HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-15 - Orange Coast Pilot•.
You'll find •he
beet •uto buJ• •long
the Or.,._ CM8t In
todllJ'• Auto Piiot
-P8'•11
Cout
Now It's up to the jury to •
decide who's lying -
Olympian Edwin Moses
or a policewoman:/ A3
Accused Nazi war crimi-
nal Andrlja Artukovlc
faces extradition hear-
ings next week after los-
ing bid In c~rt./ A3
Callfomla
A toddler taken from a
California beach In 1981
has been found by the FBI
In Alaska./ A5
Nation
A former GI says he saw
Josef Mengele In an Army
detention center after
WWll./M
Singer Stevie Wonder Is
latest outside the South
Afrtcan embassy for
protesting apartheid./ A5
World
An American newsman
kidnapped In Beirut 11
months ago, describes
his escape./ A5 • Two Russian chess play-
ers are told to stop after
160-day competition with
no winners./ A5
Sports
It's been a long season
for the Golden West Col-
lege basketball team and
things are getting de-
cldely worae./C1
Edison Hlgh's basketball
team can't be counted
outyet./C1
Oakland A's pitcher Mlke
·Norris ls arrested on drug
charges./~2
.·
DatebOok
Columnist relives
'greatest moments' In Or-
ange Cont theater.
/P119e15
Whale watching: An excit-
ing 'tall,' espectallydur-
lng 'peek' season.
/P-3
Now late-night diners do
have a choice of res:..
taurants./Pege 17
Bulneu
Amerleans are feeling
good economip.11y de-
spite budget deflclt1./CI
IKDEX
Auto Piiot
Bridge
Bun.tin Board
BulineN
Claalffted
Comlcl
Croeaword
DMth Notloel
Gardening
Horoecope
Ann Landert
Oplnk>n
Paperazzl
Police Log
Put>fle Notk:el
8porta
Televtelon n.tn
WMther
81-5 ca
A3
CM
87-9 ca
87
Be
C4
Bl
Dltebook
A7
Oatebook
A3
C7
C1-3
Datebook
OlttbOOk
A2
County taken by surprise as noise test
could qµallf y airline for more flights
limited number of Riahu it the daily ftilhu 1t lbe airpon from SS to
airport, a feat John Wayne Airport 62 nitbll belinnins April l.
!\(>•le e~pen.s bad conlickred Dellt to Al~ .the Je.tlana ~
1mpo111ble. aurprisinaly hnJe no. on tabo«, the
By JEPF ADLER
Of .. o.lr ........
Airport Manaeer Murry Cable tatresulu~expecledtolrisralot
expected it to win. charlc1eri~he aai results u .. un· or noi1e unona superviton Who now
The new technology ... quiet'·' jet-anticipatcdif and 9'id at best the . must arapple with an unfoneea bitch
liner manufactured by ... British Aero---airline would only be entitled to an in the propoeed airporucce• plan-
space Inc. flew four fi~t tests ·so additional 1even flights at John whether to~ ftiahU beyond the
quietly that the hiah-wma afrcraft Wayne Airpon. SS-flight oealin& approved only three
Pacific Southwest Airlines' 1()().
passc"aer BAe-146 flew into John
Wayne Airpon Thursday and flew
out with a coveted prize no one theoretically qualiffcd for an un· That coukS increase the number of weeks .,a.
Balloon• of hope ·~
Tram Bradbary, 8, brother of mn.tnc s-
year-old Laara Bradbury of Bantlncton
BeaCb, band.I a ••Laura'• Day'' balloon to a
atadent at Hilltop Nanerr ~bool In Coeta
Meu. ~athorldeeare aeetiJIC lnformadoa
· a boat the tot'• dlaappearaace lut October.
. -..
For~ign pictures
. replace classics
on Bal~oa ~Creen
h's~bye ··Eraserhead" a,nd .
hello ,\Sunday in the Country." ·
Goodbye cult clmies, hello forcian
films. · ' R When the Balboe Cinema dims the OBERT
liahu tonight, theater opcraton will H
unveillchanpintbctypeoffilms YNDMAN
ahown at the theater, a landmark on.
the Balboa Peninsula for more than
60Jt8!1 Bqinnina with IC)Dilht's exclusive
Oranaie County premiere ofBertrand
Tavernier•• .. A Sunday in the Coun·
\ tty t •• the theater will tcreen roman
and independently made films
sektom available to Oranlt County
movietoen, manaeer Matthew Ker-ripn says.
"ft will bcaChaQIC for UI buto.\e
that has been planned for ~ite some
timenow,"Kcrripnsaid. we·re
aoinatoaoaftcrftnt-run films
whenever possible and show them for
aslonaaswe'rednwinaan au-
dience.''
The cha.naie in direction for tbe
Balboa Cinema alto is beisw awlrbd
by a interior remodetins of'tbe
tbeeter. Newcarpetine. wallcover-=. and paint uebeilll uted in the
ftW a loftt-overdue kelift. n Mid. white tbe4»telt
theater itlelfwiU be refurbeshed.
The Balboe Cinema Qtlebraled the
latett cha.._. by bottina a private
peny Thurtday n9ht complete with
cham.,..ne hOncl'ocuvmanda screeni~ of• A Sunday in the
d·oeuvresattbe Balboa Cinema a bil
unscttlina. After all, this is the same
theater that drew offbeat audicncn by
screenina such cult film classics as
"Eraserhead ""A Clockwork Or·
1nae," "Reefer Madness," "Pink
Flami.Qaos" and "The Road Warrior"
-the type of roovies you won't
typically find in yourneiJhborhood
shopplf\I mall's mv11i-tetten movie·
plex.
This it the theater that regularly
presented such classics as ··aone
With the Wand," "Cititen Kane•• and
"Casablanca.··
This is where erotic film festivals.
1nimatlon mm fntivalund oblcure
tcieftce fiction fttms wen prnmled
-where an Alfml Hitchcock fthn
would be f'oUoweda lawb)' &be Mm Brothen.
Peace protesters
held for blocking
military meeting
By TONY SAA VEDllA °'............... -Three women were a~tcd inside a Costa Mesa ho1eJ this morai.nau Ibey
blocked the entrance to a conference room where de&eptes te a military-
industrial convention were meetina.
Tbe protesters, from the Los An·
,elcs-based JTOUP Women United.
held a green banner emblazoned with
the name of the poup and picturina
two doves hovcnng over the earth.
Meanwhile, about 3S supporten
orpnizcd by the Oranac County
Allianoc for SurvivaJ stayed outside
the Westin South Coast P1ai.a hotel,
protesting against "Wincon 'SS," the
three-day Winter Conference on
Aerospace and Electronics Systems
that concludes today.
Bqinnin& with a candleli&bt vi&iJ
on the eve of the conference iuesday,
more than 1.400 anti-nuclear av
tivists have convcracd on the hotel,
where roughly half of the 300 conven-
tion delcptcs are Slayina.
With this momina's arresu, 47
activists have been detained by police
in the past ttiree dal"! with 3() of the
protesten choosina.)&il over a chance
to be released on their own re-
(Pleue .-nACS/ A2l
'Star. Wars'
space plan
called vital
By TONY SAA VEDllA °' .. ..., ........
The United Stata it virtmlly
defenldeaapinst a nuclear attack by
the Soviets., makina reteareh on the ··sw Wan" spec:c ~entc propam
all the more imperative, a top
aerosp1ce director for Roekwcll In-
ternational Corp. said J'hu~y,
Francis X. tune ufled suppon for
the Reagan Administration's
proposal to explore the controveni.al de~me program 11 a cost of S26
billion. .
Kane told 200 people at a luncheon
~.-SPACS/A.2)
Mesa lnan freed
in spite of pleas
fro~ neighbors
By STEVE MARBLE °' ................ A Costa Mesa man charged with
trying to kill a poli~ officer during a
shootout last November. was re-.
leased from county jail today over
strong protests from his nei&hbors.
Several of Warren Althofts nci&h-
bon. who described the 69-year-<>ld
man· as a bullr and a menace. said
they dreaded his return.
Althoff. seriously injured by an
officer's shotgun blast during the
siege. was freed this morning after
Harbor Municipal Coun Judge Schm
FrankJin reduced bail Thursday from
S I 00.000 to S I ,000.
A~ a condition to his ~lease.
• I
Althoff was ordered no1 to talk to any
of his Orange Avenue neighbors.
He also was ordered to take an anti-
alcohol medication and not to drive
or to possess firearms., according to
-court records.
Several neighbors who met wtth
Judie FrankJin last week to protest a
bail reduction said they are afraid of
Althoff and cl11med he is subject to
sudden. violent outbunts
Althoff could not be reached today
for comment.
. He was charged Wlth mtent lo
commit murder and assault with a
deadly weapon after the Nov. 29
standoff with police:
(Pleue eee IOtSAR/A.2)
County
pushing
sainthood
for Serra
LOCal Catholics mark
Calif om ta missions·
founder bicentennial
By ANDREI LEnan.£ °' ............. Ora.nae County may help Cab-
fomaa ,et its own C.atholic sa.ant.
"Father Joni~ Sena will be
canonized," said Albert Valda,
grand kniJht of the Huntinaton Beach
Kniahts of Columbus.. a Catholic
orpnization promotina the 18th
century C.athohc priest fOr sainthood.
··11 may take some time, .. V.ldcz
taid. "It may take ycara, but We know
that he will be ~nonized. ..
.. He (Sena) established all of
CaUfomaa missaons." Jama MOf&fl,
Kn.Pts of Columbus d.istnct deputy,
said. .
To commemorate the bicxntennial
of'Scrrl's m1111on, p1lplms are cany-
i .. a sax·foot walk.i~ taff1QPSM!d by 1 sman cross. symbolac ofSem•s Ntr,
to all of the state's m• ion . The
pitarim• bepn at the Solano
Massaon 1n n Francisco and San
Oge> de '-kala Mt ·on. rwo-aroups Yrtll meet each other May l 7 at the Cumcl Mi 1 n. tht
Country.'
l.oftltimt s'itrot11 miaht find the
Ida ofchamPllM and tiof'I
Tbis ii thethater .... ~ -~ •
ented midniaht tnftftt11Porllte
RoctyHonOr PictUNSlioW" -me
quia .... ual C1ilt IDOv~nay
Friday and Sit~ nilltuince 1979.
That habel. Kmilla promitn. WiU
not be broken as loniu IM dnoteid
(Pl .. eo-••1804/AI)
........ _ ....... "-
--·-··-•t •I• at....._ C'-•·
bunal pl&~ of m ..
Tht P1l$!1m mo'\-ts tnto 0ra"IC
(Pl•eo.-a&UAJAI)
. .
t •
I
0.. DM.V PtLOT/frtMy, ~ 11. ,._
a, WDT lmelllAN .............
Authorities ue m)'ltificd by a
rocket unarthed this week by I
prdcact in I I .. Una Bcecb beck
yard.
Ofliciels ft'om the Mariae Corps and tbe 1..-una 8c9cl9 f'are 0qmt.
ment can't delmnine tbc Main of &ht
rocket tba1 WM dua up Wednetday
aad laltr safidy destroyed.
"Wbo kaows bow it tot there?"'
Marine Corpt spokn'!"Oman Staff Set-Vicki Coatel said. ''It could bave
been dropped there or lost by 1<>me-
one •bo Pkbd it up~ die.
Wbobowlr
Conkel said the theU, which was a
blaolr. and in no~ of ditonatine.
WU ID o&d five-incb. hilb-velocity aircraft rocket. tbc type latl uled
durins the Korean w., esa.
The rocket meuwa five inchet in
diameter ud it about l 4 IDCbet kMls,
Two memben of a Marine CorPI
txplosivet-disooul team ptcked up
1be rockd and destroyed it It the El
Toro Air Station Wednnday after.
noon. .
The t..auna Beach Fire 0epert.
ment was caUtd at about 1:30 o.m.
Wednetday lO lbt home at I 990
Glnneyre SL ~a Dtde.er Ud
unearthed the rocket while wotk.1111 in
tbe beck yard. a department ~
mansajd.
The otlMS of the prdeoer and the
owner of the home~ noc 1vailable.
Fire otncillt immediately COG·
tactcd the Marine Corp1 bom& tcauad
to investiptt whether the miui~ wu ·
live.
Initial investiption determined
tbt rocket was eitMr-an air--io-trOUnd
or alr-to-.air missile that was lost and
1<>mebow wound up in the Laauna
yard. the fire tpokesman said.
TemJ>l!I
Hflll, IOw IOt M '*"9 elldil'9 at f
Llft.---
" 03 .. •1
Woman's body found in car tl-urik
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A S9--ycar-old Capistrano Beach woman. who was ditc0vettd dead in
the trunk of her car try htt two sons
and San Ocmente pohce, aps-rentJy
was bl~ned. detectives·rcpo~
today.
M£SAN ....
From A l
Costa Mesa police said Althoff
barricaded himself in his house after
fighting with a nci&bbor and then held
police at bay for five houn. The man's
wife was in the house nearly the whole
time but was not held apjnst her will,
police reponed.
The episode ended when Althoff
allegedly came to bis front door and
Emily Mac Lombard, a divorcee
who lived with one of her sons, had
been missing since Feb. 8 when she
was last seen preparina to leave a
dipner party, San Clementt LL Al
Ehlow said.
fired a shotgun at a police officer who
bad positioned himself near the door.
The officer. not identified, re-
turned fire and hlt Althoff in the
stomach with a s.i"lle shotaun blast.
Althoff was in intensive care at
Fountain Valley Community Hospi-
tal for several days before he was
moved to the county jail medical
facility.
Ehlow said the woman's car. a 1972
Ford Maverick. was found parked in
front of 1 vacant Jot early Wednesday.
The woman's sons later pve~ police a
set of car keys and uked officers to
open the wnk.
He said the woman's body, clad ina
niahtaown, was .foun~ . l~n& on a
blanket. Eh1ow wd an initial autopsy
repon indicated the woman was
bludaeoncd but he cautioned that the
cause of death is not certain.
Armed with a search waJTant,
polic.ecombed the woman's residence
late Thursday and removed sevcraJ
objccu from the home, Ehlow said.
He said there is some indicatiQn the
woman was killed inside her resi-
dcnc.e.
No arrests have been made.
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Surf report
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TODAY llOlp.lft. SA
SATUllDAY
12MLtn.
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SHHHHH. THAT'S A QUIET JET ••.
From Al
the airplane, or course. but we've
made a commitment on this (55
flWlu) t=ublic:' lWey , "My concern is if we
are not careful, we could destroy
confidence in the board's word."
The test rcsuJts demonstrated the
four-encine jet ii capable ofOying two
times quieter than another new-
tcchnoloSY jetliner tested at the
airport only a week ago, the re-
4esi&ned Boeio& 737-300, Cable said.
In tum, the 737-300 proved it can fly
twic.e as quietly as the McDonnell-
Do uglas MD-80, the plane
predominantly used by carriers at
John Wayne.
During one of four test Oigbu. the
plane rqistered far below the 86
decibel-level above which com-
mercial jetliners arc regulated at the
airp0rt, IOCOrding to Cable. 26 to prevent the airline from gainina
With the plane carrying a full extra flights.
passenaer load and enough fuel to fly PSA spokesman BiU Hutrngs said
to San Francisco Bay Arca, the that while the airline .. would love" to
BAe-146 resistered 82.S, 83.8 and receive additional flighti, it was
84.9 decibels on various noise adopting a "wait-and-see attitude" on
moniton situated beneath the air· the matter.
pon's main ftiaht peth. "We've been sayin1 for yean that
When supervison gave their ten-we'd love to have the Oellibility to
tati ve approval to the new access plan increase servic.e," he said from PSA 's
Jan. 30, they included a provision San Dicao headquarters.
awarding inc.entiYe or "tradedut" Hastings, the airlines' public rela-
flights to airlines .using planes that tions director, added company of·
could fl y between 86 and 89.5 ficials knew the plane was quiet and
decibels. Ben'cvillJ no cxistin• air-believed there was a chance it would
craft could takeoff below 86 decibels, qualify befow the 86-decibel limit.
supervisors left the category un-"We're thrilled," he wd of the
regulated. · planes performance. ··we're very
Cable said supervisors still had the encouraged and it should be en·
option of adding cootrdls to the couragina for Ncwpon Beach resi-
access olarrbcfore it is certified Feb. dents too."
Glendale judge
supports poHce
sobriety checks
By &k Altede&Mi Preti other couns, but the American Civil
A judae bas ruled that sobriety Liberties Union has taken the cue to
roadblocks to ferret out possible a state appellate coun in an attempt to
drunken driven are lqaJ. resolve the matter. The ACLU con·
The rulin& b_y Glendale Munici~l tends the roadblocks, used by the
CounJudaeJ.D.Sm1thcon1lictswith California Highway Patrol and some
a tiecision lut month by another local police agencies, violate constitu-
Municipal Court judae in Oranae tional safeguards.
County that decided a similar road· In the Glendale rulin~ Smith
block violated the rights of a driver decided that the CHP didn t violaie
who was cited for allcacdly~ be' the rights of Denise Kell when she wu
drunk. arrested Dec. 14. Her trial is set fot
Neither decision is bindinR March 18.
SERRA PROMOTED FOR SAINTHOOD .••
Prom Al
PEACE PROTESTERS ARRESTED •••
County this weekend. Members of
the local Kni&hts of Columbus
chaptcn. including those in Hunt-
inaton Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine,
will walk two-mile stints and pa'""c
symbolic staff to the mcmben of the
other 22 chaotcrs in the county.
where a Mass and Rosary will be
celebrated. Afterward the journey
will continue up Pacific Coast Hi&h-
way to Ncwpon Beach. The pil-
grimage resumes Feb. 23 at 17th
Street in Newpon Beach and con-
tinues up Pacific Coast Hiabway to
Beach Boulevard where it turns
inland headed toward the San Gabriel
Archangel Mission in San Gabriel.
Serra established 21 California
missions which prospered in the
middle of 18th century. He spent
most of his life trying to convert
Indians to Christianity.
From Al ' Church officials indicated that
Serra is a proper candidate for
cahonization, but declined to aive
details of the process.
copmnce.
Most of the arrests were made
Wednesday and Thursday after
sroups of peace activists tried to block
buses carrying delcptes to the classi-
. fed conference sessions at the Marine
·Corps Air Station, El Toro.
Pan of the 9CSSions being held
today at the Westin arc open to the
public. by reservation only.
The women arrested on suspicion
of trespassing this morning were
booked into Oranac County Jail, after
declinina to be cited and relea.sed.
Before being removed from the
hotel. they banded fliers with the
words "We Call Upon You" to some
of the delejtatcs.
"We cat1 upon you, as engineers
and administrators, to use your vast
talents and skills to serve humanity
rather than destroy it," said the
papers. ?I
Marion Pack, co-director of the
Orange County Alliance, said I 0 of
the protesters arrested Wednesday
were released Thursday after a
Harbor Municipal Coun judge
sen,cnced them to the time that they
had already served and one month's
probation.
Pack '8id the remainina people
who chose to remain in custody after
being arrested Wednesday and
Thursday were expected to be ar-
raiped this afternoon.
She was hopeful that the w.omcn
jailed this momina would be brouaht
to coun on Monday, although only
one counroom will be open for
arraignments because Georie Wash·
ington's birthday is a national hol-
iday.
Sunday the pilgrims will bring the
staff to Mission San Juan Capistrano
BALBOA CINEMA CHANGING STYLES •••
From Al t audiences continue to tum ouL "Because we're small. we're able to Throat," which showed for months.
But Keni.gan said the theater show those types offtlm1." Kerripn· But such presentations as "The
o_pcrators, Landmark Theatcn of Los said. "Othcrtbeatcn that bold up to Devil in Miss Jones," "Hot Oven,''
Anaclcs, were forced 10 abandon the 1,000 people can'tatrord to sell only "The Incredible Sex Ray Machine"
classic and cult movie screcninp 250 seats, and can't run movies lonaer and "French Blue" were shon-lived
because of the increased use in recent than 21h or three houn." as pressures to close the theater came
ycan of home video cassette re-But the 4SO.seat Balboa Cinema in the form of polic.e raids and a
corders. can do well with JOO customers widely public12ed obscenity trial.
an d. g b b '--"d Pussycat Thcatcndiscontinucd "Youcannowbuvvideo= en in eac ' ow,n .. 111 • x ffi 1 the -rated o erings in November copiesofthcsemov1es very cap," Therc'salsotheadvan&qeof 1976, butstillownsthcbuildioaand SPACE DEFENSE 'IMPERATIVE' •••
Prom Al
for the Orange County Federation of
Republican Woman that the space
system would not escalate the arms
race. but would instead help
eliminate nuclear weapons.
Kane. director of advanced
strategic systems for Rockwell Corp.,
seemed an appropriate speaker for
the luncheon at the Westin South
Coast Plaza hotel in Costa Mesa.
The Wcstjn, which is hosting
delegates to a a thrcc-Oay convention
of Pentagon officials and weapons
manufacturers, has been besieged by
anti-nuclear activists opposing what
they believe is an arms buildup that
can only lead to world-wide annihila-
tion.
The 26th annual Winter Con-
ference of Aerospace and Electronics
Systems, which has drawn more than
1,400 protesters and 300 military and
industrial delegates to the Orange
Coast. ends this cvcninJ.
Kane, in an interview after his
speech. dismissed the arguments by
nuclear weapons watchers as the
ramblings of "the misguided. the
misinformed or the enemy:·
"You're allowed here to say any
stupid th mg you want," Kane said.
Just Call
642-6086
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tO • m -'fCI"' 'GCIV .... oe.....,ea
wamtnJ ol a propaganda and misin-
formauon cam{>lian deployed in this
country by Soviet agents.
"l hope I haven't spoiled your
lunch. Ladies." he said, reminding the
Republican women that "tile Soviets
aren't arc friends. They do not wish u~
wc11.··
Since the first Strategic Arms
Limitation Talks agreement with the
Soviets in the early 1970s, the U.S.
government has followed the theory
that nuclear war could be avoided as
long each of the superpowers could
destroy the other.
"DurinJ that R;Criod since SALT I,
we have dismantled our defenses and
didn't develop any more offensive
weapons," Kane sai_sl. "We took the
(defensive) missiles and put them in
warehouses. The only component left
is the radar."
Ccihtrary to the arguments of peace
activists. Kane said the United State's
military force did not have cnouah
inter-continental ballistic missiles to
ever launch a first.suite effort,
"f unhermore, some of the weapons
in the arms silos aren't accurate
enough."
Kane stressed the government
Kerrigan said. "So why would you havina only one screen, Kerripn no~lcases it to Landmark Theaters.
would never consider developing the want to pay the same amount 10 come said. In the nei&hborbood multi· Operators arc hopeful that the
capabilities for a first strike, but is down here. hunt for a parking space screen cinemu, you have tbcdistrac· latest change will attract older, more
instead turning away from the idea and sit in a theater to watch~t once?" tions oflaughtcr and so fonh from the sophisticated audiences than in re·
that peace can be preserved by the While they will retain some of the theater next door where "Beverly cent yean. Complaints have been
threat of mutual destruction. special-occasion film festivals, Hills Cop" might by playing, he said. voiced in the past about the unruJy
He said the "Star Wars'' re~rch thcateropcratorsexpcctthcswitch to Changes in the entertainment pres-and sometimes inconsiderate crowds
and other proposed military pro-first-run independent and foreign ented at the theater are nothing new. that descended on Balboa Peninsula
grams would substitute defensive films to be successful. Begun in the early 1920sasa live forthe thcater'soffcrinpand left
weapons, meant to block attacking As atcst of sons. the theater theater, the Balboa Cinema was trasb and broken windows in their
m1sslcs, for the offensive weaponry presented the original, uncut version presenting "talkies" by the late '20s. wake.
now produced by the military. of Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time Overthe next several decades, the 9 K · · "We would be cutting the costs (of in America" during the first week of theater had several owncrswi'th ut cmgan promised that those days arc over. defense programs) by cutting of-February. Despite running close to myriad film tastes. "We want to be flexible in the films
fcnsivc weapons and building our four hours. the theater filled with The Pussycat Theaters took over we show," he said. "But we also want
defense." Kane said. appreciative audiences. Kerrigan operations in the sprin& of I 97S with to act along with the people in trus
He refuted accusatiens that a "Star said. its X-rated films, includina"Dcep area." Wars"~ogramwouWbetherapcof ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ space, a frontier considered virgin to I
the battles that have thus far been
confined to earth.
"That's a phooy argument that the
Soviets keep advancina," Kane said.
"Space has been militarized from the
very beginning."
He explained that the Soviet Union
had developed the capability to
launch a bomb from orbit. and has
created a system to attack satellites.
"To call (the Star Wan program)
oiilitarizing space is to use
terminology that completely fogs the issu~." Kane said. UPTO
Wllat do yoe UM 1bMt die Daily Piiot? Wllat don't yoe Hiie? Call tlM
Hmber at left ad JMr IDfttale wlll be recorded, truteribe4 UNI dellvere4 HUGE SAVINGS ON CAR~ET,
WOOD, TILE AND .DRAPERIES lo lk 1,.wopriate e4Jter. ~
1'1M nme U-a...r u1wertq .ervlce may be 11ed to record leuers to tile
edJter OI uy tople. C..trtMYrl to "r Lettert col••• m11t lacllde tMlr
aame ad te._oee Hmlter fer verif~aU•. N• clre11lat601 caUt, plea.e.
Tell u wbt't Ol JMr IDIM.
ORANG~ COAST
llllyPIDt
H.L. kttw#tz ~II
Pu bf I~
ec.ren Wittmer
Ad•tl•lng Otrector
<)JO WWI Bey St Co.ta Mtu CA
MM .odf-Bo• IMO Co.It..._ CA 0262f
Oak Plank
WU $4.79 sq.ft.
NOW Only
•211 aq.ft.
Wool C•rpet .
w .. 128.99 eq.yd.
NOW.Only
117'1 9q.yd. ln•t .. led
Armatrong
Sundl•I Sol•rl•n
WIS $23.99 eq.yd.
NOW Only
'13" • 9q.yd. lneteHed
~ ...... "' ....
Clroulettoft
T1l1pMOH
Ra•~ Churchmen
COntroflet
\
640-2700
640-2934 ...
°'""" °"""" ---"' ... -
.....
DoneldLw..me
Clrculatlon
Manager
-
-Bu 11 f r 1 N B (J ~ R 11
4
Concert set tonU!ht
for ~thloplan ~eilef
The International Rqpe All Stars wiU perform at the
Women's Club of Laauoa Beach toniaht for the benefit of the Ethiopian Relief"Fund.
. The a p.m. COft(fM it 1pontored by the Sundowners
un!t of the Women'• Oub at the clubhouse. 286 St. Ann's
Drivt, U.,Una Btach. Admission is SS and tackets will be available at the door.
Further information is avaUable at 83 l-1732.
CorJ"e61dor vet. to re1UJlte
Some SO veterans of the ort,· nal 2.JOO..man S03rd
Parachute Reaimental Combat cam which liberated
Correaidor 40 years aao will uaemble Saturday at the
Embassy Suite tn Buena Park.
All former servicemen,· veterans of the 3 l 7th Trop
Carrier, the 462nd Field Artillery and Company C 161 st
Enaineers arc invited. Call West Coast chapter president
Ralph Leyva at (213) 869-2142 for reservations and
information. ..
Pre-openln6 fete planned
A "before opcnina" open house will be held Salurday
morning at-the future site of the Huntinaton Valley Adult
Day Cart Center, I 86SS Santa Ynez in Fountain Valley.
The event is planned for 9 a1m. and further
information may be obtained by clalin& Barbera Schmalz
or Shannon Sands at S48-3S IS.
Single pareni.• party •lated
The Huntington Beach chapter of Parents Without
Partners will sponsor a free orientation for single parents
Saturday at 7:30 p.m .• followed by a house party at 9 p.m.
Membership.is open to divorced, separated, widowed
or never married parents of li ving children. Call the
chapter telenhone at S36-S8 IS for information on the
meeting.
We'61Jt loa .emlnar .et
A seminar on obtaining and sustaining one's ideal ~eight -called "Leave Your Fat Behind" -will be held
Saturday morning at Saddlcback College North in Irvine.
Dr. Bobbe L. Sommer, an educator and psy.
chothcrapist, will conduct the pr<>vam from 9 a.m. to
noon in Room A301. The fee as $24, and further
information may be obtained from Community Services
at 5S9-1313.
Jazz band play• at 5K run
The Uel Jazz Ensemble, directed by Alfred Lang. will
perform music of the big band era for the first annual
Mardi Gras SK run Sunday morning at Capistrano Beach
Park.
The run. sponsored by the Social Vocational Services.
begins at 9 a.m. and will be followed by a champagne
brunch in Dana Point. Call 68(}.4313 for details.
' Starter fitnea pro1nm .et
A six-week starter fitness program begins Monday at
the South Coast YMCA. 27781-B La Paz Road, Laauna
Niguel.
The program. designed for people who havcn(t
exercised ma long time, will be held Mondays and Friday
from 10:30 to 11 a.m. and will consist of warmups,
stretching. mild exercise movements, walking and
jogging. Brenda Goodfriend is the instructor, the fee is $2S
or S3S for non-members and registration information is
available at 831-9622 or 49S-04S3.
Retired employee. to convene
The Saddleback Valley chapter of the National
Association of Retired Federal Employees will conduct its
reaular meeting Monday at 2 p.m. m the Western Federal
Savings and Loan Association. 26940 Crown Valley
Parkway, Mission Viejo. ·
Nicholas R. Dclpdo Jr., founder and director of the
Optimum Health Program, will speak on preventive
medicine through diet and cxwisc. Additional infor-
mation may be obtained by calling Peter Basone at
58 1-1226.
Heart di.ea.e talk carded
Internist-cardiologist Dr. Daniel L. Fortmann will
speak to members of the Arthritis Foundation Orange
County Lupus Support Group about hcan disc~se and
high blood pressure at the group's monthly meeting
Tuesday.
The session is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
community mcetina room of the Medical Center of
Garden Grove. 12SSS Garden Grove Blvd. Call th e
foundation at S47-SS9 I for additional information.
Friday, Feb. 16
No meetla11 1cll1ecl1lecl
A hearty brunch
The aptly named Joann Valantlne (left)
and Lynn Jahnke dell•er Valen~'• Day
brunch buketa in a fund-ralaiJal project
for the Co.ta lleea Junior Women'• Clab.
Proceeda from the bullets, priced from
$14 and $18, are earmarked C-or the clab'•
Tarloaa commanlty eerrice projecte, ln-
cladln& lleala-OD-~eei..
Jury getS conflicting tales
from Moses, policewomai:i
Olympic champion testifies he never offered
woman 100 for two sex acts in Hollywood
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Edwin
Moses and law enforcement officers
ha ve presented completely different
versions of the happenings in nearby
Hollywood last month that led to the
Olympic hurdling hero's arrest.
Now, it's time for the jury to
determine whether Moses as in nocent
or guilty of the misdemeanor charge
of soliciting prostitution from an
undercover policewoman.
Moses, the two-time Olympic gold
medalist in the 400-meter hurdles,
testified in his own defense Thursday
and denied he offered Officer Susan
Gonzales SI 00 for two sex acts.
Eatlicr in the week, Gonzales and two
other police offi cers testified that
Moses had committed such a crime.
Both sides rested their cases Thurs-
day afternoon after Moses' attorney
called two former Olympians and th e
athlete's ~ometown minister as
character witnesses. The prosecution
offered no rebuttal witnesses to that
testimony.
Munici pal Court Judge David M.
Horwitz scheduled final arguments
for today. followed by deliberations
by the six-man. s1x,woman jury.
If convicted. Moses could receive a
six-month jail sentence. a S 1.000 fine
or both. although first-time offenders
usually are given a small fine and
placed on probation.
Moses, 29. told the j ury Thursday
that ip the early morning hounof Jan.
13. Gonzales approached hjm and
mentioned sex acts and that, after
speaking with her briefly, he drove
away.
"She walked toward me. looked at
me and smiled and said something. ..
Nt oscs testified. "I couldn't hear 11;
my window was rolled up. l rolled it
down halfway. she said, 'Pull over so
we can talk.' I pulled over."
Moses said Gonzales approached
his ca r al a traffic signal.
"I pulled over. I didn't think it was
any big deal." Moses said. "She was
dressed normally, she was well cov-
ered up. she didn't look like a
prostitute."
"What happened then?" asked
defense attorney Edward Medvcnc.
"She came 1n front of my car,
glanced at my license plate; at that
time I figured she knew who I was."
said Moses, whose license plate reads
·OLYMPYN.'
"I rolled down the wmdow, she
said. 'Ha. how arc you?'" Moses
testified. "r said. 'fine. how are
you?'"
Moses said Gonzales then asked
him what he had been doi ng and he
said he had been to a couple of discos.
"She said. 'Do you want to have
some fun?'" Moses testified. "I said.
'What kind of fun?' She mentioned
the two acts of sex and asked how
much money I had. I said S I 00. I was
surprised. I had no intention of doing
it."
··Did you ha ve any intention to pay
Officer Gonzales for sex?" Medvenc
asked.
"Absolutely not.'' said Mosn. who
testified for an hour. "I left the scene
immediately. I had no intention of
stopping. When I turned the comer, I
started accelerating. I just left."
Earlier police testimony contrasted
markedly with Moses' description of
his conversation with Gonzales.
She testified TueS<b y that Moses
initiated the conversation by sayinf.
"Nice night." and that he pulled his
car to the curb and waved her over.
She also said that Moses asked her
"How much for an hour?'' and
described the sex acts he wanted and
mentioned SI 00.
Called as dcfcMC character wi t·
ncsses were fellow Olympians John
Naber. wbo won four aold medals as a
swi mmer in the 1976 Summer Games
m Montreal; Anita DcFrantz, a
bronze medalist on the 1976 U.S.
team; and Charles Sumner Brown,
pastor of the Bethel Baptist Church in
Dayton. Ohio.
"Do you actually feel some people
arc so very good, so wholesome. that
they're physically incapable of com-
mitting a crime, big or small?" deputy
city attorney Michael Guarino asked
De Frantz. a lawyer.
"If there is such a thing as
perfection. then Edwin certainly is
there." Defrantz replied.
Naber testified: "I sincerely behcve
he (Moses) as incapable of telling a
lie."
Moses has won 109 consecutive
races in the 400-meter hurdles since
1977 and was gold medalist in both
the 1976 and 1984 Olympics. He
holds the world record of 47.02
seconds in the event.
., ...
2 'JUfPlw
Allexnlicioe ~for "-t:" \, *" 9CC'ulirld or°'*""' die 4radll o1 . ._,, __
dwi.111 WOild W11 0 , it espectld • .. EE I.•
ne.1 wen after arpamea11 to t'ri• tlll ~ -,._by ......... oftkilL
The ruli .. by U.S. M1a1...c:•· 1111•111 V~ .... -Wcdnetday in Loa Aftleles detpite ... ,._,. lliy ... ....
of the Ju11ice Depertmmt't Nai llm l1lil ail -Vueos&avia haitlled to seek Artukovie'1 ...._
,.,. ~le at'C>f"fteYI arpaed that u.s..oaa• illi....._... • ....
etroru 10 extradite Artukov~. who now liw. in·Sulfliidl Colo~y near Huntinaton Hal'bour. ,
The deftntc alto ~ tMI .. 15)....W
defendant miabt be incompeient lO ~·· 1' =1 Artukovic is hOtpRalized at L-. ee.dl' Nav81 ·
tuff'erift& from mu1t1p&e ailmmts includiftt ~
old~ probabilities ate more liktly than not hr Will be
able to co forward," Brown MPOftded.
Anukovic.. who was a cabinet minialer i9 \be Nazi
puppet state of Croatia durina Wor1d War ll, js acc:uMd of
beina the so-caUed "Butcher of the a.ttans•· by allrarlly
orderina the slau&hter of7SO.OOO Jcwt, Setbl aDd Gyplia
in what it now YU&Ollavia.
He has f'oush1 etrons lO deport bim (or mme ~ ~
but the current campeip lO tend bim beck IO Y__,.ria
is the first one 1pearheaded directly by ~ Y..,.v
aovernment.
Neal Sher, head of the Justice Oepenrneaf•Office of
Special lnvesti11tion1. said Yuplav ofticiels ~
hesitant to seek extradition becau.e the actioa llQllll
traumatize put victims of Nazi penccution.•
Sher was summoned from Waaifta1on by
Artukovic's lawyers to testify at the ditmiall 1beeriaa
Wednesday, and he outlined the intcrUliooal DC81>-
ti.ations that led to ArtUkovic's arrest last yat.
Brown aburptl¥ ended Sher'• testimony, sayina.
"There still is no evidence or cvcil a 1ullft'ion that t.be
United States. throul)\ the Justice Department or the Stale
Dcpanmcnt.. actc(i impmnissibly. ,
"All that was done was to abide bya treaty obliaauoo
with a friendly country."
O s nu~R H J
SerVices today for .
Lincoln Sherrard
Private famil y services were to be held today in
Newport.Beach for Corona dcl Mar resident Lincoln N.
Sherrard. a longtime podiatrist in Santa Ana who died
Feb. 8 at the of 86.
Dr. Sherrard, a pracucing
podiatnst for more than 40
years, was a veteran of WWJ
and served in France. He wan
lifelong member of the Ameri-
can Legion.
An avid flower buff. Dr.
SMrrard served as prcsadent
of the Orange County Dahlia
Society and fmlucntly jud&ed
flower competitions.
In addtt1on to numerous
professional orgamiations,
Dr. Sherrard wa~a member of
SHERRARD the Al Malaikah Shrine. Or-
ange County Shnnc O ub. Silver Cord Masoruc Lodge,
Jolly 8o)'1 oflrvine and a past president of the Santa Ana
Ktwanjs.
He is survived by his wife Bcatncc of Corona del Mar
and a sister. Mrs. lmoacne Simpson of Redlands. He also
lcavt's his son Jere Sherrard of San Jose. dauJhter Noel
Pomeroy of Sequim. Wash. and three gra ndchildren.
Nicholas Tanyi of Mesa
Sen recs wall be held this evening for Nicholas Tanyi
of Costa Mesa. a 2(}.year rcs1dent of the Cll). who died
Monday. He was 7i.
Mr. Tanya. who retired in 1979 after 2S years as 4
valve assembler at Cla-Val in Costa Mesa. was born in
Lackawanna. N.Y.
He is survived by his wife. Manon. and a daughter,
Mildred Archuleta. both of Costa Mesa .\lso surviving are
a brother. Paul Tany1. of Brockton, N. 't .. and three sastcn
-Molly Garli ck of Costa Mesa. Juht' Ezzo and Esther
Ezzo. both of Lancaster. N. Y.
Funeral services an.-scheduled for 7 p.m. at Pierce
Brothers Bell Broadway Chapel with the Rev. Charles D.
C'lark of the First United Methodist Church of Costa Mesa
officiaung. Pnvatc interment wall follow.
The famil y has requested memonal contributions to
the Diabetes Assoc1a11on
Newport Beach
An antiQ.uc sword wonh SI .SOO
was stolen from a display case at La
Jolla-Newport Auction Gallery on
West Coast Highway. • • • About S 17,400 wonh of jewelry
was stolen from a residence on
Barrier R~f. The residents said the
Victims have described the gun-house was secured and that it ap-
man as a white man. 30 years old. S pearcd the burgJar broke m through a
feet 7 inches tall. medium built, with kitchen window.
coast's motel bandit hits
fourth time, Collects $543
A police officer trom 1m1 Valle}'
reported Thursday that someone
burglarized her room 3t 1he Tru,Valu
Inn. 912S Recreatron Circle. while
she was out. The intruder. \\ho ma)
have entered wtth a master key.
apparentl}' removed clothing from
the woman·~ d uffc:I bag and looked
for valuables under the mattress o
loss was rcponed
and stole a purse containing $31 . • • • .\bout S7.000 in tools were stolen
from an open prage in the 7000 block
of Elk. • • • Someone stoic about S 1.000 worth
of flowers and plants ftom an un-
locked grttnhou~ at Mukai Nur1r.ry,
I 7 30 I Edwards t. A lone aunman who carries his loot
away in a white plutic bq apparently
struck for the founh time this week
when he held up a Cost.a Mesa motel
Thursday, cscapina with SS43.
Police believe the Tahiti Inn, 4SO
Victoria St .. was h~ by the ume ·man who bas ro three other
coest.al motels in a crime spree that
belan Tuesday.
Costa Mesa police LL Tom Lazar
uid Tbunday'1 holdup followed the
aame pattern u the previous rot>-
Lapaaa.oh
Rcpons of a prowler ~n on the
rear porch or a Poplar Street home
early Thunday ~t police of-
ftett1 to the tcene. In a similar
incident, pohce responded to reporu
o( 1 prowler heard Thu~ C'VC'niq
on the roof oh 1.Afuna canyon ROid residence. In neither ca1e wu a
IUlpect leeD by nolic:e. r-•. A South Coat Hiahway resident
told PQijce Tburtday he knows wbo
ml)'. be responlibtc for lelrint up h11
mail. · • • • A wallet was stolen from a men on
South Couc Hithway lace Thunday
with the loll ntimaecd at S200, the
victim lOld police. • • • POlittamsted David T. Korht. 27. on tulPidon of 4rivi• Yndtr the lnft~ of lk'ohol. ltor'M was
berics at the Rodeway Inn and Don
Quixote Motel in Costa Mesa, aild the
Channel Inn in Newport Beach.
The robber walked into the Tahiti
Inn around 8:1S p.m .. asked about
room rates and then pulled out a
handaun. He demanded money, and
staahcd it into a while pluuc bq
befOR fleei"I on foot.
The motel robber has nct&cd about
SI ,S 13 from the robberin that tqan
with two bolduet about 20 minutes
apan Tuetdly niaht in Cotta Mesa.
stopped at 2: 15 a.m. today on South
Coast Hiabway. • • • Complainu of a mn ttportedly
lhakina ttta on Forest A venoe late
Thunday bfoulht police to the lttne.,
but ofractrs were unable to locate the man.
c....11 ..
WatcheS wonh S500 ~ reponed
tto&tn from a home in the 200 blotll of
Dtl Mar SOtMU.mc betweett H>.JO
a.m. and I p.nt. Tlaundly. !nay ..
throuah a po111bly open rar door.
The Witches ~·y had bc\"n
taken from a drcuet drawer. • • • Tools worth an numated S240
~ rcponed ttokn from a locUd pnee In the 1500 block of Corianckr
Drivt IOIM'lirne between 3 p.m.
Wednttdiy and 6:20 a.m. TbW'ldiy. • • •
• • • blond hair. A telephone worth S30 was stolen Lazar.~ police have sent out from an apartment at 1940 16th St.
teletypes to othdt law agencies, but Police said 1t appears someone
has not bttn able uncover any solid entered the at>artment usmg a pass
leads. key.
••There's not a whole lot you can do . • A man weanng; ~uuit brok.e 1 nto
without somcthi"I other than • a house on the 300 block of via Lido
detcription and the little white plastic Soud and stole a woman's purse. The
t>q." Lazar said. 8().ycar-old resident said she was
An attempted bur&Jary was re-Poi1ed 11 the Oa.ily Pt1ot oewspa'pCr
offtces, 330 W. Bay SL, where
10mCOne had uied 10 cut a hole in tbt
front Illa door, apparently t0me-
timc 6ctMen I a.m. and 6 Lm.
Thurtday. Enlf'l was not made. • • •
Pmcription dt\111 ~ s's "" reponed ttolrn f\'Om a mideDee in
tbe 2300 block of Fairview loed
tometirnc bciwem ~:JO a.m. and 10 a.m. Thunday. Tbe dflllJ were-.. ftom 1 bedrOOm thlt tiid beie
rant1eked. .. • • •
A McCulloch "Weed Wecktt, ..
.orth S 100. was re~ llOlen trom
1htChurchofLanerDaySainta, 277'
Pllccnha Ave .. ICMM'lime between I
p.m. and l·.JO p.m. Wedoetday. The
prdenina tool wa cKt'ft from an
open lool ctbtMt.
sleepin& at the time of the break in but
woke up in tame to'SC'C 1 youna man
runnina from a bedroom ol'the house.
The loss was put at SI SS. ••• A thief Stolt I door from I Cit)'
hfeauard jeep. Llfeauards ap-
parenUyhad rtm<JVed the door aftd
Sta<'ked it l&IJ.IW._lhe llfc:aawt1 bead· quancrs. -wtrcn tft}y retui'ntd later 10
the day it WI IOM. Tbc door.
bearina ~cit)' seal. is *Orth Sl7S. • • • Somt0ne Mok a pair of is and
boots rtoin an ualOtad 11f11C on the JOO bled ol hCM Visia.. Tbe loa waa atimatfd at S9S9.
,._ta1avau.,
A Garden Grove man.I.Old police
Tbundly tbat four hubQPt W'tt't
a<*n from tn1 lflY .1911 Maida
OLC -tulc it wu perkfd Ol .. ck the
Edwards Cal\tm11 at 16149
BrOokhunt Si 1n f(Nn1t1n Va.Hey, n.c kJel ... , "°°'1ed .. s' 71.64. . . ..
• • • .\ teacher at ( ourrcgcs hoot.
18313 Santa ( 3rJcma. told pohet
Thorsda} that om<"on~ stoic four
hubcaps from her 1ge 1979
Mercedes while she was 1 side attend,
1n\a meeting The loss w s estimated
at 385. .
Banttncton Beach
An em pl~ at the Jae m the Bo>.
rt'Staurant. I Ed1ngc ve .. told
police he ca ght a man a a woman
hav1n1 1ntcrt'ourse m a p1hc
restroom. He cha5cd th m out he
said. and the) 'NCnt an a w 1te
Vol w-agcai Bu.a where tlley sat and
drtnk • • • Burglar"\ stolt $20.000 in 1cwcll')
and vJdco equipment .after they
cl\tercd a home 1n the 4000 block of
~)' Dnve throuah a ~tiding gla
door. woman u 1na a lead p1pt
rrlashcd out wmdOW\ to ca" and a
buhd1 n1 at Tcrrv't Buacl. 122 Sth t ' . . man who al)J'larcd to have 1 o
in hi l)O(kct C!aped wtth about S
after robb1n Coa t Savi 19193
Brookhurst t . Thursda)'. • • • Someone tole t11to pu contain·.
inaSlsancrwaJk:ina throu&h an 01Xn
back door 11 Batt'M Pilla. • • • Borala" en,cl"C'd a ctr 1n the 7000
bk>ck or lark thrOuah the wn root
• • • Thieves stole t\\-O cases of beer
valued at S9 from a Budweiser beer
truck at Ma\n trcct and Walnut
.\venue.
Gunman gets
cash, glasses from
service station
..\ man with long black hair a nd 1
thick aC'CCllt held up a 24-hour SCTV1cc
station 1n nta Ana Heiahta carty
toda). escaping with about $200 1n
cash and the attendant's presciption &)a.sscs. •
The Mndat approached the lone
attendant as he. was ~'-CJun belv
an the Bnstol trcct t.auon 11 about
4: 10 a.m .. explamcd Oran \ounty
hcnfTLt. Dick Olson.
The robber, armed with a 9mm
Luacr. ordered the aucnda.nt to act on
the noor and then arabbcd a roll of
rotn5 and all the cash from the
tell er. OliOft said the f\l nma.n alto
took the attendant's wallc1 a.nd h1~
ala • l
The Ion wat put at It ttian SlOO.
The Wlf>«\ dtitribed beina
in h1i 20s.. 5hart and heu and
5pon.ina a bl ,acket P>~
Olson said the man appeilftd '°
ha"inl d1mc"hY ... ,'*lth t'he Ellltiib tanauqc. ,
'I
1 l
~ I
I
I
"'
LOS ANDELES (AP) -A former bulktina and encountered two odm .v.J ....,., llCICOUM of ~tly 1•rds who were forci1111 priloDer la
bavi1111 _. 8CC\&led Nui war crim1· eurcise. He ulced one pard wbo I.be
Dll Jo.I ~ in 1 camp for prisoner was.
GenMapriMMnafterWorldWarll .. He then looked at me and wilb
....,.,. c:on1entioas that the t0-sort of a smirk, uid, 'Thia here's called''~lofDeatb .. ofAutehwiti M~!\Fle. the bastard who sterilized concentnuon camp was in U.S. 3 0()0 women at Autehwitz,'0
cuatody and somehow escaped j~ Ktmpthome said, notina that he does
Uce, two U.S. senators 11id. • not remember the euct wonta ell-
Wllter Kemptborne, S9, a ~tired chanaed. eaeineer from Riverside, Calif.1 told The auard went on 10 11y, '"We're reporvn Thursday at the Simon aetting him in shape to ,et bUQS. '"
W"lelntbal Center for Holocaust Kempthorne recalled.
Studies that he believes he saw Menacle is believed to be alive, 73
Meqeele when he was a private years old, and livina somewhere in
e9'ped to the U.S. Counter In· Paraguay. He is aCCUled of putici-
tellifmce Corps as a lower and pating _ 1n the murder of at least
perimeter guard al the ldar..Overs1ein 400.000 people, mostly Jews, and
prison camp in Germany in July, conducting horrifyina medical CJC·
I ~S. periments on inmates at the Aus.-
Attending the press conference chwitz concentration camp in Po-
were U.S. Sens. Arlen Spec1er, R-Pa.. land.
and .Alfonse M. D'Amato, R-N.Y:. "At the time, neitherthe name nor
both of whom arc active in the search the camp meant anythinf to me, but
for Menacle. D' Amato said the ac-as a I 9·y~r-old • Amencan I was
count bolsters a report from an Army shocked by the crimes described. It
document made-public last month was somethina I'll never foraet:•
that an intelligence officer believed Kempmome said.
