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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-16 - Orange Coast PilotFORECAIT8 ON A2 Serving Newport Beach, Co1t1 Meu, HuntJngton Buch, lrvlnt, t..gun1 Bach, Fountain Valley end lou1h Orenge County ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY. AUGUST 16, 1985 i5 CENTS Judge: No Dew inmates without beds Sheriffs official$. supervisors angered by latest ruling to remedy jail crowding Santa Ana main Jail. The tour was Judge Gray's second of the summer. He found overcrowding ts worse now than it had been dunng his first tour. The order stunned both super- visors and Sheriffs Department of- fic;ials who point out the county bas gone to great lengths in recent months, spendmg mil hons of dollars. to reduce crowded Jail conditions. judge's o rder," commented Under- shenff Raul Ramos this momang. "How we do it is.still under study." Ramos added that no matter what plan finally 1s agreed upon "neither the Board ofSut>trvisors or the shenff have any intcnuon ofrclcasfngpeople who arc a dangCT to the community " since March when thejudie found the county in conteQlpt for fa11tng to heed hts 1978 ordtr to reduce the Jail populauon. The county was fined $50,000 plus $10 per night for each inmate forced to sleep on a Jail floor for more than 24 hours. By JEFF ADJ.ER Qt ... DMlr ..... ltllft . A Los Angeles federal judge has ordered the doors to the Orange County Jail slammed shut, beginning Aug. 25, to any incoming pnsoners Cout Nancy Kidder has been appointed acting dean of admissions, records and guidance at Golden West College./ A8 California An ex-KGB agent tells how San Diego's proxim- ity to the border makes It a perfect target for Sovl~t sples./A4 Nation Federal Investigators say the cloud emitted by the Union Carbide leak con- tained mostly cancer- causing toxin. not pesticide./ A5 Louisiana residents say Danny wasn't strong enough to qualify as a hurricane./ A4 World · More evidence Is found · that a Japanese Air Lines jet lost most of Its tall before crashing and klll- lng 520./ A4 Sports Dodgers' lead grows to nine games In National League West after 5-4 win over BravesJC1 Huntington Beach's Brad Greer enjoys a one-shot lead at the CaUtornla State Open golf tour- nament./C1 Entertainment Cartoonist-BO Keane keeps "Famlly Circus" entertaining by watching kids and going to the movles./WHkender Wandering through the temptations at lr:vlne Ranch Farmer's Mar~t requires a game plan. IWHkender INDEX ·Auto Piiot Bridge Bulletin Board Business Clasalfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Restaurants Sports Televlaon Weather -AUID 81-14 C7 A3 C5-6 89-11 C7 811 812 Datebook 810 Date book A8 Date book A3 811 Date book C 1-4 Date book A2 for whom no bed can be supplied within '24 hours. The order was issued by U.S. DistrictJudJe William Gray two days al\er '6 beanng on jail overcrowding and the judge's impromptu tour of the "We have to comply with the The county has been under coun order to reduce jail overcrowding and provide bunks for all 1aJI inmates Gray's latest order for the first ume estabbshes a populauon cap at the Jatl and duects county Jail'1'5 to remove within 10 days extra bunks that had The squeeze of summer When the dde come. in on the crowded beacha of Balboa l•land, •un wonhiper• get to know one another better. Most counfians oppose oil rigs off Orange:coast Albert Mardlklan Importer admits faking smog tests --UCI survey reveals residents nearlY.2-1 against sea ~rilling_ By LISA MAHONEY Of IM 06111 l'flot II•" A majority of Orange County residents say they don't want 011 ngs otTthe coast, according to a UC lrvme survey taken in June County residents oppose offshore 011 drilling almost 2 to I , according to university researchers who polled 1,008 randomly chosen county resi- dents prior to the announcement of a federal proposal to offer 54 square miles of ocean Ooor off Newpon and Laguna beaches for 011 and g.as exploration. Of those asked 1fthey would like to . seeo1ldnlltngo1Tthecount> coastline tn the next five years. 60 pe'rcent said they would not. 34 pcrc.ent favored the idea and 6 percent said they were not sure. By STEVE..MARBLE ""\ The question was part of the OfiMDMtr,...•wt • university's 1985 Orange County Customers who have purchased Annual Survey, scheduled for release exotic foreign cars from Newpor.t in late September. Beach· auto importer Albert Campus spokeswoman Elaine Mardikian must have the spons cars Beno said tl\e un1vers1ty decided to destroyed, shipped out of the country rclea~ results of the 011 dnlling or modified to mcot rigid emissions question early because "we felt 1t was standards. timely since there was such dis- Mardikian. one of the nation's cussion going on." largest importers and modifiers of Coastal communities have united European sports can, pleaded J.Ui lty to oppose a compromise worked out last week to nine counts of fals1fymg between the U.S. Department of the emissions tests with th~&vironmen· lntenor and some California-con- tal Protection Agency ll'nd a single JrCSSmCn that would permit an cx1st- (Pleaae eee DIPORTltR/ A2) mg momtonum to lapse on 1,350 ) SPON will coordinate Coast off shore oil foes By ROBERT HYNDMAN DI IN 061ty Pllol II.ti The Newport Beach environmental group Stop Pollu11ng Our :-..l·v. ~1n will coordmate the efforts oflocal commun1t)' groups 1n oppoc,1ng rnl dnll1ng off the Orange County coasthne SPON. an acuve o pponent of John Wa)ne i\1rport t'Xpans1on and largl' developments 1n Newpon Beach. will meet with leader'> of local hnml'nv. nn assoc1at1ons to plan strategies 1n pre!>ent1ng 1he1rargumentc, agamc,t nthhore t11I dnlling, said SPON President Jean Watt . 5PON's pan1c1pat1on was announced Thur.da\ night al a ml't'ltng ·on offshore drilling held at the Newpon Beach Cny. Council ~hamher\ Watt said Newpon Beach residents wtll plan a massive sho"' of oppos111i>n when fntenor Secretary Donald Hodel holds a publtc hcanng o·n the dnlltng proposal <\u$. 31 1n Newport Beach .\.ten tall Ye agreement calls for open mg six nme-~uare-mile tract' oil tht' Orange Coast for oil exploration and dnlhng. . The c1ttes of Newport Beach. Laguna Beach. Huntington Beath and '-Jn Clemente have umteli to fight that proposal. c1t1ngpo1en11al prnhkm' v.11h '"' spills, air pollution and other environmental hazard'> Watt satd SPO~'s rote tn f'«wJ>Ol't Beacl'I v. 111 ~much hk.t the t'lt1te"' group SOS (Save Our Shores). which 1!> org.ani11ng ralllt''> and pet1t1nn dn\ec, in Laguna Beach - Attending Thursday's heann~ was '>late \)t·n \1::.nan Ekrgeson. R- (Pleue eee OlL/A2) square miles of protocted coasthne in exchange for a 15-year ban on dnlhng elsewhere along the coast Factions m favorofmort' dnlling m federal waters ofT Cahfom1a are also unhappy with the plan, but for other reasons The 011 industry and pro- dnlhng conaressmcn say the com- promise should have 1nduded morr -and tx-11cr ..xean floor trat·t-; -one'> that promise to produ<'e more pet- rolt'um products to reduce the coun- tn 's dependence on 1mport«i 011. The surH'\ results come JU'>t t""o wet'ks tx-fore lnten or St-cr<'tary Donald P Hodel 1s to amve o n the Orange ( oast for a pubhc heanng on (Pleue Ke COUlfTIANS/ A2) been crammed mto e1aht Jail dorm1tone' The order to accepi. no pnsoners for whom there are no beds tf'f'ecttvely 5et'i the Jatl populat19~ at 1,657 tnmates beglnmng Aug. 25. explained R1chud H'mnan, the Amencan Civil Libcnies Union attorney rep. resenr1ng 10mates in the Jail over- crowdmg case. (P!eue Me JAIL/A.2) Crystal gazers back on Coast ' By TONY SAA VEDR.A DI IN Oe11J Piiot S19'! Orange Coast c1l)' officials predict they'll have to hf\ their bans agamst fortunetellers following the state Su- preme Coun ruling Thursday that said a s1m1lar proh1b1uon in Azusa w~s unconst1tut1onaJ. Officials said th~ don't nocd a crystal ball to foresee that their ordinances agains1 fonune·telhng bus1nesSl!S won't §tand up agamst the precedent-semng dcc1s1on that Azu!>a ·s ban violated fTtt speech laws. The question now faced by Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach. lrvme and Fountain VaJley 1s whether the) will s1mpl~ repeal their ordinances or restnct the psychtL peddlers to certain areas. Some c1ues al-;o talked of hcenstnJ the Stt~for-~c HuntlnJtOn Beach hfted 1ls ban on rnmmcm~l soothsayers more than a Related story on AS vear ago tn respon~ to a law$ull filed h~ a.(1~P"' mother and hN daughter With the door nu~ opening on such prohibited busmes~ ds astrology tea-reading. palm1~tr. .md other 1vpes ofpropheq for a fee . Orange Coast official' had fro"' ft."ars about the impact!> on lhl·1r l ttll'.'S fhe" al<,11 d1dn·1 5et'm eager to Jccept an'"' 1t;:it11rn !:I\ .\zu..a 'A a)'or Eugene \1o<,es tor other l altfom1a Clltes 10 ,harl' lht' leg.ii ((ISh of appt>altng thl fl. J ~late de-tt!.Hln to the t · S Supreme < uun · ll snot our numhe-r ont' pnont) ... Laguna Bead· l 11\ '-tanager k..cn f"rank ..aid ··~ t' ha' e the !Mime kinds nt clinct'm\ ~h<1ut unsu!.pecllng ~11ple tx·1ng duped h' un..crupulous indt' 1duah But the 4ue\t1un 1i. v. ht'thcr to ha-...1. a proh1btt1un to c;avc llOn\ume-rs\ trom 1hem!>ehcs ha<,1calh .. l O!.ta \k..a \A. as among tht· Oranite (Pleaee eee FORTUNE/A2} Judge to run for sheriff in '86 election By STEVE MARBLE DI t!M Dally ,._fl•flt "'1unH.+pal (~•un Judgt' Bobb>y- ) ounghkxld announced Thur'ida) r that he "'111 r hall<'nge ~ht'nff..('oroner Rrad ( 1att''i 1 n the I qg(, elC('tlun, prn.11, t ng tht• r;ic·t' will be an cmo- twn-, harg<'d. mud slinging affau '1 l untzhl\\lx.I. a Judge m <;an ta .\na c,in\l' I l.ll\ I has lontt ht-en a vocal dl\1, ,,, 1 •3\l' and rnrn:ntlv hu u S 10 mtlliun l,1w1;u11 aga1mt the shenff allt'jttnH har.1,1;ment (ta11.·, \A.h 1 hac; heen c.hC'nll sm~ pr ..iv. h1.·n hr v.aHlectcd to the offi~ 'va1.JlC'd "' a·tinn~ \hcnll James Mu"'' k did nut respond ll' '1 ounl(- (Pleaa.e eee JUDGE/A2) , State minorities will be majority soon Turn to Peg• 81 for th• beet eutomobll• buy1 ---- Blacks, Htspantcs. Asians ma eqJJat white population b year 2001, surpass It by 2005 By DOUG WILLIS ...... u ............ C.lifomia wi.U become more crowded and more diverse rac1ally in the M•t two decades if curttnt trends tn unmt&tation. transportation and land costs continue. By tbe time today's k1ndcrprtcne1"1 arc complctina colfqc in the prina of the year 2001, today's raci&l min· oritics will ne&rly equal the non·. H1s~n1c whites who have dominated CaJifornia inct the 1849 Gold Rl.lsh And by 200S, Cahfom1a·s H"· panic. Asian and b1actt population will outnumber non-Ht pamc whites stateW1dc1 and some or the 'tate's ma1or utoan centers Mil be domi- nated polttic1ally. 'ta>nomically and culturally by today's m1nont lncrcucd traffic co tion and hiah land cosu alona the Cahfom1a coast art en<'ouraam& housing and m1IM ptT" l'IOur toda to about I ? manufactunn& booms inland that m1lt'S pct hour by the turn of th<' will brio& 1ncrca~d urben1z:auon and ccntun. and the amount of ttmr added cconom1c and pehl1cal clout 10 frccwa) urc cloaged wtth \top-•nd-go inland ctt1es from Sacramento to traffic w1ll nearly quadrupk R1vm1dc. The sunc'\ population I\ vuwing And th~ who remain tn the San nearl) 10 times faster than th<' rat( of Franotc0, Los Angeles or San Dtc o expanMon of the tn.ghwa) and other urban areas will bt ltV1nJ closer transl)(>rtat1on sy tem\. so mo t of toetther 1n hiahcr density tio ll'\&. • _ the e~ns1on of the higtlwa) \)'~tem and the) will flct c"er-increas1n Wiii be 111t1cd at ~rvma cM pools and traf'" coninllon and lonatr com· ma transit users.. mu•CJ .;, work Despite the incn:ucd urban dcn4'1· The a\'erqt frttWI) ~pttd dunna ue, tht va<tt m"onty of (1hfom1a·, the mom1n1 peak pcnod '" l.a'I land wtll conunuc to be devotcd to Antelt1 will decline from about 31 farm. HmbC'r and rttTnllonaJ u~s. and < ah1nm1a ~111 remam the na- tion \ le•hhni a multural stale In a wnr' of l\\~X'1atcd Pra~ 1ntrr\ 1ewc,, C'\"Onom1<>t' planners and demographel'\ fr11m nu"nM~. (lO\'· emment ind the a'adrm1c commuo1- tv ajp"CC'd that '\ uin and H1'paruc 1mmtarat1on "'111 he one of tht mmt import.ant force:'\ chaniJna Cahfom1a 1n the ne'lt two dttadei The~ all al:r.o aatted the ~\alt'~ inland commumttes. whc~ land and hou"nS lfT \till retauvel} 1n~ptn· \IVC, v.ill sm~ at a much faster ratt than thr C'UJTtnt urban ccntcn on I.ht (Pl eee tmfOIUTIS8/ A2) L I • AA *Orange COMt DAILY PtLOT/Frtay, Auguat 18, 1915 ~ .J J A"4 CI:,OSED TO •BEDLESS' INMATES ••• l'romAl After Dec. I, thejatl population will be _, to no more than l. SOO inmates and belinnina April I the limit will be 1,400 uun.ues, accordina to the court order. The population in the jail, rated io bold l, l 9 l inmates. b11 ranacd as hisb u 1,700 tnmatet in recent moolbs. Lut ~t. l,561 inmates were beld in the jail, 18 ofwbom have been bu.nkin& out on the jail floor for more than 24 boun, tbe undersheriff reported. That wu a decreate from the I ,694 inmates houtcd in the jail last Sunday when 39 inmates slept on the floor. Board of Supervisors' Chairman Thomas Riler expreued pat "dis- appointment' with the court order and pointed that the county has worked ha.rd Jo comply with the court's chrectives. Low-risk inmates have been trans- ferred to tents erected on the arounds of the James A. Musick Honor Farm and other inmates have been trans- ferm:t from the main jail to the Theo Lacy branch jail in OranJe. The tents, which can hold 380 inmates, are JUDGE ••• P'1'omA1 blood's announcement or bis criti- cisms of Gates. Younablood charaed that Gates has failed to resolve the issue of overcrowding at Oranae County Jail. He also questioned why Gates, as coroner, did not invcstipte the recent death of county pathol()list Dr. Walter Fischer u a homicide. Fischer was found in his car July 8 with two bullet wounds to his chests. The death was ruled a swcidc by the Coroner's office. At the time of bis death, Fischer was under fire for aUeacdly bunalina an autopsy vital to a murder case. cxPKted to be replacied by modular buUdJnas that 11"\1 a.lated to be in place at the Musick flrm by November, Riley said. "Ris (thejudac's) mtemt m people who haven., been aood citizens is just 001 fiet... the board chairman added. 'Our story lbould be pveo the same weiabl u the ACLU attorney's. but 1t doesn't look like it is. His method is 10 rcleuc: pritoneri. We have the sa.rona feelina that if you have committed a crime you should be locked up for it,'; Riley com- mented. Herman said the court order doet QOt pose a threat to public safety, bu1 finally deals with the jail over· crowdina problem diredly. "The most minor types of of- fenders who a.re no ~ to the community will be out, Herman Wd. "Those who are a cS&naer will be in jail. Tho1e who aren't, won't be. That's the way it sbou.ld be." The ACLU atomey, a Balboa Island re ident, said Graf s action was a .. wonderful thi~ • And he lauded the court for its • oou,..e and inli&ht" lo bandlina tbe problem. ··This happened because the ooun- 1y djd not properly deal with the problem. Their solution wu to add bedl rather than reducina the popu- lation," be said. Hennan also said the county has three optfon• 10 comply with the Judie's directives. He sugestcd the county make better use off ts bra.nch- jail capacity. issue citations rather than a.rrestma people ch~ with misdemeanor crimes such as failure to pay child support, petty theft or public d.runlceness or bcain releuina inmatet several days bra week before their sentence is abo~t to expire. A spcaal COUQty jail wk force that bu been mccuna since March is scheduled 10 meet early next week to review options and and recommend a course of action to the Board of Superviton. Ramos said. Reagan signs Co ntra a id bill SANTA BARBARA (AP)-Presi- dent Reaaan hat sianed a Sl3.2 billion supplemental appropriations bill, startina the now of aid to rebels fiabtin1 the lef\isa NiCll'lluan aov- emment. The White House announced in a 1tatemen1 today that the bill was aianed by Reqan, who is on a thrce- week vacation at his 688-acre ranch near here. The announcement did not say when the bill was aijned. It opens the way for S27 million in U.S. assistance to the Contra rebels for uniforms, rations, and other so- callcd "non-lethal" supplies. Conaress, which last year cut the flow of aid to the rebel• followifta the revelation that Nicarquan harbors had been mined by the ~ntral lntclliaence Aaency, dc:crced that none of the new aJd, intended to last throuab March 1986, would be d.is.- tributtd by the ClA or the Defente Deparunent. The wide-ranaina measure provides money for a larae number of federal prop'lms and activities for the remainder of the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. The lqislation also opens the way for the eventual resumption of con- struction on federal dam, harbor and inland seaway projects around the country on a nqouated cost-sharina basis between the aovemment and locaJ beneficiaries. The House completed action on the bill Aua. I. after smooth..ina over a dispute with the Senate. Cooler weather over weekend ~ Morning IOW cloud• Wiii thtoktn • bit 8aturdey In coutaJ vlllevt u the lut ~!gee oftroplc:al del>r.-on Mlt1Y pue OWlf 8outh«n celtfom&a, the National WMthet 8etvtot My&. • 8unehlne 11 QPtCtecl 10 take hold by afternoon llonQ the oout bUt '9tnpetatu,. Wiii ~ lllQhtty ooe>W. Hlaha wttl range from the IOW 70. at the bMoMI to the mld-IOt In rnland valteye. AIOng the Orangt Cout th4n wttl ~ low ctoudt tonlQht and Saturday, 1*Qmlng mottty tunny Saturday aft.-noon. 811gf\tty ooe>W d., Hight ranafnQ from ~ low 70. at the ~to upper IOI Intend vati.y.. (lttle change Saturday except Inland vatltv hJOht mid IOI. Lowe M to ee. ''om POlnt Conoeptton to the M.icen Border -Ov« Inner watere .. tlaht vanable wind• thr~h Saturday •oec>t eouthWllt to ..et I lo 11 knoll In the afternoon Saturday. Wind wawe 2 10 a r.t. 8outhweet 8"11 1 to 3 fMt. COnllder1bte low cloudlneee with partial c!Mrtno In the afternoon 81turday. Outer waten, Point Conc9ptlon to San CletMntt llland 111d out eo mllte. moetl)' n~hweat to weet ~nd• e to 11 1cnot1 through Saturd.ay with oomblned .... 4 to e fMt. Conatcser1t>1e low doudlneea with panlal clMrlno In the afternoon end .wnlng hours tonjght end Saturday. Sr.ow••• i..;;_..:.,_:......;___;;_~....:._~.:.....:~L-~~~~~....,.-~-' lot~ WNll>e< ~t "'°.U US 0.0• ~ c_ ... ,. U.S. Tem1>9 KaneMClty 11 .. ' LAll/egM ICM 1t unit~ .. ,, j NI Le LOWllYll!e IO 11 Calif. Temp11 l.M9 8MOll IO IO AIMfly H ............. 11 " ....,,.... ...... .. 17 ~ IO 11 ...... t,~ l't .. MoNcwl• ., 11 . , ::==-., ,, "'811· low. !Of U hOurt endlfl9 et & Monter~ ... .. ., 13 11 Lift. Hted1ee '°' 74 Atlanta~ .. 1a ..... vn H 71 ....... 92 .. Newpott IMoll fO eo AlltllUO IO 71 Mol'folll, Va. ... 74 .... H " OntlrlO H .. ........, . t1 IO Olllalloma Clly ... 70 ,,_ H .. ,...,. lptlno• na 11 .... ~ t1 n Oft'l-111 11 ta ~ t2 71 ,....o.ne .. .. llmlil "'*" ff 71 Otlendo t2 71 ~ ., ... ~ ea .. ..._. ,. .. ~. t2 11 .. .. 111\ ltmlrdinO .., .. ... 17 12~ IOI IO ,_ lllotllet .. .. 1111 QIOtltl .. 17 '°"°" ., 11 ::::1.: Q .. !led lluft ,, ... 1111 Joee 74 .. = 12 IO .Ma ., 71 ......,Oty n 17 111\taMll IO II ... 47 ~.Ot .. IO ~ II .. ~CM .. ... °'*"91on.l .C ., 71 "'9vlOll ioe Q 74 ..... .. M """ ... .,,. 11 .. ~W.V ... 71= .. 70 1111 DlaoO ,. 17 T allot llelWf 12 4t awton.,N.C. .. rt 63 1111 ftrenGllOo ... .. T-11 " E 11 :: "-Oty 16 ... ._ . ..,_,. 1S M Y_,,,.. l/ly .. " ... .. Nolwlloncl t7 .. ttodlton ... M u 70 1111 MtonlO .. ,. Hlgtl, IOw tor I• ~ ~ II I p m CleYelalld a .. """'*'·"·" IO 11 lerltow 102 M Tldea ~t.c. 92 70 hettll ., IO IMurnont .. 52 ~°"· .. 70 .. IP041 .. ,. llttlop 17 41 ,H.H. ts .. lpok-77 52 0.tllllna .. M TOO.AY ~Wontl ... n tyr-11 .. '-'<llOW S.4'11.111 u ~on ., 17 Toeieka 78 ., 8-l<llllOll t ·.,.pm .. iJ"',:, .. 17 T-101 70 Surf Report ... 7 TlllM 17 .. IATUM>AY lwlN'flllt .. ~ WlllhlnQton '1rll low •·IO •"' 01 'eltMM• &1 .. 11 LOCATIOtf :::r'°"' 1t tt I I'll 41 llDlttAN ,.,.. 77 at 11\lftl"""'°"' leeclfl t~ ..,, 4Upm '. =='O a :: Eztended N¥WJ91ty,~ 2~ felt ~NO" 10 Up111 u 71 '°'" l119et. ~ a.a lek a 47 a-.... ftiglll lftel ~ '°" lll'ICllll'Mt.