canvas,
delicately grasping his brush be-
tween his teeth to depict the wide
open spaces of Western M:enes.
"The first slm\V I did, I was just
sitting therenext to my paintings and
not doing anything, and people
would walk by and say, 'He didn't do
that, he couldn't do that, he must
have had help, .. ' said the Nevada-
born Hoganson.
"So I go ahead and do quick,
original drawings, pen and ink, and
showing them these drawings
answers a lot of questions."
Hoganson, 33, a victim of con-
genital polio, lives on government
disability and the money he gets for
his paintings. He and his wife travel
by car throughout Northern Cali-
fornia, displaying his work and
meeting people at exhibitions. His
wife does the driving. .
They have also traveled to Hawaii,
Arizona and Canada for exhibitions.
Hoganson's oil paintings usually
sell for SSOO to SJ ,200, and be sold
one mural to a Nevada magazine for
SS,000. "I don't ·seu too many of
those," be said ruefully.
But his bread-and-butler work is
the pen-and-ink sketches, portraits
and landscapes, which be "whips
out" quickly for curious passers-by
at exhibitions .at shopping centers,
schools and community centers.
The pen In hta teeth la llartln LeJch drawiU• aacb u thla train on a tratle that
Hoganeon '•method for creatt.napen and mk be alilfilted In a Silcramento art abOw. ·
"These are called •1imited
editions' and they are signed and
numbered," Hoganson said.
"Several years ago, I drew some-
thing for a relative jn Reno. cat E.
Bromund, a pretty famous Western
artist saw it and wanted to sec some
more."
Bromund, he said, was unaware he
was disabled until the two met.
"He didn't know how I did it, and
at first be couldn't believe it. So he
~said, •Try an Indian,' and I ~hipped
out an Indian on him." 0
The constant movement ·of his
neck does not tire him, even though
he often spends long hours on a
canvas. -·
"My dad was pretty conscientious
about me exercising." Hoganson
said. "I staned doing exercises ev~ry
other day. When I'm painting. it's
not really tiring at all. Plus I have a
lot of energy to· bum off.
UGI prese~ts
pdli tics, arts
Washington Post editor Benjamin
Bradlcc. former NOW president Ellie
Smeal and political cartoonist Paul
Conrad ~m give their views on
November's presidential election
during lecturc;s at tJC Irvine this fall.
,, · They'll be',JoininJ dozens of other
• speakers and performers who will
.appear on camt>us in the ooming
months, including jazz . musician
Chuck Mangione. flamenco maestro
Carlos Montoya and Bella Lewitsky's
modern dance company. In addition.
Stephen Sondheim's "A Little Night
Music" will be st.ag.ed in late Novem-
ber by the UCl School of Fine Arts. ·
Opening the professional enter-
tainment sch~ule on Saturday, Oct:
7 will be performances by the North-
-em Sinfonia of England, with works
by Mozart and Schubert, and Mon-
toya and the Bailes Aamencos.
Sinfonia will play at 3 _p.m. in
Crawford Hall and the flamenc<>
production will be staged at 8 p.m. in.
the Fine Arts VillaJC Theatre.
·Pulitzer Prize-wmning Conrad will
speak on .. Satire Thro~ the Eyes of
a Political Cartoonist• at 8 p.m.
WedncSday, Oct. 10, in Science
Lecture Hall. ,
Smeal will assess women's impact anti-nuclear activi~t and ph)sician
on .. The Winning Ticket: ~o Really He!en CaJdiC9tt at noon Fnday, Oct.
Will Elect the Next President?" Her 19 in the Hent.age Room.
talk, which is co-sponsored by NOW -Two different prova.rns Pres:-
and the UCJ Women's Resou~ . cntcd by the Bella Lewitslty Dance
Center, is scheduled for 8 p.rn. Company at 8 p.m. WcdnC$day and
Wednesday, OcL 24 in the University Thursday, Nov. 28 and 29, in the Fine
Center Heritage Room. ArtS Village Theatre.
Bndlee wiU describe "Washington
and the Press" at 8 p.m. Monday, Oct.
29, also in the University Center
Heritage Room. . · And. while politics and the per-
forming arts will occupy center stage,
mystery lovers will-be treated to a
lecture by novelist P.O. James. The
British writer. whose books include
"The Skull Beneath the Skin"· and
.. Innocent Blood," will speak at· 8
p.m. Thursday, Dec. 6 in the Fine
Arts Village Theatre.
Among the highli$hts .Qf other
professional · perfonmng ans and
lectures arc:
-A performance b) deaf mime
Bronislaw "Miko" Machalski at 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 14, in the Fine Arts
-An original thealer piece com-
bining masks, puppets and tra-
ditional and contcm~ry materials
by A Traveling JcWWi Thea~ at 8
p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 4. in the Fine Arts
Village Theatre.
For film fans. the UCl Film Societ~
will screen a series of "oe"'· wave
pictures by contem}lOfliy dnect0r5
on Friday eveniop through Dec. 7 .
Peter W(ir·s .. Picnic at Hangj~
Rock" opens the series Fnday, Oct. 5
at 7 p.m. in Social Science Hall.
"People think you're in pain and
they arc afraid to touch you. But I'm MartlD l;fJlgh Rotla.D80D tiawa hU. tmpraaton of a
realty pretty healthy. cuca~ waterfall flowtna tbroap denat; treett. .
Villa1e Theatre. ·
-"ls Winning Losing? The Thttat
of a Nuclear War." a free lecture by
Tickets. ranging from S2 to S9 with
discounts for students and senior
citizens. may be purchased by cash or
check at the Fine Arts Box Office or
the ASUCI ticket offitt on campu
For more details about lectures.
phone 856-6379: about Fine Arts
performances. phone 856-4259.
WhO 's. who among chefs
wise with waies for party
.i<f ,,-
Restaurateur Society, stars
,raise $35 ,000 for diabetes
By VIDA DEAN
Deir .... ~ ....
.. Thank you for joining me," joked Bal Roseff
Sunday evening as tablema'tcs at a gourmet dinner in
The.Ritz w:ishedhim "Happy Birthday." ~
Actually, the restaurateur (Mcyerhofs and Back
Bay Rowing and RunningClub)and wife ltayweretwo
of the 39 J there for the Restaurateur Society of Orange
County's first fund-raiser .
.. Ourgroupisabout 1 ycarold,"saidRosoffofthe
RSOC ... We meet once a month for breakfast. Food is
not important; we are there to share ideas concernina
our business ... might be rcfrigcntion or any kind of
problem anyone is having. We arc a group that helps
each other."
But, at the benefit dinner food was important and
the restaurateurs (owners and operators) were helping
others-the J uveniJe Diabetes Foundation.
RSOC member Paddy CcWdoe of Paddy C.ak~-
(wbolesale dessert company) said, "We made about
$35,000 for the group.·· His wife Cbrlsty is president of
the QC JDF chapter. "It is our way of giving back to the
community."
Members were all over the restaurant lending a
hand with serving the dinner and wine and in general
over5eeing the smootb opc;rallon headed by Kara
Pra,_ ..
Demt1s Bruk (Five Crowns chef) got the meal off Lo
a good stan with galantme. which was follow~ by
mussel soup en croute prepared by the Ritz cbefFellx
Salcedo. warm duck salad made b~ Pave chefs (Noey
Wllltelm was pouring wine) and loin oflamb by Mr. Sto~
an<t He~in1~ys serv~ wjih Rutherford Hills ~erlot
'80. Ocisen was lemon and raspberry mousse w1lh
chocolate leaves (also by Salcedo).
As each course .... as served. the talk at my table was
on the wines •.. sounding very knowlcd&eable ere the
Rosoffs.FruandSiaaSolomoaandtwowhoccnainl.Y
have the name for it! Fruk and Carolya Vmeyanl, (wine
distributors discussing their tour ofEuropean vine)·ards
and wincnes..)
Prior to the dinner guests V.'Crc on the terrace
nibbling salmon tanar(Mr. Stox), Sa.shimi (Pa' c), eggs
withcuiar(ChicagoJoe's),smokcdalbacorc(Hemina·
wa}'s)alona -...ith otherdehcacic from fl\ cCrownsand
the Ritt. Between bitcsgucstsbidondonatedwin .
JoMMc:l•*"'(Johnn ,.s)andC05telocwctt
helped out in the auttionceringdepanmcnt b) Olympic
w1mmcrs Mike O'Brta and Tem Faner( ho donated
a team towel that brouaht in $200)
Othcn lhcrt included CclebsGleria LoriM and
Altlttw Mattel ("Da of Our U es"}. Sturt bun•
<··c~ncral HQSp~tal"), 3eu B~Sc0tt("A1i"' 1r') nd
Doq Rys, Roses pccta1 event d)amnan, wa 1nd
QarUe Hester with daughter Ju t and hu bind ~ll
Hamlltea. Pam and Bntee tuae. hae and Robert
BaAam •• Hm Dal (Villa O\"a). Gretdl Bra m
Fnak Bftdte.RIWfd a..dn, Browa,Marl
Fella 8a.lcedo of Tbe Ribs anc1 ·~ claef
heclerlck Spelk pat tbe cbocolate l•ftl
llper~ Lari)' Hoffmu. ROD Hod nd Oto nd
Nldl>Mlbl.
'
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..Wt100,000NAMITHAT Gn, VlllfltKaprlnsky. ** "BrNthleM" (1993) Richard CC)"""' .. ,.. -•JO-Gere, Vlllrit Kaprlnlky. *** "Just Tell Mt What You ITMATGll. (!)MOYIE (D)MOVIE Want" (1880) Al MICOraw, Al111
llmMIMTON Ht "Tiit Naked Runner" (18&7) * "Wlcllld Stnlat!Olll" (1981) John King.
MllMLL Frank"'Htra.Pet--V ..... t..... Llllil,Annltt1H1wn. (D)ltOVIE • MDVI! "",. .. -ir-· -12:*>-'***~ "My FMritt YNr" (1982) **t,t '=.To POtk Pit" (1881) 8FAIAYFEUD 18FNDAYNIOHTVIOEOI Ptt«O'Toolt,JeaiclHarp« -~Btlry. 111=~ ,.=HlTCHCOO( (l)MOVll -2:40-
..
..
Vegetable degrading term
f o~ te.rminally ill p~tients
DEAR ANN LANDERS: VEO·
ET ABLE! lam anaered. rtsentful and
dctpl) offended when that word i1 ·r plied to. person who ii terminally ii ori)'ladeepcoma.1 have heard
phy1ic11n1 and nurses use the term
often. It ia common amona l•Y • people. ·
No person is a vtaetable if he has
lived. loved and been pan of a family.
Unless the monitors show the brain
is dead. the hearinJ of a critically ill
patient may be quite aood. I know
what I am 1alkina'lbout. A few years
aao I was on the critical l iat. l heard my condition discussed 11 ifl were
rtad)·fortheembalmer. You can be
sure 1t didn't he IP-my!morale any.
Sian me-GRATEFUL FORA
SECOND CHANCE IN WYOMING
DEAR WYOM~G: I 11ree. Tbe
word veaettble, wben applied co a
peraoa wtao 10 lonaer llat bit facal·
Ue1, lt de1r1dlD1. A llamu lt aot a
tomato, a carrot or a llead of lett1ce
after bit mlDd btt cea1ed to f1nccton.
I have warned my readert ln. the
pat& about dlacu11lD1 a pacten.t'•
condUlon wben tbey believe blm or
ber to be ucon1clout or ueatbetlsed.
Too often tbe patient l11Ufflcleatly
alert to pick up tome of the commeat1
-and doea. Remark• tbat reOect
bopele11nea1 can be extremely de·
morall1la1. Watcb lt, lolke. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus-
band and l have been married for 43
years. He is 70and lam S9. Our sex
HELP YouRSELF
At1t1
IMDEIS
life wa1 always wonderful. We have
been completely faithfUI to one
another and have had very few problems.·
Three years 110 we stopped havina
sexual relations. J asked him what the
troubJ~ was and he said he just didn't
feel lik'eit-thatsexat ouraaewas ·
foolish and he didn't want to be
bothered anymore. He asked me not
· to make any demands on him because
heftlt unct>mfortable rejcctina me. · So. I have let him alone. 1
l..Ast niglit the truth came out. He
suddenly told me the reason he has
lost interest is because I had arown to look exactly' like my mother. I never
was so hurt in my life. My mother is
now 80. a beautiful womah. l have
known fora Iona ti.me that my .
husband was not particularly fond of my mother (and vice versa) but I was
shocked at his announcement.
Hewon'taecacounselorora
cle!Jyman (too ashamed). Please tell
me 1fthere is anythina I can do. -DEVASTATED IN NEW MEXICO
DEAR D.: Somtdt at lf your
b111band baa become impotent and ta
•ttempllll to 1lace tbe blame on you.
T•lk to a peyclaolop1t If you leel tbe
need to uload. It may not alter the
tltuatlon but yo1wllf1 .. 1 btttei:. • • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: This
mornlnaa bOoklet arrive<! at our
home wrnten by Ann Landers. It w11
titled," Alcoholism: Hope and Help." I did not send fort he booklet bµt 1 rcco19i~ the ha11dwritin111 that of
mycd'us1n. lam noun alcoholic. I have never
mi11ed a ~ay'1 work because of
dri nkinJ and I have never passed out.
I wish you would say somethina in
your column about people who offer
unwanted "help," I was hiahly in·
sulted. -NO PROBLEMlN DE·
fROJT DEAJ\ N.P.: ll1ree tlaat ID· •
10Uclted adv Jee 1...,enerally UD· •
welcome, bat I'm 1are your coaalD
meant to bt be I pf Ill.
Obvloa1ly; yoa lre cusawart tlaat
many alcobollcs bave aever ml11ed a
day'• work becauae of drlDkln1 nor
bave tbey ever patted out. 41·
coboll1m It an 1D1tdlou1 problem ~d
It wean many facet. Read &be
booklet anyway; W• a 1ood one. • • • lulcoholism ruini111 your lift? Know the dan1er signals and what to
do. Read the booklet, "Alcy,holi•m •• Ho~ancfHelp, "by Ann Landers.
Enclose 50cents with your request
and• Jon,, stamped, self.addressed
en velo~ to Ann Landers, P. 0 . Box
I 199 5, Cbica10. JJJ. 60611.
Beware of sl~epLµg pills
1 ~TUMAY't THI l'\.ACI D IAAIAllA MANDAELU THE 8 OOOONIOHT L.A.: VIDEOI ** ''ConftMlons Of A Window _,..... MANDflEUa.TEM (!) ftOWANUWITIH'8LAUOH4N Cltwt" (1874) Robin Askwith, DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I don't I've made up my mind -he has ~!~*=~-.. ~~~~==~~u=•~~~:~11~~~l ~•~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~=l~l=~=e~~=t~tl=in~1~o=n~m~y~b=us=ba~nd=·~b=u~t--becomethe~aHof~ee~n1~lb.H~ doctor doesn't realize it so I m 1oin1
to tell him. I call them "pills' but
they're really capsules.
· About six months ago the doctor
prescribed them for my husband's msomnia. I was there when he
warned him not to take them every
night -and not to try to refill them. But in some way-I don't know how
-be gets these capsules. Instead of
taking one every night or so, he takes
as many as three every night. He gets
up feeling woozy. So he has develped
a new habit. He takes an amphetamine every morning to wake
him up so he can work. Isn't it about
time that his doctor knew about it? (I
feel like a traitor). MRS. G.
DEAR MRS. G.: He'll need to be
weaned from both sleepina pill and amphetamines. The sooner the bet-
ter. ¥ou'll be doin• him a favor-so
don't feel like a trattor.
Your husband's history is typical.
The sleeping pill habit begins so
innocently -as a crutch to aet over
some temporary insomnia. Grad-
ually, the habit expands and the doses
increase. Often followed by
amphetamines to help stay awake the
next day. Here are some "rules" to prevent
the sleeping pill habit:
1. Don't take them lona;cr than
ordered by your doctor.
. 2. Don't bootleg them for friends.
3. Don't go from doctor to doctor so
you can have your medicine cabinet
well-stocked with pills.
rm FOR sleeping pills under a
doctor's supevi.sion. I'm AGAINST
them when the patient self-treats and
becomes addicted. Tber. arc not
harmless. In addition to 'disarrang-
ing" a patient's life. sometimes they
arc su1c1dal when comomea wtth
alcohol. Like any harmful habit, the
best time to quit is before you begin. • • •
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I was in
an auto atcient and luck.ily came out
PETER-
STEINCIOHI
of it OK except fot a strained neck.
Butthatwasovera month ago and my
neck still hurts badly. Shall I sec a
doctor about it or wait for Mother
Nature to take care of it eventually?
MR.M.
. DEAR MR. M.: Mother Nature is so
busy with all kinds of ailments
sometimes it makes good sense to see a doctor. She may have overlooked
your problem while rushing to help
someone in a hcan attack. Your
sprained neck may actually be
evidence of a whiplash injury you
suffered at the time of the accident. The fact that ii persists is reason
enough to undergo diagnostic study.
In major whiplash injuries there may
be involvement of bones and nerves
that require special treatment__ • • • • FOR MRS. B.: Tell your doctor
where you expect to travel and he will
recommned the necessary protective
vaccines. Don't dismiss the need for
polio and measles vaccfuation.s sitnp-
ly "because you're too old at 30 to
require them." As I said, whether you need typhoid and cholera ·vaccines
will dpcnd upon his judgment. Don't
be surprised if he tells you that
vaccination against small pox is not
necessary. • • • FOR MR. F.: The infant requires
iron. Breast milk and formula milk
contain about equal amounts, but it's
absorbed best from breast milk. For
this reason it is good policy to give
supplemental iron, in formula or
cereal, to prevent iron-deficiency
anemia. in infants who aren't breast-
fed.
Cop shows heat up
in Hawaii, Miami
Honolulu. The first person they run ----.--~--fot-0 is M~gjc, ..whose-father 's.Jn-
narcotics trouble up to bis lei. The
second person is lrene {Tracy Scoa·
gins), a beautiful blonde. who runs a
helicopter service, which comes in
very handy when things get sticky.
LOS ANGELES-Poor Mac! This
Chicago policeman is so depressed· that he shanghais his partner and
takes off for the fun and sun of ...
ABC's "Hawaiian Heat."
Like a couple of snowbirds, Mac
and Andy immediately fall into the
local action. In this case, a narcotics
deal which involves the father of a
beauty they meet as soon as they step
off the plane, and the brother of a
Honolulu police official who im·
mediately ukes them on as under-
cover qmts. • Robert Ginty is Mac Riley and Jeff
McCracken is Andy Scnkowski in
.. Hawaiian Heat," which makes it•
debut in a two-nour movie special
ioniaht. The rc1ular one-hour series
beains next Friday. ·
Mac is volatile and impulsive, tell•
terrible Jokes, wears loud Hawaiian
ahins. hvca on the beach and has a
friend who owns a helicopter tour
aervice. All that' a ml11in1are Higjns.
the dop and the red Ferrari from
.. M~um P.1.0
MCCracken•s character i1 harder to
pin down. Sometimes he raises his voice, t>ut mostly he just aecm1 to
fade into the wallpaper.
The movie 1pecial :1hows how Mac
and Andy stan out 1n Ch1cqo (where
h's icy cold and cnme.ridden and
very depressiq) and end up in 1 ~onolulu (where 1t•1 warm and
crime·ridden and lots of run}. Mae f~lt the tension and the final straw
comes when he'1 pasted ov r for
promotion t>etause his policeman
father is in prison for tak1n, a brtbe. MaccoldcocksAndyand oadt him
aboard a Jumbo jct, ne t top .
At their tirst tourist stop Mac and
Andy arc C'.aught in the middle of a aunfiaht {involvina Magic's father).
wind up in jail, where they're recruit·
ed as undercover cops by M~. Oshira
(Mako). whose brother is the
narcoucs kingpin behind it all. You
can pretty much fiaure out the rest of
it.
The show is fust·paccd, doesn't
take itself too seriously. and the scenery is nice.
NBC'S "MIAMI VICE" is another new detective series in which two
disparate partners are joined toacther
to fi&}tt cnmc.
In this case. it's Sonny Crockett
(Don Johnson), a &ood Ol' boy who
Ji\•cs on a boat with an alliaator
named Elvis, and Ricardo Tubb1 ·
(Philip Michael Thomu), an intense
yet namboyant black detective from
'cw York who'1 lookina for lbc
Colombian drua dealer who killed hi1
brother.
Al undercover panners, Sonn)·1nd
Ricardo will pique ~our intcrnt. The
pilot is intriauina and 1nvolvu11 and remini~nt of the SIMI}' navor of
"Hill Street Jluc " Which is no
1cddtnt. Anttiony Yerkovich, the co-exeauivc prOducer and writer, for·
merly produced "Hill Street.'
The two-hour gilot W111 be on
unday n•Jht, an then the ric mo~ to Ft1day ni&ht • . ,,
Gardeners taught
plan ting methods
Fall rdcning tcchm ue5 arc beans
prc.sented' at l p.m. on turday nd
Sundays through Oct. 28 at Rogcr•s
G rden 230f San Joaquin Hills
. Road1 ~n Beach.
Thas free minar empha azes the
v (uc of plantina in the fall to ensure
prQductivc sprina prdens. Featured
will be specific instructions on:
• Sod prtparation ror fall.
• Plant/flower lection for vanous
locales.
• Proper use of fertilizers.
• Best way to iet root.sntablishcd
forspnng.
The nursery's gardening and land·
scape ex~rts will conduct sessions
GARDEN CHECKLIST
and nswer quesuons. ••• Ed Cook, prestdent of the T11 tua
Afrlcu Vi let Socl cyJ. \\ill present a
prQgnlm on Oumeras 1or members at
7 p m. Wcdncsd y at the Mercury Sav1~gs building, 1095 Irvine Blvd.,
Tu un.
Chimeras are an.African violet type
that bears flashy, striped blossoms.
When first intioduocdby hybridizen
only three years ago, the variet) sold
for $50 a plan1. Now they are mo~
readily available and much more
affordable. • • • John Blackbum, a noted s~list
in bromeliads. will~ on lhe many
varieties of tillands11s, their culture
·and growing habits at the mtttioa of
the HortJcaltval Society of Oruae
Couty.
• Cover your ·bulb beds with The group will ~ttt ~t 7:30 p.m.
annuals to enjoy continuous bloom ·f"uesday a! lhe California Cooperat-. throu~ fall, winter and into spring . 1ve Ex~cns1on, IOOQ S. Harbor Blvd ..
even after }our bulb flowen have Anihetm. . • • ,
finished blooming. A luncheon meeting of the Sp111u1
,
Secre behind
fabulous color.
It's fertilizer
By LOUIS BERNAiNDEZ =:::.:.· .. =.. ..J.·
If l had a dime for every time
someon ukta me wnat our 6CCl'Ct u
forgrowmgtbecolorpl ntsyou~ t
the nursery, I wouldn't ba\e any
debts.
Well. the 6CCrt1 behind fi bulous
coJor is not $CCttl t all. h' lied
fer:tllher (not steer manure}.
, To dispell the myth that 1tecr
manure is a ferulizer, let's t the
record straight.
The staie of Otifomia defines a
• fertilizer as ant ubstance, pa~
as fertilizer, .which contain • rtt•ni·
mum of S pe1p,nt by wcijht of
avatlablc nittor,en ( ). phosphorus
eeb with a ta IOJuble type •t 6a8. trenitb Be urc to follow ditecdtidj
on lhe label.
Some of the better bles O'I..~
matUl re ~-It;· ltacle~
Peters. Tcrr-O•\'ltt SQlubla me.ii
nutnents ..,~ rapu1ly and can <*iii
leaf sf .lhoroU&h tertna as
done pnor lO feediqa. '"'
The ~· eaVJnt feedtt as•:tu~ gras . Lawn should be fed monmfY
ith granular fcruhzcr Gran~ ould be broadcast evenly over.
whole lawn wnh a drop s~se
the proper cahbrataon. LI
fertillZCf'S can also bum 'vcr) r.uil
follow the diru:uons cl05Cly.
lirubs, trtts and ,ground coVtlJ
:should be fed b · -monthJ)' With a MS
• Remove dead prdenia blooms WU Gardn Clab will take place
that are reluctant to drop. Wednesday in the home of Sheila
•Check your espaliered plants such Coulter.
Spring color blouoma • (P). or potassium (K). Steer manure
legally cannot be packaged or anca a
fertilizer beta use ll only contatns less
than 2 percent total a"atlat>le -P-or-K.
balantcd granular, as one wtli
formula of 1().6.4. This 5hou1d:
broadcast C\ mly under dnplines
lhe trees and shrubs and culuv.a
inro lhe sotl where feasible. For·
ground co'ers. broadcast fcna
as pyracantha, star jasmine. ~pc The history of Sherman· Gardens
honeysuckle ano citrus. Tie back any and Corona del Mar will be given by
unruly branches for better control. Bill Hendricks of the gardens.
When yoa're lookln&.atplanttni fall balbe, try eome tullpt.
Their. brfCbt bloeeom. will ~tee a colorfG.l 9PrlllC aarden. . ' As one cannot expect an auto-
mobile to run without psolint nor
children to ·grow without food, the
orincipk also must be apphed to
plants. They cannot arow v1aorously
and bloom without proper nutritnts.
LOOKING FOR ... THE''
APARTMENT?
SEE SUNDAYS
REAL ESTATE
SECTION
'-JPilat
.
WHISKEY HALF BARRELS
S'<)LID OAK AND STEEL BANDED
24" INSIDE DIAMETER
I NOW 9.99 each f .
Perfect for: • Owarf Fruit Trees
• Vegetables & Flowers
• Waterfalls
• Living Chrlstmas Trees
-RANUNCULUS BULBS
Free planting guide
2640 Harbor Blvd, Coit• Meu
Ad good llWOUQll Sept 20. 1 .......... ~ ....
l:lO\lH1
gardonshop
TRUCK LOAD
.INDOOR PLANT
SALE!!
----· All INDOOR
PLANTS
2 5 Ot. ~:~ULAR ff, PRICE
1-----·COUPON-_._----COUPON-------COUPON-----.,
I RECEIVE FREE WITH JHIS I
I COUPON A 5 oz. 6RTHO UQUID 1.
~ PLANT FOOD. A sl .49 VALUE §
8 0 y NO PURCHASE NECESSARY l
: SALE & COUPON SATURDAY ONLY 9/15/84 I
' . -' t I ~ I • -----COUPON·------·COUPON -------COUPON ·~----
All ITEMS SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HAND
HOURS MO .fRI 7-6 • SAT 8:3<>-6 • S N 8:30-5:00
llQy;O'S NURSERY AND LANDSCAPE CG., INC.