Menaelemayhavebecnarrcstedafter "A few days after the incident on
the war by American authorities in July 14, 194S (Bastille Day) my unit Vienna. was relieved by French troops and I
Kempthome recalled that one day had nofunheropportunitytocomein.
while 'be was with another enlisted contact with any of those Nazis," be
man named HaJI he went into a camp said.
.v• e' EP
A real •kl buff I
Daft RoblMoD mena1• to UeD Orm pip OD.:.. pol• aad
blabeer u be eldonwara weatlaer~at-Wa...._
ln tbe An1elee-lfatlcmal Poreet. Soatlaena Callfonalau 9*Jed back to bacll 90 ...-da,.. tbl8 week.
Inflation h~lil11 steady
for flnt month of year
8'111tAl•••--Pnl4 ' . WASHINGTON -Wbolelale prices, besiOIUlll ~ year OD ID ~note held flat in January, the aovmunent Kid today. E~
prices posted thelr steepeat drop in almOll two yean while food COIU aliQ
declined abarply. It was the third time in the last ,five months tba~ the overall
index showed no increase. While most economist• (~ a ~.rite of 2 percent for all of I 98S one said that, over the next few montha. ll ll hard to
believe that we will see any sianificant increue."1'hat e>plimiam ii~ on uaiDJ worldwide oil prices and the continued stteottb of the dollar, which hit
new h1&h• apinst foreian currencies apin this week..
ColombJanjetlbJer MUed
MIAMI -Federal agents seized a Colombian~ jet today, t~ dayi
after more than a ton of cocaine was found on ~. 1n ~be lalJ.elt aitcnft
seizure in this tristory of the U.S. Custom~ ~ce, offitjalt Mid:-~•lOml
spokesman Oiff' Stallings said the S.119 m1lbon )Ct of A vianca A1thnet ~·
seized "on the basis of A vianca havina the knowJedae of (t~ cocaine) beina
aboard." On Feb. 13, customs agents disoovei;ed that a pon1on ofa 1b1pment
of cut flowers from Bo&ota, Colombia, contained a total of 2,478 pounds of
cocaine worth nearly f600 million in street value, accorda.ng to a ~ustoms
statement. The coc~ne concealed in 32 flower box.es was mangled Wlth boxes
containin1 flo~rs aboard the plane. the release said . .,
Heart Implant p11dent named
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) - A 58-year-<?ld retired assembly line worker
will undCrso an artificial hcan implant operation Sunday at1he Humana Hean
Institute International, doctors said today. . Mumy P. Haydon, S8, of Louisville, .has had ~h.ronic conaes.llve hean
disease ohn unknown cause sf nee 1981 , sa1d Dr. Wilham C. De Ynes.
. lJoy pall• 6DZJ on dentl•t
-----------------------------------------------GROSSE POINTE WOODS. Mich. -A IS-year-old boy apparently fed up with his braces pulled a JUn on a dentist and ordered ~im to remove t~e rows Viet troops overrun rebel headquarters of silver across his teeth police said today. The dentist went a Iona wnh the
youth while an assistant telephoned for help, and policc.disanned th~ boy a"er
a strugle in which two shots were fired into the floor. said Grosse Point Woods
Public Safety Director Jack Patterson.
NONG PRU. Thailand (AP) -frontier opposite this Thai village, Phum Thmei. coalition leader Prince Norodom
Vietnamese forces, climaxina a haht-said Maj. Gen. Salya Sriphen, com-Plumes of smoke could be seen Sihanouk, a fonnerCambodian ruler, 'C' ... _.n • C'a.ee, ... Col.an to
nina offensive, today overran the last mander of Thailand's eastern border rising bove Ph um Thmei, less than received the credentials of four am-a..-"', a • .rr -
stronghold of the Khmer Rouse in the field force. He toured the area two miles from where reponers bassadors to his government there. NEW YORK -The tdevision series "Cheers" paid tribute to Nick
Phnom Malai region of Cambodia opposite the fighting. stood. Thai sources, who spoke on A final infantry assault on Phum Colasanto, the late actor-director who portrayed the lovable banender Coach,
and set fire to the conquered 1uerrilla Thai oommar;iders said unjts of condition of anonymity, said the Thmei was preceded by intense with a repeat of the episode which won him an Emmy. "This encore episode of
headquarters of Phum Tbmei, Thai Vietnam's S9th division moved in Vietnamese had set fire to Phum shelling. The Thai sources, who spoke 'Cheers' is dedicated with love and appreciation to the memory of Nick
military commanders said. · from the south, while elements of the Tbmei, or "new villigc." only on condition they not be Colasanto," co-star Ted Danson said as a picture of Colasanto appeared on te
A two-pronged Vietnamese attack seventh, eighth and ninth divisions Phum Thmei was a showcaac for identified. said Vietnam's troops screen before the stan ofThursday night's show. The episode shown was "The
knocked out Khmer Rouge defenses powered their way from the cast. the Khmer Rouge and a kind of entered the camp .about 10:30 a.m. Coach's Dau&hter," which garnered Colasanto an Emmy after its telecast in
at Phnom Malai and rolled on to seize Phnom Malai, a group of forested "capital city" for the Cambodian and set fire to a number of the October I 98:f.
Pbum Thmei which bugs the Thai hills. is about three miles southeast of f'CSi stance. Last Saturday, resistance structures. --~~~--=-~--~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~~curelorbnpotencetold
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NEW ORLEANS -As many as one-fifth of all men suffering from
impotence might be able to ~ave normal sex through surgery on tiny blood
vessels or injections of drugs. a doctor says. The surgery helps if blood vessels
in the groin are blocked, and the injections help if nerves are damaged by
disease or injury, said Dr. Irwin Goldstein. Goldstein said that the two
treatments are, effective .on men younscr than SO with physical rather that
emotional problems. The Kinsey insutute estimates that 10 million to 20
million American men are impotent. Goldstein said. ·
CoJJ6reu nlza CBS reqaat
WASHINGTON -Congress is invoking ICJislative privilcae to pfFent
CBS from obtaining a decade-old Vietnam War study the network wants for its
defense in the trial of Gen. William Westmorcland's libel suiL Steven Ross.
counsel for the House of Representatives, told federal appeals jud&es here
Thursday that a congressional analysis of enemy troop strength during the
Vietnam War would not be ajven to the network because it was still property of
the House. Daily Pilai 842-5878
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LOS ANGELES -A Nevada investment couselor described by a
prosecutor as a member of"an organized worldwide networ"k of pedophiles"
pleaded innocent to federal child pornography ~harges. Pornographic films
taken from the home of Leland Ernest Stevetison Jr., 45, of Boulder City, Nev.,
· allegedly depict him ana young boys in various sexual acts, said John Schreiber, agent-in-charge of the FBI office in Las Vegas.
LeaJcemJa gJrl cUa Jn crulJ
LOS ANGELES - A girl who made headlines three years qo after her
father took her to Mexico for unorthodox cancer therapy died in a car accident
while on her way to a hospital for regular leukemia treatment., officials said.
Amanda Joy Accardi, S,.and her father, Michael, were en route to Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center when their car hit a metal ~rd rail during a steady rain and
landed on a dirt embankment., said CaJifomia Highway Patrol Officer Jim
Kirkpatrick. The impact dislodged the car's spare tire, rammed it tlirougb the
back seat and into Amanda's head, Kirkpatrick said.
Old ra1lroad purclJued
FELTON -A defunct 110-year-old railroad that winds for almost nine
miles along the scenic San Lorenzo River Canyon will be carryina pusenacrs
next summer, predicts the line's new owner. F. Norman Oark. who already1 owns the popular Roaring Camp &. Bia Trees Narrow-Gauae Railroad at
Felton. announced Thursday he has purchased the line from Southern Pacific.
There arc sev~n bridacs and two tunnels on the railroad that was shutdown by
Southern Pac1fic two years ago because of storm damage. The new line will be
called Santa Cruz., Bia Trees&. Pacific Railway, said Clark . Hetf6ec0f'~ '• attom;t coandeat ,
. SAN DIEGP. -At Mayor ~ Hed~k prepared for his retrial on
pel).ury and con1p1racy charsts, h1s at omcy p 1d he was confident the district
attorney's 9ffic~ would apm) ~ail to .win a cof}\.iction in the case. Defense att~ Michael Pancer also laid there is "absolutely not" an)'. contemplatio11
of efttettna into!plea barpin with tbe di1trict at tome~ to avoid a.retrial. Soll1C
political observ rs had speculated that Hedaecock. 38, might resi~· if the
charget were pped or reduced. Hedgecock, however, has said he is
determined to stay on the job.
I
coatlaa•
IVaJea clte9 8flCNt mee~
WARSAW, Poland -Solidlrity foun4er Leth Walesa says he held 1 ~ teeret meetiftl wilh union ectivitH to di~lans for 1 1 S-minute nat~ llrib tO protat propoted incra1e1 in fl ~· The meeti"lt
beld lluanday mom~ wu .. apperently suceet1ful,,' Walesa told Tiit
led Pma ie one froin hit Odansk •Pat"lrMnt. A similar meetiaa ~Y of=:: o tfle outlawed Solidarity trade union was brokm up bj
police. and seven stftior Solidarity 1C11vi1t1 weft detained. Walela Wll "'~· Odaftlk ~ice and the proteeutor'• office told relatives of tlae acuv1su that no ~111on on their ~last could be upttted until today.
Coatnoeptln ,,.,, m IJ6eJalld
DUBLIN, Ireland -Parliament today debates a bill tut would permit
anr.one over~ 11 to buy con~·ves. 1 ~that hu broulla• daNetl
to Cabinet min1ttm1nd an · '•._..int of* "monl dfdint" ollM
ova.helminaRomanCatltolic lrilh. ntH 1979, lhe ... o(allcoelr'IClpbvte
.. WCultn~lrdmMI. •lllM~7~& of the ,...._&ic)p .•CallHlir. nt
""""" 'btMdt 1tt members 10 -lftlftdil hint. tonuol.·. TM meatUre ........ dtbete.ouldamndthe 1979•.~'imtheliakofcon~"''° rwriid eoupa bat oiilY Wi* I t pinniptioil. The ~ ...... su~ned mtasure woulOICt anyOM over• 11 purd\lse cont~aws;
r
..
Levin d «;f cribes
nighttime .escape
Kidnapped newsman tied sheets together,
slid down from window, fled down mountain
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)-
Jcrcmy Levin, the kidnapped Ameri-
can reporter who says he escaped
from l l monthsinchainsandsolitary
confinement in Lebanon, left here
today fora reunion with his wife.
sayi~ ••1 can't wait to be back on
Amencan soil."
A tear rolled down hischeelcas he
boarded a chartered executive jet at
Damucus airport, bound for Frank-
furt, West Germany, where bis wife
wuwaitina.
.. I cannot wait to get to my wife, to
bold her," said Levin,
He was turned over to U.S. Am-b&uedor William Eqleton at the
Foreip Ministry by Foreian Minister f arput al-Shara.a about two hours
beforctheplanetookofTat 12:30p.m.
(l:30a.m. PST).
The television correspondent, who
disappeared March 7 in Beirut, told
reporters at the Foreign Ministry: "I
feel wonderful. rve never been more
thankful. I've never been more happy
In my whole life."
Levin, S2, said he escaped Wednes-
day niabt by tyiDJ three blankets
totether, securing them to a balcony,
1Udin1down from a second floor
window and fleeinadown a mountain
toa Syrian army position in CQt
Lebanon's Bek.a.a Valley.
He said he believed there were four
other people held in the same place he was, but be did not know whether
they were Americans because he was
isolated tbrouah his captivity.
Four other Americans who disap-
peared or were kidnat>ped in Beirut in
the past year are missing.
"I've been in soli~confinement
for the whole time chained to the "'all
or a radiator .... The faces of the
Syrian soldiers were the fint faces I
saw since March 7 of last year. They
were good faces," Levin told re-
porters.
Levin looked shaken when he
arrived at the Forcip Ministry and
appeared not to know exactly where
he was .
A journalist told him he was about
to be turned over to the American
ambassador and he was in Damascus
at the Syrian Foreign Ministry.
.. That is fantastic," be said. in tears.
''The Orwellian year 19&4 wu not a
very good one for me, but l 98S is
startinaoutl bell of a lot better."
"Lucille, where is Lucille." he sajd
in a loud voice, asking about his wife.
Asked how he escaped, Levin pve
this account:
"Wednesday night ... I bad the best
chance to escape .... They were
carclessabout the chains., and I got the
chain off.
"It'stheusualcliche. I tied three
blankets together, climbed out the
window on the balcony, and went
down the blankets and I went as fast
as I could, and then 101 to the main
hi~way. 'There must have bttn a hundred
dogs barking all tbewaydown the
mountain, and my heart was in my
mouth."
SYDNEY, Australia(AP)-1t'1
bedtime and late-niabt television
viewers hete~ tuned in to the
"T oday''sbow, live from New Y Ork.
with IClenCSof Americanutruali•
in winter's anow and sleet wbili ~ustralians swelter in mid-summer"•
heal.
Australia is so saturated with
American television prosram1 tbae
days that CV~ fi'om 3().year4d
sitcoms to live rdays of the NBC
mominapropamarcon the air.
One Austri.lian critic complained recentl~abouthiscountrymenwbole
"idea of aood telly is to watch Ponch
and Boofhead of the California Hiab-
way Patrol vroom-vroomina up a.Dd
down Sunset Boulevard."
Australian viewen willina to stay
up late can now see Americans, via
th.c "Today" ahow, start their day
with news and weather reports and
whatevcretse is t~na U.S. news.
Sydney is I S hoursabcad ofNew
York.
"Finding out daily traffic con-
ditions on the Santa Monica Freeway should prove invaluable for Austral-
ian viewers.," commented one news-
paper when the show bepn airina at
the beainningofFebruary.
"fl>c advent of"Today .. was really
only the final touch since Australian
viewers already seejust about every-
thfoa Americans watch from "Hill
Street Blues" torcrunsof"M-A-S-
H."
. Daytime viewing in Australia is
filled with repeats of old American
sttcpmssuch as "I Love Lucy," "The
Andy Griffith Show" and "Gomer_
Pyle." Anothercritic~oomplainingabout
this deluae of old American shows,
wrote, "These proarams are so old
theyhaveanthropoloaical value."
Auslraliaasa nation of about l S
million people has ample t.elevision.
The country has three commercial
networks thai spend millions on
proarams in tough ratings wars and
theaovemment-fundedAustralian
Broadcasting Corp. as well u a special
network with foreign lanaua&ffhows
for immigrants.
But even in their own programs the
Australian commercial networks
tend io follow the American lead. The
formats of American news procrams are faithfully duplicated right down to
names such as ••£yewitness News"
and the same theme music. Network
commercials use familiar slogans,
such u "Just watch us now" and
"Still the one."
Some American shows arc even
duplicated, includina C~ News' "60
Mmutcs ... The local version uses the
same "60 Minutes" format, style and
even is broadcast at the same tame on
Sunday niaht. The ratinp for its
Australian hostsarc also as good as
the American show.
And ifthat wasn'tenougb, Austral-
ians can see American commercials
voiced over with Australian accents.
"It also makes all this recent
Australian nationalism a bit hollow,"
commented the Sydney Morn!_nt
Herald. "We arc what we watch.
But Australians also produce their
own shows. Among the most popular
programs in the country arc "A
Country Practice" and "Sons and
Daughters.''
He 'sanerdwithapurpose:.
Rai'Sing cas_h for Jerry's kids
CINCINNATI (~-Their or-members in the United States and ships, and what he sent avera&ed
pniz.ation'a letter is printed Canada. MC>Jt people become mcm-$4.3S1h <lC'Dts per membership. So he
upside. down. Their leader erijoys bers courtesy of a friend who sends in sent a nerdy amount. What the people
mowina the lawn in old Bermuda their name. Chapman does the rest. arc doina is crazy."
aborts. One of their areat joys is .. I can't stop people from doina NQt all memberships are jokes.
enllstina new members apinst their memberships to people," he said with Some ha'(e jumped at the chance to
will. a laugh. ••when l ae"t the money and have themselves officially declared a
They're different, all ript. But people nominate other people, that's nerd. _
what else would you expect from a the way it is. I just follow throuah." 'T vc really enjoyed seein& what's ~P pf nerds? • What does it cost 10 join? happening and some of the tbi°"
Tbe\ fledalina International Or-. "It's S4 or SS for the complete pcoplcaresayin.tand how they admit
pnization of Nerds was started fow-membership ·kit. I've been asked a their ncrdity;~ Cl)apman said. "Like
I months aao by a tclf-employed Cin-number of times, well, what's the one woman said. the reason she
dnnati bUsinesaman who has big ditfenmce between S4 and SS? It's a married her husbend 20.some years
plans to tap a. arowina fucination dollar," Cbapma'! deadpanned. "I aao was because he was-a bis-nerd
Marathon chess ~niatch
halted; 2 players. miffed
MOSCOW (AP) -The president conference ~tb ansry &bouts Md he replied, "Yes, of OOW'le."
of the Wortd Chess Federation halted some spectators jeered, Cam· The clearly dist.ra..Pt 1(1C .. 1 •rrr:1M1w
the marathon championship match pomanes announced that .be hlhed said, .. It is quite evidelat tMt F'lm
today despite the anary protests of the match because it "has exbaulteCS sbows compJetc inability tockal wida
champion Anatoly Karpov and the physical, if not the psychololical. such thinp as this world c:Mm-
challmler Ouri Kasparov who de-resources, not only of the playen, but piombip.'
mandecl that the match ao on. of all tbosc connected with the Referrin& to KarpoV, IC.asiMM
But 'the two Soviet players coo-match." said: "1 don't know if be ii t.aailil
femd for more than an hour with The official Soviet news apmcy sincerely about his desire IO s*Y. '91
Florencio Campomanes, president of Tass quoted Campomancs as sayina this (the press confercnce) ~
the federation, and formally accepted the players ·would begin a new, 2,.::. me very strongly of a wdkebtw ..
a decision that wu unprecedented in pme match in the first week of ~le in which everyone U.O-
wor1d championshjp chess. • Scpiember for the. world ch.am-his own role.
A bittmy disappointed Kasparov pionsbip. •11 have said 11)()ft"tban oooc &111111
-who had made a rematkable The announcement came af!er two want to play this~ and I ~
comebeck to trail Karpov S-3 in the postponements oft.he 49\h pme and abeolutely healthy, Kasparov IMd.
matchthatbepnSept. 10-accused there were rumors that the 33-year-~have tried to coavincc ..
the federation of tryina to .. deprive old champion was exhausted and otherwitc and to end this maleb oa al
m_cofmycbance1."Helaterindicated undergoing medical treatment. The sonsofpreiexts."
be had been pressured to qrec to end rules of the chess federation, FIDE, While the Campomanes DCW$ cm-
tbe match. give the president virtually unlimited fenmce was toina on. ~ burS
And K.arpov bunt into the noisy powers over the conduct of a match. into the a~um and Mid: ""We
news conference and shouted that After conferring with Cam-can and want to continue the s 1 both players wanted to continue the pomancs, Kasparov stormed out of donotapeewith(thedccisioo toead
match that became -at 160 days -·the room and told The Associated it and ~o stan ~ ICl'ltdl. . think ·
the lonaest in modern chess history. Press, .. I have to abide by the Mr. K..Upuov will 9CCOnd th11 ~ .
As the playen interrupted bis news decis1on.'' Asked if he was unhappy, ition."
~00dlef4i;bd·licted in 198 l .. . . .. .
Ql.scoYer-00 By; FBI ~ Alaska:
PARTYCENTE
with -well -nerdjsm. 1 had one pay tend an for 10 member-then arid still is today."
.. Tbere's plentyofnerdsout there," ------------------~""""."'.'====~:::1•
9aid B.L Chapman, =izaUon founder and self-proclai Su-
preme Arcbnerd.
Chapman, 42, a Columbus native
.wbocametoCincinnati in a l972job fll~~. formed the l>rpnizatian to
blip raiK money f0r muscular 4yto
trophy reaeuch 'and to have tome ta. Hit inspiration came hm waldabla entertainer Jerry Lewis' .. ~ routine on the tut muecuJar
d~ telethon. ... I to think of a nerd aa a
wimaw type of pay," he sa.ld. ·•aut
.... T aaned watdlu'I Jerry Lewis. I ..Md~ been a •n of 1"1Y Lcwia. Ind M"t ~~a nerd. He'• a ~ ~ prGalliJOMI, iCIJlcted lft.. ........ IUt wMa lie wUtl to. ~ bow how be daMel around Ud
walb and quacu. · .. ,.Ve always supponect ... _.,
~y (me..di) mytelf', IDd I
ll6cf rd eet IO"'¢ kind o/ Ol'IUizatioa
.-. rlprdina nmts bec:aUle it'• llOolnias very PQPUlar and .. .,.,..
-hive a lot orrun-Witlt It ft•a:ltoic .__.wy in uy way." ·-bona die nerd orfllt'iaacioD. wortred -, a membe,.i• com.-... with oftkial nad
tioca Card. ·bumper lliCUr
-~icatiOt\canecs l1'e "Wf.j Nm! ~,.;, maih,;.; atlt'Kttei 1t~nuon
lftd.,_.orpni1•tion hasp-own to 172
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Michael Droenln bold• copy of bla book, •cttlsen Bach•·'
His book reveals
Howard Hughes'
'buYing power'
'He was kind of an
anti-villain. And he
was so vulnerable ... ·
LOSANGELES (AP)-DIKing
the seven yeflrs he struggled to write
his book, Michael Drosnin recalls
times when he wou ld hold Howard
Hughes' memos in his hands and try
to commune with the dead
billionaire.
"J liked Howard Hughes.'' Drosnin
says. "It's a good thing l did or I
wouldn't have been able to get
through this. He's ultimately an
appealing figure .
"He was so innocent ofhis own
evil. He was so self-involved he only
saw his own needs. He never saw
what he was doing to others. He was
kind of an anti-villain. Atld he was so
vulnerable. I don't th ink he ever had a
moment of joy."
Drosnln's book. "Citizen Hughes,"
is anJJnexpcctedly personal look at
the rcclus1vc, half-mad Hughes. a
portrait provided bystacksofpri vate
memos which form a strcam-of-
consciousness autobiography of his
final ye.ars.
"There will forever be an interest in
Howard Hughes," says Drosnin. "He
was the-perfect vehicle fo r everyone's
fantasies. He was the one man who
could do anything he wanted to. And
the irony was that what he did with
that freedom was imprison himself."
Like most things Hughes touched,
this volume has enfendered con-
troversy. Its centra thesis-that
Hugh es tried to buy the U.S. govern-
ment and nearly succeeded -raises
hackles-in political circles.
Alleptions ofillicit payoffs to dead
politicians-Lyndon Johnson and
Hubert Humphrey-as well as living
ones-Sen. Paul Laxalt and Richard
Nixon -arc among the book's
RUFFELL'$ shockers. A claim that Hughes trig-
Drosnin balks at such insinuations.
"The time factor has nothing to do
with anything other than the time it
took me to research and write the book," he insists."l'd like to tell you I
handled it very efficiently but I
djdn't."
"I dido 't pay a penny to get the
papers," he says adamantly.
In his first chapter. Drosnin gives a
cloak-and-dagger explanation of how
he was shown the papers and allowed
to photograph the thousands of
documents which tilled three steamer
trunks. ·
Drosnin says ffe personally took
pictures oft he memos With a camera,
instructed bya professional photogra-
pher on how to get legible results.
These copies, he says, were obtained
in 1977 and form the bulk of his book.
"It all happened," he says. "There
are obviously parts I left out, includ-
ing the way I tracked down the man
who had the papers. But everything
I've written is true. I don't know why
people have trouble accepting it.•·
"I think there are two rules 1n
journalism," says Drosnin. "Tell the
truth and protect your source.•·
Drosnin, 38, who Ii ves in Man-
hattan, talked about "Citizen
Hughes" during a hectic national
bQok tour which brought him to Los
Angeles. headquarters-0fHughes'
Summa Corp. where the infamous
memos had been stored .
"I became obsessed with the idea I
could get these papers," says Drosnin.
"It was like the quest for ttie holy
grail."
The papers portray Hughes in his
last years as paranoid, emaciated,
locked in a room atop the Desert Inn
Hotel in Las Vegas, churning out
memos to his trusted aide Robert
Maheu.
I J Faalaloa lalaad
(Acrou from Robinsons) 644-6500
gered the Watergate break-in and
Nixon'sdownfall iscenain to be hotly IPlll.lmY, llC. debated.
f• n. a.st Ot Y• lit Then there's the thorny question of
The memos, lucid and well crafted,
outline the billionaire's goals: to
manipulate the White House and
perhaps choose the next President of
the United States; to pay no taxes; to
buy Las Vegas and afterthat, perhaps
the state of Nevada, and, above all, to
stop nuclear born b tests which he
feared would contaminate his retreat. 1'22 HAMm R.O .. COSTA .U-SU-115' howOrosnin,arelativelyunknown ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-=::..:::::..:=.:..:=~=:=:_J journalist,gainedacccsstotheprize
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E
Anaheim
Anaheim Plaza
Eaet AIMlheffn
2236 E. Unootn "'9.
M•lonV"fo 24000 Alicia Parkway SP 34 , 500 N. Euclid St. Suite 109
Costa Meu
3033 S. Bristol St. Suite A
lrvlne
14805 Jeffrey Road Suite F
o.. ..
Town & Country m 8. Main St. Suite 11
documents stolen from Hughes' of-
fice in 1974.
Some have suggested that "Citizen
Hughes" was withheld from i;>ub~i
cation until the statut~ oflim1tations
ran out for prosecution on charaes of
receiving or buying stolen property.
"I see it as a picture of power in
America," says Drosnin. What's so
shocking is that a government is for
sale and that no one ever turned down
Howard Hughes' money .... Hercwas
this man in his little room reaching
out to touch every politician. a
paranoid1rying to protect himself."
Garn takes cartoon
ii:i weightless stride
.r
How Could •·City
work.er get ~Dto
Hedgecock juey?
Who ge.ts to tell the emperor he'• wearina no clothes?
Not Leon Crowder. -
Leon Crowder is the lone juror to vote for acquittal in the
trial of San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock, who was charged
with participatina in a scheme to produce illegal contributions to
his re-election campaign. Crowder is also a San Diego city
employee.
Hedgecock is his boss.
Assuming that Crowder is an honest, responsible and fair-
minded citizen who hung the jury because he was unconvinced
by the evidencs the question remains: Jiow did this guy get on
the jury in the nrst place?
Our legal system goes to great lengths to ensure that trials
will be fair-both for the defendant and for the state. One of the
devices used to achieve that fairness is the voire dire, the jury
selection process. It gives the defense, the prosecution· and the
court the chance to reject a prospective juror whose ability to
evaluate the evidence objectively might be impaired by existing
knowledge, op1nions or relationships. ·
A. lot of game-playing goes into picking a jury. Lawyers
have, in fact, so complicated the task it has become a rather
inexact science. But it would have taken a scientist with the
talents of Dr. Frankenstein to have created Juror Leon Crowder
for the defense. Crowder is a career city worker with 15 years in
the sanitation department whose very living depends upon the
HedgCC9(:k administration.
Could Crowder have been expected to come into the
courtroom with no opinion about this case? Was it fair to
Crowder to empanel him for this trial, thereby forcin$ him to
decide one way or the other about his boss? Was it farr to the
people of California? ·~
We think the answer to all of these questions is "no.0
Jt•s easy to see why Hedgecock's lawyer would want Leon
Crowder on the jury; he had reason to think-Crowder might be an
advantage for his side. But why in the much-maligned name_of
j ustice would the prosecu.tion and judge accept one of
Hedgecock's employees as a Juror?
Snake called llberallszn
has poisoned thls natlon
To the Editor: bees. Thell dru&S.-acid rack music,
Re: Racism and the' 50s-Richard sloppy dress and fong hair will long be
Cohen. a stain on this country's history.
I think the time has come to speak And now, today; look at the li~ral
out against liberalism. cause's fe-1tering poison. Pomo.
In the forthcoming book. "The drugs, open immigration, treason,
Rise and Fall of the United States.," it dissent, women's lib, the list goes on
is to be noted that the poisonous and on.
snake that analagously bit and killed Yes, the poisonous snake has bitten
the U.S.A. was called Liberal. If the America, and she lies mortally
viper was Liberal, then the poison is wounded. And nobody will come to
liberalism. her aid, because in order to solve the
In the '50s, liberal-backed civil civil rights problems, people will be
rights demonstrators started an era of called racists; in order to solve civil
protest that signaled the snake's disobedience, people •will be called
movement. And what came out of all fascists. And in order to bting God
those tumultuous }'Cars? Staggering back into the picture people will be
welfare, unfair affif'mative action called religious fanatics.
programs, and civil disobedience. Unless American1 wake up and
The next movement by the rep-slay the wicked snake, maybe Ameri-
tilian liberal cause was called the anti-ca can be saved; like as not she won't.
war movement. Under the guise of The damage is severe.
using the First Amendment, they R. KNAUEZHAZE
brought this country down to its Laguna Niguel
Ladies better at betting
In gambling, women win more
consistently than men: Women arc
more methodical in the way they bet.
Men wager whimsically sometimes to
show off,.thus lower their success rate.
But once women get their S)'Steins
working, they seem more incbned to
stick to said systems. So contends a
lifelong observer of the gaming tables.
Q. What's the average weight of
women in their 30s? -
A. 133 pounds.
It's clear why most infants don't
object to what they're fed from
bottles. They don't development
much ofa sense of smell until they're
·about nine months old, so aan't taste
much. either.
Q: Which is the oldest known
surname -''Cohen" or "Katt"?
A. Debatable. Katt is usually so
i4entified. But Katt was the initials of
two words .:._ Kohen TIC'(!ek -so
some claim Kohen should tet that
credit. It's said every Katt is a priest,
descendina.in an unbroken line from
Aaron, the brother of MOleS.
O. Any danaer that the $2 bill will
be aec~ unacceptable someday?
ORANGE COAST lllilJ Plllt .
J
· A. No, sir. all currencies and coins
ever issued by the U.S. Government
are legal tender. In perpetuity. Con-
gress so provided.
All right, let's see you come u., with
the I 0 ways to ~pell the sound of"R."
Q. The writer F. Scott Fitzaerald -
what did he die or! And at what aae?
A. Liquor. 44. He once said he
never wrote a line drunk he couldn't
have written better sober.
Q. In what state is it that six visits to
a girl's house is the same under the
law as a formal marriaae proposal?
A. Maryland used to have thaJ one.
Please note, most such old · laWl
nationwide have been tossed out. In
place, now, are new family lcpl
1>1ckqes that deal more realistically
with our Love and War man's
specialties.
Q. If a million minutes is almost
two ¥Qrs. how k>na is a ~billion
minuta?
A. About I, 902 years.
,,.. ...
~~te111°'
TOM Telt ·
C•IY EdltCW
CNll ... Spol"(~
.... . w.
WIJa .'s at
laaltliJ
Korean
caper?
, W ASHlNGTON -Ridlant L
Walker, the American ambeeudor to -~·"'···--. South. Korea, bu yet anotbcr ~ __:. II nation for how it was that a 9Yinl •
_ -·-· w -.-;; squad of security police n>natwt ••
Diet • ..._ '"'•.... • • . :: poup. ~f Americans accompaa~
l ~00 ~C»\ ~---·· ._ --···· OppolltJOll leader K.im J?w J~
home to Seoul. The AmericaD wi1ll
Kim said the Koreans started die ~ mdee. The Korean aovernmeat llid
it didn't start anyt.bi.Qs. ·but the
ambassador bas fidly offaed aa
explanation that makes ICDliC:: He's
blamed Patricia Derian. California prepares to sell
itself to the tourist industry
Advertising blitz
from ot her s tates
h as cut into st a t u s
RoJler skaters in shorts and halter
tops shivered between takes at Venice
Beach the other day. Sailboats tacked
hard 01' San Francisco Bay just off
Sausalito a few days later.
But on camera, it was summertime
in mid-winter, June in January. as
California finally got set to reply to
the ads New York, Aorida, Alaska
and other states have used for years to
chip away at this state's status as
America's No. I tourist destination.
Those ads have taken at least $4
billion. in tourist spending away from
California in the last two years alone,
one industry source estimates.
Ever sihce the "I love New York"
campaign began seven years ago.
tounst industry officials here have
felt the slogan carried a silent second
phrase: "Better than California."
"We're like a mother hen being
pluck~" Christy Campbell, director
of the Catifomfa Department of
Commerce, told a reporter. "Cali-
fornia is the happy hunting ground
for Arizona, Nevada, Texas, Aorida
and New York."
That's happening in business re-
cruiting, too. but California lately has
begun to stem some business de-
partures and relocations.
. Now the state is about to begin
fighting back on the tourist front, too,
countering the wave of TV com-
TIOllS
EUIS
mercials and print advertisin.J that
caused tourism here to decline 9.8
percent in 1984, while vacation trips
rose almost l 0 percent nationally.
Three television commercials,
three magazine ads and four news.-
paper ads will be the first round in
California's battle to save its $28
billion tourist industry.
The ads will be Cahfomia's first-
ever government effon to attract
visitors. The state may be first in
number of guests and first in tourist
' dollars spent, but it's the last to begin
official spending to promote itself.
But the S5 million first-year budget
for the new campaign will quickly
vault California into sixth place
among state travel promoters, behind
'Aorida. New York. Pennsylvania.
Alaska and Michigan.
Whether the Golden State can
come up with a catchy slogan like
New York's isn't yet known.
''We're still fiddling with the cam-
paipl's theme." Ian Campbell. mar-
keting director for the state Com-
merce Department, said. But
Campbell says the ads will avoid
"sinJle-minded" approaches like
A9flda's emphasis on sun. sand and
sutt:"
Military airlift ferried QOP lawmakers
cross-country for a vote on MX missile_
WASHINGTON -Defense Sec-service, they d a1m·ed the th~ts were
rctary Caspar Weinberger and his ''in connection with official busi-
multi-starred associates at the Pen-ness." ta&~ are reacting with their annual Thouib the Defense Department
stentorian outbur5ts to suggestions traditionally has some leeway in
that the military budget can be cut by authorizinJ such transponation. the
somuchasa$7,000coffec-makerora GAO auditors concluded this vote-
$400 hammer. hustling airlift "strains the limits of
Taking the last refuge of sooun-tfo':.!ss~ble administrati.vc discre-
drels, they have the effrontery to It also. strained whatever fai th
question the·patriotism 'Of those who anyone miaht have had in the
think the military brass should fall in Pentagon's ability to anticipate the
line like good 901diers and swallow a vote count on Capitol Hill. The vote
few budget cuts alona with the poor, wasn't even close; 298 to 98 against
the elderly and the disabled. the Pentagon. So the six House
The generals and admirals seem to members who were .flown to Wash·
think that what's good for the Pen-inston for the midniibt vote could
tqon is good for tbe country. My have stayed in bed.
associate Tony Ca~ccio has dua up As for the three members who were
an example of this self-scrvina at-already in WashinftOn and were
titude. flown home'by the Air Fortt after the
The amount of money involved yote, one can only conclude that the
wasn't that areat in the context of Penta,on was hopina to inpatiate
Pentaaon b.udlets. It amounted to itself with 1 free plane ride.
onlyS27,760,orthecombinedannual Accordina to the GAO auditors.
federal income tait paid by four or five the niahts that cost the aovernment
middle-income families. $21. 760 could have been made on
But the cxomditure was of qucs.-commercial airlines for about one-
. tionab&c leplity, aocon:tina to the tenth as much: $2.798. cold~ audhon of the General TM ~t share -S l I 920 -A~ntini Ofticic -and it was an was used to ferry Rep. Phil Onmm.
exercite in futility. Here'1 what hap. R-Teus. from Midland to Walhina·
pcnC(t: ton and beck to W11CA Gramm was On May 31, the Houte was tchcd-the only round-tripper u~.for a midnisht v* on the MX The Air Force taxi. &re for Rep.
masuk ~· The DemcKTats ·John McCain, It-Ariz.. -p1id by lhe
wan.tect eo . be-WR t"-t C~ tupa)"tn. aot the oonarcssmaa -reta•~ stnct control ova the con· was 14;472 to fl) him home 10 trovtnla~ propami tbt f>a. 1'omU aftttthe voee.. lfbc had Oown
• tQOri . d\i1 move. or count. conuMrdal. it wo.ld t.ve cmt the .'So ttnbcrttt's watrdt put the t.ujlaytn only S42S
Alf f0tte•1 speci81 airlift unit to wort The Air Fotte fttthtd Ref,>. Wi.,_
fanni ... out over ae.c UMlll~ to briftl 1-~. R-C"abf .• from a
1*k 11a lopl ~ MO IPIMina c I I me.1 1a Sl. Paul and
-OUld ~-fbrthe ldmifthtntioft. Al ftew· him b9d. for tM ftdik VOIC It a
authonty for thas poht1cal shuuat COlt Of Sl.19'4. The OAO said a
............. ,t -..
"We're going to build on the notion
of'The Califomias,"' sals Campbell,
not related to his bou. ·we want to
show off the diversity of the state."
If the ads catch on, he said, Slate
officials hope private firms and travel
associations will pick up the-theme in
their own ads. Private resorts and
dev~lopments in California spent an
estimated $1 billion on advertising
last year.
But their uncoordinated, non-uni-
fied ads compete with each other as
much as with other states, said
Campbell.
The new "mini-movies" Califbrnia
will show starting next month avoid
that kind of intra-state rivalry.
One shQws a Los AnJt:les teenager
showing the town to a vuiting cousin.
another portrays a middle-aged cou-
ple visiting San Francisco and a third
shows a businesswoman touring San Di • ~e've been beaten by other states
in recent years.," said Campbell. "We
had to respond."
But the response will only be
effective if outfits like the San
Francisco and Los Angeles visitor
bureaus stop di~paraging each other's
cities, as their literature sometimes
has. It would also help if outfits like
Santa Clara's Great America and
Valencia's Magic Mountain could see
their way to cooperation.
Because, as an American revol-
utionary once put it. if they don't
hang together, thc:y'll surely all hang
separately -and ;ta1ce a lot of
California jobs with them. no.m., Eu., l• • s..ia MOlllca-
based col•ma&t oe state 111.n.
Jaca
AIHISll
commercial flight would have cost
$249.
lt cost $2,27 1 to Oy Rep. Webb
Franklin, R-Miss.. to Washington
from Grttnvlffe. instead of the $325 a
commemal tllght ....,,.ould ha ve cost;
Sl.976 for Rep. Guy Vandenfagt. R-
Mich .. to be flown m froni Grand
Rapids. instea-d ofS 169 commercial;
$2.506 to take Rep. Don Sundquist.
R-Tenn .. home to ~ashv1lle. instead
of $204; and $1I0 to fly Rep. Carroll
Campbell. R.S.C.. to Mynle Beach.
instead ofSJ88.
Footnote: Several of the con-
gressmen -including Dannemcyer
and Sun<tquist -insisted that com-
mercial tl11t\ts were not available.
Sundquist also noted that he Oew
home on the plane thauoolt Gramm
back to Waco. ,
CORRECTION: A recent column
carried the wrong address for the
Young Astronaut Council. The cor-
rect address is IOI S 15th St .• N.W ..
Suite 905, Washinaton. D.C. 20005.
NAMIBIAN OUTPOST: Cn\i~ of
the administration's polic) in
soutbem Africa have found a new
ta~t: the U.S. liaison office in South
fnan-occ.u-picd Nami~.
C'onVC"tonat critics have three
objcaions to the diplomatic outpost:
lc.s pmenct knds tcaitimacy to the
1.11h fncan occu1>1tion. wb1ch has
been declared illcaal b)' tM United
NatiOf) ~ ~ithcr N"amibja nor ne1Jh·
bonot naolawantsthc U .. lt\1 ton
'Mtt
hd .... ,... II • ,,_~NMI
t'91mt.UL
Actually, Walbr.blameci theanire
group of Americans wbo bad liCCOIQoo
panied K.im to Korea. But Derip it
not only the best-known member o(
that dclcption but also precisely the
sort of person who wOUld step
between the police and a o~tioa
leader who Korean authontles bave
tried to kill in the put. She bu beea
doing that son of thing since the old
civil-rigbts days in Mississippi.
Today Deriao's passion is civil
rights writ &Jobal, which explains ha
presence at the airport. She and the
other Americam we.re determined
that what happened to Benigno
Aquino, the Philippine opposiuon
leader who was gunned down in~
Manila. would not happen lo Kim. If
anything, it was the assassination of
Aquino that made a repeal, Korean
style, unlikely. But the death of ono. '
dissident in Manila is no guarantee ·
that another would be allowed to
remain alive in Seoul. Regimes run by
thugs arc notorious copycats.
What is Ambassador WalkeT talk-
ing about? Who cares if Derian and
the other Americans accompanyinc
K.im broke their agreement and
refused to allow the Korean polic.c to
take K.im off the plane by himself'?
They insist they made no such
agreement and that they did absoluto-
ly nothing to provoke the poli.cc (yet
another Walker charge). but none of
that really matttts anyway. This is a
silly argument fueled by an American
ambassador who's forgotten what his
country stands for.
The fact remains that Kim 1s under
house arTCSt. The fact 1s that he
cannot even go to church and that
ministers who have come to sec him
have been turned away by the police .
The fact is that he was once kid-
napped in Japan, probably by the
Korean C IA. threatened with death,
and dumped bade in Korea. He's been
imprisoned. exiled and attempts have
been made on his life. He would be
back in prison today or. like Aquino.
dead on arrival. if it were not for the
entreaties of the Reagan adminis.-
tration.
There is but one other fact you
should know about K.im: his crime.
there is none. unless it is near success
as an opposition politician. In 1971,
running as the opposition candidate
for president. he received more than
45 percent of the vote, which, to
provide some perspective. is better
than Walter Mondale did against
Ronald Reagan. Mondale. thouah.
went back to his law firm. K.im was
jailed for the crime of dissent.
It could be. as the ambusadoT
claims. that the grand plans of some
very small mmds went awry when
Kim landed in Korea. Maybe in the
crush. the police lost their cool.
Maybe the aovernment really bad
intended for the cops to be wclJ-
behaved .. i\nd mavbe. even, Derian
and the other Amencans panicked at
the' last m'oment and ~fused to let
Kim ouf.i of their sight. If they did,
they had their reasons. They, if not
the ambassador. knew that it was the
police wno threatened K.im -not the
othC'r way around.
ThC' other way around 1s appettnll)'
the way the ambassador and the
Reagan administration prefers it. lt
has directed its outrage at Derian .nd
the othen. For the JOvemmcnt that
over the yean has imprisoned bira,
kidnapped him. tried to kill hi1'
exiled him and n<),w has him under
house arTCSt for thf' crime of political
opposition, it has u~lcred ontx the
mildest rebuke. This,~ke the 'COl)-
structive engagement" o(U.S. Soutb
African policy, is foreian policy
without a soul -moral vacuity
po int as realpolitik.
It h•rdly matters who, 1f anyone..
broke an airport aareemcnt. What
'ma.tters is that an ally, a country
whose independence was ~urcd by
American blood: rou&hed up two
concressmen and two former Amcn-
caa diplomats who only wanted to
protect the life ofa pohtidl diss-dcnL
The amba$Ador is riaht: Oman 11 a
pcrfttt example of an American who
cannot be tnas1Cd. At any momen
the' likdy \0 do the~'~ ,.
........ a.m ... ., .....
tWli nhL
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Specilll v81ue: Crosswinds hot bomber
jacket detailed with snaps and pleats.
lightweight polyester I cotton shell with
nylon lining. In white, light blue, lilac
and pink, S-M-L ............... 32.00
-FASHION-
~ACCESSORIES-
Save 20%: On our entire stock of
washable slippers from Dearfoams.
Velour and terry in scuffs and ballerina
styles. Reg . 5.00 to 10.00 .. 4.00 to 1.00
Spedm purdtMe: Small leather items
from Westport Mundi including
cosmetic cases, coin purses and
checkbook clutches ..... 11.99 to 16.91
SpecW v-....: Fashion rings. with faux
stones handset in gemstone
colors ......... 2 for 7.00 or 3.11 uch
Save 30%: Ci ties fashion flat with
assymetrical strap. "Cola" in black
patent, tan or navy leather.
Orig. 52.00 ..................... 34.99
S.ve 25%: leather mid-heel wedge
from 9-West. Open-toe "Kriss" adds ~
linte sophisticati<;>n. In tan , navy or
white. Orig. 36.00 ............... 2$.99
S.ve 20%: On Reebok's leather aerobic
shoe. Toss out your tired old tennis!
"Freestyle" in soft leather with a super
fit. In white, pink, blue or grey.
Orig. 38.00 .... · ................. ~.91
S.ve 20%: Classic pump from lifestride
works beautifully at the office or an
evening out. "Shela" in black, beige,
white. navy or taupe. Orig. 32.00 . 25.to
Save 20%: Natura lizer's comfort shoe
coordinates with everything from slacks
to skirts. "Nova" in white, navy or red .
Orig. 37.00 .................... 29.80
INTIMATE APPAREL
S.ve 20%: On Maidenform "Wisebuys"
panties. Briefs, bikinis and hipsters,
sizes 5 to 7. Reg. 3.25 each .. 3 for 7.80
S.ve 20%: On The lily of France
Romance underwire bra, 11261 . Many
sizzling shades. Reg . 15.00 ....... 11.99
S.ve 20%: On lily of France Romance
bikini, /3200. S,M,l. Reg . 7.50 .... &.II
Save 20%: On St. Tropez lace teddy,
19000. Stretchy lace in seven colors.
Reg. 14.00 ...................... 9.11
Save 20%: On our delicate T exsheen
teddy in soft spring colors.
Reg. 12.00 ..................... 9.80
Save 25%: On all Pam Panties. Choose
from briefs, bikinis and hipsters in
assorted colors, 5 to 7.
• Reg. 3.50 each ............. 3 for 7.IO
Save 20%: On California dynasty satiny
jacquard gown and robe. Our exclusive
sleepshirt, pastel colors, P, S, M , l.
Reg . 25.00 ..................... 20.00
Matching fanny wrap robe. S,M,l.
Reg . 28.00 ..................... 22.40
Save 20%: On the Broadway's own pa-
jamas . Ours, an easy short sleeve, but-
ton front shirt ove.r. long pull-on pants.
Reg. 14.00 ..................... 11.20
Save 20%: On Deena camisole and
half-slip that comes in four lengths.
lace trimmed camisole in sizes 32 to
38. Half slip in 21". 25", 2T', 29"
lengths. Reg. 8.00 each ...... 1.40 ..,.
MEN'S CLOTHING
AND FURNISHINGS
S.ve 30%: On our entire stock of
suits•. sportcoats, dress slacks and
raincoats. Reg. 55.00 to
325.00 ................ alO to 227 .IO
S.ve 40%: On soft touch Diplomat
velour robes in seven solid tones.
Reg. 25.00 ..................... 15.00
S.ve 30%: On Arrow's-tone-on-tone
short-sleeve dress shirt.
Reg . 19.00 ..................... 13.30
S.ve 25%: On designer striped, solid or
doned ties. Polyester/silk .
Reg. 14.50 ..................... 10.18
S.ve 25%: On our entire stock of color-
ful fashion underwear from Jockey.
Briefs, boxers and bikinis in solids and
stripes. Heg. 4. 75 to
3/13.00 ................. 3.&e to 319.75
SpecW purd\Me: Famous maker print
ties ............................. 9.11
Spedel pwchae: French designer
leather wallets .................. 12.•
Save 30%: On our entire stock of
men's pajamas.
Reg. 16.50 to 22.00 ..... 11.51 to 15.40
•Suits in Anaheim, Beverly Center,
Brea, Carlsbad, Century City, Cerritos.
Del Amo, Downtown Plaza, Fashion
Valley, Fox Hills, Glendale, Huntington
Beach, Laguna, la Jolla, Newport,
Northridge, Orange, Pasadena, Panora-
ma, Santa Anita, Santa Monica,
Sherman Oaks, Thousand Oaks,
Topanga and West Covina.
.. YOUNG MEN-
-AND BOYS-
S.ve 21%: On young men's Campus
le Tigre colorful print short-sleeve
woven shirts. Reg. 20.00 ......... 14.18
Save 20%: On J .J. McW ays walk
shorts for young men.
Orig. 18.00 to 20.00 ..... 12.19 to 15.19
S.ve 25%: On young men's Shah
Safari roll-sleeve conon shirts.
Orig. 20.00 ..................... 14.11
Save 21%: On young men's Ritchies
dress slacks. Orig. 32.00 ......... 23.18
S.ve 25% to 31%: On young men's
cotton woven shirts in entertaining
prints. Orig. 20.00 to 22.00 ....... 14.99
Save 21%: On young men's Lawman
Swiss Army pants. Khaki or olive.
Orig. 40.00 ..................... 21.11
Save 25%: On young men's corduroy
walk shorts. Orig. 12.00 ........... 8.18
Save 25% to 36%: On boys 8 to 20
long-sleeve oxford dress shirts.
Orig. 12.00 to 14.00 .............. 1.18
Save 25%: On boys 8 to 20 Farah
belted duck slacks. Classi&sl
Orig. 18.Qp to 20.00 ..... 12.11 to 14.11
&eve 21% to 31%: On boys 8 to 20
famous logo striped polo knit shirts.