~ t·2 POOr 8ut1 ..... 10dtY ti 1 ff P 111 • "-=.:011 ts n C110UC1t --.... ..., .... • 11111e lalboaWedOI 1·2 POOr ..l\irdeY at I ,. a m end •• ai;aM et 12 ., _,.,., ~ ....... rMllllO :t ... ~e-i/I 2-4 GOOCI 7Upm ...._, .... 71 79 l'O. -tlla OOMI tO IO-. to. !ht kll~M 1·3 '"' MoOll MU today ti I 1t p I'll , rltte ,..,on..-IO ~~ :;-lnlend-.. ~ moeuv" -.i.mp; .. ~·'"'•'" ende.lt eollflel JI-.. .. .... dlreCtlon; -nr-t e.u P "'· COUNTIANS OPPOSE OCEAN DRILLING ... FORTUNETELLERS MAY BE BACK •.. From Al the dnlhng proposal. Mark Baldassare. an associate professor who directed the survey, wd a represcntauve cross sccuon of county residents came out apinst oil dnllina. "Op~sit100 ... crosses almost all g-i:ograph1c areas, incomes and aacs1" he said. Dissatisfaction witt\ the idea of expanded offshore oil anstallatfons was slightly higher amona coastal residents with 63 percent 0S)pos1ng drilling. Of inland dwellers, 59 per- cent were against more oil rigs. Fifty-four percent of Republicans polled didn't want more 011 exp!~ ration while 67 percent of Democrats felt the same. Those rcporuna incomes of under S 15,000 were about evenly split on whether more drillill$ should be allowed. The balance upped slightly toward opposition, however. Opposi- tion to oil rigs was higher among those with incomes between S 15,000 and $75,000 with sentiment ran~ng from 59 to 68 percent agamst dnlhng. The onJ.r. group favonng more offshore oil actJvtty was residents older than 65. 49 percent of whom said they wanted more exploration compared to 42 percent against. Survey results arc consistent With those taken in previous years, Baldassare said. "It fits the trend shown in past surveys that Orange County residents are very concerned about potential pollution to the environment. whether 1t relates to water. air or toxic wastes," he wd. Mike Feraus, a ~pokesmlJl for ·the Western Oil and OU Association in Los Angeles, questioned the wording of the survey query. Surveys that polled Californians' opinion on oil drilliA& in federal waters -more ., t.baO three miles offshore -indicate a majority of residents favor offshore oil by a similar marlin as those opposed to it in the UCI Ora.nae County survey, he said. When people think of oil off the "coastline" they 1h1nlc of sharing the sandy beach with drilling rigs. be From Al contended. County cities placina a moratonum Whether 60 percent of the l)e<>plc on commercial fortune tcllina last questioned favor or oppose offshore year after an ap~llatc court declared oil drillina, the issue is clearly one that Azusa's prohibition unconstitu- divides Californians. Fergus said. No tional. survey sponsored by any orpniza-Tom Wood, Costa Mesa's city tion has shown an ovcrwhclmina attorney, said most' officials antic1-m~ority t( opinion .on either side, he pated that the state Supreme Court said. w~~ld uph<?ld the rul.i~. Offshore oil is not a local or state . To ~utriaht prob1b1t fortune-tcll- issuc, Fergus said, even thouah the ma b1:1s1nesses stiemed to run afoul of feelings of coastal residents must be the First AmendJ!'ent!. as seen b~ the taken mto account. court 1n other ~hngs, W~ aa1d. To wciab local opinion too heavily Th~ moratonums were .m.tend~.to would "<feny the rest of the United act I~ a safety net., IJV1n$ c1ues States their say so " he said rt1t>mething to faU back on while they ' · · • decided bow to deal with commercial psychics. -Newport Beach went one step OIL FOES MASSING ..• further last year, rcmovina its ban but confining the businesses to certain commercial areas. Bob Burnham, city attomcybsa1d that he was unaware of any pro lems with fraudulent for- tunetellers. From Al Newport Beach, who offered her support to the opposition of offshore oil dnlling. Bergeson said she fell the tentative agreement announced July 16 by Hodel and some California congressmen was struck for political reasons and did not reflect the best interests of Californians. In another dcvclo~mcnt, Rep. Ron Packard, R-Carlsbad, whose d1stnct includes the southern up of Orange County, is requesting that five oil dnlhng tracts off Oceanside be moved farther north alonj the coast to an area strctchin~ from the San Onofre nuclear power plant JUSt south of the Orange County hoc. ' Nevertheless. Azusa Mayor Moses warned that fortune tellina 1s more than just seer entertainment, it amounts to sorcery. Moses added that the business of prcdictina the future was inherently dcccpuvc and could not be compared to projecuna the economy or forecasttng the weather. "FortuneteUen take advantage of people who are weak and charge large amounts of money," he said in a telephone interview Thursday. Luuna Beach, Irvine and Foun- taih qaUey were among the cities not passina moratoriums. No~ they are, 1n effect, left with unmforceablc fortune tetlina laws. A secretary at J...aauna Beach City HalJ said her telephone was kept rinain& Thunday by Gypsies and other crystal ball-pzers asking when they could set up shop. "It's clear that we'll have to revne our ordjnance," said City Man~r Frank, who said lhe law prohibits ~}.'C~1c-related activities, except for rcli&ious purposes. City Atiomey Phil Cohn remarked that he would probably recommend that fonunetellers be licensed, much like adult entertainment businesses, with the city checkina backgrounds and issuina permits. Laguna Beach's ordinance has been on the books since 1953. A ban against commercial soothsayers was one of the first ordinances enacted by the c1 ty of Irvine when 1 t incorpora tcd 14 years aao. Cuy sovcmment officials said most of the prohibitions throu&hout the state were pretty. standard and apr.roved as a mittcr of course. rvinc Assistant City Manaacr Paul Brady Jr. said the city had received only one inquiry about establish.ifll a fortune tcllmg business in more than a decade. Brady was doubtful that prophecy merchants would be lured 10 Irvine, because there were few storefronts available for such businesses. "There's not much leaseablc space where a fortuneteller can draw people off the streets," he said. "We're focused toward major retail centers instead of mom-and-poP. type busi- nesses on the main drag. · Fountain Valley officials were also doubtful that fortunctellcn would be attracted to their city. "I rtally don't know 1f the City Council has a strong view on its ban anymore," said City Attorney Alan Bums, addina that be received one lone inquiry about a week before the state Supreme Coun ruhna. "That person must truly be clair\toyant," Bums joked. The move, Packard said at a Thursday news conference in Carlsbad. will allow oil drilling off Camp Pendleton and keep oil platforms farther from residential areas. Packard has asked Hodel to consider the change and won the agreement of the Navy for the proposal, said Packard aide Yvonne Murchison. The Navy's sea lanes would be obstructed if oil platforms arc allowed in the tracts of Oceanside, Murchison said. IMPORTER GUILTY OF AUTO FRAUD RAP ••• From A l The move would place the tracts farther from shore, as well. she said. count of mail fraud. meet U.S. standards can cost upwards A person 1mponi ng a Europcan- Thc Corona dcl Mar resident will of SI 0,000, he said. made car must post a bond with U.S. MINORITIES HEADING FOR MAJORITY ... be sentenced 10 federal court 1n Los Mardik.ian, who had steadfastly Customs Service before bnn&Jn& the Angeles on Sept. 16. He faces 50 years denied be faked emissions tests on auto mto the country. The bond 1s in prison and a $90,000 fine. imported can could not be reached released when the EPA approves the Mardildan, 39, is the owner of for comment. Stvcral ofhistelcphone emissions results. Trend Importers of Newport Beach numbers have been disconnected. Because Mardikian faked cmis~ and Al Mardikian Engineering of The Syrian-born businessman ions tests, lhc bonds were improperly Costa Mesa. He also owns a car entered h11 auilty pl~ during the released to the car importer. govcrn- From Al · coast. But there was a sharp d1v1sion of opinion over the importance and impact of the expected inland build- ing bo9m. . • The most dramauc physical chaOie 10 Cahfom1a is expected m the suburbs surrounding the Los Angeles and San FranclSco urban centers, where new manufactunng and office centers arc following home builders 10 search of cheaper land and less traffic congestion There will be fewer major changes 1n the physical layout of Los Angeles. San Francisco, San Jose and other urban centers. But the culture and flavor of those urban centers Will continue to change as their Hispanic and Asian populations grow at much faster rates than either the black or non-H1span1c White populauons. High technology -including the current computer and electronics industries, but expanding into gen- etics and mcd1cme -wtll be an increasing factor 1n the economy statcwtdc. But there will be marginal shifts. wllh the San Francisco-San Jose areas Just Call 64276086 OeJIJ Piiot DetlYety I• Guer.nteed becomm~ a more spec1ahzed econ- omy, while Los Angeles will continue to have a more d1vcrs1fied economy with a broader base 10 entertainment and its apparel, chemical. plastics and other non-high technology manufac- turing. There will also be a trend to develop proportionately more new blue collar JObs mland, where land and housmg costs arc lower. And industries of every description wdl move, as home builders have, to new less congested. less costly suburban hubs. ''H1~way construcuon won't keep pace with population. and this should lead to more clustcnng. Bua crustcnng -Ooesn't have to occur around the current maJOr urban cores. San Lu.is Obispo, V1saha, PorterviUc, other areas we don't think of as that large, may eme~c as urban centers," said Frank M1ttclbach, a professor of urban land economics at UCLA. ''The out.lying areas -the Ventura counties. places such as San Bernardino, R1 vcrs1de. Santa Cruz, Napa -arc obvious targets for business in Hermosa Beach.' third day of his tnal. Mardikian's mcnt lawyers said. development. And industry will be Federal prosecutors said customers ncP.hcw. Garo Mardilcian, pleaded The government bcpn mvest1gat- mov1n1 there as well as resjdential who purchased ca.rs from Mardikian guilty to three counts of mail fraud at 1ng Mardikian 's business practi\:eS in and service developments,'' Mid-between 198 I and 1984 now must the same time. 1982. He filed for bankruptcy the delbach said. have their Ferraris, Porschcs, Lam-He faces IS years m pnson and a following year. thThS~ residtienuha~11buildid·ng. boo1 m m borahinics and other expensive can $3,000 fine. In a recent mtel'Vlcw, Mardiluan e 1crra oot 1 s an sun1 ar re-exported., modified or destroyed. Mardilc.ian was accused of fakma accused the government ofhoundin& mote fCIJOns of the state will con-Prosecutor Williams Sellers said emissions tests and supplyfna the him and suaacsted he was a vicum of tmuc, especially due to the increasing the car ownen must meet EPA EPA with phony documents, which the nation's "Pinto mentality." He numbers of financially independent emissions standards if they wish to constitutes mail fraud. Prosecutors said he was bein& harrassed because retired persons. But compared to the keep their cars in the country. said customers paid for the emissions he supplied exotic vehicles to cu~ expected population growth of the Converting European sports cars to tcm and conversio ns. lomcrs with hi .. ~-performance taste. inMr citi~andw~~~~c~n~~~~~~~~~=~==~==================~=~~=·=====~~ and arowth in rural California will be 11 minor. Schools which have been under- utilized or empty since the post- World War II "baby boom" acncr- at1on graduated to youna adulthood will be filhng up a~. ~~ the same umc, a growing senior cituen popu- lauon caused by longer life expectan- cies will boost the averaae aae of Californians from about 3 r today to 36. Next -Eeonoml1t1 partJc:ipatlD1 In tile AP Callfonlla f1&11re aarvey predict that ln %001 Callfona.la wtU laave laave aboat lbe nme mis of •tp· teelulo101Y lnda1try. SHUTTERS SPECIALLY PRICED What do you like about tbe Dally Pllol'? Wba t don't you llke? Call tbe number at left and your mess.age wlll be recorded, tr1nscrlbe4 and dell\lertd to Ult 1pproprlate editor. The time Is right to enjoy the cool comfort and beauty of these attractive moveable shutters, .. .In the colors, sizes and styles you wantl The same U -boar uawerlD1 service may be used to record letters to tbe editor 011 any topic. Contributors to our Leners column most Include tbelr name and lelepbone namber for nrlflcatlon. No clrcul1tloo calla, pleaae. Tell us what'• on your mlad k•rff Wittmer G~nera1 M1nage1 Clrcutetton 71•1"2""'333 C .... lfled edVeft ... ng 714/..U-5'71 An othef ct.pertment• Ma-421 MAIN OFFICE 330 ..... ltr ll Cotta .,..... C• M .._ lo• l!llO <:o.1a ~ CA 92t'8 ""°'*' f ,..,., .. '°" "° not -y06 ~ l>y S 30 II "' CAii l)e!<>re T ri I! lflCI .,oJ1 coov .... !W ~.., Frenk Z1nl [ t11tC'tl Ro.emery Churchmen Controller ~ *3 Orenge C..t ~ C:-C.np !*) -«IOI... -lttloOnl ..,.,Qt~ ..... , .. Cl 10...I"" "-'• ,,..~ ,.,.r tie • ..,,~ *"'"""' ~·' ,,._ ,,,._, °' Ci'<'~•IQll• -_s.,..,,,_, 9"" Sut'4ay " fOJ Oo -.-.-'fO' °"°' l)y 7 • "' "'~ Ot""9 10 •"' ena 10'" ~ ,.,. Ot--ecl Clrculatton T1lapMinN Robert L. Cent,..-t Product OI" r..Atl'eger Donald L. Wllllam• Clrc:ulatiQn Mana09r S«ono CllH POOi·~ Qt«! at C:O.ta W... C.01Qtll>t tuPS ,,. 8001 "''*"'<'''O" o., ca,...,. ~ 's "'°"'""' °" -·· 17 00 l'l\Of\!Hw Call (714) 548-8841or548-1717 ~ Or-.~. .. ...... Howerd Mullenery Adver1..,f'l0 Olt ltx P9fNJ aleYIM C11 to1!490 Olt1e10r VOL 71. NO. 221 • \ HERWOOD MANUFACTORY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mes-a, CA 92627 32 Yeara Experience Manufacturing Quality S~uttera • ... , . OfWnoe CoMt OAtLY PtLOT IF"°"J, Augult 18, 191a * AS - BULLE TIN BOARD Art auction to aid' Africa relief effort PriYate goal fo r 1:JCI cen ter reaChed Sawdust Festival artists will host an auction Sunday to benefit African relief efforts, bqinnina at 12:30 p.m. at the festival's entertainment center. All festival artists are donatina one of their work.a for the auction conceived by Anita Livingaton a~d Kathleen Marvin. Money raised from the event will be donated to USA for Africa. There ia a $2 fee to enter the festival arounds at 93S Lquna Canyon Road. Un derwater plJotOll 001n1 By P&n. 8NEmEIUllAN Of .. ..., ........ A private fund-raisin& campaip to help build a St 3.$ million campus events center at UC Irvine hu reached its aoal. Private don.on have contributed S3.8 million toward construction of the Donald Bren EventJ Center -a 5,000.aeat arena that will house UCI basketball pmes, other athletic contests, cultural activities and academic convocations. The balance of the funds for the project will come ftom a special UCI student fee anc1 a university contribution. The private donation aoat wa.s reached recently with an $81 ,000 lift from William Lyon, chairman of the board of the William Lyon Co. and A.irC&l. The ~mpal.an oeak was announced by Irvine \Co. President Tom Nielsen, wbo chaired the fund-rajaina drive. Campaian orpnizen wd they are contiouina to teek donations beyond the aoal. They uid opportunities for donor recognition, such as namina part of the center after a donor, are atill available. The drive to build a new multipurpose center pthered momenrum in 1981 when . attendance ai UCTs basketball pmes exceeded the ~ty of the eun ina l)'mnaaium, 1,SOCJ..scat Crawford Hall. tn 1982, students approved a $69-a·ycar- per.-studeot fee to be levied for the next 30 years to help finance a new eventJ center. That fee is exJ)ee'ted to raise $7. 7 million. The university~ to provide 2.8 acrea of land, a patkina lot, architeeturaJ coats and support services, all valued at $2 million. The campaiin to raise the remainina $3.8 million throuah pnvate donallona was launched in May 1984 with a SS00,000 cbalkaac pant trom the lrv•no Co. Two mooth1 ta&er. Oon.a.ld Brea, the board ch.airman and priocioe.I owna of lhe Irvine Co.. donated SI million in pc:raonal funds to the c::&mPf.lln. The events center subteQueoll~ was oa.med in h.ia honor. The ~ren Center qe delianed b)' Parkin Architects of Loi ~ I firm that also detipccl Wooden C-enier at UCl..;4. A pound-t,)rcUjn,a cemnony was ~ld tut spriqa. Qd initial padina and aite im- provement work are now under ny. The f'acilitl i1 1eheduleid to open tn urn.e for the 1986-87 basketball season. Oranae Coast College's first phot~hic exhibit of the academic year will feature some unusual black and white underwater shots taken by Wayne Levin, a Hawaii resident and internationally known photoar.apher. Fun Zone de v eloper raises stink w ith city The exhibit opens Aug. 28 and runs throuah Sept. 24 in OCC's Photo Gallery located in the campus's Fine Arts buildini. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. until 10 p.m .. Tennl• tourney •'6naJM .et Laguna Beach residents who want to participate in the 28th annual citr tennis tournament have until · Aug. 26 to register with the recreation department. The five-day tournament is open to all adults. Men's · and women's singles and doubles events will be offered. · Play stans Labor Day weekend, Aug. 31 and Sept. I and 2, and ends Sept. 7 and 8. The entry fee is S 14 per person, $ 18 per doubles team and mail-in entries must be received by Aug. 23. In-person registration may be completed through Aug. ~6 at the recreation department, SOS Forest Ave. JUJJlor football •tin open Boys from 9 to 14 years old who arc interested in playing Junior All American Football in Newport Beach still have time to register. There are operung.s in all age grout>' with 11 to 13-year-olds especially encouraged to JOin. No expenence is necessary, but youngsters must be Newport residents. Call Edith Muller-Stach at 644-5197 or 642-6878 for further information. Toa•trna•ten recralt:Jng The Santa Ana Toasters, Toastmasters Club 991, bold tbeirmeetinpeveryThursdayat 7:30p.m. at the Church of Christ, 287 W. Wilson St., Costa Mesa. • The group is looking for new mem~rs who are interested in improving or gaining speaking and leadership skills. For more information. contact Howard Firor at 543-4890 or Dennis Skupinski at 63{:7816. • L i brary IJonon senlon In honor of senior citizens in Orange County, the 25 branches of the Orange County Public Library have set aside the week of Aug. 26-31 as the first Senior Citizens' Week. Southwestern Bell Media is providing av.pli- cations for the Silver Pages Directory and Silver Savers Passport card. Application forms arc·avail- able at all branches of tbe_library and applicants must be 60 years or older or be turning 60 10 three months. · Ho11day card• being .ald Christmas cards in hundreds of styles are being offered by the Odds and Ends Volunteers at Saddleback Hospital through Thanksgiving, with a 10 percent discount on all cards purchased by Aug. 30. Proceeds will benefit the Saddleback Hospital and Health Center, a 175-bcd non-profit hospital in Laguna Hills. Volunteers will be taking orders Monday through Friday in the lobby of the hospital, 23561 Pasco de Valencia, Laguna Hills. Friday, Aug. 18 . No meetln11 acbedaled Monday, Aug. 19 • 6:30 p.m., Cotta Men City Council, City Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive. PoucE Loe Old, broken sewer lines releasing human waste near his Balboa project By ROBERT HYNDMAN· °' .. .,. .......... Old and possibly broken sewer lines on the Balboa Peninsula may be leaking sewage in and around the Fun Zone redevelopment site, according to the project's developer. Fun Zone builders have been testing the water at the site and have found traces of human waste in the area, according to Bruce Wank, vice president of Yavar Industries, which is redeveloping the arcadKommercial area. In a lener this week to Newport Beach City Councilman Don Strauss, Wank said prospective Fun Zone tenants have raised concerns about the odor around the project "It is a major concern to us that this problem be remedied immediately, not only for the sake of the Balboa Fun Zone, but for the protection of Newport Bay," Wank wrote. "Raw SCW&.Je comina out of the