2018 NEWPORT 8LVO (At lay"). COSlA SA, CA 92627 (71 6U>-7...,.1 '~-"' _ __,,
·evenly over the area and ~-ater 11-10
In order for fcnilzers to be itl'ei
the, the Mlil mu t have~
that "'lU not uc-up or all~; mitrieM
lO leach Out too fast. ObWJ\s correct soil properties with
amendments wdl be discustcd
RUFFELL'S
UPllLSTUY, llC.
F• Tiie iat Of Y• lie
192'1 HUaJI awo .. COSTA IEA -5"-115'
The plants that require the hi&hest
quantities of f~ arc annuals.
which should bl fen.iliud every two week. •
The Pros ' Since 195 l Col).tinue vegetable harves
· Because summer h coming to a close doesn't mean the VejCtable ~ ~~.· uum llSUUIC£ has to, too. You 'hould be lhinkilig abOut and plannina the WJDter vegetablt
Non-smoker Vegetables you can plant now are caulifio"ct, broccoli. Bruuds sprou
•
prden to continue harvests.
• ~ ~ Rates · cabbage, different varieties of lcnucc and winter utih. •
1 ~ 831-7740 Li.kcthesummcrvegeta.bleprdcn,you ouldba~elbcsollwdlpsePJd
441 ow.Neapcwt 9lwd. before planting. Dia down a foot or more .. turning_ OVCZ' the soil. Add c:qanic
.__...._._•_•.-l*l_rt_...;.••-•_d.._.,, _ea. __ __, .. ~~ to make the soil more porous a.ad ~~e to water and p)Od ll>QJ
so~· OFF
Oii THE lARGE S8ECTIOtl Of rT9C$ MARKED lfflH A .. OOT •
PWS MORE ADDED DAtlY FOR A
% O~ Cl.EARANCEI
TONIGHT ON CHANNEL 50 -8:30 P.M.
THE PROPOSED STATE LOTTERY FOK CJtLIFORrtl4~·
_ _.. __ --=CALH:_DRN.-=-IA-=--~~
STATE ------,.c-l OTTE RY
ODDS •·--;;.~ AND E~-~ :-... -::-.
RULES ~:_:_.; :;-:,'J::.>
.. ...
A GOOD OR BAD BET??~
Join Jim Cooper • Frop. l 7 · a mea•me which proposes to
ralae money for education • I debated. Gall Boyle,
president of tbe San Diego Teachers' Assodatio argues for
passage of Prop. 3 7. whlle Bobette Be nett. late p Ide t
of tbe 960.~member California rrA, op I I
... . p~posed lottery.
Channel 50'• r.LECTIO ·a• rl 1 · Oran e ount ~
Mlarce for oo pre en Ive election lnronnatjoo.
~
\
•
• ,, . -
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"We're goin' to an operetta tonight-'The
by Gus Arriola
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (V1P)
Pirate~ of Pennzoil.' " . "You're staring at an endangered spelces."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
... '-·-~ .. ""
"Marmaduke took first prize ... the dog that
realty won It stlll has the handle."
.
MOON MULLINS
AHD I TOLD THE
TEACMER TO LISTEN ..
~E MEARD IT, TOO
... "M~ l WJ.S GifTN~ TWO Olt
,.~Rat '"T'•M•s THIS MU~ ..
'
SME CALLEO IN TME
PRINOPAL,AND WE ALL
STOOD AROUND YOUR
DESK AND LISTENED ...
DENNIS THE ME~ACE
Hank Ketcham
~ ·~
l
"MO'.i WAS 6NIN1 NE A MIHM' SHE FELL IN ! ~
-
WE COULD MEAR
VOOR SNORING SIR .•
IT WAS WEIRD !
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Charles ~ulz
I DON1T MAVE TO
LISTEN TO TMIS, MARGIE
~S: AN"TS GOING-IN Al\JP
001" OF 'TH e HOU: Jl\J 1He 10P?
Vl:H.
t
ulnn. bl1.:. 'orth deal
·NOR1'H
• 963
~ Q3
0 A 762
+A 95
WE. T
• 2
s:> 94
t:AST
•KJ1074
~85
0 Q8 0 K 954
•Q113! • J 1087
OlllH
• Q5
t>KJ10762
0 J103
• K6 Tht.· bidding:
North Ea t South \\'e11t
t ~ Pua l ~
2 t> • Pa 4 <:1
Pas Pa •
Opening ll'ad: Ace of •.
Pat
Pa a
'If you gue £ right for more often
than not, don't lt.·l anything Wl'
write change your methods. But if
HOE
BRABBLE
~ ~ow w~? '-'OUR
1r--...--, F1R5I OA-1
~.'.> ..
1URKf.~,
NORMAN?
~
CHARLES
Go REN
you urc likt• th r t of u nd h Vt•
troubl gul' Ing r1ghL even hall the
tlmt'. you mtg ht con 1dcr oing v. Ith
I he O<f<I •
With h~ quarc hap , North
might h11ve rebid om• no trump _al
his et•ond turn. rather than rat u
hearts. Wh n he t•lected to upport
· Iii parlncr. 'O\lth w11 worth "1'
Jump to gume on the lrcngth. or hi
1fi:im11nd ht and ixth heart.
V..•C'. t led the are of pade and
continued I ht• uit to his partner's
king. I>ed.1rcr ruffed the third
<ipadc, drew trump~ in two rounds,
tben dcared the clubs bv <'a,hing
the king uce nd ruffing the tahle'
third club. Now nil that remaint'd
-Wab to try to limit lhl" diamond
lossl'l\ to onl'.
If lht.• mi,sing diamonds art' divid·
l'd :J.:J, there is no way decluer can
(
i
j
I
i
Q·N -
K1051"~REW
ROl.C?, DO(,~
A'f1~~
Mf..
suit't .
One Wlty i" lo gue s right .... if
West ha the doublcJon honor. lead
the J ck; iC East ha it, cro to dum·
m~ and IPad toward the j ck •
Another is to peek -but that'•
frowned upon in mo l circl . l
ln~tead or trying to divine the
po ition, why not play the odda and
simply le d the ace· of diamof!dl and
another'! Whichever defender ha a
doublt.•ton honor mu l win the
s("Cond diamond and pres en i
declarer with his contract by
yielding a ruft-sluCC. And. of course,
you will drop the singleton honor.
Quite imple. really.
by Jeff MacNelly
by K!3vin Fagan
FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
Hows1fi1s ~U ws.L· WHAl5 II
LIKE.?
FUNKY WINKERBEJ\N
DR.SMOCK
HOSE IS ROSE
fNJNZTAP
HURT
UA'tf. fNJNZ ?
NO, TH6 fN1.f£TW>R ~'f uurr THE. ums.
~,lfU. JJST ... UHH ...
THAT'S SILLY, BETH 1
WHO EVER HEARD
OF. AN EL.EVEN·
YEN\ OLD BEING DEPRESSEO?
. by i: om Batluk
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
by Harold Le Ooux
HE'S TW•L.V• YeARS OLD ... ANO VOU Nf!VER EVeN
SEl-JT t-4tM A CARO FOR HIS
BtRTHD.AV 1
1984 DODGE 600 CONVERTIBLE
ON ALL CHEVROLET CARS & TRUCKS!
HIGHEST QUALITY SALES & SERVICE!
THE HARD TO GET UNITS ARE IN STOCK NOW!
IT IS OUR POLICY ON •
OUR ~RICES REFLECT ONLY EQUIPMENT AND SERVICES PROVIDED WITH THE VEHICLE.
111., Fer -l11Q Fer l11Q Fer R114J Fer
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
-... ---at 08RVETIES--------
, PORSCHE 944
1184 -
tlJ6E SELECTION JUST ARRIVED
Al Colors - F &jy EqtiPPed
, F•EST SERVICE I PARTS
. CHEVROLET ---PORSCHE
·AUDI I VOLKSWAGEN .
IN THE U.S.A.
--------tll4 CELEIRln COIVEITllLES J98• CIVIUER COIVERTIBLES
~ Wlll NOT BE Uft>ERSOLD
Guaranteed .To Save You More!
NIWPOIT BEACH
.673-0900
,.
J
.. '
Cl OrMge Coast DAILY p LOT/Friday. September 14 1984 ..
Treat yotir auto
t~ fall inspectioD.
'Fall may be tti most Important check-up
f the year to ensure safe wlnt r d~Jvlng'
CHICAGO -The word .. fall"
~nJurea up a set of d stinct
Images -a riot of color d corat-
ing the tree • sweatered football
fans. choerlng In the -crisp air,
crossing guards ushering youths
to sidewalk safety,
One more Image should come
to mlnd for car ownera -their
car elevated on a lift with a
· reliable mechanic lnspec:tlng Its
underside.
"Fall should be Inspection time
for your car," says Walt Alley,
director of training at the Midas
Institute of Technology In
Palatine, Ill. ·
"Both repaits and preventive
maintenance should be done at
least twice a year," Alley sug-
gests. "And fall may be the most
Important check-up of the year to
ensure safe winter driving
ahead."
He suggests Inspecting the
exhaust and suspension sys-
tems. Travel over rocky moun-
tain or rural roads can torture the
underside of your car on a
vacation journey, and can jar the
muffler or tallplpe loose.
Another common problem oc-.
curring In the exhaust system Is
the presence of pinholes, tiny
gaps In the tallplpe caused by
corrosion. They often go un-
noticed during the cooler
seasons, because thev become
ptugg · d with carbon as 1t I
expelled through the tailpipe. By
the end of a hot summer, the
carbon-fllled pinholes tiave
burned through. •
"With too many plnhol , your
exhaust ystem will not be abl to
function prop rJy, allowing fumes
to seep back Into the car," aays
Alley. "If the exhaust system
needs attention now. It may not
endure a rough winter."
Your ear's suspension system
may have taken som~ hard
knocks during the long summer
months. Excessive travel over
rough • roads can stress shock
absorbers and springs. ~
"A good way to check the
suspension system Is to examine
your car's tires," says Alley. "If
they are wearing unevenly, thla
may Indicate that your
suspension system Is In need of
service."
Another slmple suspension
test Involves simply pushing
down on the bumper. If the car
bounces more than 1 ~ times,
your shocks may need replace-
ment. .
For more Information on your
car's exhaust and suspension
systems, send for the free
brochure, "Getting to Know Your
Car," from Midas International
Corp., Pf{O. Box 11112, Chicago,
Ill. 60611. .
The Doclle 600 convertible for 1984 haa a roomier r~r ~eai. power q~rter wlndowe and a gi~n rear window. · ·
Dodge 600 offers tu:rboch.aFged engine
Turbo means better performance, ecOiiOmy
for estimated city /highway mileage of 22/35
A turbocharged engine, which
provides both performance and
economy from the 2.2 llter power
plant, Is avallable on the Dodge
~00 cars for 1984.
The 600, Introduced as an
upscale roomy aedan for six
passengers, Is also available In
coupe and convertible models
this year. The four-door car
continues to be avallable In ·the
comfortable 600 model; and the
600 ES, with Its "Euro'' styling
and blackout trim, sport handling
and quick steering, fills the blll for
a sporty four-door model.
The turbocharger uses wasted
exhaust gas energy to provide
the boost, which raises the power
level of the four-cylinder engine
.t ••
to that of a six or eight cyllnder. stations for five second Jnterval
Its horsepower surge Is about 45 Its electronics eliminate the n
percent. and there's art Increase for fine tunln11 because the radl
of 35 percent In the torque locks onto the station's prect
output. EPA estimated frequency. All 600 radios lnclud
city/highway fuel economy fig· Ing the available AM/FM ster
ures are 22/35 for the turbo and cassette versions have
engine. dlgltal clock.
Chrysler's turbocharger ts one -Theexterlordeslgnofthe 198
developed by Garrett AIRe-Dodge 600 cars features a n
search and employs a wastegate wrap-around design fo
to protect the engine by releasing · talllamps, redesigned side or
excess pressure at high limits. namentatlon and wheel covers
Ford's midsize cars regaining lost popularity
Electronic fuel Injection, which There also are redesigned tw
does electronically what tone paint graphics and cas
carburetors do mechanlcally to aluminum road wheels, and
maintain the optimum mixture of variety of .Pearl Coat paints wit
fuel and air white the car's mica pigments avallable.
running, Is standard on all of the The turbocharged 600 car
600 four-door models. The have a louvered hood, brlgh
turbocharged cars use a mlltl-exhaust tips and muffler, an
point EFI system. "turbo" Identification on th
Mldslze cars are taking the fast
lane of the automotive market
with sales now pushing toward
half the Industry volume, accord-
lng to John C. O'Donnell, Ford
Division Los Angeles district
sales manager.
"The oil embargo and gasoline
shortages of the 1970s pushed
smaJI cars to the foreground of
the automotive market, but lower
gasoline prices and more fuel
. ftfflelent larger cars have breath-
ed new life Into the mldslze
segment," O'Donnell said. "By
1980 more than four of every ten
cars (42.9 percent) sold In the
U.S. were either subcompacts or
small sporty vehicles. But 1980
-
was the peak share for small
cars.
"So far this year, mldslze cars
have captured nearly half the
market. In round numbers, of
every 10 cars sold, five are now
mldslze, three are small and two
are of the large and luxury
types."
O'Donnell said the move back
to mldslze cars ls logical now that
the country Is In a mlddl.-ground
economic and social posture,
adding that "these aren't boom
times, but they are much better
than they were two years ago."
The mlqslze car market In-
cludes two general automotive
groups -family-oriented mid-
size cars such as Ford's compact
Tempo through the Mercury Mar-
quis, and the mldslze specialty
group which Includes the Thun-
derbird and Cougar.
"Our mldatze car -the
Tempo, LTD and Thunderbird -
are among the most popular In
the segment," O'Donnell said.
"In Southern Callfornla, Tempo
sales were up 162 percent fr the
first seven months of 1984. LTD,
which was strong last year,
showed an 18 percent aalea gain,
and Thunderbird -which Is
California's most popular
domestic car -Increased by .66
percent."
Buyers of mldslze cars tend to
be slightly older, more often
married and have more family
responslbllltles than the average
buyer.
Basic prices range from $6,900
for compact cars such as the
Ford Tempo and Plymouth Re-
liant to near $10,000 for sporty
mldsl1e lines Including the
Mercury Cougar and Oldsmoblle
Cutlass Supreme.
The fuel economy of mldslze
cars ranges from high to moder-
ate. The four-cycllnder dlesel
Tempo with manual transmission
Is rated at 41 mpg city and S&
highway. The V·6 engined Thun-
derbird with automatic Is 21 and
32.
A 2.6 titer Mitsubishi engine Is front fender.
avallable on all 600 models. The Dodge 600 two-doo
Inside the driving compart-coupe Is built on a 100.3 Inch
ment of this year's 600, a re-(2548 mm) wheelbase, Is 181.3
designed Instrument · panel Is Inches (4,604 mm)' long, 68.5
featured, and there's an elec-tnches(1,740 mm) wide, and 52.6
tronlc speedometer, tachometer Inches (1,336 mm) high. Its curb
and gauges on the ES mQdel as . weight Is 2,474 pounds.
well as an optional electronic The Dodge 600 and 600 es are
voice alert system that ','talks" to built on 8 103.3 Inch (2,624 mm)
the driver about the car a operat· wheelbase, and are 187 .4 Inches
Ing systems. (4,761 mm) long, 68.3 Inches
An electronically-tuned AM (1,734 mm) wide, and 52.9 Inches
radio allows driver and passen-( 1,346 mm) high. The Dodge 600
gers to preview pre-selected curb weight Is 2,593 pounda.
4 dr, fully factory equipped, AM/FM Fully factory equipped Incl. 5 apd, Rear window wuher/wtper, ~
Stereo w/cass, front disc brakes,
Completely self-contaln8d, reclln'g Hatt, AM/FM stereo, P/dlsc headlights, headlamp washer• an 4-
dlgltal quartz clock, tinted glaas, side brakea & ateer, Rear window defog-. speaker AM/FM multiplex . radio
moldings, PI S (500177) oven/space heater, ref. ger, tilt (500978) Loaded. 1.0. #82882 w/casHtte, whip-type antenna, auto-. 11411 sa211 11111 GIST& 1111 llTHllU1 11111 male locking front hubs. "''' lllA
OOITA IEIA llTIUlllHI um OIAIT 10111 1om11&1T-E llTlllllll
2111 larlttr llYll 0.1t1 .... 2111 l1r~ .,,.., Ottta ltu 1111 .. ,.., .... , ........ , ......................... 1111"'9rlW
140-4411 140·0110 140·4411 140·0110 .140.4411
~ -.
EACH FRIDAY ONLY II THE
AUTO PILOT • s2500 . .
SECTION
RESERVE per 1MO 210 ZX Mara red, White top, S •PMd, · atereo
LOAOEO. 1.0. #1468747 YOUR· SPACE 10th Anntvereary day CUHtte. 28,800 mUM. Edition .
if you furnish the picture of .... .
Red and Black-all options, lnclud-your car. $5°0 additional if Stk #7937 ......
642-5618 Ing T-Top. . ..... · PHONE Dally Pilot takes the picture. .......... .., .. r ..... 000-0000 2 days for $45 .. • 111·1
. .
. .
1 • t
•
I
-
•
One ot the w ye hom 1 are betn&
bought. and aold today 1 wft.h
A aeoond morf.C&ge sa a method or
rtna.notna whereby t.he buy r 18 •
provided \tilth an add1Uon&l or
IOCOnd mortsago when t.htre la not.
tnO'l,lCh cuh to ueum th•
1x11t1na mort.gtC•· A ond
morteace can alao bt taken when
the ttrst mortga.Ce a.nd the down
pa.yment tall hort. ot the &ale
pr1oe. A oeoond mor~a« ca.n b
provided by either t.ht nller or a -
lendtnc snamuuon. P&yment.1 are
made bOth to tht 11ller or lender on the eeoond mortga&e and to t.he
lender~ or the und r1,Ytnc mortflage
• Down paymtn\ may be nteo\lattd
• EnablN purohue ot home with
1JC11tln& rnoric•&• requtrlnl 1u11
Clown paymeni ·
• With a11umpt1on at 1x1etsn1
moriaai•. a favor&bl• 1ntere1i rate 11
PoHlblt
lmpao' on 11ll1r
• Sm&Uer Clown paymaM &tLracl.I mor.
Pot.entl&l buyera
• Aac11\lonal profit with 1ntereat
reotlHd on ..ooncs moricac•
• ~1v11 all tunc11 If l1nc11n1
1n1muuon prov1cs11 NOOnd mOr\Cac•
There &re a number ot ettu&tlona
in whJoh the second mort.g&e• e&n
raomtat.e the purohue or sale or &
property. Cont.act your re&l estate
expert to aea11t you.
· Daily PilDt
•
DEATH NOTICES
..
'
~z om ~~
=Cl)
0 < tl> .,
-0 .,
:::s
VI
~
0 c: ::> :::s a.
-tD ::r 0.
C"j) c: -'C ... ~ -•n _.,
... a. .. ~ -·
.. . • , '
THE !<EAL
ESTATE RS
!mitL llB nnc;;,.., Mn a:: 3aeo Mld\e&lon onve e.t. smso. p/t1e. P.wd kvlne ecceea.(819)32C).114'
WILllTsetmm ca•wlWlw lltl m _./1K.. SBr conao w/poo1 in G Ill.Ill flU. ,_ 81.UFFS. 2018 Vl1ta
A ,_.-cte.n 0 unit In en Caudal. •1u.eoo. ~· ..... location IMIO-M 11 A4it
i ...... 1..,. Vacant Md avallable: la11 .. !itf IHI
....... ... Call for detalla. * ...... * RIC:38M 1S: + ou-t .,.. IM-1111 44. i.il.4lt0f'.CHEAPI
1753 Plaza• eur. ·o,.., m.lla 27 u., .$ll0f CHEAPEAI
loc. ecf'OU from pert(. l , Prtoed to Ill fMt
S 2 17 ,000/term•. ~ R6dc9yere780-72t2
Marehall ANlty 87M800 ____!...._. 24hra &KR. Co-op. emu ... 1111 1m The meet~ 2 8d 2 "SET-uPSMAILEO UM llU ~ba In turtle rock REPOSSE88K>N WIDE ¥11U4t1114 lp1 lally 12-1 111111-11. tm.ooo 9H-2130 2 "°"'*on tot S144 ooo.
Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay, pool, ~,,:. 4:.l5 ~~ Wllll-1 IM• Low down. Agt 64&-f13t
spa. lOO'boatspace.XlntFin.$4.850,000. bHchH, dramatic~~~,.:; llLllNlllll
Channing Spam.sh 3 Br, 2 Ba on 45' lot, ~':.:r'~ iiA~•• irv flm •ll'flllWll
deck, courtyard, pier & slip. $1,100,000. vi.w. S750,000 Incl land. :;'*Beaut~= ~•= = Beaut1!~l 3 Br. 2 Ba, playroom. fireplace, U :1:n = ~ i11ce. .. 1:= :f1 =. ~
beam ceilings. Xli\t financing. $420,000. Ctlil LN llM obo. 7e&-2oe4 >-142-~
UYllDE lllVE UYFIOIT COllO §8"2L Irv countJY kite !sW!'t•L l!!! "'9 t. lalt 1411
J etty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai w/pan~eimodtled ba. rs; e:30. ;;;ii :, h11l1111•1ll Pr1111""' Kai. 2 Br, 2 Ba. 40' patio Now $&45,000. Bier 131-2242 11~ Aleum. 10% dn. Prime locatlon In • 11111, •Y 11111 Atk'g $85,500. 41WI03 Maryavllle/Yuba Cit)'.·
'PHllSIU 1011 OCWFHIT Agent e1waso • ..,.,. .... tRI ~ m:.. ":-~~
Exciting Ocean & Jetty views, 4 Br. 3 Ba, ALMOST NEW II a1a,-... call(t1ewwne
3700 sq ft car parktng. $1,285,000. 3 BR +'*9.2.,..betwnt.. LNellle (111)1 1eoe
End unit, lkyltaa, 2 mr 3 Bdtm 2 be. IOe peeyroo..,,, U. lalault Hii
WIST IH lft l&fflOIT -r:.n~,:,'~ ~·~N~~r:TOA u;;aia:;:• propert)'-
At N.H.Y C Traditional 5 Br spectacular 2820 Elden 02. fl50.225t t7M181 hde ~TO't. ,_.
bay view Owner !in. $1,050,000. BYOWNER.3bt,den,2ba, ··-111 hllalCllllh. ~ Elllde I 146K • ...._ 14'8. ...a Wtl.L TRADE !Md, game. UllU IUCN llLLlllE . 3AO Cabtt11o St. 2 t1ory uoo llf. 48A 3Ba. OOfl)Ot ... notea MC. tor Pool/epa. hi calla, I ow lend, homea. oondoa, Panoramic ocean & city view I spacious 5 ULL .. IPPT. Tl UI er· Comlaf 114 ect• untta. 624-7102 ext 101
Br. 3 Ba . Xlnt financing, now $199,000. "r.:r:r:.°1 ·~:n· 9~~ ,nc::·:t.:7~ tor ll i.... llB
COTIOI POllT £STITH 1240,ooo 811 P9nlrl IJchfrt cape Nft6 RiLP? WI GUY
' 8R home, lfHhll cOd 3Bt. &in 1.a. 111 0 eondFA8TO, Yhouour"'· u'!!.'! Cmtom view lots next to Casa Pacifica, Pftce -San Clement from $550,000. ptltrt9d,~~ Olt'Ptt. 8t.148t,OOO. 71'-'763 •mal24-7102ext 102
BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR
' J , I I' • .. 4 ~ f ' f •,
car ~i:i!;:;O:.:, llYPlln IMll ''!i.!!!L:::::=: ltJ..._1111 Immediate po .... •lon,I:
•Ptcf~• own«a untt ..... .__ .... L.....11
COndo-V. 2 fT\9t tultee, CMl1oc*lng main Cf\M. Ill&-2~ba--A/c.E.A.0, bit-In net 1*11 I Bdrm Nntlll. vac. MMJIM loin 11192 Income 123, 000/yt l!D!l•':'W:=-~-~-.-~11 .... !•
or trtlde equity b hie In tredea IOCePted,...lng rr.i-.;;:-; ,
NB or CM. &42·2574 :: .. 1-:iooo. Ow"/ Agt -.0.. •Id, c:'9' ywd 13 t76-U1t ... ftlll-BeM 48R 3bt. 3 oer ger. '9Jililt
aer. J!'= room. =: .. ~~ind~:EWa.J!!
Nlotty deOOf'lted & '*"'"" pyrm. Mutt .... ,.,.. ""'*'*' OOIMlo °" ... 1Cl11P9d. Pool & ~ wtth"2 Off.-. Open tHa ;.tnd. bey. .... .. & poof patio•. t174, too. 114 o.y Pl. on 15th 11 11916/Mo en.o.e
4U.f103 47Wt90141 ·~ Wint.... •· .... '"b•.
WITll YllW
ON THE LAKE. Two bedrooms
d n. SECURITY GATF.S. Walk to
Huntington Be h and P' r. Horne hu
many lll'Tteni · t;A.RGE AS-
SUMABLE LOAN!! ............
IHIJ WIHM9r " lllHt -..,.,
OllTllY 11 Ull
lHllH .. H1 U4/MM41•
;
fUmliMd from A IO Z.
Wiik 10 .,... • -' =,=r8'pt """ (2~3) 471-'7 ot .. ,. 714,..,..
"
..
~
Kl>S-EARN GREAT TRPS Afl> PRIZES!
\
•
' HOROSCOPE
~ ~ -... -
-
• • ,
)
ICl&Ultt•d Adt ere Ole anewer to• 1u •M
09r1ge ot yard Mle4 ti'• a
tr.Utt "' to tell mort '
Monday thru Ft1doy 9 I 1 o"' or ~ ' pm
330 W. Bay ..
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
n •qval opportvn1ty e pl~r
,
: WANT ACTIONt OtMllttd Adi M2-HJ
n m1nr.... • motorcycra, w11flar,
i.csi.eme1.-..... '""'°" fNWt. :~711 Vitti UmbtOii tuMi1 104.