Orig. 19.00 to 23.00 ............. 1a.
Save 21%: On boys 8 to 20 O.P. cor-
duroy shorts. Orig. 17.00 ......... 12.71
-MEN'S WEST COAST KIDS •FUR CA RAV AN.. .. SPORTSWEAR.. S.ve 21%: On our entire stock of girls
-Save 25%: On F-;;nch designer 4 to 14 denim jeans collection. Save 50%: On over 300 gorgeous furs
at our fur caravan, Beverly Center,
February 16 through February 20, 'and
at the Glendale Galleria, February 23
through February V .
updated cotton knit sportshirts in ~eg. 16.00 to 34.00 ..... 12.00 to 2LIO
stripes, solids and rTI\Jltl-textures. Save 21%: On our entire stock of girls'
Reg. 29.00 to 32.00 ..... 21.00 to 24.00 handbags, totes and backpacks.
Save 33%! On Oleg Cassini and Joel Orig. 2.00 to 15.00 ....... 1.-to 11.IO
striped and patterned short-sleeve S.ve 21%: On little Bltty's nautical -FASHION-woven sportshlrts. Reg. 25.00 .... 11.11 striped playwear for newborn, infant
Save 21'M>: On Levi's A ction Wool and toddler boys and girls. .. ACCESSORIES.. slacks in washable Dacron* polyester/ Reg. 12.00 to 15.00 ...... l .00 to 11.21 a.v. 3'ft: On our entire stock of wool. Reg. 36.00 ................ 27.00 1eve 21: On boys 4 to 7 short-sleeve
spring necklaces including semi-precious S.ve 33%: On our own snappy cotton oxford striped shirts. Orig. 10.00 ... 7.•
stones, ivory and twist bea~s .. (Does bomber jacket. White, taupe or black. S.V. 291M.: On boys 4 to 7 Farah belteCt
not include M onet4t and Trifari. ) Reg. 46.00 ..................... •.oo duck llack1. Orig. 16.00 ...... · · · .12.11
2.24 t a't 75 S.ve 21%: On d~igner woven striped leve 21PM.: On girts 4 to 14 knit topt Reg. 2.99 to 85.00 . . . . . . . o -· nd A .. __.. Sewe ~ On our entire stock of tex-and plaid apomhjtta. a ~en '"'"' ...
tured hosiery. Includes laces, ultra-Reg. 32.00 to 35.00 ..... 24.00 to-a.a Orig. 6.00 to 12.00 .. • ..... 4.IO to I.II
f B •-• On French A-i...ner .an'ing-lne ~ On our entire atock ~girts aheers and novelty textures rom ur-_..,.. uv-v _.. 1fth nd robel ,
lington, Round·the-Clock, Jonathan colored stripe crewneck sweaters. • to 1• ny.tgowna • · ·
Aston and 8erbhire. Orig. 60.00 · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·······.Ma 5.00 to 25.00 • · · · · · · · · · · .1.11to 11.11 ... -32.00 Sewe JllM.: On Haggar belt loop slacks. ...,_ ai.: On.. zip quitta fOf beblel. • Ran . 5.00 to ~.00 · · · · · · · -to ,... A 18 00 1• --• 'bl Reg 27 00 eg. · · · · · .... · .. · · .. · · .. · · .... =~~n e~~~r:.v:~ar~ty of ~ ft ()n (;~," ~ "c:idi~ ·~~ted lpulal pwot 111: B~Of Pllt9t ~
styta and colors. Reg. 26.00 ..... a.• twil llack1. Reg. 32.00 to 36.00 ... 21• atretch cover81ft fof · · · · • • · ·
-TELEVISIONS-.
· &eve 70.00: RCA' 13" diagonal remote
color television, orig. 369.00 ..... •.oo
Save IO.OO: Zenith 19" diagonal remote
color television, orig. 449.00 ..... •.oo
S.ve J0.00: Magnavox 5" diagonal
black and white portable,
orig. 129.00 .................... •.oo
VIDEO RECORDERS
Save 200.00: Pioneer 40·watt audio
system, if purchased
separately 699.00 ............... •.oo
S.ve 70.00: RCA VHS Hi-Fi video
recorder, orig. 469.00 ........... 398.00
Save I0.00: RCA VHS Hi-Fi video
recorder, orig. 699.00 ........... 141.00
.. ELECTRONICS ..
Save 10.00: Sanyo dual cassette stereo-
to-go, orig. 99.99 ............... n.•
Save 20.00: General Electric Space
Maker microwave oven.
orig. 299.00 . . . . . . . . . . . : ...... 271.00
-FURNITURE-
s.ve 611.00: Queen convertible so1a in
a floral print, orig. 1150.00 ...... •.OO
Save 121.00: Traditional hall tree with
brass accents, orig. ~75.00 ...... 241.00
Save 201.00: Contemporary 5-piece din-
ing set, orig. 700.00 ............ 411.00
Save 301.00: leather Plus recliner by
Catnapper, orig. 700.00 ......... •.oo
Save 201.00: Traditional wing chair in a
classic mini·print, orig. 400.00 ... 111.00
Save 1001.00: 2-piece functional wedge
sofa, orig. 2000.00 ............. •.oo
Save 251.00: Transitional Tomcat
oatmeal full convertible sofa,
orig. 750.00 ................... 411.00
Save 461.00: Transitional Shadowbox
cream super queen convertible sofa,
orig. 1150.00 .................. •.oo
Also available in stationary
sofa, loveseat and chair at comparable
savings.
Save 151.00 to 361.00: Our ver~tile
Eucopean design Player modular with
sleeper and incliner,
orig. 550.00 to 1050.00 •.oo to •.oo
Save 1151.00 to •1.00: Berkline
Niagara family room group in' cham-
pagne colored Herculont> velvet, orig.
400.00 to 1140.00 ..... 241.00 to 711.00
S.ve 150.00 to 1•.00: Versatile rattan
2-piece sectional or sofa /loveseat
combo ... , .................... •.oo
-DOMESTICS-
..,,. 20IMt to 11%: Woven bedspreads
In white or natural,
orig. 50.00 to 135.00 .......... •·•
leve 40% to 11%: Tone-on-tone table~
cloths, 22.00 to 40.00
if perfect. ................ *-12.11
&eve 40% to 11%: Wrap Sack bed
pad, orig. 25.00 to 50.00 ... *-14.11
lfte 40% to 80%: White goose f('ather ..
and down bed pillows, orig. 25.00 'o
42.00 ....................... 14.11
Seve 4flMI to ~ Royal Cla11ic 100%
cotton towels, wash to bath, 4.60 to
13.00 if perfect ........... 2.21 tO 4.41
lpec.., purchMe: Queen and king
sheets in Refractions pauern ...... la
lpMW pUtdi •11: Matching
queen/king comforter ............ ••
-FASHION-
-ELECTRICS-
left •• Krupa 10-cup Brewmasttr,
<>rig. 70.00 .................... ...
9"e II.II: KruPt 1t11nd mixer,
orig. too.oo .................... ..
lne 4A Krupe Fast Touch coffeemill
orig. 24.00 ......•............•• 1t:li
lll¥e ... K,. coffM "°""· ,,,_.. . i .. 3 cupe Of 4-12 C'AJ>I, orig. 15.00 ...
"'•LIC1'ICMI MAY VMY STOM TO ITOM. NO •&ctu OllDIM, NO Tl1.IPMONI Oii MAIL ORD ..
• y ... , '
. .
-,.
•
The sporty 2-seater Civic CAX SI -
the first Civic model wtth Honda's
Progammid Fuel Injection -Is being
Introduced this month by American
Honda Motor Co., Inc.
The system will boost the Civic CRX
Si's horsepower ratings from 76 at 6,000
rpm for the Civic CAX to 91at5,500 rpm
for the Civic CAX SI.
To complement the CAX Si's higher
power rating. it Is equipped with a sport
suspension wtth front and rear stabilizer
bars and nitrogen gas--fllled rear shock
absorbers, sporty aluminum alloy
wheels and steel-belted radial tires. A
power sun roof -with a panel that slldes
up and back along the outside of the roof
at the touch of a button -11 standard.
Rear window wiper /washer, dual re-
mote-control outside mirrors, dual outlet
exhaust aod halogen headlights are also
standard Items. The rear spoiler Is the
European type, giving the car a sharp,
aer.odynamlc profile.
With the Honda fuel injection system,
each Injector is timed to provide the
proper amount of fuel to each cyllnder
based on engine speed and load con-
ditions. The result Is better fuel ~lstrlbu
tlon for Improved low speed operation
and sustained power, and compensation
for changes in altljUde, and good fuel
economy.
~C.HI CK. IVERSON
EXECUTIVE DEMONSTRATOR SALE!!
EIECUT·IVE DEMO
1984 CHEVROLET . ..
CELEBRITY EUROSPORT
. FULLY LOADED
#5048
J
1985 CHEVROLET
S-10 PICK-UP
8 8 % GMAC FINANCING
• Delivery By March 31 , 1985
. FILLY
. -UllL
EXECUTIVE DEIO -
1984 CHEVROLET
CAMARO SPORT COUPE
FULLY LOllEI
#5111
DISCOUNT
LIST ...
•12,11111
Loaded-V·6 with auto· SALE $15 0 goo:. DISCOUNT LIST v-6 ... ~: :u=••~. pow••
matte,· tilt wheel, cruise, tu-• steering, power bakes. cus-~~~e nfu~~tm~~t~~re~eets, '1111" STOCK NlMBER #5300 '11, 119" tom interior. loaded.
SALE
•111r
HUGI lllYINTORY-PORSCHE-AUDl-BllT SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY
Ill UI FIRll•BIFORI BUYING•LARGE SELICTION•HUGE SAVING
445 EASJ GOASJ HWY.
NIWPORT IEACH
673-4900
• ,
...
.... ~I:;: !:Ill "ID1fl ... ..,,.. ·-~ •"m1m11_F#_aa11-1 n.......,.,.,..... 111:= ..;,::.::.:::-"" ~ .. =~. ~:: .... -:::-:::= Pel&.L MAZDA Ofl '40 ......._ C... Df., T9. atll to .. llllllllll ........ ef 00 A MllA. Mat.._ #llO, ~ ....... CA eo.t. _.,. .... Ind .... ...... COM1 ..... a.. tateO .._,CA ....,.._ .......... Al
neat " 11'1 .i Cclrpot....,.,. ...... T. .... IHI "'9 HIM~ liMdl Unleft Celftpbell Motor• Of OllbnMI --llMoft. MO ............ .._ eo.t. .._ .... DllWtot NY,
C.. MtM. *·• 1 cell-....,.,, 0.... Dr , HIO, .._,CAtatll . . ...... , ...........
...,. Corpore46oft. 1421 Newport leedl, CA ne10 ...._ J. ~ _. ttoetloftl M4 =tl"f -.... l"9M eo.ia MtM. Mol9r'd Cclrpotetton. 1 ...... lrl9llOI ......._ COMI __. .._..,. ol ,. ,.. 1. 0.
01S11111 iiift C.iJfornla Cl0f'P0'9'kll1, MO ...... CA 12111 M ..... lreM"'9W llGN 'LAN l'OR THI
Tiiie ~:." r:: Newport~:·.:=· ~~·..,"::. = ~~t~= ="¥."= ~ ~· ce;:.:;:,....... ~ ......._ II oon-..... CA tMH Huntl"flOn 811ell, CA !'a.. THI 'AlmA ...
.,. M*' W: • OOtPOflltOA Tiiie ~tlneN le oon-NMe. M'J "-"' ~ M-. OIVll.OPMINT A891G\',
Tilll ......,..,., .. ..... W. Aoet MollerO __. ~ I ....... '*1· ...................... IOIT Mfl'ICI -1•
.... COWnty Cc.t& Of Of. Tiiie -•!Nftl -..... --....... •urine , .... .., INYIRO=NTAL 01· .... County· on Jf/IW'/ 14. Wlttl tfle County Otlftl ef Of. "90ttt T. .. ..... '*"9 ""°' to .,_ Tl1 lllt.,_ . -..r.
1111 _..County on '*'*Y 7, Thie .. ~, ... .._ 4, 1tll. I . 91UHN1NG ACTION
f'll1l8 1"5 wfttl tl'le County Cltrtl If Or· Ilda eflett be c~ 'A-11-t 1 '°" W9'.UAM ~ OfMOe CoNt . ,_ _,.. C0UMY on'*'*' t , ,...,.,.. "OlleoeN .._. l'ILDNl,J.._ AUT~ZIO Da11v P110t ~ 1 I 15 Pvblllhed Of_,.. OOMI 1111 IMflt • aid ,..... • _. MINT """' CONOIL ..... tt. 'tts ' ' ' Diiiy PtlOt Februwy 16, U , ,_*-cl to~ I ......... YllTM•NTlit ltOO
' F-N2 MAWOl'I 1, I. ttlS "'*"'*I 0renee 0.... ~ ~. HurM· INIT~ 8TM~·..t. 0 tOf, F-722 Daty Not~ 11. II.._.. 8lildt Urion Hiit\ CC>eTA..aA,FUl'IAOONo
Mardi 1, I, 1tu IChoot Ot1ttl1t, tOH1 OfTIONAl Ull lli'l"MIT ._ _____ .....,11-.. 1_. YOtlltown A:...~ '°"A MOTml WITH V,._
... 111 11nnH: liMdl. CA I, llN#",. ANC98 ,..,._ NQUND 1--------~ "'"~ oetWild at Oil .....,. 1:00 'Al'ICINQ AHO MAXIMUM
The following~·.-. Ml.JC fl)TIC( PICnnout IUH•N ~:.. ~ ~.:. ~&U-~N:T :r~
dolnobllliMMM: '1CTITIOUl8lllllN IMlmeTAW Piece b6dl .. lie~ ITWTINAC&.ZONl.IM-OA"lf PARK APART· umtTA,,_,. ThefOllooll4ne_..,. .. openec!Mdreedln81dt.C, V.fflONMINTAL 01· MlNTS. L,D .. 2112 Dupont Tht foMowlng periON tn dolrw ..._. M: "clom 3'1. ' ~TION· NIGATIVI . on~. Sull• 202. rrvlne. doing bUllneee... • AL1.CA.QAKLAND. tm Al ........ Of .,... DIQ ... ._.noN.
t27t5 S & H PARTNERSHIP, Kailler A\lllnUe, Irvine, CA end NmoM .,.. "9 ,. l.~NNING ACTION
Pen American ~~· 17•1 Mt1cM1 ~.Irvine, 12.r:, O ... __.___ 1.._ .. ~Of !he 11eco 11111111 PA 11 01A P1CJR Q9f WONG
Inc .. A Ctlllfomla ........... CA92714 · ..._..,.,, -bl0dlf{1~ ..... tu .. lie Al90CIATQOR81W~Y
atlon Alexander. MacPheraon. WanderW LaM. HwteiftOton added to ... QUCMtlone un. HEAITAOI! HOT!LI 1H Thie t>u1lne11 11 Cort-R.R. _, 1. Unoan Ad.. Now 8Mctl, CA 12$49 ... Vlld rMliUleii tait pet· CAM Of 01H WOHO' Al-' I#........... ducted by: a Hmfted partner· WatwfOf'd, ~ova Scot11. ~ E. & Nena Athton, mtt number 11 tut>mm.o 80CtA TES. AUTHONZIO 8teYeD Oreenberl elaare. quiet moment OD the road wttll friend llartlyn Hamilton. Miio c~ B1H 41<2 ... 1 ........ .,, Clrdt. CA with blO f«m. AOUIT F.OA IAl<IOl<A
AD. K_,, PrMdertl Hugh MacPtierson. M NtlS Peyment In M lhlll lie FA"M$ ~TIO
' Thie ttatemont .. llled ROOC1NI AO.. Now W••· Ar~ H. a Mart Al)n mecSe wtwn MWWi ~ Of 148IO WT IUNFLOWlft F.Tiee~ay[can tasl·es can be =·~~:i~: :=i=.=-lllend· ~oe:-=~Ortve. =i:.~of.=.-=--= ~!=at..~~~ 1•111 Anoue MlcPheraon. 9tt JI)' Colin LCNefoy. 172' moved from Olttrtct prcip. FINAL . OE.VELOPMl!NT
.... ~ Of•"""''= A 9,..2,.to, Oorone del Mar. ~!=·1 Nowpor1 Beoah, etty at !tie lime ot fUll Pl)'-PLA~ FOR A I-STORY ... ...,__. -...-,... " IMnt. HOTIL TO REDUCE THE '-h h 1 b Otllly Pilot FebNal')' 15, 22, Thia butlneu 11 con-EllM Mw• lovef<>y, 1723 The Bolld ,...,..... the PAAl<INO STAUCTU,_l 1 e d thrio g. . t 1•s c u Marotl 1. I, tHS Ouoted by: a genwal part· Mlfamar, Nowpor1 Bolctl. rlohl to refecit any end ... FROM 4 TO 3 LEVEL8 ANO ea lze U F--724 Mrlhlp CA 92881 bide or to wllve any Inf«· A CONDITIONAL USE~ Af\9111 MecPheraon Thie buelnou II con~ rnetlty Of'. lnegulerlty In 11'9 MIT FOR OVEALA'Pf'tNG • Th61 111tetn0nt WM filed ducted by: a genwal part. bidding .. All maC.lalll 119 PARKING, LOCATED AT "8.IC NOTICE wttt1 '"-County C*1( of Of. notal'llp IOld In an "at 11. Whore la" 3350 AVENUE OF THI! LOS ANGELES -Steven Orecn-sajd, ant: knowledge, power. respect, ___ --.. anoe County on Febnllty e. ~ ~t:=t Wiii Med condition. The Dl1trlct ARTIJ IN A POA·UC ZOHE.
i....-.. 's toot.·~ r-. love ·o the r-.a t Tai'l Oat1'ng costs $29 r-.o an ............... --1HS ma1c .. no~,.., written ENVIRONMENT AL D!· ""' ... r 1 ... m aor 1 ri s •~ r money or contentment. um ITATl•NT ,... with the County Otoni of Of. or lmP'led ... 10 t.he con-TE'™INAT10H: PR!Vtou8 lane this yeara he ho~ o,th~rs will introductory membership and fea-And it provides a list of 39 The following per9on1 .,. Publlafled Ofenge Coaat ange County on Fobruaty 1. dltlon of any 1,.,,, ttoma rney l!lf\. op.13-1,.,
meric the same way with bls new tures a shiny, neon-looking m1Jenta character traits which can be checked doing bullMla u: oa11y Pilot Fef)ruaty 15. 22. l915 be withdrawn from .... ",. 4. ZONE EXCEPTION
service called Ta.ii Datina. It's the and yellow on black bumper sucker. off, includ ing such choices as im-HIGHLAND SHORES. Marot11. 1. 1985 Pu""'· ....... "' ~ quired prior 10 blO accep.. PERMIT ZE·l3·172 FOR "----· } I h' ..__ t. 1924 Cot11end Dr .• Newport F-72t .,.,.,_, .,.ange .,..._, tance. HUNSAKER AND Al· _SC()oJld ullll;way ove cub to 1t t,be tn~ .. ey-to th~operarion. pulsive, romantic. passionate, tolcr-e..oti, CA 92125 Daily PllOt Fet>roary 16, 22. =......,,,.._. s 0 c 1 ATE s , 1 N .
road in this land of five million cars. lfa member sees someone he wants ant. dreamy. argumentative, neat. Cemeron PNllp Peeroe. Mardi '· 8. t915 1ft111 c o A p o R A T 1 o ,
Both an based on the notion that to meet who is drivin~ a car with that , scxyilfiscrious. frugal. o ld fashioned tMI Holiday Ad .. Newport ""727 Defect: ebNal')' 14, 1985 AUTHORIZED AOENTl-pcoplc ·-each otb-1'n cars and ....... t bumper st1'cker he as only to J·ot and a leti'c e..oti. CA 92MO "8.JC NOTICE •-.,. Mf\TM"r Publlltled Oranoe CoeM F o A R o L L o w • -.-"' _.,, • · Catherine C ameron ,.._ nu ""-OeHy Plot Fobruaty 16, 22, MCCLELLAN. JUNIOR, to m eet, but have no cttance when one down the license plate number and Tail Dating puts no limits on who PMroe, 1941 Hollday Ad.. FIC1'mOUa .,.... NOTIC9 °' l98S 2424 WINDWARD, NEW·
exits the freeway or barely makes it rel in touch with Tail Dating's can ~·oin, Greenberoer said. Nowpor1 l!IMctl, CA 92880 MAim 8TA~ .. ._m....,. TO F·132 PORT BEACH. FOR EX·
• •o Th .. butlnos1 11 con· ~ ,--......... poraons we •.,::. =· TENSION~ TIME r,..,,. • th.rout the red light. leavmg the eadquancrs. T e une mployed driving old ... ~ --""' -... ...-. .,... .-un .. th h . d Th T 'I Da . will .,....,oo by: a general part· dOlng bullflell ae: "'°"9RTY AT •-IC MftTJC[ PLANNED DEVELOPMENT o er 10 • en a1 Ung send a junkers can sport the same Tail nenhlp s o u T H w E s T MY u IALI n-. nu FOR A 19-UNIT CON·
"It's a natural thing. especially in personality profile to the person in Dating bumper sticker as movie Camwon P. PMrce TREESMITWS. 3n w. ~ N0.~.121770 ..,. oOMINIUM PROJECT Los Angeles where there are S million the .other car, without telling the studio executives cruising in sleek Thia 1ta1emen1 -llled SI. •C-2. Cotta Meea. Callt. supeno, Court of tht VMllt?m LOCATED NORTHWEST a.; can," said Grecnbe....,er .-.aident recipient the sender's last name. Ja2 ars. with lhe Counly Clerk 01 Of· 92~1~ Mlt...._.. ..__. 377 Stat• of Callfotnla, for IN MCOMllDI 111111 AA80A STAEETIWHITTIUI ••;.;.1 .-·~· r.U · ange COunty on Fet>Naty 7, ,.. .,.., ... _, .-... C ty I Of AVENUE INttASECTION IN ind c hief executive omcer of the More important. I.he one who wants 'J wanted to make it a trendy. fun 1985 w. Bay s1. •C-2, Co.ta ~at: 01 ,,:riNE LANO -~ ,......,,.. A POR·LD ZONE. EN-
Sherman Oaks-based Ta.ii Dating. to meet another person will not be thing to do," he said, noting that a , ... Mesa.Callt.92827 . aka MARY MAXINE LANO. NOTlCIOflDVAULT VIRONMENTAL DE·
"Peoplearcinthcircarsallday,"he told anyth1'ng about the ,._.(fr· 1'ent · · l ed · h r-. Publllhed Orange Cout Dave Noel. 351 w. ~."=Md · ANDILlcnoNTO TERMINATION: NEGATIVI!
...... I promotion IS pann Wlt 1rce Daily PllOI February 15. 22. CoetlMela,Calll.92927 NoTIC.E IS HEREBY ISU.UNDmt DECLARATION FOA said. "People are always checking leading to a safer situatjon. reen· memberships o n radio\ statio n March 1. 9. tH5 cwot L .. wan.ca. 2838 GIVEN lhat on the 25 day of ":.fr OP·43--3A.
each other out. This is a way for them berger said. KNOB-FM. \ F-723 ~~~-~· Colt• Mela, Feb.. 1985, or tlWMfter ~TANT MOTICI FOR FURTHER INF<>fl.. to meet. And whafs great about it is .. No one gets any information on The introductory membership 1---------"90• ~-v within the time allowed by MAT10N ON THE A80VE
that it's we." you that you don't want to oive," he provides the bumper sticker, per-fltllUC NOTICE Tttta bu•1ne11 11 con· 1ew. at Garden Grove. Celt-IFYOUAPROPERTYISIN APPLICATIONS. TELE· G be I · 00 ducted by: a general pall· tornla LYNN E OS· FORECLOSURE BECAUSE PHONE 754--62.45 OR CALL I recn rger acknow edges that his said. sonality profile and three c.ards to '1Cnnout .,..... norlhlp TRANOER u •• ~tor of YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR AT THE OFFICE OF TfiE
idea is not original, but he said he After the profile is sent out, it's up have the profile sent to three people. um ITATllllNT Albert Mltohell P•t theWlltot1N at>ove--namecs PAYMENTS, IT MAY B! ~LANNING DEPARTMENT.
didn't kno w Ruth G illo u in Hunt· to the recipient to contact the person While three additional cards cost $20 The following pertOl'fl at• Thi. ata1ement wa1 fllocl decedent. wtH Mii 11 Pl·'••• SOLD WITHOUT ANY ROOM 200. 11 FAIR DRIVE,
in•to n Beach had launc hed the Free-h nht th t' be Id ·1· · ·1 doing bullnoM aa: with the County Clwk of Or-ule the pareol of real ptop-COURT ACTION, Md YoU COSTA MESA, CALI· ... w o sou... e mec mg. a mem r cou receive an un 1m1tea DAVE'S GLASS & Ml~ ange County on February•. erty lltuated In the City of may have '"-llgel' right to FOANIA. way Singles Club in September 1983. The profile includes questions on number of profiles. ROR, 2077 Wallece •3. 1H6 Garden Grow . County of bring your account In OOOd Pvbltlhocl Ofanoe CoeM
Greenberger. a 30-year-old appearance, occupatio n , musical, Freeway Sin~es' Gillou said re-Coeta Mela. CA 92127 'Pu ........................ ~ Ofenge, s1at• of ca11tom1a. etandlng by pey1ng a1t of DallyPllOt Fot>ruaty 15, 1116 bach I r-. '"'h ' ho J d 1· · I r-. ti h Ofttd Aahley Fox. 2077 .,...._, "" ... -...,_,commonly c:IM"'nated at yourputck»paymenl1ptua F~7S4 . c or 1rom \.: 1cago w was scxua an po 1t1ca pre1erencc. cen y t at s e's not surprised wa11ece 13.CoetaMtM.CA o.tly PllOt February 8. 15. 11581 DANIEL• Garden permitted coeti anc1 ex----------interviewed recently in his Century favorite movies. television shows, another business like hers had been 92827 22. M11Ch t, 1985 Grove. CllllOfnla and more pen..a within tl'trM monttie "8.JC NOTICE
City law office, said h e's often wanted books and things to do on a date as formed. Thi• bu11n"' 11 con-F-703 palliaAarty deecrlbod .. fOI· from the date thll notice of 1--~=;...;.;.;..;.;.;;;.;;. __
.... meet someone in a neighboring II k " d "Th II b h ed by: an lndMdual Iowa· o.tautt wu recorded. Thie .., we as smo ing an newspaper ey a try to copy me. ut t ey David A Fox LOT 34 of Tract 2578 .. amount 11 $2.129. 10. u of um etAT'DmlfT
vehicle but had no way to do so. reading habits. phaseoutas fast as they phase in." she This statement was filed 1111-tC NOTICE per map recorded In bOo« 02/0f/85. and w1111ncr.... The tolloWlng peraone ..
"It's difficult to meet people." he ft also asks whic h is most impon-said in a telephone interview. h the Covnty ~of Of. '"~ 77 pagea 8 & 9 of Mil-untH your ecc:ount 11ocomee doing ~ aa: PerMlc
•---------ange County on Fobtuary 8, cellaneous ~ in tht Of. current. You may not haW'l to Plannera Ind lnaufanoe tlor· "8.IC MJTICE rtalC NOTICE "8.JC NOTICE rtBJC NOTICE NI.IC NOTICE t915 ,_ Tl ..._ 1:: .. c nee of 1t1t CounlY Rec:orcs. pay "" 1n11re unpeld por-=:,,of~~
PICnnoutlUl••N 1966 Pomona #12, Coata • K-.... Robef1 T Beat, 2925 FICTmoutlUIMU Publllhed Ofange CoMt TIO l mlt1 :,,::: =~·~ ::~--= Gro'te.CA'2Mo ·'
MAim 8TATW MeM. Caal. 92927 ACllhOU8 .,..... South Brlatol Street, Coeta NAME eTATDmlff Dally Piiot February 15, 22. uJ~ :'::: ~~~~M con<lttlonl. 1Wtrtc:1lona. ,... . but'°""""' pey ~ J. EldW, 21•1
# The ~ per90n le Th .. bu9lneu •• con-um 8TATa....,. Mela. CA 92928 The followlng peraon II WCh 1, 8. 1985 F-720 DATED 9115182 UHLE88 ervatlona, rights of way Ind the amount .... aDolle. a.rt~ Dr .. Anlhllm. CA 4olllQ bu11M1a M: dllctocl by: a genwal part-The folowing per.ans.,. Peter J. l<o.ttlng. 2925 doing l>ullnoal aa: enementi ot record. Aflet thr• monthl from 92802
• AMERICAN SOCIETY OF norahlp doing ~ ae: South Btlltol Street Cqela 'NORTH AMERICAN IM· P\lllC N0TIC£ ~~gT/tf E y~J~IO~RcJPO The clocedent'l intor.t 10 11\e date ol reoorcSatlon of Dorffn Eichler. 2141 ~OSMET1C BREAST SU~ VIJayC.Parlllh WMTAR FULLERTON Moea.CA92128 ' PORTS.332LIJQOnla,New· ERTY fTMAYBESOLDAT belOldw'fllbe .. Ofllerr1gtlt, lhi.documlnl(wfllc:tld.eeof Oertley Dr .. Anatlolm, CA
• ER Y . AMER IC AN Thia 1ta1«r1ent wu filed ASSOCIATES. 2925 S. Mletlael M. Rue, 2925 port Boectt. Calif: 92M3 NOTICE A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU title, lnter•t. end .. ta .. at rec:ordatlon appears ,_. 92802
.ACADEMY OF COSMETIC with the County C*1( of Of. Btlstol. Colta Meea, Cell-South Brlltol Street. Coeta Timothy Mldlael s-t· ltVfTINQ _,. NEED AN EXPLANATION IN time of her deeth and ett on). uni.t the obllgafton This bu9lnetl 11 con-
• REAS T SURGERY. ange County on f'obNary 4, fomla 9211211 Mela, CA 92828 land, 332 Lugonia. Newport NOTICE IS HEREBY OF THE NATURE OF THE rlghl, tltte. and lnter .. t that l>olng loredoled upon pet• duc\Od by: a general Pl'I· .AMERIC~ COLLEGE OF 1985 Robert T. Best. 2 Jede Thl9 bualneu 11 con-Boaen, CaNf. 92863 GIVEN that .. aled PROCEEDINGS AGAINST docedanl's 911ate Nia IC· mitt a longer !*loci, you nenhlp <COSMETIC SURGERY. f-.a7 Cove. Corona del Mar, Call-ducted by: a llmlted partner-Thia butlnon It con· pro"""""'la f lvrnllha.... all YOU YOU SHOULD CON-quired or may,_....... ec-have only the legal right to Dew_, Elcl'llet '1419 Superior Aw. Ste. 2, Pubfflhocl Orange Coalt fOfnla 921125 lhlp ducted by: an Individual lal .---or ""' · quire stop t"-loreclolura by pe)'-Thie etatement waa nled ~ Boocti, Calif. 9?183 Dally PHol February e. 15, • MICl'IMI M. Rue. 3 Hiii· Rot>«t T Beat. General Tim Sweetland t>or, materlall. equipment, TACT A LAWYER. . Ttte .... wlN be made to Ing the entire amount do-with the County C*tl Of Of. • Wllllam Roy Morgan 22 March 1 t985 gra11 Irvine Callfornla Partnw 'This statemenl wu filed traneportatlon and iuch On 2122195 at 9.15 A.M. the ......._. ._ .. ..__. .. , ... ..._ mandod by ye>ur creditor ange County on Januwy 18 ' • ' 9 7 ' ' " other laclHtlol u may be,.. CICO CORPORATION aa . ..,,.~. _,.. .,.., ......_ T tlnd he . t985 ' M.D .. t419 Supetlal' A~. F-&99 2 14 Thie 1tatement WU ltled with the County Clerit of Of. quired f()f t9TH STREET the duly appointed Tl'\llt .. IUb)lct to the lerma end 0 out t amount
•te. 2, N.wpon Beach. Callf. Peter J. Koetting. 1975 with the County Clwk of Of· ange County on Febn.llry I, WIDENING FROM PARK nder and "'"IUant to Deed condltlonl herelnefttr Mt you mlllt ~. Of to arTMge ,_.. ~2883 Porl Leurenl. Newport ange Coucaty on Fel>fuar)' 8 t985 u .--forth and eubi-ct to con-torpeymenttoatopthef«• Publlllhed Ofange Coost .,. Thie bu1lne11 It con· •-II' Tll't BMch, C1llf0fnl1 92e80 1985 . ,_ AVENUE TO FULLERTON of Trull, Recorded on llnnatlon ..., the abo..,..tl-ctoeure, Of If your property II Dalfy Piiot February 15, 22 .
... .,,ted by· an lndMdual r~ NO ""-Thi• bualne11 11 con-,_ Publllbed-0r-Colet AVENUE wtll be r~ by 9127/12 al Document no. t'-" rt.., In f0f9Cloeur• for :t,nv ottior Mwcn 1 e 1985 ~~ · "·-·--.,... the City of Costa Mela atlhe 12·33857 4 Of Offlc:lel A.-_, cou · . u RIC ' ' • F· 731 Wiiiiam Roy Morgan. M.D. 'ICTTT10UI .,._.. ducted by: a ._-,...al Part· Publllhed Ofange Cout Dally PHot February 8, 15, Office of the Ctty Clwk 77 corda In tM office of the Re-Bide ate lnvlled for the r.-on, contact. A,.. AN
• This ltatement waa filed NAME ITAT'lmJff nerlhlp Dally Piiot February 15, 22. 22. Mareh 1. 1985 Fair Drive Coete M ... Call-corder of Of•"""' County propart)' and muet be In writ· SAVINGS AND LOAN AS-~th the County Clerk of Of. TM 1~ Michael M. Rue March 1 8 t985 F-709 • • -...-· Ing and wt11 be rlClllY9<1 at SOCIATION (714) 773-7312, County on February 4 ~'"'"' poraons .,. Thia 1tatement WU lllocl . . F 721 fOf'nla. until the hour ol 11:00 Calllornla, He<:ut•d by the...-....... of BONITA LYNN"' 15125 E Whlttfer Blvd ' doing buliMM as: ,.~. Cler1I o • a.m.. March 5, 1985, al JOHN W. RAMPELLO & .,.,,.,. • "' . ,..,.. ......,.,." 5 COS OVERHEAD OAR· With the vvvnty of r· PlllJC NOTIC[ which time !hey will be open-NANCY A. RAMPELLO, PALMER. Atlomey at" ~w. Whltllw, ......,om1a ..,.,.,7 • ........ AGE DOORS, 1945·A angeCountyonJanuary 24· 81-fC NOTIM" edpubllclyandrMdaloudln HUSBAND AND WIFE WILL 5e Eut Holly Street. &lie. Bt·l91361-3-11(F) SCBABLEIN b Published Ofange CoMt Placontla Av9nu• Cosla t9l5 ,.-. itw. NOTICI Ofl theCovncllChamber1 Soll-SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION 215, Pasadena. c.llfomla If you "-w any queetlon1,
ally PllOt February 9, t5, Mesa. Calff 02927 . f2l72l'7 K·W71 DEATH Ofl ecl Pfopoaal• ehall bMr IM TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER 91103. any lime after the you ahould contect a lawyer DON ALO DALE
Dra TH Nor1us
22· March 1· t985 Pell Mauett, 33448 ~ubll"*I Orange Cout NOnc. Ofl M>IUU T. LUMD .eia title of the wonc and the FOR CASH. (payable at time nret publlcatlon of thla no-°' the gcwernment agency SCHABLEIN, age 27 • F·701 Do1lnla Drive. Laguna Da:HY Pilot February 1· 8· 15·1 DEATH Of1 AU9MLL TMOMIA&.D name of the bidder but no oflaielnlawtullnoneyolthe tlce and belOf• IMllJng I wtllchmay"-velnlwedyow R 'd f
Niguel. Callf 92877 22· 1985 MITH O'OO•••u DAvtl LUND other dlltlngullhlng maru. United Stat .. ) at AT THE sale Any bid .,, .. be 90-io.n. years. est ent 0
Joel LaRochelle. 753 Blue F-e81 AND M NfiilON AND°" NililON Any bid r~ after lhe FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE companied by • caahler'• Remember. YOU ~AY Yucca Valrey. c..
J.-, Culotl, Blue Jay. Cellf. TO AO•HTD TO AW8TIR ICheduled cloelng time IOf OLD ORANGE COUNTY diectl Of cortlftld chodl LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF Formerly of Costa rllltC NOTICE 92317 PtlllC NOTICE l!ITATWNO.A·,... HTATENO.A1..n the reeolpt of bids lhall be COURTHOUSE. LOCATED mad9 ~to the •x· YOU DO NOT TAKE Mesa.Donissurvived
Thia bu1lnoss Is con· To all helrl benefk:tarlel To all helfl. beneflclarlel, returned to the bidder un-0 N SANT A AN A ecutor, LYNN E. 08· PROMPT ACTION. b his ""°'";. . ~:A=I ducted by: a general pall· K·1tMI credltor1 and cont1ngoni creditors and contingent opened. It lhall be tht IOte BOULEVARD BETWEEN TRANOEA. In lhe amount of NOTICE 18 HEREBY Sy ,., ... ._ mter,
T 1-.. norst11p FICTTTIOUI ..,..... credllore and per.ans who credfton. and persona who reeponall>lllty of the bidder SYCAMOAE STREET AND at leaat ten percent (10%1 of GIVEN: That SUNl<IST SEA· us an Krag le n ;
... ,...~~.,. JoellaRochelto .. ,...ITAn.NT mayoeoihenriellnter•tocl be~im......ted 10 ... tt)athll~ltll'9CeNed BROADWAY; SANTA ANA. '"hi.am::'!:,,'':~ VICi! COMPANY. " now cherished uncle of, ng 0 · This ltaternent waa nled The followlng personi are In t"-wtll ar.dlrx oatae. of': In the wNI and/Of e11ate of': In proper time CA on ~ appointed Tru1tff 'Forrest and J......A·-· • H O.M.S (H USE & OF· with IM County Cl«k of Of· dol ~ u · RUTH O'OONNEU DAVIS . RUSSELL T. LUND ... A ... of Plane. SS*llal all rigtll. tltte and lnter .. t the followlng terme: caah °' • Deed ofTNlt dated . .... ....... tlCE MAINTAINANCESER· angeCovntyon Februaty8. F~LLEATON SQUARE A 1>9titlon h• been Med RUSSELL THORUALD Pr0Vilion1 Ind addtttOM fo con~ to Ind now hdcl IUChotllertermlMlhallbe 08103177 Hecuted by: cousin, Harriett
ICE). 4 Start>uret Cl . Now· 1985 2925 s. Brlltol, eo.11 M...: b c 0 N s T A N c E LUND General Provllions to the by It under Mid Deed of OYed by the executor THOMAS GARY BAZE a Schablein; several ·t<>j0~·Eca1iL:~8:';1 4 flmzM Clllfornla 929211 TOMPK INS GORDON A pe11tlon hu beefl flied Standard Specfllca1ton1 Truat In the p1operty eH~ ~!~ !_~~ KAY ANN 8AZI. HUSBAND Aunts & Uncles. Fu-.' b C Ni ' Publlll'led Ofange Coeet Robert T 8"t 2 Jlde WHITNEY In the Superior by ELNORA I. LUND In the m~ be obtllnod 11 the Of· ated In .. Id County Call-• 1 _,_ pay ANO WWE • Tlwtor, to oa-neral . will be · ~ ... u~ If 9~&as ewporl Dally Piiot February 8. 15. Cove Corooa del Mar Cati· Court of Ofange Count)' ,.. Superior Court of Ofange-flee of the City Engineer, 77 lornla. Clolcriblng t~ land eac:row c:Mrgea; 8rl'/. fw tor cure ob11Qetio111 In 11¥Gf ot. tel'Vlcet •r-=:-·:· 1
• 22. Matctl t. 1915 fornli 92825 . questing that CONSTANCE County requ11tlng lhat Fair DrNe, Calta Mola, Call-therein: title l"*H'ance PotlCy Ind AMlAtCAN IAVIH08 AND held Saturday lPM, f!Al~::fdaVi ~;'anfu~~~ F-707 Michael M. Rue. 3 Hill· TO MPKI NS GORDON ELNORA I. LUND be as>-fornte, upon nonrefundable LOT 13 OF TRACT NO examination of tltle. S... LOAN A880CIAT10N •• February 16,1 985 •t :~.111 92eJ · · · grau. Irvine .• ca111ornl1 WHITNEY be appointed u pointed •• petaonal rep. payment of $10.00. An ecl· 9105. AS PER MAP RE· ~ f,~ .... ~ding '!!! llolillfldary, "8conted on Harbor Lawn-Mt ..., . 927 t5 pertonal repreNntattve to retonlatlve to admlnlater the dltlonal ctlarge of '3.00 w111 CORDED IN BOOK 384, •"' r.,.,_ •lax ... ,.. oe111m • OOcument no.
Thi• bualn"' 11 con· Peter J Koettl 1975 edmlnlstertheHtateoflhe"tateofthedec:odont. bemedelfhanclledbymall. PAQES33T0340FMIS-llf•lnlurenoopremlumltlall 317o& boo« 12241 ~Olive Memorial ·~u;t~ °( Ef'partnor• PtlllC NOTICE Porl La~rent, ':ewport decedent. Th• petition raque1t1 Plane. 1poclllcatlon1 and CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN be ~ated tit the doM of 1740 of Ofllolal Atoofdl In Chapel, wlth Rev. T~1r'atet..= WU filed 'ICTITIOUe .,..... BMch. CalllOfnl• 92860 Th• P•llllon reque1t1 auth«tty 10 admlni.ter the ofher con1ract dooumenll THE OFFICE OF THE :er.-The P!.~:.: the office of,,... "9c0rder Of Chuck Caito offidat-
• ~th the County Clerk of Of· N~ eTATDmWT Thie bu1lne11 11 con· authority to admlnl9t• the •ate under lhe lndopen· may allo be examined It lhe COUNTY RECORDER OF _...,.... °'; ~--OMNOE County, Celltornla, 1,. .. Interment follow·
"ucted by: a general part· Mlat1 under the lndepen-dent Administration of &.. OtflceoflheC~oftfle SAID COUMTY. __,.., • 0 ~ t notl(I) fOt the .. ,.. m; County on February 4· dJ"-~ per.one are norlhlp . dent Admlnl1tratlon of &.. lat• Act. City of Coeta . Plane The ltteet addr... ano for 14/yet to ~ ~ IUM of IN,900.00. That Ille Ina. In lieu of flowers
:. fW E~ECT~N~C PRO· Rot>«t T. Best tatM Act. A~ on the petition and SpocJflealloM wtel nof otNr common de9gnatlon, tlon cc:::":;~ dry rot beneficial lnt.,..t undoi family~ dona· Publlll'led Ofange Coaat FESSIONALS' INVITA-Thie ltaternenl WU flied A hearing on the petition ... be on FE8AUARY be malled unlell the ltd-If any, of the rMI property ano •....& Nici Deed cf Trutt Ind tht tion1 be made ln
•t>any Piiot Flbruan. 5 15 TIONALCONFERENCE. 8111 With the County C*1( of Of. wlll be held on MARCH •. '17, 1985 at 9:30 A.M. In dltlonal '3.00 Gtwge" In-ducrlbU above II lhe... t IMMI ~-MclUt'ed thereby memorv of Don to • - ' · · ange County on JWlUaty 22 '1985 at 9·30 A M In Dept Dept. No. 3 at 700 CMc Cludocl with Po)'mlnta. purpcnocl to b« 1091 OLEN eJC«lU or 'efW .,. ~ held by the -~ • :U. March 1· 1915 Amlgoe Way Suite c . ~ t985 · No 3 at '100 ct-Ac c.ne.; Comer OtlW W•. Senti Eacht>IO~bemedeon Cl..0&.I, COITA MESA. CA that the doea not know of beneflc:lary. That a btOICtl the H igh Desert
;; F·
702 portE1ec:tee;-:.Cc~O:::a11· Publllhed Of.,,;: ~~2we11. Santa Ana. CA ~·~M2~cr to the~~ t~~.r"'~ ~ undenlgnocl Truat• :ZC..'*:':'..,~':r':: ~:'f:':::,,11\;:C: Nature Museum, 1111-1c NOJll'f" lnvltatlonal ConlerencH. Dally PtlOt February 1. 8. 15, IF YOU OBJECT to IN granting Of tflo petition, )'OU l"9 contract• 'J::,_.,,, dlldMnlanyllablltyforeny lmproumen11. The of Truat 11 leCUflty NI oc-Yucca Valley. Ser-
.• '"~ rw. Inc .. Calltornle, 818 Amigol 22 1985 granting of the petition )'OU lhoukl either ..,..., M the and lhell be ~lltd lncofNctnw of the ltreet purdllMr ...,,.,,.. IOle ,.. Clllt9d In IMC ltlo ~ vices and uranp•
'1CTTTtOUI .,..... :2:,, SC.:: 9~Newport ; F-1183 lhould e1111er ~ ai 1t1o lloenng Ind ... '/04lf ot>-by a certlfted Of caefller'• eddrW Ind other common ::::"t tor tfle~ • NI nol belrl mede of: m~nta under the
; .. ...-1TAT'llmff Th11' bu.k, ... 11 con-,....,Ing and 1tate yow Ob-l:.~C::':!':':J:; ~~~c:'o1°::'.:o= =-lion, If eny, lflOWn ~ .... :....:':-.!! '•flu,. to matre th• d1recUon of Harbor ~:=wine::''°"' .,. ducted °t.. ~··Ion t =~-:.: ~ = = the heiring. YtNI IPPM'· of the blO, made ~ 10 Said ....... be made. bUt Ctolocl ~ ............ .!!.'°.!::~of .::':i L• w n -Mt 011 Ve
;. PACIFIC AUTO SALES. ~E.,•t=~ ~ "8.IC NOTICE tM Maring Your tlPC>W· ancemaybe lnperaonor by the City of Coeta Meta. No wtthoUt oonwoent or..,.:""--~=--~ tubaeqi:nt paymentt. Mort , 540-S~:M ~2 OCMn Cr .. t Dr , Hunt· with IM County a...11 of Of. encie may be In pereon or by yowlF YattorOU ney ... c--T~ pro,OHI 1hall bo con-=0119' ... or ~· ,.._ ~ .-.. hit Or lier togeltlor tf1tt1 lee. cfWOet, •.-ioton BMcti CA 92848 Coun F K·MM7 your altomey. AAE" ..._... "" llderedunt...1ocompe11locl oat title, pc 111.cn. or ffTIS>C)llndt tm'°"nct do ~-tC •.Rahl Mlrghavaml. 9882 = tyon ebruary
1
· 'ICT1T10U8.,._ll IF YOUARE AO..EDITOR or a contingent credilOf,: by IUCtl ~·· Cftedt, enourn lnCM, 10 pey the ~o:::-.=,:.::: poa1ta, if'eny, under ...; --
Oc.anCr•t Dr .. Huntlnglon "'1'tt1 um 8TATWNT Of a eonttngen1 creditor of !tie dec1111d, you"""' ~.or bldOer •bond rem~~""" of , ... fOfanidalNiee~ die-t«meofilldnoteoro..ctof 1795fliOJtfUt~----•8oacf1. CA 92&48 Publllhod Ofange Coelt The lollow'nO per9on111• l"-docea.MCI, you muat Ille yow c&alm with lhe OCUf1 Of Noblellhallbe°°"'"*ocl lhe I) _.,,.ed by Mid OleeeO._the~aln-TNlt and .. IUtlH!l*lt ...,...,:rvr, ~ Roknl MlrQl\avaml 9882 1 5 doing bullneea •: your clelm with the court or pr-t It to the per90fMll uni... ft 11 made on • blar* Deed Of Nit, "'"" ..,._. .., peymonti ~ boc9fM
OQeen c.-.. 1 C>r • Huni1ng1on ~:t:~t ,"~ary ' 1 ' W. REIGEL CONSTRUC-preeen1 11 to the peraonet r.-.ntatlvuppol=~ fOrm f\1,,lllhocl by the City Of thereon ... prO¥ldod In_, :':"...:.on~ MY ch.le ......... lncMlng 91y ll!QUnt &wh, Ca.