groundwater and secpmg into ~be bay is a common concern for all of Newport Beach." Dick Hoffstadt, a city public works engineer, said the city will examine sewer pipes to cbeclc for leaks and the need for repairs. The.,sewer lines throughout the Balboa Peninsula are old and may be seeping sewage in the area, he said. but the extent of the leakage will not be known until further tests are completed. Tests of water samples talcen for Yavar Industries revealed "unacceptable amount of fecal chloriform (human waste) at the Conflicts on lottery panel aired SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state politi- cal watchdog agency report indicates that two lottery commissioners' investments wiU prevent them from voting on some matters, but PQ.1e no general "conflict of interest." Lottery Commission Chairman Howard Varner and Commissioner Ken Webster, two of the fiye board members appointed by Gov. George Deumejian on Jan. 29, have begun avoiding matters involving ticket retailers· because of their holdings in companies seeking to be ticket outlets. Varner on J11Jy 30 wrote the Fair Political Practices Commission for an opinion on bis holdings. FPPC attorney Robert Le1digh advised Varner, in a report obtained Thursday by The Associated Press, that his corporate in'llestments "do not constitute a conflict of interest with your position." However, Lcidigh told Varner that under 'the state's political reform laws, "You must disqualify yourself from any participation in decisions which will have a reasonably foreseeable material financial effect upon either" Hollywood Park horse race trac;k in Southern California or Mamott Corp .. both of which Varner sa id applied to be lotter) ticket rt'ta1lers. lfyou want to Jf&tch Pun Zone projlect golnC up, bettefhold your noee. northwest and southeast ends of the Fun Zone site," Wank said. ;ltea -although smelly -1s not harmfu l. of sewage, according to Wank. who said he wanted to call the city's attenuon to the problem. Passersby complained of odor problems at the Fuh Zone in July. But state and local officials maintained that the water that springs up during construction in a coastal Typically, water that percolates through the soil picks up the chem1cal hydrogen slllfide, crea ting a pungent odor. authorities said. "We just wanted the etty to take theu responsibility in hand and keep them informed of our progress," he said But analysis of the water revealed traces County man kept a promise. to his wife by k illing her By tbe Auoclated Pre11 Reid Logan made a promise to the woman he loved. and he bad to le.ill her to keep it. Years ago. Logan, 78, promised his wife. Edith. also 78. that he would never send her to a rest home. Then Alzheimer's disease crippled her m md and he found himself unablcJo care for her because his own health was fa1 Ii ng due to a heart condition. Investigators say be kept his promise by lolling her and taking his own life. They had been married 48 years. "It appears to be a murder-suicide situation," Lt Dick Olson of the Orange County Sheriff's Department said Thursday. "His wife had Alzheimer's, the gentleman had beart problems. There's nothing to indicate to us that it was anything other than that." Logan, a retired aerospace executive, called the Orange County Sheriffs Department Tuesday and said he had lc.illed bis wife and was ~oing to le.ill himself. When deputies amved at the trailer park in El Toro where the couple had lived for 11 years, they found the bodies in the bathroom. Results ofa coroner's autopsy, released Thursda). showed Logan died of a gunshot wound to the head and his wife of a skull fracture, Olson said. 1 Dorothy Fenton, a neighbor, said Mrs. Logan "was probably one of the most bnfliant women we k:new unt1l the disease struck and she began drifting." Logan's daughter. Arlene Niceley. said her stepmother suffered from Alzheimer's, a dcgenerau ve brain disorder. "M' father had a heart cond.tuon and Wti lolling h1mself tr) 1ng 10 take care of her." She said the ''disease had progressed so fast that It wa\ shocbn.J. T here was so much deter.Jorauon that J couldn•t believe 1t. He suffered because be couldn•t do anything to hl·lp her. except to protect her from herself. "I'm sure he thought about what ~e was going to do and agontzed over it. but came to the conclU'S1on that there was no other way out. that what he djd was best for both of them." Logan slept for brief pcnods onl) when his wtfe slept. :-.l1ccle) said. He fll>ver left the house for fear she would hafTll herself and he spoon-fed her meals he prepared wnh care When he was hosp1tahzed by heart attacks. he called his daughter to take care of his Wife. "I tried to get him to take ber to a home. so that he rnuld get some rest himself. But he ~ouldn't He said he had prom1)e<l her a long ume ago that he wouldn•t do that to her because ol what happened to her mot.her." she s~ud. Mrs. Loga n's mother died of Alzheimer's disease in a mental institution. where she had been abused. N1cele) said Mrs. Fenton remembered Mrs Logan as a bndge plaver who taught English to Vietnamese refugees al nearby Saddleback College before she fell 111 .. Thert was great love between them." she said "I belie' e his two heart attacks were brought on b~ the stress oftrvrng to care fo r her." George Tohler. N1cele) ·s fiance. said "The last umc I \ti"" them, he was holding her on his lap hke a bab' and roe long her to sleep·· Bandit hits Mesa bank, escapes with $1,000loot Coat Highway Thursday. The dam· age came to $600. • • • A $225 TV and a $106 answering machine were reported stolen from a bomt in the 1400 block of Superior n unaay. • • • Someone stole a SI 00 purse con- 2500 block of Sant.l .\na Saturda~ Pohcc.rcports said the bufi}ar c.ut the padlock on the garage door to-ga\n enU). Hantlnpn Beach Thieves grabbed two I :!-packs of beer from a hquo~ store along Beach Thur)(jayand ran out the door before the clerk could catch them Someone 'itole a S53) <>e"-mg machine from Grannies ~wmg Ma- chine World, located at the cornc.-r at Mam and Palm. Thunday. ••• .\n ''on )t.atue worth $600 wa' rcporteod ~lcn from in front of l. S Com and Currency, I q900 Bench some11me in the past two days A robber escaped with more th.an S 1,000 Thursday a.fter holdina up Citizens Bank of Costa Mesa. 2970 Harbor Blvd. Lt. Leslie Harrison said the bandit walked up to a teller about noon, Intne Someone stole a car stereo valued at over $400 from a locked vehicle parked ln the 16600 block of Milliken Thursday. • • • Two men were booked at Oranae County jail Thursday after they were appreh'ended tryioa to steal medical equipment from a business alooa Holland. The equipment, valuod between $600 and $800, was l"t" covered. • • • Thiev~ 1tole a Wie fem valued at under SSO ftom the front yard of a home in the 17300 block of Peach Thursday. • • • Thieves removed a mailbox from in ftont of a home alo111 Benn naton Tbunday. ••• A clan rina. worth between SSO and $200. was reported atolen from an aparuncnt in the I 00 block orRoote- velt Wednetda.y. routalD Vallef A resident In the 900 block of Liuris reported Thursday that 1he clasped hi• bands toacther and de- manded money. Harrison wu not sure whether the robber displayed a weapon but no one wu iajurcd in the holdup. had been rec:eivina oblOCne t>hone calla at a rate of one per day (or the past month. • . B~ atole•a isoo VCR and S2S in coins from a home in the 11100 block of Bellflower Thursday. Police reports said the suspecU a1ao ran- taeked the bedroom in aeareh of olher item• to ateal. · ••• Someone atole $780 in jewelry and a $87 BoOlie board from a home in the ... l 1800 block of Amethyst Thurt- day. ••• Tbe manqcr of a Radio Shack store, 16157 Harbor, reported that a buralar stole $898 in computer equip- ment Tbunday. Pollce rg>on.t said the suspeet brokt the front a1ISI window, worth S6SO, to pin entry. • • • Someone stole $580 in jewelry and S3S in cuh &om & home tn the l 8500 block of Santa Cruz Monday. • • • A bWllar, enterin& throuah an unlockcdlileben wfndow, 110le S3SO in cash ffom an upttain bedroom or a home in tbe 900 block of He.Im Wedaeaday. The robber was described as a White man, 25 years old, 6 feet tall. 165 pounds, with a silver stud earring in bis left ear lobe. He escaped on foot . Lap.na Beach Police responded to reports Thurs- day of a man who pulled bis pants down in front ofa woman on Myrtle Street and Cedar Way. Officers were unable to locate the man's whete- about1. ••• A Olconeyre Street resident re- ported the theft ofSlOO Tbunday. • • • A Zell Drive resident told ~lice aomeone bad been Uahtina illcp) fireworks in the area Thurs<Uy eve- nina. • • • Two can P,!Ckcd early Thunday ni&ht on Oiff Drive su111ined an esilmated SiOO damqe after tOrrte>- one 1ma1hed them With a baseball bat, the victim told ~lice. • • • Police di1pened a pany Thursday nli&ht on St. Ann's Drive because of lu larae size and bec:WJt alcohol was beina aervcd to minon. Kewport9eacb Vandals abatten:d tJ\t windshield ofa l 963 Chevrolet Impala oarked ln 1 vacant lot in the 1600 block of We t _,_ __ taining credit cards from a red 1979 Toyota parked in an alley in the 700 block of Balboa Monday. Police reports said the purse contained no cash. • • • Thieves stole SI 099.10 in golfi ng equipment from a brown 1983 Datsun Maxima \)8fked in the West Ocean Front parkin11 lot Thursday. .-.--,. A buf'l)ar stolt $325 m Jewelry from a home in the 400 block of Bolero Thunday. Police reports said the suspect apparently cut one of the screens to pin eouy. CoetaMeaa A man. claimina he was interested 10 buy1na a diamond rina for his wife. stoic one worth $30,000 ftom a Schaeffer & Sons Jewelry shop 1n South Coast Plua Wednesday Ac· oordina to police repon.s, the man said be ·wanted to bu)' a diamond for his wife's I 0th wedd1na anniversary. When the aa1eama.n had to attend to another cuatomer, the suspect switched the real diamond W1th a rake one and waJlctd out. • • • Power tools valued at S 1.22$ wett reported stolen from w bed of a white GMC tnack parked on a Sm1th Con1ttuct1on Co. si tt at 62S Sunflower Wednesday. • • • Someone stole a S 1.$00 paint sprayer and S 1.SOO lft mi1ctllaneous items from a ~n 198-4 Toyota SR-S parked in the P raat of a home 1n the , • • • Someone stole $550 m Jewelry and $820 in camera equipment from a home in the 17400 block of Ltdo sometime in the past couple of days. • • • .\ S2 50 radio. a $200 Wiltch. a camera of unknown· alue. and two bottles of liquor were s.tolen from a home in the 20600 block of Brookdale 'Thursday ;\ccording to poltoc re- ports, the sus!)('cts also ransacked the ~droom • • • A resident IO the 5000 block or Rob1nwood ~ported Thursday that nc•ghborhood children entered her house whil e she was a work. Accord- 1na to police reports she w d they left cereal all over the floor. In add1tton. she claimed one of them unnated on her hvma room rua.. • l' • Vandal, poured paint all over a red 1970 Daisun parked in front of a home 1n the I 5800 block of Wallett Wcdncday nltht The damae came to SlSO • • • Four TV'i valued at S 1.400 were .stolen &om a Mobil TV stOTe, 10042 Adams. early Thursday momma. • • • A thief stole a car phone. a car , terco, and two lh«pskin scat oovm from a ttd l 98S Merttdct 3SO SEL parked in fmnl1 Cit(' Cleat\(IJ, 7171 Warner. earl tburdsay mom· 1n1 The lou wa tttamakd at $4.000. • • • • • • Someone -.1ole $400 in coins from n home 1n thr b"700 bloc\: of Anchmage Thu~3' • • • • Video c.-qu1rmcn1 worth S2.000 was stolen from a whtte 1985 Nissan StaQza parked at the comer of Pa1.1fil Coast H1gh"a\ and 7th trect Thur~ day . . . A. SbW '!>hottmn a S l '\00 rnm<'rn and an S850 gold watch wa-. c;tolcn from the bedroom of a tenant h \mg m a home 1n the 5500 hlotl of I m·h11l 'Wedne)(ja) The tenant accu!><'d the owner of the house of the thcO hut thr owner denied 1t The VJCUm St\\'~ 'h1 IS amng to move OUI. Liquor given for tickets Tbc manaittofMr Buck's Liquor, 2989, Fairview reported that two of h1s employtts had ~v~n 1way SI ,6SO tn hquor to tbe Pacific Amphitheatre sinoc June 10 exchanat for concert uckcts. Pohc.ic ~ports wd the twu men ~vcd a total of 1'4 tickets 10 1-mpb•lh.eater c:ioACCrts dunna the.! • coune of the summer. • An amphltheuer spo\!'. oman llid she was oot &watt \be men did • rJol have pennm1on to pan1cipetc 10 th~ aMnatment. I • •' I 1 t I I .. Clothing • Furnishings • Shoes < Ill.~. 11 \ \' Final Weekend •outhwick sae ends August 18 119 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • (714) 759-1622 • Bullocks Wilshire Wing • As of July 26, 1985 I regret to i nform y ou that is no l onger associate d with Baby Carter. Sin c erely, "-i JcLtc (I a,e ~ -- AX LINES SHOE CLEARANCE SAVE ON THESE NAME BRANDS BARETRAP FOOTWORKS SHOES-STUf f LA.GEAR BA SS APACHE l.J. SIMO NE 8-MEV. SPECIAL GROUP 90 VALUES TO s4 900 IMPO Ml A ANDRE ASSOUS SEYCHELLES 9WEST CAL LI STO WOMEN S BASS BARETRAP MEN'S3QOLO SHOES 7( TO T NUNfl.t I USH DEXTER POWER kEOS CONVERSE AZTEC SALE ST ARTS THURS .-8-15 THRU 8-.18 HOURS ARE: M-F 9:30 -7 • Sat-Sun 10:00 • 6 245 forest Ave •Laguna leach• 92651 t : ' i t f Botha speech upsets leaders Distressed Tutu says blacks will be more desperate By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 African leaders. Western poh- ticians and communist nations say a long-a wailed speech by South African President P. W. Botha contained nmhing to improve the lot of the country's 24 million blacks. Anglican-Bishop Desmond Tutu, who bas tried to keep the peace between the nation's angry blacks and the white-minority government, said be was "deeply distressed" after Botha's seeech Thursday. The Nobel Peace Prize winner, who is black, predicted South Africa's blacks would become more desperate. A spomman for the African Na- tional Convcss. the mai n guerrilla aroup figbung white rul e in South Africa, said Botha was advocat10g the status quo. "Apartheid continues and that means the struggle agamst apartheid continues," Thabo Mbekt said man interview with the Canadian Broad- casting Corp. The chief of Africa's largest black tribe, the country's 6 million Zulus, said Botha's speech would not stem the tide of anger and bloodshed in South Africa, where more than 600 have died in nearly a year of unrest M~usotho Gatsha Butheleyi said: "We re back to square one." Other world leaders also expressed concern and disappointment after Botha delivered the eagerly waited speech to bis ruling National Party Thursday night. Reagan administration officicls and U.S. congressional critics said they had hoped Botha would have moved more decisively away from apartheid. in which the white m10- ority of 5 million rules 24 m11t:ion blaclcs. Botha rejected equal voting rights for all races. 10cluding blacks wt.o cannot vote under apartheid. Botha, whose party has ruled since 1948 and created apartheid, said to gjve blacks the vote would lead the white min- ority "to abdication and suicide." He said "independen<:e cannot be forced on any community" but that he wanted to n~otiate the future of South Africa's 1mpovenshed black townships with the community's leaders. Quick Danny a drill Gulf residents 'h ave h u rrican es down to a science' LAFAYETTE, La. (AP) -Aash- in-lhe-pan Humcane Danny left power failures, downed trees and minor flooding in its wake today, and emergency ocnters were quickly aban- doned by people one official said "have been through this so many times before that they've got it down to a science." There was one death. No other injuries were repo(ted Thursday and none of the immense property dam- age left by such killer storms as Audrey in 1957, Betsy 10 1965, Camille in 1969 or Hilda in 1964. Still, Gov. Edwin Edwards de- cfarcd a slate of cmeraency in n- parishcs and said he would try to get f cderal aid to cover damaJes. After building in intensity for three days, Danny finaJly stormed ashore at Pecan Island mid-mominJ Thursday with SS mph wmds gusung to over 100 mph. It was downgraded to a tropical tonn by 8 p.m. At 2 a.m. today, the National Hurricane Center down- graded Danny to a tropical de- pression with a "porly defined center" JUSt south of Monroe in northeast Louisiana, heading nonh- northcast toward Arkansas and Mis- sissippi with 30 mph winds. Tom Creaghan, director of state emergency operations in Baton Rouac, said damaae assessment teams would fan out today thtouah Calcasieu, Cameron, JeffO.vi1, Ver- milion, Iberia and Evanaehne par- ishes. "We were tremendously lucky - not.h1~1eriousand no injuries," sa.id Pete Picou, CivU Defense director at Cameron, about 3S mjles weat of Pecan Island. "We had 300 people hete leas than an hour qo," uld Timothy Hooper, ma~ of the Red OoN shelter at Lakt Charles-Boston Hiah School. "Just aout all of them WC1'C from Cameron and when the Civil Defense pve the OK. 99 percent of them left within a half hour. "They started chcenna and then started paclcinf. I tncd to stop them but they heard 1t on TV and then there wu no stoppina them." EPA adopts new ll~its forradlo~ctivlty~scape By TM AJIOdaa.11 Pre11 WASHINGTON -Radiation from undervound nuclear wa t repositories mu11 not cause more than one cancer death per decade for I 0,00 years, say federal rqulators. But in adoptinJ its new rqula1ion1 Thursday, th Enviroomental Proiectioo ~aency left it to the Nuclear Reaulator Commission to decide how to make sure radioact.i vity does not escape from . such repositories. Bacqround radioactivity_ ~tom natural ores and cosmic ray already cauae about t percent of the 400,000 cancer deaths each year in thi country, and any increase from a waste ttposito. ry should be undetectable, th EPA said. The Energy Department is studyina three sites -at the Nevad. nuclear te1t site, at Hanford., Wash., and in Deaf Smith Cou~ty, Tex.as -fo deep underaround disposal of spent fuel from power-gcncrat.10g ~ctors anc other biabJy radioactive wastes starting in 1998. Hamid Jaeat cat. Ne• York work day NEW YORK -Thousands offederal and cit)'. employees got the day of today to help prevent a recurrence of power failures which added to th1 miseries of a humid heat wave. Cable overloads and at least six fires apparent I: caused by hiah temperatures and record power demand were reported 01 Thursday, and mid..aftemoon traffic jams developed after Mayor'E.dward I Koch ordered non-essential workers in some city offices to go home earl¥. H1 also asked private employers in lower Manhattan to follow suit. Koch said h1 feared that the fires and increased power demand because of heat 10 the 90s fo the second straiaht day could lead to a city-wide blackout. · Bomb 1a S-foa Jaan. nro otncen BOSTON -A bomb found outside a commerciaJ buildina went ofTtoda: as police were preparina to detonate it, iaj~ two officers, officials said. Thi bomb was found at about 6:38 a.m. in the city s West Roxbury section. Polic. took it to a dump and were preparing to detonate it ~en it exploded just befon 9 a.m. One officer suffered bums and hand injuries while the other was unde. observation at a hospital after complainina of chest pains. JlbJe accident till• 3, UVare. J CORBIN, K'{. -State mine inspectors were expected to enter ar undcraround coa mine in Whitley County today where three youni coa miners were killed by a toxic gas and a fourth was seriously injured. The miner. were asphyxiated Thursday wben they "just got into some poison gas;· saic county Coroner Carl Paul. One victim, Recd McKiddy, 21 , was the hcensec owner and operator of the mining company, said atate Mines and Mineral! Department spokeswoman Faith Miller Cote. The mine was opened on the si tr of a former strip mine. Lawyer to clJaJlmJle WJaltwortlJ bJterne• SAN FRANCISCO -Retired Navy code expert and accused Soviet Sp) Jerry Whitworth talked with federal a&ents for several hours the dar. the) searched his home, but his lawyer says the conversation and search were 11lep.J Attorney James 1..arson said Thursday that Whitworth was "coerced" intc giving permission for a search of his Davis home in Ma)'. and wai ving hi! Miranda rights not to speak with agents without having his attorney present Whitworth agreed to taUc after an intimidating