TODAY'S
CROSSWQRD_p-1JZZLE-
ACR091
1~
ICMlt~
t Of en Otd Wotld
,7~
... Fltt~
11 IOckbecle
63 f Nit '°"'°9
15 LcMrt of fine
toodt
57 Autos-t
" -p.,, It llkleter
80CIMotwme
11 POC)fty ktPt
120ntM~
13 Wtltp mane
DOWN
27 8Je p.acagee
2t. Plat0an.-
30 An1•
11 aanguin.ry
S2Uopieoe
S3 RatUer'• ettedl
l"Pf~IOe u Ship'• olloer
II KftO'llll kot. '° Time P«lod 41 9. AfnCM
• 1 •
..
4' UnUlied
ff .RM CMJnnt
'78rWlpoW ... ~
... Endengennent
501(~11p
11 AoW
62hofd~
6.S T1'090IM
" lptlng 41*\t MSpft\e
. .
J
WlllY USEDCAA8a TRUCKS
COM! IN O" CAU. FOR
PIDllfl&IUL C«mler-OeUlo •
lmlllJT 11211 Bl!ACH BLVD ••
HUNTINGTON BEACH
14l .... lt141-1111
nWllTYWI
IWl-UIJ ... Ao!WdDece
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
Jf1t,O HA•llOR 111 >'0
CO"A loH'A t>4J 01'10
"
II I • • A ,.,., ... , ~ .... ,, __ ...... ., .......
714 -833-1300
._.. ttB .........
113$/mo.1471 doWn.
QOMd End Coft'ltner'dal • L.-
All ..sA VE AS LEASlNQ
'78T~Con:lla
a.rt(S23PPH)
12111
*** '78 Toyota Ceica
Uftbec*. Autornetlc T,..,., XTRA Nice (M2AUQ .
S2MI
*** •79 Coro9aSM
lltt'*=*, AM/FMC..
(OSIYIL)
13281
*** '80 Toyota Corolla
Sun Roof.~ttt90(29MI)
l34N
***
IKE lklUll'S SOITI
CO Im
IOTOIS
f)
ttMllAll •nomu
WoUsburg EdiUon ..... cu..
S2M74 . m.
10P 111,UO 64
CUl11" a.~ NdudiClft
~ 21
@
11141111 ...
11•a11um
4'moC 11
123'•11111S-!'l'IO
TOP ltUt .20 c~~ 112.000
~SSTMOI
1114
41moCfl 1
12 t7 • I.a.I ps "'° T~ I H OfO M
CAPttUOO
SSOO CAtt ~IOfl
~UHl11
'79Toyotac.lceCpeST 18711 Beach Blvd th ~ (7'95UQ)Q ~ Huntington Beech
'11 T~C!..~~~· O~T~=(l~1 .. 4~) .··.2.-2.000E:1 Uftbecl{. wtth .. (8&4V8Z)
1-i·-----.,... Bill MAXEY TOYOTA
• 19202 Beecti M2.ol2I
Tlit(s FROM win Sheepstt!!
AS LOW AS ~~~.~.:-:; awn• UHO IU· 1345 or YW ..-, hnt l,... up-
$4999 l'n-1344 .... .,.. .... 1 ., 1145 642-3120
(4252) fi'f:a. ,...'!!! um Ollm petnt. lnt•tk>f. ,,.,_. l2200 M2"'3120
ISUZU .. vw buQ. 1mmec ""°"'-,...,., eno. ,em/fm stereo, 11111 ......... ...........
842-2000
,
aMTI. whll, MW c:Mct\. l2900 ...... 2571
=
-COMNELL
CHEVROLET
~ .
r -.·
S4t>-1100
ltforcS .....
"'T·TOO'",NICGnd, ... --~(~ .... MAXEY TOYOTA
~~~
15MUl'TANO ·~.9/c. ~
"17 .. 'f llO. i cyl, •• NI
s7g9
r" --e're New--
We're Oeahng
71 .. SU-1919 , .. , ...... ,. '-k .. _ ........
NI IU •
mAll> ID ~ SCIROCCO
llTH 9J FIUCllG
s9999
I .
----... . ,, '
1' ~~
1 . 5 YEAR ,
1 50,000 MILE · I
I SERVICE CONTRACT AVAIL-I l ABLE ON ALL fEW MITSllllSHJ I
' . VEHICLES I ~ ,, ILL READY FOR Ill·
MEDIATE DELIVERY!
SEE 'EM IOW AT ~~-----' ~~___:~~ ............. ~--"-------COSTA .llESl
MITSUBISHI ...
. OUTSTANDING VALUES 011 TRIPLE
DIAMOND USED CARS Ill FOR ' WIPLE:
'80 SUBARU 4x48RAT
$
rnexpens1ve "Ott Roader"
(308ZXZ)"
'19 DATSUN 310WGN
Economy 4 cyl, AM/FM
Stereo Cass (299WXD)
·STORE HOURS: .
8:30 AM • 9 Pl Ion-Sit
10 AM • 8 Pl SUllDAY
4 whl drive, Off road pk&.
Rur slick Window, Bed
liner. A/C, AM/FM Stereo
(2055331)
•
'19 HONDA ACCORD
. .
lX .. Crui'Se, A/C. AM/FM
Cass, P/S (1KHG300)
..
BESU
OUR EXTENDED SERVICE COii-
TRACT AVAILABLE 011 QUALi-
. FIED u ED CARS. I
'
ater Del 30, Santa Ana V:alley o
21. Woodbridge rr
. I ----~ 1
Newport Harbor 20, Irvine 7
Mir ................ ~
lnlne'• J eff Blelman (11) ••ol&i N~rt·• Neleon
Alldenon (8&)t See Pai• Bl, BS for detalla.
Foree.et• on A2
JanetGa_yna
dead · t77
. .
COUNTY IDIJlll .
I f AIDA Y C...( P T f MBf A 1.1 1 ~84 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA --25 CENT-S
You'll find the
bnt auto buy1 along
the Orange Coa1t In
t0ctay'1 Auto Piiot
-PageC1
110-unlt hllltop project In
Laguna raises Ire of city
officials./ A3 .
Callfomla
A convicted drunken
driver picks ui> a 10-year
term In the slammer./ A4
Nation
Contractor tells elderJy: __ ._ __ ""'
woman he can fix leaky
toilet for $50,000./ A5
A quake measuring 6:9
rattles Japan's mid-
section./ A4
Paul Conrad wlll explain
how polltlcal satire af-
fects the '84 electlon In a
lecture at UC Irvine.JBS
"
Former Marina High
quarterback Ken Laszlo
will direct Orange Coast's
Sarah J.,ea'ritt •tanda outalde Bantinfton Beadl mobile home.
West Saturday ./81
tlonal, seWor Saturday
wlshboneagalnstGolden 81• otechnolo~y
TheWoodbrldgelnvlta-wave of the uture
morntng, la the ftrat tm--._ ....... ......;;;;;.;:;;..~_.;;;:;;._.,,..;::;;.-=.--::=;..::..::....:~=-=:..=:::..==:::.:::i:.....;~--1-
POrtant high school cross C s . d 1 =~:.~_to_•t_he__ 10r . ~ Ill US cy_· -
~ntertahiment
Legendary Ella Fitzgerald
starts the Laguna Beach
Pop Music Festival.
IW•kender
INDEX
Auto P\lot
Bridge
Scientist outlines
potential advances
atUCI Symposium -
By PBU. SNEIDERMAN
Of ... o.lr .........
Regeneration oflost human limbs.
Surgical transplant techniques that
.. could help a damaged brain repair
itself. Dairy cows that produce sia-
nifkantly more milk. from the same
amount of feed. Plants that arc
genetically engineered to resist pests.
These arc among the break-
throughs that may be achieved in the
very near fu ture. a leading scientist
told local business leaders pthercd
Thursday at a UC lrv1nc symposium
ongene J'C$Cln:h and biotccbnoJay.
But the pcaker al.so warned that
U.S. companies. if they want to keep
pace with ~iotcch cxpens. in,Japan,
mu t establish close tic >Atth uruver-
sity rescarchcn at in5ti tutions such as
UCl.
" ... Join t rc<1tarch efforts bciwccn
(Pleue eee 8CIENC8/A2)
.
Boward A. Schneldermai..
Bulletln Board
Bu!Mneu
California NNI
Ctualfled
Cornlea Crotl'#C)(d
OMth Notloel
Gardening
Help Yourtelf
Horoecope
Ann Landen
Mutuel Fund•
NatloMI Newa
C>pnlon
Ptpltm
People
·c1
88
A3
A.7
A.it
05-7
88
C7
C3
87
88 ce
His crusade: Execute state
POtlOI LOg
Public Noltces
Aelt11Urant1
Sport• Stock Market•
TeltVlllon
ThNter1
W•thtr
Wortd Newt
l
murderers au of them
ae ·-=-~~~~~~~--~~~...___.....,_ ____ ....... ,,__ ........ ___ __
A7 County optometrist leading advocate
Ait ~ o w at e calls 'penal euthanasia·
85.e "3 ~
Weektndef'·
8 1-4
A8 ae
Week der
A2
A4
•
RB activist
backs women
in cable fight
Albright vows to lead homeowners· revolt :
If mobile home dwellers evicted from par.k f
By ROBERT BARUR l?!ckinson Pacific... t
ota.~,...... Leavin and Teeters. wbo ~ A Huntington Beach civtc activi t when Ctllow tenants lilt the ~)cf
promised Thursday to lead a home-Mobile Home Park at Pacific Couj.~
owners• revolt against Dickinson Highway a.od eWland Street ~
Pacific Cablei.y5tems if lwo women proved a five-year mUlti-,unit con
arc evicted from their mob1le homes tract lO book up the part to the cabli
because of n di putc over cable television system last Sc-plember,
television. · eviction by the part's ~L • Dean Albrisht, a member of the All tenants in tbe park~s 4S uniu
city's Environmental Board and for-crcassesscdSlOpcrmouthlOcovcr •
mer Cit) Council candidate. id be the costs. But lbe two women rdmcd
and about IS people he's talked with to W;c the service &Dd refused =
arc upset about the threatened evi°"" lhc extra fee. Tbq· were 1hrca ~n hanging over lM beads ohcn1or W'lth eviction in May.
atizcns Sarah Leavitt and Betty 1bc two holdouts stuck to lbcif
Tcctcn.. guns and were informed by llcl1er mat .. It's a form ofhara smcnl nd 1t~sa their rent is bcin& bikcd::StO ~SI
hatnt that it bad to go this far." on Oct. 1.
Albright. a 52-year-old-dectnoan, · thqnrcfu 'nsto pa) anda
said ... If thcx two ladies arc evicted lawyer itiJlt!SUltiD,I .senior' ci ·
from their homes, ~'C arc gou~ co interests is lhttatallJlil lepl KUoD a.
cancel our subscriptions with (Pl HI -D.oi.T/~
Coke kingpin. i
pleads guilty :
Hunttn on's Mobley
15th-to admit guilt -
In h u e cocaine rtn
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Dmlf ......
Alan Charles Mobley. the 24-)ear-
old Huntington Beach man Y.bo has
been described as the kingpiD of the
largest cocaine ring on the West
Coast, faces 4S vcars in prison after
By JEFF ADLER
Of ... ~ .......
Residents of the Oran e Coa l's
40th Congrcs onal District att con-
cerned m<?\t about yrock'eting fed-
• 'era) dcficm and unbndkd go"em·
ment spmdana. accordina to a ~ul"\C)
The solutions to both conccm &
cutting back on all federal procram
and spending l on soc prosram
according to thrue ~ponding to ~
unscienufic Ul"\CY conducted b
Rep. Roben Badham, R·. C\\port
~ach.
Badham. in a 40th di trkt nt'W'll•
STEVE
Mu1L£
NEWSMAKER S
l
plcadina suiJty · Thunday to C1n&I
chaflCS.
Mobley is the I Stb person to enter•
au1lty plea in the diuj ca9C., bdii~~
lO be the third larscst in the nation'f
history. •
A Fullenon High School p-adua
v.ho alJcscdly became a multi,.
m1llionaire from cocaine saJ
Mobley faces a maximum of t 5 >earl
in prison on each of lbe three counta
be pleaded cuilty to as well as lifetimt
(Pleue eee q<>Jm/ ~ •
letter. asked residents of the conj
5ervati\e coastal district to rank th4
.. mo t pressing issues facina the
United States today" and to rcspoo4
to a ~ncs of questions colltt'mina
defense.and the economy.
fore than JS pcrccntof\MdiStriq tt~idcnts "ho rcspondC'd to tht
urvc) ran'-ed federal dcf1<:1 -tbcif
'o. I concern. follo"'td by aovcm; ~ ~ing (~percent), mihtarj
pre rtdness(9 pcrocnt) and crime (f
percent). r • '
Ht intc t rat income \ax '"
(Pleue .ee D&l'ICITS/
Irvine Co.
fights tax
appraisal
Otangt COUt DAILY PILOT/Frtday,
CoNTINUlO S10R1fs
' -~------- -----
IRVINE CO. FIGHTS REVALUATION •••
homAl
Under r B di y L. J oob'
• rcv8luat1on, the·oom ny'1 propen)•
taxes rould skyrodcet from about
17 million nnuaU) to about SS 1
mt1hon nnuall}'. Tht revalu uon
ppl&eS to the 1984· S x y r.
l1K: formal petiuon of prot t
filed Thu~y witb tho Ornn c
' Count) Clerk's offiu consist of a
blanket ppeal covcnna I Irvine Co.
parccl5 a well a sep rate appeals for
md1vid l ~reel~. according to a
t.at.cmcnt released b the comJ)lllY.
The c-ompan) did not file individ· Ua1 appeals on residential leasehold
properties.; the statement read, be·
cause they were not ubject to the
revaluation.
The company•s ap I centc~ on
its con1cnllon that a rcvatu uon,
"'hicb under l 978'5 pru~y tax·
cutting Propo 1t1on t 3 1s tn crcd by
a le of re 1 en.ate. was not ncccssao.
The s
re rdcd a
tock as le of real est.ate:• the
company statement charac .
The sale, in April 1983. transfemd a mlljonty of the com pan) 's tock to
board chairman and now pnncip.il
owner Donald L Bre~ who fu es on
Newport's Linda Isle.
"This, by definition, was a stock
transfer. not a ~e of real estate, and
hence not a cause fot a total revalua·
tion," said Thomas H. Nielsen,
rompan) pre dent.
Nielsen I o obiectcd to the
a sc r' appraa J :of undc,.clol)Cd
parcels on the 68,()()().acre Irvine Co.
propen) ccordl~ to .. thdr theoreti·
C'al lona.icnn. ulum te u s, rather•
than on the basis of their cum:nt and
nc ·term use ...
The compMy president id the
. property. be1na developed over a
penod of' dee des and within the
con traints o( phaSc(i aencral plans,
will not reach the value appraistd b)
the s~r for man)' years. if ever.
Robert E. Currie, legal counsel to
the Irvine Co. on the um mcnt
appeal, said tho bulk of the revalua-
uons may take more than a year to
settle in separate appeal hcannas.
DEFICITS, SPENDING TOP CONCERNS ••• .. . From Al · ·
inflauon and anemploymcnt were
· selected by survey re~ndcnts as key
1ssue1 b~ less than S percent of those
who ranked the issues.
The survey results are based upon a
random samplcof SOOqucstionnaircs
from \hose "'turned to 8adham's
• office, cicplained AflYIC Nelson, a
Badham aide. The newsletters were
mailed an early September.
Badham, who is up for rc-elect1on
m November, is opposed by Demo-
crat Carol Ann Bradford.
To reduce federal deficits, survc)
respondents ove""1hclm1ngly op-
posed rajsjna income taxes (87 per-
cent), psolinc taxes or business taxes.
They also opposed spendina less on
defense proarams. but supported
cuttana ... 11 federal programs" (64
percent) and spending less on social
programs (60 per~nt).
More than 46 percent of district
residents. who rcs nded 'to the
survey reported they economi-
cally better off now than 'they were
four years aao. 'le 36 perocnl said
they were the same and 17.S percent
indicated they were wone off.
The question, .. are you better off
th.an you were four ycan aao? .. was
the often-repeated refrain Ronald
Re•n successfully used in his 1980
presidential victory over thcn-Presi·
dent Jimmy Caner. •
• Tumins to defense issues, the
Badham survey found 76 percen( of
district residents who answered the
questionnaire favored strenathcnmr
nat1onal defense while 8S percent said
they ao not belie\'c the United STatcs
hould make concessions to the
Soviets on arms control.
A bilateral nuclear builddown as
proposed by the Reagan Adminis-
tration received support from 81
percent of all respondents.
Howevtr, fully SS pcrocnt of those
answcrina the questions said they do
not believe the United Stat~ should
provide military and civilian foreign
aid to emcr.Jina Third World nations.
DEATH PENALTY ADVOCATE •••
From Al
"If you have a tumor, you remove
it."
Garber sees convicted murderers
as a health care problem and death as
the proper prcsciption, the proper
treatment to the problem.
Among Garber's subscribers arc
three ammates on death row. A1J have
written to Garber claimina they are
inteJ'C$ted m haVIDg their sentences
carried out - a la Gary Galmore.
One oftbc men, Robert L. Massie,
has asked for' Garber's help m gettina
the American Civil Libenies Umon
out of bas han so that be can be
ex.ecuted.
A two-time killer. Massac
. murdered a San Francisco hquor
store clerk only a year after being
paroled for slaying a San Gabncl
woman.
Garber has corresponded with the
death row ammate and recently met
him dunng an antervacw at San
Quentin State Prison. He admits
Massie as an articulate, intelligent
man who has e Jawyer-ltke under-
standing of the Jaw.
Still. Garber's only mtercst in
MasSic 1s secma h1m dead.
"The guy's ni~. The guy's in-
telligent. Bia deal. 11.'hat's that have to
do with anything. He's a menace to
society and that should be the-only
ng upf or weekend
ODaatal
.. es ... '4 n ·«> .,. ..
• 92 .. .. a to 14 ....
72 13
.. 74
II IO
73 $1
79 S7
7t 11
-U 44 .. 14 •1 u • 43
13 4t
am 14
1 ,
1191 1-a
1
1
Swell dlrec:llon -~
.. ,,
'' n •• 71 11 u
1t ro " .. ..
ti 1• H H .. l4 .. .. n M t1 n
'CM ·74
" 10 1°' a .. .
.. 11
91 ta ,, 10
71 11 tt •• .. 11 u 70 " .. N 11 eo n
14 M .. . u ,. .. u .. 11 ... 42
10 M ' .... 10 JO .. 41
74 to 12 ..
" 12 " 79 1f 71
101 72 79 71
11 70
Vicki MO~gan killer gets ~5 years
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Former
talent agency employee Marvin Pan·
coast was sentenced today to 25 years
to life for bludgeonina model Vicki
Moraan to death with a baseball bat
last year.
ta1 exhaustion. He subsequently Pancoast was living with "Miss
dropped out of the case, said Arthur Morgan when she was slain July 7,
Barcns. another defense attorney. 1983.
Superior Court Judge David Hor-
owitz passed sentence on Pancoast
and denied defense motions for a new
trial or reduction of sentence.
.. Hot weather . r et u rns
Sentencing was delayed in Auaust
when defense attorney Charles
Mathews pleaded 'J)hys.ical and men-
CoN TINUEu SroR1Es
Southern California's brief spate of
ram is over and tem~turcs will be
climbina back up to 100 d~s in
some areas Saturday, the National
Weather Service said.
Highs from 92 to 96 are forecast
inland while the mercury ranaes from
94 to 100 in the San Fernando and
San Gabriel valleys and 98 to 104 10
the San Bernardino Valley.
COKE KINGPIN ADMITS GUILT •••
From Al
probation after has release. Mobley, lots in Huntmgton Harbour, property
who is held on $4 million bail, will be near Bia Bear, a~d land in at least
sentenced Nov. S. three other counties.
More than a ton of cocaine was He also relinquished ownership to
seized in May and 31 defendants were more than a dozen expensive cars he
charged after a massive Orange purchased durii:ig trips to Germany.
County druJ sweep that closed a two-Four Colombians named in the
Machado, 39. She could act up to
ci&ht years in prison. Mobley's wife,
Afeyda Mobley. and his sister, Cindy
Lee Croley of Newpon Beach.
pleaded gutlty las\ month and'face up
to five years m pnson.
----rssuc: ---· ---------
"Is h_c rcall) mtcrcstcd to being
executed? I don't know and I really
car anvcsttgation. The trial was to case -three of whom are related to ,-----------1--1r·ttn TUesday.--·fvfobtey ~· ma:mage = ha+c-
ft as likely a tnal will not be been fuaitivessmce the federal indict·
necessary and that other defendants ments were issued. They are beHeved
in the case -except for those who arc to be hiding out in Colombia.
All picas, including Mobley's, were
conditional pendina an appeal of the
WlftLBP issue to the U.S:·4t~it-
Court of Appeals.
don't give a damn.
"But I'll take his word for 1t, and I'll
do my best to help hjm down the path
to his tcnninataon. to his final day.
"It's not that I hate the guy. Why
should I be mad at him? What I'm
upset about 1s a system that lets
people like ham back out on the street
to kill again"
Garber ~•II not even entcrtam the
notion that Massie or Watson or
Frccwa) Killer Wilham Bonin or any
of the other 164 immates on death
row can be rehabilitated.
"Do they have the nght to be
redeemed? Hell no There arc certatn
th1ngs an life that arc not reversible.
"If you decide to commit su1c1dc.
that's a final decision. You can't
change your mind afterward When
you take a gun, put it to someone's
head and pull the tngger, that's
irreversible. You arc 1hought of as
being dangerous and \oOu'll never be
washed free of that "
Unhke some. Garber does not see
the eicecut1on of a cnm1nal as a form
of punishment "lor does be believe
that the gas chamber as a deterrent to
other cnm1nals.
"If \OU have a rat with bubomc
pTague. kiTiinanimiln-'Tgoing to deter
1he rats across the street. But 1t sure
"'111 deter him. If you have a menace
\oO u deal wtth that mcnancc
· "Tcnnmataon is an absolute deter-
rent," he adds
So, who is this man so passionate
about emptying death ro~ tn the
name of mcdacane?
Garber 1s not an attorney nor is he a
direct victim of crime. He's a
Berkeley-educated father of four who
bepn writing letters to the editor 20
years ago to express his growing
. .,..,,,...,.....~Ten1K-
ffOW&rd Garber leattacrasadeto,mptyDeath Row.
consternation W1th the justice system: He says Garber is auilty of "gross
As B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation 1cneralities0 when he insists that the
League committee chairman in 1964, death row papulation is beyond
Garber· drafted a rinsing law and ~ rehabilitation.
order proclamation that was adopted "There-are people-1ike Charles
by his lodge. Man50n and others who arc probably
In 1972, he was a co-<:hamnan of beyond our reach, .. HuUkowcr sua·
the Death Penalty Initiative and four aests. "Others, however, can be made
years later he helped found the to function probably in an institu-
Orangc County Chapter of C11izcns tional settina."
for Law and Order. Then came Rose Though some have dumissed
Bird, the parole hearings, and oppos1-Garber and his ilk as a "bunch of
tion to the propased buildina of a kooks" and "unfeclina right
county Jail site near Anaheim Hills. winac~" he insists he's not a hateful
Garberis not alone in bis fiahts and or vengeful person. ·.
has fcclinas. On the other hand, he is He claims that tbc fonns of
not universally admired. The ACLU execution used an the United St.ates
and the Coalition Against the Death are primitive,. cruel and unusual.
Penalty reprd the man as being "If xou had a pit bull that attacks
"misinformed.'' Even the American and kills a youna child, what would
Medical Association is opposed to the you do? Would you hang the pit bull?
death penalty. Hell no, you wouldn't. Yet in this
"Garber would have us increase the country we would do thinp to
number of homicides in the country humans that we'd never consider
by 20;000 a year." .says. Hullkower -0t doi~to an anima "Garber says.
the Coalition. "That's insane." " e notion that t ey shoUTd icCI
Th.c..dcath pcnalcy _opponent views pain is an:haic. I'm not interested in
Garber as a man fascanated by kllling inflicting brutal, cruel punishment.
murderers and says he 1s turned off They shouldn't have to feel anything.
his analoa1es between pnson ammatcs He advocates lethal injection -
as vanous rodents and arumals. the twilight sleep approach.
"There arc many intelligent, hu· "There should be no emotion
mane things that can be done with attached to at. It's not a reHaious issue
some of the immates on death· row. or a political ~sue. h's a health care
Throwing a few thousand volts i sue." he says.
through their bodies doesn't repair "Why should be treat this menace
1hc np 10 society created by erimc," to societx any different that some
Hullkower says. bacteria?' ·
still fuptivcs -will enter pleas A bench warrant for his arrest was
before Tuesday, federal prosecutor issued. for a fifth defendant. Michael
John Ku ray said today. Serrano, 26, of El Toro. who failed to·
"This worked the way tt's supposed appear in court Thuriday.
to work," Assistant U.S. Attorney The s>rosecutioo's case against
Mark H. Bonner told the Associated Mobley rested on federal wiretaps of
Press, contrastina the prosecution of Mobley and other defendants. with
the case to the recent John Z. De thousandsoft.ape-recordcdconvcrsa-
Lorean cocaine lriaJ that ended m nons.
acquittal Tb1rteen defendants bad already
-As part of the deal for--Mobley's pleaded guilty in the case by .Thurs-
auilty plea, about SS other federal day when defense attorneys made a
cbargcsapinst the Huntington Beach last--ditch effort to have the wiretaps
man were dropped. thrown out. The judae denied the
Mobley also agreed to Jive the motion.
federal government millions of fdoblcy then entered his pica. Also
dollars wonh of propeny be pleadina auilty Thuisday to con-
purchased with allcacd drug profits. spiracy charscs was Mobley's
The land included three watctfront mother-in-law. Belen Puerta
One of the fuaitives beang souaht is
Mobley's father-in-law, Heriberto
Machado Velasquez, SO, ofMcdiUin,
Colombia.
More than 400 law enforcement
officers were involved in the case,
tncludina 186 FBI aaents, 38 Dru&
Enforcement agents, 48 Internal Rev·
cnuc Service aacnts and l SO Orange•
County officers.
One of the defendants, Ron
"Turbo" Tina, 2S, of Corona del Mar.
WU critically inj~ when he WIS
shot by an FBI agent. Tina reportedly
was reachin& for a weapon when be
was SbOt in the chest with &.~lgUD.
Tina. who 1s paralyud Jlllh the
shoulders· down, entered a auilty plta
from Fountain Valley Community •
Hospital.