•9eac11 CA 92148 • . F•1 TION 1920 Churctl Street, repreeentatl~ IPPolnted by ltlo COIWt within tour I Ooet• ~ ettd 11 !Mde In not.(•). ....... " any. ~ ~ .... ~ Oil °"* .... 92t51
Jaa0n A Keneo, 14931 coata M•H. CellfornlathecourtwlthlnfourmontM from ltlo det• of h 11-accord1nce wllfi Ifie i.lnderthe"""'oftNOeld ..:.:r .. --of..; ~undeftfletermaof 494.,.15 Athel IMne CA92714 92127 from the dat• Of""' ... euenoeot...,.,.. .. pr~ pr~ Of ... PropoMI of'Tnat,............ ---lltfd-..oro..ctofTnat
• Thlt bu.inHI 11 con-DeYld Reigel. 1920 Church euanoe of teltM at PfOYldocl In Soctlon 700 of ttte reQUlremienll. ~Of the Tn.ietee and ~ '=.::-:: :; Thet by roaeon "*90f, ~ed by • general Plfl· "8..IC NOTICE Street. Coe!• ~. Call· In Secllon 700 of tlle ~· ~ ...!!. ~ hem bldd« "''* bo ot the truee. CN8ted ~Mid di= J nt'l ...... frOllt .. th• pr ... nt bonoflclery • fleflhlp fornla 92921 Probete Code of Collfornlll. •,,.time ...... '"""' -. ... -ilcer1"d .. ,..,ired by ft, 0 .. d Of Truat, 10·-'t: undlr IUdl o..t of TNIC. ~ Rahl Mlrghaveml 'ICTmOUI 9U .... I Qoorge A Wlllllmton The lime tor ftllng ~ wtll not •K9Q prior to four Prevalllng w.gee ettall be S 15e,06U7. llbllty ~ ::='i " m., NI llMQltocl Ind --
Thil llatllfMflt wu llled NA.mlTATIMINT 1120 Chufct1°St,...., eo.teno1 •JCPlte prior to tour montflatromthtctlteotthe In eccOfcfenoe with th• The~uno.MICI :=,~~ltlo to Nici 1,..,...., 1 ~
• ... ,, lhe Cbunty ~ of Of· The following per.one •• Mela Cellf«nte 92927 rnonthl trom the date of tho hMrlncr notice lbl>ve. 0.-110°" Act 11 epecl-0..0 of Trwl hefetofott 9'\' Of --not": Dall• llllon ef 0...... Ind :ina. Cou '*'*Y 7 doing txlllnek M : Thlt blllll'IOH 11 oon· l'tWtng notlOe eboW YOU" MAY EXAMINI the flod .......... In thtM ecutod Ind ....... to tfle -·c, -.._.. ~ kw lala. llld ._ ;;915 ntyon · COSTA DEL LIDO. 1113 dUCted by.·~~ YOU" MAY DAMM the•• ~"'9oowt. If~ lpecfatPt'owMb... ~ •"""""" ~ :""': ~ .. ~·~ '"ultldwllftllldTNllee
:;. ....... Baller St. Suite E. eo.te Qoorge A. Wllllemaon Ille lceot ~ the oowt. If JO!'! .,. :.t::°: Inter.._ In The Cit)' Cound of the .... Ion cf ~ end 0. '' :.:: .. Oil Ill .., ..... Deed C1f TNll llld iii
• PIJC>IWled Ofanoe CoeM MeNR ~~w~1 -Thie .....,,,.,,. ... fMed .. • perw 11•11•• in ~-~-~~ ~ !...~ ~ ~ .. ~'°'Of~!"..!..~ '"f.: .... •.:.~ ,,.... ._ , ...... , • ........._ ·Oel!Y Plot '*"-Y 1s n ...... _,.,.,_, ... _. With the County C*1( ot Or· tt1e ......,. you lftlY ..w ...,._, ..,._ .... _....,.. .... "•" .., . ...,_.Ml or .._ - - -"""°"' _,.., • to· 1, .,_ ............. ....,.. ,._ ,. ~ -.:,.. ; :::: .. ~·,,=-.::z = "°""" ............. :::"'-"'.":-:;::. ... ::: =:· ... " ... "":...-:.: ~.. .......... . ..... ;:;...·..=..::..::; :---.. !'"--.. .i: ::":":;, '=:i:F Costa~. Celt, t2at 10rNy tor tN ~ OI adrMMlllOt, end lie wlefl ~ wltfl the Pl~ll ~end 111fa9on to ... ftPIOW_,.,~--..... ... r---------1 Jam .. Sander•. tt1S PuOll9hed Or.-iot co.e lldn*•etor end fie""" the COlll1 wfttt proot of•· of ledlon 1170 to 17t0 lft. tolle~ln ... ._ ~-=:::.,: .. Pl, .... M..., _,... ' rmtJC ll)TIC( .. ., St U19 E. eo.ta Deity Piiot FltlfUaty 1. I . 15, the coutt .... proot of _.. ¥tee. I -"'"*' requaet ..... cMfw, of the Celfornll --. tfle ,... ~ II ~ ot M1 ..,_ lllMll-:; _... ,.:o W w ... ~. Callf. t2l2t 22 ttt:5 ¥tee, 1 wrttw1 requae« ..... inO IMt JOU ~ ~ L9bot C:OO.. ttie ,,..., ..... IOcleeed T"""'9 le CtcG --._.., ... eo --.. • '1CTmOUe..,..... Robert 1..'"91'becto, 11 t3 . , inO tNe you ...,. ..,... ,..... Of ... lllnO Of -In-,... Ind ... of ....... CcwporeUoft ·--·· .. .. ....... MM9 8TA~T &alfer 8t Suite £, Coeta noUce of tt1o f11r11 Of art In-W'lntoryanct ~of tlllllflocl by .. Qty of Addrw Ind teleptloM ~t _,.., ~ .. -~U 1a .. The fOllowlnO .,.,_,. are Mw, Ceilf t2t2t end...,.._, ... of .......... or of "'9 _. C°"8 MW wNdi .,. ... ,...,._, of pet90n oonouct· • """ O ,..._ ~~ .. "' 0 u
tita Dualnell • Thia txlalnoM la Con• "8JC fl)TIC( ¥efttory_.. ~ ef -....... Ot ................ wtlft Ille Qly ~ of llld tnf .... la• 110t 9llr"f ,..,. .. ~~ !.1'~.. .. ~ f. M ! 0 1 C ~ t. , U I L I • Ouc't«I Dy co-w. tlonl °' ~ ,,..,,..011., In lectlon l200 enct !200.t of Ctty, and ltl9I b"9t penal• anue, "9eede, Cellfornie ...___ .. -~ATIOHS. ttH Pomone R !artoWelCtWMn K·-lnloctl0ntl00Mctl2001of ~ProNeeCode. "",,......_,,._.,for t1S31ttt-M2440I. 110Jl11910QIMll191~MIC, A--'-9' IAWW
1'12. ""'" -..... -... .._ ----... --..................... -........ -.... ....... """.:t=.· .. ":';.:;; §gl"8';::= •1*1 wttti tM eoumy ~of Of· um nan 1 " .... 1....., ~ ,..._,. .. ~ CJC• ~OWOttAno-., ..,_ .,...1 ... , ,. '-# J,.' L
Vijay c. PerNltt. 1ut enee County on~ 1. The~~.. '••• r , ••,.... • • ......,. C.... --'· "IH•~= Al TMll'Tll. 9r. "-C•Mfor.ue tttN fl1f; 'bail 1 1 ... IU,C....._ 11M ~~M.WUTAA .......,, ..... CA .... ,-. ........ ~,, .. _.. ......,, ... ,rttM ..... 111-JtllCI,,:.::• _,
Dr ~Nllf<,,_.,., lli'UCIWlod Ofanoe"= e:o.,CAE~~T~ ~ 0r.,.. CW. ~-=... C09M-=:,...,.. Or .. C.... ... Nlllflild or9"jo C.. ,_........ C.-: . .-..Ut• ~ 0.-~. PClmOM llU, C:0.. ~ Plot ~ I , 11, rTfO P,_,.TNEM~. 2125 "'°' ~ t4. 11 0.-, Not ~ 14. '5. o.1¥ Not P:*'-'f I, ti, ~Not~ 1, I ,., Dal!W11 ~ ,...,_., 14, ti. ~,_t .. ~-r 11. B , c. t2927 n.. Marett 1, 1916 '°"1ft 8'letol • .,... c... . 21, 1... 1td ,. • ,...... • ·-..,. Cllemoe•• ~. F-412 ..... CeMomle.. f'Ml;-.11'7 I ~1~ , .. , t " n.P-111 ~,.
.
" • .. • •
• . .
The name'• Nl••n
It'• Dat8an no more at tile national head-
qurten.of NIMaa U.8.A. ID Canon.
Tbe company•• laraeet and moet .Ulble
DAT8tJllf alp -7 leet bJ 80 feet -lau
been replaced bJ NIU.AK, ..,,.aJtna tile
flnaJ pbaee of a nadonwtde name cb•nce. . .
The new 2,000-poand ato 18.-aby1t01ae
500,000 commaten dalfJ. TM n1De-ttor7
ball~ 19 located attlle lateneotloa of tM
San me.o &94 Barbor rr._,_ ID Loe
Anaelee:lnatanattoaof aew.,._ataeatlJ
l, l?H> Dat.an dealenbl,. be1fU ID 9PrbaC·
Jeep to.sponsor pro rode_o circuit
to p~omote.its Comanche pickup
TULSA, Okla. -American
Motors' Jeep Corp. wtll be a
major national sponeor of the
International Profeulonal Rodeo
Aseoclatlon rodeo circuit In 1985.
"Our partlcJpatlon In rodeos
wlll help build enthusiasm for this
rugged sport and provide us wtth
excellent promotional op.,
portunltles for our legendary line
of jeep vehlctes, Including our all-
.. new Jeep Comanche pickup
truck which wlll debut later thl1
year," said Jacque O. Polan,
director of new product aatea
development.
"The rode<rwlll be an excellent
way to showcase our new Jeep
Comanche. Starting this spring,
rodeo fans will be given sneak
previews of the Comanche to
heighten public Interest In this
new truck prior to Its Introduction
In September." ·
The Jeep Comanche la a com-
pact pfckup truck that will offer
both 2-wheel-drlve and 4-wheel-
drtve powertralns.
Rodeo fans attending nearly
200 locally sanctioned IPRA
events wlll have the opportunity
to partrclpate In the Jeep Com-
anche Rodeo Sweepstakes. Two
Jeep Comanche pickup trucks
will be awarded as grand prizes.
A separate sweepstakes la
being sponsored by Jeep Corp.
for rodeo contestants, stock
contractors and local rodeo
committee members. Four Jeep
Comanche pickups wlll be
"Swarded In thta program.
Pitovtdes better
~cltabtlity, fuel
The Saab car dM9k>n of Sub-
loMla AB, the 8wedlltt IUtc>-
mottve Ind Wotp8Ce group, hM
un~ a car 'On"lon eyetem tMt COUid be the Ink automekera
twM been ~attlng for to develop
a more efflcient engine.
According to Per Olltbrllnd, tn
oh9rge of Saab engine deWk>c>-
ment, Ignition 1Y1temt were the
• lut roadblock to better engine
efficiency. Other cfevejopment1
have focged ahead, Including
turbocharglng' and four valvet
per cyNnder -pioneered by
Saab and now being Introduced
by car manufacturers fNfKy-
where.
"But Innovation In the hlgh-
YOftage component• of Ignition
ayatem• has not kept up wtth the
pace set by other engine
aubayatems," Gill brand said.
''We weren't confrolllng the
apark preclaeJy enough."
One of the rueon1 for the slow
pace of development pa<le 11 that
conventional Ignition systems
can only be manufactured proflt-
abty In large production runt over
..wral ye6ra. At a result, car 1
manufacturer• can now only
chooM between a few available
lgnlUon systems produced by
speclallzed companies.
Ttlls led-Saab-Scanla to r•
search whether an entirety dif-
ferent type of Ignition system
could be developed and manu-
factured on a smaller scale. The
result Is the Saab Oltect Ignition
aystem (SDI), which the company
believes may beoome the stan-
dard of the future.
The basis of any Ignition sys-
tem la to step up voltage from 12
volts In the battery to the
thousands of volts needed for the
spark plug to Ignite the fuel/air
mixture In the cylinders.
The SDI Is a capacitive system,
as opposed to the conventional
Inductive system. The latter In-
duces high voltage by the elec-
tromagnetic field If) the coll. With
the SDI system, a 12-volt current
Is applied to a capacitor In the
Immediate vicinity of the spark
Take time to ~clJeck
transmission flUifl
Three people out of four pump
their own gas. That's the good
news for the, dollar-conscious
motorl1ta. The bad news Is that
moat people are negligent about
checking their cars, according to
Car Care Counclt.
Among. the most neglected
under-the-hood-checics Is the
automatic transmlsslon fluid. tt
should be looked at fN9rY month
or two and fNen more often when
the car Is subjected to "aevere
service" driving, definition of
which Is detailed In car owners'
manuals.
Procedure for checiclng the
automatic transmlsalon Is
simple, says the council. Be sure
the engine and tranamla94on are
at normal operating
temperature. Generally this
would be after about 15 or 20
minutes of driving. Park the car
on leve4 ground and apply' the
parking brake, and/or block the
wheels. Move the shift lever
through all positions and back to
'I• .
Park~ ~ral, depending~
the make of the car (egllln. ,...
to the owner'• manu81).
. With the engine Idling, ~
the dip stick, wipe It oft, Md
reinsert It all the w.j. ~ •
again and note the fluid lev.e wtlt'I
r•atk>MNp to the .. ADO" or
''FULL" marks. Add fluid ~
neected, but do not ~
Exoeaive ftuld can Clll'8e
loa or erratic INftina.
Be 9Ure to add fiu6d of the
correct type for ~ perttcuaer
car.
The flu~ 9houtd be red, not
brown or burned In~·
If tt has l~t Its cie.r, red
appearanc4t and/or H tt hllll 1
burned od~. then It 8hould be
drained and replaced and a new
filter Installed.
Consider, too, tnstaffation of
an auxlllary fransm6aion. cooler
to prevent further overtieatinQ.
Replacement of 1'utd and tit•
should be a periodic procedure
to protect the tranaml9'aton. .
----~.ON SALE NOW ••• AT CONNELL CHEVROLET
-
PER MONTH
• Tu, llQenM $450, MC:Urtty depoti1
S500. S3000 down. c:IOMd end !MM
on approved credit
. ..
..
I
' . t
: ;84 ALLIANCE, 2 dr .
• • "
cyttnder, 4 speed, air condition
ep (Stk #992)(10 #265946)
.
'84 ALLIANCE, 4 dr
~ ~~ .. -.1•c; --.,,.. ~ .,, _,,...., __
4 cylinder, 4 speed, Air con-
dition prep (Stk #1 118)(10
#282707)
*
'83 CONCORD, 4 dr
Automatic, Air Condition, Power steering and brakes
(902590)(10 # 104962)
A REAL BARGAIN
'81 . ·JEEP CJ-l .
8 cytlnder, 4 speed, Power steering and brakes (524-1)(10
#018204)
PRICED FOR FUN!
•*
0
• 111an
, : 6 mo hs
g 0
. •'
I
'83 ALLIANCE, 4dr .
(902600)(10 # 112672)
SALE PRICED!
'83 HONDA .
STATIOI Wl&ll
4 cytlnder, 5 epeed, llr condttton, ...... (1380-1)(10 #001068)
. ECONOMICAL FAMILY FUN CAAi
NC
;-_
FREE CHERRY PIE
WITH EVERY
. DEMO DRIVE
FRI THRU MON, Feb 15-18
. '8~. ENCORE, 3 dr
4 cylinder, 4 speed
#517)(10 #189941)
L
'84 EN~ORE, -5dr
. .
4 cylinder: 5 speed, Air Con-
dition prep (atk #711XIO
#233264) 22
'83 FUE&O
5 tpeed, 'Air condltlon,1 Power steering and brakes (90253-1)(10
#842399) .
PRICED TO SELL!
'82
STITIOI Wl&OI
4 cytlnder I uomattc, -condition & fn0(9 (902820)(10
#1oMIO)
LOW MILES, LOW PRICE
-
----'I
~a test 200SXse'dan on hand
at OC's Datsun dealershipS
Nlaean'1 1985 IPOrtY Mdan,
the 2008X, la aY8Mable at OrM09
County Dateun deelerlhlpa.
The cart, which fMture Im· proved ride, Mndllng and per-
formance, CM be purch-.d at
Dataun of Orange; Irvine Dat8Un;
Hotmee Tuttle Detaun In Coe1a
Meaa; Newport Dataun of New-
~ Beach; Barwick lmport11 Inc.
of San Juan Caplatrano: Bf'•
Dateun: Anaheim Dat9Un, Cotton
Park Dateun In Buena Park;
S•nta Ana Oateun; Zee Dateun of
Fullerton; Target Dattun In Gar·
den Grove and Dick 88rbour
Dateun In Cypr ...
In addition to the upgrlded
ride characterlltlcl, the new
200SX prnents eubtle dellgn
changee -Including ellmlnatlon
of the hood acoop on the Turbo
,,.,,vf•I --.nd some electronic
wtardry.
The 2008X • oftered • a
hatchb8clc coupe with a 1.1-Hter,
tutbocharged four-cytlnder en-
g"'9and. bOth a hatchbeck and
notchback coupe with a 2.0-Nter
normalfy....,eted engine. o.
luxe and XI trtm leY9la are
available on bQth body 1ty1ea,
and a dlaltal equipment package
I• avallable on the XE.
Among the new electronlc
ltema on the new 200SX I• a
apeclalty dellgned automatic In-
terval wiper eyetem, ecttvated by
the frequency of molature lmpect
on the wlndahleld. Suogeeted
baae prloee range ffom -18,9"
for the deluxe notchback coupe
to $12,a.9 for the Turbo hatch-
back model
The Introduction of the 1985
2008X thla month -completing
the 1111 NIMM mocM1 lne -
foMowe IMt Pebnilry'I IUCC: fut unwlllng of the oomplet
redeelgned 11M 200IX.
All 1"5 N11Mn 2008X mod1l1
.... equipped wtth a fully tnct.-
~t ,..,. auepeneton. fOUi'-
wh..e dl8C brlk• Ind lerger.
hlgh-performMOe tlr•.
The turbochw~ modet II
ottered with the 5-l!Peed model
onty. Other ~ are avallabte
In .. lpeed autometlc tran1-
mlulon u well.
XE modet1 wtth the dlgttel
package Include an electric entry
ayetem with power door locka. By
entering a "peraonal code" Into a
door-mounted controt panel, the
driver can unlock the vehlde'a
door• u well aa the trunk or
tt.tchback.
Pontiac's c·ompleting details _
for South Korea import· autos
GM would like to Import Increased allotment
of Chevys from Japan If quotas were lifted
·South Korean cars would be
., TM -..Ocleted ~ , Imported, but aald the capacity of
CHICAGO -General Motors the new aaembty plant there
Corp. may Import South Korean would be 150,000 care per year. cars under the Pontiac name aa Industry analysts belleYe moat of
early as the 1987 mod~ year, a those cars would be U.S.-bound.
company offlclal said. Another company official said
"We're flnallzlng the details GM could quickly bring In fJve
now" of GM's joint carmaklng times Its current allotment of
effort with Daewoo of South Japanese-made Chevrolet• If
Korea, said J. Michael Losh, quotas that llmlt lmportD from
general manager of GM's Pon-Japan were lifted.
tlac division. GM'a partners In Japan -
The cars wlll be front-wheel Isuzu Morora Ltd. and Suzuki
drive subcompact• based on the Motor Co. Ltd. -each have
new version of the Opet Kadett unused capacity for 100,000
made by GM In Europe, Losh more cars annually, saJd Tom
added. McDaniel, director of Chevrolet's
Losh said he was pleased with Japanese Import project.
Pontiac's showing In the sports "We'll take all those, plus what
. car and big-car markets. "Where they can provide on overtime,"
we've got a need Is hlgh-vofume, McDaniel said, If Japan llfts Its
low-priced, entry-level cars," he volun1ary quotas this spring.
said. "Watch and eee how fut we can
Losh wouldn't say how many do It."
Harrah
·• to acquire
land for
museum
A reement with city
permits Immediate
acquisition In Reno
The City of Reno and TM'
Wiiiiam F. Harrah Automobile
Foundation have announced a
plan that permit• the Immediate
acqulaltlon of land tn downtown
Reno for an autombblle mueeum
.. uld Ben Daaher. chairman of the
foundation truat ....
John and Tony Harrah, IOf)I of
the Late Wiiiiam Herrah, wMI
Meume Habfttty for a 15 mttHon
loan to the foundation. In ad-
dition, loc., developer Don
Wltkeraon and retired Valley
Bank prealdent Bob SuUl'IM
~ S1 mllllon eech to
underwrite the loan.
Under Japan's llmlt of 1.85
mllllon car shipments, GM gets
only 29,500 cars annually from
Isuzu and 17 ,000 from Suzuki.
Detroit's lntereet In South
Korea picked up when Japan
Imposed the llmlta four years
ago.
Japan hasn't Indicated
whether the quotas wlll remain In
place, or be raised or eliminated.
Losh said GM was committed to
the South Kolean project now
and the quota Issue probabty
would not affect It.
The Isuzu car Is sold on the
East Coast as the Chevrolet
Spectrum. The Suzuki Is sold on
the West Coast as the Sprint.
Chevrolet also announced that
the third part of Its Japanese plan
-the sale of Nova cars bullt
jointly In California with Toyota
Motor Corp. -would begin June
13 In the middle 25 states where
dealers cannot get the Spectrum
or the Sprint.
The Pontiac car doesn't yet .
have a name. All four are sub-
compacts.
"Our target la 19 minion," utd
Dalher. "fhl1 wtll allow ua to
obtatn a loan from Flrlt lnt .. tate
Bank to lmmedlatety begin
-. purch ... of the parcel of lend
choMfl for the mu-..m ltte."
-
DMher a11o ukS that the Reno
City Council haa 8Qreed to ...
aume whatewr ~ of tit
!OM after four ye1ra. ,
''We're ~eey.on our. wflf, ''
o.t. Mid. "With IUCh credit-
worthy and publlc-aplrlted
.,.pteputtlng thetf MtMeon tM
ifne ·tind wtth the ~ledglng It•
eupport, we're tng to ...
the Mgt'lt at the end of the tunnea.''
The property oh011n for U..
Herr8h ...., ...... ..._,,.,II on
the Truck• Atver doM'ttown,
bordllNd on tM weet br LIU
St,_ and on the eouth by Mii
StNet.
DHlgtied by Anlhen and Att.n
Archltect11 the 192,000-aquare-
foot f8CNtty wHt exhibit 300 cart
on two~.
l
. ·
,.
• .
' .,
. .
I
' r
\ •
t
I •
-.
·'
OVER 100 .NEW JEE~S
· TO cHObSE. FROM. TODAY THRU MONDA.Y ·
NEW 1985 JEEP CJ-7
. NEW 1985 JEEP CHEROKEE
Comes with aunroof, air conditioning prep, tinted glass. power steering, extra capacity
fuel tank, radial !Ir• and more. Does not Include dealer added accessories It any.
(STOCK CH1183) (SERIAL 1317)
s10,889
NEW 1985 ALLIANCE
Comes fully fec1ory equipped and priced to aeu. (Stock 1206XSer 0-464) Yours For
Immediate Delivery. •
"'• a -IW .. -C5L OAC -· CMI> w T•-la SI.,, ti• II-*"''"' -· M1'7 • T .. at 01 ,_ • ........,
s5995 ~i~SE sgg
Come See And Ori~ The Leaendl We Know Once
You Do You'll Wn To Order Yours Todeyt W•
Know Once You Do You'll W1nt To Tak• lmmed .. t•
Oeflvery. (1586)
NEW 1985 ENCORE
Comes fully factory equipped and priced to sell. Yours for
Immediate delivery! (STOCK 1096) (SERIAL 2839) s5999
NEW 1985 ALLIANCE CONVERTIBLE
This beautiful blue Alliance Convertible comes with automatic s 1 0 9 9 9 I trans, power steering & more. (Stk AL928)(Ser 2886)
Yours tor Immediate delivery! _,
'81 MAZDA '48 WILLYS '78 MERCEDES '84MAZDA '81 JEEP '82 BMW
626 COUPE . JEEP 450 SEL RX7 CHEROKEE CHIEF ..
eon--~_,-~ p,,_,. rod ......, lr1ltnOr 1M1f OSl Wiii! !I IPMd. -oond . IUIW'llOI. 9'nool, 5 ........ 41.000
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Thi Olly Plot offtf1 ,ou ltis Hid Ult If
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125,. "'· or 2 cb's for 145.
flll9lll •....,,,or .. 1 pflotflrapfl it for ........... *••· ... ....,.
ULlll'lllT1ftl ( .... ...,., a.. ........ ....
From f144,to0 wttb K down. 2 BR
2~ BA + den/family rm. Creative
developer finandnc-Umited time.
Only a hornet available. Priced to 1ell
now!
Great Eutslde location. Spacious, lm-
aaf.native Ooorplan. ranee. micr, D/W,
firepba, beamed ceilinca, double elec-
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entry. Garden ~ wtndowa.
BeauUful luah landlcape. Bkr. Co-op.
UYUDR1 ..................
(1 Block 8 . W. of Meu ~;> .. 11•11 HAID Ill/
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of livin1 well
OESIOHEO
FOR ooueu
OWMltSH#P Orto...,,.. AW. I eloc:ll No. ol l'fltl Sf '------
PllOM 1188,000
Cwtom 4 BR beyfront with
substantial P'~r and alip for large
boat. Finest material throughout.
l..ovely decor plua new spa. Don't
mill thia value!
--TODAY'S
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631-7370
AC"088
1 8ac:k9d ewey
8 Plent1ful
10 Danube lttbu·
l•ry
14 Ooot-Patt
16 The Auld Sod
11 Clvll War Unton
QeMf•I
17 8etft notrH
18 Noble
1t Flnal no11ca
20 AC1ort
22 "Et tu, -1
23 Wiid patty
24 OcMon
28 Oueetlon
29 Mania; tull
3 t Oppottng pref 32 Gal.heflng
a4 Smothef
3l lm-0-3t FIMy
41 IP<*9n
42 GoinO with
45 Tyroa
4S V8081•ble 49 , ...
60 Augment
St Dey of'"' H W .. tunlll
S7 Throng
s8 Skin '""" 83 1118 rupee
84 lncenM
8SUp -
68 Palmlll
87 Slcllneaa
N EcllPM type et Animal group
70 Hty Of oalt
11 11,oc:key Of
toot bell
DOWN
I Pati.1
2 lofty
3 Concern1f1G
A Throw out
SP111age
6 Pert1nen1
7 St ... 1ng19d~I
8 Pr1nc;pa1
t Upshot
tO Appofttonment
1 t Beet t>aek
12 Federate
13 Cerfler
21 SmallaMOunt
22 CrOollecS
25 PONetMI
HSt-arp
. l
27 Card 1n taro
28 Entangle
30 Auot10n1 oll
33 Writing turfeca
35 FOOllOOM
36 Happy llrN
37 e..io.a
40 Highllgh19d
A3 A tics.
AA Weapon SI
Al Al 11\e peall
47 lHMd hOtMI
S t Hide
52 A111n bull110
53 kinder
S4 Shrub lane.
st TIU noti«
S9Rah eo v ..
61 ln11m1111
62 Span11111 1>411nlet
64 Doll
.. • •
I .{f· h'FA
E~., I /\Tli P
...
(
TOP ., ... quiM, no peta ......... o.
BEAUTIFUL 1 Br 1575 nu
PAV r:Uo, y•d & gar;r. IUWI• YILUIE -IUllllWt POO & SPA 2Mi0 H a .......... MESA PINES 5'9-2447 WIYllTt
Pvt t Br, frplc, ro:· patio
.,..,...,.
r · No pN. 09 W. Ba~ Uw wt!«• you h~ eon. llentty located I $515 850-&35 •S'*1ecu1at ~ one of ltVIM't MWM
SHARP Eatt60e 18r, enc * 1 & 28'. 1 & 2811 tuft• retldentlal Mtt~
get~ No I*'-AVlll •SS*!OuetownhouMe Wlndwood Glen rt 1,
now 95. Pem or Larr) •Areplecee & 3 bedroom llS*tment •Prlv1te balconl .. 01 ~ tltuated nH 979'-~ or 54&-5182 Garden patlOt • lhopplng
•STUNNING Lg 18dnr . parka. 181 Oerden Apt. Poo WIYllTt
1495/mo. 710 W 18th * 3 Lighted tennis COUrtl For ::re Information
Sharp 2 ~~!! uJ)9taln
* 2 Swimming poo11 pleeM cal : (7141559'-50 t
•Strum1 & pond• Mondey-Sundey 8:30
•Sorry. no pN to 5:30 pm.
•(Jrlv deck, blt·ln RIO * Furnlthlng• evall 0 , WW crpt, drP9. 2 WHY NOT CALL ..... 27 prttg epaces. no doge•
U95/mo.353 Hamlltor 11a.1111 1738 :na
Mgr 846-9794
IUWlll YILUIE FumWled STUOIP "450.
Wl ~I-CIOM to beeet\. 494-279
Want a Ion of gr .. t 15555 Huntington VMlag« Nr Moea Cove. bact1
IMng? W• can offer eny-Lene. from San Dlegc & 1BRM00.8tOYe&~ Fr~, north of a..ct-UtH pd No pet1 4f9.. tN~ from • emall 11Pt tc to Me edden, WM1 or a 4 hM. II lo<*lng Ir MeFedden 11111&.. '~ 1717 CM,NB,Of HB think of ut
flr1t for that ctlOlce ot Spaciou1 2 Br 2 bl 1 enc lmmec. 16f7 qut;f.,..,
ldee.1 1~ g111. frplc, patio, w1lk to ·mature. prof. non-tmkr
TSL MGM 842-180~ beh, mature edult1, U50 No "ltl. 1500. mo.
NB REALTY 875-184~ mo. 9e2-5987 aft 6 951· 967
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I
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MIS 11·14
Diii if TO 17tM Pll IBI. •••as_....,_,...., ~ .. *"' ,..,.. lw "'or-. c.-.
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j '85 190 • $299 per -
............ ...-1.-'-ilDIJt ........... ...... , ...... , .... ~=
j '15 3000 • $367 per ino ........... ~ , ................ _.,. ...... w . .aut1111m1 .,_.
Ttt:SE SHARP TRADE·•
TO BE SOLD AT
lllE.DMI.£ PllCESI
J '12 fell 210 SE 4.5.:.$4,995
,.., ......... (tQ\A)
J '80 ELDORAD0 .•• $6,995
'-Y .-y .. tC01a 1
J '10 Ill 240 D ... $10,995
'---~ J '83 BMW 528e •.• $17,995 ... ..., ......... ._, .. , ..... ,
J '12 .. 300CD
COlft ... $19,995 ......... .,,.,._ ....... c-.-.,. ...... ,...., ........ 121.•> (IJlll 11
J '83 BMW 533i ••• $21,995
-_,,..., .. 1111-J
J '84 CORVETTE ... $19,995 ........ ., .......... ,w .. ,
J '79 MB 450 Sl ... $22,995 ...,, ..., .. ,, .. ,
JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
•CTIONS: tab 405, eff at 11KAr111r llM,
ht• MKArlu, ricM., •ct. and left• Qml
1001-1301 Qui St,~ lead!
Zll/623-5000 714/133-9 .
****
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m•rclal l•H• ALL· SAVERS 7141'32•1t71
"
..
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. Ill MAIES IN ONE LOCAllON .
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·areal D1al11n Gralt ' NiW a ·used 8110111 .
. . . -
.. TODAY ··SATURDAY • SUNDAY I . MONDAY
• •
RustlerS.rQll .witlJ the puacll.
Go den West bas etbal team surviving
6utjust barely thanks to the injuries
When Jim Greenfield began
preparina for the 1984-85 basketball
season, hchadtohavca pretty good
fcelinaabouthisGolden WestCol-
lqeteam.
After all. Greenfield had tbc top
scorer in the South Coast Conference
back in Rob Dameron and he aJso had
the tallest player in thcconfcrncc in
6-9Jack Haley.
In ad~ition, he had another capable
returner in MikeJudacanda new-
comer, 24-year-old Marc Lorigan
who turned out to be the top scorer in
the South Coast Conference this year.
20 shoot 66
With that ktnd of personnel,
Greenfield figured to have a com-
petitive team, if not a solid contender.
Well. the Rustlers enter Saturday
night's same with Cypress with an
0-12 record in South Coast play. And
Greenfield will be lucky lfhe has six
players suited up for the game.
There is no Dameron or J udgc or
Haley or even a Loripn on the
Rustler basketball team these days.
Everythin& that could possibly go
wrong has. -
The-final blow occurred last week
when Lorigan was belted in the
mouth by a auy who reportedly )ut
Lonaan'scarfrombehindatan
intersection.
Loripn now talks real funny and
catsthrouat\astraw. He'll stay that
way fora couple of months.
Haley. who never played high
school basketball, was still learning
the pme when he was a freshman
center for Greenfield last year. He
wa.sn 'ta real smooth player but he
was a hard worker. He only figured to
aetbetter. .
Apparently the basketball geniuses
at UCLA thought so and promptly
offered the novice star a scholarship.
HaJeysometimcs plays IOminutcsa
game for the Bruins these days.
Dameron was simply academically
ineligiblc'andJudgedecided to take
Cllt
Smu
CoMMUNITY CottECE
the season off to work.
And then there's frtshman forward
Steve Hutson who bro'ke his ankle in
practice las( week. He's history. So is
forward Kevin Smith who has a stress
fracture in hisankfe.
Whamo. 0-12.
Greenfield is feelinaa linle strcs.s
himltlftheie~ bUt he tries..,._
at lbj.11pot.itavcly at beaa.
Lawty.be'•beeal9Yi dai ... .. Wbn u rains. it ~91 aad "fJ.!·re
JUttp .. to~ in theft" a lot.
A little mOft t6an a week~,
Greendfield and hit de~ team
traveled up tbe &eeway to W•ut to
' play confticnce-ladirw Mt. San Aa-
ton10. The ltuttlen. a run-aftd,.pn
team. tried to do lhat the fint time tile
two 1ea1mmet butforsot the "sun ..
part. ThC"y lost U-S 7.
So the teeond ti!M the ieams IMt.
Gteenfidd played slowdown. The Rutlen and Mounties were tied aa ~athalftime before ML SAC.went
onto win.
He had to try somctbi~ (Plwew11Lm•JC8).
Qui.DD
.irlted . .
• • . or better
A'Meara ftr~~~-Koc~re1nf"9carand lheWiffiams
V '-'" a 1 JJ .. champion in 1983. "I'm very confi-
-a _n___,d=--i -S_i_n_:i_,,._a_n_d_•e_r __ d.cnt here. The 64 actually was a fairly
7atKing~-
U b1 surf.le round."
of misst.ng eut that ~~~h'r~~~~~~inrn1:~~c!hf~~~}
Frem AP dJ1patdles
LA JOLLA (AP) -The San Diego
Open golf tournament is plunging to
new lows.
Low scores, that is.
Never before have so many players
_ needed so few shots to make one trip
around the twin courses at Torrey
Pines, the scenic. Pacific-bordered
club that graces this elite coast.al
community just north of San Diego.
"I guarantee, you'll sec some good
scores with this weather," said Gary
Hallberg, who ought to know. He
fired an 8-under-par 64 Thursday,
one off the tournament sin&Jc-round
record, yet had to settle for a four-way
tie for the lead.
Swinging amid ideal conditions -
temperature in the upper 70s,
brilhant blue skies, no wind -1 18 of
the I SS PGA players competing here
shot par or better. and 20 of them
covered 18 holes in 66 or fewer
strpkes.
The scores were $o low. in fact, that
toprnament officials speculated it
might take a 36-hole total of 140, 4
under par, to make the cut. That
would eclipse the San Diego Open
record low cut of 3 under, set last year.
.. The greens arc very slow and firm .
You can roll your ,utts aggressively.
and you wind up knocking more in."
said Hallberg, runnerup to Gary
the hole five times, sank putts of 12,
IS. IS and 20 feet , scored an eaaJe on
the par-S sixth hole and managed par
on the 18th despite hitting into the
water and taking a penalty stroke.
His torrid play came over the south
course, which in the past llad been
regarded as the more difficult of the
two Torrey Pines layouts. He said the
south's superior condition this year is
making up the difficulty difference
between the two.
Tied for the first round lead with
HaJlberg w(re Don Pooley, Tommy
Valentine and Howard Twitty. Five
players were one stroke back, at 7-
under-par 6S: Steve Pate. Loren
Roberts, Gene Littler, Bruce Lietzke
and Vance Heafner.
Littler. S4. won tht San Diego
Open at Rancho Santa Fe in 1954,
when he was competing as ari
amateur.
Laguna Niiuel resident Mark
O'Meara, seeking his third straijht
tour victory after winning the Bang
Crosby Pro-Am and the Hawaiian
Open, suffered a disastrous quad-
ruple bogey on the par-4 fifth hole
and. despite a 33 on the back nine,
finished at 72 and was in danger of
missing the cut without a strong sub-
par second round .
The flayers arc chasins a winner's
prize o $72,000. from a total payout
ofS400. ()()(I
I GIRLS BAStH TBALL
II. -• --
Klnf• and eo.ton BruJna playen are eep-
arated by official• da.rln« a flnt-perlod
,,,..,....._
brawl at the Forum. The Bndna llCOred
two third-period 1oa1a for a 3-3 tie.
INGl£WOOD(AJ>)-Tiie pay Of
the Los Antelcs ~ in l9'e th.int
period in tight pmes-,lS' bqpnnina to
UTitate their coach.
The Kinis .-vc up two fluke aclilll in the finaJ penoo Thursday nipt and
had to settle for a )..) ~ 1ie
with the Boston Bruins at the Forum.
Coach Pat Quinn said he's h8d
about enough o(tbe Kinp' fo&dina act
late in pmes.
"I'm just aiet!fn! tired o(looltina at • • it," Quann said. I'm not sure bow
we're aoiDJ to Ft pcol)lc to thin
about playmg hockey the right way.
We keep servtng up sifts."
The two aoats the Kinp pve up in
the third periO<i Thursday n.isbt were
true cbanty.
The Bruins' Mike O'Connell was
cred itcd with a &<>&11 :06 into the third
period when Kinas' Bernie Nicholls
lost control of a clearing pass in front
of his own oct and the puck ~t
between the legsofLos~lcs~~
Darren Eliot, bit the post and tncklcd
past the goal li nc.
Ex-Kina Charlie Simmer then
scored a pl on an a~ to center the puck from the riabt . of tbe LOI
Anteles net. Hil pus delected °' K.inp' defen!Cman Mark Hardy"~
stick hiab into the air and a:laoced Olf
tht hick of Eliot into.the net to tie dtc
game with 10:59 ltft ..
Quinn said the 1wo Boston goals
wett not flukes.
''That's the type of goal that team
gets.·· he said. "They so off legs and
behinds. they go hard to the net
They're bound to get those.•·
Edison
· · st111 alive Barons, OV, Chargers playoff-bound
after all
Special playoffs ·
set for saturday
tl tte develops
Warriors won't have top scorer for CIF;
CdM, Estancia and Irvine also advance
Fountain Valley, Ocean View and
Edison arc headed for the CIF girls
basketball playoffs as Sunset League
action concluded Thursday night.
while Woodbridge. Corona del Mar
and Estancia arc the Sea View League
representatives.
Meanwhile, Irvine High snuck into
the playoffs as the South Coast's third
place representative and Mater Dei
wrapped up the Angelus League title.
While that's good news for all
parties involved. one1of those CIF-
bound teams got som bad news.
Powerful Woodbridge High
learned its No. I scorer. Sharon Lyon.
has been ruled academ1call-.· in-
eligible and will miss the rest of the
season.
Herc's what look place Thursday:
Foutain Valley S&, Hantiagtoa
Bead U : Carol Strausburg's Ba rons
clinched the No. I berth (via coin flip)
by sharing the Sunset League crown
with Ocean View af\er a 52-17 sweep
of the boards led the way on the floor.
Jackie Cook ( 17 points. 16 re-
bounds) and Melissa Hanley ( 11
rebounds) sparked the Barons, along
with a 10-point production by Dawn
Lawler.
Fountain Valley. 9-1 in league play
and 18-6 overall, awaits the first
round of the CIF 4-A playoffs a week
from Saturday with a home game.
"We went into a couple-games
slump, even though we were winning.
at the start of the second round.'' said
Strausburg. "But right now I think
we're soin' back up hill and i1's al a good time.·
Ocean View 88, Wettmlaster 3t:
The Seahawks grabbed a share of the
Sunset crown at home as Dana Dout)
and t.aura Simek proke a couple of
school records. •
Douty onl)' scored 17 points but
she broke her own assist record w11h
IS. Simek pulled down 22 rebounds
10 set another school standard.
Trina Vlachos scored 17 points for
Can Flores carry Rustlers?
the Seahawks, 16 comine 1n the
second half Michelle Chom1cz added
17 points and 17 rebounds.
EdllOD SO, Mariaa 49: The Chargers
pulled it out as Michelle Hennessey
hit two free throws and a technical
foul with 26 seconds remaining to
erase a two-point Manna lead. The
win gave the Chargers third place and
a Cl F playoff spot.
.. We were outplayed and out·
coached," admitted a relieved Edison
Coach Dave White.
Martha Noffsinger led the Cha~ers
with 16 points. Stephanie Sabehno.
playing her final game forthe Vikings.
scored 18 points.
Woodbrid&e Sl, Newport Harbor
it: The Wamors survived the bad
news about their 1op scorer and rolled
CdM boosters
lure Sutton
..
past 1he host Sailors behind 16 points
ap1ett from Holly Ingraham and Jill
Daniels. "We're looking for a couple of
players to pick up the slack now and
that happened tonight," said an
obviously dejected Woodbridae
Coach Enc Bangs. "Holding Newpon
Harbor to 29 poinu at their place was pretty good ...
,Suzanne Shriner led the Sailors
"1th 11 points.
Corou del Mar 51. Lapu Bead
1': The Sea Kings had no problems 1n
their league finale. fin ishing the Sea
View season with a 12-:? record. good
enough for S«ond place.
Fran Wynn scored 33 points and
hauled down I I rebounds while
pfa)'ingjust three quarters for the Sea
Kmg. K. C. Jones added 14 poinu
while Michelle Willard led CdM in
rcboundinll W1th 14.
E1tuda J7, C..ta Mesa U: The
Eagles left their half court press and
went to a 3-2 zone in the second half
to help offset Costa Mesa's outside
shooting. and 1t fol"C'cs the Mesans
into a third place playoff pme with
Newpon Harbor Saturday ni&ht for
the nght to become the Sea View
League's No. 3 representative in the
playoffs.
Point guard Karen Rindone led
Estancia with 18 points. S assisu a:1d
2 steals. wh ile Lcshc Self (9) ~nd
Ginn\ Foreman (7) pa~d thr ~
boun(hng area.
SIMH.lebact 47, l mvenlt) ti: The
Roadrunnersenteted the fourth quar-
ter trailina 29'-27. but Monica Waltoa
scored 14 of her 31 poant.s tn the finaJ
quarter to a1vc Saddlcbtlck the viC'IOf'Y
at UJ1~ven1ty.
lntae IS, IA,_ HUit ..,. Tbe
Vaqueros stturcd third p&acc arid a
Clf playoff spot wilh the wm at
Latuna Hills.
Dina' Graham tcd the V lqOCtOI
with 19 point whale Shclty Moceri
ICOr'Cd 16 and Nancy Bower hid 11.
MOC"eri abo bad !Cvm rebounds.
,..
-
...... A.P ... ldll • HAYWARD-OUland A•1 pitcher
Mike Norris, wbolK'eddrua~M one lime Wt year, WM booked earty Tbunday
on ee~ offeft1e1 inctudiq pa11e11ion of eocaine, the
c.Jifomil Hiabway Patrol repone<t.
Hiahway petrolmen ttoppedacardriven by Noni1
late Wednesday ft.iabt on lntmtate S80 just south of
Oakland, Fred Martin of the Hayward CHP office said.
The pitcher was arrested and held for invel\iption
of drivin& under the combined influence of akx>hol and druas. resistina amst. and poucss!on of a quarter pun
of cocaine. Norris aho was cited for poaession or less
than an ounce of marijuana. He wu releued from
custody Thursday.
A spokesman for the American Lcaaue team said
that A•s executives would make no immediate
comment on the arrest.
Norris, 29. was out of baseball last year. reooverina
from an arm injury. In May, he was arrested in
Oakland, where polfoe said Oocainc and marijuana were
fou~ in a motel room Norris had occupied. But no
charaes were filed.
In an interview last week., Norris said, "After that,
I cleaned up my act."
He has been maki~ plans for a pitching comeback.
The right-hander broke 1 nto the major leagues I 0 years
aao and bas been piqued by arm troubles throughout
his career.
Norris• best season was 1980, when he posted a
22-9 record and was second to Baltimore's Steve Stone
in the American Leaaue Cy Youna award votinc. His
lifetime record in the majon is S7-~9.
~(16.._ .. ,
lllNiiP• ....... 111ar_-Qt_.. tnt.on$!!p1M1 IMlllS ,.Ali"'-... ...., .................... ~ ...
'JOAlll-W•to ..... Mdlnd•MfrOM ._. anding._. IO dO .. ~tar you."
~ylor am Clemente awUd
NEW YORK -Dcsianatcd-hjner Ill Don Baylor of the New York Yankees, who
serves as national spon.s cbainnan for the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, was selected ·
Thursday as winner of major league baseball's Roberto
Oemente Award.
Baylor is the second successive Yankee to win the
award, which bonon the player who best exemp(ifies
the game on and off the field Pitcher Ron Guidry was
the 1984 winner.
The award is named for the Pittsburah Pirates' Hall
of Fame out fie.Ider who was killed in a pfane crash Dec.
31 . 1972, while on a mercy mission to aid earthquake
o .. woa toomacbforKDIOb 11.ri. atan bft.wl to~, Sports OD T'V
Rookie Mielm ~ ICOred 30 -~ ~ a.berll and Brtu .._., m ~or weekend C:.-~ ~~tionlled doWn • ~ationaJ Basket· scored third~riod aoat1 Sl tee0nd1 aput , ;& ! ~-. ICUOft-lilb 2j rebounds Thuf'lday ni t to lift the Mionel01a Nonh
TbW'lday niabt to laid . t~ Houston Stan to a .5 tic with the Detroit Red .. ,...,, R~ to a .113-lOS dec1110.n over, the New Y<>!k Winp In a bra!fl·mamd National Hockey Lcque ~icb: Th,e vtetory, H®aton s Ont ln New York in pme. Referee KM Wleb handed out 92 minuaes in
eiabt tnel 11~ 1919, pve the Rockeu a 3()..ll record. penalties after one brawl alone ... In other NHLpmes
one more tnumph than t~y had aU last teason in 82 Thursday, Tim Kerr ICOf'td two aoals and artu..,.,, fi"'"· · · . In otber NBA KUOG, ..._, M•ttlef ~ had a aoal and three assisu as Philadelphia beat Quebec
Mt IO ae.d MU~ee IO a 1~2·128 overtunc 6-3. It was the fourth victory in the last seven pmea VIC~ over lndaana ... J;orward (4-2-l) for the Ayen, who are second In the Patrick AJe*,... ICOl'ed 33 poen~11nd t>ivisaon. Quebec, third in the Adams Division, is 2·3-l ~rt sat out the fourth penod u in its last six pmes ... Goalie s .. vt Weeb recorded his
hit Oenve.r teammates ,poun.ded scoond shutout and Gres Maloae and Keva. Dlaeea
the Jlump11.~~111 City K.inp each scored a aoal and added an assist as HanfOtd
I 3&.123 ·. . <Jen:t-ICOrtd ended an eiahtiopme winless streak with a +o victory
24 points as San A,nton10 u~ a over New Jersey. Weeks turned aside 19 shots in
stout defense to ta.e a franchise blank.Ina the Devils and was never. seriously tested ... ~rd for steals in a 131-102 J.,....Petcen.-scoredonsuccessiveslapsbotsin the
tnumph . ·; Knt. M~llale scored se<lond period and added a third aoal on a wrist shot
1 S points an the second half and four minutes later, leadina SL Louis to a S-3 triumph Olllfll•• Larry Bl,.. 14 as Boston p'111~ over Toronto ... Rookie Du Frawley scored two aoals
. a~y to. defeat Seattle l I 0-94 an and Tny M•rray collected his fifth pme-winner of the
the Kinadome. The victory improved Boston's road season with 14 seconds remainina in the second period
record to. 19--8. and overall mark to 42-l O. a half-pme to lead the Chica10 Black Hawks to a S-4 triumph over ~of adle Phil.adelphia in the ~tlantic ~ivi.sion. The Pittsb~rah ... Bob ~"'8ter, the highest scoring
SofltCS, m~nwhtle, drop'ped ~hear fifth an sax pmes. American-born player in NHL history, netted his 43rd
After leadma. S4-SO ~J halftime. Boston outscored and 44th aoaJs of the season in the third period
Seattle 1~23 an the tha~ q~rter to1ake COJltrol. B.ird, Thursday night, rallyjna Washinaton to a 4-3 victory
wh.o scored only four points an the first half. tallied eight over Calgary.
po ants and arabbed six ~t1ounds in that decisive period.
Lloyd awaken• to cruah Graf
DELRAY BEAC H, Fla. -After her, El
customary slow start. second-seeded Chris
Evert Lloyd crushed West Germany's
Steffi Gnf 6-4. 6-2 Thursday night tcrjoin
Martina NavMilova in the women's fi~al of the Lipton
International Players Championships tennis tour-
nament. -
Earlier in the day, Navratilova, te No. I Seed in the
128-playcr women's field, solved her own balky
foTChand and Carling Bassett's hard aroundstrokes to
defeat the Canadian 6-3, 6-3.
Saturday•s women's final. which will be Jelevlsed
nationally on ABC. is worth S 112.SOO to the winner.
A dome for C&ndleatick Park?
SAN FRANCISCO -Mayor Dianne a ·
Feinstein announced Thursday that her
proposal for a downtown stadium has been
scnpped and that she is now making plans
to remodel Candlestick Park into a "numero uno"
domed-sporting facility.