display of authority by agent! who swarme<I around his modest mobile home. • Speclal .cllool• for rmderprivlleged? LOS ANGELES -Mayor T9m Bradley says his idea for 10stilli~g motivation in underpriviligcd Watts children by placing them in special schools. away from parents. would be based solely upon voluntary cooperation. The mayor, who bad just completed a two-day California tour Thursday, held an airp6rt news confcrcnoc. clarify controversial remarks made Monday on a television special about the 20th anniversary of the Watts riots. He empha.sizcd to reporters at the airport news conference that the plan was voluntary and would involve students, parenlS and teachers in an extended school hours program. Aetna Gale Sondergaard dlet1 LOS ANGELES -Gale Sondergaard, who in 1936 rece ived the first Academy Award for supporting actress and later was blackJistcd dunn1 the McCarthy era. has died at the age of86. Miss Sondergaard died Wednesday of cerebral vascular thrombosis at the Motion Picture and Television Hospital in Wood.land Hills hospital spokeswoman Jean Ferris said Thursday. Her dark, sultry looks made; her a natural for villaincq roles in dozens of films, includi1" that of the title role in \he 1944 Sherlock Holmes picture "Spider Woman, • starring Basil Rathbone. CorJM •y. no to acca.ed anolJUt RAMONA - A judae thou&ht Erik Arthur Kirk would benefit from military trainina, but the Marine Corps said the 18-ycar-old man who pleaded guilty to reckless arson is not on their list of"a few Jood men." Kirk entered the guilty plea with the undentandina be would enlist m the Marines rather than go to pnson. The Marines1. however, said they don't want him, and the original judge removed himsel from the case Tb"ursday, leaving Kirk's fate to the discretion of another judge. Kirk admitted setting off a bottle rocket t!ult caused a $650,000 brush fire to quickJy spread out of control May 14. · Clerk II.nu allfl•tor Jn IJJ61at boz SAN MA TEO -It didn't like coffee to wake up a Peninsula Humane Society attendant arrivina for work. He found a three-foot-Iona alliptor in a niaht-<lcposit box. Such boxes in the society's front wall usually house abandoned d~, cats, birds and other domestic animals. But never bas one as exotic as an aJbptor been left behind, said Susan Regan, a societ y official. .. It's the first one we've had and we're not set up for him, or her," Regan said. No one knows where the alligator came from or where to Ullce it. Cal-Furn U..ruance •aed for $460 mflUon LOS ANGELES -A lawsuit allcaing fraud and breach of contract was filed against Cal-Farm Insurance Co., a writ.er of auto and homeowners insurance that was placed under 1tate conscrvatonhio earlier this year. The $450 million suit was filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Los Anaeles by Cal-Farm's former1eneral agent, Ea&le Bonds and Insurance Brokers Inc., and by California-Pacific Construction Co. and the own en ofboth finns, Errol and John Couplan. The suit alleges Cal-Fann and its officers exposed hundreds of institutions around the country to losses by issuing loans based on more than $100 million in worthless bonds improperly iaaued by Cal-Farm. In January, Cal-Farm filed a S4S million lawsuit apinst Eagle Bonds of suburban Agoura, ldlcginaviollttonrofteOetiil raCkelCenna sfatutcs. ...., Pope~-uuade to ICenya KJNSHASA, Za.irc (AP)-Pope John Paul II' frican campaiJn apmst birth control, abon.ion and sterilization faced · · t cbaJJenae in Kenya. where the 1ovcrnment is encourqjna cont on to stem the fastcst- arowin1 DOPulation in the world. Before arrivi today in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, thc-~pe 1eheduled a brief atop in Lubumbashi, Zaire's second larsest city located 1n the central.African country's mineral-rich 10uth. The pope, who is on the ninth day of a I 2-da)', seven•nation lwin& through Africa, struck at birth control earlier jn the week in Cameroon. Lotltjet taU eridence moantbJ6 TOK YO -American a via lion eJl>Cf\I today flew by helicopter to a remote mountain ndee where S20 people died in the crash of a Ja~n Air Unes jumbo jeL New evidence was found that indicated the plane'• wl acct ion had d.iaintearaced ill fiiaht The American1 -from the federal Aviation AdmJnl1triUoo. the National Transportation Board and the Boeina Commercial Airplane Co. which built the plane -canied cameras and were dttUcd in mountain-dimbina pr. The aroup was accompanied by Japanese inveaiipton. rormer •ded TWA plane iehl.rm LARNACA, Cyprus -The Boeina 727 that bad bcell at Beirut airpon lince it wu bijlckiid by Shiite Moslem ~uemlsu in June Dew here from Lcbenon today with a TWA crew beck at the controls. Thjny-nJne of the plane'1 American pultl\fC!' and crewmembcn had been held captive for 17 days after the hijactina, and one other American wu bot dead by the h1itc Moslem sky pirates. J~ W. Cosley, a TWA poke man, wd the plane was released after ~kl of •aeftlltive" oqotiauoos betWttn several U , and intemauonal •ncia. TWA captain, Richard Vau.151 , of Danvm. Mus. told the media after landina that t.hc crew had been .. , ittle appreben i~e aoa_na in and~ to act out" of Beirut but the airpon officials in Lebenon had been •·very ruce, and they handled us well." ~' Carbide gas cl~ud mislabeled? Federal lnvesttgatora say It contained cancer-causing toxin. not pesticide LOS ANGELES (AP) -Federal investiptors believe a aas cloud that escaped &om a Union Carbide Corp. plant in West Virainia consisted mostly of a potentially cancer-causina to"in, not a pesticide aJ had been believed, according t a published report. Tbc cloud that injured I 35 people Sunday consisted of about two-thirds methylene chloride, a solvent that isa suspected cause of cancer in labora- Ji'..ry animals, and one-third aldicarb Jxime, the Los Angeles Times rc>- ported in its Friday editions. Union Carbide had described the escaping gas as a mix of aldicarb ox.ime, a pesticide ingredient. and dicbJoromethane, a chemical syn- onym fo( methylene chloride, the Times said. But the newspaper said most of tbc company's news retll&Sel have focused on the effects of aldicarb oximc rather than methylene chloride. Thad Epps, a Carbide spokesman in lnstitute, said the company in- dicated Monday that the tank con- tained aldicarb oxime and dimetbylcne chloride. He said he could not comment on the Times report. The newspaper said scientists at Allied Corp., wbicb manufactures aldicarb oximc for Union Carbide, said the chemical properties of the substance "preclude it from responsi- bility for what happened .. at Institute, W.Va. Aldiearb oxime bas a boiling point of 4 JO degrees Fahrenheit, ·makina it impossibfe to generate a cloud of gas that would •tfavel u far as the cloud ,,~ Ca.rtla Zimmerman of Long Beach wu the allent Tlctor Wednesday in a national mime conteet ln Loe Antelee. He won $2,obo and a Roee Parade appearance. Readers off er advice to Sean and Madonna By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 NEW YORK -Today's wedding of rock singer MadoDDa and actor Seu Penn will be just fine with readers of the New York Daily News ·who responded to a survey ask.ing them to write in what they thought of the match and what advice tbe;y would offer the newlyweds. The final tally: 1,253 in favor. 394 opposed and 80 with no opinion. "Never go to bed angry, .. was the advice readef'S most often offered the couple. Second was "Don't let your careers interfere with your life together." One writer advised the couple to avoid the names Play or Fountain for the kids. Judith McAlister of Queens wrote, "Scan should dump Madonna and marry me." while Ray Martinez of the Bronx has his eye on Madonna whose songs included "Like a Virgin" and "Material Girl": "lam I 5 and will be 16 in December if she waits," he wrote. Actor arrested bJ car dlspute LOS ANGELES-Vince Edwards, star of the old "\kn Casey" television series, was freed on bis own recognizance after being arrested on a Tellas warrant which accuses him of keeping a car that was only a loaner. He was arrested Thursday at his Marina del Rey home on a warrant for investigation of felony theft of services, said the actor's attorney, Peter Knecht. Edwards, 57, allegedly failed to return a 1984 Toyota Supra GT, worth $14,000, which be .was loaned under a contract to do commercials for Medi~Quick Inc., a medical aroup based in c;astem Texas. Tbe car was to be returned June 28. The case was continued until mid-September. _is:- Bud80n better, complaln• of food LOS ANGELES -AIDS victim Rock HadlOD is in .. a fabulous frame of mind," and has a healthy appearance but complains about hospital food, his publicist says. "He's reading and doing crossword puzzl~ ... Dale Olson said Thursday after he visited the actor at UCLA Medical Center: .. He -joltes, is receiving vts1tors.""He looks vftal"' Hudson, 59, asked friends to prepare home-cooked treats for him, including Mexican meals, Olson said. He remains in fair and stable condition. Can we talk -about AIDS? LOS ANGELES -Comedian Jou Riven, one of the first Holfywood entertain~rs to become involved in raising money for AIDS research, says Rock Hudson should not have tried to bide the fact tba~ he had the deadly ailment. .. I think the way the situation was handled wu horrendous," tho substitute host for Johnny Carson on the "The Tonight Show," told syndicated columnist Marilyn Beck. " "His people knew the truth all along and should have just come out and acknowledged it was AlDS," she said. Illa BUle to receln $1 mlJHon LOS ANGELES-Actress Doaa RMil will receive more than SI million in a settlement ending an episode of off--itaac intnaue over her loss of the role of Miss Ellie in "Pallu," her attorney said. that hat Institute, said\ James A. Hathaway, medical servi~ director for Allied's chemical division. "When it bit the atmosphere, it would· condense out and drop like rain," he said. Methylene chloride, which boils into a aas easily, can cause nervous system and brain disorders when inhaled in lllJle doses. It can also cause eye, skin and respiratory atrita· tton. Aldicarb oxime, according to tests conducted during the 1970s, produced only "transitory" effects in animals, Hathaway said. . Methylene chloride, a solvent, was placed under special review by the Environmental Protection A~ncy after laboratory tests linked 1t to unusual numbers of maliillant lung and liver tumors in mice. The review will establish whe1her the subsuncc poses a significant health risk to humans. Chemical industry official~ say no link to canoer h.a5 boen pt0ved and other tcsu have shown no caute for concern. The EPA has said tbc t 35 people hospit.ili.D:d after Sunday'a incident will be rcaulatly checked by the federal Cent.en for DilCUC Control for evi~nce of cbroruc or latent health problems.. Tests found that the gueous mix- ture that burst from the lnstitute reactor tank was 65 percent meth- ylene chloride and 35 · percent aldicarb oxime, said Rick Homer, a' chemical engineer with t'1c En· vironmental Protection Agency's Superfund office. Homer said the chances of lasting effecu from the sinale release of gas at Institute are proba&ly low. "I've been exposed lo It myself in laboratory situation& and I don't think they hav&' anything to worry about unless it keeps happening," be said. Dental benefits nixed to lovers 'Of gay workers State Supreme Court also upsets city ban on f ortunetelltng SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Li ve- in lovers ofhomosellual state workers lost a fight for dental benefits when the Cali(omia Supreme Court refused to grant them a bearing. Among the heavy load of cases decided Thursday were rulings on a city's ban of commercial fortune tellers and dama-gcs awarded to two waitresses who were denied jobs by their union after refusing to work as prostitutes. In the decision on dental benefits, the justices refnsed, 5-2, to grant a hearing on the appeal of Boyer Hinman, of Carmi.chael, and a gay- rights group. Hinman, a 12-year employee of the state Employment Development De- partment, filed suit after dental benefits were denied to his compa- rifon, Larry Beatty. Hinman said the couple had lived together for 12 years and would marry if they could. Because same-sex marriages are not recognized by state law, he contended, the denial dis- criminated illesa)Jy against homosex- uals. But the state's 3rd District Court of Appeal ruled in April that the demal was not employment discrimina1jon and was based on marriage, not Agent's weight blamed Mistress' pal testifies · of ex-FBI agent that he was overweight LOS ANGELES (AP) -The mistress of former FBI agent Richard W. Miller refused to acknowledge that she was sexually involved with bun, saying he was "too old and too overweight," one of her friends testified. Testimony Thursday at Miller's trial in U.S, District Court on es- pionage charges repeatedly returned to the defendant's battle wtth obesity. sexual preferenc:e. The Supreme Court declared a city's ban on commercial fortune- telling to be an unconstitutional violation of the freedom of speech. By a 6-1 vote, the court rejected arguments by the Los Angeles County communit)' of Azusa that fortune- telling is "inherently deceptive" and 1s not entitled to constttuttonal protection. Two waitresses won a victory when Justices upheld damages against a labor union that the women say denied them jobs after they refused to work as prostitutes. The court unanimously denied a hearing on an appeal by Local 28 of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Banenders Union. Karen Scritis ofOaltland and Terri DeLoacbe of Berkeley, joined the union in 1974. They said they sought jobs as waitresses but were told by union leader Ray Lane that they could be paid more for having sex with men or with a dog. When they refused, th~y said, Seritis was fired from her JOb as a waitress, and neither woman was ever again referred to a job. In other action, the court agreed to bear the appeal of mobile home owners who were prevented from scllinJ to a family with children. The decision was a setback for mobile home park own~rs because it nullifies an appeals court ruling allowing an adufts-only policy. Gary Auer. chief of the ~l's ~viet counterintelligence squad tn Los ~­ geles and Miller's former boss, satd the FBI repeatedly disciplined Miller for failing to shed weight. 1 1fr~~S~ A psychiatrist warned the bureau Tl two ycan before Mil~er's arrcst that the pressure was pushing him.toward a mental breakdown. Auer satd. Another witness Ludmila Kon- aratjeva, testified that even Miller's lover and a co-defendant. Russian emigre Svetlana Ogorodniltov, re- fused to ack:nowlcd&e she was sexual- ly involved, calling Miller "too old and too overweiaht." Millet, 48, is the fint FBI agent c~ with espionage. He is accused of conspirina to pus classified FBI documenu to Oaorodnikov, a Russian ll')', in exchanse for $65,000 in IOld and caab. A halr-nt••n1 experience Tunko pla19 wtdl aa antdentlfled soo emplOfee wbo a.ct8 u a n.nopte motller at tbe Brons Zoo in hopea of redacm, the moitallty rate baby &ortllu face. Ber chaJ'&ee are blCJl rtak, beblC the oftaprtD.C of a flnt-time mother. . Ex-KGB major says spies in San Diego SAN DIEGO (AP) -A former ~or in the Soviet KGB sa.td San Diego's proximity to the Mexican border makes it the perfect target for Soviet spies interested m tugh-tecb- nology '8dgctry produced and de- veloped 10 the area. .. llccntltment of agents takes time. But no doubt, there are some," Stanislav Alcksandrovich Lcvcbenlto said Thursday of the possibility that spies are worlcing in San Diego. Lcvchenko, who served in Tokyo until he defected in October 1979, was in town to address representa· tivcs of San Diego's high-technology industry. Except for a noon press briefing. the meeting.jointly sponsor- ed by the San Diego Crime Com- mission and the San Diego FBI office, was closed to the public. "Here, they can just cross the border into Mexico, where KGB agents feel _quite secure, where they can spend days in training," be said at the briefing, addina that the Soviet Union places "enormous" import- ance r-Qn the acquisition of high technolojy from the United States. He esumattd that between 40 to 45 percent of the approximately 4,000 Soviet-bloc citizens in this country are professional agents. "It's vital that they pin this technology, because without acquisi- tion of things produced in California and San Dieao. it is very difficult for them to update themselves in the development of new weapons. .. Recently, the San Diego FBI office increased its espionqe staff by 25 percent to help stem the loss of techliology to forci_gn nations, accord- ing to Gary Penrith. special agent in charge of the San Diego FBI. He said an average of 40,000 illegal aliens cross into the U.S. from Mexico each month and that about three percent a.re from countries other than Mexico. "We are doing a lot of intelligence oo people in this area, or who arc vtsiti.ng this area, who we believe are connected wt\h a hostile intelli&ence service," Pennth said. Roger S. Young. executive director of the San Die&o Cnme Comnussion, said Thursday's meeting was or- ganized to make the city's !ugh technology officia.Js aware of the problem and what they might do to safeguard the11 technology. • 5.01 cu ft freezer. • Adjustable tempered glass shelves • Sealed snack pack • Helps keep fOOds fresh up to 15 days with sealed h1gh- "um1dHy 1)1m. and ao1ustable control • Energy saver switch helps cut operating cost • EQutpped for opttonal automatic 1cemaker • $pacemaker door holds &<packs • Teittured doors won I show fingerprints The qrecment was reaf-bcd Monda.y in nea~tialions, with an attorney for Lori mar Producuons. producer of the hit CBS prune-time soap opera, Michael Donaldson wd Thunday. The actrc , 64, sued Loriltlar for $7.S million for breaking her three-year contract to replace hct witb Barbara Bel Ocddes. _ Durl~-ber own trial earlier, OIOf'OdD.it:OY confeued &be was a Rusaian spy and pleaded auilty &Jona with bet buabl.nd. Nikolay. They bave been 1eotenced to prison. Tbe atiJl..port.ly Miller sat solemnly Tbunday, taki_q noca u vritneaet diaculted bis failure at weiaf\t watch· LOW m•eY-1'1.7 ••. ft. 'AwlaJ Annie' l'fW•ln• toraJ •tam. LONDON -PrlKeu AaM. once rcfermd to in tbe British press as "Princess Grump" and "A~J ~.nic..".wuloutcd u .. our true pnnceu" in one of the country s daily tabloads. r On Anne's 35th blnhd.ay Thu.nday, the tabloid Minor u~ the oocaslon to praise her for her work u prestdent of Save the Children Fund which bas taken her to several Third Wotld oat.ions. 'he spent her birthday crui ina oft' the coast of Scotland on the royal yacht Brittani•. ~th her cbildrcn. Pe~r. 7, and Zara. 4. Buckinaham Palace aid. · . ~onsra\Jeva, a Soviet cmiln:, re- called that Mn. OJotodniJcov brouabt Miller to a dinner p&ny at her home in A~st 1984, iotroduclf\l him u "Richard.'' ber busincsa woclate. Tbe witness. who said she knew QaolOdnikov bad marital problem"- tcsllfied thal she asked the woman if her ••busuteu friend" was really a bovf'riend or lo~. ' «si\, uict .. N~ it's llOl my lova-. Heu 100 otd and overwdabt for me • ~ it ia not a lover.'" she recalled. T ... MtlRATOR •·•·· ....... I I . I . ' • Cherrtist given endowed professorship at UC Irvine Nancy Kidder Kidder named acting dean at Golden West Nancy Ktdder has been appointed acting dean of admissions. records and guidance at Golden West College in Hununaton Beach. She has returned to the admissions area after a two-year stint as Golden West's associate dean of college and student services. Ktdder. 39. graduated from the University of Redlands with a degree in history. She received a teaching credential from UC Irvine and an master's 1n counseling from Cal State Fullenon The Golden West administrator 1s a member of the Center 500 Group for the Orange County Perfomm1g .