SCIENCE, INDUSTRY LOOK TO FUTURE ~ ••
From Al
America's great universities and joint research projects involvina the
America's research-driven com-school and area businesses.
panics promise to acccle~te both In line with this, univcrs1ty officials
basic research itself and its com· sajd UCI ts scckina (>rivatc industry
mercaal applications," said Howard assistance in est.abhshina a world
A. Schneiderman, senior vice presh.. .. du biotccbnolog~ center that .will
dent and ch1ef scientist for the include the nation s first untvemty-
Monsanto CO. departmcnl ofbi<5Cllemicat errgm~
ing. "It should enable us to discover
cures for diseases an shoner tames,
improve crop yields more quickly1 create new materials with uncxpectca
and useful properties and devise new
and more efficient production pro-
cesses."
Addressjna the symposium au-
dience. G. Wesley Hatfield, director
of UCI's acne research and
biotechnology proaram. acknowl-
cdaed that the term "biotcchnoloay"
is a • buuword with a variety of
meanings.
Hatfield noted that Orange Coun-
ty, with more than ISO biotccb·
related businesses, is bccomina a
leader in this field. He aJso pointed
out that UCI has more than l SO
affiliations with industry and hopes
to1ncrease such-ties;
f n his keynote address,
Schneiderman admitted that joint
mdustry·university research projects
carry risks
"Arc our univcrsitjes morally
strona enough to W1thstand what is
construed by some to be the borrupt·
in& influences of bi& bu iness?" he
asked. Before he joancd Monsanto in
1979, Schneiderman conducted re-
search at UCI in developmental
• bioloay and 1cnctics. studyinagr~wth ~------------------------:------control, conaemtal malformations
He defined it as a description of
"any technique thet uses living or-
ganisms, or P._arts of orpnisms, to
make or modify products, to improve
plants or animals and to develop
microorpnisms for specific u~."
Schneiderman said some scholars
fear that rompanics will press uni ver-
ity researchers to focus on narrow
product--0nented goals rath r than
more basic research. ...
·J,ust Call
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!130am •'0.'0t• 7
ll'ld ""' .. ..... OP-eel
•
ORANGE COAS'T
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwertz Ill
Publisher
• Ao11mery Churchm•n
Co~troller
lttphtn F. Cerezo
PrOducllon
M nagcr
Oon1td L. WllH•m•
C rculat on
Mana9 r
Clrcutatlon 714/M2-4W
c1 .. a1tled edwertl•lnt 71"'4a·M7'
Aft other d•pel'tmenta 8'2-4321
MAIN Of FIC!
30 Wtt1 ltv 61 OOllAI M ..GA...
IA l.Ja•llU It• !f>e() ~I !MU C:"" 2V<'&
VOL. n, NO. 251 •
and cancer. He joined the UCI faculty
in 1969 and later became dean of
university's School of Bioloaical Sci-
ences and director of the Center for
Pathobioloay.
Thouah now employed by
Monsanto, he maintains a close
assocation with the Irvine campu .
Schneiderman was the keynote
speaker at Thursday's 1ympo ium.
which wa de iancd to familiarite
local bu1inc s and community
lcAdcrs with the b1otcchnolog) re-
search under way at UCJ. The
pfOl,rlm was also part of an onaoing
dfon by the univmnv to encoura
I
Hatfield said the biotccb indu U')I
already has developed micro-
orpnisms, cells and plants used by
industry to ·produce valuable
chemicals and fuels uch as methane
p and ethyl alcohol. He said
aenetically enaincered organisms are
also beina used for oil re overy and to
produce hydro en p .
In the future. he said, b1otechnolay
can be used to help tpc worldwia
food shonaae and to produ~e impon-
ant pharmac utical Kuch as insuhn,
interferon, &tOWlh hormone and V C•
ctnes"""'. ~~-
"ff, in the interest of hon.-term
rewards, corporations damqe the
basic intellectual structure of Ameri·
ca's universities, they will kill the
aoose that lays aolden eaas.·· he
warned.
But headdcd1 "lam convinocd that
America'• m~or corporations reiw
coanizc this and arc nsjtive to ihe
importance of of the university u
society's mam arena for the discovery
of facts, explanation and ideas and a
the grow1na around· for our richest
natural resource, cr~tive and
eneraetic >-duna women and men."'
REVOLT VOWED IN HBCABLE FLAP •••
-From Al
their behalf. cla1mang the 1ncrc is
tied to the cable TV r\ ice an;.t is not
I I,
Albr11,ht say that he bchcvc the
b1 f~bTC ttlcv1s1on comp.any, With
regional hcadquaners • n Garden <1rovc.1 n 1bl fonhea11emm
force to get the hook up last fall foraemcconimulti· \
e and puk ." unit bl111, it would be o'<ier
until a later date.
"It it a d ca iltat they (w~n
and Teeter&) could threatened th
t'la101ed the oompany 'I)'. lfth ) won't \\Int cable TV nd
dll don•t ha\e h lhey shouldn't hll"c lo
1Cln l pa for n."
I
E tancla 1:7, Laguna HIU. 14
ter Del 30, Santa Ana Valley O
Tustin 21, Woodbrid&e 7
Newport Harbor 20, lmne 7 . .
Dlllr ........ "' ...... ~
Newport'• John O.wald leape for catch &aaln•t lrrine.
Por Thanda7'• prep football detallt, .ee Bl., BS.
Forec111t1 on A2
G>
f IRIT 10111011
-------------
'
I !IOI'"' ·,fl' II Mlllll II l'IH I OH ANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNtA 25 CENT S
'
'Dr. Death' on a crusade
.county optometrist leads campaign
to execute state's convicted killers
helped oraanize a recall effort against
state .Supreme Court Justice Rose
Bird.
.. He comes off like he's craz)'.. but
You'll find the
beat auto buya along
the Orange Coeat Jn
.today'• Auto Piiot
-Page.C1
110-unlt hilltop project In
Laguna raises Ire of city
offlclals./ A3
.
A convicted drunken
driver picks up a..10-year
term in the slammer .I A4
Na don
A quake measuring 6.9
rattles Japan's mid-
section./ A4
=~=-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·:·:·:·:-:·:~·:.:.:·:!:·:-:·~~=
.
P8otConrad will explain ·
how political satire af-
fects the '84 elect1on In a
lecture at UC lrvlne./85 •
"I'm not cold blooded, but if I
could pu5h a button and terminate
everyone on death row, I'd do it so
fast ll would make your head swim."
-Welcome to the world according to
Howard Garber.
A retired optometrist who lives in
Anaheim Hills, Garber is a leadin1
crusader (or capital punishment and
chairman of a statewide: victims•
rights group that opposes parole for
convicted killers. •
A stocky, bearded man who can
BB man
• ·VOWtng
cable TV
'rev;olt'
Threatened eviction
r-t:~~erly,resfdent~
sparks HB outrage
By ROBERT BARKER
Ot ... DllllJ .......
A Huntington Beach civic activist
promised Thursday to lead a home-
owners' revolt apinst Dickinson
Pacific Cablcsystems if two women
are evicted from their mobile homes
because of a dispute over cable
television.
Dean Albright, a member of the
ctty's Environmental Board and for·
mer City Council candidate, said he
and about l S people he's talked with
arc upset about the threatened evi~
tion banging over the heads of senior
citizens Sarah Leavitt and Betty
Teeters.
"It's a form ofharassment and it's a
· shame that it" had to go this far,"
Albright, a S2·ycar-old electrician, Former Marina High· said. "If these two ladies are evicted
quarterback Ken Laszlo from their homes. we are going to
will direct Orange Coast's cancel our subscriptions with
wishbone against Golden Dickinson Pacific."
S d /81 Leavitt and. Teeters, who balked West atur ay. when fellow tenants at the Cabrulo
The Woodbridge lnvlta-Mobile Home 'Park at Pacific Coast
ti J t f""' s t d Highway and Newland Street ap. ona , se ur a ur ay proved a five-year multi·unit con-. morning, Is the first Im-tract to book up the park to the cable
portant high school cross television system la$t September, face
country meet of the · eviction by the park's management.
•ascrt . .192=-----.--1---A~wi~the k'~,~ units
Entertainment .
Legendary Ella Fitzgerald
starts the Laguna Beach
Pop Music Festival. ·
/WMkender
were assessed SI 0 per month to cover
ttie costs. But the two women refused
to take the service and rcfllsed to pay
th~ extra fee. They were threatened
with eviction in May .
The two holdouts stuck to their
guns and \\tre informed by letter that
their rent as beinJ hiked SI 0 to S 180
on Oct. I.
what he says comes from a very deep,
seemingly talk for five minutes sincere belief," says Orange County
without taking a breath, GJrber bas Deputy Di~trict Attorney Ton)'
spent about 20 years raili.,. against Rackauckas. "'I'm in agreement with
what he pcn:eivcs as an archaicjustioe a lot of what he says."
S)Stem that; in his words, bas "un· "'He's actually a rtal nice guy and l
hm!ted patience., with the dregs of kind oflike him. But much of what he
soetety. says I find to be vile.•· uys Neal
Garber bas fou&ht against the Hullkower, a director of Southern
parole of .. Onion Field.. killer California Coalition Again~t the
Gregory Powell and Manson Family Death Penalty.
memberTcx Watson. Hehasdebatcd ·· Capital punishment is·· one of
superstar defense attorneys like Garbcr's favorite topics. He prefers to
Silkwood lawyer Jerry Spence and call it .. penal euthanasia: He ad·
STEVE
vocates that convicted murderers be
treated with the iaDlC danical cool-
ness that doctors give a patient "ilh
an car infection.
.. If you have a tumor, you remove
it."
Garber secs convieted murderetl as a health care problem and death u
the proper prcsciption, the proper
treatment to the: problem.
Among Garbcr's. subscn"bers are
three immatc:s on death row. All have
written to Garber claimina :they are
intertst.ed in bav~ ·1.beir sentcnccs
carried out - a la Gary Gilmore.
One of the men. Robert L ~
bu aSked for Garber's help in eettin&
the American Civil liberties Union
out of hi.s bait so that be ca.a be
e1ecuted.
A two-time killer. Massie
murdered a Sall Francisco liquor
store dcfk bnly a year after beina
(PleUe Me DBATB/ A2)
Coke
kingpin
pleads
guilty
. Huntington dealer
could be sentenced
to 45-year term
Fnm staff ud wire repens •
Alan Charles Mobley, the: 24--year-..
old Huntington Beach man who bas
been descnbed as the kingpiD of the
largest cocaine ring OD the West
Coast, pleaded guilty Thursday to
c~ of conspiracy to distri1'tite.'
narcotics.
Mobley, a Fullcrton Higll Scbool
graduate who allcacdly bcc:amc a
mwti-millionaire from cocaine sales.
becomes the l Sth person to enla' a
guilty plea in the dru& c:a.sc.
He faces a maximum of 45 ,years in
prison. Mobley is bcina held OD ·$4
million bail.
More than a too of oocaiDe was
seized iD May &Dd 31 defendants ftr'e
clwaed after a massive ~ ·
County drua sweep that dQSCd a niro.;
Ye&!' in·•cstigation. The trial was set tO
begin :f ucsday.
"This worked the way ifs supposed
to work." Assistant U.S. Attorney
Mark H. Bonner said, contrastiJll the
prosecution of the case to the recent
John Z. Dclorean cocaine trial,
which ended in acquittal.
There have been onlr. two larsei
dru& cases in the nations history, in
Florida and Atlanta. said a ~~
man or t'h'°.~Cti on:cmenl
dministranon in Washinaton.
Four Colombians named in tbc
-three wbo arc related to
Mobley thro~ maniqc -have
been fUiitives 510ce the federal indict-
ments ere i ued. Tbey arc bcliC'o·ed
to be h1din& out in Colombia.
The prosccutio11 's case qainst
MobJe rested on federal wirdaps of
fobley and other dcfendarits. wilb
thou ncli of tape-recorded convcna·
tion . INDEX
Again. they're ~fusing t~ pay ~~d a
lawyer representing senior c1t1zen
interests is threaterung lepl action on
their behalf, claimina the increase is
(Pleue Me R&VOLT/A2) Sarab Lea.Stt 8tanda outatde Bantlqtoo Beach mobUe home. (Pleue eee COCAll'CB/ .A.2) .
Auto Pilot
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Bullneu
Callfomla New•
Clallifled
Cornlea
Crouword
Death Notlcel
,.Gardening
HetpYoureeU
Horoeoope
Ann Lander•
Mutual Fund•
Natlonll News
Opinion
Paparazzi
~ POllee Log
PUbllc NotlcU
'Reltaurantt
-8pon1
Stoel< Markita
TeleYWon
Thuteca
W•tt. Wortd Nft1
w
w
C1
88
A3
A7
A4
C5-7
88
C7
C3
87
86 ce
• 88
A7
A4
A8
B5
85-1
A3
C3-4
end«
81-4
A8 ee
ender
A2
A4
Biotechnolo~
wave of .fthe fliture
.for U.S. indu~try
(Pleue Ke 8CIEMC£/A2)
• ...
.......
Federal spending,
deficits biggest
Coast concerns
...
.I
'I .
weather
returns
to Coast
DEFICITS, SPENDING TOP CONCERNS •••
J':romAl •
preparcdne~(9percent) ndcnmc(7 ccnt),p'lohnctaxesorbu 1ne staxes.
percent). They also oppo cd spending le on
... H~ mtcmt rates, income taxes. defense program , but upponed
nflauon and unemployment we-re cumoa ··au r~cral proarams" (64
:selected by survey respondents a kc)" pc-rccnt) and .spendina less on social
i ues by less th n S pert'Cnt of those programs (60 pcn:ent):
wbo ranked the i sues. More than 46 percent of district
The urvey result re b ~ u~n a · residents who re ponded to th_e
randomumplcofSOOquest1onn1JJCs survey repo1'ed they were econom1·
from tho e returned to Badhnm's cally better off now than they were
office, explained Arayle Ncl~n. a four )cars ago, while 36 ~rccnt said
Badham aide. The new letter.. were thcr were the same and 17.S percent
mailcii in earl> September. indicated they were wone ofl.
Badham, who is up for ~lcction The question. "arc )'OU better off
in November. 1s oppo~ by Demo-than you were four years ago?" was
crat Carol Ann Bradford. the often-repeated ref rain Ronald
To reduce federal deficits. survey Rca_pn succcssfuUy used in nn 1980
respondents overwhelmingly op-presidential victory over then-Prc1i-
posed raisin& income taxes (87 per-dent Jimmy Carter.
Tumi.Jt to defense Jssuci;, the
8 dham sun.cy found 76 percent of
di5tnct n:s1dcnt~ who answered the
questionnaire favored strcngthenina
national defense while 85 percent id
they do not believe the United STates
should make tonccss1ons to the
Soviets on anns control. .
A bilateral nuckar builddown as propo~d by the Reagan Adminis-
trauon r«cived support from 81
percent of all respondeats.
However, fully SS percent of those
answerina the question\ said they do
not believe the United States should
provide military and civilian foreign
aid to cmcraing Third World nations.
r COCAINE KINGPIN PLEADS GUILTY ••• , FromAl .
r---· Thirteen defendants had already
pleaded auilty in the case by Tbun-
day when defense attomeys made a
last-dttch effort to have the wiretaps
• thrown out. The judge denied the
motion.
Mobley then entered his pica. Also
pleadmg guilty Thursday to con-
spiracy characs was Mobley's
mothcr-io-law, Beren Puerta
Ma<;bado, 39. She could act up to
ei&ht years m pnson. Moblcy's Wlfc,
# Afcyda Mobley, and his sister. Cmdy
Lee Croley, pleaded guilty last month
and face five years m prison.
AU picas. including Mobley's, were
conditional pendina an appeal of the
wiretap issue lo the U.S. 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals..
One of tbc fugitives being sought is
Mobley's father-in-law, Heri&crto
Machado Velasquez, 50. ofMedillin,
Colombia.
More than 400 law enforcement
officers were involved in the case,
mcluding 186 FBI. aaents. 38 Drug
Entorccment agents, 48 Internal Rev-
enue Service agents and l SO Orange
County officers.
One of the defendants, Ron
"Turbo" Ting. 2S, of Corona dcl Mar,
was cnticaUy injured when be was
shot by an FBI agent. Ting reportedly
was rcacbina for a weapon when be
was shot in the chest with a shotgun.
Ttna. who is paralyzed from the
shoulders down, entered a guilty plea
from Fountain VaJley Community
Hosprtal.
.. DEATHPENALTYADVOCATE •••
From Al
paroled for slaying a San Gabnel
woman.
Garber has corresponded with the
death row immate and recently met
him during an interview at San
Quentin State Prison. H~ admits
Massie is an articulate, intelligent
man who has a lawyer-like under-
standing of the law.
Still, Garber's only interest ID
Massie is scc1Dg him dead.
"The guy's ruce. The guy's in-
telligent. B1gdeal. What's that have to
do with anything. He's a menace to
society and that should be the only
issue.
"ls be re.all) interested m being
executed? I don't know and I really
don't give a damn.
But I'll take his word for 11. and I'll
do my best to help rum down the path
to bis tennmauon. to his final day.
"It's not that I hate the gu) Why
should I be mad at him? What I'm
upset about is a system that lets
peo~le lilce him back out on the street
, to kilJ apjn."
Garber will not even entertain the
, notion that Massie or Watson or
Freeway Killer Wilham Bonm or any
of the other 164 immatcs on death
row can be rehabilitated.
"Do they have tbc right to be
redeemed? Hell no. There are certain
things in life that are not reversible.
"If you decide to commit suicide.
that's a final dCCJsion You can't
change your mlDd afterward. When
you take a aun. put 1t to someone's
bead and pull tbc trigger, that's
UTCVcrsiblc You arc thought of as
being dangerous and you'll never be
washed free of that."
Unlike some. Garber docs not sec ~ the execution of a cnnunal as a form
of punishment. Nor docs he bcheve
that the gas chamber is a deterrent to
other crim1Dals.
"If you have a rat with bubonic
plague, killinahim isn't going to deter
the rats across the street. But .1t sure
will deter him. If you have a menace.
you deal with that mcnance.
"Termination 1s an absolute deter-
rent," be adds.
So, who 1s this man so passionate
about emptying death row in the
name of medicine?
11911r,...,._.._,TwrtltN11
Boward Garberlead.acruade to empty Death Row.
count) Jail site near Anaheim Hills.
Garber is not alone ID his fiahts and
his feelings. On the other hand, he 1s
not universally admired. The ACLU
and the Coalition Against the Death
Penalty regard the man as beina
"misinformed." Even the Amcncan
Medical Assoetation 1s opposed to the
death penalty.
"Garber would have us increase the
number of homicides in the country
by 20,000 a year." says Hullkowcr of
the Coaliuon. "That's insane."
The death penalty opponent views
Garber as a man fascinated by killing
murderers and says he is turned off
his analogies between pnson 1mma1cs
as various rodents and animals.
beyond our reach." Hullkower sug-
acsts ... Others. however, can be made
to function probably in an institu-
tional setting."
Tbouah some have dismissed
Garber and bis ilk as a "bunch of
kooks" and "unfeeling nght
Wlngers," he insists he's not a hateful
or venacful person.
He claims that the forms of
execution used in the United States
arc primitive, cruel and unusual.
"If xou had a pit bull that attacks
and kills a young child, what would
you do? Would you hang the pit bull7
Hell no, you wouldn't. Yet in this
country we would do things to
humans that we'd never consider
doing to an animal," Garber says.
It_' s heating up for weekend
Coastal
'tide•
TODAY ·~·'"" '4
IAT\MAY
lt27&fll -·11
..... "' 11
12:11'"' '. 11.:Hplft 1 I
Temperatures
Extended
u ., .. ..
12 40
,18 .. H et .. u to .. .. u 12 -Q .. .,,
• IO
n '' 1t ., 7t 51 '2 ,, .....
II 3t to .,
13 ..
"n ., 'fl ., 1J
11 u
" 16 70 ,, .. .. ,, '
11 " .. " .. . 17 N 11 ?a
104 u ., 'TO
103 u .. .. ... , 11 .,
,, 70 ,. 71
'12 41 .. 11
IS 70 ts ... 13 ,,
.. ?) .... ., . u ft .. .,
.. 71 .. u
10 .. " .. 70 60 .. u
• 14 to
t2 IS .. 72 .. ,,
,. 11
!Ot 72 ,. 71
11 70
Ex-Mesa offi-ce~ given light
sentence, prosecutor says
'lie may have been a good officer.
but .. .It was only from the belt up.' --
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ltMI OllllJ l'llot llllff
Former Costa Mesa Police Officer
William Lauchlan was a,iven a light
sentence but is bein• severely punish-
ed in other ways, said the prosecutor
in the sex case after the ex-patrolman
was ordered to serve 60 days in jail.
"He lost his job and bJs life, in
effect, hal been ruined," said Deputy
District Attorney Carl Armbrust,
who had recommended a sentence in
tbc state pnson
Laucblan was sentenced Thursday
to 60 days in Orange County Jail and
three years formal probation for
sexually molesting a 22-ycar-otd
female he stopped on the Costa Mesa
Freeway last January.
Superior Coun Judge James Judge
formally reduced the felony sexual
battery conviction to a misdemeanor
but told Laochlan that he would face a
year ID jail if he violates parole.
Lauchlan also was ordered to pay
for the woman's psycholoaical ther-
apy. The woman has been unable to
bold a job lnd suffers nightmares of
the incident last January, according
to the prosecutor.
Armbrust araued for a heavy
sentence. He described Lauchlan as a
man who "made of habit of preying
on women who were alone at night
during his patrol."
He sajd Lauchlan appears to be
"obsessed with sex" and told the
court that "he may be even more
dangerous outside bis uniform.
"He may have been a good officer
but if he was, it was only from the bch
CoNnNuro SroR1Es
----
up," said Armbrust dunna a con-
versation after sentcncina. "Below
the belt he was a menace."
The prosecutor conceded that he
had mixed feelings about how hca vy a
sentence the 33-year-old former
policeman should receive.
..... he's beina punished just by
being revealed," said J udgc prior to sentencing. .. He will have to hvc with
thaL He has been an embarrassment
and disagracc to hUnself."
Laucblan, the father of two ~rls, is
separated from his wife and chddrcn,
according to a probauon report. It
notes he also is JO extreme financial
straitsand has bad little luck landing a
full-time job. He was fired by the
police department in February, t9.'o
weeks after tlis arrest.
Judac ordered Lauchlan to sur-
render himself at the county jail on
Sept. 28. Tbc delay was aranted for
Laucblan's attorney, Matt Kurilicb,
to file an appeal.
Lauchlan did not stop to talk with
reporters followina sentencing. His
mother said, "There's. nptbina he's
going to say that's printable anyway."
The wavy-haired fonner police-
man has been adamant about his
innocence. Kurilich complained that
bis client was convicted on the claims
of a woman he alleges had just had an
emotional breakup with her
boyfriend.
Lauchlan allegedly stopped the
woman on the Costa Mesa freeway
durina the early morning hours last
January and told her to follow him to
a darkened industrial park. He re-
portedly molested her while detain-
William Laacblan
ing her inside h1S car.
Though he originally was arrested
on suspicion of sexually assaulting
four women, all but one of the
allegations fell by the wayside during
tbe proccedinas. The most serious
charge -that he raped a woman in
the front seat of bis squad car-was
tossed out bya Munic1pa1 Courtjudge
who said be found the woman's
testimony unbelievable.
Annbrust brought three other
women forward Thursday prior to
sentencing. All testified that
Lauchlan had made suggestive oom-
ments to them such as .. How about a
quickie?" and "Gosh, you're beauti-
ful."
Kurilich said the \C$timony was
lauahablc and added, "I say worse
thinas than that on a daily basis."
REVOLT VOWED IN HB CABLE FLAP •••
From Al
tied to the cable TV service and is not
legal.
Albri&ht says that he believes the
big cabfe television company, with
regional headquarters in Garden
Grove, is responsible for the dilemma
because it "tries to use force to get the
scmces into comP.lexes and parks."
Dickinson Pacific representatives
were unavailable for comment today.
Albright claimed the company
"kind of used blackmail" b)'. allegedJY.
telling park manaacment tf it didn t
hook up last fall for service on a multi-
unit basis, it wouJd be passed over
until a later date.
"It is a sad case that they (Leavitt
and Teeters) could be threatened this
way. If they 9.'on't want cable TV and
don't have it they shouldn't have to
pay for it."
Garber is not an attorney nor 1s he a
direct victim of cnme. He's a
Berkeley-educated father of four who
began writlD& letters to the editor 20
years ago to express his growing
consternation Wlth the J ust1cc system.
As B'na1 B'nth Ant1-0efamation--
i..cague~mm1uec chairman JO 1964.
Garber drafted a ring.ing law and
order proclamation that was adopted
"There arc man) 1ntelh&ent. hu-
mane thtngs that can be done with
some ~ munatcs on death row
Throwing a few thousand volts
through their bodies doesn't repair
the np m socicty·created by cnme."
Hullkower says.
''The notion that they should feel
pain 1s archaic. I'm not interested in_~!!!~~~~~!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~~!!~~!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!.-_ mfhctma brutal, crud punishment.
by bis lodge.
In 1972, he was a co-c hairman of
the Death Pcnalt) lmt1at1ve ;w.d_ four
years later he helped Rlund he
Orange Count) Chapter of\:'it1zens
for Law and Order. Then came Rose
Bird, the parole heanngs. ~n~ opposi-
tion to the proposed budding of a
Just Call
642-6086
He says Garber is guilty of "gross
generalities" when he in'lists that the
death row population is beyond
rehabilitation.
"There are people like Charles
Manson and others who arc probably
They shouldn't have.to feel anytbJng.
He advocates lethal injecuon -
the tWlligbt sleep approach.
••There should be no cmouon
attached to 11. It's not a religious issue
or a poht1cal issue. It's a health care
issue." he says.
"Why should be treat this menace
to soc1ctx any different that ~me
bactena? •
What do you like about tht Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the
number at left and your mt11a1e will be recorded, transcribed .nd delivered
to ihe appropriate editor.
The same t4·hour an1werln1 service may be used to record lectera to tbe
editor on any topic. Conlrlbulors to our Letters column must llltlude tbtlr
name and telephone number' for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell us wbat'1 on your mind. ,.
SCIENCE, INDUSTRY LOOK TO FUTURE~·.·~· ............ .
From Al
" .. .Joint research efforts between
America's great umvcrs1tics and
America's re earch-<iriven com-
panies promise to accelerate both
basic research itself and its com-
mercial applications," said Howar<l
A. Schneiderman, semor v1ce presi-
dent and chief 'scientist for the
Monsanto Co.
"It should enable us to discover
cures for. diseases in shorter times,
improve crop yields more quickly
create new matenals with unupected
and useful properties and devise new
and more efficient produclion pro-
cesses."