·~After two long years of checking and rc-checkinJ.
runnang and re-runnang numbers on site after site, it 1s
now clear that the siting. high cost and the impaction on
other projects rule out a new downtown domed
stadium or small open-air stadium," said Mayor
Feinstein.
The mayor said no site would bring the sufficient
Bau, bank deny reporta
LOS ANGEL.ES -Sports and real • estate magnate Jerry Buss and Security
Pacific National Bank denied Thursday
th~t .Buss bas fallen. behind in payments on
malhons of.dollars an loans and may lose control of his
sports empa~.
..The teams are. in n.o jco~rdy .. said Bob Steiner,
tp<>kesman for Buss Cahfornaa Sports, which owns the
Lakers basketball team, the Kinas hockey team and The
Forum spon.s arena in suburban Inglewood.
. On Wedn~ay, KCBS-TV reported Buss had
massed payments on loans totalina SI 00 million to the
bank. The television station also reported that Security
Pacific ha<lconsidercd t;aking contro.I of the teams and
had. CQ..n.~cd Sam_ G1lbert. a prominent Southern
Cahfornaa sports fiaurc. about running the Lakers and
Kings.
"We are stickina by our story," a KC BS
spokes~oman said Thursday. She asked not to-be
identified.
TELEVISION
10 a.m. -COLL&GE BASKETBALL: Duke v&.
Notre Dime, Channel 4 .
11 a.m. -COLL&GE BA.S&.ETB.AU.: LSU 11
Syracuse, Chaonel 2. ,
Noon -COLLEGE BASK.ETBAU: Nevada Lai
Vcps at UC Irvine, Channel 4.
Noon -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Arizona at USC,
Channel S. l 2:30 p.m. -QllEATEIT SPORTS LEOBNDI.
Channel 7. I p.m. -SPORTS SATURDAY: Boxi.ns -Bill
Costello vs. Leroy Haley for WBC liahtwelJht cham-pions~ip; men's world speed skatina championshipe.
Channel 2. I p.m. -TENNIS: International Players Cham-
pionship (women's final), Channel 7.
I p.m. -GOLF: Crosby Southern (tape), Channel 56.
2 p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Boxin1 -James.
Kinchen vs. James Shuler in a middleweiaht bout; Kanae
-Brad Hcf\on vs. Tom Hall for the pl{A heavyweiaht
championship, Channel 4.
2 p.m. -SOCCER: Channel 34.
3 p.m. -BOWLING: PBA tourney from St. Louis,
Mo. (delayed). Channel 7.
4 p.m. -GOLF: San Dicao Open (delayed), Channel
4. 4:30 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Harlem
G lobetrotters: world nordic skiins championships, 70.
meter ski jumping and cross country championships,
Channel 7.
8 p. m. -COLLEGE BAS&ETBALL: Arizona State at
UCLA (delayed). Channel S. RADIO
Noon -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Nevada-Las
Vegas at UC Irvine, KWVE-FM (108).
Noon -COLLEGE BASKE'l'BALL: Arizona at USC,
KNX (1070). .
7:30 p.m. -PRO HOCltEY: Washington at Kinp.
KWVE-FM (108). •
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Fresno State
at Long Odeh State, K.EZY ( 1190).
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BAS&ETBALL: Arizona
State at UCLA. KMPC (7 I 0).
Sunday
TELEVISION
9 a.m. -AUTO RACING: Daytona 500, Channel 2.
11 a.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: DePaul at Sl
John's, Channel 4.
I 2:30 p.m. -TENNIS: International Players Cham-
pionship (men's final), Channel 7. ..
I p.m. -GOLF: San Dicao Open, Channel 4.
I ~.m. -GOLF: Crosby Southern <.tape), Channel 56.
12:30 p.m. :--PRO BASKETBALL. Boston at Laken,
Channel 2.
3 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Bicycle Race
Across America (tape), Channel 7.
RADIO
victims in Nicar.,ua.
12:308.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Bostof\ at Laken,
KLAC(S7 ).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---····················•l!ll•r 7 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers vs. Atlanta, = KHJ (930).
support to oass a bond issue.
SA VE $2500.00
1985 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD SEDAN
WHY CADILLAC? Thia 1985 Cadillac Fleetwood aaya it all! Claaaic
style end appeal, renowned Cadillac room and comfort. Visit Allen
this weekend and see this fully loaded Fleetwood! Save $2500.00!
(8258)(288723)
LIST PRICE U5,086
Allen's Sale Price $22,586.
DON SUTTON, BASEaALL'I MOST VALU-
ABLE PLAYER IN '77 a DODGER PITCHING
ITAR FOR 11 YEAM, CHOOSES. AN
ALLEN CADILLAC FOR Htl DRIVING
PLEAIUREI
SAVE-$-1-000.00
1985 OLDS
CUTLASS SUP.
YOUR TYPE OP CA.I ...
This 1985 Olds Cutlau Supreme, 2-door, with automatic trena-
miHion, air conditioning, power steering, power brake. tinted
windows, divided aeata, super stock wheels. AM/FM ate~eo and
much, much more! (6102)(362652)
LIST PRICE U 1,871
Allen's Sale Price $10,871.
•
Scioscia gets CIF 1 ff: · k $435,00Dsalary p ayO 8 a Wee away
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dodgers
catcher Mike Scioscia who a:e.pined
his position with the National League
baseball team last season, was
awarded a S43S,OOO salary for the
coming season in an arbitration
hearing.
Scioscia batted .273. hit five home
runs and drove in 38 runs last season
to win his job back from Steve Yeaier
after being out nearly all of 1983 with
a tom rotator cuff in his right
shouJder.
Scioscia mort than doubled his
salary through the arbitration pro-
cess, having earned S 17 S,000 last
year. The Dodgers had offered
S3S0,000.
OUR LONG TERM
LEASE OR PURCHASE:
A LARGE INVENTORY
ASSURES CHOICE
7'41123 7210 • 1l4J7I0-7201 • 1tJlt.l1·-~ -----· .. ,..., ..........
And they have a new look with addition
of the powerful Big Five Conference
Prep basketball moves into its final
night of the regular season tonight
with the ClF playoffs looming a week
later, but it's a slightly different
agenda this year with the addition of
the Big Five Division, a skimming of
the top leagues from the 4-A division.
Among the area schools involved
in the 16-tcam format of the Big Fi ve
arc Angelus League power Mater bei
and Sunset League <:ham pion Ocean
View, while the Sea View league's
trio of Newport Harbor, Estancia and
Corona del Mar will be involved in
the 32-tcam 4-A setup.
Three teams from each league
qualify for the playoffs, with a wild
card entry added to the Big Five to
round out the 16-team field.
In the 32-team 4-A, one playoff
game (to be determined from third
place finishers) on Tuesday will trim
the 11 leagues to 32 teams.
Herc's how the lcques shape up
SAVE 20~o
Our Entire Inventory of
Dre•• Shirts and Tiel
THIS.WEEKEND ONLY
Februarf 16th and 17th
Saturday 10-8
Sunday 12-5
#119 F.ublon bland (714) 111-1m
.. I
entering the final night of regular
competition: * !Me ftlY• ltlo Mew ) 10
AMGUUS San Marcos ) 10
Wl err.us aaLT
Meter Del • 0 EIMnflower 10 )
Plus X 7 2 lt~ndt 10 3
Servllt s ' San Got''"'1!1o . ' ltlverlldt Polv 7 ' SI. Peul ' s Fontane ' 7 llSllOP Amal I • ltut>ldou• ' 7 11.noo Mone. 1 • Pain! Sof'ln91 • ' CAMINO 1taAL COiion 0 l)
St. Anthonv 11 2 IVY
Serra 11 2 NO'lll (ltlv.1 11 2
SI. lttrMrd 10 3 NOf'CO 10 )
VarlMlm Del 9 ' ~· 1 ' Merv Star s • flAOf'tno v alleY ' 7
St. Monica s • It~ ' 7
Cantwell I 12 Pwrll 5 •
S.le•l•n 0 13 COf'ona ' ' O.L•aY Arllneton ) 10
Creull 10 2 MAUl1IONT9
Camarlllo • 2 Alemanv 7 ' W11Uaka ' 3 SI. Francis ' s Channel lllandl 1 • LovOll s ' Simi Valltv 1 ' SI. John 8osco s 6 It oval ' 7 8osco Tecll ' 7 N-burv Park 2 9
Noire Dame 3 • TllOUMncl OU.a I 10
MOOttl OCIAN
LI Potv • 1 lnelewood • 0
Compton ' 2 Culvtr Cltv • I
JOf'dan s ' Hawthorne ' 5
Mllllkan 3 ' leWrlv Hlh 3 • Lit Wltaon 2 7 North TllfTance 2 ' Lakewood 2 7 TOf'ranc:e M
IUMS8T f'AClfllC
Ocon View ' 0 Glenclale ' 0
Fountain Vallev 7 , Muir • 3
Hunllneton lffc:h ' s Crtteenta Vallev 6 3
Wt1lmlMIW ' s Hoover J • Merine J ' PMedena 3 • Edl1on 0 ' Arcadia 0 ' 4·A SANOA .. lll
HY L.vllwood 11 I
Santa Monica 11 0 ~ 10 I
Wiii Torrance • 3 Paramount s •
ltadondO 7 s Ctrrlloa • 7
Mira cos•• s • Oownav • 1
SOultl Torranc. s • Gahr • 7
ltolllno Hlh 3 • Warr111 I lO
Palos Vwclea I 11 MIA YlllW
CINTU..Y ~POf'I .._,Mt 12 1
<>ranee 11 2 EalancJa 11 2
Sen•• Ana 11 , COf'OM "4 Mlir 10 3
EIModena • s s.ddllbeck 7 •
Foothlll • s L.•euna lffc:h 5 •
Sent• Ana Vallev 7 • Cotta MIN ' ' ClllVCNI ' 7 Woodbrld9t 2 ti
Tutlln 2 11 Unlvenltv 1 ,,
VI .. Park 0 Tl SOUTH COAST
CHANNIL Mlulon Vi.to 10 ' llUIM 12 I 0-Hiia . )
OlnerCI ' ' Caoo Vallev 7 ' °""""'°' • s El Toro • s •.. ..,..,. 7 • l.aeune Hiii • 7
VlflfUfa • 7 San Clemen .. J • ~ • • lf'flne 0 11
'85 CHl!VY
SPRINT
(~ .. ~
.o~ OUR •4r0
PRICES
ARE RIGHTI
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Hou11on 113, New Yorll 105 Denver 131, t<an.aa Cltv 123 kn Antonio 131, Phoenix 102 8011on 110. s..111e ,.
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Cel Sl•J• htceotltld S3, Cal Stitt Nortl\fld .. 51 Weslmont 103, LA Ba11t1a1 69 S..lllt PactflC 13, Allall1·AncllOl'1ee 79 Porllllld 13, Cent. W11t11no1on 65 llOCKIH Utah St. 13, Fullerton SI. 63
FrHnO St 61, Ntw MlxlCo St. S3 BYU 77, COiorado SI. 6' Utall 69, Air Force 65 ldallO SI. tS, USIU S3 Nevada·Rano Sf, Montana SI. 41 'Norlhlrn Arl1on1 76, Montana n
•A.ST Falr1tl1111 Olcklnaotf 69, St. Francia, Pa.
" Hofstra 70, M1n11a111n 61 Iona 47, Armv •s Lovola, M4 7S, St. Francis, N.V. SO MarlhlH II, E. Tenn. St. S9
NIVV II, Am«lc.n U. 61
Penn SI. 70, Geo. W•Mllnoton 61 Rullltl'I 67, OUQUftnl S9
SI. Jowon'a, Pa. 66, MlnaclluMllS S4 Svracu .. 94, SatOl'I Hiii 62
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SOUTH LSU 11, Ttnnesia. 12 Louisiana Tech 13, SW Louisiana, 1' (01) VlrOJnla e.. ROiiins )9 Furman 63, VMI SI
McNeeM SI 67, NE Louisiana S1 NW Loulalana 57, S.F. Austin SS
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SOUTHW•ST Arilan.aa 60. T11tH SI Arlllnias St. 61. TellH·Artln9ton 60
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Total fouls: Woodt>l'ldOt 1', N-POrt
HeftlOI' 11 Foultd out: Oenlt11 <WI, Nolin (NH ).
1'...,.ln V ... y U , Hllftttrt""9n ... cft
23
• Cs-Mt L.Mt:ua> HUNTINOTO. laACH (21) -Kiiter J.
~ 2. Mu<rav I. &tdler 4, Hartman 2. VllOwt 4 Totals. 11 1·9 21.
f'OUHTA!tt VALLaY (5') -Hendlev 7, WaPln 6, Cooll 17, Clower •. Cilellrowskl 6, Mven 6, Lawler 10. Total•: 22 12·U 5'.
k.,. by °"''''" Hunllnoton Beech 4 4 10 S-23 Fount1ln Val'-v 10 1' 20 12-56 Totel 1ou11: Huntington 811ch 13. Foun· taln Vallev I.
0cMn V1-W M, Wftlnllt•ter 3'
(5-..t L....-1 WHTMINST•• (Jt) -Watler 0, l<Hrns 2, Le 4, Akita 7, Porter 0, Outctll< 0, Baits 6, Batr 10, B111111111 9, Puebla I.
Sl*ICI 0. TOlals; 17 S·f 3'. oc•AN v1aw <•> -c11om1c1 11. Ooulv 7. Hounilll 2, Lawson 3. Mllltf 4, RO<frlllue1 6, Slmell 22, VllCllOI 17, Zlnetll 10. Tot11S. 39 10-15 II.
Sc-""' °"'"'" WtstmlnJler 14 t I t-3' Oc11n View 16 16 21 25-tl Total fouls Westminster 1', Ocffn View
Edlsen SO, Mann. 49
($4MMI LAffue)
•DISON ($0) -Hannn .. v I. Out>vrn e. Wiison 10, Tv• 0, Noffslnoer 16, Herman 3, Rudd s, Totals: 17 16·24 so.
MARINA 1491 -t<lrkuP I, Smlth 4, S.t>t!ino 11. Charroln 4, Kuester 12, erawsler 3. Tota!S: 20 t · 19 It. Sc_ ... ...,...
Edkon 4 16 10 14 .-SO Marina 13 11 10 10 s--49 Total fouls: Edison 17, Mallnl 11. FOUied out: l(lrkuP !Ml Technical: Charroln <Ml, l(uester IM).
lrvtne '3, LatuM H•s 44
(SWiii C•1t Lll9Ue) taVIN• (6.J) -8owtr 11, Moceri 16,
Graham It, R .... 2, ROt!CIUI .. •. Ford J, VI
2, ECIWards 6 Torell: 24 15·24 63. LAGUNA HIU.S (44) -C.udlllt 12, Cllrehk:ll s. Lvdan 11. Vlcnlcl 2, Nerai 2, M1t1ot1 4. Monahan I Totels: 20 4· 11 '4
Sc-... °"'"'" Irvine 13 12 20 1..-..J L111una Hiits IJ 14 J ,._.,.
T 0111 fvuls · lrvlne 1 S. L111un1 Hiiia 11 Fouled oul: Monahan ILH)
Mater Dal tt, BilMp ArNt 31
(An91NI L.._.) MATER D•I (ti) -Waoner •• M Galnev 33, Ci Cielnev I, ~,. s. Wood 3, Ellerman 12, Mounce I. Formanec:ll I,
Llwrfftel 2, OltN I TOl•ll 43 S·ll ti
llSHOft AMAT UI) -Gannon S.
Pelleraqn s. Melle I, Munor 2. Mesina 3, "d. Ciallevos 6, AP Ci•li.uot 2. Totals. 14 J·lS 31
Scere bv °"'"'" Mater Del 34 23 16 11-91 &lllloP Amel 5 11 9 6-31 Total foula· Mater Dal 16, Blsl\oo Amal
11
GllltLS' STANDINGS
S.. View LNeue
(f'lftel)
L .. tue WL Wooclbfldge 1' 0
Corona def Mer, 17 7 Costa Mesa I 6
N-port Harbor I 6 E1t1ncl1 1 7
SldctttOack s 9 Unlvenltv 2 12
LIHJuna lllKh 0 14
TilwMllV'• sc-
OVWll
~~
IS 6 10 12
12 •
' 13 6 13 2 II
1 21
Corona di! Mer SI, Ll9una Beach 16 Estancia 37, Costa Mtse JS •
S.ddlet>Kll 41, Unlver1ltv 40 Woeclbfldvl SI, Ntwllort Harbor 2'
SUnMt LNtue
(f'IMI)
.........,. C>wrll
WL WL Fountain Vallev f I II 6
Ocean VI-9 1 It S
Edison 6 • I) 10 Marina 3 1 9 1• HU111i1111ton Beech 2 I t IS Wtstmlnattr I t 7 16 llluf'M9Y's Sqir'tl Fountain Velltv 56, Hllnllnelon Beach 23 OcHn View II, Wtslmlnster 3' ldlton jO, Marina 4'
•
o..._. 11 ....... ._..._ =\ ....... ., °"' ....... ll·J>-.64 JfM ...,, •~n .....,_.lwltry .,...... Ctwlt~rv .,._.. r-wetto11 ..... ,, TtFMWV..._.. ,. ...... C..,lfte:e .... . ,..,,....... ,...,, ..... Jt·»-71 Stew~ .. »-12--tS c ........ l4•J,_.. oa..1~.., 11·»-n L.OfllllllMrt• J2·....S PIYM St.wart *,....... OlcllMcC"-" tt·»-11 0...1.lllW n·~s WlllleWOld ,......., •on~ ,, .... ,, ltUC.1.llMlll• ··~ Devld ~om ,,.,........ Clll Clll •wie.-,...,._,, VtttOIHMINI Jl•J>-fS ,,. . .,.. Erl#Ciolu.-,,.,...... "°""~--· ArwfVM..-U-31-66 Tim~ .. l.otw' Jl->5-66 TltlCMtll¥ J.U • ..,,., 11·35-66 GetvMcCtrtl Ian' Crlfllllew U-31-M ICtll OfMll .,,_, »·~ Cflertlalellifte WOO#lv llaellburll lMSo-M t:':lowmen wrvPe,. ,..~ Gove >evHM1 32.,....... JOIWIJICOM l lllH-ocll ,,.,,._.. KIMV IC llH Lennie Ctamentt Jl·~ De¥1d l'rott •on Slrec.tt 33•lot-67 lrlCIFIMI, Ctt'9Staclltt 34•»-67 Cir"T ..... ....., OOl~llul• Jl·»-67 Tom PuftW aotlOv ClatNell »·J.6-67 Lenv Mire Frtd Couotes J4·U--.7 GM MorllWI OoutTIWell »..,......, ,.,..rll lrooll• Scott Slmtlson 35·»-Q Tonv Siiia JoMnv Miiier »·U-67 lrldFa-011 Dan Pohl 34·»-67 l(tllh """"' Phll llacllrner l7·»-f7 01111 Stock ton Tim Norrt1 3'·31 ..... 7 JtnvWlta Gene Seuef 1 JM,_.7 Miiie .. utMrt WIVfteOractv »-~ MlkeSmml J.tf Coston 3Ml-.a JIV Oelllt11 David TllOft 3'·»-M Oevld Edwardi J,C. SMICI ,..~ 84*Twey Tom Jlllklnt 34.u-41 •e• Celdwtll DenHellOl'dlon :16·»-61 Al o.lelttMr Ptul A linter• 33·15-'9 Miiie Sulllvan Pel McGowan JS·,,_... Garv koell &IN ltouera l3·3s-.t )04IV Slndtllr JOlln Cooll )5·33-il Jodle MUdd llN CillHOll 34·~ JvanSmllh Merli Pleil 35·33-a JohftAdlm1 Jim Slmont S3-lr-.I Miii• Mlle.-. T.C. Cller: l3·3r-.I Tomllflmen AnavNorth 35--»-;I JlmGelltfWJr luddV Gardner 34·M--61 Curl l vrum " MlchMI llrlltlll" »·.JS-. OeMllTrtxler D.A. Wlebrlnt 3'·J.t-61 Dave lerr TomWOOdlrd ,._,....... MacO'Grldv Steven L ltbler 3Nr-.1 Franll Conner
Ln Alamltel THURSDAY'S .. SUL TS (21st If 67·1111M lletMll ,_.....,
, .. ST RACI. One milt PKe.
C JM Social (•lctlmoncll _j,20 6.00 5.20
Callrk Juilv CTrtmtlltvl 25.40 13.60 Suited To A T" !McCarty) f 60
Time 2'04.
13 IXACTA (7·4) M id Stll,10.
s•COND RAC•. One mllt PKI. Warp Orl111 (Marchena> 7.20 UO 120 Star ftecl (St\arr1t1) 19 20 10.40
TaN Scoll (fOCMI) UO Tll'M: 2;05 3/S.
U IXACTA (l ·SI oeld S.371.00
THtaD llACI. One mile P9C1. Ftv Man Ftv !Crawford ) UO 2.IO UO Anava Winston (Glen) 6.00 4..00 HIPPV Hunllno (l<ueoler) lAO
Tlme. 2:01.
U EXACTA (1·41 paid llUO
"OUtlTH llAC•. One mile lrot. Martina Price <Slltfren) 4.00 3.60 2.60 Neall .. PllOI~ (DI Fr•nco> 11.00 •.60
Miiford MMronev (W1"i•msl °' Time: 2-0 I 415 "'"™ RACL Ona mile paca H H Tr""°' (Plano) 300 260 110 Cirll>tlln (TOdell I IO UO
ScottlMI tsov (SMrren> • 20 Time, 2'01 3/S
SJ axACTA ()·6) Pl ld S5'.60.
'SIXTH RAC•. One mile OKI. Clletlerlnu IF>lr111lne) 31.20 IUO 5.60 Roval Marv (Rllchlel 10.00 4.60 Nuevo ZIP (TOCl<I) 2.10
Timi! ,OJ.
U •XACTA <5·61 Plld J420.JO.
nv•HTH llAC•. One mile PICI Catffornta Alltel (TOCld) 3.00 140 2.40
HIS Tiie lllst llltvtel') 3.00 2.60 Volclno Of Shlrwff (O'Oonohuel S.20
Timi: 2:00 21 S.
U UCACTA (1•21 Hid Ill.JO.
llGHTH RACI. Onl mite PICI. Mv Aunt Rae (Marellalld) 9.00 UO J 60
Oetono Wav Home (Aul>ln) 1 20 5 60
L udlV LIYllV ( Sllerrefl) ._40
Timi! ?-02.
U axACTA (6-1) oeld S5'.70
HtNTH RAC•. ON mite pace Rt11rtl Me Not (Crwld) 21 40 l.IO 1.40 l<lfen Eve (Lackev) 3.IO 3 00
Mister Ciuirav ( BaPIOuth I 3.60 Ti~ l·SI l1S
13 IXACT A <1·61 P•ld llOS.30.
S2 PICK SIX tM+l+ll oald '31,S70.60 with one winning ticket (ab
llOfws) S2 Piek Sia Consolltlon 1>1ld S Ill 00 wllh If wfnnlno lkllets lllvt llorws)
TENTH RAC•. One mite PIClt
Oran«i>erk Blossom (SwtM) 3.80 3 40 3 00 Ftoo Danica I Pierce I 9 60 6 40 Aunt GMtv ICrawtordl SIO
Time· 2.01 21S
SJ IXACTA (2·•1 PtiO '32 70.
ELaVINTH RACE. One mile Pt tl . Olct1tor111lp (l:ackevl HO l 00 l,60
Ooclor Don (Pl1no) • 40 (J10 Rall>ll C Adloa (KUIOlerl 340 Time: 1,59 '
13 EXACTA <S·21 Pltd S2700 Attll'dance 3,117
Sant. Anh
THURSDAY'S RESULTS
( )9lfl If lt·deV !Nr-~ ITMeflnel l'IRST llAC•. 6 furlOnOl. • No Hold1 Barred IMcHro> S.80 3 IO 3 80 Our Citau (Lorove) 10 20 S IO RoHllt's Choice ILamancel l 60
Time-I 20 115
SECOND llACE. One mile Two Hearll (McC1rronl l 20 3 00 Nl11ht Guard ( T orol 3 20 3 00 Lost taentlty (l.orov•> •to Time 1.31 )IS
$2 DAIL V 00\18LE 16·91 Pl•d l n 20
THIRD •ACI. 6 ' turlQng,
earr~1·1 l.tdv (Plncavl 7.60 S 00 • 60 My Vlr11ln11 RMI !Steven\> 6 00 S.IO Hu<lro Jet !McGurnl 17 00
Time I II ?1S
'OUttTH RACI. I I 16 mllfl Dominant LH IOltlUY) n 20 I 40 s 40
Bio Potentlel (Steven•> • 00 3 60
Mlft St. LAU (Oominouerl •IO
Time I U 2/S "'™ RAC•. 6 turlonlls. Hide A Pennv (ESlradl) 4.00 3 20 2 40 M$. LIQfltrtlno 8oll (H1wllv) 4 IO 3.20 Dvnomtltr (Pedrorel 2.60
Time: I 10 "s,
S.S IXACTA 16·•1 Plid s•7.00
SIXTH "ACa. 6 lurionos Mir Kie Mist ( Plncev I 10 40 4 20 3 20
Our kif Tell (V1len1Ullll 160 1 40
Dulce Vino (Stt-•I J 20
Tlma. I 10 llS.
HV•HTH RAC•. 6 fUflonlli Nitro (Oelalloun v•l 71.20 t IO 6 40 l(lllma Point (V11tn1uel•) 1 00 S 00 Pasaea Tile ltult (Ooml1111uH) uo
Time-1:10 315.
U UlACTA (t·S) Hid t-45'.00.
1 .. HTH llACI. 1\.1: milts on turf •td Emoer (Pfncevl l.00 J 10 out Gut11vll (McCarron I , 60 °"'
C*-Dt:lllflttr (Hewtevl °"' Time: I.Al 415.
U IJlACTA Ct·3) N~ SISOO.
A f'ICK SIX (I· 1-6•1·,_ 11 Clolkl
15Si1S5.IO Wllh IWO w~ Jlcllet• (f111
llor111). 12 Ptc:lt Six con.oletlon Nici suuo
wlll\ '"' w!Mlftt tlcllet• <ftw l!Onft).
NMTM llACI. I 1/ 16 mn.t
YOYflt ~ (Hewtlv) 11 II 540 4.01
CKIMN (~) 3'° 2• ••• ., ... t~Hlrtue) 7 '° Time 1 ... 415.
11 IJlACTA (4·f> .... t111 • AllellCIMCe ll,.J It
..._ ___
DAft~...._ ......... t -'' ...-n. • reo •· J cew c.w. n ..,.. ...... ,..,... ........... '
teulllln ..... , u....-. • ......, ....,_,....., • .,. ........ 1'r90
~., ....... ,,. .....
.,.._. ~°""' •~n ~ t.i=· »·»-n .,......, •11-n ....... lfl.Wt """"
,...,._,, .......... ......... . ... .,, »·.-.. Mla9~ J7•....,. U ·Jt-10 .. , .... J1·Jt-n ., .... ,. ~JoMt •»-n 15-lS-10 katl~9 ,..,._n
>6-U-10 Tom Kllf .... ,,
lS.JS-70 VltW ....... '1•»-n ,, ... ,. ..... .._.urn •~n U-H-10 Dell Honllne •»-n 31-H-10 '°""WIN •»-n 3.S·U-10 Jim o.t •v-n lS·>S-70 OtwvPlnM ~---7' 3'·,......10 Midi SG4I ·37-7• M•»-10 O...Oouelh1 ,. ...... 74 U·JS-70 Oe'leOevl1 1M1-1• 33·37-70 •rtt u,,_ •>S-74 36-M-70 •oe1 cur1 :J7·11-7• ,..,._,. Oout~s 15-,,....74 37·33-70 Lenee Ttn•lfa.c:ll 31·3'-74 JS-lS-10 Jeff Slum.an 37·31-74 l7·l>-10 LOii Hllllllt 27·»-7• 3'·»-70 1111 lrllton Jf-JS-7• '4·)7-71 lerrvJMdlll •·»-7' lS-l6-71 (hip lectl ,..,.....,.
35-M--71 MlfltWltOI :16·»-7• 3'•35-11 a·Dannla Pllfton »-»-14 17.,......71 DIMv Edwards .. ,.....,. 34.37-7( Gordon JOllMon ,..,...75
36•35-71 llMlert1ln 3'· ... 75 35-36-71 Phll ltodeer• JMl-75 35-36-71 TornmvAr"'1lllt¥ 37 ...... 75 •n-11 ,....Brown l6•,,_7S 36.-35-71 MMll•oHint •>7-7S J6.-3S-71 Terrv~an >t-3'-75 l6·lS-71 ltlldSllerlv 3'-37-16 •»-n Jeff Senders ll-lt-16 J7·JS-.12 CS-..Clclll J7· ... 16 37·3S-n Getv '"" u--..... 16 »·»-n Tom Sfedmlenn 36---16 lS·l7-n Ir Id iarv.nt :Jt·»-n
NHL
CAMPa•LLCOM,•R•MCa
SlwftM~
W L T ""' faft •A Edmonton WIMl1199
Celllarv
4C1 10 6 16 213 llS
I( ... Vancouver
2' n 6 a m 2n
21 22 1 63 2st 224 24 22 It st 2$3 240
" l3 • 40 lft 2'1 ...,,.. DMllall
St. t..oull 26 If 10 62 213 *
Chleluo 2• 21 > 56 m m MIMISOlt 16 2' 11 43 1'2 217 O.troll 16 31 10 '2 20I 260 Toronto 13 36 1 33 174 2142
WALIS COM,HINCI
~""'*~ Waa/llnoton
F'hlaOelclhla NY llllndera NY llaneera PlllMlurefl
New Jlr .. V
)5 15 I 71 244 171
l'216 1 nmm
JO 12 l 63 2$3 21S
17 " ' 43 "' 227 11 30 s .. 190 2'3
11 JO 1 " 113 m
Bllffalo
MontrNI
QueMc
&Ollon Hertford
Adami OMlitll
21 IS 12 66
27 19 10 ..
2•n•60 25 24 I SI II )() 6 ,,
1'11WM9Y'• Sarft 8oston l, Killlil l Harlforo 4, ,.._ Jersev 0
PhlllOelPnll 6, QueMc 3 Mlnnaaola S, Detroit S
Chieffo S, PlllUlurllfl • St. Louis 5, Toronto 3 W11hln111on •. Ca111arv 3 T__.,, ca.Ms
Montreat at &uffato Edtnonton 11 NY Ranuen
s.tw•V'•~ Walhlnolon 11 ICilllil Chlcaoo at Detroit Hertford II NY talanaett
&Olton ., "~ BuffalO 11 Montreat
QueMc et Ptt ISA:lurllfl
New JerMV II Toronto E dmonlon 1 I PtlllldtlPllll WlnnlPtll 11 Calcllrv • Mlnntwl• II St. Louis
Klft9I J. .,,,... 3
ken ... ,..,....
20'1 1S2
214 111 226 205 212 20'1
"' 20
lkKton
L•Aft911tS
O I 2 O->
0 J • 6-l ''"'~ Scorlt>ll-none ~Jes-elum. lloa IPIO!dlnu>. o-.u; Tavtor. LA !rOUOhlnol. 0-26, Crowder. 901 (llOlcllnJI), 10:10; Ellot>IOm,
LA lh'9~~· 10-10; Mltt>urv, Bot (hOldlno l. . tlla, LA, ooul>le·mlnor (roughing), :01; Curran, 80\ <rouohlnol, 11:01 ---....... I LOI Aneetft, Dionne 34 (Tavtor, MacLllllnl, 6 If 2 80\ton, MIOdltton 20
Cilium, Bour-). 1-ot l. Los Aneatts. Ketv
7 (Miiier. Svk .. ). 15:45. 4. LO\ A,,....,
5nutt IS llltclmond, Motlowkl. 11A Penal· tles-Mllt>urv. &CK (rouehlnt). 7-06,
NlcllOM•, LA <roug11l119), 7:06, H1k1nuor:, LA (trlPOlng), 11•02; Slrnonettl, 8oi (llOlcl· Ing), 13:22
~~ s. Boston. O'Connell 15 luneu!Stl<ll. 1-06
6. Boston, Simmer 27 (Crowoer). 9-01 Ptn11tles-G11tev, LA (rouot:lno I. 1.37 Crowaer, 8os (roughlnol. 1:37 • ~
Scorl~ P911111Je\-nor:e. Shot• on llOll-tklslon 6-7-1·2-23 LO\ Anollll "10-II· S· 2-'ll. Goellll-9oston, l(nns 121 atw>ll· 2S
lives) Loa Anotlts, Etlol 123·20).
Rifer-Dave Ntwtll Attendance: ll, 122
~ NCCet
HtGH SC:HOOl
Hewpert Hll'Mr 3, W11•r14191 I Newport Hartlor sc:orlnu Covne , Tlldmas I Woodbfldoe Korlno Quartararo 1
e
Fullerton, 49ers
al In PCAA play:
Fresno triumphs
FrMlAP~adilet
LOS ANOELES -Senior forward
Wayne Carlander tcored 23 poinu
and Southern Cal pulled away in the
second half to its fifth suaipt viaory. a 76-60 triumph over Arizona Siate 1n
a Pacific-10 Confettnce bukett.11
pme Thursday ni&ht.
USC led 36-34 at halftifl\e and was
ahead just S~9 with 12 minut.n to
play when Carlander. the former
Ocean View HiJh standout, con·
verted a three-point play lhat ianited
a 2~ I spun over the next S:40 to si~e
the TroJans a 7~SO advantqe, their
biaest of the contest.
Southern Cal raised its conference-
lcadinJ record to 1~2, 16-S overall.
Cbns Sandie bad 14 points·tO lead
Arizona State, which fell to 6-7 in the
Pac·IO. 11-12 overall.
Arizona State Coach Bob
Weinhauer said that durina its sec-
ond·balf scorina spree, Southern CaJ
pla1.ed some h igh-clus basketball. ~USC went through an un·
believable stretch and showed whx
they're leading the conference, •
Weinbauer said. "In that stretch.
USC played the best basketball in the Pa~-10. ff that ~n·u Top 20effon.
1 don't know what was."
Wcinhauer tried to keep the game
from .etting the Sun Devils but
couldn t find anythinJ that work~.
"W e talked about 1t at each ume·
out. and tried to fiaure out bow to stop
iL Webavedoncmisina lotofgamcs.
Sometimes you blame 1t on in
experience, but you can't always rely
on that. Actually, it ~as more of what
USC did, than what we didn't do.··
Southern Cal Coach Stan Morrison
said he tfiought that the Trojans'
defense keyed the crucial spun in the
second half.
·•There's little doubt it was our
defense that generated our offense in
the seco nd half;' Morrison said. "I
was scared to death of this game. Bob
Weinbauer has his team playing. with
good rhythm."
M om son said ifs no time for the
Trojans to relax. with a game apinst
Arizona coming up Saturday.
"This is no time to celebrate, we P!!Y a tou&h team Satwday," h.e said.
"Tbey'rc the hottest team m the
league now."
In PCAA act.ion:
Ut.all State 7J, Cal State hllertoa
13 -At Lopn, Utah . Jeff J.
Anderson scored 27 points to lead
Utah State to u s fifth win m six
games.
Anderson. whose 14 first·half
points led the Agics to a 39-37
halftime advantage. was also the
leader down the stretch when Utah
State outscored 1be Titans 1~3 in the
final four minutes.
Vince Wasfiington scored 16 points
SEEDEN ...
From Cl
Commun11y college basketball
coaches try to recruit players b>
pointing out real good reasons for
pla)ingat their school. G~nfield
could have some probl~ms next )e.ar.
Can you hear humry1ng to con-
vince that All-CIF guard to come to
Golden West: "Look. I know we were
(). 50 last year. but ... ••
Greenfield insists n won't be that
bad. though.
·rm wo rking very hard on recru11-
1ngalready. ··he says. "Sure. it's hard
to tell th~ kids )Ou ha' ea good
program. t think r "edonc well in the
past.1hou&h. We've placed a lot on
guys on sdiolarsh1ps.
"~c have to point out the dif-
ference 1n style betwccn ourseh cs
. and (intra-<hstnct nval)Orangc
Coasi. I try to tell the kids their
development will be better at o ur
place:· Greenfield adds.
Greenfield has some 1mmed1atc
con cc ms to deal with. too.
When the ~ustlers play C'yprc s
Saturday. there 1s the chance only fhe
players will be suitC'd up on the
Golden West bench. The flu has
decided to htt a few ofGrrentield·s
pla)'Cf'S.
He nerds at least five gu)'S to stan
thcaamc. lfoncortwoshouldoul
o ut. his team can continue playing.
The worst thing that coluld bappen is
they'd lose.
As for next year. Greenfield sa)'s he
hasan unnamed J)4a}erwh1ch should
help his team consickrably. And,
Longan will be back. He 58)'1 he
miahteve.n~tOamcronandJudac '*k.----
"I'm enthused toa degree," Grcen-
fickhays.
and Gttt Grant Md 1 l "°'ntt Ud '" ttboundl b Utab SI-., wtlicll
imptO* '° 14-1 ovetd ad ,_. ia
PCAA ptay. hhard Monoa ~ 19 poiats, Kevan Heedmoe 12 Md
Dewayae Sheperd and o.,.. Davis l I
each for f uJIMOG. wbicb reu to I J:. lO
overall and 9-S in PCM.
Peetfte M; Ltilt .._. 8eUe 11-
At ""' Beac6•s campu SYtDt
10phomore pwd Kyte ~tcond
23 J!Oinu and the Uruvmny ol
Pacific broke the open 1 clote pme
eatly in lM second half eo route &otbe
win.
Freshman forward Oo_m•!'JO
Rosario added 17 points for PICilic.
which raited its conba« mart IO
4-10. 8-JS overaJl._~na Bach Scale
fell to 1·12 in f'CAA play, J.19
overall. ·
Freae Slate 11 , New Me:sb SCale
U ·-At Las Cruces. N.M., senior
1uard Mitch Arnold and junior
forward Jos Kuipen scored 12 points
·apiece to lead Fresno State.
Fresno State's 8u.Udop boosted
their record this season to 16-6
overall and 11-2 in the PCM. New
Mexico Siate suffered its ninth c:oo-
socutive loss. skidding to 6-16 overall
and )..10 in the conference.
In other action:
Pe,,el'Ale II,~ M -At
Spokane, Dwayne Poi« scored 1 7 of
his game-high l 9 points in the ·seco6d
half and Eric White added 19 more '°
lead Pepperdine to a WCAC win.
Pepperdine is now 6-l in WCAC
action and is 18-8 on the season. Tbe
Waves have a haJf-pme adva1naee
over sec:Ond place WCAC foe Santa
Clara.
Orepa State It, .......... S..te
ti -At Corvallis. Ore., A.C. Green
scored a pme-hi&h 29 points to help
keep 18th-ranked Orcaon State in the
Pac-10 championship race.
Center Steve Woods.idc added 17
points for he Beaven, 8-3 in con-
fCf'Cnce play and 18-14 overall, plus
11 assists. Most of those went to
Green who maneuvered close to the
basket for the bulk of bis scoring.
OFqoa 71, fla.....,._ M -· At
Eugene. Ore.. center .Blair
Rasmussen, who sat o ut 13 minutes
of the pme because of fouls. scored
22 points to lead Orqon to a 70-66
upset
The defeat seriously damapd
Husky hopes for the league title as tbe
loss left them with an 8-S conference
reco rd. · •
In a women's game: usc·w, CaJ State FllOeri. s1 -
At the LA . Spons Arua. Yolanda
Fletcher mack a layup with 17
seconds remain ing to lift Southern
Cal to a Western O>llegiate AthlctJc
Association win.
C heryl Miller scored 20 points and
Fletcher added l.C for Southern Cal.
which lmprovcd its conference mark
to 4-2. 14-6 overall.
RUSTLER • • • From Cl
Q,ereem. an Edison graduate. went
to the pJate 28 umes and also hu .286.
Campeau will Stt action against nght·
handC'd pitchers.
c·ENTER FIELD: Anotht'r Edison
product. freshman Todd Nash will
anchor the o utfield and Hoover is
expecting big things. "We·ve had
thret or four outstanding ~nter
fiekkrs at Golden West and Nash 1s
aJrudy nght up then-with them.
He'll get a lot of balls m the alle~ and
he ukes charge out there:· Hoo .. cr
says
RIGHT FJELD: '-\nother 1ransfer.
Case> Manin ~om Long Beach CC.
haseamed the Job. Manin h11 lQOfor
the Vtkinas last )ear and has also
impressed Hoo er Wlth h1) defense.
PJTCmNG: Hoover plans o n car·
rymg seven pitc hers. only two with
any community roUege expcncnce to
speak of. Right-hander John Manin
started nine games last season and
finished "1th a '-4 record and a l86
ERA.
\\ilk. a kft-hander. lied for the
team lead "Ith thn-c \3ves laSt \.car.
W ilk had a 2-0 record and a 4.62 ERA.
Joining them "ill ~ Gaf) Buckles
who worked 1ust t"o games last
season. He p1tchC'd 11 1nnmas
wnho ut allow1J1& an earned run
The freshmen include Tom
Kilpatnck. Luis Diaz ind Larry
SaJaets.
"There 1s nothing rosy about o ur mrr.·· Hoover confid--nwc have to
have everybody hnllhy and throwina
strikes ••
Vanguards play Cal Baptist
RIVER 10 -Southern Ca.Ii·
fom1a Collete. comint off o ne of its
btllC$t wins of the teaSOft. ~es on
CAI Baptist t ni&ht in AIA Di1tnct
Ill bukttball action hett. T1pofT1u1
7:JO .
Co.ch Bell Rcynokh' Vanau.ard
foltowinJ an ls-61 tnumph ovtt Pt.
Lorna Tuetday ni;ht. w111 try to improtc on tbtir SoUthtm 01VI ion·
leachna 7-2 ~ b S-«s>•n tht
Llnttn \Onie.ht. -
ra1>1uttd the tint pmc 76-
...
1n toe v anauara om.
The Va."luards. 21-4 0\<Crall, a~
led by Krn Bardik}' -ho 1 •vencint 13.1 potnb pcr•me and potnt patd
Sbenro-ln Durham ho I"~ 11.S
poants per outu• •
F°"'1lf'd nl n 0.Vt who
SC'Ortd 11 poin 1n the fi'14 ~
~nst the Vanauatds. i l Blp.
t 1 fs too 0rtr
"' 1n ton1aht ,_,'Ould a urc the
an.suard of " least a. ot fer the
AlA Oi\t~t 111 Uthem Di I IOI\
cro11ron
...
"
J
• ..
..
ailing? Check the cause
neglect are major reasons for damage
., ~ a.u&-PVGUBll
......... O•t J , I
It is not uncommon for in~oor
plants to suffer from disease or damaae in ll)ite of routine care that lliu..¥Pt them aJive and well for some
ti.me.
Various symptoms, which arc
usually subtle. can be caused by
multi~ facton. However, they can
be eliminated if recognized at the onset
The symptom leaf drop can be the
result of insect damqe, under or
overwaterina. disease, air pollution.
too little light or too much sun, over fenillzina, drafty location, or inade-
quate humidity.
Other symptoms include brown
leaf tips and leaf margins. leggy
arowth. leaf spots, soft or fleshy stem
bases and sour or souY soil.
• The best way to determine the
cause is to follow a me\hodical
approach:
-ec.tn by cornparina the plant's
ttowth feCl•UrtrMnll to what you
have been providina,.
-If acneral care is not tbe
problem, look for insect infestation.
Insects need to be eradicated immtdi·
ately.
There arc two methods o( ~t
control -biol()lical and cbem1cal.
Biol<>sical control involves physical
removal of the pests. followed by a
gentle rinsina of the leaves to remove
any cgs. Use either plain water or a
soapy solution (use soap flakes. not
deteraent). Use cotton as a sponae for
the delicate wipina-off of the leaves.
Sponge offboth the bottom and top of
each leaf.
Chemical control involves the use
of pesticides, such as malathion that
is effective on spider mites. scale, leaf
miners and mealybup. Follow the
manufacturer's dirccuons and apply
in a well-ventiltlted area.
-If you tule out pests as the
problem, then c~eck the soil. Sour or
1985: Theyear
of the portulaca
Portulaca or moss rose is a cheery.
dependable garden flower that bas
endeared itself to generations of
prdcners.
It splashes a paint box of non-stop
color across a summer garden but
demands very Ii ttle care. It is beat and
drou&ht resistant and is almost pest
GARDEN CHECKLIST
•Give your lawn · a boost this
~onth ~Y. fcediuj il Use a combina-
taon fcrtllizer and pre-emergent weed
control to help eliminate the source of
potential weeds at the same time.
•Spraying is one of those chores
that shouldn't be neglected. All sorts
of pests ana diseases arc still dormant
and can be controlled now if you
spray.
•Malec sure the soil has started to
warm before planting tuberous
begonias, dahlias and tuberoses.
•Nothing can compete with the
quiet beauty of a backyard pond or
tub garden when water lilies begin to
bloom. The gardens arc easy to build
and maintain.
and disease free.
It also is the National Garden
Bureau's 1985 Easy-to-Grow Flower
oftbc Year.
The portulaca is a low-growing
annual with ncedle--lik.e leaves. trail-
ing stems and boldly colored cap-
shal)Cd flowers. -
Overall the plant appears as a small
mound 4 to 6 inches hi&h and has a
spread of up to 2 feet. The fleshl y
leaves arc a pale olive green and are
arranged alternately on the stem.
Depending on the variety, the
flowers are either singles, semi-
doubles or doubles. Colors range
from soft shades of cream, lavendar
and white to a vivid palette of yellow,
orange. red, cerise and pink.
Although seed packets usually con·
tain mixed colors, some individual
shades hav~ been isolated and arc
now available. The flowers have the
unique habit of closing up on cloudy
days and in the evenings.
Ideally the seeds should be sown in
dry, sandy, well-drained soil. Portu-
laca is a versatile plant though, and
will tolerate almost any condition but
one of excess moisture retained in the
soil.
';OIJY toil is cauted by eilbtr poor
dra1ftlle and/or overwaterina. To
check drainqe, remove 1be rool ball
and be sure ll\e draiftlllC hole is not plUllCCL Before re1umina lhe plant to
lhe pot, cover the drain hole with clay
pot shards.
-Ovcrwaterina can lead to 1
mushy stem bate or a funaus infec-
tion. If the only visable symptom ls
lbe Joss of 1 few leaves cut back on
waterina. tr tbe toil doesn't dry out
within a few days and the problem
worsens. chanae 1t with a sterile soil.
-If the problem doesn't appear to
be in the soil then look for plant
disease, which is uncommon in
indoor plants. Generally the problem
is a result of poorarowinaconditions.
improper care. or purchasin& a plant
that is alrudy diseased.
If the disease appears within a short
time after purchase return the ptant
and exchanF it for a healthy one .•
Funaus diseases, such as root and
crown rot, can be stopped by either a
biological or chemical control. Either
transplant to fresh soil or dust
infected areas with a fungicide.
Anthracnose, another fungus dis·
ease that is very infectious to the ficus
As they tend to have shallow root
systems. they often arc used in rock
gardens. between the stones of paths
and on dry slopes.
Because seeds are very small. they
arc difficult to handle individually.
But by mixing them with an equal
part of sand, the portulaca seeds
become a breeze to sow. Since mature
plants shouldn't be moved. it is best
to sow seeds where you-want the
LLOYD 5
garden shop
OUR ANNUAL
1. CENT SALE ·
ENGLISH
PRIMROSE
Excellent
Spring Color
4" Pot
Buy 1 at ~· Price
$1.35
Get 1 for 1$
B ~U ~l~B ~S
euott9d
Gladlola • D ..... • a.gona..
Mix 8ftd Metch
Buy 2 at reg. price; GET THIRD OF
EQUAL VALUE OR
LESS FOR
SHRUBS
ALL 1and5
GALLON
PLANTS
Mix and Match
Buy 2 at reg ~:
GETTHIAOOf
EQUAL VALUE OR
LESS FOR
HOUSE PLANTS
ALL GREEN PLANTS
ALL SIZES
By 2 at reg. price;
GETTHIAOOF
EQUAL VALUE OR
LESS FOR
1, ..
...
BEDDING PLANTS
VIOLAS & PANSIES
• .,., pony pak
Buy 1 •t
regular price It" ••·
Oet1 1•
pak for ...
BARE ROOT SALE
AH lareroot
Roses, Rosetrff•
Buy 2 at reg. price;
GET THIRD OF EQUAL
VALUE OR LESS FOR
Buy 2 at reg. price; •
GET THIRD OF
EQUAL VALUE DR
LESS FOR
(fla) species. can be caused by exueme tuunidily.~uddtll chilli.,~ too dlY
heat from an overhead heatana veat.
For control, hold blCk wateri111t_
ventilate lhc arowina area. ~ oft'
infecied leaves and use a foliar
fUnaiside .
Plant• that have arown lqSY and
show only spene new leaf arowtb
should be transferred to better ljpt.
and trim blic:k ICll)' vines or stems.
Brown leaves and martin• are
caused.by salt damqe. Contributors
include old «>ii, repeated feniliz.ina,
and not enouah water when waterina.
In some areas salt concentrations in
tap waler arc 100 high for aood plant
growth. If this is the case, mix it with
either rain or distilled water.
If you have frequent salt bwld·up
and saline water, re~t in a clax container~nd use a shahtly acid soil
mixture. Ask your nurseryman about
a oommericial additive for the water.