\ns Center and 1s a member of the board for the Contemporary Group at Newport Harbor Art Museum. Ktdder 1s a resident of Newport Beach Champagne Sand~y Branch Dr. Peter R~tzepas of Irvine hu been appointed to an endowed pos- ition as a professor of chcmisny at UC Irvine. Rentzepi11 a pioneer in lasar- induced chemical reactions, comes from BcU Laboratories an Murray Hill, N.J., where he served as director of the physical and inorganic chemistry depanment. He 1~ the second person to be given an en- dowed chair at UCI. "VCI offers many opportunities for me to expand my areas of research, and I also want to be a pan of the campus's continued arowth ahd excellence, "sa1d Renuepas. At the university, Rentzep1s plans to continue his studies of tnteracuons Mary Richmond Q _, Enjoy Our Full Servlc::e In the Mediterranean Room 10:00-3.00 pm. ~ 1 ··~ ' ~ ~,I ~RTER~· ~HOTEi.~ 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine (714) 833-2770 Co II• <>rant• CA>unt11 Alrpon) CAPRICCIO CAFE BE.UNCH \\'ITH AN OCEAN VIEW . CHA \itPAC;NE B 'FFET 9 10 2 :JO 900 ~E\\ PORT CTR. DR. :-.iEWPORT BEACH Su11dag lJeg11clt ""tile 1Patee/e"11t e""'"""'""'"1' ~,N,,1u • toaM-3""' w. C!41Ut ""'*·' ~ a"aa 6.,2·3~31 *" aa,,Ytl --- of molecules in the hquad and solid phases. Library tra•tee IJoaored Mary Richmond was recently honqred for her 8 years of service on tht Newport Beach Library Board of Trustees at a luncheon at the Balboa -vacht Club. Richmond, who served four tel11\S as the board'schamnan and also held the posauons of vice chair and secretary, was presented with a gold charm engraved with the Library loao, and praised by present and former members of the Newport Beach Public Library. UCI lellotnlJlp Kurt E1selt of Irvine, a graduate student 10 the Department of lnfor- mauon and Computer Science at UC Irvine, has been awarded the Joseph l . Fischer Mem onal Endowed Fel- lowship for 1985-86. The award, which recognizes Eiselt's academic acheivement, in- cludes payment of all required gradu- ate student fees. Dari• deaa'• ll•t Brian Kennelly Jr. of Newport Beach has been named to the UC Davis dean's honor list in the Colleje of Letter and Science. The honors list 1s based on Spnng 1985 grades. Kennelly was one of 1.135 to be honored at the Davis campus 1h1s spnng Art faculty ulJlblt The art faculty of Coasthne Com- munity College have placed vanous drawings, paintings and sculptures on ex habit on the first floor of the College Center in Fou!ltaan Valley. Open to the public, the exhibition will run through Mo11day, September 9. Gallery hours arc 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday throu&h Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. i:'riday. Several members of the faculty have won local and national reconi- tion an Juried an shows. For more informauon on the gallery or art clases, contact CCC at 546-7600. Ma•ten In ba•meu Linda Barwick of Laguna Niguel recently received a master of business administration with distinction from National University in Irvine. Barwick earned a grade point average in the lbp 10 percent of her summer graduating class Top •tafl member Gana Bloomfield of Irvine was named ."Outstanding Staff Member of the Quarter" for National Univer- sity's Orange County locations. Bloomfield is a financial aid ad- visor at NU's Orange County campus an Irvine. She was nominated by summer graduates as being the most helpful to them during their studies at NV . Bloomfield is currently enrolled in accounting and finance courses at Nauonal University. Loma Lmda award · Annette Murray of Costa Mesa recently received an academic award from Loma Landa University. Murray, currently a sophomore in the School of N ursang at Loma Landa, maintained at least a B average last year. and prove herself a co mpetent student m learning nursing skills. She is scheduled to graduate w11h ~ bachelor of science in 1988. At the Jam ree LUe &coat 8teftD Paster. rtcJlt. of Ban=n Beach and Scoat Jlm Aldrlcla of <>ranee pat tile ftn toachee to a campelte ploneertna project at tile Scoa~'• 75tla an· nlff1'8&1'7 Jamboree laeld recently ln Vlr~. l"oeter. i:i, l• a member of Troop 22-la Ba.ntiJICton Beach. OeaJ19e C?ctut SUNDAY BRUNCH GUIDE COUNTRY STYLE 10 am to 2:30 CHAMPAGNE BUFFET BRUNCH Featuring Omt ltts to ordtr. wafflts, baton of $} } 95 bttf & ham Plus much mort TI£ B'MJ RESTAURA"IT & SALOON "' -- For lnformatfon.- c.ll atenct. C•ponera at IU-41211212. Sundays 10-3 Champagne, tool (Asti Spumante) 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644-2030 Satarda.v a Sanday Branch T ' J: •• ~~"~alboa __l, _J: •Huevo1 Ranchero1 ~ L-: • Briney Deep Benedict • A11ort~d Omel1tH • . ~ FROM $3.75 !fam to 3 pm 801 E. Balboa 673-7726 SERVING COUNTRY STYLE SUNDAY BRUNCH '1.99 lnclud .. S...rqe-Well Drink°" Beer .Jl_ 9 Al4-1 :00 ~h7J~:~=· 646-8091 ~-'• ~---.::....-------------------------------------------~ ~~--j No favorite yet in skirmish for Cranston seat State poll shows r-se_n_a_t:--o-r-:;;f;:-ar_a_h=--ea-d-=-- of GOP opponents SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sev- eral Republicans say tbey are interesled in chaUenJina U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston in next year's election, but a California Poll reponed Thurs.. day none of the GOP hopefuls is a· clear leader. The poll also indicates that Cranston~ a Democrat, would beat •ny of nine Rel>ublicans who've expressed interest ln bis seat. Four of the Republicans in the race received the suppon of more than 10 percent of the 309 rqistered GOP voters polled. Leadina the aroup was state Sen. Ed Davis, R-Chatsworth, with the sup- port of l S percent of those polled. Bruce Herschenson, a Los Angeles television and radio commentator. was close behind with 12 percent. Los Anaetn County Supervisor Mike Antonovich a.n4 U.S. Rep. Bobbi Fiedler of Northridac uch received 11 percent of the support. The five Republicans with smaller amounts of support were economist Arthur Laffer, with 7 percent: Rep. Daniel Lunaren of Lona Bctch and state Assemblyman 1'.oben Naylor of Menlo Park. with 4 percent each· and Reps. William Dannemeyer of Full- erton and Ed Zechau of Los Altos. with 3 percent each. But the 30 percent of those polled who said they were still undecided indicates the race ii aUU wide open. Cranston came out well ahead when pitted apinat each challenpr. The closest race was between €ran.ston, with S6 percent, and Davis, with JS percent. ... The poll also ~rted that 46 , percent of S 16 Californians polled thouaht Cranston was doing a good or excellent job u a 1enator, with 39 percent sayina the same about Re- publican Sen. Pete Wilson. Camp Fire fans reliance flame FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP)-Atage 7S, Camp Fire Inc. is mixing camping with courses m self-reliance and is working to attract boys and girls in an effort to encouraae them to relate as equals. Eight hundred high school memben of Camp Fire -they dropped Girls from the title six year ago-are spending the week at Colorado State University, attending seminan and hearing from such high achievers as astronaut Sally Ride. Camp Fire's leaders, meanwhile, reviewed the organization's progress over the decade since boys were admitted. "It was a courageous move," Karen Bartz, Camp Fire's director of research and development, said at the National Horizon '85 Conference, which ends Friday." Men and women bave-fo relate as equals. "They t\a ve to have flexible roles, be caring, compassionate, · strona and assertive. The best way to get men and worpen to that plane is to bring them up together." "· · . While onlySO'ofthc Horizon conference panicf pants are boys, there are postive signs in Camp Fire's younger ranks. Of its 380,000 members, 45,000 are boys. But half the Sparks. who are kindergarten-age, are boys. . "'The test will be whether as many boys as girls continue," said PhyllisSchoedel, a Spokane, Wash., attorney and Camp Fire's volunteer president. "(Boys) haven't been breaking down the gates, but the caliber of young men who'vejoined us is very high. We're delighted with their response," she said. Camp Fire Inc .. based in Kansas City, Mo., was founded in 1910 as Camp Fire Girls, a group similar to the Girl Scouts. Many variations of AIDS render vaccin~ difficult By WARREN E. LEARY ,,....._ ..... WASHINGTON (AP) -The virus suspected of causing AIDS has so many variations in its genetic s~ructure . that d~veloping. a preven- uve vaccine apinst the disease may prove very difficult, if it can be done at all, researchers said Thursday. Scientists at the National Cancer Institute said they looked at the suspect virus found in 18 patients with AIDS or at high risk of getting the disease and that each isolated virus showed a different variation in its genetic structure. The findinp, to be published Friday in the journal Science, mean that It could be difficult to find a common site on the viruses that-can were subject to repeated exposures to diverse viruses. The sci en tis ts said this suggests that some type of interference process may occur so that one variant becomes dominant. AIOS 1s a disease believed caused by a virus that destroys the body's protective immune system and leaves the victim vulnerable to infections and other diseases, including cancers. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. For Tiit Rast of Your life 1922 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA-548-1156 FARMERS INSURANCE be targeted for preventive and thera-Hive 1 Safe Summer peutic measures, they said. ui To develop a vaccine, researchers ~ Im lllUUICE say they need to find a common Founded 1957 protein region, preserved in all vari-.. ations of the virus, that triggers an . immunologic response. If the body has ~n ~reviously 131·7'740 Manacled John J . Walker lea•eejall for court: \ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Frldey, Augwt 18, 1815 * A7 Fans fionor Elvis on anniversary of death MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Thousands of fans toured Elvis Presley's mansion and visited his "'vc Thursday, ~yi~ tribute to the 'kina of rock 'o roU with j)()emt, nowcn and photoanphl before the eighth annivenarr, of his death.· · A week of tributes and events dedicated to Presley, who died Aua. 16, 1917, was centered on a memorial service and candleliaht m~h late Thursday. The event wu cxpeCted to attract l 0,000 or more f&ns. said officials of Graceland Enterprises Inc., which operat~s the mansion 11 a · tourist an.ractioni "It's a beautiful sight," said Graceland spokesman David Beckwith. "We have the memorial service in the street in front of Graceland, and then we open the ptes, and they li&ht a torch from the eternal flame at die arave and bring it down. ''Then ·people lisht their candles and walk up the driveway to the crave and then come back down," he II.id. The 1ervices were befun 1982, shortly after ~land wu opened t0 visiton, and each yq_.r the crowd arowa lll)et, Beckwith said. Fans from 11 far away as Japan, Australia and Sweden come to Memphis on the anniversary of Presley's death to tour his home, attend conceru and film festivals, participate io trivia and art contcsU and awap Elvia memorabilia. Oraoeland offlciala estimate that 20,000 to 30,000 people will Ylllt Memphis durlDJ this year'• &n· nivmary week. The candleliJht service is sponsor· ed by the E1Yls Country Fan Oub. BcckWith said. "The crowd is usually pret\)' re- terved, •• be said. ··A lot of people ue here to mourn, but there arc some wbo are oelcbratina. especially the British. Thc,tve been hav1na danClCI every n{aht.' The fans troo_p throuab the Gcor- lian mansion's tint floor at the rate of 3,400 a day, Beckwith 111d. Ad· minion to the hou.C is S6.~0 for adults and $4.SO for children. Fana may also walk throuah Presley'lt two JC'l planes, a CoovaLr 880 ~nd a smaller Lockheed JetStar, for ~3.SO. For S 1, viaiton may inspect the bus Preiley took on tours. Many of the visitors bnn.a aifts such as pbotoaraphs, poems and teddy bean, or floral tributes for Pre11cy's arave, which is at the south end of the house. Beckwith said the dJsplays wtll remain on view all week: Afterward, the sifts will be stored.in a warehouse near Graceland. Navydocuments Lagunaharpslchordlst OK'd. . I IlseFoerstel-Bllssdles 1n spy tr1a .Ille Foent~l-Bli~ of Lquna describe. h~ as a "JUdJCl~U5 per· Niauel, a harpsichordist and teacher, former with much sohd mu- died Aua. 6 al\cr an extended illness. siciansb1p, a sence of musical under- BAL TIM ORE CAP) -A bag of classified Navy documents that John A. Walker Jr. admitted leaving along a roadside may be used in his espionage trial, a judge ruled Thurs- day. But he disallowed some state· ments made by Walker after his arrest. May l 9 and returned twice to sec if the transfer had aone according to P.lans and if llis "contact" had left a 'delivery." Mason argued that Walker retained ownership of the bag and that the FBl's seizure of the property was an invasion of privacy. But Harvey said that when Walker left the· documents in a trash bag 12 feet from the edge of a rural road, he '!could hardly have a reasonable expectation of privtlcy." Mn. Foentel-Bliss was born June standing and the ability to project that 11, 1918, in uipzia, Ger., the only undcrstandma." daughter of Charlotte and Gerhardt Her final performance took pl.ace 1n Foremel. The Forerstel family had March of 1984 when she appeared been, for generations, a family of with the Brentwood-Westwood Sym- musicians. phony in a program broadcast over Mn. Foentel-Bliss was well ltnown KUSC. in Southern California both as a She is survived by her husband, performer and through her work m Russell, and her son, Christopher local and nationaJ music organiza-Bliss. - lions. A memorial se(Vlcc will be held U.S. District Judge Alexander Harvey II said it was legal for FBI a~ents to seize the paper grocery bag without a search wamnt because Walker had abandoned it, without identification marks and with trash piled atop the inch-thick stack of 120 documents taped in a white plastic bag. As a soloist, she bad toured Euro{>C Sept. 6 at 11 a.m. at tbe South Shores several times and played a recital in Baptist Church in Laguna Nlguel. New York City's Town Hall that The family requests memorial dona- Mason said he confirmed Walker's prompted the New York Times to tions to the American Cancer Society ownership of the baf solely for the purpose of his pretria argument, and 1.--------------------------thc information could not be con-A lawyer for Walker, Thomas Mason, confirmed at the pretrial hearing that the retired Navy com- munications expert had dropped the bag along the road at Poolesville, nohhwest of Washington, D.C .. on espionage charg#"s. -strued as an admission of auilt to the 0. inner The judge planted a defense mo- tion to supp~ss.statements Walker made May 20. the day of his arrest. NEW J •• , PANASONIC V H S Video c;....,.,. ••corder (PV-JSSO) -;~~~ • Front Loading • 1'-D•ll I 2 Event Timer ' Stand·by One Touch Recording • Remote Control """' htt ..... •' Viti-o.,,_t a. ........... ,. We wlll MEET or BEAT •11v •dvertl•ed price• ol J 986 P•11••011lc video eqalp•e11t 111 •toclt If Video Depot No•l• Cl•lt Neat.erelrilp le .. reaia-c1. "' (A••-• t25, LUe ta•. eood at all o•r •• ea.ala etoree) ---------MOVIE UNTAU---------. EVERV DAV IS "SP£CIAL" AT VIDEO DEPOT NEWPORT BEACHlll l••l'Y W-'•• ... Vl 99( per movie overnight l••tV Fn'8v A ....... .,, Rent 3. receive l frH. end kHP th•m until Monday/Tuetdey, for $10 1••'11 M••••v A T•a..tav1 Rent 2. receive I lrH, and kHp them unlit W1dn1ada11/ThurMlay, for 17.50 ·Music.· Just listen to that incredible crunch. It's a prelude to the best fish in town-our famous LONG;:;;:;;edfi~~ StLVEl{S. f6'WP., .. 3095 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa (Across from Fedco) pnmea to produce ant1bodies to this ~41 Old Ntw"Port BIYd. Newport Bfach area. such as throuah vaccination ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ with the protein produced by the tarseted genetic reaion, then it may be possible for people to resist the Virus when they come in contact with it. Ors. Aossie Wong-Staal, Robett C. Gallo, Mikulas Popovic and col-teaaues at the institute also said there was no distinct viral pattern found in patients with actual acquired disease mununity syndrome as opposed to those with a similar immunity dt_.., order called AIDS-related complex or those who were viral carrien without any disease symptoms. Gallo, a cx>.dilQOvcrer of the sus~virusca1ledHTLV-m1 saidin an interview that the viral diversity "i• a worry when it comes to vaccine development." "lfwe find no conserved, common reaion or if it is not immunol~c. it would aive us mucl\ concern. ' "But we do~'t thint this wjll be an tn1urmountat>Je problem," Oallo said, alludin.a to yet-unpublished raearch oomina from hit laboratory. The researcher added that the viral divenity should not have a &re&t effect oh eff'oru to develop chemical aaents to contain the disease or attack tho virus in the cells of infected patients. The studies, conducted with Phillip Markham of Utton Bionetica Inc., and Robert Redfield of the Walter Reed Anny ln1titute of Research also round that only two of the ti pttient1 showed cv1dence of actual infection by more than one viral vari&JJt. even thouah many patients - ·" -(~-. Look for the Daily Pilot's feature pages for Home and Garden now ap- peuing in every Saturday morning's paper. To Adverti1e In Thia Section. Call 642-4321 ,. l •• Smokenders makes it easy. Just give us one hour to prove it. Have you ever tried lo Qu•t o• thou~P"' aoout Qu1111ng smoking? Would you Qu11 rt you couto be l•Pfl' of the u•qe and e1es1re 10 smoke' Would you qu11 11 you couio do 11 w•lhout scare ldCl•CS shock ireatments coto turkey w1thd1awa oruqs ctrmoing the walls ga1n1nQ we1gt11 embarrassment or w•llC>?wer' We can he1p .,,0\1 We .it! nt• Ot>C ~u,..d•eas • thousanos ot smoke1.-,., ric,. '9h4 Ma101 coroora11oric; n;he c;,e1e '+.>11 ... ~ r, r t>IP their emotovees Our orogral"I meets •hp Qwde ,,.,·,., ot 1'1t' US Si.rgeon G neral ano nas nepri CKC•Pdrteo Even 11 yov tee, v<>11 ._,,Qn' t::i 1111•' Ou' .,ol .. ,., ' rea1t\' want 10 .utt>nO a t Pt' mc .. trria ATTEND OUR FIRST MEETING FREE ... NO COST OR OBLIGATION -- I J City didn't lose to Krishnas, but to itself The headline read, .. Laguna gives in to K.risbnas," but any su'8estion that the O ty Council's attempt to ~ecp a religious festival off Maih Beach was defeated by the sect treats the members of the council too kindly. They Jost the legal fight with the International Society of Krishna Consciousness before it began because they were arrogant and ignorant. . The City Council established one policy for pa.rtles of whom it approved and another for tone-deaf people with odd haircuts. Such blatant discrimination could never withstand a court test. When it became clear the K.rishnas were able and willing to spend the money to force the city to defend itself before a judge, the jig was up. In February, the JocaJ K.rishnas made formal application to the city to hold their Festival of India at Main Beach Park. The request was denied, based on an existing policy to prohibit booths, tents. stages and the like to keep the beach open for sunbathing and other more traditional sand and surf pastimes. The city made a concession, offering an aJtemate site that the K.rishnas found unacceptable, apparently because it was away from the well-traveled pedestrian pathways where they might proselytize the public. That policy, sensible as it may be, didn't last another full moon. The city Arts Commission stood before the council members, JUSt as the guys in the pony tails and robes had done, and asked for.permission to hold their Arts-in-Motion festival -complete with structures upon which art would be djsplayed -on Main Beach. Three members of the City Council -a majo~ty acting on the advice of City Manager Ken Frank - voted to ignore their policy and aJJow the art show. The Krishnas, who filed a First Amendment suit after their denial, licked their chops. 