In line with this, un1vers11yofficials
said UCl is seeking {>rivatc industry
assistaooe in establishing a world
class biotechnology center that will
include the nation's first univcrsit>
department ofbiochcmicaJ eniinccr-
ing.
Addressing the symposium au-
dicnc.e, G. Wesley Hatfield, director
of UCl'~ gene · research and
biotechnology proaram, acknowl-
edged that the tenn "biotechnoloay''
1s a bunword with a variety of
meamnas.
ty, with more than I SO biotech-
rclated businesses, is becoming 11
leader in this field. He also pointed
out that UCI bas more than UO
affihatioos with in<!ustry and hopes
to increase such ties.
In bis keynote address,
Schneiderman admitted that join&
industry-university research {>rojeas
carry nsks.
"Are our universities morally
strona enouah to withstand what is
construed by some to be the corrupt-
ina influences of big business?:' be
a•~. .
..... , ..,_.. ... J,,..., _____ ~-
~fore he joined Monsanto in
--------1919. tu~i man cOnducted l'e'"
He defined it as a de ription of
'!an~ lCC.hniqu.c. tbal..u hvma or-
ganism • or P. rts of orpni m . lo
mpeor m0d1fypr0ducts, toimprove
Schneiderman said ~ome scholan
fear that companies will pre univer-
sity ~archtft·to focus on arrow
product-oriented g<>1ls rather than
more basic research.
D•llJ Piiot
Dell very
, ta Gu.,•nleed
~,,.,,., i_, " . de I
COl ha'd fl:U pac;e "" S30om c;a o.• t7o
I rid 'f04JI COOY ,. t>P
~o
Clrculatlon
Tel phonH
f
"I )
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Aoa~mary Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Cerezo
Proauc11on
Manager
Donald L. Wlllf•m•
C1rcu1a11on
ManAg r
'
lrculatlon 71'1~---
Cta11lniC:t advertlelng 714/142·517'
All otf\er department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
VOL n. NO. 251
I
search at UCl in developmental
bioloay and acne~ics. study1naarowth
t'Ontrol, conaenua_l malfonnauons
and cancer. He joinc the UCJ faculty
in 1969 and later became dean of
university' SChool of B1ol0&1cal Sci·
cnccs and dirtctor of the Center for
Pathob1olo y.
Though no epiplo)cd b)
Mon nlo, he m intaan a close
a bc'ation uh the Irvine campus.
hn 1dcrman the keynote ~pca~cr t TJlutsdAy' S) mpo 1um,
which wa Jc t ncd to fam1li rue
local bu mes and community
I dcrs with the b1otrchnolo re·
rrh under wtty at UCI. The
program WI also p rt of an ongo1n
llon by the uni c il~ to encourqc
Joint research projects 1nvoh 1n . lhc
hool and rca bu n
fants or animals and to develop
microorpni'lms for r>C(ificu ''
Hatfield stud the biotech 1ndu try
already tlu ae ... cloped micro·
orpm m • cells and plant b
industn to produce valuable
chemicals and fuel uch.as methane
gas_ nd cth)'I alcohol. He 1d · ncucally cngmccrcd orpru m re
al~ bc•OJ u d for oif'rcco' cry •tld to
produc.e h)d en ~
Jn the future. he 1d, h1otcchnotgy
~n be u d to help the worldwiae
food honqc and to produce 1mpon-
1nt phamtat'Cuticals such msut n,
tntei'fl ron, 1t9wth hormone and va
inc.
Hattlcl4 noted that Ota oun·
)
S Pilot Weekender/ Friday, September 14, 1984
Pop Music
Fest opens
on Sunday
Two weekend treats:
~~~~~~~~~ Songs by Ella, Lightfoot
The Laguna Beach Pop Music Festival will feature
the legendaf) Ella Fllzgcrald thi!i Sunday and songmaster
cxtraordma1rc Gordon Lightfoot next Sunday at th
Irvine Bowl, home of the Fcsuval of the Arts.
Th.c concerts. benefiting SchoolPowcr. the Laguna
Beach educational foundauon, and the YMCA, are being
ponsorcd by Downey Saving.~ and Loan Associat~on
which ranks in the top 2 percent of the nation's bank1ng
mdustry.
Leonard Feather, jau critic for the Los Angcles
Tim~. sa~. "Ella ts one of the elite few for whom a s10gle
name on a marquee would suffice almost anywhere in the
world."
-Last )Car she garnered the 12th Gram01y of her
.11lustrious career, yet David Wei ~ of the Los AngelC1
Herald faamincr reports, "she's no exhibitionist; it is the
"ery quality of hy humility and nose-to-the-grindstone
prof~sionah<,m that !.Cts Ella aJ>')rt."
In 19.58 Ella recorded a fi"c LP ~tot the George and
Ira Gershwin Songbook which 1s still being pressed and
has gone down 10 the annals of popular music recording
a~ exceptional classic$ in the pop/ja11 category.
Her multiple honors range from the Pied Piper
Award given by the American Society of Compose~.
Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) to Beverly Hills
1...-___ ...:.W.:.:o~m.!.!a~n!...-:of the Year to the Whitney Young Award.
sponsomf by the NAACP She also has 6CCn prescntC<l
with an honorary doctorate of music from Howard
Un1"ersity.
.,
From the ballrooms of Harlem to the Hollywood
Bowl, to Euro~an theaters and clubs, to TV concerts
with Frank Sinatra "her greatest tnumph has been her
ability to sustain a style all her own; to in fact, ~ome
instantly recognizable wherever she goe~."
Lightfoot bridgrs-the boundan~ between pop,
country and folk rock music. So much that his sonss have
been findin& their way into the repertoires of many
internationally known perfonners.
Some of his biggest hits, "Ramy Day People,"
"Sundown," and "If You Could Read My Mind" arc a
few of the songs that took him from coffee houses and the
club circuit to concert halls.
s:s. K.18' to lead Loq Beach BlaM Feet
The Newport~r
will swing with
b 'ands' tempos
Fifty combos donate
talent to support
scholarship fund
Tex Beneke will.be arand marshal
when the Orange County Musicians'
Oub presents its annual per-
formance extravaganza, starting at
noon Sunday at The Newporter in
Newport Beach.
For this year's "bash" nearly SOO
musicians will provide more than I 0
hours of continuous entertainment
-Dixieland, big band. symphony.
country, classical, Jazz and rock
music -on seven st.ages in the
ballrooms and on the grounds of the
resort.
"for 14 years now our club
members -all professional mu-
sicians -hne united in this
celebnition with plenty of spinted,
friendly camaraderie to go along
with the various musical styles.'' said
. L1ghtfoot's is a career that has continued since the John Wbitlin&hill, chairman.
mid-'60sincludingat least 70 concert appearances a year ''In the final jam session, they all
m Canada (h is home), the United S~s and other com~ together and even the pro-
countrics lnco1UXI1Jleroain the warmth and intim~_ du~1on peo le g~t to kick back and
that he displayed in the early days of his career, and hts enJOY e is enmg wnb evv1yom::-
songs-old and new-continue to touch the minds and else.
hearts of his listeners. "last )car 3,000 attended and we
Both concerts will start at 7;30 p.m. Bcforc~vent expect even more this year:·
fcstlVltics will include dance trou~. bag pipes and lri h Proceeds from the $7 tickets
food from Muldoon's Irish Pub. benefit the musicians• union Schol-
SChoolPower will be hosting a $200-a-plate, pre-arship and Emergency Relic( Fund.
concert dinner with. Ella in the Irvine Bowl and the Children under 12 arc ad.mined free. YMCA will ho5t a $SO-per-person post-concert wine and
cheese reception with Lightfoot as special guest
The fC5tival is being produced by Brad L Fry and
Associates. This is the l I th time Fry has produced
Fitzgerald in concert. The former Oran&e C.oast College
instructor and director of two arts centers bas produced
more than2SO concertsin the United St.ates including the
first U.S. tour of the San Francisco BaJlct.
Beneke, who has performed at
~ummer concerts at Fashion Island
and UC Irvine, will make a iucst
appearance with the Henry Brandon
Orchestra in the Plua Ballroom.
Fifty bands -wim: members donatingtheirtimcandtaJentforthe·•
ranging in age from 17 to 70 -arc day.
Long Beach performers
to off er nothin' but blues
Smgcrs and harmonicas will wail from noon to 6 DixonandBi1MamaTbomton,andbis10D11include .. A
p.m. Saturday and Sunday durina the open-air, fif\h Man and the Blues." .. I Got My Eyes on You." .. Stone
annual Long Beach Blues Festival at the North Field on Crazy" and "Watch Yourself." In 1966 he bepD teaming
the Cal State, Long Beach campu~. with harmonic. areat Wells, an excellent ex~t or the
Legendary B.B. Kina. winner of the 1984 Grammy funky Cbicago blues tound.
Award for Best Traditional Blues Rccordina for .. Blue1 ... The blues wet"C IW1ed by black people out of
'n' Jazz," will le.ad the list of guest anists such as James depteMiOo over opprasion." •YI Ku.a. .. But tOday, it
Cotton, a bluesman's bluH!Dln who wrote "Fcelin' bas to do with people ai'OaDd tbe ~ repidleti of
G~ and ""'Catdonir.*" Jimmy W1thcnpoon, famous financial status. h comes fftMn lo¥C .am.. ~
for "Ain'tNobody's Business;" Buddy Guy, Junior Wells wantina todObetter and tbe bUlles ofevayday lifB."
and Denise LaSalle. TbC feativil. produced by • Dn Jecoblon, as
From his Mississippi bcginninp to hiscwmst fame, presented by FMl8/K.LON, lhe no11-<loaunercial, public
Cotton has never been afraid to share his ••bocJlie-rock· radio outlet licented to the CSULB Foundation. Bernie
blues" that leaves them da.Dcina in the aislei. He•1 had a Peart. Whole weetly radio ~ .. NodU .. But the
profound influence on sucb'perfonnen as Boz Scaga. Bluea"isaSouthlandataple,aurtisdcdirectorandcmc:ee..
tevc Miller, Bonnte RaitUnd the late Janis Joplin. • Tickeu are Sil.'° in lldYanee tb~ "tidtdron
When Witherspoon sings the blues, peopk just (634-llOO)orSl.Sforltnerallldmisaion.Ouldrtn 12and
naturally pay attention. When Enalish rock pou .. bepn under are admitted free.
imitating the style of black musicians, he was one of the Fc!stiv~areanvitedtomakethceventafanuly
most copied. A Iona association between Witbenpo<>n affair by brincina blankets for lawn le8Ulll and a picnic
an<S Eric Buroen and the aroup War helps suppon the outd of hon»coc>kcd ua&s. Or foods and bev~
notion. • will be be tOld at the field alollia with commemorative T-
Guy recorded with blues legends such as Willie shirts.. caJ)I. poaten and propaml.
J •
Calendar
Fri.-·
Clu.tcal
"TDri'COl'SADn'DllESA." a
poet avant~ opera ol the ure of Saint Tctaa of AYlla by WWJ.am
Houaton. ta praented from 6 to 9 :30
p m. With a prniCW bef'Oft and a
rcctjJtJoo rot~ng. Newport Harbor
Art Muacum. ,850 San Clemente
Or1ve. N~ Be8ch. 810 concert.
825 with preview and rettption.
759-1122.
JOPWD.UAmcanducta the Loe
Arwldei fttl~annonk In great musk
of the stage and 9Cl"Cm, Inc~
exce~ from ''Indiana Janee and the Tc:m of Doom," at the Hollywood
Dow at 8:30 tonight and Saturday.
Concertmaster SadDey' Weta. wtll be
eolotat for '"Carmen" Fant.My by
Sarasatc to complete the program.
11<'1\c:b at the box amce or charge by
phone at (213) 480-3232.
GallGOllY COl.gMAJlf. claaliical
gurtart9t, entc:rtatns In La Palme
restaurant, The Nc:wportcr. I 107 Jambortt Road. Newport Beach. Mon.-Sat. 7·1l1!:3~1700. .
TBS 1rDm ~ J •• rataurmt
fc:aturea dauk:al ~ dw1.nC dinner. TUcs.·Sat. from 7 p.m. 1be
Nc:wportc:r, 1107 Jamboree Road.
Newport Beach. 644· I 700.
GaD M.ACll offera easy Ustentng
on the piano Tuea..sat. 8:30 &:;a
midnight. Reuben's, 151 !:.
Highway, New poet Beach. 675-5790.
Jan
~ OLLY LdlADtll ap-
J>rAra Tuca.-Sat.. 8 p.m.-mld-
• night. eano·a, 2241 w. Coast High·
--walaeHewport OeKh. 631-1381.
laVDfS NA••IO'!T feat.urea
eight hou1'8 ol conunuous llve Ja%%
each Friday evcruhlt th~ the
umma with ''The wlilz:zard. a nve-
plecc Jltzz group. perlonrung contcm· ·
poriUy aiid pop edcdton9 from
4:30-8:30 p.m. and lhc"MIChael JOr·
clan Trio .. performing standard. LaUn
and contempon.ry Juz from 8.30 p.m.-12~30a.m •• 180b0VonKannan. lnint. 720-0330.
Gaoao& 8l11'TS appears at Cafe . 9 p.m.-1 a.m.. 858 S. c.c.at
H ny. ~na 9each. 497-5404. ~PBIU.IJl9 and his b10
In an ttclwdve ~t-P'rl.&t.
9 p.m.-1 a.m.. T'Ui:s.-Thwa. 8:30
p.m.-12:30a.m •• Ubrary l.ouJ9!. 'The
Newporttt, 1107 Jambortt Road.
Newport Beach. Througb Sq:ll. I 5. 644-1700.
WAYK& WAYD playa the ax·
=e and flute. and aJCll
• ••• ta on the keybc8.rd. 9 p.m.-1:30a.m.. Cale Udo. 29C>C>New-
port Blvd •• ~ Bmch. 67!>-2968.
ltOIQllB and his b1o fea-
ture clU&lcal and Lalln Jaz. Wed.·
Sat. 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m.. Copa cir
Oro. 633 Anton. eo.ta Mesa.
662-2672.
8ISPllA!llB ATD a ftlCHJ8
and the II.a Pdoe TrlD pc:rf'onn
Thun.-sun. ~ Ron"a lD
lag\ma. 1464 S. COUt ffiOlway. lAaUne Beach. 497-487 I. ·&1mu.y IM>Oma a ft10 pc:rf'onn
Jazz vocals. Frt.-s..t. 8:30 p.m.-12:30
a.m., Nod's Seafood, 16281 Pad.flc
Coast Htghway. Sull8d Beach. In·
ddlnlte. C213) 592-2051. ·
ua ~· pc:rf'anmJazz peano Tua.&f f 8 p.m .·1 LJIL NkpOrt
17, 1615 E. 17th St .. Senta Ana.
lnddlntte. 547-9511.
TD m Cl.SAIL QUIHl&I
plays rrom 9 p.m. lnddlnJtdy at
Johnny·a. 2250 p;, 17th St.. Santa
Ana.~.
40 music. 9 ct:;·l a:m.. R~ E..
l..Cc. 151 £. Highway. Ncwpwt
Beach. 67!>-5790. '•wca aa•i.nm_ ~ easy UsteDt...e llDU9lc lnddk\ltdy at Re-
uben's MoOnraktt. 18542 MacArthur
Bhd.. lntne. 'l\aCs.-sat. 9 p.m.-1;30 .....
~Ii/I!) mu.·· play a fl'Olf am
of IDU9k'. from country to NcG
aamand and Pn:aJey. for da.ndrll(.
P'H.-&at. 9 p.m.·1 ~30 a.m.. WaC"·
1bUl'S. 8:30 p.m .-1 a ...... Swallowa
Co¥e In the San Clrmrntc Inn . .....aa 1'B&AT" appears at
Rmbaw. J5t3 N. "rU9ttn Aw_ Senta
Aoa. Tap ·40. c1antt lllUSk: reaaurut.. 'Fri. -&at. 9 p.m.-1 :30 •. m..
.. Alli liiiiiO OOSS .. at t~ CW·
talo can Dinner n.:.tcr. 690 El
CUllno Real. 1\llllln. ~ c:xcqJ( c:. ~ curtaJn tbDes th Oct. 28,lL.18:1540.
• •• al lhe Newport
n.eater ArtaCmlcr. 2501 Chn'Drtft.'
Ntwpcwt Bl:ac:h. F'1dlli~ and satur-.,. :aa 8 p.m. thnlugh Ort. 13.
1831-0388..
"'T•S 8S8T LITTL& ... , Mal8& DI 'l'SJltA.SP M the: ·-
I I
I
·.
.. PUot Weekender/ Friday. September 14, 198-4
Calendar
•0o1by Stereo
WltJI Ht-1171
STADIUM ORM-IN
11£11A , ... 121-4171
81.lEM PARX DR
COSTA IW tJM14l
EDWARDS CINEMA CENTER
-St«>llCI
n TCllO 581 ·5880
EDWARDS SAOOl.EBACK
SEE 'GRFMLINS'
AGAIN
BEFORE YOU HIT
TIIEBOOKS!
uuumus 1a..11
COSTA •SA 151-4114 EDWAROS/SANBORN
EDWARDS TOWN C£NTER LAGUNA HILLS MALL
fOUITAll IAWY 113-UIJ llSSM llJI 4tu221
f AMl Y FOUR EDWARDS MISSKlN VU) MAU
lllm 154-Ull OAANGE 6l4-2S53
EDWARDS UNIVERSITY snn cm COTO
BO
DEREK
I ···-··-·•-11Dm.1 . ••-n••-. • FOlllT• VM1£Y 9631307
FNAY FOOR
~634-3911
UA CITY CENTER
GmJI CICM' SJ!M-401
EOWAllOS WEST8llOOI(
SMTA Mii 540 7 444
EDWARDS B«IST~
IPG·llle»
HUNTINCT'ON BEAOt * cmAHGE Edwards Huntington Cinedome
Cinema 848-0388 634-2.553
''ENGROSSING
... brilliantly
played:'
-lud1th Ct1~ WOR·TV
GENE WIIDER'S
CAamo COJfR&CTJ01'8, for
alngles age.a 25·55. hoet. a id·
acqualnteCJ r.rty. 810 fnc:luda wfne.
rdreahinen • and pro(e:uionally Jed
actlV1Uea. 8 · p.m . 32 Sandstone.
lrvfne. 545-0840. • .. BOWTOUTSCTIV<UACB
OUT TO onmas.•• Sll\4lea leam
how to cut throuah ainalf talk and
Improve commun!CaUon akllla for a
more aaUafy1.n« reJauonshtp 7-11
p.m. 810 (~.{;olden West Coll~
CommunJty Center. 1.5744 Golden Weal St.. Huntington Beach.
891-3991 .
Wll&SL OJ' PIUl:1'D8111P. for
slnalea over 45. meeta for happy hour
at' Cord Nelaons In Anaheim at 5:30
p.m. 524-3327.
11188 AJllGIS'8 6DfOLD DARCB
CLUB Invitee aingles to come dance
and get acquainted tontaht from
8:30· rJ :30 with the Fran1' Amou Trio. Lafayette Hotel, ·144 Linden
Ave., Lon&Beach. (213) 435-6311.
Etc.
• VlCTORL»W.-..
-W VICTOR ORAi -~ GFM: WILOOt (pg..UJ
,...OIUOl'f llllCfUl'lfS.._,, ~---~ ........ -
NOW SHOWING
lahavtngadancefrom9,p.m.to I a.m.
at the Fountain Vallej Community
Cn\ter, 10200 Sliter Ave. The club la
ror mtn 6-foot·2 and over. •r\d •O'i'Mn 5-f'oot-19 and over: ahorter people
may attend H guests. Phone
542·1211 for Info on other club
eventa.
''POCUa OR PBO'l"OGJlAPll' A photo conleet and exhibit co;sponaor-
ed by ProleaetonaJ Pbot~phera of
Orange "County and Mall ol Orange.
Throt.i«b Sunday. Mall ol Orange,
North T'uaun Ave .. Ora~. 998·3900.
TD CATALIRA ART f'DTIVAL
opena at Palma restaurant In C.tallna
at 6 p.m. and ·contlnuea lhf'OUCh
Sunday &Ion& Crattnt -Ave •• AvalOn.
PaJntlllf&ll. aculpture. craft.a. pho-
tography ar\d chOdren'a worka are
featured. For tramport.a.Uon lnfor·
mauon call 527-711 1.
TBS CAl.U'ORJlflA WOODSJlf
BOAT raTIVAL, part ol the fall
Newport In-The Water eo.t Show.
fcalwa boats for uk and bOllta on
dtsplay Ju.t to be admlmt. A rqp.tta
wtll tricfUdt boat• from 18 to 8Cr fttt and exhlblton and membCra o( the
wooden bOllttng public are Invited to
puttctpalc. 11 a.m.•eunset. 85 adult
admi.ton. 67~9360.
CJa..tcaJ
TBS CIVIC BA' '.ft ol Southern
Callfomla open. It.a 9eUOn with a Olverttucmcnt program cnllllcd
"FaU Festival." It fcalurcs audtence
faVorttes ol the compe.ny'a c1 ... 1ca1
ttpertolrc and h"°111'2.hUng the (>l'O-
J(ram ~.the drama1k: tiallet "The Red
Poppy. 7;30 p.m .. Golden West Col· lc«e. $5 pre--Mle. 86 at the door. • a.f6..-02 I 5.
.JOllJll WD·l IA• conducta Loa ..Ph1lbar:monJc, ~ Friday
THE POR l THEATRE
,._ ........
.... .... .. .. .. .
' J ". ' ,~ I •. ., J
·.
' .• • ' • I
•
,,.. . --.•-
ROBINSON
\ ,
• Plot Weekender/ FrtdaY. September 14. 198' ,
Calendar
JUT PSAll80Jll. ·~ Orange County Cowboy ••• perfona. tonight at
8 at ~ a.st ColJtee Fine Art.a
119. S6 ~ S7 at~ door. 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
432-5527.
Jaa
TBS LOllG •ACB 8UJSS ...,:.
....nY£1.fcalun:s.maoJa{l.beaamt.ey'•
finest 1*lcs ~to a fe91UVc.
famlly-ortnated atrnoephftT. B.B.
Kfng. Buddy Guy. JunAor Wdls. De-na LaSalle. James Cotton and
Jtmmy Wllherspoon are among the
pcrionnen appeartn«. Noon-6 p..m .•
North Fldd. ·0a1 · Staie Lodg ec.:b
campus.815geocnl8da I ]' ... (213)
597-9441.
PIAlll8T ma.LY l.W•,_ at
~REAU.Y
CHEER!
REVENGE OF 11£ NERDS
malces }Qlal"e about its
charaaers. Robert Unadine
has created a great characterr
--S....,.NIC.:fV
-.639-lno
STMllllDI• ·
IE 99CM02i"
UAllJWES 4
.. ,. 952-4993
~IOI.$·
NOW SHOWBtGI
COSTA El 9J9..4141
£DWMllDS CIOM CDTII
COSTA IOI 5404594
UAsoont~T a nm sai-5880
£.DlUllJS SAOOl£BACI
WE'RE
BIGGER
ANO
BETTER!!!
.
OCC'S SWAP MEET MOVED
SUNDAY, SEPT. 2
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
Adams Ave Part11ng Loi
COSTA M,ESA
SPACES • $10 • 432-5880
Sellers ngy ren1 space at 631 a.m al h Gal!
-55Hl655
EDWMDS WOtXm>GE ... '37-0340
•CJIMCEIMU
IDT I I IB 193.(1546
UA M'.S1WIS1tl lllAll
BARGAINS GALORE! E~~s~:~v
FREE ADMISSION & PARKING FOR BUYERS!
cano·a. 11ee Frtday llat.lng.
WAYIU WATR and RICK 8flSW••w. aee Fr1day twong.
l'1JllT VOLOR& plays the piano
~t and Monday, 8:~p.m.-1:30
a..m .• Ron"a ln lag\lna. 1464 S. Goast H.lll)nra~na Beach. 497-487 l . f.a• ~ .. 8tt Friday lJstln«,
COlln&Y PlllLLIP9, ett Frtdiay
lbltJng.
DaVSY ftATLOa. Thuraday
and Saturday nights. Indefinite. Mu·
wdfa. 317 Padftc Oout Highway.
Huntfn«IOO Beach.. 536-2555.
llOldllS moww anc:t hls rr1o. aee
~ver~ y ~ a: TILIO, ett
~t,;'l'L ATSS•~ and the ltlldl Prloe 'l'd9. .e Fnday
~ MJT19. w F11day Uat·
~VD> W performs rrom 9
p.m. tndcf\nltdy at Johnny'a. 2250 !:.
17th St •• Sutt.a Ana. 836-6658.
''THE NEW PRINCE OF HOUYWOOD:'
.mo IEI S4i-2711
...... 634 2553
CIEOll(
EmMDS SO..JDASJ ftJlA. f..._Y RU. PM:R-IMY 39 DUI
COSTA IE& • EDWA110S HM10t lWIN 631-3501
...
a:wacoenu.oand The At.tnc·
Uona ..,.._With apcoclal guHt.s Nick
Lowe and Hie CowbOy OOtClt. lrvlne
McadDwaAl6Phltheatre. 740·2000,
.,.. 8!le :tr1day listing
noa: maY. ece i"s'?a\."sung. TD GalOIRAL JlllSJll,
Jtm Pike. Ric de A&evedo and Bob
Engemann. pther to pt:Tform In a
"Reunion concat" at Orange eoa.t
Oollcae. 8 p m.. Robert B. Moon:
Theaire, 2701 F'a1n1ew Road. C.OSla
Mc9a. 88 pre-eal«;. 89 al the door ••
432-6527. -•.....a WllSAT,'' ace Fr1day
llsllrc. .,OlllO MD BILL ... see Frlday
listing.
LAllCS SAU.IJllO, ett Friday Ust·
~A'llY& ~··. Friday
u.tln&.
.iaA.R·UJC Hliii I performs •1th
apcdalguat The Yd.lowtacket. at the
Pactnc Amphltheattt. I 00 Fair Drive. eo.ta a.e.. 834-1300.
CAlllRAll"IU'• are featured by the
Anahdm Dance Promotlona PublJc
Dance. 6 p.m.-1 a..m .. Anaheim Con·
ftllUoo Center Arena. 800 W. Katdla.
Anahdm. 999-8900.