If your plant does not respond to
the above solutions, discard {>lant,
soil and pot, and replace with a
healthy specimen. It is best to tou out
a sick plant rather than risk con-
tamination to others.
flowers to be displayed.
Broadcast seeds over the area, press
seeds into the soil. water lightly, and
allow I 0 to 15 days for genniniation.
It is not a good idea to cover the seeds
with soil as they will not sprout if
planted too deefly.
Portulaca wil self-seed readily b11t
the resulting flowen may be disap-
pointing. especially if the first plant-
ing was a hybrid.
FJ'all'IUlt Dowen '
Tbe taberoee, ~1 reprcled for lta attradft eplkee of ~t flowen, will bloom :rear after Je&r· Balbe 9llolald
be plaDted now for .aamer to fall bloom ..
Cyrrrblllium ·society
to open orchid sho~
Exhibits, floweramangementsand demonstrations will biahlial'lt the
three-day orchid show, sponsored by the Oru1e Couty Brueli of ilae
CymbW.lam Sedety of America.
The fifth annual exhibition, entitlted "Orchids-Nature's Royalty;" will
be held Feb. 22-24 at the Anaheim Plaza Mall, 500 N. Euclid St. Hours are I 0
a.m.·9 p.m. Friday; I Oa.m.""6 p.m. Saturday; and l I a.m.·5 p.m., Sunday.
Tbrou&hout the show;experts will demonstrate bow to pot orchids. Many
of the plants, arrangements and corsues will be sold. , ..
Kenneth Inouye, a Disneyland horticulturist, will Jive a slide lecture for
members of the Newport BtDt Gana Cl•b who will meet at 9:30 a.m.
Thursday in the Glendale Federal buildina, l 00 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach.
The speak.er will explain how beautiful flower beds at the maaic lc.inadom
are grown and offer tips on how to duplicate them at home.
For information. call Mn. Clarence Peanon at 644-2506. • • • Connie Spengerofthe Native Plant Society will give an illustrated talk on
the endanaered T ecate 5.press and its habitat at the meeting of the
Hortleelhrils.dety ef C...ty. -
Members will meetat 7: J p.m. Tuesday at the California Cooperative
Extension, IOOOS. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim.
Great French chefs wb.lp up
sumptuous cb.atity banq_uet
But dessert nearly
a disaster when flight
bearing it is delayed
NEW YORK (AP) -Armed with
70 pounds of truffles and 500 frogs,
the five greatest chefs of France flew
here to create the ultimate meal in
honor of Pierre Francy, the man who
popularized French cooking in the
United States.
-But the benefit dinner orpnized to
raise $300,000 for the March of
Dimes came close to culinary disaster
when pastry chef Outon LeNotrc's
plane -and his dessen -was
delayed by bad weather for 14 hours ..
.. Can anyone do backup?" moaned
the guest ofhonor Tuesday night as he
wandered throu&h the steamy kitchen
of the Tavern on the Green res.
taurant ... Can we fry crepesr•
It was not until the 500 ~~~ guests had sampled the sweet
~th truffles~ the fi:oa's l~ soup .a!'~
toiale lub>ka uumpl1np w1lh zuccnana
blossoms that LeNotre's plane landed
from Paris.
Two station wagons whisked the
chef and his confection from the
airport to the dinen u they sampled
lamb with carrot, spinach and mush-
room puree. LeNotre arrived just in
time to serve an oriainal creation
called "Pleasure."
Franey, the author of the syndi·
catcd ntW$plper column "The 6().
Minute Gourmet" and two
cpokbooks with the same name,
awarded LeNotrc with a Steuben
gla55 snail for his effon.s.
"There were 300 people in the
plane, and by the end, we were
prepared to feed them the delsen,"
Joked LeNotre, whose concoction
featured Gnnd Marnier custard and
chocolate mousse ... Too bed for
you!"
The four main dishes were created
by Paul Bocuse. Roeer verser. Alain
Chapel and J8CQuet Maximin, who
all run tc1tauran11panted the biabat
fourMat rad• 1....ted b)' tbe-pra--
tiaious Michelin paide.
Their tall wbtte b.111 wavi~ like
cburtb spires, tM. bar men llined,
whipped. roled and puawed with the
· ln•ex•pen~e·
'(In Ill epen• ... , ,... •
In prlc•: , .. 1onabl•. ::.,,-=...., ...
et ... 1~*1'"~
food for only two hours before it was
served by I 00 waiters, cleared by 40
busboys, and cleaned by 13 dish·
washers who ate only pasta for
dinner.
Several bottles of Dom Perignon
flowed down the famous French
throats to provide them with energy
durina their coolc.ing ordeal.
"B_ut this is not difficult," said
Maximin, who runs Le Chantccler
restaurant in . the famed pink
Nearesco Hotel along the boardwalk
in Nice. "You are not a put cook if
you can only do it for 20. You must be
able to do the si.me thing for 2,000 if
you are a areat cook.··
Tuesday's dinner was much sim·
pier but more delicate than a similar
dinner prcpen:d for the March of
Dimes last year by 14 of the areatett
U.S. chefs, who ran the pmut ot
ethnic specialties.
But 8ocuse, who is widely ac..
claimed as the world's finest cook,
stressed that the Frenchmen bad not
traveled to the United States to show
up the Americans.
"You will never find in another
profession the brotherhood that el·
1sts between chefs," be said. .. We are
here, not to compete, but to honor
Pierre, who has been our ambassador
of cuisine in the United States.'J
'
..
DWI COg. eama profltof7 cent.
a 9bare forquatter·endtng Dec. 28
DWl Corp. Tf'.tursday tt_ported net ill(()me of $624, l 83, or 1 ccnta, on
revenues ofS2.S million for the teeond quancr ended Dec. 28.
Thiscomr.res toa net lossofSS6,414. or I cent. on ttvenues of$684 84l
for lbe 13 wee s endtd D«. 23, 1983 for the Irvine firm. '
·. For the six months ended Dec. 28. the company ~ported net income o( SS67.665, or 6 cents. on revenues ofS3.4 million. For the 26 weeks ended Dec
231•11!913. DWI reported a net loss ofS67,422. or I cent. on revenues ofSl.4 m son.
Both second quarter ~nd six m<?nth results for fiscaJ 1985 include a sale of prod~~t development projects totaling S 1.6 million for a m~ority interest in a
ne* JOtnt venture company. Jnotek.
. The net f1in from the ~le after CC?Sts and reserves is $602.218. Robert K.
Fujaolta, chau:man and chief executive officer. said, .. DWI had a second qua.~r operat1~1 pro~t ofS2 I. 965..txcluding the sale of product development pro_,ec~ reflcctma~n am.prov~'!l~nt over the previous quarter in Design West. our destan and enamccnng d1v1S1on.
. "As previously ~poncd. the spin oft: of the product development projects
into a new corporauo.n. lnotek.. in which DWI holds a majority mtcrcst
enabled the cost ttduct1ons and subsequent profitability. As a result. we expec\ a profitable I 98S.
"lnotek will Row develop the new products received from DWI in
exchanee for stock. lnotck expects to raise captial1hrough a public offering. ..
L>Wl. CO'\) .. doin& t?usiness as Design West. is a leading industrial design
and en11neenl'\8 . service c~m~ny. It provides design and product
development services to mult1-nat1onal companies.
Mlf?rowave d~lares dividend
The ~d ofEIP Micro~ve Inc. Thursday declared the company's 28th
consecutive quanerl~ cash d1v1dend.
The dividend of 3 cents a common share is payable March IS to
shareholders of record Feb. 28. ·
EIP Microwave manufactures microwave test and measurement
instruments which arc predominantly used in the defense and tele-
comn1\lnications industries. The (()mpany has manufacturing facilities in San
Jose and maintains corp<>fal.C oflkcs m-Newport Beach.
NEC has $12-mUllon earnlngs
H. 0.vid Bright, president and chief executive officer of National
Education Corp., Newpon Beach, has reported the company's 10th
OOllteCUtive m:ord year with 1984 eaminp of S 11.9 million on revenues of
S 173. 9 million. ...
Bri&ht also announced that fourth-quarter earnings rose to a record high of
S3.5 m1Dion on l'O"'eOUCS ofS47.3 million. .
Eaminp for 1984S1.17 a share, compared with 88 cents a share in 1983.
·Americans are stngtng the old hymns. bUt
thewords,.thoughtsdon'tap plyanymore'
When the words and ~IS DO lofterr 8"1Y to the si.tuatioa.
Lodtt and his felJow fbrv8'd
Profcuor 8nlCe Scion remind Amm.. cans tbat IM competitjve daallcner
todly comn not from trlditioaaJ
rivals in Western Europe. but from
Japen, South Korea. Taiwan, Siftaa-
porc and Hons Kona.
By JOHN CUNNIFF -............
NEW YORK -If consumer
confidence indexes. the stock market
and remarks from the White HOUK
arc correct, Americans these days are
fcelina aood economically. in spite of
budict deficits and the like.
Two reports ·this week, however.
lend to spoil the fun. and suqest that
good feelings do not ncccssanly make
good sense.
One. from the president's Com -
mission on lndustriat Competitive-
ness. tells how the ability of U.S.
business to compete in international
markets has been slippin& over the
past two decades.
The other, compiled by the U.S.
International Trade Commission,
documenTs how Americans have
spent $IS. 7 billion in higher prices
since mid-1981 because the Ameri-
can automobile industry is protected
by voluntary quotas.
Not all is bad news. Competitive-
ness has recently been improving,
says the president's commission.
And. says the trade commission.
while quotas have been costly they
also have hel~ U .S. industry be-
come more efficient.
But the thrust ofboth reports is that
the United States has problems, and
problems layered over in good times
have a tendency to break throuah the
surface when the economic cycle
turns down. as inevitably it will.
The first report. called "Global
Competition: The New Reality, ..
indicates that the United States
simply cannot continue to do busi-
ness as usual and expect, as in the
past. to remain the world's most
6.7
Powerful market factor.
The rules att cbanaina. it IUllats,
and it recommends chantes in the tu
sylte1n. more ~tion amOl'\a
business. labor and 90vemmcnt, re-
considention of antitrust laws, and a
new emphasis on trade at the Cabinet
level.
In effect. the document reiterates
the statement comina from academe
that t.he old assumptions and
premi1CS no loD1Cr hold true, and that
Americans had better ~ that
world trade js a brand-new bellpme.
As Professor Georae Lod&e puts it. we continue to sina the o1d hymns
I
The thrust of the new cballe.,.en.
they point out in a recent book ... U.S.
Competitiveness ln the World f.coa..
omy," comes not from favorable
natural resources "but from coherent
national strateaies throuab which
each country mObilius an.cf shapes its
productjve c:apebilities to achieve
economic srowth and pob91 com-
petitiveness." -~canwhile. they suaest. the Unit-
ed States sinp the hymn o( Adam
Northern Telecom rolls out
n.ew voice and data systems.
.
Northern Telecom of Laauna
Beach Thursday introduced a new
line of digital communications sys-
tems for information rnanatement
that offers voice and data services for
large and small orpnizations.
Called the Meridian line of prod-
ucts, it includes:
-A major enhancement of. the
company's SL family of private
branch excha~ (PBXs), increasina
their capebiliti~ and providinJ a
ranae of new tnformat1on services
and features.
-A new office information system
for smaller orpnizations or individ-
ual departments ttiat fully integrates
voice, data and text communications.
-A ranic of new digital terminalJ
that extends the company's existing
terminal portfolio. The ~w products
include a sophisticated voice and
data terminal. new digital telephone
sets, and a radicaUy new telephone set
that uses a touch-sensitive screen
instead of buttons.
"This portfolio of new products
and services repraents the most
extensive set of integrated com-
munications capabilities ever de-
livered by one company," said
Desmond F. Hudson. president of
Nonhern Telecom Inc."
The Meridian line of products was
introduced as part of Northern Telo-
com's OPEN World Protuam. an-
nounced in November 19g2 (OPEN
is an acronym for Open Prot~I
Enhanced Networks). The OPEN
World concept envisiops ~lion of many informalio
functions and differnt. &ypes •
makes of equipment.
The new enhanced .yeniou ot
Northttn Telecom 's SL f'.amily arc
called the Meridian SL. I and Mer-
idian SL-I 00 intearated services
networks. serving from 30 to 30,000 usen.
"The Meridian SL systems in-
corporate~ ex~sions of the SJ. architect~ HudJon said. ••1t is
imponant to recoanize that the
Meridian SL products do not replace
current SL,. I and SL,. l 00 systems -
they build upQn tbe'tn. SL systems
already installed can be upgraded to
become Meridian SLs.'"
~ Quarterly tax payers face new rules
4. 4.
4 1·
\ 4 4.
4 • f 4. i· 3.
Individuals who are required to
pay their income taxes on a quarterly
basis have new rules for t 98S. These
rules were pan of the Tax Reform Act
of 1984 and become effective Jan. I.
1985.
The most significant benefit to the
taxpayer is the new method by which
nderpayments of estimated Illes
will be computed. Under the old law.
you could avoid being penalized if
you met one of four exceptions to the
penalty. If, however, you missed all of
these tests. your penalty was calcu-
lated on the full "balance due" on
your tax return.
To sec how this worked. let's
suppose that your I 983 tax liability
was S 12.000. On your accountant's·
suggestion you set your 1984 esti-
mates at S 12.000 in order to meet the
penalty exception that requires you to
pay in 100 percent of your prior year's
tax liability. After three installments.
you decided that ypu' had paid in
enou&h. so your total timatcs paid
were 19.000. When your 1984 return
is prcpattd. your total tax liability.
much (o your surprise. romes out to
S2S.OOO. Since you have failed to
m~t the "I 00 percent of the prior
Rilll
Scarr
year's taxes test." the penalty will be
assessed on $16.000. the difference
between the S2S.OOO total liat)ility
and the $9,000 actUally paid.
. Under the new law. your penalty ·
would be based on the ~
between what you actuaJly paid
($9,000) and what you should have
paid using the I 00 percent of the prior
year test ($I 2,000). In other words,
your penalty will be based on $3.000
not S 16,000. This chaogr in the law
can be very beneficial to md1v1duals
who have large fluctuations m the1r
annual income.
Ralph Sc:orr is a ccrtifit:d public
accountant with oflicn in Newport
&acb.
Chrysler earnings soar
to record $2.4 billion
HIGHLAND PARK. Mich. (AP)
-Chrysler Corp. said Thursday its
fovrth-quarter profit soattd fivefold
from a year earlier. lifting its full-year
caminp to a record $2.4 bilhon.
Chrysler's profit in l 984;its second
consecutive year of record earnings.
lifted the combmed profits of the Bl&
Three U.S. automakers -Chrysler,
General Motors Corp. and Ford
Motor Co. -to nearly SI 0 billion.
GM earlier said 1t earned a record
$4.5 billion last year. and Ford said its
1984 profit was S2.9 billion.
-l•ij-~------
However. Chrysler Chairman Lee
lacocca said Detroit's good umcs
would end if Japan lifts its voluntary
qunta~ nn Ntr g,..lp~~~!!'.; :v ;?-~
United States when the quotas expire
March 31 .
·Tm a httle scal"C'd nght aow,'"
lacocca said.·
The quotas. which currently lunit
Japanese shipments to 1.85 mtllioa
cars annually. had the effect of
kttptng Japan's shancr of the U.S.
market at about 20 percent last year.
Japan has yet 10 announce whether
1t plans to e~tend the quotas or ~
But larocca s:ud that if the)' md.
Chrysler ml&ht be forced to ~ash an
amb1t1ous fhe-year. S T0.5 billion
investment plan.
hould 11 cut producuon. Chl)'$Jcr
would ·•stan at the mall can and
mo~e up:· lacocca said
(.
·Oa
tbe
, ••
FlllAf S Cl.11111 PllCES
WH Ai NYSE D:u
NYSE Ll AIH RS
UPs AND DowN s
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW VOltl<. (AP) Feb. IS
NASDAQ SUMMARY
Go10 Quo ns
\ MfTAls Qu off \
That's an apt description of bbth business and
business people along the Orange Coa __ st. To keep track of ,
where companies are gotn~ and which people are helping
them get there,]ust watch Credit Line' -every day tn ttie
Business section of your new lllJ Piii .
by Tom Batluk
<JCJ-A11\J(. IJl''llltif1
r..l'E~\JE UtfllN(, < 11 rf.P'• M(. OPPOftTUNIT4 l(
IMPf'OJE. l)Q(~ WP.Ill~~ <,f1(1..f IN (lU(.IAL MCA~ WH(~E cPEA11v111,1 t'i r,rAL.l4' <AU.ED R:l4ll ~PO .
l.fAKINu <J0u ~T.;ROcJ<,H ~Ql)C>T10N~'
l. ~11\NG f'IW"( RCUEVA8t.E APOENC£ E.XUJ$~ I
6ReAKIM1 OH F"(lA110NSf.41P!> et.I IY\At&.. 1
~ PL.fACt t-IC .,• If 11 tf '" ti (J(I£ c.DulM' Frt.t;fo 01= ..ft 'fl.4
RfX.u I
'--------=----''---~··------------'
BIO GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) ,.
ti . , ~==~===11 I.,
\\
SHOE
~,WAAT~PSij. •!¥..CSER, ~·AH&~lt)Vr~~. ~Mel¢' ~R M'( MAJJZ?. .•
-
by Charles· M. Schutz'
--------------------------. l ·I' MORE TRUE TMAN LOVE e WMAT DID YOU PVT
OOWN FOR NUMBER TMREE,
MARCJE, TRUE OR FALSE ?
TRUE. SIR! TRUE BLUE~
AS TRUE AS I Ll~E ~
TRUE AS STARS ABOVE ~
TO ME ~ OM. 'TIS TIWE. I
4'15 TRUE ! TENDER I
AND TRUE ! . f
i
%
"Who marked up the ceiling?" "George, take the towel OFF before you DRABBLE
throw It In the laundry hamper." by Kevin Fagan
"Not me." "Not m~."
by Brad Anderson
:l IS
"He't brought my pipe. newspaper and
sllpPers ... why do I have this sense
of foreboding?~'
·GORDO
.,,
GARFIELD
w£&.L ,I'VE 5Wf.PT ONPER n.E
FORNITLJRf, VAC.OUME.P Ml.iJ
CHAIR ANO SHAKfN iMf. Ro<;S. J'M FINAU '-I RIP OF
All YOOR CAT MAIR
MOON MULLINS
S~ SOFTHI!' TIMES ...
B L,A ST ED LAUNDRY!
iHfY 5~RUNK MY SHIRT
SIX srzes .'
• JUDO&'PARDR
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
FORTONATE.l Y. I KEEP AN
f.ME.RGENCY 50PPLY IN TME MCK OF MY 6EP
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
IHEY SHOULD 'ST.ART
MONoGR,AMMIN<S .
"THEM HIS A~D HERS •..
by Harold Le Doux
l ~·1 OMDER~T»lO IT!
1'~ AQ£ No ()JCl('j
M{()Ot.40 ~f. ~
-~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
.Do I HAFm GCrlb eeo, How LO~ WlLL rr ~? l't"\ DRAIUING-l~E '{001bF1N1SH?
A Nefff PICIORE !
~·r 100CH M ~ ... IT'S~~/
by Lynn Johnston
c:>eP'ENJS oN How LDNG-
DAt:Ot' SLEEP&.
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
COMBINE YOUR LINES
Neither vulnerable. North deala.
WEST
NORTH
•AQ
<::'AKJ
0 K87S
•AJ97
EAST
• I( 1087,3
Ci:i> 9852
• J95
~Q874
0 JIO
•8
SOUTH ••t ~ toa
0 Qt52 .,,
0 At4
•KQ 10t4J
The biddlnr:
Nenll Eut
INT P ... a o , ..
4 ~ r ... , .......
Welt p.,. . ... . ..
Openlnr lud: Eis ht of •.
at h!. previ01.11 turn), South made
the value bid.
There are 11 top tricks at aix
cluba. How many chances are there
for declarer to make.a 12th trick?
If you Mid two, the fineNea in the
major aulu, 1ou are almosi right.
There ia an additional chance -a
o •••
SHUIFF
8-8 break In dlamoada. How would
1ou p about t .. Unr aU three
poutbt1Jtl11?
lf.1ou take the apade fiMtM flrat
and It. Iola. or ll JOU duck a dia-
mond and tr7 for a 8-8 bnak onl7 to
flftd that. the diltnbaUoa ii uakind,
la the cue here, you can atill fall
back on the spade fineaM for 7our
a lam.
Tbat works, and you set the 1&me
rt1ult aa thoae who could fO no fur·
· ther th.rn a finesse. But at Jeut JOU
have the penonaI aatiafaetloo of
having played the hand eornetlJ.
CHARLES
GOREii
h la not. alwa11 enou1h to know you mlaht. Joae 1our elam II the nut
whaL line• of pla7 are available to option 1ou nerdee pet wron1. But.
.you to makt your eontraet. Y 011 you can try all . t.hrff ehancee It, Ba.e ,... a.... ,....._ lllh ....
might have to try them in a •peelfle att.r drawl.na trumpe, JOU take tb• W. W.W.? Let~ O-. ._.,
orur If 1ou waat to Wit them all. Mart tlnllH ftnt. -1!" W ,._ ••J • tl •-
N4>1't.h-8outh bid well to reatll aa A•ulbt It loMe aad Eut nturu If DOllaLU w , 11 dMH _.
t:teeU.nt dub alam. Aft.w N.-111'1 a heart. Oieeard a dlalMfid OD the tUMet. rer a ..,, .. •It
eu bkt of four heaN, wllkll ellow· Ulird hMrt. euai U.. aee-klaf of DOVILU •u'dit, ,.. llM ..
eel coneentn~ val•• la tlM 1Uit. dialDOlicla and ruft a dlamood. l the "Ger•Da U '•.. p .o. ltil 111 • .a.11t&AMNM-aM,_..._~ .. ,,art Mtk."91111 .. ,..-.. .. ,,..._,~ PalaJ1a. N.I. -.-._
<North had denl.cl a rour-Urcl major for JOUJ' epMle loeer. Jr lt dottn't, u ..,...._ .. N.,,.,.,., 1 ••
....
..
Now It's up to the jury to
decide who's lying -
Olymplan Edwin Moses
or a policewoman:/ A3
Accused Nazi war crimi-
nal Andrija Artukovlc
faces extradlctlon hear-
ings next week after los-
ing bid In court./ Al
California
A toddler taken from a
California beach In 1981
has been found by the FBI
In Alaska./ AS
Nation
A former GI says he saw
Josef Mengele In an Army
detention center after
WWII.JM
Singer Stevie Wonder Is
latest to be-jailed for
protesting apartheid
outside South African
embassy building./ A5
World
An American newsman
kidnapped In Beirut 11
months ago, describes
his escape./ A5
Two Russian chess play-
ers are told to stop after
160-day competition wtth
no winners./ A5
Sports
It's been a long season
for the Golden West Col-
lege basketball team and
things are getting de-
cldefy worse./C1
Edison Hlgh's basketball
team can't be counted
outyet./C1
Oakland A's pitcher Mike
Norris ls arrested on drug
charges./C2
Date book
Columnist relives.
'greatest moments' In Or-
ange Coast theater.
/Pege15
Whale watching: An excit-
ing 'tall,' especially dur-
ing 'peek' season. ,,_.
Now fate-night diners do
have a choice of res-
taurants./Pege 17
Bualneu._
Americana are feeling
good economlcafty de-
spite budget deflch1./CI
INDEX .·
By ROBERT BARUll °' .............
A plan to detour treated sewqe
from the Strinafellow hazaroous
waste dump away from Fountain
Valley's water supply. was hailed
Balloon• of hope
today by local ofTaciaJs.
"This is a step in the ri~t
d irection," Mayor Ben Nielsen said. "It (the bypass) is not sjaned, sealed
and delivered yet, but itJoou JOOd.
We're still copcerned but that would
take away our main conoem... • drinkina water by percolatina 1Ato
If the pi.n. studied by officials of poundwatcr suppl~. offida.IJ said.
the Oranae County Sanitation Dis-The material would be d1vtned to aricts proves feasible, a bypua will be the treatment plant in Hunt ingtoo
put into place at the Fountain Valley Beach before beina dumped into tile
~ tttatment plant off Ellis sea.
Avenue. State Department of Health and
It would eliminate a thrat that the federal Environment.al Proteetion
treated to1ins and heavy metals from A,ency experts say the treated ma-
the wute dump in Rivenide County terial will be safe.
would find their way into local But Fountain Valley officials are ...
~in'°~ t" :a1-.:
Strindellow IMleriaJ ..... ... blencfed with other treated ......
and 1njec1cjd into city "111 IO..,.•
1 burier apinlt ocean water 6-
entcrina the fmll•lller dri__..
supply.
Hununstoa ae.ch Mayor Rm
Bailey, Who is a direc:tor of lbe
("-9-YAU.aY/Aa)
. Huntington hit
as .'.uncaring'
in club hassle
By ROBERT BARltER Watson, and others, claim they are °' ... Deir,....... constantly disturbed at Aitbt by tbe
Huntinaton Beach was depicted noise.a~nt~ of the bu~o..__.__
today as a city that doesn't care about ni&ht club patrons.
its citizens by a central fiaure in a lt was the complaints by Watton
clash over a night club operating near and his neiahbors that led city
a residential neighborhood. But the ofTi<:ials to revoke a conditional use
mayor of 1he city disputed the permit -the d ub's operatina licente
allegation. -in December. At the time, ofticials
• .. Huntinston Beach is definitely acknowl~ that customers of the
not a citazens' city," firefighter-video-disco niaht spot revved car
paramedic Craig Watson charged. enaines. honked horns and raced
.. They (officials) arc not out to hcfp throuah. the parkina lot 'IS well as
us. They're having a name contest. ~screamed and yelled late at niaht .
The winning entry should be Business But three weeks later council
World." I officials. backed away from their
Watson lives on Randy Otivc nexi tou&b stance. Some of the com~nts
to Garfield's Night Spot at Magnolia didn't starid up under qUClllonina,
Street and G arfield Avenue. (PleMe -0All1t&LD"a/ A2)
'
, Peace protesters
hel~ f9r blocking
military meeting
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. Delr ........
Three women were arrested inside a Costa Mesa hotel this mom in& as they
blocked the entrance to a 0011fcrence room where delegates to a mihtary-
industnaJ convention were mceung.
The protesters. from "'the Los An-
aeles-bascd group .Women United.
held a green banner emblazoned with
the name of the p-oup and pictunng
two doves hovenng over the earth.
Meanwhile. about 35 supporters
organized by the Orange County
Alliance for Survival stayed outside
the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel.
protesting against "Wincon '85." the
three-day Winter Conference on
Aerospace ·and Electronics Systems
that concludes today.
Beginning wnh a candlelight vigil
on the eve of the conference iuesday.
more than 1.400 anti-nuclear ac-
tivists have converged on 1he hote l.
where roughly half of the 300 conven-
tion delegates arc staying.
'Star Wars'
space plan
called vital
By TONY SA.A VEDRA
Of .. Dllllr .........
The United States 1s virtually
defenseless against a nuclcaratt.aclt by
the Soviets. making research on the
"Star Wars" spact defense program
all th~ more imperative. a top
aerospace director for Rockwell In-
ternational Corp. said Thursday.
Tram BradbarJ, 8, brother of mt_.na 3-
year-old Lama Brad1Muy of a-ttncton
Beacb, handa a .. Lama'• bay" balloon to a
•tadent at Hilltop Na.nery 9claool ID Coeta
lleea. Aatborltl• are Mekl.a& information
about tile tot'• cllaappeara.nce lut October.
With this morning's arrests . .i7
activists have been detained by police
in the past three days. wllh 30 of the
protesters choosingJa1I over a chance
to be released on ttle1r own rt·
(Pleue eee PEACE/A2l
Francis X. Kane urged support for
the Reagan Adm1n1strat1o n 's
proposal to e:llplorc the controven1aJ
defense program at a cost of $26
bi I hon.
Kane told 200 people at a luncheon
(Pleue eee 8PACS/A2)
Foreign pictures
replace cla·Ssics
on Balboa· screen
ROBERT
HvM>MAN
•• County
pushing
sainthood
for Serra
Local Catholics m ark
California mtsstonS--
tounder bicen tenntaf
By ANDREI LEFEBVRE .................
Orante County ma)' help Calt-
(omia get its own Catholic saint.
"Father Junipero Serra wall be
canonized," said Alben Val~
arand kntaht of the Hunting1on Beach
Kniahts of Colu{libus. 1 Catholic
orpniuuon promouna the 18th
century Catholic pne t for sainthood.
"It may take some time.'' Vakicz
said ... It may take years. but we know
that he W111 be canonucd."
-He ( rTI) embhshcd all pf
Cilifom11 m11 1on ," Jamtt Mora'n.
Kntahts of Columbus du.tnct deputy,
said.
To commemorate the b1ccntcnn1al . '1
o f m ' m1 10", pilsnm an cany· •
1na1 ·~·foot wanm~ t.aff t~ b> a
man , ft\boltc of m ff.
to all of the talc' m1 aons. The
ptlari~ bcpn at the lano
Mt •on an · n Fran ism and n Di!IO de ~kala Miss.on
T-o IJ'OUP' will meet c ch other ~ 17 ....,the ~ Mt • ..,...--'!"'!~
bunal place of Serra.
The' pi'snm• mo~ K\lo Oranac
(PleMi .. U IUlA/A2)
• ..
---. -·----·--.-------------~--
• I
I
Happy Valentine'• Day, Doug
WlloeYer, and wbereYer, DoaC O'Keefe '-·
he llhoold know that he'o !Offd. llotortou
tra't'elinl north-ander the SUI Dieto
Freeway'ollewland Streetoftlrc,_tnaln
Hantlnlton 8-ch lot the mr ·ae Tllan-
day. Here'• hoptna Doq did-·
"
; Gunman gets
:·.cash. glasses from
.service station
"
A man with long black hair and a
thick accent held up a 24-hour service
station in Santa Ana Heights early
today, escaping with about $200 in
cash and the attendant's presciption
glasses.
The bandit approached the lone
attendant as he was stacking shelves
in the Bristol Street station at about
4:10 a.m .. explained Orange County
Sheriff Lt. Dick Olson.
The robber. armed with a 9mm
Luger, ordered the attendant to act on
the floor and then grabbed a. roll of
coins and all the cash from the
rqistcr. Olson said the gunman also
took the attendant's wallet and his
glasses. .
The loss was put at less than $200.
The suspect was described as bein&
in his 20s. shOrt &nd heavyset and
sponing a black jacket and &loves.
Olson said the man appeared to
having difficulty with the English
language.
' .~ SHHHHH. T HAT'S A QUIET JET ••• . Jl'romAl
test results are expec1cd to trigger a lot
of noise among supervisors who now
must grapple with an unforsecn hitch
.,. in the proposed airport access plan -
'·whether to ~rmit flights beyond the
.55-flight cc1liiig approved only three
weeks ago.
Supervisor Thomas Riley, who
foufht for the five-year, SS-flight
ceiling the board approVed. said he
would like to sec the hd maintained at
all costs.
"No. no. no," he said when asked if
the plane would be permitted fliahts
··beyond the 5.5-fl ight lid. "We're
caught in a situation that is a surprise
, to us. We welcome the quietness of
the airplane, of course, but we've
' made a commitment on this (55
fliahts ) to thcJ'ublic."
Riley addc . "My concern is ifwc
· arc not careful, we could destroy
' confidence in the board's word."
The test results demonstrated the
four-engine jct is capable of fl ying two
times quieter than another new-
technology jetliner tested at the
airport only a wci;:k ago, the re-
designed Boeing 737-300. Cable said.
In tum, the 737-300 proved it can fly
twice as quietly as the McDonncll-
Douglas MD-80. the plane
predominantly used by carriers at
John Wayne.
During one of four test flights, the
plane registered far below the 86
decibel-level above which com-
mercial jetliners arc regulated at the
airport, according to Cable.
With the plane carrying a full
passenger load and enough fuel to fly
to San Francisco Bay Arca, the
BAc-146 registered 82.5, 83.8 and
84.9 decibels on vario us noise
monitors situated beneath the ajr-
port's main flight path.
When supervisors gaVc their ten-
tative approval to the new access plan
Jan. 30. they included a provision
awarding incentive or "tradeout"
flights to airlines using planes that
could fl y between 86 and 89.S
decibels. Believing no existing air-
craft could takeoff below 86 decibels,
supervisors left the category un-
regulated.
Cable said su{>Crvisors still had the
option of adding controls to the
access plan before it is certified Feb.
26 to prevent the airline from gaining
extra flights. ·
PSA spokesman Bill Hastings said
that while the airline "would love" to
receive additional flights. it was
adopting a "wait-and-sec attitude" on
the matter.
"We've b«n saying for years that
we'd love to have the flexibility to
WASTE DET OUR ••• From Al
. Huntington Beach.
increase service," he said from PSA 's
San Diego headquarters.
Hastings, the airlines' public rela~
tions director, added company .of-
ficials knew the plane was quiet and
believed there was a chance it would
qualify below the 86-decibel limit.
"We're thrilled," he said of the
planes performance. "We're very
cncouraaed and it shoukl be en-
couraging for Newport Beach resi-
denu 100."
STRANGLE •••
Jl'romAl
intitially concluded that the woman
likely had died of a narcotic overdose
not as a result of fou l play,
Bea:uchampcxplained. However, Or-
ange County Coroner's deputies said
an autopsy showed Reinecker had
b«n strangled.
The autopsy also indicated the
woman probably ha~ died about 10
p.m. Tuesday. Beauchamp said the
woman's Dody was bruised but not
battered.
Beauchamp would not say when
the woman checked into the small
highway motel or whether she was
alone al the time. Police also declined
to say whether any drugs or narcotics
paraphernalia was found in the motel
room.
Bcali<:hamp said the motel man-
ager found Rcinecker durina a rou-
tine check of roOms .
; Bailey said she was concerned that
, · the facili ties at Brookhurst Street and
; Pacific Coast Hiahway in Huntington
complete trca1men1 because of the
added volume.
Local officials have clamored
without success for the State [Xpart-
mcnt of Health Services to make a fuU
environmental Impact report before
as much as 187,000 p.llons of treated
material begin arriving daily fro m the
Stringfellow site next month .
Rcineckcr apparently li ved with
her father in Huntington Beach and
may have been usin1 her maidcn-
name. Braun, the-detective said. Beach may be Ovcnaxcd i r the
•. Fountain Valley treatment is
. bypassed. She also was concerned,
:•·she said. that Huntington Beach
, facilities. may not be able to provide
Beauchamp said the woman p ve
birth to a child about si"' months aao
but he did not know where the child
or the father arc livi ng.
,_
:.
" ,;
'
Just Call
642-6086
•
Wb111l do yoo like about tlle Dally Piiot? Wh•t doa't )'O• like? Call Ille
a11mber at left ud Y••r mnN1e will be rec.rdetl, lrulC,rlbH and delivered
to Ule •pproprlate NIJtor.
The 1am~!f-hnr aaswerl•I ""Ice m•)' be 1sed to rttord let1er1 to tlte
edilor oa aay topic. C011trlbeton to"' Wt&er1 col1ma mail htcl1de dtetr
ume ••cl telepltoee a1mber for ver1flcatioa. No clrcal•tlH c•lls, pk!a1e.
Tell •• •lta1'1 on yoar mbtd.
•.. ,...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~~--.
.,
' ~
ORANGE COAST
Dlily Plllt
Ctrcutotton 714/1142.._
Cl1111fted N..,..,.. 71C/M2·1171 Al_...,.._.. 142-421 -
MAIN Of''ICI
MOr*~_,,.,.,. 11 yau "° lJO w ... Bey I t C.:.1 MloM CA
llOI ~ ~ -l>'I' H.L .lchw1rtz Ill ....,. ..,.,,.. ac:.. 15e0 CoM• Mne. c ... 12t2e •·J011mc.1i:.iore 111"' p II
• encJ "'°"' CIOPt' ... bl • ub sher ~ 1118J ~ c-.i ~ ~ "° ~ -.. .,, ....... , ...... edll«lll-... II' ~
' a.i~ -..,,_. " Frenk Zlnl Ker-w111___ -.,....., ""Y °' •~ M111cM ..-,..... l'°'!_dO .... -,_ ••• '!!.I! _,,__.~---~by't • '"· '* °""'' Managlng-ECUtor -Advertising Director .,. '° • '" ...., '°" ~ *" a.c-c-. flOllllOt 1111111 el co.I• ...... ~ • ....,_ IUl't 1t4l·IOOI ~ 11y -.11ir M.1' lllllllftllr,
Cltat1litton Rotem1ry Churchmen "'"*'•·~~
Controller ''" -, __ -,. C T.fas'*• "'"'IOI'-•-• a."""'Whltl'I"~"" ,. ,.,.,...._.~"'"If°' ..... Co.ti~ l\......;c.;:l.: .... :..·co...-:::-:::=f-..A~~L-Contr·• ... 11---0Dotonmotdll_ld~t.;;~rlltl-..iw-f"~~.:;:.":-:':.~.'!";::.:::::o~ II P od II • Cl -,. """'"""*P\lllWWIG~•11 "°"""' ~ ...... r ue on ·rcu'fatlon .... .,,"'Po lo• 1* c-......, ~•:lm .
.....,... ,.,..... --Manager Manager "" VOL 711 NO. o.
• •' ----· . -I
, \
Coast to cool off over we.ekend
Tempe· ,_.,,, .. .. ... _ .. ..
~ "' l• llDut1I ..... 9! • --.. .. ._ " " •• • :.:::-..... .. " ~ .. " .. " " -.. .. .. " --" ... .. .. -:· 17 ,1a ....... " ... -a..-" ·-c., .. n -·-" ~ Calif. Tempa ......... .. .. {'::tn"' .. .. .._.,,, " ........ u " .. .. --" T_Y...,. .. " -.. .. °"""' " .. Hlgll, low tor 24 -. W11Nn9 •I I ........... .. .. l'Nlwdllplllio .. ,~ ~-i: -" " -" "' " Surf report -" " :::::r ... " ...... .. .. -:: " " n,,_ ,. .. -" l'Cll1llnlt,OI'. " t0 L--'• " " , ... ,_ --._ .. .. =-" ~ .•. c. .. " .. ""'-.. .. --' -=:;i_w.v. " " -. .. .. ..._ " .. ..... atty.~ , .. -.. .. " -·-::r " .. ---' .... -.. ..... " .. HndSW. ........ ' -.. .. .. _ .. " -""' ,. .. .. __ . ' -g;.: .... " .. lt,__T .... .. :: ---*' .. .. i:~ ' -.. " ......... 5 " " ,., -" " ..,_ .--_ ... " .. '-'-"-·'"·"· 7t ::=:.-, I .. .. w...,._,,,, ._., .... .. " ..... _ " " .. s ... dlndlon: -· " .. .. ::::...-=·~*"II .. .. -' .. 41 f7 37 .. .. .... Girl -.. :{ ....................... IOr 24 --.. " -.. Tlde. .. _ .. .. ,._ .. 211 ...... Mlp.111, • -H " ·-· " 00 lenil-71 M ...., 11 ·10 ·-" .. , Ilg .,.. '' , 1 TODAY ·-.. .. ·-.. 23 ~ 1021 u ..... ... l ;tltp.llL ·-·10 _,, w-.. ,.. _...... 71 311 ..-. .... ·-..... -" 11 LOf19.._,,. .. &i U.T\MDA'f :;,~-.:_. .. .. Wik ...... " 11 Molll'OWI 99 q FirlllOw tJ:)CI ...... .. " " :r=.. .._, ... .. .. -.. " Eztended ~-=:orl...,, -.. ,. --.. .. -" .. ~ -_...,. _.,.. low --llidlr•• " .. wllll"'°"Y~ ....... ---. ..... " .. '' : ....... ...._._ ............ --, .... .. .. .......... ......... .,.-ro.."-lnlllll.O. ........ -" .. IOlow IOI. ... _
By die AIHda&M Preti
Glendale judge
supports police
sobriety checks
A judac ha ruled that sobriety
roadblock$ to ferret out possible
drunken driven-are lepl. .~c ruling by Gle~le M~nici~I
Court JudgeJ.D. Smtlh conflicts with
a decision last month by another
Municipal Court judge in Orange
County that decided a similar .road-
block violated the righu of a driver
who was cited for allegedly being
drunk.
Neither decision is bindin11; on
" .. =::r .. ·=~··"'· ••• " " 2:02 ....... "' .. .. .......... 1:31p ..... • •• 15 .... ·~
5Ufl ..... toc:la,. at 5:37 p.rn. • .-" .. s.1 .... d.,. fll 1:37 Liii.. -........ -.. ..
" .. 5:31 p.rn.
" .. .._ -· ~ tll.1:41 •. 111 ...... .. " s .. .,,..c1oey e1 4:N e.111. -.... ....,. t11
" ., 2:42 •. 111 .
other couns, but the American ·civil
Liberties UpionJlas taken the ca.sC to
a state appellate court in an attempt IO
resolve the matter. The ACLU cOn-
tends the roadblocks, used by the
California Highway Patrol and-some
local police agencies, violate constitu-
tional safeguards.
In the Glendale ruli~ Smith
decided that the CHP didn t violate
the rights of Denise Kell when she was
arrested Dec. 14. Her trial is set for
March 18.
SERRA PROMOTED FOR SAINTHOOD •••
From Al
County this weekend. Memben or
the local Kni&hU of Columbus
chapters, including those in Hunt-
inaton Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine,
will walk twQ-milc stints and pass {he
sygtbolic staff to the members of the
otticr 22 chaoten in the county.
Sµnday the·pilafims will brina the
staff to Mission San Juan Cipistrano
where a Mass and Rosary will be
celebrated. Anerward the journey
will continue up Pacific Coast Hi&h-
w~y to Newport Beach. The pil-
gnmqc resumes Feb. 23 at 17th
Strttt in Newpon Beach and con-
tinues up Pacific Coast ~way to
Beach Boulevard where' 1t turns
inland headed toward the San O.bricl
Archangel Mission i'n San Gabriel.
Serra established 21 California
missions which pr6spered fn the
middle of 18th century. He spent
most of his life trying to convert
Indians to Christianity.
Church officials indicated that
Serra is a 'proper candidate for
canonization, but declined to give
details of the process .
'
BALBOA CINEMA CHANGING S T YLES •••
Jl'romAl
audiences continue to turn out. "Because we're small. we're able to
show those types of films," Kerripn
said. "OthcrthcaierS that hold up to
I ,000 people can't afford to sell only
2S0seats. and can't run movies longer
than 21/:z or three hours."
Throat," which showed for months.
But such presentations as "The
Devil in Miss Jones," ··Hot Oven."
.. The Incredible Sex Ray Machine"
and "French Blue" were short·lived
as pressures to close the theater came
But Kerrigan said the theater
operators, Landmark Theaters of Los
Anacles, were forced to abandon the
classic and cult movie scrccnina.s
because of the increased use in recent
ycanofhome videocassette re·
cordcn.
But the450-sea1 Balboa Cinema
can do well with 300customcrs
attcndin1eachshow, he said.
l'n the ronn of police raids and a
• widely publicized obscenity trial.
Pussycat Theatcndiscontinucd
the X-rated offerinp in November
1976, but still owns the buildinaand ·
now leases it to Landmark Theaters.
"You can now bu_y videotaped
copies of these movies very cheap,"
~rripn said. "So why would you
want to pay the same amount to come
down here, hunt for a parkina space
and sit in a theater to watch it once?''
While they will retain some ofthe
special-occasion film festi vals,
theater operators expect the switch to
first·run independent and foreign
films to be successful.
Asa test of sorts, the theater
pretented the original, uncut version
of Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time
in America" durina the first week of
February. Despiterunninacloseto
four hours, the theater filled with
apprcciati~caudicnccs. Kerrigan
said.
There's also the advantaaeof
havi ngonlyonc screen, Kerripn
said. Jn the neiahborhood multi·
screen cinemas. you have the distrac-
ti ons oflaUghter and so forth from the
theater next door where .. Beverly
Hills Cot>" mill.ht by playing, he said.
Changes in the entertainment pres.-
cnted at the theater arc nothing new.
Bcaun in the early I 920sasa live
theater. the Balboa Cinema was
presentina "talkies" by the late '20s.
Over the next several decades, the
theater had several owners with
myriad film tastes.
The Pussycat Theaters IOOkover
operations 1n the spring of 1975 wi th
its X-rated films, includina .. Oeep
UPTO .
Operators arc hopeful that the
latest change will attract older, more
sophisticated audiences than in re-
cent years. Complaints have been
voiced irfthe past about the unruly
and sometimes inconsiderate crowds
that descended on Balboa Peninsula
for the theater's offerings and left
trash and broken windows in their
wake.
But Kerrigan promised that those
daysarcovcr.
"We want to be flexible in the films
we show," he said ... But we also want
to act along with the people in this •
area."
HUGE SAVINGS ON CARPET,
WOOD, TILE AND DRAPERIES
Oak Plank
waa "4.79 sq.It.
NOW Only
•211 aq.lt.
•
r
WOQI C•rpel
WU $28.99 ~.yd.
NOW Only
117" aq.yd , lnotali.d
' -_._
Arm•trong
Sundl•I Solarlan
was $23.99 sq.yd.
NOW Only
·-13" oq,yd. lnlt-
U!llllM ..........
640-2700
~2934
• •
.
~
\
\.
\
I
Dreams ·of exotic islands
keep him young and alive
By 8C01T HA Y8
DateltoME4Ja.r
Kit Carlson is one of those rare individuals whose love of
the Open sea and dreams of exotic islan~ arc !\Ot .dimmed by
·•real world .. jobs, problems and financial obligations. At ~4,
Carlson.,s childlike enthusiasm for world trav~I helps keep ham
afloat mentally, throuJh life's everyday· hassles.
Someday, be chums, those dreams of eating melons on
exotic islands with wife Cristie will come true.
Someday. .
Meanwhile the San Clemente resident works as a
manufacturer's 'representative selling garde~ ho~ •. ~op!~,
spreadcn .. things like that. .. Although be enjoys It, his JOb IS
merely a .heans to an end -his own boat and worldwide travel
in search of juicy melons. .
Kit lives for his week.ends when be can perfonn odd JObs for
Ed Fitzgerald and the Dana Harbor Yacht Club .
... help out on the wee~ends .because I love ~ing around
boats." Kit says, working this particular day as a shipmate for a
whale watching cruise. 0 1'U do little odds and ends -whatever
needs to be done -as long as I can hang out down here. I come
down every weekend Ed wants me. Let's put it this way, I call
him every weekend to sec what I can do." -
Although Kit d~sn't gcJ paid for his. services at the y~c~t
club he is aJlowed certain 6enefits for has efforts. And Kit 1s dow~ there every weekend working for those benefits.
.. In exchange for my help, Ed will give me a call if someone
wants to go out fishing or whale watching," Kit says. "That way
I can spend time on the boats."
Kit is originally from Virginia ~ch, Virgina where he
sailed, crewed on boats and worked has way to Europe on a
freighter. .
He moved out to California last November with his wafe.
"We like warm weather". ·
Kit's closest encounter with melon-laden islands was in
November of 1983 when he and Christie were married in the
Virgin Islands .
.. Everybody went down there -my parents, her parents
and brother and his fiancee," he adds. 0 About 13 people all
together. We were married under a gazebo on a beautiful
afternoon. Two pelicans flew over bead during the ceremony.
That's supposed to be '-ood luck, you know.
•
0 1t was really neat1 'be adds ... Just a super dream come true.
I Jive for those rare moments when dreams come true ...
The couple went bade last year to celebrate their first
anniversary.
They'll no dou.bt go back again in the futu~. But for now
Kit contmues working toward the day he'll buy bas own boat and
sail the world.
0 Workingat thelachtclubworksout very nicely," Kit says.
.. , get a steady diet o the ocean every weekend."
And what happens on those rare weekends when Ed doesn't
have any work for him? °Cristie and I will just go down to the
pier, take long waits and dream!'
Publish": H.L. Schwanz Ill
Monoti"t Edltur: Frink Zini
Editor: Scou Hays
Art Di,,l'tor: Steven Hou1h
Adi t rtl.tlng Dirtttor: Karen A. Wiumer
Clo fllf/td Df,,"tor: D•yton Piel'10ft
Clrtulotiun Monapr: Donald L. Williams
j Produttlon Monopr: Robcn L. Canlrcll
0.1cb00t ,. pu~ cwry Fndl) by &ht ~ Cout Pubhahi111 ('o ..
P.O. llo• U60. ))() W Bly S. .. Costa. MeM. CA 92626. Ttkphotw (714) 64:! ... J:!I . .,...,.. buMMM hou" m. I"'· IO j p.m .. Monday lhrOUl)I
Frlde). °'8dl"HW for calendar o( cvcntt items and letwrt it J p.m. Monday. Tht' cttttrt ~ of 0111cbook arc oopyripltd by the <mntt Co.tt
Pltblttltlftl C"o. An ""'" att ~td.
..
WHALE WA TClll1'G: AN EXCITUfO 'TAIL• -
.•..........................................•.................... 3
By SCOTI' BA VS -Whale watching is. one of southern
California's most fonnidable pre·summer paatttmes, and February
is .. peek" season. According to Dana ~arbor. yacht ma~ Ed
Fitzaerald, whale watc~ing is rom~nuc, exc1t1ng, relaxana. fun,
exhilarating and educational. If you re ~ne of those rare southern
Californians who has never found the tu.ne to st'!k out the Grat
Grays it's high-tide you pull out your ~dot's cap and take to the
hiah ~s •cause whale .. tchiqcrui1e1eod in March. (On the cover
is Bob bdel. Art direction by Steve Housh.)