0 It just makes our pending suit stronger ... " their lawyer observed propheti- cally. The city a~eed quietly on July 29 to allow the Festival of IndJa on Main Beach. It would be nice to think council m embers bad recognized that aJJ citizens have equal rights and are entitled to equal treatment. But it is more likely they just saw that they were going to lose. LETTERS \ Wllllazn Buckley's got b.lgb. court dead to rights. To the Editor· Mr Buckle;\ article: IDail; Pilot Aug. I) touched upon the heart ol many of the nation's developing 1lh up to and through rnal-use of tht: Supreme Court SJnce the FOR era. A. check of the record will show that since the humble beginning of our ( onst1tut1on and llS \hnsuan his- tory. and up to the FOR era. the Supreme C ourt rulings and defined interpretat1ono, of th e ( on<,t11ut1on could be countt:d on ahoul two hand<; Namely. a ver; few fl'\l'r\al figure\ However. in the f-UK t•ra there were over 133 rcver~ls' Since that penod, then ..ecm\ to be more and more leverage to re- interpret what our forefathcr'> C'>tab- hshed with prudenct 1udgmt'nt and deep forethought It 1s high time we tool.. a look at what "trend" our I n11cd '>talc\ ol Amenta 1<; OK'1ng a\ .. normal pr<Xcdure" and \trongl; re-establish the ~undoes\ found in the Const1tu- 11on. To continue otherwise 1s to allow "cnd runs"' 1n more mal-Judgments from the bench and a further erosion of our ongrnal ('hnst1an way ofhfe. The revcrsaJs by the high courts would make a good ~tudy. In closang.1t would be also interest- ing to note that our.Consutution 1s traced to the Ten <rzommandments, the Bill of Rights, Declaration of Independence, Magna Carta and other h1':ltoncal documents, sueh a!> the Ma yflower Compact of 1620. Mr Buckley's article on Mr. Nor- man Lear and the fate of the third branch of our government 1s hangin& 1n the balance Let'':I hope that the JU~llce bal· ilncing ':IC31c'> arc once again 1n balance! < DR JAC K H T PRENTICE USNR Ret. Ralboa Island Urban game wardens Were )OU aware that numerou\ game wardeni. work daily an Nt·v. York C It)·~ Borough of Manhattan'' Indeed ~mng the lotxtercatch down at the Fulton fish Market. ( hccking out exotic pct ''itore'> C onl1-.cu11ng leopard-skin bae,'> and the ltkc No cat purr<, when alone Nepal's Buddh1,1-, 1n lhc- monastery of Th}angboche at the hanan-La altitude of i:l, lf.IO feet sometimes 1n their mHtenou\ ler- emon1es nng a gong. h~ e11011<. HinC' hnacrs 1n the chill thin air for a long moment to charm 1he wonderment of '1.11ln&efS In fact. that gong '' an old oxyaen cylinder ahandoncd hy an Everest exped1t1on Q. Who wa~ thc-fir\I d.111}' ru•w1,. paper column1,1'1 A. £u&cne Field Worktd tor the old Oucaao Daily New' Q What word b.:<.omc\ \hnrtn wM'n you add two ltllt't4! lo 1t'' A. Short ORANGE COAST llilJPilai The Tarahumara lnd1anc, of Mex- ico herd cattle but never milk them, and don't kill them, either, except for rehgou, fea'it\. They live on the edge of starvation. the Tarahumaras do. Y ct the; 're the one!> you read about - the endurance champions who don't ride but run three or four days at a \tretch to get somewhere and back. Accordin& to our Language man. the government officially call~ tl "L1beny £.nlig.hteninF the World," hut the people -here s to the people, clink ' -l.-11 11 "The Statue of Libert) " P1rturc hall a walnut with a small pearl 1n 11 -that'5 JUSt about the c,amc-3\ ;.1 humm1ngb1rd's nest with an cu thcn:1n In ~Ull\ '\frica s Salisbury. to act 10 the plate <.ailed 4X>uth Garbaae. )'OU ha.veto dn vt down a road named Rotten Row l .M. Soyd 11 • 1yedlc•t~ colamaJ1t. I ,, ... 111 Dnl (dltOI Tem Telt ............ g:-..::.•J =i::" ' .. It ·s a tem6Je tragedy If J 6'percent Of children are abused In the home. but that certainly Is no justlflcaUon for scaring the other 84 percent..· " ' PHTLLl8 8CHLAl'LY colamnlat PHYLLIS ScHt AFLY Schools focus on ab.use in hoines If you thought children 1n the first three grade!> of school were ,pending all their time learning the bastes (reading. 'nlmg and 'rithmeuc). you will be surprised to learn that some schools are teaching a new subJect 1n those tender years. It's a course about incest, physical and ~xual abuse, alcoholism and domestic violence. Learning-disabled youthS achievesuccessatMardan These courses ha ve e:totlc names and. of course. enJ9Y t.axpayer fund- ing. One. called .. Protective Behav- iors Ant1 -Vict1m Tra1n1ng," 1s claimed to be in use in 34 states. Jt has crea1ed quite a stir 1n W1scons1n where 11 onginated. If this IS news to rou, you might think tha1 some usefu purpose would be served by warning little children not to get in the automobile of a stran~er who offers a candy bar. Bui that isn't what this course 1s about Only one out of 86 pages conccmr. dangers from strangers· the rest of the course 1s about danger5 the child ma; face in the home Pupils who app ear 'slow ' could have .a learning problem As 0ran,e County continues to p-ow. llS need for special services and institutions continues to grow along with the incT'CaSe in population. The seed s are many and vaned, and one of these 1s the need to provide for children Wllh learning d1sab1h11es. Lcarnina and arowmg arc the two most important aspects of attaining matun\y from childhood to adulthopd. Unfortunately, there arc many children who arc average - even bnght -in intelligence. bu1 are unable to team . Lcamang disabilities derive from a variety of factors, both physical and emotional, and manifest themselves in various ways. Unfortunately, children w11h team- ing disabilities that have not been properly diagnosed are often thought of as troublemakers, as unable 10 adJust or merely slow. These are problems which cause great suffering in families, disrupting the household and the lives oft.he parents. Fortunately, something can be done to change all of this -to make the child able to team and 1n turn become a respected pan of society. In Orange County, the Mardan Center of Educational Therapy wa\ MARTIN BROWER begun in Costa Mesa 23 years ago by David Eisenmann. During the past ncarl)' quarter c~ntury, Dave Eisen- man and his dedicated ,roff have quietly worked wonders w11h learn- ing-disabled children Children who reached an advanced llfe wtthout being able to read have since gradu- ated from maJor un1vers1t1es Children are referred to Mardan Center by the public schools through- out Orange County. and 1t 1s Mardan's goal to return these chil- dren to the public schools in as short a time as possible. Nothing runs smoothly, and even an 1nstituuon as outstandang as Mardan has had Its problems. These. came in the wake of Propos1t1on 13 which reduced propert} taxes but also reduced the amount of money avail· able to school d1stncts When a school refers a child to Mardan. it also has to refer the money the school normally receives from the state. And so some school district!. <;topped refernng children. Mardao made up some ot the referral deficit by ofTcnng scholar- \h1ps secured from chantable foun- -----........ dauons and from fund-ra1s1ngevent~ It also began accepting ch1ldrC'n direct I> who~ parents could afford to pa) without a scholarship And 1t started a pre!.(hool that has become a h1ghl> successful pr~ram of its own. Mardan 1s housed 1n Costa Mesa''I former city hall, and through success- ful fund-raising programs now owns the building and the land beneath 11. Plans are under way to expand and upgrade lhe school slructure and the grounds Naturally enough, that will mean another fund-ra1s1ng program A non-profit. non-~tanan school, Mardan 1s governed b; a blue ribbon advisory coun<:il and a community volunteer board of directors. Matdan students have come and contanue to come. from all walkc; of life Some of the cou nt> ·s most notable fam1he'!I ha ve had children attend Mardan, and some of the county's most needy fami lies have also been able to benefit. We salute Mardan, Dave E15Cn· mann and his long-time associate Richard Schnetzer for their dt>d1- cat1on to the children ofMardan And we encourage parents who have reason to bcl1 e .. e their child ha!> a lcarningd1sab1llty to investigate what Mardan has to offer. The success rate 1s phenomenal. I am proud to be a member of the board of director<;. Mart/a Brower publi•bes tbe m ontbly newsletter "Marlia Brower's OraJJge CoUJ)ty Report " The course consists of a sencs of lessons about hor:rible hypothetical experiences that allegedly may occur to a child 1n his own home or as a resu lt of the misbehavior of his parents. No wonder parents object to the course. they pertc1ve 11 as an ta -~rent a'i indeed 1t I\ It ~ares the child into believing that home 1s a hostile environment and that the chief threat to h1'1 safety 1<; from 'iomeone an hi-. own family. The child 1s taught 10 expect lhat hi\ parents probably will not believe him 1f he tells them his fears. So. the child 1s required to set upa network ol mostly NON-parents in whom he I'> to confide. Even the semantics of 1he cour~ are anu-parcnt. The manual never mentions mother. father, mom or dad. but refers exclusJ vely to "grown- up5 at home .. or "household people · The onl; mention of "parent" 1s about a parent abusing his own child The loursc includes a "81bllo· graphy of Children's Literature" made up exclus1vel) of depressing, books about disturbing events 1n the home. ugly remarks. fam ily quarTCI· lfl&, divorce. domestic v1olencc, al- c~ohsm or mental 11lnes<, It doesn't include an> book of hope, inspira- tion nobility or family love. Fedsoutofmoneyto pay farmers '·insurance claims The child is led to believe thl' g1gant1c falsehood that these evils are typical. normal or common to most homes. The figures given in the cou~ itself (which may be exag- gerated) indicate that only one out of five householdr. cxpenences suual abuse, domestic violence or physical abuse, and only one out of three homes experiences alcoholic abuse. The course attempts to Justify iiself by reiterating the statistic that 80 percent of the abuse of children comes from adults whom the child knows and trusts. This figure 1s used in a very misleading way It docs not mean 80 percent of children are subject to child abuse; at is 80 percent of the 20 percent of the children who are allegedly subject to child abuse,' which is onl y 16 percent of children. But agency did find funds to treat officials to $90,000 dude ranch retreat WASHINGTON -Tens of thousands of Amcnca's farmen - who ha ve weathcted devastating drought. torrential hail storms, hordes of grauhopper\ and fore- closing bankers -now have a new won) There 1s senous doubt that the federal &overnment will make good on future crop-insurance claims The agency that make\ the pay ments. the Federal Crop Insurance Corp. 1s insolvent. barely hvin& from one stoppp measure to another In past columns. we warned that the FC'IC had no money left to pay the ansurance claims filed hy farmers for crop losses -even though the farmers had paid premium~ for the protcqion We described the agenc)"~ effoo' to salva&e the s1tuauon a~ akin to the steward rearranging deck chair\ on the T1t.an1c But even a\ we wrote th<>st columns, the &&.ency. which had run $861 m1lhon an the red over the last f1vc yea~. managed 10 come up w11h enough scratch to treat 4S of lls officials and their secret.ant\ to n week at a.dude range in W1ckcnhurl- Ant Accordin& to promotional litera turc of fl Rancho de los Caballero\, "the accent 11 on leisure and rdaxa- uon" Amcn1t1e~ include tenni, courts, tnipshootina. horse trails, an 18-hole aolf coune and. of counc. a 'w1mm1n1 pool Cattle '"roundu~" can be arranaed The usual cost 1s SI 06toS110 a day per person. but the fC I( 101 a discount that allowed 1t to meet aovemment allowances of S 7.S a day, an aaency spoke man said. An F IC source said the tot.al bill wu $90,000. The purpose of the aet-t<>scther WU to plan lht ~·s future courae, but perhaps its official' can't be blamed for not comma up with 1 muter plan, what with all the d11tt'IC'l1ons a\'a1l· able. Shortl) after all that leisure and - relaxauon, the bottom fell out of the FCIC On July 17, Secretary of Agnculture John Block suspended payment, on insured losses. The FCIC ha, not yet begun to pay the leg1t1mate claim, again. It'-; a 'lenous matter when the farmers can't collect their chums. but the \1tuauon is really IJ1m when the fCIC's own offic1als can't collect their pay. All 1tscmployct'i, including FC I( Manager Mcmtt Sprague h1m~lf, were notified there would be no money to pay their salanes after Aug 25. They would have to he furloughed, unle s Congress rus'hcd in with some emergency money. The reason for this sorry state had to do with a nifty httle maneuver the H IC people pulled off secretly several months aao when they trans- ferred $50 m1lhon of administrative and o~rat1ng funds 10 the bankrupt cl:u ms d1' 1\1on Thi~ b1 t of Peter-Paul robbery was not only foolish, but "improper." accord1n& to an intemnl General Account1na Office lepl opinion. f("IC'~ poor-mount in& did m1nage to SQOCClt' a lut-m1nute S 11 3 m1lhon supplemental appropnauon from ConlfC'l!l before the Auaust recess Until President Reaaan •ancd the ball, however, the FC'IC could not be&ln to pay farmert Meanv.rh1lc, the FCK and It chief, ~prague, a~ hv1n1 day to day He ant1c1pate\ heavy claims for wheat crop'I damaied by droua.ht an Mon· tana. Nonh Dakota nd ~uth ()a. kota The new 1nfu'1on or money, he says, Wlll be JUSt enou&h to handle claims until Sq>t. 30. Afkr thlU.. he c.tn't prom1~ anything _ A recent GAO audit -completed ancr our stncs of column -finch FCtCi future dismal h predict\ the asincy will mau onl) ~lect1\le payments on "cla1m1 that can he co\lc~ by premium payment\" Thi~ amountt to.a kind of govem· JACK Art DEi SOi and DALE VAN A TT A ment-sponsored pyramid scheme The ma1or way to pay off tho$C who have one of the 400,000 insurance contracts now <11gntd may be to induce many other; to 11gn up so their prem1uou c.an be u~d 10 pay the old claims It's a tt:rrible tragedy tf 16 percent of children are abu~d 1n the home, but 1hat certainly 1s no JU'lt1ficat1on for scanng the other 84 percent of the children who come from normal homes where parents observe stan- dardsof morah 1y and courtesy and do not indulge in violence or abuse of their own family members. Nor 1s 11 any JUSUficauon for tnfl1ctm1 group CONSU MER REPORT: fhr therapy on the majonty of children who come from homes that do not Food and Drug Adm1nistrat1on ha11 have these problems. launched a major publ1c1ty campaign The authors of "Protective Bchav against products guaranteed to rcr.uh tors" asked 2.000 teachers, school in weight loss but which don't deliver. administrators and social workers to Officials charge that firms marketang evnluate th' course 1n termsefa fru11 wa1s1 wraps, vibrating belts. !>nuna or v~etable R~ponscs included 'u~!s and '1m1lar dev_~ces ere engaged "C"auh nower. bcc~use lots of little in &fO s decept10M Some products piece ao t~ther 10 make the whale even result 1n ~nou~ 1nJury. cau.~ang head.'' and . 'Broccoli ...... you ha~~ to dchydrauon or cutting off c1n:ula· lcam to accept 11 for what 1115:· Tf\<* uon The FDA Knt notice Int y~r 1 answers JJ"e a good md1cat1on of the to com panic markctina -the dcvt~5 non-professional level of the course. and asked that they altet their cla1mc,. When some firms refused. the FDA dec1drd to go public MINl-FDITORIAI Time 1'> run- °'~ out on Superfund, the mult1- b1lhon-dollar pool of money used to clean up the nation'\ hvardou, waste snes. and finan~ mainly by t<>m· panic'I that produced the waste. Consre11'I nttd'I to approve a new Superfund w1th1n week , or the fund will run dry Without 1t. experts aarce. toxic: chemical art hkcly to seep into water supphes. upcrfund, which hH spent more th n SI .S b11Hon, ha3 just scnitc:hed the surf act, some prupostl• call for 1ncrca 1na the tot.al to SI 0 b1llton. But 1n the meanume, Con· lfeU hat been dntJlnl Its teet, leav1n1 a dtadly to1t1c t1me-bomh 11ck1na J•d AlldtrH• ud Dale V•• Alt. ttt 1111dJ~•tH <'01101oJ1 Another 11milar course for eily elementary &radcs, currently u~ 1n Nebraska. ic, '"Bubbyloman n- countcr" It'• a play Wlth clauroom d11tu<mon About a ettature named Rub who amves from Bubbylonia to teach ahout aood touchina and bad touch1n1 The course compels a cla\UOOm d1scu s1on of IOCCSt and forced •uual touch1na by d1 IC4\ t thr third 1rade These are eumplc!'a of the u · pcnmcntal 1Mycholo11cal course' wh ich address f'echnais. anuudc behavior and family rcl1uon1h1ps. and which consume houn of the ~hoot day, thereby d1splacin1 trl· d1honal •~dem1c \UbJectS and bui<' skills Little children are beina u~ for "auincap1pnm" by unlicenltd p•ychotoai ti tn the cla room. Pt1lll• Sril.eny 11 • 1yadl~lrd ro/•nq/11 ---~----...... ------... --------------------------------------------·--------- package cont•lsts of low front bump- er air dam, slcje skirts and deep rear fascia extennlon. New flush Euro- style compot:Jlte headlamps further the aero appearance. along with Integral fog I 11mps. A monoch romatlc paint treatment offers a dramatic touch, with body emblems. grille and llg~twelght cast aluminum wheels color~oordlnated to match or to harmonize with the body color . High-gloss black fin- ishes are u: ~d for exterior compo- nents as we II as the rear license plate pocket. .. rear roof rail courtesy lamp and visor vanity mirror are standard. The standard AM/FM stereo with seek and scan can be upgraded to Include full push button controls, clock and auto-reverse cassette with graphic equaltzer. Other op- tions' Include a six-speaker sound system, electronlc speed control and tilt steering. · Orenge Cout OAILY PILOT/Friday, Augu9t 18, 1N5 81 . There are few visible exterior changes for the model year. Moat notable Is the use of high-gloss black treatments for all moldings on the LE series. Twelve colors are available, Including a new flame red. A fuet efficient 2.5-flter Tech IV _engJne equipped wltnJMectroruc fu.I Pontiac SE'sjust a grand new car More fun ctlonal features Include a 3.0-llter v .. 6 engine. outfitted with multi-port fuel Injection. plus a • three-speE1 d automatic transa.xle. Injection and 5-apeed manual trans.. -, , axle make up the standard powe,... All-new Grand Am designed to attract sports enthusiast Capitalizing on the success of Its Grand Am automobile. Pontiac has added a sporty new four-door model, Introduced a sophisticated SE series, and created a host of new features throughout the llne for 1986. The premier attraction..!_or Grand Am In '86 is an all-new :::sE series, which the car company Is touting as a distinctive cut above all other entries. Avallable In sedan or coupe body styles, the SE Is a sport enthusiast's model. "We wanted to develop a refined driver's car possessing a certain sophlstlcatlon, yet one that would present a boldly aggressive appear- ance," said Terry Henline, head of the Pontiac One design studio. Following In the footsteps estab- lished by Pontiac's 6000 STE. the Grand Am SE skillfully combines numerous features as standard fare. Its aerodynamic ground effects Ease of handling results from a refined rallly tuned suspension (Y99) system w'1th 28-mm front and 21- mm rear ::1tablllzer bars and a 16: 1 steering r:atlo. Inside, ell Grand Am SE models receive t one-on-tone Pailex seat trim that Is color-coordinated with the exteirlor. Also Included are manual fl:>ur-wey bucket seats and leather 'Nrapplngs for the four- spoke st•!Mtrlng wheel, parking brake handle a ind shift knob. A header-mounted reading lamp, train. A 3-speed eutomatlc la also available. Just as in 1985. theentry-levet and LE models offer added performance with a 3 0-liter V-6 outfitted with - multi-port fuel Injection. available only on the automatics. Under-the-hood Improvements for '86 include a 951 alternator, which provides smoother transition during suddenly applied electrical loads. A low-noise electric cooling fan is also new. The Interior has also been enhanced with such features as four-way manual-adjust seat backs, integral rear seat headrests and vent-directed heating for the rear seat area in all models. Coupes also get an easy-entry front passenger seat for 'Convenient access to the rear· compartment. 