............. oosa·· at tht: Cur·
ta1D CaD Dtnner 'lbc:aler. See frlday ~· at the Ncwpe>rt
1'beater Art.a Center. See.,f'rtday ltllt· .... ·ras a&aT LITTL&
W .. 18008& DI T&XAS" 111 the
Hartequln Dtnner PlaybouK. See f'n· .,..
a.A" at the Grand Dinner
Thattt. See Frida* ll.8tlng. °"TB& FA•MIL .. DAUOllTSll'•
'at the HuntJ.n(lton Beach PlayhOuee.
See ll'r1day .,_ emu.a DI ear· at the
Cludcn ~ ColfttDuntty Thcater.
See P'rtdlly Ulltlng .
.._.. 0. U ••WCBA" at the
ll'onun Theater. Yorba Unda. See ~~All" at South OOMt
~=~1'1'Rlif1mitW:
"'9UQAa" at the San "Clcmenlt
Community Theater. See Friday IMl·
lnlA Tcma WITB A YJS1r• at ~
WfllltmlMter Community Theater.
8ee rwtdJiy bating.
"
Calendar.
891-3991.
'"T&Aa OAS TllADIDtG." A atate certJfled program that pttparea par-lklpantalopauastateexamtoobtaln
a permit to cany a tear: ea.a weapon. 9
ll.m.-r p.m, 819.50 fee. Golden Weat
CoUcgc eu.lneu BIQr... Room l lo.
15744 Colden West St: Hunungton
Beach. 891-3991.
''KAJIATS POa IDD8."' ~lf-de
fense techntquee for ages 6 to 17 a.re
tauBit. 818 fee. 10:30-11:15 a .m. GolOe-n We.t eoue.ee Center. 15744 Golden West St .• ffuntlngtoo Beach.
891-3991.
WBE&L OF ~. ror
• Slnglei over 45. lnftts a~ Unbrook
BoWl In Anaheim for bowling at 6:30
p.m. 524-3327.
Etc. ...
n'SPllAlUS A'l'D a nDKDS
and the a11t1a Prioe Tito. att Friday lbtlng.
.ntUT WLA.ICO. a very talented
musician. host.a a weekly .. Jam ..
session from 5 p.m. at the Swallows
Cove Lou~ ln the San Ck!Mnte Inn.
-TBS GIU.IAll GAllftll .JAZZ
911.AllTST. 7-11 p.m.. lnddlnlte.
AU k>'a, 1870 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mee.a. 642-8293.
.JACIUIRAJ0>.3-7p.m .. tnddlnlte.
Rusty Pdtcan. 2735 Padllc Cout
Hltlhway, Newport Beech. 642-3431 . RAoe llARTIJll8011 AJm TD
IUITTBll 8BCTlOJll, afternoons. OJd
Dana Point Cafe. 24720 Del Prado.
Dana Point. 661-6003.
8'1111>10 CAR featurea an after-
noon jazz --.ion. 100 Main St .. Balboa. 675-7760. ------Pop
JAIOS TAYLOR and aARDY
D1nlAJI ~onn ton~t at the
Irvine Meadows Ampnltheoatre.
740-2000.
GROOVlt TJT AKS. aftemoona at
Baxtet"a. 14346 Culver Drive. lrvtne.
lodeflnlte. 857-2103.
CALTP80 STE&L Dami 8AJm
appearys at Cano's. 2.:a p.m .. 2241 W.
Coast HJgtlway. Newport Beach. 631 -1381. ,,
Theater
"AM 11 BIMi OOSS .. at the <:ur-
taln call Dinner Theater. See Friday
Ust1ng. ••'fas BS8T LITTLE
WBODllOOSE llf T&XAS" at the
Harlequin Dinner Playhouse.~ Frt·
daJ.: listing. • 'BOROLA"' at the Grand Dinner
Theater. See F'rtday llalln,t.
"PDQ[ PANTBltA" I.a hown a
parf of a Davtd Nlvrn Olm attlea Niven
a.ld9 the bumbltr..g tn pector In thta
da.sstc. 3 pm., Colden Wno1t College
Community Tht'&ter. I 5744 Gokk'n
West St'.. Hunlh\4ton Beach. 82 ~
era! admmton. 8D5-8378.
.. ..._.,,,a. .. A rare look at the
onenat '"Pink Panther" n1mn1 ln
1 !MO ls ~nted as part ol a David
Niven Film Serice. 3 p.m .. Golden
Weal College Community Theater.
15744 Golden West St .. Huntington
Beach. 82 general. 81 Cold Key and· chl1dttn under 12. 895-R378.
WllBBL OJ' l"RDllD8BIP, for
slngJes over 45. meets at The Catch tn
Anah~m for brunch at 11:30 a.m.
524·3327.
11188 .A.1'01'.S'S BIG BA1'D 80C1n>
Dance Club gathera tonight for free
dance leaeon by Candi Davis. 7·8
p.m.: and Rusty Higgins playaforyour
dancing pleuuttlrom s.11 p.m.
Lafayette Hotel. 144 S. Linden. Long
Beach. (213) 428-8780.
t!IOU'J'llSlll'f WDZL OF ..mJU).
8BIP. for slnglca over 45. meet for
Sunday supper and mu tc at 5 p.m.
Mimi"s restaurant. 17th at 55 Frtt·
~Tustin. 766-4130.
MK&TllfG PLACS Invitee
t>Ustnc:sa and profcastonal singles
25-45 years to a gathenng In Newport
Beaeh. A live mu.le voca.Jist and hors
cronavres are featured. e p.m. 815
~ua 81 yearly ~mbn'shlp stuca. ~5·2347 OT 720-0350.
Etc.
N.ls the courtyard at Bowcni Museum.
An cxhtbH af:contt':mporary palnUl\g!I
by Mexican muter arttsta are alao
fl"&tured. 11 a m.-6 p.m .. 2002 N.
Main St .. Santa Ana. Sl adult.a. :SO
cents for chlldttn. 972· l 900.
TBS CAL"°RJQA WOODS"
BOAT SHOW.~ Friday bat.Ing ..
TBS LAST QUAT onnua camaa olfera a two-hour Jazz
brunch (819.:SO) and a 6 p.m. cilnner
cnJl.e" (830) ol NewJ>Orl Harbor.
875-1481. • ••J'OC1J8 Ol'f PBOTOGJtAPBY,"
lltt Frtday =· COWll '8', a atamp how,
aee Se.turda)' llsU'&cJ TD OllAJtG& RI I MEJroD0 eoo&on and~ ·84 is held from 8 •.~-pm. atfl"l"eanon Elttbontu.
The open-air ne.ta. spomGred
a cook
ridc:s. pines. dancing and entertain· ment. 82.:SO adults. undu 12 free.
666 E. Dyer Rd , Santa Ana.
838-4550 COSTA 188A AJtT LEAGur&
Annual Open Jur1t:d Show, see Satur-
daW:lnfl.. , CATALIRA AltT •H-al .. l..,.VAL,
att FrtmyUaUng.
AM S8P 8PltCT ACULAa PSY-
CBJC RSTIV AL is eponsored by the
Loe~ Whofl Uc Group from 11
a.m.-6 p m. With 50 prominently
known psychics gatherrd. Ramada
Inn. le<>O £. F'trst St .• 'TU9ttn. S3 door donauon. (213) 871-8054.
Mon.
"111.Uf OP' LA llAllfCBA" at the
Forum Thcattt. Yorba LJnda. See
ay ltstfnlt· ra~ ~ .. ~~"'--""m.&.--+~~~~~~....:..~~~~~~
Sun.
Cl&Mical
TD OaAJIG& C001'TY llU-81C1AJ118 l'UllVAL la held today
reaturtng Tex Beneke as Grand Marshal. Big bands. dixieland. aym-
phony. country. cta.ulcal. Jazz and
rock are all featuttd. Noon-10 p.m.
The Newport er. 1107 Jamboru Road.
Newport Beach. 87 tax-«ducUble
adml Ion. under 12 frtt. 546-8166.
Coanb')'
TD 900'Tll COAST ftlO ~r
fonna folk music from 8 p.m.-mld-
ntght evcry Sunday.· Capistrano Depot. 26701
Verdugo. San Juan Caplatrano.
831-0232.
Jaa
SU.A J'ITZGS.a.A.U> appeara as
part of the Laguna Beach POp Mu~lc
tc:stJval. 7:30 p.m .. 650 Laguna Ca-
nyon Road. ~ Beach. 825 and
820 ticket.a lhrOugh Ticket.master or Sound SJ)«trum tn Lai!Una Beach. m u.o •·~aoa na. --TIVAL, ReS.turday tftlttn«.-
TD OOLD&lf SAOL-. .JAZZ
BA.IQ) pla19 at the "Amtrak Depot ...
3.7 p.m .• San J\llln ca~st.rano DA1USI. IT. 11Aal&D-'.& plays
the saxophone and oJON o.AJU>lC•
penorma on the piano. Jazz and 11.ght
pop for eeay Ustenl!1!J and dancing.
4·8 p.m .. Alexander a ltal&an res·
tauranl. 1565 Adam• Ave.. Coet.a
Mesa tnddlnlte. 241·0123 UDO JAZZ ALL 8TAJI&. 4-8 p .m.
and 9-11 p.m .. c.re Lldo. 2900
Newport Blvd.. Newport Bcach.
875-2968. 080llQS m aaxopboOC. and
ftAJll WM'RallllDO&. planO 3·8 p.m:~eano·e.22•1 w.eoaat H~war· Nf:wportBcech.lndtflnlt ~1 -138 .
I
'"SAJllf'I' .lOAJll" at South Coast
Repertory. See Friday listing.
&BRA'nO!I featwu mUS1c. dancing.
trad.IUonal crafla and great food lhat
FROM AllH&ST YOUR FAVORITE TITLES: * Mefttl ly N~ * l._.. ReMtMt i1 COMllrt * ..... * l..,. ...
Clil Tllit A• a PrtsHt It F•r ... 11101 r1rd1u1
Of ""fllTllllf• or •E•T "fllTlllll .. ~ ....._2_, T• AMelliltlfy FREET.,_ S.,~ 20dl
,..._ ...... .,.,... ....,_, l•T:D• (11 fM T• ,_ Cli•-'-""'
. '-:-/ -I. . . . . ~ v .. ·. 111·11• c~• AMF
17 &
Westdiff Plozo
NewJX)ft 8ooeh '!
t
f
j
a Piiot Weekender/ Friday, $eptember 14, 19tM
Calendar
GaEGOaTCOLEllAN,attFrtday
listing. -•
Jazz .
KURT VOLOU, att Saturday Ust-
I~ LIDO JAZZ ALL STARS
perform from 9 p m.• l :30 a. m. at Cafe
l..ldo. 2900 Newport Blvd .. Newport
Beach 675-2968.
Pop
PETE SEEGER, aomaz on.-
B~RT, ARLOGUTllR.Dtand HOLLY
NEAR perform at the Untver8al
Amphitheatre, 100 Universal City
Place. Unlvcraal City. 815 and
813.50. (213) 980-9421 .
URRY GBLTZELllAN, slnjter,
gultarplayer 9p.m.-1 a .m .• BlueBttt Cafe, I 07 21 t Placf', Newport Pier,
cwport Beach 675·3333.
Dance
CIJ&lllSTRT plays Top 40 mu lc fordanctngfrom 8:3<> p.m.-mldnll(hl.
Clo~ Encountf'rs, 21022 Brookhurat.
Hunttnl{ton Beach lnde ftnlle. . 968-9800
Etc.
DA VET'S LOCKER, IOC'at~ at the
Balboa Pav111on. features Mopday eve·
nlng cocktail crutsca dunng the sum-
mer. 673-S245.
COSTA llESA ART LEAGUE'S Annual Open Juried Show. sec Satur-
day Usllng.
Tues.-
Jazz .
PIA1'19T OLLY LeMAJBR, ~e
f'~llstlnl{
LIDO' JAZZ ALL STARS,~ Monday ll~Ung.t~
"l'fATIV& TOftGUJt," att Friday
II ~log
Theater
"ANYTlllPIG GOD" at the Cur-
tain Call Dinner Theater. Stt Frtday
II ting. "'fRE BSST LITTLE
WBOUROUSE IPf TltXAS" at the
Harlequin Dtnnt'r Playhouse. See Frt-
dAy llstlnl(.
"BOPPOLA." at the Grand Dinner
Theater. See Friday II ling.
"SAINT JOAN" at South Coaat
Repertory. See Friday listing.
DAVID RALEIGH, ~e Monday
listing. C01'Jl'UT PHILLIPS, Stt Friday "BWIN'l'fl1'0 PIA1'0." A Coll~(' llstln.c{ • for Kids proftran1 for age• 6 to 13
LES CZDIBER. l'!Cf' f'rfday llsttng. \x1:!1ns today. 3 15-5: 15 p. m. 825 ftt. Golden Wcst-(.'.oll• MWiJc.BJdf( .. Rm. Pop 200. 15744 Golden West St .. Hunt·
BAXTltR'S features the ....... ln5(ton Beach. 891-3991
nallca" who ~rform Top 40 mu-.tc "PERSOJ'f AL COMPUTER
lhrouith Sept. 29. Tuea.-Sat. 9;30 SPREAD SIJ&rr& f'OR BU~
p.m.-f:30 a.m."14346 Culver Or1VC\ PLAl'f!Ql'tO "Bustncs planning can
Irvine. 857-2103. be reduc-ed from day'I to minutes with
• A "8WI1'0 COl'fTEST JlflGBT" ts personal computer spread sheets fea~urt'd every Tuesday night at lkvelop skills to bcnf'Ot· career and·
Happy Daze. 17927 MacArthur Blvd., comf>.my. Tonll(ht and ~pt. 25. 7·9 Irvine. 250-1077. p.m. $30 fee. Golden We l College
LAJ'CC& 8ALLIPfO, stt Friday list-Fine Arta Blda.. Rm. 138, 15764'4
trig. 1 Golden West SL. Huntington Beach. ______ _,_ ______ ___:::;..__ __ _..;_ _______ _: 891·3991.
.·
. .. . .. • ..
Wed. nm RJOll'BOVa aaoruu
perform at 8 p.m. at The Hop, 18774
Brookhurst. Fountain Valley.
963·2366 TSDa URRY. see Frtda}· llsUng Cia..tcal . "011'0 AJfl) BILL," see Friday
listing. '
GREGORY COLltMAM, 9Ct: Frfday "CRAZY DA.ZS" Is tonlgjlt at llait~ Happy Daze •. l 7927 MacArthur Blvd ..
WDm C&LLAR, ett Friday Irvine. 250·1077.
llsuna. "NATIVE TOl'fGU'&, •• M'C Fr1d3)' •
II Ung. Country LilC& 8ALLIPfG, att FrJday llst-
KAUJf BADL&Y'8 COUJttllY Ing. Yll8JC SHOW Is held> lndeflnltely at BAXTER'S features the "Pa~ Marcel's. 8 nattca." att Tueaday listing
p.m .-mldnlght. 130 E. 17th SL. Cosla Th .. •ta•
Mc.a. 646·!l666 --
Jazz "ANYTBIPfO GOES" at the Cur·
taln call Dinner Theater. Stt Frfday
DA V1D RALltlOH, stt Monday ll ling
II Un~. ' ' T B E 8 & 8 T L I T T L E TOllllcLAIN,aln.gerandguttart"l. WHOUHOUSE 11' TEXAS" at the
8 p.m. midnight. The Cannery ltS-Hartequtn Dinl'l"r Playh~. Stt Fri· taurant, 301 Cafayette Ave., Newport dayltsttng.
&ach. lndeflnlte. 675-5777. "BOPJ'OLA .. at the Grand Dinner
COIO'UT PIDLLJPS, 8tt Frfday Thf'aler. See Fnday II Ung,
listing. "SAIPfT JOA.ft'' at SOuth Coa,l
LES C%111BltR. ~Friday llsttng. Repertory. Stt Frtday listing
RICK SBBRllA!t performs on ihe
keyboard at care Lido. 2900 Newport Workahoi-
Blvd .• Newport Beach. 675-2968. PIAJ'JIST DLLT LcllAIER. att "APPSTITS COftTROL: Eal Your
Friday listing. . Way To Sllmn ." Exerd~ the msb·
ROKJ'fl& 8ROWI'f and his trio. ett cons<!lousmlndto-exrh11ngeoldttHng
f'r1day listing. habits and overweight lmag~ for a
DORA OAn: a DREAM. popular mo~ slender you. TOnlght, ~pt . 26
LongBcachJau«roup.appearatCaJe and Oct. 3, 7:30-9:30 p.m. 823 fee. Etc. LagUna. 858 5. Coast Highway. Golden West College fine Arts Bldg ..
*PACIFIC WALK-INTHEATRES * Laauna Beach. 9 p.m .·1 a .m Room 138. 15744 Golden West St .• COSTA llE8A ART LEAGUE'S 49'7-5404. Huntington Beach. 891·3991.
BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Pwfomuinces Mondly * Annual Open :Ju~ Show,~ Satur· Sin.,...._
Tlma S.turdly (Except HoJidlys a Spec. E"flll'Mntl) day ll ttnq. ~-~·~u..~---~----
~ -~~]•f 3l ~:n:o'i~1~C:.ur s..i~ 1f+1i4ii;•I•]•I ~ J ••=:~er~:. =:f8:~·s'f~
r ~~-~ ~~•. ~~~~~=,~=~~~~~,~··~'~-~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~----~------~~~si~i-~~;~t600pm ~~n~~
Tt9PU ...... ere> m" (PC-IS) -...u .... {I) ~ SOVTBEJUf WBJ:ltL or IRIB1'fD-
lt4\. ll!> H\ 14), It¥> 11 t• 4. 'JI. IH •MllfS1tlll Maior Studio ~neak Preview SHIP, foratngt~agcd45orover. meet
"CIOl.lls" (PC) I~ s JS 10 IS I 00. uo UU:lO ltSS ~ at the Claim Jum~. Brookhurst at
"Tll WT STmaTll" IC! ll'.l &a Toni· dht & Tomorrow Night 405 Freeway. In Fountain Valley ror . -.... _..._ t;aA happy hour. 5· 7 p m. 768-4130 ·' • ·
17UttM 1411/l• ...... .,_. · ~
u ....... "--"' .. ~;;_.-.ii., • '"AU OF ME• IS A SlAPSTICK, HIPSTER HYBRID Etc.
1•>1s SJO 1•S =10•:.:....--OF 'HEAVEN CAN W.AlrAND 'TOOTSIE'. C08TA IUSA AltT L&AOUJt'S
Willi COMEDIES IN SHORT SUPPLY, IT M~ Annuti~ur1edSbow. sce.satur-
"MMllMll .. ltED'' (K-13)
IH~ 14t 4 lA. U~ SIU e
'1IOl£IO'" It., .... 11 -..alt
J1'0 HS •aca.J -.L ODDS" (I)
1.·1e H~ llttl
~-.JA It,
M~TQI" (I)
IH~ 145 40 ' lltlf\ It~
•PACI DRIVE·IN THEATRES
* CINE·fl SOUND! At these symbols F•t soud net to your AM Clf *
radio. If no radio Wtth eccmory position, "'"" yow ... AM p0f1llltt.
All OPEN 6:45 Start Dusk ChilchnlMdef 12 ALWAYS FIEE
MJ~M1!4ftti3I•i:::~·.~r. lt~·) 1§1!.ii.!!N1fi!th
* * SU,ER SWA, MEETS b"ery SAT. A 5'11t41v• • cm1 ·t .. 1u •:ru, .. --.t1 l.
l'UIS (I)
"C..U.J ... (I) I ........ nr
lllPU\P"" -.-..-e
"ID OA.-(PS.lJ) l'llll "fWU Ull" (I)
i:QUU4t\Ji31°~::1.::!'oi:::,.) * "'fW••" (I) I "mol.llS" (PS) PUIS * l'UIS "Cir (I) _ "CCIM Tit DDTIOltl" (PS)
....... ftil 11inttitl"lll)l'\US "IOCIUS""
11Hl "llltl .. •-.... I CH co. ... Go ... '°" * "MN .... (I) "NITllPI" (I) l'\ct. ....mi"~ (R) • "Tll ~IN! IJPOI.
.. ,. ... Tt ... (PC)
l'\111 ~mll1'1"(1)
ORANGE ~
* * "cllSTllSTtlS" (PC)
l'UJS "'RH·~ (I)
La HABRA .. ~~.
I.,._..,...." 1."llJt ..... , l."IP ......
WARNER .
ut!:·11~11 ... ~
I. "1t• NI & ............ fCI I. '111 Ul1 .. _. fll
1.-...--(J)
aA UA...,.,
lll().4022 .... .... ,.
UAMovils 952.-1 .. ,.
PROVE lliE BEST OF lliE SEASON.09 dat:gu.3iroAL AKTJQU&a asow AJ'fD 8ALlt of Newport Harbor Art
Museum begJna wtth a pla o~ntng
evcnJ.na tonight. 6-10 p.m .. follow~ by exhibltlona through Sunday. $40
admission Includes compllmentary
wine and buffet. Exhlblrlon hours
Thurs . ..sat. 11 a.m.·8 p.m .. Sun. 11
a.m.-5 pm. 850 San Clemente Or1vc.
Newport ~ach. 759-1 l 22.
COITAMUA
(Own Cllema
S4&-31Q1 u1,...
caTA MIU UIUM tlL.LI [dwlrdsl-... WllTI •1 nu
Cdwlrdl SOllllt Cod SftorTI Lipa HIS £..-MlllOI UA lMn CllemM
PllDS4f.2711 Mii 7'9•11 VlljOMll4aC!20 ~ .... ..... ..... ..,.
'Thu.
<mSOORY COL&llAN. ~ Fnday II 1Ung ..
TD WIJU CELLAR. ett Frtday
listing.
ma.I TSIOA1'1tA conducts the
California Chamber Vtrtuoel tonight
at Cal Slate LonlJ Beach. The program
tncludca Mozart s Quintet In G mt nor.
K.516 and MencJels.ohn'• Octecl.
Opus 20. 8 p.m.. University Mu"llc
Center Rccttal HalJ. 88 ~neral . 84
~nlors and atudenta. (213) 498·5526
Jass
TOM lllcLAJJf, sec Wedncaday II t·
"f;S; CZDIBSR. ett Friday ltsttng .
DORA OAIL a DJtLUI,
Wcdnetlday list.Ina
MA81l 1aa&LI. AND TBS Ut18M ascTIOPI, evenings. In·
ddlnJte. Old Dana Point Cafe. ~4720
Ct-I Pnado. Dana Point. 661·6003. .
UCll aDIUIAJlf, e« Wcdn~say
It sting.
Dil'VKY TRA n.oa. ett&aturday
U.tlng.
PIAJllaT DU. T Ldl.ADR. ~e
F~~=na, a aC>W'Jll and ht tno. ~
Fr1day Uettn& OOllnLST PBIU.U'e, etc Frtday
Uttl111&. . .
nsPBAJnS ATU • PJU&JCDe •
Calendar
and the Rada Prloa Tito. ~ Friday
listing.
..;;....._.,.._.,--~--~-~~
Pop
TD IUORTSOUS aaonmaa.
see W~nesdayllallng.
PSTER. PAUL• MARY perform al
lht' Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre.
740·2000.
"CUATIV& TDD llAl'fAOS-IURT." Specific t~hntque. to find
time In a busy 11ehedulc are taught. ~m to deal with clutter. tnler-
rupUon . echcdull!'Cand ~rullna· lion. Toni ht and 5ept. 27. 6:30-9:30
p.m. 826 fee. Golden Weal College HumanttlealJldg . RoOm l07, 157«
Colden West St .. Huntington Beach.
891-3991. r=--
day listing.
TB• lft·TBE·W AT•t USSD
BOAT SHOW begins today and runs
through Sunday at Lido vmaae. Boata
on view will be In the 30 to 70 ft. range.
Newport Beach. 673·9360.
. AdTance Bllllnl
* PUot Weekender/ Friday. September 14, 49" I
.•
DARA WBA.RP at Dana Point
Harbor offers half-day if"lnd three·
quarter day aportflahlng trip&
496-5794.
DA VBrSLOCDllalsooffmicSttp
ea sportflshln& trips dally.
673-5245. .
DISJR.YLA1'1>, 131.3 HarbQr Blvd .
Anahf'lm "Date NWit" ts pttSCnted
Saturday night ancfTcatum1 "Cheap
Trick," the "S.O.S Band;' "Shan·
non," "O'Bryan.-trn<!-Papa DooRt'hi
Run" on at.age. A ~lal prl« Teen
Passport ror S-9 Isa vallablef or 8#9 l 3
to l "l ·after 5 p m Al$o, "Di>nald
DuCk'• 50th Blrthday earac1c··
present~ t 3 and 7 p m turday
and Sunday. Senior Fun Unlimited
Passporta vatlabfc to~· 60 yean
bf e and over CVCT)' "ntur&day nd l'flCK PTZOW. slng('r. guitar, har·
monlca. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Blue lket cafe.
1()7 21st Place, Newport Pier, New-
p6rt lkach. 675·3333.
Lectaree
IOUTB COASTSTIIPBONT dJrtt· tor/conductor John Larry Cranier
conducts pre-concert ltttures that
explore the hlstor1cal and styltatlc
attrtbutea of the compositions and
enhance participants' enjoyment of
theconrert.s. Cu eat arUsta wlll partici-pate-when poulble. 7:30·9:30,p.m..
Oran~e Coast College'• Robert 8.
Moore Thc.tre, 2701 f'alrvtcw Road.
Costa Mesa. $2 adml5slon. 432-5527.
"JlflGBT 01' TBlt llA8Q1Jlt" auc·
tlon and ball ts planned by the
Newport Harbor Art.Museum on Sat .. ------------------------------Oct. 27. Ha.t~ by Bullocks Wllshlre
In F'. hlon I t.&nd. U featura more TED. uaaY. stt Frtday II Ung.
BAXTER'S features the "l"'"a-
nallcs."' stt Tue.day listing.
"011'0 A1Q) BJLL," att f'nday
listing. • LAJfCS SALUllG, sec Friday II t-
ln11. "NATIV& TO!fQUE," Stt Friday
llslln1.
Dance
THE TRACT W'&LL8 BIG BAM>.
for your dancing plea ur~ 8:30-11:30
p.m .. The CaUiomlan. 16431 Bol.5a
Chic , Huntington &ach, 82 ad·
ml Ion . 846·1347.
'BALLROOM DAl'fCIJllG, 8 pm.·
ml<Uilght. Dance lesaons 7-8 p.m. Al80
door prtzes. Meadowlark Country
Club. Graham Street. Huntington
~ ch.
Theater
"A1'Tl1ll1'G GOU" at the Cur·
tatn Call Dtnner Theater. Stt Friday
listing.