Hey Alvin fans! .. Alvin and the Chipmunks and the ~c Camera"
are appearing this weekend at the A~ Convention <;:enter.
Beainnina tonight throu&h Sunday, Alvin A Co. strugle With the
evil villian, .. The Shut1Cr Bug," for possession of the ~c Camera.
Don't miu the fun and excitment. Also scheduled this weekend
aJong the Oranac Coast is all-star jazz at the Cafe Lido in Newport
Beach. The jazz concerts will feature the likes of Warren Saxon,
Wayne Wayne and Tracy Longstreth.
BOP ••• AND JITTERBUG-
GERS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• · ••••••••• 10
By.EVE C. LASH -There were no crystal champagne &lasses,
matching linens or coordinated china plates here. Just 60 or so
down-to-earth 0 Yuppies" who came in droves to drink beer, dance
to 0 Duncan and the Yo Yo's," and honor the Westcoast return of
Jeff Simonds. It was, as Jim McVicks so profoundly stated, a
"groovy" time. That may very well be. As Eve Lash reports, it
definitely wu a jeans rolled-uJ:>1 bcer~nkina kind of pany. The
type of nostalaic eceanfront pmcring that always makes for aood times and fond memories.
CUT Ci\I Tl-E
LATE-IOOBT DllURS DO HAVE A CHOICE ··········~······.·························~····················· 17
By BE\'ERL Y BUSH 8MIT.B -So you've been out aJI evening
attendina the theater,movies or perhaps a concert, when sudden\y
that terminal cue of the munchies overJ)owen you. Quick! Where to
grab a bite to eat? What restaurants stay open this late of niaht? you
ask yourself. Don't fret, for Datebool( restaurant columnilt Beverly
Bush Smith bu a few answen to those late·nite hunaer pangs.
Beverly hu witely accumulated a list of OranJC C.OUt restaurants
for thote late--niaht suckers. A rather imptcl$1ve list, actually . ....
llOVllt nmn ...... : ................................ 12
. I OALLERIU ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••• IS
• 1 •
b'
-----------
i ..Uhim~.
EdFi Whilc~mc may lack the mqic of Ishmael
or Ahab, the person brinp to mind those fictional
amen who fouabt the ll"Cat leviathtns of the sea.
Only Ed's &attle is not huntina whales, but
1pottiDJ them for the seabound' wllale watchina
enthUllUU.
"We parantee whales,., says Fit7.IC1'alc1 ,eneral
manager of Dana Harbor Y ICbt Chanin, U he l&een
a 36-foot l&ilboat (owned by Ri~-C.arlton Hotel ma.,.,-Bill Hall) out to sea for a day of whale
watchana. "lfwcdon'tlpotanywbales, we'll 1akeyou
out qain on another day. It's u simple u that."
Whale watchina, one of southern California's
moat popular pre-summer putt.imes, is in full
throttle through February. And spoqtina oft' this
weekend is the 13th annual Dana Point Harbor
Festival QfWhales, a celebration oftbe 12,000-mile
miaration of the California Gray Whales from the
Bering Sea to the warm lagoons of Baja California,
whtre the females will aive birth.
Sponsored by the Dana Point Harbor Associa-
tion ... Spirit oftbe Whales .. will be the .
theme of this year's festival
continuing through March
I 0. And heading the acti v-'
ities list will be the always
popular whale watches.
Althouah the--whales normally ·
migrate from December through March, Fit7.gera)d
claims Februacy is .. peek: season."
"The whales wiU parade at an average of I 00 a
day riaht now," Fitzgerald says. "This time of year we
send out about l 0 clifferent boats, both the ~foot
powcrbOats and 36-foot sailboats." .
Fitzaemct is a jolly sort, the type person who
always makes you feel at home. He bu sun-bleached
hair, a di · 'shed lookina beard and permanent
unile. One ':oae easyaoina types whose love of the
sea keeps him happy, friendly and serene. Everyday~~· March, says Fitzgerald, 20. to
30-foot whales. ' u much as 30 tons, travel
along the Pacific COast Cedina. breathing. surfacing
and playing. On ra~ occasions, the whales have been
seen spyhoppin' (poking their beads out of
water):and breaching yum pang out ~f the water). Fitzgeral~ who has been spotting whales for six
years, says he can locate the great mammals by either
the .. blow" -water and air from the spout atop the
wbalc'sgreat,gray head-ortheoily .. slick" the huge .
mammals leave on the ocean's surface when divinJ. ~ales swim in groups called pods. They arc air
brcathang creatures. so every three to five minutes
they must surface for air. That, says Fitzgerald, is
when "you hurry and catch up with them and tailgate
for as long as possible.
"I also look for sport fishins boats clustered
together heading in a S(>utherly dll'Cction, or I Just
start looking along the horizon· for movement,' he
says. "We us~Jly stay about I 00 yards from the
whales once we've spotted them."
At The Dana Harbor Y acbt Oub, whale'Watchcs
costs S 15 per person (for groups of six) for two hours.
Onan average day, as many as a dozen pods of four to
six whales can be spotted .
.. The whales generally run one to fOur miles off
shore." he said. "Most people are pretty surpilcd and
thrilled when they see the '
whales because this isn •t
something they do all the
time. Generally, people
have never been close to
something this big. The
size of these whales is
amazing. Even if you've
been to the zoo and seen
a rhinoceros, whales are
twice that size.
"Even though most'
peoele are not boating
types, they always love
whale watching," he adds. -
If you want to learn more aboiit,
whales, Fitzgerald adds, various local
restaurants and businesses will be
praenting special whale movies. lec-
tures, slide shows, ahd presentations
throuatioot the month, beginning this
weekend.
.. It's great fun," he adds ... And the
whales never get scared because they
keep their eye on you as much as yt>u
keep your eye on them."
-Other local whale watching
cruises include:
Cormorant Cruises, Newport
. ~ WharfSponfishing, offering whale ntch-
mg crwses every hour-from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets
for these two-hour cruises a~ $7.SO for adults, SS for children.
Pvtller 1a1 ..... u. • ~ Pntlval efMUln
may M elt....a ~ ca'h1 nt-H'74.
Beacb, featuring a
champagne
LeUlordlcu.p-sy•..t'-... cautena1a0na, .......
u ··-ca..,,~ .. u n ......... •1c>r1 .. _,
brunch aboard
the Cormorant,
catered by Delaney's
Restaurant.
Kit Car'-. ........ ltoat -· .. -,_ •
d1a7olw11AJe .. ec• ... o11
.,..__,Polat
o.t.bookJ Frid8y. F*'*Y 15, 1985 a
-.
)
Ballet Paclftca claacer.
8eD4ra WlDl•kl aacl Du
BerDey caa be Men u LIM
aad Colaa lD tlae .......
•tory ballet, ..... Pille lla1 Ganlee ............ ,_ 8at-
ardaJ at 8 p.a. aad lmldaf
at 3:30 p.m . lD tlae LaCaaa
lloalton P1a11aoue.
Friday
THE LOS ANGELES CHAMBER
OltCllEITllA. conducted by Gerard
Schwarz. with guest artists The
Juilliard Stnna Quan.et. is presented
by tM Oranac County Philhannonic Soci~ty at 8 p.m .• Sanl-8 Ana High
School Auditorium. 520 W. Walnut,
Santa Ana. 642-8232.
"GIGI" is presented by the Full-en.on Civic Li&ht Opera at 8 p.m.
tonipl. Sat. and Thurs., and 2:30
p.tn. Sun. Phtmrl)Cr Auditorium,
Lemon and Chapman Sta., Fullerton.
~ -LU.EN aa>VILLE, pianist, per-
=~~ .r Salriani, SchUmlllJ\, · _. lavel 11 I p.m2 0.--~·· 1crtea Hall. 33J N. <'.illaell, ~Free Mlmission.
#97-6t71. • ~ore::,;~~TUD!
SDID of mulk, poeUy, and per-
formancc continues this week at
Newport Harbor Art Museum with
Paul Dresher, a guitarist and elec-
tronic pianjst who splits his creative
energy between solo performances.
chamber and orchestral composition,
and opera/musical thcat r. 8 p.m .•
850 San Clemente Dr.. Newport
Beach. $5.50 members. :>7.50 non-
members. 759-1122.
Saaday
THE ''IRVINE EARLY MUSIC
CONSORT," directed by Richard
Glenn. performs a prosram of Rc-
naissan~and Bar~ue music at 4:30 p.m., UC Irvine's Fine Arts Concert
Hall. S4 general admission. 856-661 6.
"GIGI," sec Friday listing.
'he9daf
-'l'llE .RAJUIOll SINGERS invite
anyone who can carry a tune to join
this sroup. Meets Tuesdays.. 7-9:30
p.m.. Presbyterian Church of the
Covenant, l='airvicw Road, Costa
Mesa. 897--0587.
Wedaeeday
THOMAS LaRATrA, renowned
pianist and teacher, performs a guest
artist recital of music by Mozart,
Debussy, Brahms and Chopin at 8
p.m .• Cll State Fullerton's Recital
Hall. Fullerton. $4 public admission.•
773-3371 .
Tlaandaf
A CONTEMPOR.ARY CULTURE
SERIES of music, poetry, and per-
formance oontjnues this week at
·Newport Harbor Art Museum with
the ROV A Saxophone Quartet which
deals with contrast. rhythm, harmony
and tonality in a prcase and startlina
way. 8 p.m .. 850 San Clemente Dr.,
Newpon Beach. SS.SO members.
$7.50 non-members. 759-1122.
~GIGI." see Friday listing.
~-y
THE DOO WAH-RIDERS perform
from 8:30p.m.-1:30a.m. at the Crazy
Horse Saloon, I 580 Brookhollow, Santa Ana. 549-ISll.
8atarday
........ ,
THE DOO-=--.-AH---RID--ERS ......... -.-sec-
Tucsday listini Also.ionlgllt only are
country dance lessons by Ron and
Donna at 8 p.m.
Tlaand&J
THE OOo WAH-RIDERS, sec
Tuesday listing.
Cal. country, DA TE BOOK 02/ I 5
Friday
THE DOO WAH-RIDERS perfonn
from 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at the Crazy
Horse Saloon. I SAO Brookhollow.
Santa Ana. 549-1 512.
8atarday
THE DOO WAH-RIDERS, sec Fri-day listing.
Saaday
A COUNTRY SUNDAY BASH fea-
tures a bar-bc.que buffet from 2-7
p.m. with 3 bands perfonning. Crazy
Horse Saloon, I 580 Brookhollow,
Santa Ana. 549-1 512.
Monday _
A PaEIJDENT'8 BIRTHDAY
BASH is prcscnted with free hors
d'oeuvrcs and an all-American buffet
from 2-7 p.m. 3 bands perform. Crazy
Hone Saloon. I 580 Brookhollow,
Santa Ana. 549-1 512.
Taeeday ------THE DOO W AB-RIDERS appear
from 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. A Talent
Ni&ht Contest is held toniaht only
with first prize ofSl25. Crazy Horse
Saloon, I 580 Brookhollow, Santa
Ana. 549-1512. -------Weda•dai__·
TBE DOO W AB-ltIDEBS, see
Tuesday listing. Also toni&ht only arc country dance lessons by Ron and
Donna at 8 p.m.
Tlaandaf
THE DOO WAH-RIDERS, see
Tuesday listina.
THE DOO WAH-RIDERS, see Fri-Frlclay
day listing. .
Saaday
A COUNTRY SUNDAY BASH fea-tures a bar-be.quc buffet from 2-7
p.m. with 3 bands pcrfonnii\g. Crazy
Horse Saloon, I 580 Brookhollow,
Santa Ana. 549-1512.
llODdaf
A PBESIDENT'I Bl&THDAY
BASii i1 presented with free hon
d'oeuvm and ah all-American buffet
from 2-7 p.m. 3 binds perform. Crazy
Hone S.loon, I 580 Broothollow.
Suua ~na. 549-1512.
'l'llE DOO W AB-IUDEU appear from 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. A Talent
Niaht Contest is held toniaht only wiih fint prize ofSl2S. Crazy Hone
Saloon, f 580 Brookhollow, Santa
Ana. 549-1512.
THE HOP presents emcee Jocl-
Stevcn and lots of dancing each
Friday and Saturday evening. 18774
Brookhurst, Fountain Valley.
963-2366.
•'THE FABULOUS CROWNS,"
who have an upbeat musical style that
rdlects the current trends in pop
music, perform current Top 40,
rhythm and blues, and a n\edley of
oldies from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. The
Newportcr's Library Lounge, 1107
Jamboree Rd.. Ncwpon Bea.ch.
644-1700.
.JUDI LOftlCK 6 TRIO perform a
blehd or pop and jazz in lhc: Atrium
Lounte of the Hotel Meridien New-
pon Beach, S-9 p.m. Tua.-SaLB= M8cAnhur Blvd., Ncwpwt .
476-2001.
111.A&B ii feelured ., the Suntet
Pub from 9 p.m.-1 :30 a.m., I 66H
Pacific Cout Hwy., Suneet lacb.
(2 ~i92-1926. .. aoca.ING HOBIE JaAND"
Clalpmuuak Al.ta ..... 1119 Jella Taftlta 11a1 ee to
rebiact ..... from ... ···~~re.er.·· ~a two-bomr u:a;-.. at ......
CollftatloD Ceater .,. TIUm ........ ..,....... . .
perbin1 H~ely Top 40 mUlic from 9
p.m. for li11enl111 ind dandna it the
Via Maria Mnican RataUIUt. 9969 w&~~-821·9300. .-y pr91eftb Tbe
Y ouna Amcricant Sona and Duce
•
Com~y, a musical revue, In·
definitely. 6 and 1:45 p.m. Fri., 5:45
ind 8:45 p.m. SIL, 6 p.•. Sun., 7 p.m.
Mon.. Wed. and Tbun. 4647 M.cAnbur Blvd., Newpon leech.
756-0611.
•
. -Sanday
BAXTEll'I STREET, see Friday
listina.
"TllE JASON CHASE ALL-ST All
JlEVIEW," featu.rin&. Lee Ferrell, 8
p.m .• The Hop: 18774 Broo\hunt,
FINAL SALE
50-75 1/1 OFF
Designer Sportswear .
Cocktail Dresses I E._ We.
Slloes I Accessories c
Cll••• llltm, J..,, luey lliylke,
11111~ Ytllli Y1m1m1t1 .
Ar~oros ·
#29 FASHION ISLAND
~#27 TOWN ~o~:Y, ORANG~ ecJ 543-1760 ;~
~
JUDI LOIUCK II ftlO, see Friday
listina.
·We've
at the Garage
with our great
select· on of shorts,
shirts and t-shirts.
All in 100°/o cotton.
-----~ - - - - - -
TIE SOUID or llVSIC:
FD .l-17 W::'
FOi lesaYA'nONS CAU. sa-10
996-4195 ~
~~~
56 FASHION ISlANO • NeM>ORT BE>CH • (714) 644-5070
~I Fr1day, f*'-Y 15, 1985 I
•
(
}
"JUD!BOXS4,TURDAYNIGHT"
at Sebastian's West Dinner Play-
house. 140 Ave. Pico, San Oemente
( 492-9950). Wednesdays throuah Sat-
urdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at I and 7
p.m. until March 10.
"ONCE UPON A MA'M'RESS" at
-Elizabeth Howard's Curtain Call
Dinner Theater. 690 EJ Camino Real.
Tustin (838-1540). nightly except
Mondays at varying cun.ain times
through March JI.
"PICNIC" b~ the Brea . Theater
League in the Cunis Theater of the
Brea Mall (996-6283), tonight. Satur-
day and Feb. 21-23 at 8 p.m.
"RECKLESS'' on the Second Stage
of South Coast Repcnory. 655 Town
Center Drive. Costa Mesa
(957-4033). final performances to-
·niJht at 8:30, Saturday_at3 aod 8:30,
Sunday at 3 and 8 p.m.
"SOMETlllNG'S AFOOT" at the
Newpon Theater Arts Center, 250 I
Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
(631-0288). Fridays and Saturdays at
8 p.m. through March 30.
"THE SOUND OF MUSIC" at the
forum Theater. 4175 Fairmont
Blvd .. Yorba Linda (779--8591), final
performances toniaht and Saturday at
8 p.m .. Sunday at 2 p.m.
"THAT CHAMPIONSHIP
SEASON" at the Irvine Community
Theater. Tunic Rocle Community
Park. Sunnyhill Road at Turtle Rode
Drive. lrvine(857-5496), Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m., this Sunday at 2
p.m. through Feb. 23.
"WALLY'S CA.PE" at the Costa
'Mesa Civic~. 661 Hamilton
SL, C.OSta Mesa (650-5269), final
performances toniabt and Saturday at
8:30 Su~y at 2_9.m..!-__
~barda__,J=--~~~~~~
"A FUNNY THING HAPPENED
ON THE WAY TO TllE PORUl4" at
the Harlequin Oio°" Playhouse. Sec
Friday listing. .
"COME BLOW YOUR BORN" at
the Grand Dinner Theater. See Fri-
day listina. •
"GIGI" by the Fullen~o Civic
Li~t Opera. See Friday listina.
'llEARTBREAI BOUIE" at UC
Irvine. Sec Friday listina.
"JESUS CBRllT, SUPERSTAR"
at Saddleback Collcgc. Sec Friday
listing.
"JUJtE BOX SATURDAY NIGHT"
at Sebastian's West Dinner Play-
house. See Friday listing.
"ONCE UPON A MA'MR~" at
the Cunain Call Dinner Thea~. Sec
Friday listing. ,
"PICNIC" by .the Brea Theater
League. Sec Friday listing.
Fred A9choff has raced everything Yottc UniYefsily and has lived in nearly every state.
•
from Ferraris to Spt*9 and even won first
place in the 1961 $ebrN Race. Today, he sits on
the sidehs selling aubnotiYe aftermaJ1(et prod-
ucts at the Orange Cotny Fairgrounds &Nap
Meet.
''The races went a very exciting part of my lite.
I've always loved cars and it's very pteasing to be
98ling automotive products at the SWap Meet/' he
said. •
During his racing career, Fred was aAao a pri-
v8'1t lrN Htigator. He said, "It 988fnS Ike exdee-
ment tlM *'WiS come my way. Aa a P.I., I was
able'° fiiCOliet the jewefs in the famous Bily Roel
robtlety.''
Fred aAao hokts a Ph.O degree from the New
Q~/ FriClllY. ~ruary 15, 1985
His products include windshield tints. window
lowre8 and bu'nper stidcers, which range in price
from 10¢ to $100.
The Orange County Falfgrounds &Nap Meet is
proud to have Fred as part~ iD vendor fimty and
invi1es you to visit hm at Space G1·1 on $atufday
or f231 on Sooday.
"Belides getting a good deal, you may get to
hellr a good *>ty or two," Fred quippieC1.
.._.,., nr on the&condS.
ofSouth Coast Repcr10ry. Sec Friday
listina.
"'SOll&TlllNG'I APOOT" .. the
Newport Theater ArU Cenier. See
Friday listina.
'1'11E SOUND OF MUSIC' at the
Forum Theater in Yorbe Linda. Sec
Friday listing.
"THAT CHAMPIONSHIP
SEASON" at the Irvine Community
Theater. Sec l:riday listing. "WALLY'S CAJl'E" at the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse. Sec Friday
lis~ng.
8a.Dday
"A FUNNY TBJNG JAPPENED
ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM" at
the Harl~uin Dinner Playhouse. Sec
Friday listmg.
"OOME BLOW YOUR BORN" at
the Grand Dinner Theater. See Fri-
da>.'. listin,.
'GIGI' by the fullenon Civic
Light Opera. Sec Friday listina.
".IF.SUS CllRIST, SUPERS'I'~"
at Saddleback Collqe. Sec Fnday
listi
.. ~90XUTUaDAY NIGHT"
at Sebutiu'a West Dinner Play-
boute. See FrMM} Mtia1,
'"ONm UPON A tu•i .. ,U:SS.-IMI" at
the CW1aia Cal Dinner l11ater. Sec
Friday listin&.
"'llECU.Bll" on the Second Stqe
ofSoutb Cout Repertory. See Friday tis . ~ IOUND OP MUSIC" at the
Forum Theater io Yorba Linda. Sec
Friday llstlna.
"THAT CHAMPIONSHIP
SEASON" at the Irvine Community
Theater. See Friday listina.
"WALLY'S CAFE" at the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse. Sec Friday
listing.
"OOME BLOW YQUR BORN" at
the Grand Dina.er Theater. Sec fri-
day listina.
"ONCE UPON A MA TTllESS'' at
the Cunain Call Dinner Theater. Sec
Friday listing.
.. WALLY'S CA.FE" opens toniiht
MABINELECTVBESERIES
FEBRUARY 15 · CHICK & PATTY KAISER
MARCH 1 · STEVE & LINDA OASHEW
'FRIDAYS-8 P.M.
Admission: $5 Pre-Sale; $6 at Door
GOLDEN CITY
BARBERSHOP CONCERT
Old-Fashioned Fun arid Music
8 P.M. -SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18
•Reserved Seats: $6 Advance: $7 at Door
PARIS & THE SEINE
Armchair Adventure Serles
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22 -I P.M.
·Admission $3 Advance; $4 at !bot
OCC SYMPHONY ORCHIS11IA
Featuring Daniel Pollack. Plano
SUNDAY, FURUAaY 14
4 PM -•Admission: S4 Advance: SS at Door
PICASSO
Val...,HUlfon Dance T.heatre
Co-sponsored by califomla Arts Council
8 P.M. • SATURDAY, MARCH 2
·R~ ~ats: S6 Pre-Sc*; S7 at Door
PADDY~
Irish and American Folk Music
a P.M. -FINE ARTS 119
SATURDAY, MARCH 2
$5 Pre-Sale; $6 at Door
• ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
..... rt •. MOON n...twe
F...._ A Aftletlt-. Coeta Mee.
TICKET INFO ~
(714) 432-5527 riCiiiM~
Coll /or 1985 Schedule/ .. :.::...--::=..."""caw. ~IN/Mtatercard Accepted For Adv•nce Ticket s.i:•••C?Mt,.._
Ql1eount1 1v1ll1ble tor Cfllldren. Gold Cards fS4tniors)
at the Harlequin DinnCT' Playhouse,
3S03 S. Harbor Blvd,., Santa Ana (979-S IS I). Performances are ajven
nightly except Mondays throuab
April 14.
Wedneeday
"COME BLOW YOUR BOllN" at
the Grand Dinner Theater. See ,Fri-
day list.in&. . ·
"JUIEBOX SATURDAY NIGHT"
at Sebutian's West Dinner Play-
house. See Friday "listina.
.. ONCE UPON A MATl'lll:SI" at
the CUna.in Call Dinner Theater. See
Friday listing.
.. WAIJ.. Y'S CAJT' at the ~
~uin DinnCT' Playhouse. See Tuaday
hstina.
~~~~~~~~~~
Tlaa.nday
"BAREFOOT IN THE PAIUt" by
the Buena Parle Civic Theater at
Sullivan Center, 7631 Melrose Ave.,
Buena Parle (S23-03SI), Thursdays
throuah Saturdays until March 23.
Friday listi ~by the Brea Theater
lelpe. See ftiday'1 li.aUftl,
"VINEGAR TOii" at UC Irvine's
Fine Arts Little Theatre. Thun.-Fcb.
23 at 8 P~m. $4 teneral admission.
8S6-6616.
... AU. Y'S CAFE" at the Harle--
~uin Dinner Playhouse. See Tuesday
hsting.
'"ONE PllOM THE ll&AllT' is set
in las V cps and is a 11«)' -which
concerns a couple who have ao afWr
only to reunite and decide on mono-
pmy. A Francis ford Coooola film. 7
p.m., UC Irvine's Social Sc:ienc:e Hall.
52.SO aenefal admission. 856-6379.
.. COME BLOW YOUR BOllN" at
the Grand DinnCT' TbeatCT'. See Fri-
day listi"°
• "GIGI by the Fullerton Civic
"TllE CRANES AllE PLYING" is
a Russian love story tct ~nit the
drama of World War JI. Directed by
Mikhail Ka.latozov. 7:30 p.m., Gold-
en West Colics, Fine Arts 222, I 5744
Golden West "St., Huntinlton Beach.
$2 general admission. 89f-3991.
•
Li~~~sI~~~~BT"
at Sebutian's West Dinner Play-
house. See Friday listing.
"ONCE UPON A MA'M'REU" at the Curtain Call DinnCT' Theater. See
EVERY
SUNDAYll
OAANOI
COAST
COLLI GI
••u..ura UfTllANCI
SPACES $10 • .. ...
..... llllY ......... •t••• ..... ....
BARGAINS GALORE/I
,... CUSl'Olml Aa•lllON
• ltAMIMClm
~
"MASTERS OF MODERN
SCULPTURE, Pan One: The Pion-
fenturi11g
1£J ier-side
Lounge
(Huntington Lanes)
MICHAEL
"LITTLE EL VIS" MYERS
Tues, Thurs., Fri., Sa t.,
9 p.m .-1:30 a.m.
Feb. 19 -Mar. 2
• Cocktails
• Dancing
• Music
• Floor Show
'Pier-side Lounge
(Huntington lclnes)
IQS82 Be.ich Blvd. Huntinl(ton Be,wh
(114) 963-4587
13tb Annual Antiques Show -Thirty Three West Coast Dealers Showcase Fine Antiques ,_....., ~ COflt-.,.,.,.,..,.,_, hrwl
Catefed &Jfet and Cocktails "Everytoog You Ever W8Aed to KnoN About Antiques
ThU'sday. Fetlr\8Y 21 Fnday. Fetnay 22
6 10 9 pm $35 per person 10 am $15.00 per person
eo.• """·~--hM
......,..,.....,.,..,
~Restoration and Conservation a AnbqueS"
&rdly. FeOUWy 24 ASIO Members "Deco 8111 ig With Anllques" .
Sall#day. February 23 .
10 Im $15 per peraon 10 am $20.00 per person ...........
Noon-8 p M. Ftld9y & 8eUdly
~P.M.~ ..... ,,. ""' ..... Ooot OaNllon 16.00 tQ LAGUNA aL\OI MUUUM OP AllT
em. .. Gecqe Sep.I nanlla lbis film
u .,.n ~ a series fOr CODtinuiJ!I
educMion. Thia is o&red i9 co.Uunc-
tion witb the cumnt Newport Harbor
An Musuem es.hibit '°Sill In Bronze.••
S p.m., ISO San Clemente Dr.,
Newport Beach. SS admission.
tbe itaal as,pccts of eollecuon. Today
and.t"eb. 2t 10 a.m.-S p.m. Golden
West CollcS Admi:nistratioa Bid&..
Rm. 136, Is744 Golden West Si.
Huntinston &.ch. S33 ftt. 891-,3991. .......,
759-1122. •
' ·)> A PAREN'rSUPPORT GROUP,
for parents of dysle.t.ic children. meets
at 7:30 p.m. to share and get expttt
assistance from tnintd psy-
chotherapists. 640-S3S6.
Wedamday
"MEDICAL INSURANCE BILL-
ING For the Physicians Office.·· All
phuieS of medical insurance billina
will be covered. includina a look at
Dll. JON WIENEll, UC lrvme
history professor. shares rart con<%n
and interview tapes of slain musician
John Lennon during his lecturt
entitJed .. Music and Politics of the
AIE YOU LOOK~ FOi ENTEITAINMENT?
For Parties. Fund Raisers arid
Special Occasion<,
s, ... Votees Sing 119 Your fovoflle Songs m rhe
Style of the S.g Bond Vocol Groups of the 40s & 50s
Col P01 Webster (714) 131-1236 You'll Be Pleased .
ro Heor About Our Reosonoble Rotes
STEAL
SOME
STYLE
·THIS WEEK
G"'at ~tyle doesn't $2111* lun ltYery-all ~tobe~. for our mtd-wttk
And when you~ II rate of only $27•
Luxe L1~ry ~rvKe, an hour No ot~
Vou'll find that our lamou,\lne company
hourly rate 1s vinually a steal. 1n the Newport ~h a"a can
l.ulle is ready, right now, to help off~ you the same P"'" Or
you ce~ra~ this Wttk •s spe· prov~ you with the same level
ci•I e\'ent or occasion. Meet of ~rv1Ce.
our attract~ly amrtd chauf-Go ahffd. ~I some style
~~ Enjoy our ias~ully _today. ~\ no rNSOn to w.11
"WO'nted hmousi~ com· for Friday Of Saturday Af~ ~ wtth fully stocked wtt •II. a ce~ation can ~n •
ban And ex~in the arfo/ d"'f of the wttlt For
1mptttable serv~ you·~ A .. -~MtlOns or 1nformat10n.
naturally ellpecl from ~~ c.111 (71.q 558·1411
~
1164 E Fru11. San.a AN. CA (71.q 558·1411
·a..~ .. ~s...,""°"""r~~
nw. "°"' --"""91_,-, ~· tO -llbt "'
\e
~ Fridey. f*'-Y 15, 1985 .,
\
I
\
' I
•
•
1960s: The Case of John Lennon!' 8
p.m.. UCl's University Center
Hcritaac Room. 856-5181.
"INVESTING IN THE COM-
MODITIES Furures Market"' Invest-
ing in the commodities futures is
explored. inclu~ing types of orders,
trading:. cl\artinr-an<f in formation
soun:a. Each Wed. throuah Mar. 13.
7-10 p.m. Golden West Colleac's
Humanities BJda:, Rm. 303, I 5744
Golden West St., Huntinston Beach.
$25 fee. 891-3991.
"LANDSCAPE OF.SIGN POR BE-
'GINNEBS." Participants learn . the
basic fundamentals to plan and
design their own_yards. Eacll Wed.
througt\ Mar. 20, 7-9 p.m. Golden
West Colleae Administration Bldg.,
Rm. 128, T 5744 Golden West SL,
Huntinaton Beach. SI 8 fee. 891-3991.
from the earliest days of AmouTriofroml:lG-U:30p.m.All Mercury/GeminitotheS~ShuttJe 18Ciinyited. Buena Part Hotel, 7675
and ~ond. lndudes slides and film. Crescent Ave.. Buena Park.
Noon, lJC Irvine's Univeni1yCentcr-m--r . - -
Heritase Room. Free admission. TBS MBE'l'INO PLACE offers a
856-5181. social 8t I p.111. 11 Ambrosia's, 695
Town Center Dr .• Costa Mesa. Hors
d'oeuvres and music'° dance by arc Tluanda offered. $6 members. $8 non-mem-•1---hers. 85S-2347.
"FROM PllOJF.cr MERCURY SOUTHERN WHEEL OF
TO THE SPACE SBUTrU~ and l"IUENllllllP, for sift11es over 45,
Beyond: The Exploration of Outer Friday meets for Haooy Hour at 5 p.m. at
Spaoe." Joe Campbell, a former she MISS ANGl'-'S s~o• -0 • ..,_,. Maxwell's, 3i1 Pacific Coast Hwy .. activation officer for NASA, traces !!I '~ ....._ ~ic. Huntinaton Beach Pier. 768-4130.
the evolution of space cxpk>!'&tion CLUB features music by the Frank A PEOPLE-S.UIPLEa is held by ------l.--------~-------------.----------__.:.---------------, the Man· Woman lnstitutcat8 p.m. at
the Selc1iff'Yillaae SM>s>Pina Center,
Ste. 20, Yorktown A Main Sts ..
Hunting10n Beach. SIS. Ates 25-55.
969-1776.
.. omca RaNl> .off
.. IC'ICI SAM ~TERSlOO
.. al'flCl'llC m m HAl'G s. ~
.. ICIEENPtM ·------RJCE ~
.. AlM EDrnt5 JM Q.AAf(
.. CIBWOQINIMY
OAS~
c:•11-631·3501 EIJMIJS !NU TWll -·--·l---·1'-'850 ~NWlllDR• "11'tt AIU.
.. 990-4021
IM llMS 4 ......... , ... ,.,
_,. 952~9'3
IMDlSI · · -,. ..
•.••..•... ,
D. .. 51l'5llO ~WllllEIQ u. .............
mn•-~ 1M tioUnt aMST
IMIW~
-Hl.-S ~womalGE
-l'IMLflQlWJ --•IMZ20 OJMllS .... Q IMU
lt "1t 9'-WUIY NM
-637.QMO COltM5£1MU
IWlll IO-OI ~
-134-ltll IMaTYcmu
•MCllY .... caia
m:man1 .•
IMYll .... .......... ""
m: 11•as.sw IM 11.SMBna Ml ---·-. '
latardaJ
A GR.AND OPENING OPEN
BOUSE is held by the Aquarian Age
Sin&les llcaistry &om 2-S p.m. Can
for location, 855-9121 .
SINGLD ON THE MOVE, a
friendship club with no .,e limit and
not a dating service, otrcn a dance at
8:30 p.m. 539-7377 or 548-8505.
llmaday
THE SAILING SINGLES offers
saitina out of Newport Beach each
Sunday from 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m .
Brina lunch and bcvcraee. For ages 25
.and over and also non--smokers. $20
donation. 673-3282 .
THE SINGLETAIUANI' Dis-
covery Group meets for discussion
and social each Sunday at 7:30 p.m .
Unitarian Church, l2S9 Victoria St.,
Co.ta Mesa.SI edmillion. 962-8596.
VOi.LEYBA.LL is sponaored every
Sunday by the Tall Ouh of Oranac
County. l p.m., Shiffer Part, Costa
Mesa. S42-l 2 l 1.
IOUTBS&N WHEEL OF
FIUZNlmlP, for liQllcs over 45.
meets for supper at 5 p.m. at tbC Jolly Roeer. 22873 Lake Forest Dr., El
Toro. 7~130.
TllE IONELu. BOT IPUNGS is
the destination of a day trip sponsor-
ed by the Aquarian A# Singles
llqistry. $8.SO. 9S 1-0825 . ......... ,
TllE llBAOOWLAU • SWING
DANCE a.VB holds == and dancina at lhe .,
Coun(O' au&. BcsiJanina daDCle cWs
at 7 p.m., intermediate at 8 p.m. and
social dancina bcain• at 9 p.m. S4
I ,.·j .._-j',I !rt -1 ~.1 •4~
1 , n , I , 11 I 1 I ' H
-' I ~ ' I ~
with class, $2 for social danciDf only. another workshop. A Valentine's
16782 Graham SL, Hunllnston party is held that evenioa. Sunday
Beach. 493-7 I 62. features Kolo. clapcina at noon with
SOUTHERN WHEEL OF exhibition da~ arouPi perf'onnina
PIUBNDllDP, for llftlles over 4S, and closina the~k~nd with a party
meets for Happy Hour at 5 p.m. at El until 6 p.m. 543,5928, 494-3302, or
Torito, 17 and Yorba. Tustin.. 5~S-19_51_..,.___
768-4130. ---_., --~,
Tlaanday__ _ ' , BALLET PACIFIC"' offers three
"LOVE AND ADDICTION." ~ varied dance works includin' "La
you "fallina in love," "powin& in Fille Mat Gardee.~· .. Fantacia, ' and lov~." .or "lovinf your poison?" Stop "Kolors." Tonjght at 8 p.m., Sun. at
add1ct1ve behavior, 7-10 p.m.;Gold-3:30 p,m. Laguna Moullon Play-
en West Colleie's Community house, 606 Laguna Canyon Rd.,
Center, ·I 5744 Golden West SL, l.aguna Beach. $8 adult .admission.
Huntinaton Beach. S8 fee. 891-3991. 4~7271.
THE LAGUNA FOLIDANCERS,
sec ~riday listing. ·
Sanday
·BALLET PACIFICA, sec Saturday
listing. .
T8E MEADOWLA&I SWING
DA.NCI! CLUB, tee..Si.naJCl Wc:doe:s.
THE LAGUNA FOLIDANCERS, see Friday listing.
da~~ting. LAGUNA FOU..DANCE~
J'rlday
host their festival bqjnnina toniabt
at 7 p.m. with a workshor and an
af\erparty that lasts unti 3 p.m.
Saturday bqins a 9 a.m. with an
advance worksbip, lunch. and "ALVIN A THE CHIPMUNKS and
,Ill,_ crt>
I UO, t40. 4 SO, 1 Ge, t I 0, I l.15
La M IR ADA (.~
.., (I) -llZ ~IJ) I 00, 3 00. SOO, 100. 9 00. 1100 12 4S. 2 .S. 4 4S, 6'4S. U S. 10 4S
KNllG T0rn Oii SAl£ CW. Y Al1011/Cl 10(1$ (I! wt CW. T
MfllC.l•-•l a ... fO-(PC)
12 JO. l OS. H O. llS, ltsO 1'00. HO. no
AOl#la TDElS ON W OMY MJllMCl 1lCllCIS ON SAl£ CW.Y
ll&T NUS CGr (I)
IN OOllY STUlO
I 00. l IS. SJO. IOI. 10 lO
"11NG. TU£1S ON SAU OM T
llT'ES (I)
12 40. l 00. S 20. 1 4S 10-SO
"11NG. TDfTS ON SALl OM.T
OIWJSmlS~)
11 lnlY Sllll.O
100.400, 100. IOOO
MNNG. TDilS Oii wt DMY
-QIOT (I)
1230 230.430 63S.140. IO't5
.,.,. •• _(I ... ---Cl) _ _, ,...
-~-... U)
MISSION
""rTT-• • •
aaoTBD7" a one-man show de-
pictioa black biscory tblOUP mmic,
poetry Mdcltama, is praented as~
oflllac:t Hisuwy Month. Aclor PtuUip
Walker ~nts a dlronoqy of nine
black Americu leaden. 8 p.m., UC
Irvine's Fine Arts Coacen Hall. SS teneraJ adm iuion. 856-6616.
latmda7_ ----nm BlG ORANGE SAD.ING SO-
CIETY often sailina with wbate
watchina on luxury sailboets. Must be
21 and non-smoker durina cruix.
Sat-Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. weather
permitting. S20 donation. 646--4005.
A ""GUN A oot.LECrOa'l lllOW
AND &ALE"' is held by Doa and Mic:ia Bullock at the Anaha~
vmtion Cenier, 9 a.m.-S p.m., 800 W.
Kafda, An.Meim. ,999-8900.
TD BIG ORANGE LULING SO.
CIETY, tee Sarurday listin&-
.. ALVIN A THE CBJPMUNU."
see Friday listioa.
A ""GUN 6 OOILECl'OA'S IROW
AND.IALIC/' see Satwda~na. TIU: .. WE TIP" BEN IBOW
is held from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the
Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W.
K.atdlCAnaheim. 999-8900. TBZ COLLEGE BOWL RE-
GIONAL Championabip is hosted by
UC Irvine with schools from lhro~ lloDda7
out California competing. 8:30 a.m ., ucr u . . c H ···-"ALVIN • THE CRIPMUNU," s n1venaty tnler en_ _ F1:..:.1-y li'sti'n• Room. Free admission. 856-5181. -.. ,_. ..
.. ALVIN 6 T8E CIDPMlJNU."
Tbe ..U .wtan, .. TM Slaat-tee ~~na. \ . .
tet Biii·" 8tnaalea wttla -a~{Uctron ts =~-ACftAJ\ICE Alm and tlae Cldpmaab 20/300ubdfNewpon 8eacb. Bristol - - - -for II DIHHloa of tlae ...... ~ Holiday Inn. Costa Mesa. DANA llAIUIOll YACHT CllAJl.
Caipera d1lr'lq a lift per-631-8250. TDS and the Old Dana Point Cafe
form•ace ~t ~ LAGUNA POETS honors GremorY and Wine e.r praeat a whale
Saaday at tlM ~ Corso and John Balaban at ihetr wa1ebiftl. wine-c.b=ite up the Con'ftmtloa Ceater. f'lll6er Winier festival, 2:30 e.m., fonam coat lo aad around Harbor
laform•Uoa aT&llable et Theater, 6SO Laauna Canyoa Rd., tomorrow. Feb. 23 . 2 I I 999-8900 Lapna Beach. S6 donation. A~ a.m.-4 p.m. SSOadmillion. 493-l l06. ~ tion is bekt afterwards. 494-9550. IOUl'll P1lllCO AND· JADIN'
TheMqicCamcra"appeartoniahtat A VALENTINE'S DAY PAJAMA BillDarepmented byt.beOranae
7:30 p.m., Sat. at l I a.m., 3 ancf7:30 PARTY is held by the Balboa Sk.i Empire Jan Productions Feb. 23
p.m., and Sun.-Mon. at 1:30 and S O ubat 8p.m.S5includeswine,bccr, from 1 p.m.-1 a.m. at tbt Garden
p.m. Anaheim Convention Center, snacks, and cbncina. Seuoray Grove Elks Oub, I 1551 Trask Ave ..
800 W. K.atella, Anaheim. 999-8900. O ubbouse, 21372 Brookhurst. tfun.,_ Garden Grove. SIO admiuion.
"CAN I SP~ FOB YOU inaton Beach. 7S4-I 712. SS 1-9484.
The Brothers of
Saint ~l's School
preached agabN vice,
lust and disrespect..
But that
never stopped
these guys.
;
~
l
\
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---··-~ ,rtdllJ, 1'ebru8ry 15, 1985
"You always see· the heavy hitters, the pillars of the
community like the Segerstroms, the Fluors, the Rileys in
the society pages. But this is what it's all about," said party
hdst Keat S. Moore of Corona del Mar referring to his
1950s oldies bash.
The nostalgic outdoor oceanfront gathering was the
scene for some 60 Newoort Beach euests honoring Jeff
Sim0Dd1 (top producer Coldwell Banker) on his return to
the coast from Houston.
There were.no crystal champa$11e glasses, matching
linens, fresh flow.en, coordinated china or even pate being
served at this get together. But there was a great oldies rock
'n roll band, (Duncan and the Yo Yo's), cold beer and
assorted finger sandwiches.
I'm having a groovy time," said Jim McVlcker of
Balboa Island as he listened to Bee Bop A Lu La. He said
the music and the theme brought back some fond
memories. "I wanted to be right out of a James Dean
movie. I took a bus from Michigan and got off at the
Huntington Beach pier in 1966. The first thing I did was go
into a surf shop and price a surfboard. The one I wanted
was$250andall I had was$275. I didnit buy it and I never
learned bow to surf. Instead I got interested in motorcyles,
girls and body surfing."
"I love it," said ru..ly1 SUek oflrvine, referring to the
party. "The best part of the whole thing was putting
( ...... w PAPA••m,... Ii)
J
SteUa aad a .. v..-.. .... oil their coutblt car, a '29 Pont • ...._, to Jim
lie Vicker. .
....• ···········~·····••t•4•' •••.••
together our outfits." Stick
came clad in white 'standard•
blouse, jeans rolled-up (of
course) tennies and a pony tail.
Stick wu cbattina with
friend Lia.. 'Black,•r•
(donned in an oftical Ameri-
can Bandstand t-shin that read
0 we like the beat") about what
danceswere 0 bot .. in the 19SOs
and 1960s. BIKkburn said the
mash potatoes, the swim, the
watusi, the swill& the bop and
the jitterbug were the "in ..
dances.
Moore sai4 every one of the
guests in attendance would
qualify as a local "Yuppie:• He
said to be a Yuppie one bu to
be youna. "'°feuional and upwardly rinng the corporate
ladder. Tbc official Yuppie
auto for the '80s is the BMW
c a N T
seen for a while. The nice thin&
about this is lou run ink>
people you don t see from the
community:• Sager drives a
19S4 Rolls Royce sedan.
~=~u=;:
Patt., Brwee Eadafey, De-
berall Weir, Walter u4 .._.
Marla Sim•••, P-y a.rt.
tlau, SM EHllteta, Man
Bucaw ... Dr. Martlla New-LW,,.,.,
kirk. Also on the guest list were · ~
Doa P•rter, Aalta Jeuoa, .,--4
Alu Beyer, Dine MoMlal, •
BrM ... Saaue Becker,
Malc•lm Craycrof t , Tile -
Claarlet Gierp (he"s maDJCT
of Brooks Brothen, Fashion
Island), ...u.t Bill Eftardl
... Mn. E. Cudy LeMI ...
l.ay Pryor.
I 'N U E D
318, he added. Another group of young
0 Speakina about the man of urban professionals, the newly
the hourt Moore joked, •i•m established Metro Arts Coun-
really glad he's back, because cil were checking out .. On and
now I don't have to continue Off the Wall" art at Laguna
managing his slum properties Beach Museum of Art's South
in Newport Beach and Balboa Coast Plaza site.
Island. He owns several (valu-Curator Bob McDonald wel-
able) properties,., ht added. corned the crowd and briefly
Jitterbugina ·to "rock explained the unusual art dis-
around the clock" were played. .
Cruisin• Association board di-Guests mingled among the
rector Col ._ VertMtel and eclectic art forms drawing
his wife (and hiab ..school their own conclusions as to the
sweetheart) Stella (wearina her meaning of the varied works .
. high school sweater). Verbael A three-piece contemporary
still owns biJ 1929 Ford Road-jazz band called .. Mixed Emo-
ster he dro~ when they were tion.. added the final touch
going stmdy. with their music incorporating
The Oran,e County Cruiain' all the senses in this im-
Association is a looeely or-aginative and unique evening.
ganizcd poup of about 1,000 Worb of 18 artists from
strectrod eatbu1ia1ts who Nortbcm and Southern Cali-
share a common love for fornia were shown, including
vintaae can, music and .. fun-Billy Al Bellptoll, T•J
filled lifatyla" of the 19SOs Berlaat, Men. Ettet, Peter
and 1960i,llid VerbleL -Sldre, THI B.ua.I ... Jm
8111 &lld Dlua Oteall, Ruaq Car18oa &lld llarllp ~ cMck om llm11 • aop T
9lllrt. . •.
The roclda' and rollin' wu SaftP. (Savaae's large as-
stopped only for Moore•• brief 1e111bla11Jt, .. Still My Life,"
welcome home speech .to wu[tma its share of atten-Simonds, wbo wu presented tion.
with an ofticial Crumn• j~kct. .. t links the artists rep.
Said Simondl: .. rd like to resented is an open-mindcd1 thank my IOOd ftiend Kmt experimental attitude towara
Moore for a pat time and a an makina." said McDonald.
perfect sift." Thia wu the tint exhibition
Llstenina to tbc music and openina for tbe council which
rem4Uscin1 were Jee C)r of bu further plansfor pllery Bay Sborei with lee_. .W. talks, lectures, con~porary
DaYi .. -. .. I wu tbe bouat film series, fundraisen and
kid in town, umil tbe ~ aot .. cultural cocbails . ., (Mem-
me," Cyr said;otmalY,; \,;yr is benhip is open and a. .. 11
also a vinllee car enthUllUt. Bra•• at the museum,
"l'vehadmaayoldcan. I uted 494-6531 , bas dc1ails)
to have a 1964 Ponche Metro Arts Council mem-
Cabertet coavertible -a ben there were Mike Peear,
Jimmy Deacs. I pea I~ Am.J &Wt, Btlle &Jae Seam•
out ofit." 1t1:;:•:r, art.SJ Trlt, Lee
Le..,. .... of Coro• Zltut•-... Pat SUrlllll.
del Mar laid; .. rve met a n...;....-.-· ~:~ ,_ v:·:,,, .. number Of fteW peGl)ie todaV r~--Jf Rl'IGV "J. AM
-,.
and some old people I haven't ;;;;Dea.=n.;-.. -..:-------~----~~~~~----------.&---~~~~~~~~~--~~
...
I I
1
•
..
I
I
1
,.
..
-
-..
•
( ---., -~ ~
TUil& Ill: A rousina ldventW"C>
drama about Jimmy Lynctt (Timothy
Hutton), a you .. man ~crusade
10 redeem hi1 brothel's reputation
rallies an entire city to his side.
Jimmy waaes. o~man war against
an indifferent city buraucracy be·
cause his older brother Terry (Robert
Urich). a heroic fire-fiahter, has been
denied his rightful pension after
suffering a near-fatal inJury rescuinaa
child from a burning building. Also
starring Kim Cattrall. Robert Culp
and Darren McGavin. Directed by
Bob Clark. Screenplay by James
Gregory Kingston and Denis and
John Hamill.
THE I' ALCON AND THE SNOW-
~l
SAT.-MON. 2:35, 6:35. 10:30
. Mle!rJ 9 ~~m~
SAT. 12:
·MAN~ Rated R. Based on a true story
about Christopher Bo)'(:e (Timothy
Hutton). son of a. former FBI qent.,
who sold some of America's most
closely guarded secrets to the KGB.
Based on the best-scllina book by Robert Lindsey, .. The Falcon and the
Snowman" also stan Sean Penn as
Daulton Lee, who alont with Boyce
wuconvicted as a spy. Screenplay by
Steven Zaillian. Direct~ by John ·
Schlesinger.
MJ<SJ Is MAUDE: Starrina Dudley
Moore and Amy lrvina. The-story
about Ron (Moore) who is happily
married to Micki (played by Ann
Reinking) but finds h1mselfhavinaan
aff1ir with Maode (Irvin&). Ron
Mlelil Q . Maude ~ TUCS.·ERI. 6:35, 10:35 rn:otorur TUES. ·FRI. 8:40 (PG
4:
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST."
ht Collins, C15.rv, cas MOltHING NEWS
°"'9il C•wii...__., CIS•TV
NATIONAi. 90.AIO Of ltlVIEW
l=:r .. I '\
\
Beach O ub, where the P.A. system
crackels with rock hits and well-oiled
bodies &listen in the sun. Willis hooks
up with the flaaby Phil Brody (Rich-
ard Crenna). a .,-qarious sports car
dealer who retpls as the club's
unQffical "kfoa."' Also sta.nina Hector
• Elizondo;.. Molly McCarthy and
Martha vehman. Oirct.ed by Garry
MarshaJI.
aet.y R118Ml tallee aim ID a
ecene from New World Pie· tuee: 0 Awmt::f Aqel.'' ... 8tarrlllC Ca•Man.