'The manufacturer's suggested re- tail price for the base 1986 Grand Am coupe is $8,549, and the Grand Am Sedan $8,749 Pontiac bu added a four-door model, Introduced a eopb.l8tl- cated Sit Mrlee, and created a hoet of new features throacJloat the line for 1986. Tbe new SE .erlee le the result of a deelre on Pontiac'• part to built a reflned, eophlaticated drl•er'• car with an agreui"R appearance ....................................................................................................... THE BEST DEALS ON WHEELS FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL ·,. • ISUll,J SPECIALS . ' '86 P'UP 15588 W/AUTOMATIC J lr ACK: TO SCHOOL USED SPECIALS \...]' '77 DODGE COLT •sm '2488 '7 3 DODGE DART .am '2788 '79 THUNDERBIRD •s11a '2988 '80 PINTO WAGON •&JU '2988 '80 DATSUN 510 ••1a1 '3788 '83 ESCORT •b}u '81 CAPRI . 1 '4688 '4988 '81 JEEP SCRAMBLER af)]()6 '5788 -<I "71 PORCHE 914 •isu '81 CORVETIE 4 SPO SAVI fill~ SAVI ~~ l ISU/U I v ..... ....., • PfOI ... ~ •• .,.., •• "" llllt ~ 6211 BEJ,CH· BLVD. BUENA PARK ~ (114> 521-3110 e (213) 921·8681 I j . j I .. 82 Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/Frid•)', Auguat 18, 1985 - Buy -ing.a u 'sed car-? Her.J 's how f ,o sidest~p the Je ,mons Determine its use, conduct road test, auto expert says WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. -It may be • teen-ager'• flrtt or a famlly'e second. But sooner or later, nearly everyone buys a uled car. And the secret to buying a used car that wlll be a creampuff Instead of a lemon Is easy - provided you know when and where to buy. how to ex~mlne the car, how to carry out your own road test, and how to haggle over the price. said Robert R. Isenhour, manager of R.J. Re- ynolds Tobacco Co.'s 2,600- vehlcle fleet opratlons. "The very first step In purchas- ing a used car Is to decide Its purpose.'' said Isenhour. "Are you buying a family car that must have room for the youngsters? Then , maybe you need a station wagon. Or. wlll It be a car for someone who enjoys, says, fish- ing? Then, perhaps a four-wheel drive Is what you need." . According to Automotive Mar- ket Report, a wholesale used car price guide, used car prices Jumped 10.3 percent In 1984, although sates dropped 3.4 per- cent. There were 16,805,000 used cars sold last year at an average price of $5,406, com- pared to 17,391 ,000 used car sales at an average price of _.,902 In 1983. But. Hid IHnhour. 1wlnglng a honey of a deal and getting Just the rJght car for you Is pouf ble If you take heed of the following tips: •Never ehop for a used car In the rain or 1t night. Rein maaks oll or transml11lon leaka and night- time llghtlng makH cara gUtter Ilk• dlamond1. •Although a used-oar dealer generally chargee more than a private owner, you usually can get some type of llmlted guaran- tee or Hrvlce pollcy from a dealer. A private owner almo1t always sells a car "II 11." Also. keep In mind that under a new Federal Trade Communications ruling, all used cars told through a dealer must carry a "buyer's guide'· detailing what Is known by the seller to be wrong with the car and whether It has been fixed. Failure to comply with the ruling could mean a $10,000-a-day fine against the dealer. •Once you find a car you llke, take a close look for flawa or r1pples. lt'1 falrty easy to tell If a car has been repainted. Look for overapray on the rubber gaskets, corners of the windows and on the chrome. Repainting may cover deep flawa. •How does the Interior look? Are the seats worn? If so, It's usually a sign of abuse. Check pedals and control•: wear on these parts should agree with the mileage. If they are new, look out. •Check the odometer and compare It with any stickers still attached to door poets. If there are no stlckera. be auspicious. Do th• number• on the odometer read In • atralght llne? Are there acratches or broken pieces of plaatlc lnetde the apeedometer cue? If so, beware. The odometer probably has been rolled back. Although It's Illegal to change odomoterreadlngs, It 1tlll happena. •Check headllghts, brake llghtt, gauge llghtt, turn slgnala, horn -all acceesorlea -to determine If they ere In proper working condition. •Start the engine. being alert for 1moke from the rear. Blue smoke might mean a complete engine overhaul la needed. Whrte smoke can mean a leaklng head gasket. Reject this car unless ¥OU are ready to pay for some very expenalve repairs. •Map out a ·road-test toute that Includes dry city streets, a freeway, a hlll, a bumpy road and1 an empty parking lot. Don't be preuured by the salesman Into a short drive around the block. Make certain the automatic tranamlsalon shifts smoothly, that brakes work without squeal- ing or grinding, and that the Power steering works without undue atraln on car or driver. •After completing your road test, take the car to an auto- diagnostic center or service S1•· tlon where a mechanic can pla-1 point faults you may have missed. car has ever tJ.een recalled. Look cation numbers match. If It's a •Call the National Auto Safety at the car's pnpers to de1ermlne stolen car, It can be reclaimed by and Recall Hotline and ask If the that engine e1nd other ldentlfl-the legal owner . ................................................................................................................................................................... Drivers with car phones on the road more, hut crash less SU'rvey shows users of cellular fcleptiooes twice as likely to show courtesy on highways WASHINGTON -Drivers with car telephones spend twice as much time on the road, yet experience half as many acci- dents es people without such phones, according to a study released this week by the Ameri- can Automobile Association and AT&T. Cellular phone owners also are twice es likely to be good Samaritans. reporting road haz- ONLY ards, accidents or other serious Incidents, according to the re- port, based on the aJx-month experience of more than 750 drivers In the Washlngton-Baltl- more area. Cellular customers of both Bell Atlantic Mobile Systems and Cellular One were selected at random; non-car phone drivers. which formed the "control group," were members of the 1985 MERKUR XR4Ti (809874 ) 48 Mo• C.EL Total Down S 1297 Total or Payments S 1<' 160 Total Payment $239 -Tax $253 34 Potomac division of the AAA, which helped conduct the AT&T- sponsored study. High lights of the 62-page study Inell.Ide: . •The car-phone customers were Involved in one traffic accident for every 317 ,000 mlles driven; the control group's ratio was one In every 115,000 mlles. (The national average, according to the study, la one accident per 89,000 miles.) •Car-phone owners said they averaged fewer accidents after cellular Installations. '85 COUGAR COUNTRY ea~..., • 3 8 lrter V-6 en1ine • Ar conditior*11 • Automatic trammhdon • AM/FM stereo • Power 1teem1 • Power front disc brakes • Dual power "*1on NOW -- • Tinted itus • Al-season ltttl-bttted WSW racial tlrn • Polycut wheels Of wire wheel covtn • Bodyddt pPrt s~s • Quartz tlt~tric clock • Reeini'11 t~ comfort blltt stats • Ciotti and my1 stat lrwn OR • Cob-keyed dOJle belts • St1t btft ;tmkMSer chine • Cent er consolttt e • T~ odometer • Vinyl mert bodyslde motdln1s • ~ rub slf1>1 MO. r.o Mei\ lu111 down Sb12 to1a1 ut pay mtr11 SI I /6f. tlOitd tnd t1\@ OAI.. wnm1 • •About 35 percent of cellular drivers said they called authorities to report colllsons, erratic driving and so forth - compared to 13 percent In the non-phone control group. In addition. four out of five ear- phone owners said the cellular units made either no difference or Improved their driving behav- ior. Michael Senders, sales vice' president of AlbanBruce Com- munications, Baltimore, sa~ "When I am running behind schedule -or hoplessly lost -I • no longer em t ompted to step on the gas or perhaps to take chances I woltldn't. take ordl- narlly; Instead, I use my cellular phone to call al1 ead. "In short, m)• car-phone has made me a safer driver. And I also seem to bt1 even more alert to traff lc condl't Ions when I am using my cellular phone." The study poh·1ted out that the participating car -phone owners average about :24,000 miles a year behind the v..1 heel, compared to 11,800 for AA,t\ members. Cellular custo.rners use their WAS '20,,333 NOW CllNLY car phones about five times during a typical workday, which finds them on the road for three hours, according to the survey. The average cellular customer Is leas gabby while In the car then at home: The usual cellular con- versation lasts about three minutes; the typical residential call runs five minutes. Currently, there are some 150,000 cellular customers In about three dozen U.S. cities, Including New York, Chicago and Los Angeles. 1985 LINCOl.,.N. TO''WN CAR (707323) $299 Per Mo. for 48 Mot., CEL, Tot11 I Down12012, Total Payment 1299+ Tax•S3 HS.9-4 )lliiiiiill.-J1 ..................................... l!!!!!l!ll .. ... \~ . ~ 1985 MERCURY GRAlllD MARQUIS WAS 1 17,31~'9 NOW ONLY · • F Ofmal coach roof • T~ mi*f con.,. •Tit whttl • Spttd contlol • Dual pwr. Mita • Comtrlna ~1 • ~entry ... • F• llz• tp1rt • Dec. uuette •Vent .... • B/S molcln1 • Power antenna • Power Ioctl VP· •Dual .tMr wriy Ir (112217) • Auto clmltt 1/c • OtfrOSftMtlf •leather b1n • FIOOf mats • Preriln IOU'MI •Licht VP· • CcmlNlnct lfP. IL.... ............... ----=--..;_------------------------ f I • .· .. :1~ . ' , . In celebration of Jim Cl ick Audi becoming Southern Galifornia's newest Aud i Dealersh ip, we're doing all we can to earn your business. Take for instance, the 9.9°/o APR Financing• ava ilable on an of our Audis. But that's not all. Come in and test drive any new Audi , and we'll enter you in our Grand Opening Sweep- stakes. The prize is one Audi 4000S free and clear: No purchase necessary.·· Of course, when you buy an Audi from Jim Click, you also get the luxury of old-fashioned personalized service with high-tech expertise. Afte r all, a sweepstakes is lots of fun , but it's the quality of our seryice that sets-us apart. Stop by and find out the full details of our sweepstakes and finan ce offers. And get acquainted with one of our beautiful new cars. Who knows? If you're lucky, one may fo!low you home. JIM CLICK AUDI Irvine Auto Center • 41 Auto Center Drive • Irvine • CA • 92718 • (714) 951-3144 •R>r 1 flm1t4td lllM, on approwd cNdl1with1 minimum ol 20Qli down peiyment .. • ·. • ., No pur<inaM neoeaea~ Ell'tn If no test drfwt II tai.n, to enter. oomplttt ~ ofTIClal entry form .valllbl9 11 Jim Ciiek Audi trvtne Auto Center 41 AUtO Cerlter Orr... 1rv1ne Cahtorn11 92718 2 Ead't entry must be r.oe!Yed by noon. ~bef 29. 1985 lnQOmQlett or 1119QI'* entrlea INlll bl ~ ~ All tntrlet beCOme ~ PtOl*tY of Jim Qidc Audi and wlll not bl ,.turMd Contut ~ wtl9rt proh bit4td by law All 111te and IOcal lewl and r9gulation1 •PC>IY 3 Prize IMrd«S by Jim Ciiek Audi Prize la OM 1988 ~ 40009 Al>C>rolOO\att total wilue $18,500 4. Wlnn1ng/Entrtnc. 1"9QUlntmenta ~ will bl chOMn by r111'1dom drawing on S.ptemti.r 29 1985 Contest 11 QPen IO rttldent• of Catt~ ~ 11 YMrt of eve tile.pf ~· (and fhelr famlllN), ~ afftlM ,.., 1Ubadettea. and tc:NotrttllnQ and l)f'OmOUC>naJ egendtt of Jim Cb Aud Oddi of winning ant dtoendent upon the number ol entries ~ WW.. fNIY be ~'*' to Pf'cMOt an .~of tllglblllty and retea11 By ecc.ptlnct of the pr1a wirnwt oonttnt to the u .. of thttr namu and/ot ~tul'M. tor promObonal purpo .. 1 In conntebon w th thls IWMP • No add•bonal oompen•bon from Jitl'I 06cil Audi .at ~ 1'9Qull'9d tor promodooll u•. I All tnt'9t'lt.a. •• a condition of an~ ~ IO ,.... .. Jim Ckk Audi, 1.nd any of thtlr a litlet and IQff'Cle•. lrom •nv and 1K liability lor •nJu~ and/or di~• of nv kind IUltlined wt\ in~ in ~ Ol'\d' · once ~ e Awlfd: Pritt winner wtlt bl notified no tater than OCtobtr 31. 1985. Tht pma It non·tranlferable. No cuti eubltltutlon• Tl1tH Incl llcenM .,. ltlt tc>lt ,.l()On tv of the wtl\Mr • ' / / • • • ................................. iililllill .... __________________________________ ~~--~~~---~--~--=== > ~ 1 M <>r.,. COM1 OAILY PILOT /Frid1y, August 18, 1985 Nissan announces price hike for its passenger cars iri 1986 CARSON -Niss.an Motor Corp. In the USA, distributor of Nissan cars and trucks In the United States, has an- nounced ·an average base model suggested price in- crease of $91 per vehicle, or 1 percent, for Its 1986 Sentra, Pulsar, Stanza and Maxima passenger cars. Base suggested price In- creases were $50 on the Sentra Deluxe XE and SE, $100 on the Pulsar NX and Stanza GL Sedan, and $200 on the Maxima. The price of the Sentra Standard model remains unchanged at $5,499. Prices for the other 1986 models are: Sentra De- luxe, $Ef.'699; Pulsar NX, $8.349; Stanza GL Sedan, $9,649, Maxima SE and GL, $13,699. The Sentra, Pulsar NX. Maxima and Stanza G L Sedan will go on sale at Ni ssanDatsun dealers shortly. Prices for the 1986 Nissan 300ZX and Nissan 200SX will be announced later. Ready for takeoff Tultln DodCe will be tlae ftnt dealenblp to break IJOGDd -ud tbe Ont to open -lD the new Tu9tiD A a to Center, wblch t. billed u tbe larl•t retail automotl•e center lo Soatbern California. At- tendlnl pre-con•tractlon fatl.tda are (from left): Cl~ssic editions of Rolls -Royces sent to dealers Tom Lee, uelstant Loe An- 1ela &One manacer for Chry•ler ·Corp.; Marty steaa1. sone Nla manaier; Ken · &llef:f:• co-owner: Hant.f 8ora • aenenJ aal• manaier; Bohna Tuttle, owner: and Bill Donnelly, sone .enice and puta man-acer. Insurance firms get • • warning Only 25 Centenary Silver Spurs made~ six in Southland- Six of the rarest Rolle-Royce motor cars ever produced were delivered to dealers In Southern Callfornla last week. Called "Centenary Edition Sli- ver Spurs," the cars have been buUt by the company to com- memorate two motoring mile- stones -the 100th annfversary of the motor car and the pro- duction of the 100,000th Rolls- Royce and Bentley. Only 25 of the speclally hand- crafted cars have been made. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Priced at $125,000, 12 will be state Is warning Insurance com-sold In the United States -six of panles against surcharging them In Southern California. motorists for llablllty coverage Among six Southland Rolls- f or the sole reason that ttieyhllve Royce dealers who took dell very never bet ore had such coverage. of the special cars from Rolls- T~ State Department of In-Royce officials at a ceremony In surance said It had received -.Beverly Hiiis were John Belanger. complaints from motorists who president of Sterling Motors Ltd. are seeking llablllty coverage for of Newport Beach. the first time In order to comply The dealers had just returned with the new Insurance law. from England, where they at- Under the new law, any motor-tended a colorful ceremony at 1st being cited for any other the Rolls-Royce factory cel- ebrating the production of the 100,000th car. The festivities Included a cavalcade of Rolls- Royce cars built during the 81 years since the ortglnal 10-hp open touring car rolled out of Henry Royce's small factory In 190-4. Presenting the cars to the dealers, Peter Young, Western Regional Manager for Rolls- Royce, said. "These rare cars contain a number of specially handcrafted features unuiual even for a Rolls-Royce. We belleve they wlll be hlghty prized collectlbles." Each owner will receive a radiator-shaped presentation case containing a sliver keyring, sliver pen, note pad and en- graved sliver plate bearing his or her name. · Tt:Je cars are painted In royal blue with a dark blue roof. Inside, sliver Inlays have been meticulously worked Into burl walnut door capplngs and walnut picnic tables for rear-seat pass- engers. A center cabinet con- tains cocktail requisites -en- graved silver flasks and crystalware. violation may also be asked for evidence of liability coverage or other financial responslblllty. Fallure to have It can mean a fine or a driver's Ileen~ suspension. The department said It has sent a circular to all Insurance companies saying that surcharg- ing, as well as placing an appli- cant In a more costly "substan- dard program" just because he or she has never carried llablllty Insurance, could be against the law. Subaru again tops satisfaction chart Motorists are normally placed in "substandard programs" for poor driving records. The department said there are many reasons a motorist may not have had prior Insurance, many of which have no bearing on future loss potential. Complaints may be addressed to the Consumer Affairs Division, Department of Insurance, 600 South Commonwealth Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90005. For the second straight year, Subaru outranks all other Japanese and U.S. automobile m~kds In customer satisfaction, according to the 1985 Customer Satisfaction Index conducted by the J.O. Power and Associates research.firm. Tom Gibson, Subaru executive vice president, said the results "reflect the streng1h of our prod- uct as well as the extra care and commitment our d is- tributor/dealer network displays In their attitude toward the people who buy and own a Subaru." The latest study rated 29 Import and domestic automotive nameplates, with only Mercedes Benz showlhg a higher per- centage of satisfied customers than Subaru. Polling customers who owned their cars at least a year, the survey used a weighted average measuring more than 100 dif- ferent factors, Including con- dition of the car upon delivery, frequency of mechanical prob- lems, dealer and service attitude and warranty work performance. Gibson said the Index ranking is expeclally Important as the automobile lndus1ry prepares for one of the most competitive periods In Its history. ORANGE COAST JEEP/REN~ULT i) HUGE SEI;ECTI0.11 GIVES YOU A BETTER CHQICE· NEW JEEP CHEROKEE 4 X 4 Bucket seats, radial tires, P /S, tilt, and much more. (stk # 1902) (ser #6738} FREE 5 MIN. CREDI T CHECK NEW 1986 JEEP CJ-7 Come see an d test drive the all new '86's an d order yours today! CM/ (1(RrRllAITrRFDITl/'I (714)549 3103 A 9< f fJR CRff>I T ~ft\ '.M .I H - % IN STOCK. 48 MOS. FINANCING, O.A.C. • rM Y£ARS OR ~ 000 MUS IHAULT OffEIS llEllCA'S IHT Sllll CAI mncno1 • Pl.US llEQUIMD MAMENANCC PflOTECTO. L-.. ........ c.1 .. __ _,.,. ......... r ~··Orange Coast ... -::-...... ~ 111184 HAR•OR •LVD. ca•TA M• X1 '1AMC Jeep Renault '"-;-_-(714)1549-8023. (714)1141!1~7770 -. - 0renge CoMt DAILY PILOT /Fttday. AuguM 11, 1115 • Crash repair study shoWs cost exc_eeds car's worth Study shows replacement cqst for '85 Camaro is 3. 5 times the sttCker prtce t.