"TH& BEST LITTLE
WBOUll008B °'TEXAS" at the
Harlt>quln Dtnner Playhouse. Stt f'ri·
daX~i~LA •• at the Grand Dtnner
Theater. Stt Fr1daX listing. "SADn' .JOAJll' at SOuth Coe.st
R~~~~ ~":/ 1~::1'c1cmente
Community Theater. 'See Frtday list·
~~ ---~-~--------Worb)aope ·-·
"SOLO LIVll'fO WITH STYLE." A
four-wttk lecture/dlscu Ion with
topics lnelUd.lng .. Opening a Con·
versatlon and -Xecptnit It Cotng,"
.. Verbal and Nbn·vtrbafCommunlca·
Uon." "Lonely, Alone or Solo." and
:·Ltmcrance. Love or Addiction." Led
by Roealle Kfoury, M.A. 810 tndlvtd·
ual workshops. 7-10 p.m. through Sept. 27. Promontory Point
Clubhouse. ;zoo Promontory Ortve W ..
Newport Beach 64~4-03~~7...;;5.;.... -~-
Slnglee
"llltTAMORPBOSIS: Growing
Through The Separation." Avoid pit·
l';llls which cau~ "breakdown rather
than a break through and learn to
emerge from a separation. divorce or ckath po6ltlvely. 7:30-10:30 p.m. 88
fee. Colden We_t ColJ~e Communll.)
Center, 15744Golden West St .. Hunt·
lngton Beach. 891 ·3991. • Etc.
Aft AJnruAL AJllTIQtJlt8 SHOW
A1Q) SAJ,S, see Wcdneaday llstlng.
C08TA llBSA AJlT Llt.AGut'S
Annual Open Juried Show, eee Satur·
than I 00 nationally recognlz~ and
emerging artl5ta who have creat~
ma ks to be auctioned off. The masks
will be exhfblt('d ~nnlng Ort. 4 at
the ·musucm. 862~ per pt'r:son
Rl'.M>rvat1on1 may be made by calling
759-1122.
"Tlllt ART or SILK PLOWER
11.AJUl'fG," an t"lght·wcek courae In
which students en-ate their 011m floral
arra~ements. Is offc.'~ at the lrvtnl'
Fine Arts Center on Thul'.l'lda)'li from
10 .s.m.-ooon beginning Sept. 'J.7. 836
rec doca not lnclui!c m tertab
552-1078. A TRA VBL·STUDT CLASS lo New
York 1$ present~ bv the Fullerton Coll~e Fine Arts Department. Bill
Gia man, who tearhea Introduction
to Opera <'la s. guides the partlcl·
pants to Ix museum • thrtt operas.
two Broadway show • two conttiU
and also featuru a half-day Man·
halt.an city tour. Pre-trip class
se-sslons are Jan. 7, 8, 9. 14. 15. 16.
fmm ~81gg·m· with the trtpoccumng Jan;-87 H> lnrludea air trans·
portatlon. double ocrupancy hotel
accommodations, and a low cost
muacum. Opt'ra. the ter and concert
packagt", plus city tour. 1'r1ple oc-
cupancy Is 8664. 997-8844.
Oa&oi.DC EYents
BJllOGS CUl'f!ONGllAll AUTO-
llOTIVlt llUUUll. 250 E~Baker St., Coata Mesa. Antique ca.rs cir('& 1912·
pt'Qt'nt. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. W~ -SUn.
546-7660. .
An Al's Garage Bclsic· •.. for Baek to School
Stubbies from Aus1rofio designed b the OCTiYe llfesf',ie with the sMinQ
and cut that tels 'rOJ ITl()l,'9. Treat yourself to the comfort ot S1ubbie
~~~
56 FASHlON ISLAND • NE\NPORT BEACH · (714) 644-7030
~ . _,._
''Many layered and funny,
Alan RudolP-h 's 'Choose Me' is an L.A. flower,
a neon orchid-hip, outrageous, beautiful:·
" 'Choose Me' is marvelous
entertainment. 'Amazing!"
.HERALD lXAMIMCI, Drrid Otutc
'• 'Choose Me' is not only the sexiest ftlm
of the year, but also one of the funniest."
SEATtLE TIMES, Jim EMCrson
In the middle of the night,
when there's no one else ...
Ck"'4L M~ a a serious comedy
Genevieve
Bujold
Keith Lesley Ann
Carradine Warren
1u111m1111a u.u••
aft UI· ... lllff • 911·• • tm·Plll ..
-ftNll ft lllf,... £ltlM lmBS., ••• u:mn
1E111.-•&1Pm11•ta1 ••IDI
llJTtl • EU If U m11 1 l!UI Ill •-
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
FIL l1IO. l:OG. ltoo
SAT l 20. UO, 5 4S, lj)O, I 00
edwards TOWN CENTER
. . . .... . . 151418~
•
•
•
..J
•
.....
1 e Piiot Wee«enOf//f/ Friday, September 14, 1984
' Galleries
llOSEUllS TBS An'SaJllOOR GA.LURY. CBIUSTIARTBOllASOALL&JlT.
801t'D81111J81ttJll. 2002 N. Main 503 Park Ave •. Bait.. lalaod. SpcctaJ. 100 l W. 17th St .. Suite T. C.ta Mesa.
St., Santa Ana. "Reflections: Paint· lztng In .. emerging ar11sts" Sandra An exhibition of abstract acu.lpturaJ
togs of Jerry Wayne DowN" features Deeb. Karen F~ra~n<lot • .Joy Pat· flgurca featurtng the work or Annie
SUITO.Uatlc works=he eo.t.a Mee. t.erson. Drawings, patoUngs. and HCaly ts featured. Abo at.tract oU
ar1Jst about tech '• dTecta on Moonprlnts. P-ermaneot South· paintings by John ~er. lnddlntte.
mankind. Runs 1 nJtely. Houra western Art corner wtth a 8dedJon or Tua -sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Mon . ..sat. 10 a.m.·5 p.m.. Sun. New Mextco pottery and sculpture. C08TA IB8A AaT L&AGUS
noon-5 p,m. 972-1900. Tues.-Fr1. 2-6 p.m .• Sat.-Sun. noon-5 memben Cilor1a We~. Ira Dobbe.
LAGURA DACH 111JUOll OF p.m. 675-8675. and Roeemary Panluet.z display thelT
ART, 307 Cllff Ortve. Openl.llg Tun.-ALL&JllDAL& GALLSRY. 1540 S. watCTCOlors at Cilenda.le Federal Sav·
day Is "Callfomta Contemporary Art· Coast H.lghway. Laguoa Beach. Htgh.ly tngs offices In Fashion Island. Orange
I ts 22:· New works on ha.ndmade poUsbed bronze aculptun:s by the COUt Savings at Adams and Mea
papt"r by Cathy Morehead, and mlxed Bennett Brothers ol Placerville. In· Ve~ Eut Tn eo.t.a Mesa features
mnila lyrfcal abetiactlons by Barbara definite. Tues.-sun. l I a.m. to 5 p.m. palnU~ by Alyce R1cha.rds. Grace
Weldon are shown. Abo ahowtrig art' 497-6005 MeJjanlan's palnllng,9 are shown at
"Aspects or Color: Works on Paper" AllTI9'r8GA.LLE&Y. 11 Monarch thee.ta MeaaCMcPlayhouae.John
from the Hfrshhom Museum and Bay Plaza. South l..agur\a. A o~·man Ceols shows ht.s artwork at the Mesa
Sculpture Garden. which coosJsta o( show ol ofl palntlnga by Wayne Forte. Verde Llbraly ln eo.ta cea; Through
a .m .-4 p.m. 871-5862.
SLAJlt GAU.gwtJZS, 1492 S. Coast
HISlway, No 7. Laguna Bea.ch.
Palr1ck N8'ed. known for hla •leek and amsuous -Playboy WuatratJ.ons. ta
currmtly showtrac his worb. Wed.·
Sun. 11a.m.to5 p.m. 494-1902.
SIDAl.M GA• •.a•T DITEK·
!fA110RAL, 384 Forest Ave .. No
13A, Laguna Beach. The G~ f~tun:s Lat.tn-Amerlcan Corporate
Ar1 with Annandloa Loa.00 prcs-
enUng paintings tn putd, Vernon
TeTTy exhlbiUng acufpcura ln cut cement. bronze and alabuter. and
AntonJo Stclnhardt featurtng pho-
tography tn color and black an<f white.
nirough Sept. 30. Tues..-Sun. 1 l a.m.
to 6 p.m.. and by appotntn\C11t.
497-5303.
GLOJlY JDJ.L. 416 31 Sl .. Can·
nery Vll)age. Newport Beach. PaJnt·
1.ngs by c::\orta Brade80n featur1ng "SCenee of N"'J>Ort" lllT exhlbltccf.
Tucs.-Sat. 11 a.m. to 5 £ m. GUGOSJIODDl OAI &RT. Chap·
man College. 333 N. ClasldJ. Ora.ngco. "Since Vietnam: Th~ War and Tte
Altermath"I ahownwtthacolltttton
of Vlttna.m related works by 17
artlsta. prtmarlly from California.
997-6729.
32 abstract and representatJonaJ nattve Southern Cil.ltfomJan, Is held. Septern~.
gouache and oU patnungs. water· Through Sept. 30. 1\aes.-S.t. 10 COSTA IDSA•a AJlT llOllfTB ts .-.;.;,
40• rok>ra.andcolomipendl~by a.m.-6p.m .• Mon. l~p.m.661·9352. saluted wtlh the second, year of --•--•.i•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•m?•lliiiiiiiiillll __ _
JaVDIS P1JU ilT8 CEJlfl'SR.
4601 Walnut Ave .. lrvtne. "In the
Form of Fumltuft," a group Uhl·
blUOn ol functional and non-func· Uonal contemporary art furniture and
other dTecta Of the bom~reeentnt
through drawt~ ~ or~ aCa1e Sculpturt. beaJna tOday With an
AmetreliharidEUropean . m CALLIORAPBIC A.aTS-, ZH9 dtsptaj'tngtne'bcsfofover250enb1es ?
the latt' I 9th and 20th ttntums. and Main St.. 137. Huntington Belich. ln Jewel Court ol the South Coe.st I c I d
"CaUfomla tU~or1cal ArtJsta I: Mabel OIUJnal artworks and pr1nts by eev· Plaza through Sept. 22. AD fine arts a e· n ar. Alvarez and Elanor Colburn." featur· erar regJ<>nal and lntematlonal arUsta. media are repreaented.
1111( two hl$0lly stgntflcant flgu~Uve Including ~J~phy and handmade DBSJGRS llBCTCLED OALL&KT.
painters wlloee careens n:ached their papeT plecee. lneae brush paJnttng 619 N. Harbor Blvd.. Yullt'rton.
peak ln Southern Calflomta dunng and watercolora.. lndeflnJte. Mon.-&t. "Sculptural Ci '84," a two-man
the late 19209. Both through Sept. 23. 1 ·5 p.m. 960-5775 gJa.sa exhlbU. featutt.a Randy Strong ""'-'A-
Tucs.-SUn. 11:30 a.m ..t:30 p.m. CAL STATlt l"OLL&aTOR, Main and Mike Jones.~ Sept. l2. 9'..._y.~F"rt~-em.-6p.;' .. Sat. 494-6531. Art Gallery. 800 N State College. Mon . ..sat.10a.m.to6p.m.879·1391. a.m.· a.m.. a.m .· p.m .•
lltfntlll OP NORTH ORA!fGE Recentworkllor37~aJumnlare SAllTlrS. 11lBASURJt8. 1540 s. Mon.·Thura. 10 a .m.·6 p.m. 999-4565. . . comnT, 301 N. Pomona Ave .. Full· exhtbUed. Through .. 0. Mon.-Frt Coast HJJthway. Suite· 104, Laguna. IDfO'IT8 mJlT FAJUI. 8039 erton .. The G~t lntemaUonaJ noon·4 p. m .. Sun. 2-5 p. m. 773-334 7 Beach. Tfie largest pr1vate colledlon Beach Blvd .. Buena Park. The exctte-
Manonette and Puppet ExhlbtUOn" ls CBAJlfDLSll OALL&aY, 7745 ol jaM and Ivory carvtngs ts on ment and color ol the Old West arc
shown through Sept. 23. It traces the Herschel Ave .. La Jofla Grand open· display. Tues.·Sun. I 0 a.m.-5 p.m. featured wtth WUd West Stunt Shows,
dt'velopment or this art form from tl8 tng wtll feature the sober and dar1ng 494-4193. Cancan dancers. authenttc
folk origJn. to the hU!hly developed latld9capn by Patr1ck Tobin Of TBS &DOS, 212 N. Harbor Blvd.~ atagecoaches. and narrow-gauge thcaleT form. Tues.·Pri. 10 a .m -3 LagunaBeach.ArecepUonfrom5to9 Fu.ller1oo. Recent work by Kay WhU· trafnslnKnott'SChostTown ... Studio
p.m .Sat.10a.m.·5p.m .. Sun noon-5 p.m!Salurdaywtllfeatureanappear-ney and Jan Taylor ls featured. A K" offers a Video Dance Party each
p.m 738~545 ancc by the artist. Wed.-sat. l.l a.m. reuptlon ts hdd Saturday rrom 7-9 Saturday. Live perfonnancea ol JJm
___ ....;G;;...;.;AL=L;;;..E;::;;..;;;:R;;;;t.D;;;;t:S;..;:;.._ ____ to_7..;.p_.m_ .. _Sunda _ __:Y~l ·_5..:.p_.m_. --:-----y-...::P:....·m.:....... Th:........rough:..:....:~...,.::Oct:..;:..:..._1_:2:.... . ....::Tues..::.:=·...:-S.=L:.....:.,ll:...., Turner's ·"nae CountJY Mu.sic Star of
"IT'S A BLOCKBUSfER, ·
A WLLAPALOOZA, A CLASSIC.0
_:_Rex Reed, New York Post
•ancl thei
1111 tUJ f/171L Ii' lt!l/P' fr!Jlt!Jl.IJJNtJ _
• COST A ME.SA
( dw3rd$ Soulh CoMI
Plw ~2711
NOW PLAYING
U/XUIW rHIAntfS
WALK·INS * Fin1 r--.. ... a--* Olll.Y SUi U.. fhtJ DRIVE -INS :~~
STADIUm a
DOWNEY SAVINGS
PRESENTS
Laguna Beach Pop
Music Festival
ELIA AlZGERALD
SUn .• Sept. 16 1·30 p.m
the Lawren<'e Welk Sho•:· JI~
Shannon's "Ireland's Lc>vable •
caJ Clown." and Antonio Hoyos'· e
Little CbarUe Chaplin" are featured.
Knoll's wtU be open Fri. 10 a .m.-6
p.m .. Sat. 10 a .m.·11 p.m .. su.n. 10
a.m.·8 p.m.. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6
p.m. 220-:5200.
LIOR COUHIR'I' SAFARI. 8800
trvtne Center Drive. Laguna Hill&. The new acUon adventure enterlalnment
center. sum>unded by a warm tropical
setting. off era thr1lle to the excitement
of new rldea,,,...,, Sahara .Maze Track.
and Kylaritl Slick Track. Advmtun!ra
can race mldllet formula can on a
wtndinggravertrack and/or on a steak
sUck LraCk .. For nauUcaJ advcnturens.
J~ Tube Bumper 00.t and
Shanillee Racer Boat flttt. have been
expanded. CrulR on the ZArnbczl
River, ~ unlqtx animal cxhJblt&.
and take a hike throt.IRh lush nature
tratJ. OpenS dally 9:45' a.m_ Jaat .car
admJtted 5 p.m. 837·1200.
TD L08 AJllGIU.U ZOO, 5333
Zoo Ortve, 1.o9 A•les. Yun Yun and
Ying XJn. a pair Ol'.gJant pandas on
loe.ri from the People'• Republic of
China th~ October, can be eeen
from 10 a.m.·& p.m. dally. (2131 666-4650.
TD PA VILIOll gugu off era tour
crullMS ol Newport H&rboc'. ahowtng
the oo.ne. ol John Wayne and other
peraonallUea. from the Balboa
Pavtllon In Newport Beach. Dally
ev..-y hour. noon through 3 p.m.
673-52-45. TDQO'ESJI llAJlT ARD 8PllUCE oooes. located at the eouthemmc>8t
poant ol the Lollg Beach FTttway.
Houts fo a.in.~ p.m datly. (l13l
435-3511. .
llAGDIO 1'A'l'ltlt8, 111 Via Verde
Drive. San Dtmaa. The &areesl water·
oriented amU9e1De'flt park west of the
Rocklesfeaturee the wave cove. ktddle
pool.a. two speed alldea and four
acrpenttnes. New a.ctMUee Inch.Mk
The Dropout, Ram~. and R ng RSvens (the longest ln~r tube: waCeT
rtdeln Amcrlca). Mon.·f'11. lOa.m.-10
p.m .. Sat.-SUn. 9 a.m.·10 p.m. Cloeea
Sept. 23. 592-6453.
8A1' .JOAl't C:APISTRA1'0 Ml8SIO!l.31882Camtno~~no.
San Juan Capistrano. caltfornla's
oldeat bulldJ.ng. Nauve Amerlcan and
early Span!Sh culture exhlbttfll.
493·14l4.
8BJ;PMAJ1f LIBllART AJllD GA.ll-
D&JllS. 2647-PacUlc Coe.at Highway.
Corona de I Mar. Roses. cactus. annual
prdens. an orcbkl conservfltm-x... kol ponds 1md a gtft"Show. D:rtty;-10:30
a.m.-4p.m.
SIX l'LAOS llOVIELAJllD. 771 l ~ach Blvd.. Buena Park An
elaborate collection of movie and
televtslon memorabllJa tnc-ludtng life·
like replicas of mo~ than lOO re·
nowoed atan are featured. New
exhibits Include Carol Burnett. Mr. T
and Ronald Reagan. Frt.-5at. 9
a.m.·10 p.m .. Sun.-Thura. 9 a.m.·9
p.m. 522·1154.
SPllOCB G008S, adjacent to
R.M.S. Qum Mary. PterJ. LongOcach tlarbor. World's lar)(est atumlnum domehouaeeHowardft~ ·world·~
larlest ecaplane. See the Quttn Mary llatl~ U~UIAL8TUD._l'001l.100
Untversal City Plaza. Untvcnal City. A
IUJded. beblnd·tbe...cenc. ucuraton
lhrough HolJywood'~ btJtrlcst and
busiest rnovte·TV comnyreex. 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. daily. (818 877-1311.
AIE YOU LOOKING FOi ENTERTAINMENT?
for Parties, fund Raisers, and
OXNllD aLUES CN-1a 1 :JO 3:H • 5:40 t :SO SN~K ATl100
lta> OAWW (PG-1~) Sllowt at 12 30 3:00 I-SO 1 ·00
.6 I0.30
..,.k.ll ""' .. ,..., AT 12 41 J :OS 1.21114$ 6 tO OS
Clint Rutw•eil ~ .. J Shows at 12135 2:~5 5:20 7150 .. 10:15
•Irr M,.,.,.., Daft AYkrO)'d
~-.. , S&owu at U 125 2:40
4155 7121 t :I0/70 MM
T .. WO_,. .... .._., ........ ""'' hclletor ll'art)' ("l
·~OPTMS ..... (llOPtu1
... 1111)''1 ,.,
..... llA~&Tlllt ·--~ ... T_.. .. ...._IN) Ptu1 c: ...... ture~
Siio.rs ., U :OO r.ao Th• LUt St.rfltllt•r(..a) l !OO 7:3• & 10:00 IN70MM
Eil'EJ•UJ;l2J~v:;a::+M ... ) :::~:?~::,
Albert f'lnne:r I IWJIT.. • ...... INJ010I "°LCAlll» ra> Cena11 Tfle Oettr•y•r At l :OO l lfO & lt:JO (~)Alt 00 & 10 to
OIUVl 1111 OtiNta .._ II fMf .,.._ ....,.,,,_ t ti M
GORDON UGHTfOtiT
Sun.. Sept. 23 7:30 p.m.
IRVINE BOWL
LAGUNA BEACH
.........,. trMY .at• o mt°" .ar-riCQr!'...,..-
Af •Y f;l#Nl't .. f\US, ..... $PfC1flUll
..allNMf ilQl11IMl'lllCIWllf SJ•Jl •2111 •
(1141 7 ... *9 (II( $Alf NOW 52H2HIS
W. ... •u•tit~ ~~
A 8lod l Fry &. ASIOC Amai llorlon
Special Occasions
,
Sui Voices Singing Yoor fo'l()(rto Songs 111 the
St)'fo of the Big Bond Vocol Groups of the 40s & 50,
Coll Pot Webltef (714) 131-1236 You'I Be Pleased
to Hear About Our tootOf'IOblo R01cs
Galleries
1 opt>nl"J( ~n from 7·9 p.m. Alao
on exhlblt are ••Bruce Houston: Aa· sembt~;· and DOnald Sutherland'•
sculpture exhibit en tu.led ··oracam." AU through Nov. 10. Mon.·Thura. 9
a.m.·9 p.m .. Fri. 9a.m .-6 p.m., Sat. 9
a.m.·iJi.01· 652·1078 1'S RT B&ACB CITT BALL
QALLEll'r, 3300 Newport Olvd ..
Newport Beach. Vincent Fafi"ell
txhlbita oils. acryucs and 1nll draw·
Ing& Alao James L. Thompeon'e
sculpture la shown. Throud\ Oct. 3. Mon -Frt. 8 a .m .. 5 p.m. 5~.1258.
m.lXed med.la a.rt.a ofter a conum•ntary
on eoclctal customs. Thf"OUllh Oct. '12.
Wcd.-Sun. noon-5 p m. 54§..4989.
PltlflR8ULAOALLUY. 428 31st
St .. Newport Beach. An Innovative UM: ~l el, normally uac:d only for
ta. has ~ a eerlt9 of Uful land9C8pr paintings by Loa
Munford on e:ahlbtt. 673-1416.
UIJOllUll. 374. N. Cout H!lhway.
Laguna Beach. Jan~ London'• wata--
oOIOna and~a H.oegerman'a oUa are shown th Oct. 1. 10 a.m. lo 5
p.m. dally. 4 22.
8ARD8TOR&OALLltRY. 384-A N.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Shirley Aml>u~ ptftents ··ldyUwUd
lmpreaelOna" ln' wattteolor fn the
Studio Callery. and "People and
Places." by gallery members. ls
ehOwn In the Main Callery. Dally 11
Hofer, paJnUngs; ~n H. Jone& drawh·tgs: OonaJd an, ttra.mJc
aiculpture: and James wtu.cr, photo-
graphs. Th~~. 22. :rue..-sat.
l la. tn.·Sy3_&lm. 545·ARTS. UC IR rm& AlrT8 ~
LEllY, lmnc. ''The Clllt(oroJa Prom-
ise: Five Flt'tcha-~ Artllta'. te
featured with Steve Ariiularoag. Rich-
ard Bef.ooen, Torn Dowtin«•·. BW
Puk.ewttz.. and Vldd Ryan. Thurs.· Sat. l l a .m.4 p.m . Th~ &opt. 22.
97 .. 9286.
VOllPAL GALI.UY, 326 GJm-neyre. Laguna Beal'h. An cxhlbUlon ol
woodcuta and llthqO"apha by, U.C.
Escher ls preecntf'd. Thl'OUIUI Oct. 21.
Dally 11a.m.-6p.m .494·9441.
Plot Weekender/ ~. &lptaalber 14. t984 11
ORA1'G& COASTCOLLSO& Photo
Gallery. 2701 Fairview Road. eo.t.a
Mesa. An cxhtblUon al color photo·
graph• fused wtth draWfOO and col· ~ by Joanne Leonard, lonntt pho·
t~r>hcr of a U.S. Olympic team. ls
on d!spliy th~ Tuclida.y. Philip
Tnt,1.?er a ptctures ihoM~:_puaSon foe.~ bulldtn&t ol n ~ on
d play WednClday through Oct. 16.
t.ton.·•·r1 . 8 a .m.-5 p.m. arid 6-9 p.m ..
clc>etd Tucada~ eYCnlng. 432·5039.
a.m .-4 ~.m .. clo ed Mondays. Th~~~7-6775. --=----.......... -.-.... -===== ~ QAI tgRT, 522-
OIUJllG&Hl I Cmn'IUl POR
CONTSllPOaAJIY ART. 3621 W.
MacArthur Bl~ 111. Santa Ana.
BcalnningWed ythrttSoulhcm
CaTtfomla artJM.e are featunld In
"Metaphyalce and Symbolism.•"
Mar1ue Johnston employs oll enamel
on canvu wltb twuah, stick.a .and f'l~. Cllarloltc M)'el'8 U8CS acrylic.,
otl atkk and collage on papn-and
canvas, and ~um Pat Sparkuhl'a
()ld Newport Blvd., Newport Beach.
Fe9tured·are new photograph.a from
Hawaii by Brett Weston; bn>nu and
wood sculpture by Henry EManchJnJ:
and f"reoch sUll llfe by Jean-Pterre
Sudre. Through Oct. 6 Tues -sat. 10
a.m.to5L."t:3l~. Tl.KO RT. 611 Anton Blvd ..
Suite 120. c.osta Me&a.t "Up and
Coming" features six dynamic new
arttsts. some tn Their flrat exhlbltiOn.
Artiste Include Mary Ann Blak~ and
Karen FU90n. sculpture; Brett Gwtar
"THE BEST HOLLYWOOD
MOVIE OF 19841"
"A tough, engrossing detective thriller?
_...,,.~
PACll:MMl:llOR• ,.., t1 11 \ODI
mASlt-"39 -~MZA """ ..... .. ,..152~993
IMllM'..SI ... _ .. 911
a,_stt.o EDMmS SAM ruc;a n-•.,...,
•Judlltl Cfllt. WOA-TV
.,.,. lllOt l4l-OJla
[IJllNDS 1Ufllllil<*
llllOl Al -& UllS
-~11
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Preach / atU1 life pboto-
oapba OD eablblt at 8•U
8plrtt118 O.Ocry. 522 014
Kewport 81•4., Kewport
Beach tb.roqb Oct. 8.
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IZ Pttot Weekend«/ Friday, September 14, 1984
Early Bird Dinner
Specials '6.9S
Pri me Rib or Fresh Fish
. ill TEXA
nee, a 1. =Black Angus steer;. hielpe the Gourmet Coffee ~ launch a new advertlstnp campaign
"We've Got the Beef! And More." Ttffs alogan Is the chain's
answer to the popular phrase coined earlier this year bY one of
Its competitors. For the locatlon nearest you, call 1-800-GOT-BEEF. . · .