Sa.MD Tyrrell uad o.te oam.
quickly learns that both women are
prqnant., and now he must cope with
two wives -both expect.ins babies.
Directed by Blake Edwards(" 10'").
AVENGING ANGEL: Rated R. Ifs
been four yean since Lt. Hu&h
Andrews lifted Molly Stcw1rt (ab
Angel) from the. depths of her dra-
matic existence as a prostitu\e o'n
Hollywood Boulevard Molly (Betsy
Ruseell) is now studyina pre-law and
is in love with another student who
knows nothina of her former life.
Suddenly, her quiet world is shattered
when Andrews (Robert Lyons) is
gunned down in the Chinatown area
of Los Anaeles. MoUy returns to the
streets. see\ina 10 1venae the murder
of her auardian. Written by Robe1'1
Vincent O'Neill and Joseph M. Cala.
Also slarrina Rory Calhoun.
A PA!UGE TO INDIA: rlt'St
published in.1924, E.M. Forster's "A
Passage to India" is an emotional and
deeply personal story of love and
class.-strugg)e in 1928 India as a young
English woman is cauaht between the
allure of the exotic f ndian lifestyle
and her own strict upbringina. Writ-
ten and directed by David lean
("Great Expectations:· .. Doctor
Zhivaao, .. "Lawrence of Arabia,·· the
Brid&e on the River Kwai"). SWrina Dame Pqay Ashcroft, Judy Davis,
Jamn Fox and Nied Havers.
TUFF TUllP: On the mean 1treets
of Los An&eJes, Nick Hau1er (Paul
Mones) and bis tecnaae pns reian
supreme until Morpn Hiller (James
Spader), a streetwise newcomer, ap-~ on the scene. Hiller's problems
intensify when he tetl his ailbts on
Franki, Nick's p rl (Kim RiChards),
forcina her to make a choice between
Nick's rou&h and tumble world and
his own lite on the other side of the tracks. Also 1tauina Mau Clart and
Claudette Nevins. Directed by Fritz
Kiersch.
STARMAN: A romance, adventure
S10ry about an alien (Jeff Bridles)
who comes to observe life on earth
and becomes st.anded near the Wis-
consin home .of recently widowed
Jenny Hayden (Karen Allen).
Starman is told by hjs people that
• their mother ship wiU pick hlin up in.
three days in Arizona. Swman clones
the bouman fonn of Scott Hayden.
Jenny's recently ~•It'd buand.
Jenny becomes an unwiUina partici-
pant in a ~p wbkh becomes a
daqerous night across America as
the two are pursued by the U.S Army.
Also starrina Cbarta Martin Smith
and Richard Jaectel. Directed by
John Carpenter (:Halloween," "The
fog,•• "Christine;.
l"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimf JOHNNY DANGEROUSLY: Michael Keaton ("Mr. Mom") siars
THE FLAMINGO DD: Matt
DilJon stars as Jeffrey Willis, a
plumber's son, who embarks on the
ti_me of his life at the El Aamingo
... TITll DB.81T..J:GllPLETElY Cl1'111ll1m.
.,..._, J a.FEllElfT." "'-• R-i N£W YOflK POST
FRI 6:00
8:15, 10:30
as Johnny Ketty, a poor but honest
younJ man wpo Joins the mob to (>IY
for his mother's pancreas operation
and becomes a top criminal. Pitted
!Pn•t Johnny iJ Dllllny Vermin (Joe
Piscopo), the kind of guy who could
give crazed kilkn a bad name. They
are joined byacomedycntemble that
includes '1'ui's" Marilu Henncr as
Johnny's tirlfricnd, Olcar-winner
Maureen Siaplcton ( .. Reds"), and
Peler Boyle ("Youns Franken11ein").
SAT/SUN 1:30 Directed by Amy Heckertin ..
3:45, 6:00 PROTOCOL: Starrina Goldie
8:15, 10;30 HawnasSunnyDavU,aWuhinaton.
I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•l!!!~IJ O.C. cocktail wailrell wrenehed from i-: a mundane exi~ and catapulted
BEVERCf
Hll IS
~
A 1WWiGJCT ltTlll . --
first to national atwndon, then the
iuternalional apodiahl. Durina this
spiralin& upswi"lo Sunny mesmerizes
the media, ~ Yt'ith politicos and
hobnobs with foreian potentates, all
the while dodJiq bullets and other
assaults.......And thoruah it all she
somehow manqes to reiain her
warmth and com~ion, and main-
iain her own spectal _inna&c dianity in
the most undianirted of circum·
siances. Also starrina Otris Saran·
don, Richard Romanus, Cliff
OeYouna. Directed by Herbert Ross.
Screenplay by Buck Henry.
TllE ULLING PIEi.Di; Baaed on
Sydney Schanbera'a 1980 Pulitzer
Prize..winninaardcle "The Death and
Ufe of Ditll Pran." "The Killing
Fields" is an intcn1ely personal 1tory
of friendship and aurvival amidst th~
torment of war1 and ~ Pran saved
Schanbera's lire, then later disap-
peared Into the countrnidt of Cam-
bodia. • Starrina Sam Watemon as
Sydney Scbanbera ind Haina S. Naor as Dith Pran. Directed by Roland
!offec, screenplay by BnJce Rob-
IMOft.
DUNE: Frank Herbcn'a tcience-
fiction novel of an utnordinary
univene of the future comes IO film.
Dino De Laurentiu pre1en11 a David
Lynch film. Starrina Frahcesca
Anni1, 8nd Dourif, Joee Ferrer, 1t1d
~ of the rock pup The Police .
uced by R.awfllella ~Lauren·
&lia, direNd by 0..vid Lynch.
Scrttnplay by David Lynch,
llUUUM&
BOWERS MUSUEM, 2002 N .
ain St. Santa ·Ana. .. Ban Chiang:
chaeofoaical Tr'easures from
historic Thailand" opens today
d includes over l,000 objects
shioned from bronz.e, shell. clay,
lcite, and &lass excavated from the
n Chiana region of Thailand. They
te from .between 3600 B.C. and 200 .o. A grand openina is held toniaht om 7-9 p.m. Continues throuah
pt. 30. 972-1900.
LAGUNA BEACll llVSEVM OF
T, 307 Oift' Drive ... Forum 11"
~nts emersi!IS artists who live
nd work In California, and is curated
y LBMA Chief Curaior Robert
McDoriald. Oranae County arttlt
featured is Patrick Crabb. Ooses
Sunday. Tues.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m. AJso shown at the satellite site
located in South Coast Plaza is "On&.
Oft'Tbe Wall: Shaped and Colored."
This exhibition presents contem-
porary California an that emphasizes
the hybrid of sculpture and painting.
Tbrouab Apr. 7. 494-6531.
-NEllPOllT IWUIOR ,UT MU·
SEUM, 8SO San Oemente Drive,
Newport Beach. .. Six In Bronze" is
presented. A film entitled ''Masters of
Modem-Sculpture, Part One: The
Pionen" is featured Sunday at S p.m.
Also shown is .. Alfred Leslie: 100
Views Along The Road" and "New
Californ,ia Artist VIII: Zadik
Zadikian,.Sculpture. '" Throu&h Apr.
14. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
759-1122. •
.1GALL&JUE8
THE AnEBNOON GALLERY,
503 Park Ave., Balboa Island. ''Pre-
diction '85" features Jim Merritt with
his abstract expressionist bursts of
color and movement. Also being
shown is polished bronze sculpture
by Linda Jo Quinn, and watercolors
and oils by focal artists Eve Thomp-
son. Throuah Feb. 28. Wcd.-Fri. 2-6
p.m.. Sat.-Sun. noon-5 p.m.
615-8615.
ART·4·FAIR G.uLERY, 664 S.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Waterc.olor by Lorraine E'drie,
_ _... ~------... --,,_........._ ______ -.... ··-· .
etchings and paintina by Paula Hinz.
and other gallery artists' worts are
presented through Mar. 13. Tues.-
Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 494-4514.
BALBOA BRANCH LIBRAllY,
100 E. Balboa Blvd., Newport Bcacb.
Balboa resident Joan Cbrislensen
currently epiibits her award-winni~
watercolor "The Dory Market'
through Feb. 28. 644-3171.
BC SPACE GALLERY, 235 Forest
Ave.. Laguna Beach. Photographs
that deal with the human condifion
are presented by artists Gail Rebhan
and Cynthia Gano Lewis. Throuab
Mar. 9. An artist's reception is held
toni&bt from 7-tO 1;>.m. Tues.-SaL
11 :){) a.m.-S:30 p.m. 497-1880.
CAILIGRAPHJC ARTS, 2219.
Main St.. #37, Huntington Beach.
Oriainal calligraphic works by
Thomas Ingmire att presented.
Throuah Mar. 3. Mon.-Sat. 1-5 p.m .
960-5f75.
CITY OF IRVINE FINE ARTS
CENTER, 4601 Walnut Ave .. Irvine.
··The Figure: Transformed by Tech·
nology" features manipijlatcd pho-
tography, paintings, and drawi"45 and installation. Also on exhibit lS
"Under G lass: Robotic Toys."
"Portfolio: Children's Art." and
.. Courtyard Sculpture." AU cl02
Mar. 23 ellcept "Courtyard" which
closes Mar. 30. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-9
p.m., Fri. 9 a.m.-6 p.m ., Sat. 9 a.m.-3
(llee GALL.S•lltafPaee 20)
11 ~~~~
Ac.Ala1AWAID NOMINATIONS
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(• PWID .. -I I** 'I , ,, 4TWUitMOMONC90ClPC>l
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8ur1 l.lllCMtar. sw.i a.i.
a:::MIONWB•
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MCME · * ~ "Tiii Lana HMd'' ( 1154) '°" McClel. 8lfbn Hall.
CIDMCME • H lh "lalliMr" (1114} TOlllSela,
Jina~. (l)MCME ** ''Tiii ••• (1113) Scott Glenn,
Jl#gen Prodlnow. _.._
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. AM> HUQPIY •IM~IQ. -
HARRISON FORD'S Piii U Ol'Lllutem IS A llARVB.."
"'Wltnen' Is wok In the
purest ...... A ........
And a pleaeureb .. II." c;,,.,., ~ TODAY SHOW
PARAM:XJNT PICTURES PRE.5ENTS
~~1'8JPll
AN EDWARD S. FELDMAN ~
HARRJSCN ~·WITNESS · CO..ma:u:ER [)\VlO BCMBYK
SCREENPLAY BY EARL W. WALLACE & WIWAM KEU.EY
STaN BY WlWAM KELL£Y AND Al.MELA WAU.ACE ~
EARL W. WALLACE· PRaXx:;ED BY EimARO S. FELtMAN
DlRrn BY m;ra·~~~~ ~ .. R -.::tn,_.. . JT~
llOW PLATDIGI •CllT•-ldwlllll SolMI COlll Pim S.Z711 .. .,..
Edwll$flTn 511.ti5Go
14-o.t.book/ Friday, February 15, 1985
•wt•1nw .... •ca1 Sii•-!It• 1:0I 1:10 •• ,. 7•IO ..... ~~&:'t:T 11f1-J1H l 1U 7:10. 1010I
c:rv cenreR ~~
~ .-sT (II) I NlW•TO~ · Sttewa At .. , .,.._At ~y MIUJI CDP l 1H 7150 • 10:10 ••DO 7111610tl0 • C.-ftlillture ., ...... ,",
lfllYl·I· CliNs• ...., 12 fllH .,.._ 1:41
--
1 \Ill ,J\I llH\'\1,I C IH '\JI{', I '\1,\1,I \11 '-1
"ONE OF. THE YEAR'S TEN BEST."
-Time Magaiine
-Washington Post
-Village Voice
-Boston Globe
-Playboy Magazine
-San Francisco Chronicle
-N.Y Daily News
-Playboy Magaiine
-New York PosJ -California Magaiine
-Boston Herold ·
Bf.ST FOREIGN FllM
-New York Fiim Crilica
-Not/offtll Boo!d of k11Wt¥
-Golden Glo"' Nomintt ,
Bl\lBOA STARTS TODAY
1 •• 111 :•_ .. _.,,, ),, -.m.v: 7:30, 9:20
IAT/IUN a HOLDW C2/181 MATI: 2:00, 3:90, 1:40
,.
"The DrMt to Win"
Some oanc:er pattents need 0
llft to and f'torn tNulh ~ .•
'IQ.I oon ltoe a f8w hQ.n a
week, pleme oal ~ lcx:ol
American Conc.t Society
offtce. Join '1he DrtY9 to Yt1n"
and dllc:°"'9t the l9Wad d
helping In the fight ogatnlt
cancer.
..
. -·
...
olumnist relives
greatest moments'
n local theate·r· ·
(This is the second of three
olumns reviewing the past 20
·ears in Orange County
heater.)
If one could single out a
particular year as a high water
mark of excellence over the
past two decades oflive theater
m Orange County it would, in
all probability, be 1971.
That was the year South
Coast . Repertory created its
own legend with the original
musical "Mother Earth."
Coincidentally, local com-
munity theaters seemed to all
take their best shots that
Tlmll . SUI m1lll ..
Tllfm.Clll&
Ill
THE MEAN SEASoN A._,.,__ .. 911 .....
OS di:.'
particular year with a com-
bined prodigious artistic .out-
put that has yet to be equaled.
Glancing back at the top I 0
community shows of 1971, we
find "Death of a Salesman,"
"The Glass Menagerie,"
-llN111 ~-....... -.-
_,.tSl4'3
tMmlEI
··-.. .u Ill,._ ....
~-·· --Af-·tua
. .
"Lona Day's Journey Into
NiP.t," .. A View From the
BndF" and "Rasbomon"
heading the lineup. The name
of the pmc, in that year at
least, was ambition -in
abundant quantities.
___ ,
-~ ___ ,__
~.J.r&, .. -·-lA-531111 .... ,
U.l'IWM..an• ..--•1111 -·-t.-•c.t •U--
.. Mother Earth" at SCR was
unique, a homemade triumph
with music by Toni .Shearer,
later to achieve prof essionaJ
fame under her maiden name,
Tennille, and boolc and lyrics
(....._wllOlll&RTSfPICe le)
~m&J NMlll
--II.LS 9l.l ••911••----.w'fClll'fa.J -----__ ,,_,.
~--··--m ••1·• -·--........ ~
0.tebook/ Frtday, FebNlwy 15,, 1985 II . '
,
I
I .
I I
I
_,.'
-
• •• Dallllaok/ Ff'ld9y. February 15, 1985
MOMENTS •••. rrom..,.111
by Ron Thronson, a longtime
company member now on the
theater faculty at Chapman
College. The topic was
ecology, and the SCR troupe
turned that dry, serious subject
into a scintillating rock musi·
~l that ~ro.ught .an opening
night audience to Its feet. .
The show ran for the better
part of two months, then
returned in another incarna-
tion the following season by
popular demand. A touring
company hopped around the
country, culminating with a
week's run on Broadway, and
South Coast Repertory gained
a bit of national attention, a
harbinger of things to come.
Meanwhile, on the local
non-professional scene, the
year.old Irvine Community
Theater began making crcati ve
waves with Richard Dow's
productions of a pair of Arthur
Miller dramas .. Death of a
Salesman" and "A View From
the Bridge," which finished
one·two in this column's year-
end appraisal. (The next year
saw your correspondent be·
come _personally involved
with ICT, thus exempting it
from any "best" consider·
at ion.)
San. Clemente's "Glass
Menagerie," ~una's 0 Long
Day's Journey' •nd Hunt·
ington Beach's "Rasbomon"
were other formidable
weapons in that memorable
1971 arsenal, alona with a pair
of Westminster shows, "The
Big Knife" and "Once Upon a
Mattress," which also drew
plaudits. It was, indeed, a
vintage year in local theater.
The Westminster aroup
proved the class of the coun-
ty's community thcaten in
1972 with Fred West's hilari·
ous version of "A Funny
Thing Happened on the Way
to the Forum," while San
Clemente's "Butterflies Are
Free" and Laauna's "SummeT
and Smoke" \e_pt the serious
playgoers sadsficd. At SCR,
the bi& number of '72 was the
sprawling docudrama
"Pueblo.••
in 1973, something new was
added to the local stage scene
-dinner theater. Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse open·
ed in a converted Moose Oub
in San Oemente. SCR shone
with "The Basic Trainint of
Pavlo Hummell" and "Sticks
and Bones," while Laauna's
"The Pride of Miu Jean
Brodie" and Costa Meu's
"The Gingerbread Ladf' were
the cream of the community
offerinp.
In 1974i Westminster's thcs.
pians bui t their own theater
after a decade of performina in
schools, storefro.nts and
cafetcriu1 and topped the
community poll with "Prom·
ises, Promises." Lquna•s
Marthella Randall mounted
the second and third-ranked
shows, .. Mister Roberts" and
·•And Miu Reardon Drinks a
, ........ ..,..llTS,....19)
"funny, Mxy, true:-to-IH•. come4yf'
-UN71t StMU..,_.,,.
--121-4070 .. ,. ...
_,_ tU'49Q
IMIDISI
-·-~l..tlM U..fu.CDml
Cllll-11Mltl -cm.conu
1.-YI ... .__nn.
-·l ... £.-.-
....... 100 ---_.,._. ..
IMClfYCUl'OI
MllUB •IM WUWTU ML • ....
1 J.
r ·"' .
, .. ~-~ ~ ~.,
~-. ' Nal · .... -. .
,.. ..
~.... ~ ----· -
ate-night diners do have a chOice
BEVERLY BUIB lllllTll .-...c.n ........ .
So you've had a peat eve-
ng at the theatre, the movies,
perhaps a concert. Now it's
o'clock -or later. And
u're not at all rcadl to head
r home. In fact, you re suft'er-
1 a terminal case of the
unchics. The problem is:
here can you go, when the
st majonty of restaurants
op serving at ten o'clock?
nd some snatch the dishes
way and band )'.OU your hat,
t and check 1f you dare to
nger much later.}
Fortunately, a number of
ining spots do cater to the late
iner. Herc arc some I've
iscovercd.
THE ARCHES. 3334 W.
The rcaular menu sugcsts
soups, hot and cold sand-
wiches, salads, burgers, made-
in-housc.cake and pie and full
dinners of fried chicken, veal,
s~etti, pork chops, prime
nband more. Top dinner price
is SI I.SO.
THE GRINDER, 1400 W.
Coast Hwy., Newport Beach,
is another wee small houn
spot to refuel. Open till 4 a.m.,
re-opening at 7 a.m. breakfast
is the big aeller here, with 2
a.m. often a busier time than
dinner. Bacon or sausage
(Farmer John links) with eggs,
steak and eggs, eggs Benedict
are all best sellers. Also avail-
able: 0 gourmet" hamburgers,
steak sandwich ($5.45) and a
12-ouncc U .S.D .A. top sirloin,
a best buy dinner at $6.95. · this area for many years, these bowl, and ip a multitude of
The newly-redecorated rcstau-rants feature a wide var-other forms, including a chili
CAPRICCJO CAFE, NEW-iety of dishes priced from $2 to cheese omelet. Breakfasts in-
P<)RT BEACH MARRIOTI', $5. ~lude a .popular Mexican
900 Newport Center Dr., is Yes, there's chili -in a ,...._ .. TOWJll/,...M) open till midnight on Friday _______ ...___ _______________ _
and Saturday, with an
emphasis on American
cuisine. You may construct
your own creation from ·an
extensive salad buffet. Or if
you're really hungry, order a
full dinner with fl'C$h fish,
roast beef, steak. and barbeque
cntrccs, priced from $9.25 to
$18.95.
CHARLIE'S CHILI, at both
2278 Newport Blvd. in Costa
Mesa, and I 02 Mcfadden in
Newport Beach, serves until 3
a.m. during the winter
months. Late-hour fixtures in
,..8 .HIND. -
THE
SC•NES'•
WAMHCMMa MSTAURMT Pt ltU,_ .... Otflu1 ....... '9
........ OrMC1ld1ra1hR
oast Highway. That land-----------------------i
ark on Coast Hiabway at
You CM fell tfte exdtement br~ .. the w.y from,._ art.ne. tt'• no IUrpriM the ~ at The ~ .......... In ,...port
Beach we putting on their petty Mia to~-"~' too. "F•
Tuetday," FebruetY 19th will find the f~ wetertront W-.houM
festooned wtth balloona and ttrwners, Med with the aounda of toe-
tapping Obdetand rhythms and the 9tMllt of the mo.t dMne Create
cooking coming from the k"chen. Chef Chatles KIAglen wtM be
featuring the dl9het of the 8myou county 8t lunch and dinner, In
lddttlon to the lnternatloMI menu ltemt. "OeJct•" will provide !Ne
muak:al entertlllnment In the wtw1 Bllr and yqu C8n lip a powerful
M81dl Gru Punch In honot of the d8y. The W~ AMl...,t ..
3450 Via Oporto, Lido VHl-oe In Newport Beec:t\ la a ~
destination thle Tuesday. Fet>tuery 19th. 't-.'t Y8lldated ~In the covered garage. Call for lnfonnatk>n and .. .,. .... ,., .. wt.Ing.
Newport Boulevard aervcs
nightly till l a.m. Whether you
seek soup and salad or
chateaubriand, cherries
jubilee or sweetbreads, there's
a huge American/Contjnontal
selection.
• This is aracious dinina with
tablcsi~ service, and JOO im·
ported and domestic wines.
Full dinnen avenae about
$14.95.
THE PARK, 25 IS E. Coast
Hwy., Corona dcl Mar, will
satisfy those buqer p.np till
midmght durina the week and
till I a.m. on weekends. The
ParkBuraer, steak sandwich,
pepper steak, berbequed ribs,
chicken and ribs. pates, oysten
Rockefeller and on the half
shell, pasta salad ... tbete are
just a few of the temp&ations.
Prices raqe from $6. 95 for
appetizers to $22 for rack of
lamb.
MARCEL'S GOURMET
OYSTER BAR, 130 E. 17 St.,
Costa Mesa, 11 one of ·the
newer late nilbt 1pot1, lel'Vin&
till I a.m. Oyster bu fare
ranaes Crom elCal'IOtl in pastry
to fettucine aux &uit de mer.
shrimp piz:Wole or French
onion soup to ~un shrimp,
priced from $2.75 to S7.9S.
The flair is French with ac-
cents from LuiUamL Oleck
out the espral9. care au lait
and ice cream fruit .. CCMapes,"
too.
CAPT AIN'I TABLE, AJft,.
PORTBll B~ 18700
MacArthur Irvine, ii the only
restaurant f fbund which cur-
rcntlkra':"" 24 boun a day. Brea is always available,
whether _yoa•~_likC ID omeleUe
(try the Spailll), Pnmcb tolll.
Pl~ or em combo.
Roosted dJck wtth hOney and cilantro ...
Supreme of pheosont with wild mushroom.S and
port wine sauce ... veal chop with coNodos
and green opptes ... rrucn more.
And a view which perlectty ~lements
the spectacular menu and elegant decor
9 floors above the spot1<1ing stretch
of the Poclftc Ocean
l HE JO WER S RESl AUR AN l
Al the SlMf & Sand Hotef
On the ooeon at l.oQlnl Beach
fa bMdcfas1. uioo crd chlllC Coll (714) 497-4An
....... HOTEL_,._._,... AMolM 0,... ,_a......
Rett . .,,ant Antoine, the French dining spot In the Hot.t MeridWI
N9wport Beech. hu expanded ID wvlce to lndude lunc:heone. The
restaurant had offered only dinner tlnce lt9 op91ilng In Wf'f Januery,
The gradual ~ ... 1nten11oN11. llCCOtClng to Food Md
Bevetege Director Ohler Lou& "W• dec:tded to GI*' llowty to .,_,,..
that 04K Wvlce end QMlne ... the~~.,....._ We .... we.,. now 8ble to~ NI.,_ qullllty durtng the .... ......,,_
Antoine Mtutee a CteatNe ClMlne tMt corMil• ~...,,.Ind
cok>rt ptepered by~~ who rec 1ll'lled....,. ~In...,.
of the finest teatautantt In Ftence and the United Sttdee. Adding to
Antoine'• dltttnctk>n la a prowcattw menu thet hM been.,.,.._,
by~ MaJdfNn, the 1184 P•••• Chef of Francie. Loc:aMd off the
main lobby of the Hotet Meridien. Antoine wMI ww lunc:heon from
· 11:30 Lm. to 2:00 p.m .. Mondays through Frid9ys. Dinner .. .wd
from e:oo p.m. to 10:00 p.m., Mondays through Sat~. Coets end
tlet we required. The Hotet Meridien Newpot1 ~ It 8t 4500
MacArthur Btvd. In the Koll Center Newport. Reeervatk>na ere
suggeeted and can be made by C81Hng 476-2001, exteMion 2158.
PAAADIU CU. C1l1•ra111 lrd Alw....._,
PwadiM Cefe In Fathk>n lllMd It c-.t>tatlng their 3rd AnnNerMty
this month, and looking fofwatd to another toc:ceesful yw. Since
opening In 1981, ParadlM Cafe hu buHt •fine reputatk>n tot~
lunchet and dinners, u well u acquiring• 9olld folowtng of neppy
hour fans. Shopper• from Fathk>n ltlllnd, Newpor1 Cent• bu9ineet
peopte and resident• from Coton• def Mar and •'8wport 8eech heve
made ParadlM Cafe a faYOf'lt• ~ reet8Utant In f'9ftec:ting OV9r the
put three years, Paredlte Cefe menager, Sam Rametta Mid "It realty
hU been fun-aJI our cuetomera new been fantatttc:. end I think
we'w att enjoyed pettldpettng In the 8'ICCeM of Peredlee Cate."
Patadlte C.fe It open fot brellkfut. lunch end dinner,~ a
variety of Cafffomla dteMe ranging from fNetl ft9t\ and patu to
saladt and t teekt . Patedlee Cafe Ii loc:ated at 800 Newport Center
Offle In Fuhion Island. For fur1her lnfonnatk>n calf 644-1237
FOllTY CAMOTa ....... ..,. .. F• n.e• lift,__,
The trend towards Nght• more helltthy d6rq la up 1111 cl in this new
apedat-TEAS FOR TWO at Forty Catrott-"•' a pett9c:t afternoon
treet. er .. ted for ~ Md frilndl -.ting a c:Nnce-.to....*'>c,
couple with an extra afternoon together, Ot .... ~ the "Teu"
lndude your chok:e of tout ftnget ~ on ,.,..,.. rye. Egg
taltd. tUt'key and cheele. tune Mled, or <Hc*en Nied. 8erwd with •
hef\ fruit cup to atwe. and 'fOUI ct-. al tour of...., femoul "*"
rnutftina. or two tr-.ey Mllec:I ~ ~ Ylc:t0t1e'1 9IM -· You ellO ,.,._a pleoe of OlnOI °'*•or ct._•• to_.. and two
hertMll tw. 9eNtng.,,. tor TEAS FOA TWO la~ bet 11n 2 Md 5
p.m. Located In 8olllt\ COMI Pflllla on the 111 loor bet 1• 1 8uloc:k.t
endt • ...-: • •••
,..,,.. ol IM Ollf)-l'flOf Adw• .... Dlpf. •
OtUbookl Fftdlly, '*'*Y 15. 1915 If
-
....
-
I I -.
. J
I
years. The money I earn pays
for school and basic ,living
expenses. I like my job. How-
ever, I wish people would stop
, squatting at my tables.
Squatters (camperi, sitters
or whatever you want to call
them) are customers who oc-
cupy a table for hours after
they have fi nished eatina.
people enjoy visiting after a
meal, I fall to see the need to
remain three hours after they
have finished their coffee.
Besides crippling my ability
to earn a living, the loss of that
table m~y inconvenience other
customers who sometimes
wait an hour or more to be
seated.
As I write t
four tables in my, section are
being occupied by customers
who received their bill over an
hour ago. I'm willing to bet
these people will sit for another
hour and the tip will be
modest.
Decorum prohibits me from
suggesting that these people
continue their oonversation in
t~ bar. What's a waitress to
do? -HIGH BLOOD PREM.
ORE IN WORCESTER.
DEAR HIGH: ~Uy
die ret....,_, UI • time
limit. (Some •o. ftey tell '/M
tlley ••e twe or dine seat·
lap, wllea y• m..tarrl•eud
.-. Y• m•t leaTe.)
la tlae abteltce ef Id Idled·
llliJa&, walten ud waltrelaes
ma1t be pelite ... ,.deat.
-------'---------------------~----------------~ People wllo ape11d aewenJ
·o.. Am l•M~n: I have
been waiting tables for two While I understand that many
..... vt1ttiac after • meal
.....W leavea lludaome tip. U
tlaey •oa't, notlllag cu be '-e
aboat lt.
Dear Au LuHlen: I know -------------------'-------.---------------"----------1 you said, .. No more letters
about truckers," but this is the
most important thing in my
lifo. I'm begging you to print it. . My husband drives an 18-'
A
FUNNY TllPIG MD I ••• ,_..._
r
---.
•
=--~~ .. :t:.··~Ciiii9:::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::: ---·-············································-
~ -·••"'!!!!I.. .................................................. , .• .,. --··························································
uml6U ___ °"""' ___ """"'._ ___ __,_~ ...................................... -~C:....~.::··:::::::::::::::::.:·:::::::::::::::::::: ~ ............................................................. -----·········· .. ···································--~ ..... ~-................................... -
.·
---NeTMlO •...•...... , ·•·••••·············-~~a TMX> ............ , .••••••••••••••••••••••• -
---. T09rADo\.... • ............................ ·-~~·~·······•·························-~ mu.D«lll...... .. . . . . .. ················-,,_·--··············· · · ......................... -°" 7'IS AAtl!Al('l.H NOi! ___ °"""'_'-__ ...,_ =-'"=" ft'IA&........... .. . . . . . ............................. n.a ~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ....... .,.,................ ... ····················-
. N&•etrs
~(OIM;N
wheeler, a car carrier, and he
could tell you stories that
would make your hair stand on
end He goes down the road on
a two-lane highway, and a little
cracker box of a car, usually
carrying a young wife and a
couple of kids, will race with
him until she runs off the
highway or be takes the
shoulder.
When he is traveling at 55
mph, carrying a full load of
cars, some old couple pulls out .,,
of the side road a few hundred
feet ahead. They arc going.25
miles an hour. He has to start
shifting down and pray he can
slow up enough so he doesn't
have to run over them.
l knowJoung hotshots who t-----------=----'--------------1 get behin the wheel of a big truck and think they're bot
stuff. When you spot these
maniacs, take their license
numbcn and get the name 9f
the company. If possible,
notify their employers.
THOSE-CRAZY 50'1 -'6011 DAYS ARE 8ACK AGAINI
.FNturlng fllfl'tOUI Al's Dfnerl
D«lclngl UwShowsl z.nyoJ·1&Comks1 Opennllef)'·jolnthepanyl
Our NEWEST ShoWt
JASON CHASE AU-STAR REVUE
An ~eNng of aMMdy and song
~LEEF£RREU
l!Wfy Sund8Y •• p ......
Don't mfll lhe hoa8t show In IOWnl , ROCK AROUND THE CLOCK
,...,,.,. -WON CHASE .
IWty T...-Y • I P·"'·
Older drivers, like my hus-
band, arc still "Knights of the
Road" and have respect for the .
other drivers. They never fail ,.
P'leMe-LAllDllll8,.... 19)
Now Serving .coumy STYLE
o help when they can.
I pray every ttme my bus.
nd leaves home that a
liceman won't come to the
oor and tell me be is lying in a
eap of twis1Cd metal some-
here because be· chose the ..
OMENTS •••
romPaCe18
ittle," while SCR nearly
uplicated its "~other Earth"
at trick with "Godspell," a
ock m usicaJ that also returned
he following season.
Kent Johnson's third ver-
ion of "Stop the World, I
ant to Get Off," this time at
estminster, led the com-
unity theater output in 1975,
oil owed by "Another Part of
he Forest" at Huntington
ach. A new group, the
ddleback Valley Communi-
Y Theater -which would
ome the Mission ~i~jo
layhouse -was born. SCR
GULEIVER'S
~
c.A 'Place to
CJJine
Reservation•
Eaaentiall
... ' ' 'I l . '
lllh.'\1.-·~.'ii H
l ! ·: .... '• •
Classy Autos
Advertised
in the _.. ....
ditch rather than take a life. -
WISCONSIN WIFE.
DEAR WIFE: I've read M
muy letten frem lnSen'
wi•n, I feel like I coUI get
lato u 11-wlteeler ud.tlrtve It
myself. Now tlaat everyWy
.... ud ki1 say. let'• IMlttoa lt
ap, folb. ftub to all wllo
wrote. I'm coaviace4 tncklDg
J1 a toep way to make a Uviag
.ud tlaere are a lot more good
tncken Ht tllere tllu bad.
.
'
WE PROlll8E YOU
GOOD CH91EIE
FOOD
LUNCHES. ONE'IS, TROACAL
COCKTAILS. BANQUET FACIUTlES,
CATERING. FOOO T0 GO
OPEN 1 DAYS
SPECIAL DISCOUNT
ON FOOD TOGO
31• 8eectl Blvd 827-1210
Nlllf Knot1' s
Anehelm 995-9920
came up with one of its all-
time triumphs, 'tTbat Cham-
pionship Season," and its di-
rector. David Emmes, and
West111inster actress.director
(now Assemblywoman) Doris
Allen became this newspaper's
fint man and woman of the
year in theater.
ing production of the British
satirical comedy .. The Na-
tional Health" was SCR's rep-~--------------------
rescntative show as the Costa
Mesa company began to out-
gro."'. .its NeWP.Ort Boulevard
fac1httes.
Laguna's "Seascape" and
Westminster's .. Gypsy" went
to the head of the community
class in 1976 as Doug Rowe
returned to Laguna to mount
the number three entry, .. The
Petrified Forest." An engross.
The years that followed,
from 1977 to the present, saw
theater on both the pro-
fessional and community level
increase in popularity and
prestige. Those years will be
covered in the third and final
episode of this 20-year remi-
niscence next Friday.
~ ~-g,,. "'tM 1'W1 7.-t, ~
tA•11t11111« ~ '&-D,e.1111 "' ~ l1e1111tl 'lie.
·'/)~
RESTAURANT ·
GQme enjoy all of your old favorite Mandarin and Szechwan
dishes, In the beautiful setting of our spacious new res-
taurant. OPEN DAILY
Full Service Bar Lunch 11:30 to 3:00
Food To Go Dinner 4:30 to 10 p.m.
20ZI 8. HAR80R BLVD., C08TA llEIA.ta-1112
lunch•Dlnner•Oy$ter Bir
11 A.M. To 1:00 A.M.
Sunday Continental Brunch
A La Terrace
Newport'•.
Cannery Village
JAZZ NITESPOT!
@feQ.do
Continental and Italian
t Cuisine Daily Jane Jazz
9 PM-1:30 AM
4 PM·ll PM
s-i.;;.
tiJNCil
11 AM-3PM
DINNER
Ni,htly
S900 Newport Blvd. Newport Beedl 87&-a88 6 PM to Midnit.e
8IGGER
IS BETTER!
The freshest prime meats and seafood.
Monday thru Thursday 6 -10 P~t
Friday and Saturday 6 -11 PM
~cw:oauons .ire rccommcndcti.
( :..11 MO-MJOfl, fatension 61 Jb
~ •t chc
Newport ftac.h \hrriuu 1 loccl
and Tcnn11 ( :luh
WO S cwron <:cntct l>mc
Oatebookl Fr1d9Y, FebNlry 15. 1985 ie
r -
..
-
...
'•
\
"
f-.
GALLERIES-. •. TOWN •••
l'rompacel3 From...Ce17
p.m. 552-1078.
DESIGNS RECYCLED GAL·
LERY, 6 19 N. Harbor Blvd .. Full-
en on. "Contemporary Paperweights
and Perfumes" features over 20
American &)a$s anists. Continues
throYS.b...Mar. 1. Mon.-Sat 10 a.m.-6
p.m. 8"79-1391.
annual show focusin& on the tra·
ditional art form of the Hopi Tribe.
continues throuah Mar. 3. Daily 10
a.m.-5 p.m. 661 -17.81.
GALEIUA DE ANZA BORREGO,
Borrego Springs. "Designs of the
Desert" fcatu(CS paintings and draw-
ings by San Juan Capistrano resident
Arillyn Moran-Lawrence. Through
Feb. 28. 495-4148.
po~ry Vessel Form" is prefented
t>eainning Saturday. Includes sele<l-
tions from tM Silber collection. A
reception is hdd toniaht from 7-9
p.m. Tbrouah Mar. 31 . Wed.-Sun.'
ooon-4 p.m. 636-1232.
breakfast and French toast.
giYcs you watcffront ambiance
and full dinner servioe till 1
a.m. during the week and 1:30
a.m. on weekends.
From the a la carte menu;
you may simply order ap-
petizers. Pastas, too -
particularly pa~ta prima~er:a
with bro.ccoh, zucch1n1 ,
tomatoes and permcsan, or
pasta with pesto -are
favorites. Or you may choose a
dinner ~ntree, such u veal
scallopine piu.aiola, or scampi
with garhc butter. Entrce
prices range from $ 7. SO to
$17.7·5.
NEWPO&T BEACH CITY RAU.
GALLERY, 3300 Newport Blvd. Oils
by Eleanor Forsyth and Naida Scbora
arc sbQwn th.rou&h Wednesday. Be-
ETl'INGER GALLERY, 2222
Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach.
"The Feminine Eye•· presents women
anists Joan Brown. Johanna Jordan
and Susan Ranlcaiti\_throu&Jl Feb. 25.
A reception is held tonight from
S· 7:30 p.m . Also planned tonight in
conjunction is a performance by
Eleanor Antin as Eleanor Antinova in
"Recollectio·ns of My Life with
Diaghtlcv." It is held at the forum Theat~ at 8 p.m . Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-S
p.m .. Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 497-3309.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE fine
Ans Gallery. 15744 Golden West St.,
Huntinaion Beach. "An of Africa"
presents cultural exhibits of African
art, dance, music and textiles.
Through Mar. 8. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-2
p.m.. evenings by apJ1<)intment.
895-8361 .~
~·nnil'I• on Wednesday is waterc0lors
Joni Sellinaer and Hele!' Reeder.
rouah Mar. 27. Mon.-Fn. 8 a.m .-5
p.m. Sl8-12S8.
ORANGE OOAST CQLLEGE,
2701 Fairview· Rd.. Cost, Mesa.
Worn from the Jc~ Dell series
entitled ''.Riparian Rights, Lake Su-
perior" a~ featured througq Tut14ay·
in the Photo Gallery. Openins
Wednesday in t~ Photo Gallery arc
works by photographer Nancy Web-
ber. ThroUJh Mar.19.Alsoondjsplay·
in ~e Fine Arts Building Lobby
throuJb f«b. 22 are lal'IC 4'x6'
paintJngt by OCC painting students.
Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m .-S p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
DOMINO McFL Y, 4248
Martingale Way, · Newpon
Beach, the newest comer to the
dining, drinking and dancing
scene,. serves from its full
menu till midnight, night.ly.
You can order a litt.le or a
lot, including ·such appetizers
as mozzarella marinara and
buffalo wings, a variety of
salads. such as Chinese
chicken, a four-salad sampler.
Sandwiches highlight a Phila-
delphia cheese -steak-and tur-
key-bacon-avocado melt. En-
trees range from l..Ondon broil,
lemon-herb chicken· and veg-
etable stir-fry to fresh fish or
fettucini with chicken and
zucchini. Entree prices aver-
age $6.95
EXOTICA GALLERY, 1088 N.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
.. Ceramic Forms -l iving
Sculptures" is presented through
Mar. 10. Mon.-Sat 10 a.m.-6 p.m .,
Sun. noon-4 p.m. 494-2131.
GUGGENHEIM GALLERY,
Chapman College, 333 N. Glassell,
Oran~. Gary Martin, sculptor,
exhibits his work through Mar. 21.
Mon.-Fri. 1-S p.m .. Sat. noon-3 p.m.
997-6812.
HUMAN 'EQUATION GAUERY,
I 550 S. Coast Hwy., La&una Beach.
0 8eyond the Snapshot: The Art of the
Photographic Miniature," a thrcc-
artist show of small-format photo-
graphs. is exhibited. 497-7408.
G.ilERIA CAPISTRANO, 31681
Camino Capistrano, San Juan
Capistrano. "The Art.oft he Hopi, .. an
MILLS HOUSE GALLERY, 12732
Mafo SL, Garden Grove. "Clay: An
International View of the Contem-
ORANGE COUNTY CENTER
FOR CONTEMPOIUJlY ABT; 36-21
W. MacArthur Blvd., Sp. I l l,.Santa
Ana. "Between Tht Worlds: The An
of Women's Allin" is featured.
Curated by Cheri Gaulke_ Throush
Feb. 22. Wed.-Sun. noon-5 p.m.
VILLA NOVA, 3131 W.
Bill and ~ I.canne Peters'
CROWN ROUSE, 32802 S. CoaSt Hwy., Laguna Niguel,
and BA YSRORE HOUSE,
23311 Muirlands, La~ Forest
Village, will seat you for dinner
up till 11 :30. And the opter
bars serve till I a.m., with
some fare as hearty as a full
dinner.
American
THE BARN
American, Lundi M.f 11·2:30. Oinnef
M-S frO(l'I § PM, Happy Hour M-F
4:30-7 PM:' Sun. Champagne Buffet
Brunch 10-2:30. Entertainment &
Dancing 8a'*'8t Facilities. 14982
Redhill, Tustin. 730-0115.
THE ORIGINAL BARN
FARMER ITEAKHOUIE
The or1ginal. Featuring dilplay broil·
•lnQ...• Lunch lllon.·Frl. 11·2. Dinner
n~tly Mon.-Frl. from 6 p.m .. Sat. &
Sun. from 4 p.m. 200 t Harbor Blvd ..
Costa Mesa. 642·9777.
HAMOR HOUSE CAFE
Established sinOe 1939. Omelettes, 25
varieties. Served 24 ~ Sand-
wiches. 30 varieties. Heeled g11rden
patio. Dinner 9efVed 5-10 p.m. 3" 157
Coast Hwy.. Dena Point. (714)
496-9270. Al$0 163" 1 Coast Hwy .. Sunset Beach. (213) 592-5404.
PARADISE CAFE
San Franciscan style. Freeh lleh and
p~s1a. Patio dining. Lunch M·F 11·3.
Dinner Mon. ·Sat. from 5 p.m. Happy
Hr. M-F 5· 7. Wed. Ladiel nite SOC well
drinks trom 3 p.m. Banquet tecilltles.
600 Newport Center Dr., FetNon
Island, Newport Be9ctl. 644-1237.
POOR RICHARDS
KITCHEN
Breakfast. lunch. dlnnec. Patio dining
wtth ocean view. Modest Pflces.
Beer/wine. Famed tor Befglan wattles.
Open dally from 8 a.m. 1198 s.eoest
Hwy. lrt Village Faire Mell. Laguna
Beech. 497-1667. •
PUFFINS
"NaturaHy" cooiled foods, lrom pen-
cakas to crepes 10 sleeks .. An a<Mto·
ture In natural eating ep.n Sun. lhru
Thurs 8 a.m. 10 11 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 8
am. to midnight, Visa/MC. Casual.
Moderate pr1oes. 3060 E. Coast Hwy ..
Corona dlll Mar. 640-1573.
Chinese
olADIDRAGON
8Z9Chwan & Mandarin Cuisines of
06d CNna. Hoel Wallece Lee. Chef Yr
Chen. Elegiant ~. Lunch, dinner.
Sat, & Sun. Olm 8Ynl ccnww-T ..
cake Brunch) Banquets. a., &
Wine. AMlonatlle prioea. 12100 8-cl\ BMl. Stanton. 891H933.
.. D 111s-.1 Friday, February 15, 1985
Continental
AIRPOfl I IR .. ... ....,, ... .., Room
Continental. Lunch M-F 11:30-2:30.
Sun. Brunch 10-3. Dinner from 5:30.
Hawy HOUf M·F. Entlftalnmenl &
Oancfng 7 nights a week. Valet park-
ing. Banquet facllllles. 18700
MecArthUf. Irvine. 833-2770.
CAFE UDO
Newpof't'• Cannery Village jazz spot.
Cozy atmoeptlere. American. Italian
& Continental meno. Lunch M·F
I 1-3. Dinner nightly 6 p.m. to mlO-
nlght. Entertainment nightly 9-t:30.
Sun. jazz MSlion 3-7. Ample perking. 2900 Newport Blvd .• Newpon S..Ch.
675-2968.
MARCEL'S
Volef Mercet. Newly remodeled!
Marcel's goum1et oyster bar is now
open for lunch ffom 11 a.m dinner 'tW t:OO a.m m lr..Sll'\g nlgl'ltly 130 E.
17th (a1 Newport Blvd ) . Cos1a
M"8, 646--8855
NYmRA
Continental. Chef Rlcf\erd Bergner
slnoe 1970. Intimate dining. Lunch
11:30-3. Dinner from 5 p.m. Cloeed
Sun. & Holldeyt. Banquet roome.
3333 S. BrlstOI. Co.ta M .. e.
S40-38i40.
French
•
Coast Hwy., Newpon Beach,
ORANGE
COAST
'
RESTAURANT
DIRECTORY
LE.mt .
New In Newpon, ·old In tradition.
Falvorlul Freocti Pr~le dllhes.
ChaflTolno decof and etmoeptiefe of
the Soutn, the Mldl of France. Lunc:tt
and dinner Tuee. t!Wu ,Soo. Sun.
BruN:h I 1 AM to 3. PM. Ext~ caur. and French wine .. ta. 3"21 Vie
UdO. Newport Beech, In plaZa near
Hughes Matket. 875-<t904,
Ita li a n
DONA'RLU'S
The Oftglnal from ea.ta Mela line.
1973. In CU MW location Mrvtng
our femoue pfaa end pae1a. Dine In
Of' tall• out. e.. end _...,. alto
eetved. 9'430 Werner A.-. at
Buanwd, behind the Simer In " PleVOf1 Plaza. Fountain Valley.
983-5"5.
MARCaL09
Family owned. Ettabllshed since
1973. Pesta. veel, plzu. SpecialitlnQ
In Cloppino. a., & Wine MNed:
Sal8d ber. Lunch Mon. ttwu Fri .. dinnef
7 night• a .... Sunday Brunch 1()...3
p.m. 17602 Beech Bllld. et Sletef,
Huntington Beech. 842--5505.
M ex1ctln
•CMAlmXICAN MSTAUUllT
Our tood .. a Mp IO Maxlcol Eat. ~
1972. Open dally trom 11 a.m. tor
!Unch & dimer. Coc:kt• Enten.in-ment Wed. ttwu 8a1. nights In the
8u'To ~. 298 E. i 7th St .. eo.te ....... c.11 MS-7826.
Natural /Healthy
PORTY CARROT8 . _
OelciotJs faeNon food pet' Henry
8eger'ltrom. A gr .. t pl9Ce fOf dinner 7
days from 11 a.m. Sunday cnam-
Brunch. Between Bullocks and
. So. CoHt Plaza, lower lellel.
00.
Steaks/Seafood
8LACK9eARD9
Hearty Beef Entr.. & SeefOOd.
Lunch 11·3:30. Ofnnef from 5 p.m.
Happy Hour M-F. Exten1111e Ovaler
Bar. Two bloclls IOUth of John Wayne
Aifpof't. 833-0080.
THICM•BY
F .. tUfet treeh loeat ... food, Eastern
beef. Lunch, dinnlf, Sunday brunch
and ohamf)IGM bfunch, herbof
cruises. Entertainment nightly end
Sunday altefnoon. Lounge fOOd gel-
ley. Historic waterlront landmark In
Newport's Cannety Village. 3010
Lafayette. 876--6771. •
CftAZYMOnl ITIAKHOUll
Featuring Eastern Com Fed Beef.
Prime Rib. FreSh Seafood and
specla!Wng in our famous pen fried
steaks, end deuer1t. Lunch M-f
11·3. dinner M-Sun 5 p.m. (Dinner
reeervatlons guaranteed) . Authentic:
Weetem decor. dllnclng & !Ml""'* in the saloon. ()y9f Ad. Exlt/Ne'#port
Fwy, Santa Anil. 549-1512.
RU8TY NUCAN . .
Freeh ... food end lots oi It. Newport
8eecfl -Luncti. dinner, ·Sooday
bNnch. Oilellooks Newport Bey. 2735 w. Coest Hwy. 642-3431. IMl8 -
Lunch, dinner. ~ nour. 1830 Mein. MS-• 77 4.
TAU OF TltS WHAU
OS*I 7 deys. Breallfllt 7 a.m. M-1'. Luncfl , 1-4 ..... ~. Olrwltf' ... , , .......
Sat. & Sun. bl\lrld'l 7 .... ~ -Fri.. Set .. Sun, 8enquet ledlii9e up to 500. Entenainrnent W.CS.-fkMI .. ...,,.
Otamlc My ... 400 Mein 9t .. e.t>a. 873-~ •
. -
r