'Tomb with a View' turns
in to hilarious ti.il_dert-ali-ing
Toi
Tnus
10 characters remain 1:>n their feet at
thefinalcwwn;it'suptoyou toSUC9
which two.
The convoluted plot isn't witty
enough to be satire, although tltis seems to be the intention since it's a
scndup of the lhriUer ieore. but it
sooceeds quite nicely~ Ca.roe. The
play is set in the isolated mansion of
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AdultS Children wider 3
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Earty Bird Dinnen 3:30 to 6:30
Complete Dinner Including
Soup and Salad. & Dessert •5."
Lunch Buff et
M-F I 1-3. '3. 95
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Hclrdll9fon llHdt M2·SIOS
the "Totnb family (th:af1 ri&bt: it:S
their name), a areedy. arucsome,
p-otesque lot made all the more
unpleasant by the news that their
rtoentl)' ~ father bu Willed
most of his inheritance to a romance
noYebst he's never met.
Once the hein arc pthercd it's
open season on one 111d all, lmd the
Grim Reaper cuts a wide swath with
lus scythe. The first few departuns
arc sWtlina. but after a while thinp
settle down to a deadly deja ru.
Dtrector Aida POITO$-Gf'iasby has
assembled a talented cast ~ble of
pa.iotin& over the hoJes in the ploL
They're all aiveo free man -pa111cularly the five • Tombs -
~ ... 'TOllB/Pap 13)
Now Serving
COUNTRY STYLE
SUIDIY$199 IRUICH
GULLIVER'S
t:AJJ New
CX>inner CMenu
~
CJ'rime 'flibs of '7leef
R£SERVATIONS ESSIJNTIAL/
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Get good deals on
used-items in the.
classified pages
Daily Pilat
NEW
INN~WPORT
OLD
IN TRADITION
In •ddit:ion to an extraordinuy
Jection1'£-a Ja CMI& dishes, ..,.,
invite you to avour •
7-COURSE DINNER
FOR
$24.50
ref ully selttted and uranged
o harmonize
3'21 Via Lido
Newport Beach
67549M
Pilot w ......... , ~.September 1•. 198'4 1a
'TOMB WITH AVIEW' FUNNY •••
J'romPa&e12
MitcbcU Nunn as a inad saentist. transportation. reserved scats and
Renee Selden as a latter-day Lucrecia discuSSton with the CISls. Bor&ia. Jo Scott as a mannish &)utton, The plays.~1Cd in conjunc·
Lorraine McWiDaarns as a nymph~ tion with the County Theater
maniac and 1, Mann as the quiet; Associaticm, -are .. or the Use ortbe unassu~ b£othcr whose only Hall" ai the Irvine Community
peculiarity u beliCviq himself to be Theater Oct. 12. '1'hC Fantasticks" at
)ulius Caesar. · the Suena Park Civic Theater Nov. 9
Others thrown deliciously into the and "Plaza Suite" at the Garden
potpourri arc Don Damn as the Grove Commaruty "Theater Jan. 25.
family solicitor, Bctt~ M~ as Tickets for the" touriq theater
the novelist, T. Bradshaw Yates as peckaae may be ordered by phone at
collese's Student Centcr.
BACUTAGE-South Coa Rep-
ertory will begin its Evening Con-
servatory program of acting classes
Monday .... studcnts may chOOie from
a variety of classes to create their owo
curriculum, according to ron-
se rv at o ry director James
Wilsoo ..•. instruction 1s offctcd in all
phases of theater at all levc with
more infomutioo available by call.inc
SCR at 957-2602. •..
•her shy ICCt'Ctary, Carolyri Sheppard 432-SS27 or in penon at OCCs
as a cute young nune and Bonnie Community Services Office in the Hurd as thecadaverou.s housekeeper. r---~------,.---------------
Ofthis divenc continacnt, Selden 's
spacy win~ and McWilliams'
lusty seductress arc the most effec-
tive, with ScOtt's disagreeable
muncher and Hurd'• ominous ser-
vant close behind. All, however, fill
their roles with the frenetic
enthusiasm that bubbles to the sur-
face when overplaying is· not only
enco~ but demanded.
"A Tomb With a View" won't be
the most presti,;ous offmq of the
Westminster season, but it may well
be the most fun -for actors and
audience: It continues for four more
weekends, Fridays and Saturdays at
8:30 and a Sept 30 matinee at 2 p.m ..
throuah Oct. 6 at the theater, 7272
Maple St., Westminster. Cati
99S-4 l I 3 for ticket information.
ORANGE COAST ColJesc will be
offering tours of three OraDIC County
community lheaten this season in a
S'pCcial pack.age deal that includes bus
The Grand
DlnnerTheatr
WllTTtN IY:
JUl()MI CHOOOIOV
lYDCS IY: SfO lUUll MUSK IY:
• W1WAM H lOCKWOOO WJ••· aflUT MIMQNO •
WORLD
PREMIEllE
LM ON STAGE
A lolrirll 1Drs .-.a OllMdy ....
firnmy0UrMRifthisvm d!~ di~
FREEDMAN WAY, ANAHEIM (Aero,. trom Dianeyland
•PIZZA
• SUBMARINE SANDWICHFS
• SA.tADs-• SPAGHEI'fl
MADE FRESH DAILY ON PREMISES
WITH OUR OWN SPECIAL INGREDIENTS
WINES • BEER • ICE COLD DRAFT
Eat in or Carry Out. 11 A.M. till Midnight
THE IN PLACE TO MEET AND EAT!
IN THE HEART OF THE ISLAND
223 Manne Ave., Balboa Island
Calt 87~7479
For~ PllZa delivery on the island
ff •
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... Plot Wfl#/ll.iJndletl . Friday. September 14, 1984
Picks of the plays
.. Ail I I &INOGOSS." the Cole Porter ft.181Cal. Ison lll.gie al
the Curtain Call Dtnner lbeatcr. 690 El Camino Real. Tmun
(838· 1540) Pftformanca att gJft'll ~Uy exccpt Mondaya at
va.rytng curta.lo umes lhf'OUlth Oct. 28. •
"BAmn'lll.'' the musk:al b6ography o( P.T. Barnum.
bdng pramtcd at lbe N~ TilC&ter Arts Centtt. 2501 ClJJf
Or1w. N~ Beach (631-0288):'. Pnfcwmanc:es wtU be gJvf"n
Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. lhrougb Oct. 13. "" "" ""
'-TD ~ urn.a WJIOllEllOOSS Ill TSXAS." a
c:ountry·llavoral m~. Is the atlracUon at the Harlequin
Dtnl1f'f' Pbyhou9e. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd.. 5anta Ana(97g..551 l ).
Pnfonnanres a.tt gtven ntghUy except Mondays at varytng
cunain u,...ee through SqJl. 23. "" "" "" ·
••BOl'FCJL.A.." the musk:a.I biography oC Jimmy Durante. Is
In It~ wortd~at lheCrand DtnoerTheater. 7 Freedman
w~. Anahdm{772-7710). ~wtll-bcgJven nightly
atTJ)t Mondays at varying curtatn Umes through Oct. 28 .,, ""
~
'-TBS rA•m'8 DAOGBTS:ll." a poUtlcal c:o~. IS on
sla# t the Huntlngtbn BcaCh f'tajb~. MaJn ~red al
Yortltown Avcn~. Huntlfl§On Beach (832-1405). Per·
fonnances a~ given FrtdaysandSatwdaysat 8:30 through Oct.
13. ,,,, ,,,, Ya
"TBGmLSDllSOe. ''a comedy about two elderly rtt1U8CS.
opens tonight at the Garden Grove Community Theatrr tn
Eastgate Park. Chapman at St. Mark's, Oarckn Grove
t897-5122). Performann:s w1U ~given Fridays and Saturdays
at 8;30 with Sunday matJnee11 sept. 23 and 30 at 2:30.
''llAK OP LA llAJllCBA;.'' the Don Qutxote muaktll. la
being praented at the Forum Theater. 4175 Falnnont Blvd ..
Yorba Unda (779-8591). Performances are Frtday• and
Saturdays at 8. Sundays at 2. through &pt. 23. .
•'8.&JJllT JOAK.'' Shaw's dramattzaUon of the Joan of Are
~rid. IS bel~nted, at South Ccasl Repertory. 655 Town
C.cnter Or1ve, ~ (957-4033). fe?formances att gtvc-n
nightly cattpl Mondays al 8 p.m. (Sundays at 7:30) with
wttkeod mauneaaat 2:30 through Oct. 14. •
OUT Ort TtE·TOWn
"BEHIND THE SCENES"
with .._..c.,11era
Restaurant Account Executive
••A 1'0llB WJTB A vmw. ··a new comedy. •the rare•• tile
WeetmJMter c.ommuntty Tbeattt. 7272 Maple 81.. Wet!t·
mlneter (955-4113). Prrlormances wtll be gtven Frtdllys and
Saturdays at 8:30 through Oct. 6 . ., c ~
.,,.,,.,,.,,-Excellent . .,.,., -VtTY good . .,,., -Good .,
-Not ao good.
'Meinoirs' extended
Neil Simon's "Bnghton Beach Memoirs•• mmn• at the
WilSbire Theatre in Los Angeles has beeo extended '°"lb Sepe 30. .
The comedy dea~ with a close-knit. hard-workina oily 10
1937, whole mutual~ and love a~ its paaat ~. =confronied Wltb cramped livini quarten., financiaJ
he panas of ado~«. 1exual awakeni• and •ht
that the c:o.m.mi of World War ll lhrc:aaeos '° divide
them. Tic.Uu att available at the box office°' by phone; 634-1300
Museum
unveils
carousel
A nostal&,ic surptj5C awaits visuors
to the La Habra Otildrcn .s Museum.
William and Marion Ocntzcl of
Santa Barbara have donated a unique ~uction in tbe tradiuon of the
original Jwid.arvcd .. old park"
carousels.
This working. country-fair tyle
carousel features ~i<:as of a rooster.
pig, fish, doa. unicorn, hont, fros and
a sea creature -all hand-p&intcd by members of the Dcntzd tamely.
About lO.fcet in diameter and lO feet
bigb, ihocarouscl aJso has bind orpn
music and an ornate rou~i!'J.board
with mirrors, lights and sh~.
The Oentzel ramily bas been build·
ing carousels for more than I 00 years.
bcginnina with Mich.Kl Dcntzel in
Germany. His son Gustav enuaratcd to
America and introcha<%d his first
carousel in 1867. He was the first to
use juflg)e and farm animal lhapcs;
adding variety to the hones-only
structures previously builL The fam-
ily continued to produce carousels
until J 928 when Willi.am Dcntzcl
diid.
William H. Dcntzcl 11, a lawyer by
profession. bcpn oroducina new machines in lbe 1910s, 'particularly
the ch.iktreo's caroutel desi&n lake the
one installed in the muteum.
WorkinJ car0utels arc treasured
now as a fonn of folk art became the
.-o'oden animals are rapidly d1sa1>
pealing into pnvatc collections..
Where tbcte were once I 0,000, fewer
• th.an 80 caroU1Cls arc still eperating.
TbC <:aroutel can be Viewed from J 0
a.m. to 4 p.m. Tue.days through
Saturdays. Admission to the m~m
at301 S. Eudid Ave., La Habra. is SI
~~~c.dl.ikkaumd..~~Ior...aclubs.
Auditions set
Dante Arts Theatre of M11S1on
Vicj() is ~stina its annul production
of-rbe Nu\Cl'leker."
AUditions will be held at the
thea&a", 23728-A Via Fabricantc, on
Sept. 22 at 6 p.m. foe dnldm. under
12. Dancien over 12 may try ou1 from
7 to9 p.m. Sept. 22 or 410 6 p.m. Stpt. 23. ' Bri1ll pOiite or~ lhOii a
QeCleMll'y. ·Par further 1nlbnnltion, pbone"'761-9613.
TOP SIRLOIN $7.95
If you <;ould go for~ great U.S. Choice steak dinne~
served in comfortable privacy, Black Angus~ the pbce
for you. A)(ol'nners complete with'Sol.lp o~ Salad, baked
pocuo ~d oasted Rmch Bread. Rcc;crvauons 3cceptcd. .
Q:
Plot Weeflr.Mt6«/ ~rld8y. Septanber 14, 1984 15
ADVUJOaa& cw wncs•woo
B&JIZAI: Rated PG. Undoubtedly the
It~ movie of the year, combtn·
tng edcnce ncuon. pulp adventure.
Weatcm and WU~ ~nt:L
flandeome Peter Wcllft' ts the tttJe
character. an ea:pcrt brain surgeon.
phyelcist and rock guttarblt wbo
leads the colorful Team Banz:a1. Earl
Mac Rauch 'a9Cl"fpt, dlred.ed b)' W. D.
Rkhter. contaJ.ns numerous wacky
and tmagtnau.e sccnca about alien
lnvadcn who may trtggtt the de·
lllnlctJon ol Earth. The only thtng
mtaetng ta a coherent storyline . ..,.,...
DllSAMBCAPS: Rated PG-13. A
bJghly lnt.rtgutng premJse: what lf you
could enter and perUdpatc ln aame-
one else's dreams? After a fine start
Involving a rductant trlcpath and a
university' sleep lab.
''Ottamscapc'' ~crate. tn ast.alr
government conapiacy fllm. lt'• n:·
deemed. though. ~ an oc:tUnC
dtmadJc battle ln9'dr: • PlealclMt•s
nightmare. Dennts Quaid and Kat~
Capshaw ar . .,,., ...
DIDIA1'A.JOJllS$AlQ)J'llS Dll·
PL& OI' DOOll: Rated PG. Ham.on
Ford returns tn a worthy follow1lp to
''Raiden of the Lost Arlt." 11lt' film
has lnMkmark LucuOhn Virtues:
lhrtlllng non-stop actJon, cobfuJ
aetuqgs and atate-d-tht41't cll'ccts
and stunt 1rork. It al8o hu lhe
Lucasfllm drawbedul ol shallow
characterization and almpli.t.lc plot-
ung. Otmctor Steven Sptdbng skil-
lfully ml1ea the hwnorow and acary
momenta.. cspcclalJJ dunnc •
marvdolm opcntng nightclub .a:nc.
The ll10l'e "riolent llttOCI may be too
frfgtdmlng for younger chtldren. ...........
FEI I UCCINE WITI-1 SMOKED SAl:.MON
Dd1cate nbbon pasta with smoked salmon. blcndro into a W?lvcty s.iuce butter; Cf('.lm
.md Italian cheeses Plu-:. your choice of a mixl'd green or orafl# almond salad.
CREPE ST. JACQUF.S AND SPINACH SOUFFLE CREPE
Our ~afood cl.l..."IC combined with a savory Spmach Souffl Cn.-pe.
Plu!> your choitt of :a mixed green or orii~ almond S01lad
VEAL SCALLOPINI PARMIGIANA
Bre.ic.li'lf.vNI sc.illops s.iut~il. then toptX.J with Italian tomato ~ucc ~ ProVOl()O(',
Romano anJ Parmesan ch~'S. St-rved with a vegetable, potat(l('!, :and your l hoia of a mi%l'1
grem or orange almond salad.
South Coast Pla.c.a .
(714) 556-1225
Uniwr.;ity Towne Cmtcr .
1 ~ Diqw{619)4SJ-6616
Offn-J,'tXld after SPM.
Don't m' our delightful
Su1'(by Brunch.
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I
•• I Piiot Weekender/ Friday, September 14, 198-4
Movie reviews
GB09TB11SftU: Rated PG A
nrst·rate contemporary comedy wt th
superior special effects. Bill Murray,
·oan Aykroyd and Harold Raml• att
three bUmbUng parapsychologt ta
trying to rid New York of ghoeta.
Murray's constant •t.secracke are
hlJanous. and Sigourney Weaver.
whose apartment Is haunted. proves
she's more than an Intellectual I«
lady. The ultimate monster that
finally attacq New York Is too funny
togtve away .,.,.,., ·
GremUn• to vivid life ls an amazlng
feat In thta SplelberC·,ProdUC'td ntm,
dltteted by Joe Dante ("The Howl-
ing"). But Dante and ecreenwrtter
Chris Columbua have *> much fun
with the Greml.IM and W1th tributes
to p .. t movtes ttlat the human
storyllnea lltt'. left eadly undevelo~
Entertalnln~ but forgettable. v v
TBS ltAJlA TB &ID: Rated PO A
predictable crowd·pleaseT for anyone
who'• ever been picked on by a bully.
Ralph Macchio plays the new kid at a
Callfomta echool who becomea a
target of teen m1ut1al art.a experts.
Nortyukl "Pat" Mor1ta plays an tt·
centric custodian who leads Macchio
th~ 50me orfbeat karate train-
Ing. Mor1ta and Macchio gtve ftne
~rfonna.ntte. and dtrettor John
AvlldKn pulls the r1ght emoUonal
strings, aa he did In "Rocky." .,..,.,
TD DV&a&JQ>DfO llTORTt
Rated PG. An enchanting children'•
mm that will hook a lot of adults. too.
Barret OUver p&ay.aboy who eacapea
his rea1·world troubles (the death of
his mother, harassment by bullies)
when he t.eglns reading a book about
.the magical land of Fantasla.
'Another boy (Noah Hathaway) I•
trytng to save this world from a
mystenous all·consumtng force.
Splt'ndld SJM'Cfal spectal effects. Solid
direction by Wolfgang Petersen ("Da.a
Boot") .............
POUCS ACADSllT: tf you en-. eaapenee yam-penod. Eutwood ·
Joyed "Animal Houae" and breaka the Dtrty Many mold ibY
"Porky'a," yau'U probably get a kick portraytng a more COlllP.'ex -Nrit
out thl• ~ndup of pollC'e tratnfftg. A Orleans cop with two ~ dluah-
new woman mayor ha• opened the ters at home and a t.a.te· (Or ktrilry
aeademy to all aorta or mlaflta,•who encountere away from home. He'a.
tum oullo bC a lot pluckier than their . now on the trall or• a.dlaltc kllltt
no-nonaen tratnJng offl~r (Ci. w. who eeems to knoW the detecttve a
Balley) suspects. Lota of crude .but Utile too well. RJchard 'futgie'• acr1pt
funny iJAl!Jt. If you're taste rune to haa a few holca, but the utl·bttlng
more aophtsucated humor. don't tod ·aequencea wtU keep. you too
bother wtth thll one. Directed by engro.ed to· notice. Tuggle ..al50
.Hu&h WU.On. creator of "'WKRP In d.lrttted. Vt{'V
Cincinnati." v v GUllLUfS: Rated PC. These little
crntures start out cute but evenlu
ally tum Into dangerous mischief
makers who wttak havoc In a maU
town at Christmastime. Bnng1ng the
:t1011T1tOPE: Rated R. The bt'st · vvvv -Exct'Uent. vvv
CJlnt Eastwoiod film Ince "The Very iooct "" Oood ":' -Not so
Outlaw Jo&ty Wales.'' and a ~ t ~·
American
THE BARN~-
Amerlcen. Lunch M·F 11 ·2:30 O!Mef •
M·~ froro 5 PM. Happy Hour M-F 4 30
to 7 PM Sun Champagne Buffet
Brunch 10-~30 Entertainment &
Dancing. Banquet Facilities 14982
Redhill. Tustin 730-0115
THE ORIGINAL BARN
FARMER STEAKHOUSE
The Ofiginal Fe.ttunng display brOll
ing Lunch Mon ·Fri 11·2. Dinner
nightly Mon. -Fn from 5 p m .. Sat &
Sun. from ' p.m 2001 Harbor Blvd ,
Costa M ... 642-9777
HAMBURGER HAMLET
Famoue 11ar•ty of hembutgers. satoon
steak aandwlChes, lobster blsque.
oniOll soup foadtw and cherry cob-
bler. Lunch & dinner from 11 30 ~t • Sun t<HO Speaal Suoday
&eakfast Great bar & happy hoof.
t~5 Adema at Harbor, Costa Mesa
5-46-7392.
HARBOR HOUSE CAFE
EstabliShedCIOCe t939. Omelett•. 25
>1anetaes Serced 24 hour$ Sand·
wtehes, 30 varieties Heated garden
patio dinner se<ved 5·10 PM. 34157
Coest Hwy. Dana · Point (714)
496-9270 Al9o 16341 Coast Hwy ..
SunMt e.acn. (213) 59i·~O.
PARADISE CAFE
San Fr1nctscan style Fresti fish and
past• Patio dining lunch M·' 11·3
Dinner Mon ·Sat. Trom 5 p.m Happy
Hr M·F 5·7 Wed. Lad Me 60c well
dunks from 3 p m Banquet faclhllee
600 Newport Center Of . Fashion
Island Newport Beacn ~-1237.
POOR RICHARDS
KITCHEN
Breaktast. IUnch. dinner. Patio dlntng
with ocean V"1W Modest prices
Beertw\ne Famed tor Ba'Oian watlles
Open daily from 8 AM 1198 S. Coa$t
Hwy. In VWlage Faire Mall. Laguna
Beach 497·1667.
ORANGE
COA ST
RESTAURANT
DIRECTORY
Continental
CAFE LIDO
Newport's Cannery Village jazz &pOI
Cozy atmosphere. Amencan. hahan
& Continental menu. Lunch M F
11-3 Dinner nightly 6 PM to midnight
Enterta1nmef't oCJhtly 9· 1 30 Sun
jaz:z seMiot'I 3 7 Ample psrttang. 2900
Newport Blvd , Newport Beach
675-2968.
MARCEL'S
Voftal Mare91. Dancing Wfld lhru Sat
night$ to Buuy Box. 9 00 P.M 10 t 30
A.M . Top 40'1 Li'le ~·every Fri.
& Sat. from 9.30 P.M. backgammon
Happy hour 4·7 P.M Come see our.
brand new 100!< Serving sandwiCMs.
soups. seeloOd and etOISNnts 130 E.
t7th SI., Costa Mesa 646-3666
RIVIERA
Conhnenttl Chef Richard Berg!W
Gll'ICe 1970 Intimate Dining Lund\
11 30-3:00 dlnnef from 6 PM CloSod
Sun & Ho~days Banquet f<X>m$
3333 S Bnatol, Costa Me a
~0-3840
Italian
DONATELLl'I
_The originaJ since 1973 Now open In our new IOcatlon. Serving our t&n"IOU9
pczza and puta Dina In or take oul
9430 Wimer at Bothard, Fountain
Valley: Behind the SIZZier 983-5965
MARCEUOS
Family owned Established ~"
1973 Pastas, veel, pizza. Speclallz.ing
in Clopptno. Bee< & Wine 1erved.
Sai.d bar. LUnch Mon thru Fri dinner
7 nights a week SUnday &unch 10-3
pm. 17502 Beath Blvd at Sleter.
Huntington Beeet\ 842·5505.
Mexican
Chinese ---------!!!!!l!!!!!!!""'---~ILUA'-SSU'T:..CQMAU:EtAA.T Ml CAIA •XICAN
Natural/Healthy
FORTY CMROTS .
Oelicioul faShiOn food P9f Henry
Segefttrom. A great place tor dinner 7
days from I 1 a m. Sunda)t Cham-
pagne Brunch Between Bullocks and
I Magt'WI So Cout Plaza. lower level
556-9700 '
PUFFINS
"Naturalty" cooked fooda, from pan-
cakes 10 etepet to st•ka. An adYen-
IUfe 11'1 nahnl •ting Open Sun. thru
Thurs 8 am to 1 1 pm Fri. & Sat 8 am
to 12 midnight Visa/MC C&sual Mod·
erase Pr1Cet 3050 E. Coast Hwy ..
Corona del Mar. 64(). 1573
Seafood & Steak
THE CANNERY
FeatUfee fresh local seefood. eastern
beef. Lunch, dinner. Sunday brunch
•nc:J champagne brunch, htrbo<
Ct\JIMI Entertainment l'llgtltly and
SUndly afternoon Lounge food gal-
ley H11tor1C waterfront lalldman< 'In
Newport'• CellnefY Village 3010
Lafayette. 675-5771
RUSTY PELICAN
Fresh seelood Ind lots of 11 Newpon
BeaCh • Lunch, dinner, Sunday
brunch Overlooka Newport Bay. 2735
W. Coast Hwy. 642·3431. lrvtn. •
Lunch. dinner, happy hour. 1830 Main 5'~4774
TALE 0, THE WHALE
()pet'I 7 Daya '&•kfaat 7 am. MF
Lunch 11·4 M-F. Dinner 4·11 M-S Sat
& SOn. brunch 7.4 Oystet bar Fri , • •
Sat . Sun. Banquet teclliti .. up to 500
Entertainment Wed ·Slki. Panoramic
bly view 400 Main St. Balboe
873-.t633
>
·. ..
JADE DRAGON
Szechwan & Mandaran Cuisines of
Old China. Host Wallace Lee Chef Yr
Chen. Elegant CSioing. Lunch. Olnnaf.
Sat. & Sun Dwn Sum (Chinete TM
Cake Brunch). Bartaueta. Beer &.
Wine. Reasonable PriC:el 12100
Buch Blvd • St•nton 898-8933.
DINNER CA --------MITAUM.NT--------____;.-.;.THE WA~------• UISE Our foOd 11 a trip to Mexico! Ett. 11rioe "~~ ~--
Cr\Me around the Newport Harb<>f 1972. Open dally from 11 s.m. f0t FrMh sMfood & International
board rtie Cotmorant. 1 .. 1urlng both lunch & dinnat. Codtt&I EnlaHafn. QJlllne Watwfront dining Chai
gourmet dining and epw1ted entertain'.. mant W.C thru.Sat nights In the c.hartee Kl!tgi9n Lunch. Dinner, Sat.
ment. Cebefet style Oirwl8' CNlsee, Bwro Room 296 E. 17th St . Colt• & Sun Award Wanning 8tunch Bin-
night ell.lb CfUiMe and Sunday "22 Mna Ce• 845-7626. quett & C.ttfing, Oyster .Bar, Erner•
brunch etu..n Cllll 675-1'81 for In· .taioment. Udo Village, Newp<xt a..ch
formation and r....-vatJone TRH AMfGOI 873--4700.
For Restaurant Directory Information,
call Brenda Caponera
A piece for people MlC> appr.CWa
good Mexican food .. Mprlelngly low
Pfices Open daly t 1 a.m klnch &
dinnaf. Dally tuncheon IS*llala. Da.ne·
Ing Thurl.., f:'rt & Sat. 10 p m to 1.00 a m Top 40'1 tnlJllo. catetlng 2200
HarbOr Blvd K Matt Plaza; Coeta at 642-4321 Ext. 262. Mell 5-42-827411278
..