~:-:---~-~~ tlmet the car'• 110,882 factory etlcker prloe, according to a recent atudy. The Auto Repair Cruh Study was made by the Atllance o1 Amerleen lnturera, a national property-eaaualty lnaurance trade uaoctatk>n. The 4'1tlmate excludee labor. A Camero wu uaed for the annual study, to demonstrate the Increasing cott of rebuilding damaged eara, aald Larry Soular. alliance ,.....,.ch manager. The ftlpt POW« for· an eng ne add• complct hu a modern unlbody neatty SS,000. d .. lgn and many optlona, lnclud-Besfd• driving defentlYety, Ing automatic transmtaton with "ear ownera can hefp reduce overdrive, power brlk•, power auto crash repair co.ti, u well.a stMflng, aJr conditioning, and their Insurance premium•. by stereo. purchufng automobll• With SCHAUMBURG, Ill. -The pfetety reconstruci a two-door cost of parts and paint to com-1985 sport coupe le about 3.5 Lift Gate Assembly with Glass (Tinted and Heated) $1 .386.32 Left and Right Sun Visor Assembly S 88.80 According to Soutar, the atudy tMtter-than-averege. repaJr ,... found that reptacemem pant cord•." Soular eald. ''They can and paint for the 1985 Chevrolet alto ahop for modela wtth S mph Camaro would cost $37,014. bumper protectk>n. "Manufacturtng prooesM9 for Although the 5 mph bumper 11 Right Front Door Assembly with left and Right Reclining Bucket Seat today'• cart are a technotogk:al effective In reatstlng crutt dam- and coat-efficient marvel," age at low epeede, the National Soular obaerved, "but crash Highway Traffic Safety Admtnft.. repaJr 11 quite another matter." tratlon reduced the mandatory o t 1 r actl f bumper performance standard Glaas (Tinted) and Mirror $1 , 141 00 Assembly and Tracks S 965..00 amage 0 on y 8 r on ° 8 to 2.5 mph In June 1982. Since • Crash Dash and Instrument Panel Assembly and Console S 2,025 00 new car' 1 part• can C8"'8 repair co1t1 to exceed the car's value. then, some manufacturera have At that point -not when an equipped their ·cars with weaker automobile Is lmposalble to re-bumpers, lncr+astng repair btlts pair -Insurance companies In low-speed crashes. consider the car a total loss. ''To save money, conllder Soular explained that the In-Insurance factors when ~ou lhop surer In such cases pays the tor 8 car· Check w h your owner the car's pre-crash Insurance agent for discounts; "actual cash" value and takes many Insurers chBlge higher premiums for models wrth ex- tltle to the vehicle. Actual cash pensive repair records." Soular value means the car's replace-ald ment cost less annual de-s Some Insurers offer repaJr- preclatlon, plus or minus mileage replacement coverage which and valuable options. "It Isn't pays for repairs on late-model necessarily market value or even vehicles even when the cost Is the remaining loan balance," higher than the car's pre-<:rash Soular added. value, Soular noted. If the car Floor Pan Assembly, Extensions. "Replacement part cost Is a cannot be repaired or the dam- prlnclpal reason for the high cost age costs are prohibitive, the of auto crash repair and auto Insurer replaces the auto with a Insurance rates." Soular con-new car of the same make and tlnued. "In an Insurance pollcy similar vehicle class. This special for a late-model car, about 60 coverage Is generalty more ex- percent of the premium covers pensive than a standard auto vehicle damage and about 40 policy. Rear Axle Assembly and Bearings $1 , 108.00 and Ra lls $1 ,513.00 $10,682 Factory Stick er Price Brake Assembly: Power Disc Front and Drum Rear $1 ,472.00 $37,014 Replacement Parts and Paint Price percent covers personal Injury," Soular recommended caution he said. in choosing a repair facility. "Be sure repairs are done by an auto The sticker price ot a new body shop that has proper equlp- Camaro would buy only enough ment and employees who are replacement parts to bulld a Fred trained to realign the new un- Fllntstone-style vehicle with: ibody cars," he said. In unlbody design. panels are welded onto a •Two front fenders and Inner metal outer shell rather than panels -$1 ,050 bolted to a frame. Repairs call for •Two front doors, windows. special skllls because the un- and mirrors -$2,282 lbody shell must be realigned Dealers report booming sales in July exactly to its origin al position for •Two reclining bucket seats the car to steer and handle and tracks -$955 properly. And. most new cars are •Dash, Instrument panel. and of uni body design. ...-· console -$2,025 Souter eJlplalned that un- I Best since '79, says LA are" Mercury chief Los Angeles-area Ford and Lincoln-Mercury dealers re- ported booming sales In July, despite an automotLve Industry decline for the montfi, according o Ford sales executives. "We had our best July since 1979,'' said James C. Stewart, Lincoln-Mercury's Los Angeles district sales manager. "Our strengths were the new, aero- dynamically designed models." "Cougar was up 33 percent in July, compared with a year ago. Mark VII, our luxury sports car, Increased by 29 percent and Merkur, our new European sports sedan, had Its best month ever.'' Southland Lincoln-Mercury dealers sold 2,937 new cars, an 18 percent gain ·over last July. Volvo scores its finest month ever July, normally a fairly mod- est auto sales month, waa exactly the opposite for Volvo, with retall sales up• 7 percent from last year. T~e company reported sales of 10,835, compared with 10, 123 a year ago. Thia represents not only a record July, but a record for any stngte month In the com- pany's history In the United States. Year-to-date sales for Volvo stand '*t 67,350, up 2 percent from 66,025 In 1984. "The demand tor Volvo automobllet Is growing every day," said Bjorn Ahlstrom, president and chief executive officer of Volvo North Ameri- ca Corp·. "There Is a strong demand for our new 700 Serles sedans and station& wagons, while at the same time our tradttlonal 240 Serles continues to be highly sought after.·' Nissan reports record month CARSON -Nissan Motor ' Corp. In the United States haa reported record aalee of 80,742 for the month di July, • 30 percent lncreue over June, the company·,-prevloua record month. Nluan deai.. told 57,088 , eara during July, tncfudlng 3,524 domeatle-butlt automoblln. ' Truck aalea for the month of July wete 23,854. Nationally, Lincoln-Mercury dealers Increased sales by 4 percent during the month. Sales leaders for cars Included district history, O'Donnell de-!bodies are designed to collap~ the full-sized Crown Victoria, up clared. •Steering wheel and column accordion-fashion for passenger Ford dealers sold 10,827 new cars and trucks In July, a 3 percent Increase over last July, according to John C. O'Donnell, Ford Division's Los Angeles dis- 58 percent, and sporty Mustang, The latest available regls--$1 ,082 safety. ''The lmpaci of a front or up 5 percent. Sales Increases for tratlon data Indicates that Ford •Power disc front brakes and rear collision deflects across the light trucks Included 39 percent leads all other manufacturers -drum rear brakes _ s1•472 car's top and floor ~ around and for Bronco, 32 percent for F-both domestic and foreign -In away from passengers," he said, Serles pickups and 18 percent the sales of cars and trucks In •Two sun visors -$89 "but this makes unlbodles more for Econollne vans. Truck sales Callfornfa since Jan. 1, 1985. Forsaking cartoon character's dlfflcult to repair " were the highest for July In I ------------=:______________ ~-----· trict sales manager. · Toyota's car, truck sales for July top 1984 levels TORRANCE -Toyota July car and truck sales topped year-ago· levels, according to figures re- leased today by Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. Inc. July 1985 car sales were 68,753, up 32.3 percent from 51,962 sold In July 1984. July 1985 truck sales were 45,604, up 103.6 percent from July 1984 figures. Year-to-date, Toyota has sold 352,685 cars, up 9. 7 percent from 321,420 In 1984, and 199,996 trucks, up 38.6 percent from 144.206 trucks sold last year. The July truck sales mark put Toyota In front as the best-selling small pickup In the United States, a tltle It held In 1984. THIS IS THE EQUIPMENT: B Ii\ Vinyl .... B .c.p.ttd flllr Mab B T .... c..t• B llU!htecl lntry ~ e Auto L-.. S11t• 'W" B C"'*"c l_,. B Ailt9Ntic AS~ H TltS......... Bf .. ,._ B s.,.M Ce1*t1 B AM/RI st .... OK CISMttt B Drh•'s '·••1 hlr S.1t B lntdr luawJ en..p B lt1t .... B ledlMI t*t wtletl men THIS IS OUR SPECIAL DISCOUNT: Manufec.....,•1 Retell Prtce •.•••••• -........................ -••• .-••..•••• '11,745 FMd Mo .• C·o. Dlecoun•-··-········-·············-······························· 'IM Dee* Dlecount ........................................................................ •1• Tot.el lavtnga. .......... -......•. -....................... -........................... '2'·115 Total Del. Prtc. .......... -.......................... --.......... .-... -....... _ ...... 114.m THIS IS YOUR TOTAL PRICE : 5 14,552°0 (Onty t-. l lloenlt) .,. ...... , WAI *15,207 NOW '85 FIERO GT V-6, auto, air oond, sunroof power door locks, spoiler, cruise control. AM/FM ETA stereo. plnstnplng. thermo guard. fabric guard Ii 1923 LAI GITI SILICTION lVHI 5 13 333 NEWlRANS AM . .................................... _. ........ .,_..-..... .._.._ __________________________________ ~~~~~~~----- 1 , OVER FACTOR·Y INVOICE You Save Thousands Of$$$ On All New Grand Wagoneen & Eagle Wagons! '85 EAGLE WAGON '85 JEEP GRAND WAGONEER NEW '85 ALLIANCE Convertible ON LY L M~DEL (Stk 1900 Ser 245464) S242!!o. CaSh oarmen1 P<•ce s 10 955 7S • ta• & h<: SXlOO caa/\ oown payment S2•2 S!I Pet mo f0< 43 mos 8 5 annual percentage rate Of' ll>PIOVecl crec:t•I Oeleneo oayment PltC» S 13 644 32 SAVE$1744 In 1n11trft~t-Regu1ar OllY"'ttf'I plan OI CHn peymet1ll ptoC8 l 10 '1~~ 1~ + IA• & II( S;>O()(J CUI> OOWn payment 1:118 93 pttr mo IO< 48 mot lb 0 82 AUDI 5000 s S8490 '83 FORD EXP . ·• I • ' ... ~~ .... '81DATSUN 280ZX '9790 All car! subject to pr1or sale end sold on approved credit Price plus taJ(, license. documentary and applicable smog fees Sale ends Sunday Aug 18, 1985 '77· MERCEDES "D" 300 '84 DODGE CONQUEST TUR90-lAdlet 5 1Po drgtta t CI H•U• •'•C WW.00•• loeded (250808) '11 ,990 • 86 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /frtday, Augu1t 18, 1085 San Leandro Alfa Romeo dealer Patrick Nohr (abo•e) bu only one car left on h.la ahowroom tloor ln the wake of a na- donwtde atrlke by driven of car carrier trucb -and that one'• not for aale: It'• a toy model of the Itallen import. Meanwhile (below), there'• an overabundance at placee nch u General Moton Corp.'1 Delaware Park ln Delaware, where can art belDC atored d~ the atrlke. A tentadve contract between the union and manace· ment bu been announced. Haulers strike m a y be e nding Would mean end of stranglehold on flow of cars from docks WASHINGTON (AP) Leaders of Teamsters Union locals representing car-hauling truck drivers are considering a tentative contract agreement that would end a nearly three- week-old strike. Kenneth Paff. a spokesman for a dissident Teamster faction, Teamsters for a Democratic Union, called a proposed three- year pact agreed to by manage- ment and union negotiators Wednesday a "big Improve- ment" over an accord voted down by a 5-to-1 margin among the 20,-000 members earlier. The settlement was to be presented to the representatives of the local unions covered by the agreement today, the union and the National Automobile Trans- porters Association said In a joint statement. 'Thls ls good aews for the car-baying pabllc •• •ell as America'• dealers who sen them can and true.ks.• National Automobile Dealers Association Leaders of the Teamsters de- cllnejj to comment on the proposed pact, which, If ap- proved, would remove the stranglehold on the flow of autos from factories and docks to dealer showrooms. But one union offlctal, demand- ing anonymity, said the strike would continue until the pact Is ratified by the rank-and-fUe membership. The National Automobile Deal- ers Association, commenting on the agreement said, "We are very pleased that a tentative agree- ment has been reached. This Is good news for the car-buying public as well as America's dealers who sell them cars and trucks." contained significant con- cessions by management. Under the bylaws of the Team- ster• constitution, a contract propoeed by the union's leader- ship can be tejected only If two- thirds of the votes are cast against. It. But on aubaequent contract proposals Involving the same set of negotiations, the bylaws say, a proposal can be rejeqted wtth only a 51 percent margin of the votes cast. Thus, the challenge of the union leadership waa to stash the 81 percent rank-and-file negative vote In the earlier proposed pact to no more than 49 percent In the new proposal. Whtie Teamster official• de- clined to discuss details of the tentative agreement, Paff aald In Detroit thtt he understood there were "big Improvement•" over the eartler rejected pact that sparked the strike. The Industry'• previous offer .. called for 60-cent-an-hour pay increases each of three years tor the car haulers, who now average about $13 an hour. But manage- ment did make some last-minute concessions In the Important area of differentials for the driv- ers, said a source who decllned to be Identified. Most dr~s also currently earn about 65 centa a mlle white dellverlng cars, and would have received a raJse each year of 3 cents per loaded mite. The source aald that In the contract tentatively approved Wednesday ·management backed off two points that had been stumbling block• In the contract earlier rejected: proposals to cut the mlleage rate In half for back-hauls, or return trips, and to establish a two-tier wage aystem In which newty hired drlvera would have recefved 80 percent of the wage rate for experienced drivers. Richard Kelley. spokesman for suburban-Detroit based N•- tlonal Automobile Transporters Aasoclatlon. echoed thoM eentl· ments, adding, "We'd Ilk• to get back to work u aoon aa poulble, and hope the workers ratify It as quickly as possible." The strike came In a month of typically slow sates as all makers ..switched production to next year's mode1s. General Motors Corp.. Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp.. continued to build care on achedule, movtng them by ratt where pou,ble. 'Vette liDked to1 fake claims worth $40,000 The big three autom~er-. In aeparate atatement•. applauded the Mtttement and expreued hopea for • swift return to normalcy. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - MOhammad Said Sabbegh took a battered 1981 Corvette and 24 au .... on a Journey through 17 atat• to cotlect up to M00,000 In fake ICClct.nt ctalma, llCCOrdlng to the C'altfomla HIQhw8y Patrol. "I don't know how In heel he dOM It," laid CHP •taa.d traffic colllalona tnvnttgator "tom Mitt-er. The tentative egreement eeem- lngly would face a •tern« test then the one rejected lut month, even though aourcea u ld It •• But he hu an Id ... The 39-year-old ex-felon uMS the ume Corvette for r9PMted eccldent clalma, poalng elter- natety aa the victim and Insured driver aeeklng repair payment• betWMn S7 ,000 and S 10,000. aald Miiier. "They muat have the Corvette milted up with another one," aald Sabbagh'• attorney, Al Anottk. He aalcJ he wUI Uk that all cuea Involving Sabbagh In different Jurltdlct1one be conaolldated for one trlal. • • --~ ~ -... " .. ~ ....... • 'brCn_ge Coast DAILY PiLOT/Frlday, Augu1t 18, 1985 81 New De Lorean car Thia drawtna ahowa two Ylewa of the new car John Z. De Lorean plane to build ln Columbua. Ohio. He deacrlbea the car aa an updated. hleh-apeed venlon of hia original DMC-12, atalnleaa ateel •porta car. De Lorean will team with New Orleana en- trepreneur Gordon Novel to uaemble the new automobile, which will aell for more than $30,000. The automaker admlta he ha• no firm financtna. no firm contract, no name for the new cu and no •peelflc alte. And while he ezpecta to aell aome of the can by the firat of the year. he doea not eq>eet to have any bullt by then. ._ . VW Golf places third its first time out in Pikes Peak climb Car resembles 1985-two-door hatch back except that it has twin engines. radiators TROY, Mich. -A twin-engine The second radiator Is used to· Golf entered by Volkswagen cool another Identical 16-valve Motorsport placed third In the .'' engine mounted behind the drlv- rally class at-the recent Pikes er where the back seat used to Peak Auto Hiii Cllmb In Colorado, be. The result Is double the the first competitive event for the horsepower, four-wheel drive car. (each engine drives Its own pair Driven by German rally pilot of axles), and perfect weight Jochl Klelndt, the dual-engine distribution for excellent hand- car was just behind the four-llng. wheel-drive Mazda, RX-7 Although Klelndt had never prototype of American rally drlv-seen the mountain before, he er Rod Miiien and ahead of a V8-practiced well and the car ran engine Fiero driven by Pikes perfectly during the week before Peak veteran ~obby Unser Jr. the climb. He quallfled just sec- From the front seat forward, onds behind Miiien belore plac- the car Is similar to a production Ing third In car's first competitive 1985 two-door Golf hatchback, outing. except that under the hood Is a The pair of 1.8-llter power potent twin-cam, 16-valve, four-plants mean the radical one-off -cylinder VW engine and two Golf has 3.6 titers of dlsplace- radlators. ment, eight cyllnders, 390 horse- power and two of everything: two transmissions with two of each of the five forward gears, two clutches and twice the number of engine monitoring gauges. This Is the fourth dual-engine car built by Vplkswagen. The first was a Jetta, then two Sclrocco cars were built, one by vw Motorsport In Hanover, West Germany, and one by VW's · research and development de- partment In Wolfsburg, West Germany. .The Golf Is a ·product of VW Motorsport and orlglnally trans- mitted power to each pair of axles via a three-speed auto- matic transmission In front and a five-speed manual In the rear. For Pikes Peak, the front and rear engines use Identical five- speed gearboxes operated by a single lever. The car can go from zero to 60 mph-In approximately four seconds, and attaJn a top speed of nearly 140 mph. .• Thla VW Golf placed third ln the Plke'a Peak Auto Hill Climb lta flrat tlme oul. \ -· Danish car dealers.make war ·,on exorbitant automol>ile tax .. Dealers say buyers hold onto unsafe cars. don •t buy safety devices that push es up COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) • -Danish auto dealers have launched an attack on the coun- try's automobile taxes, which . they say can soar to as much as 180 perc.nt, the highest In Europe and probably everywhere ..... . Under the headline "Goodbye to the Family Car," the news- paper Jytlanda-Posten of Aarhus In Jutland-publlahed a chart showing that a Volkawagen GTI, ' whtch retalla for $8,297 In Weit ' Germany, coat• a Dane $17,592 -112 percent more. The dealera maintain that t>e- cauH of the hlg.h1 iprlcea, Oanea hokS onto their care for longer than 11 aafe and refrain from buytng .. fety devtc:ea u option• bee9Ute the coat would drive the tax even higher. Th• auto d .. lers' campaign comea u European car makers are beginning to Introduce new models, with higher prices. Den- mark makes no care of Its own. The campaign also comes as the nation, one of the world's highest taxed, debates tax re. form measures that are seen as harmful to some and helpful to others. Although the car-tax Issue has been fllllng newapaper pages, the dealers are asking for a cut of only 10 percent. Such a cut could offaet the higher prices for 1988 models. They aay they wlll take their case to the European Com- mo·n Market If they get no help from the government. But government offlclala, Who havelongueedthetaxlncometo finance public tranaportatlon and other extenalve O nlah pub- lic aervlce1, •how no algna of giving In, even tr the matter goes to the Common Market. "I am fully convinced we wlll win," Tax Minister Isl Folghel has said, adding, that a cut In auto taxes would probably mean a hike In already heavy Income taxes. "l.f we should be forced to reduce the charges, we would have the most extremely difficult time f ind ing this money elsewhere," he was quoted as saying In one newspaper Inter- view. The government says the auto taxes are expected to bring In the equivalent In kroner of $887 mllllon to $988 mlllion this year. The Aarhua new.paper, one of the country' a 1 .. dl"'1 dalUn, calcul.ied that the Volkawagen I GTI wea 11• percent more ex- pensive In Denmark than In Belgium, 55 percent more ex- pensive than In England and 77 percent more than In neighboring Sweden. Dealer• argue that the high taxes make It hard for them to MU new care to drivers with otd onee. '" .... f AC10RY S1\CKE.R $10 ,985 PURCHASE PRlCE $9499 '85 N Gl C~MPEI Radio l>feil. p. s center sw1tel seat latt \\It-tr (0033921 f AC10RY ST\CKER $18 ,030 PURCHASE PRlCE $13,866 OR LE.ASE. ·4110 $1 ~tmo For &Cl mos total pyml ot SSS£i2 + tu OR LEASE. 1481.'1 For 60 mos total pyml ot SS916 • ta• , 5112 WOLF SBURG ·cABRIOLE~T ~~ lea1t1er a t alloy .-heels P steer in&. ;er :: 121 S30 • f AC10RY S1\CKE.R OR LE.ASE ~~~ii~E PllCE $214~~ .. $)2,162 '·~.~.~':';~~· .. ISUZU A.P.R. Fully IOaded ( 908ll 101 f AC10R¥ S1\CKE.R $11,961 PURCHASE Pl\CE $9999 f AC10RY S1\CKER $7833 PURCHASE. PllC£ $6599 .. ~ulo1Tial1t trim f nas OR LEASE. $148!'1 Foi &a mos lotol oy ot S893• + tai OR LE.AS£ $ll3!i r ,, AS m;s 101a1 pymt • ot S!>469 -U• i Lo896' S11C"ER OR LE.ASE FACTORY n S $6840 g1cE $99~· " t\JJ.CRl ro• AB .,.,05 Tota W"l ~:>~~ ot SA191•111 LEASi-PYMT. BASED ON 1ST MONTHS PYMT .• LIC. FEE, SEC. DEP. OAC I.I APA N/ A ON ADV SPECIALS/41 MO. MAX. OAC Ad •• .,..... • ~ .now ~'*' · $1500.00 GUARANTEED TRADE ALLOWANCE TOW IT DRIVE IT DRAG IT PUSH IT '85 FORD '84VW '80VW '84 PONTIAC '83 IMPULSE T-BltD RABBIT VANAGO~ FERO • , . . ... ' . 1600' .... 1'"1 ~ '""'" • .. ., •KtP•, • . .... t...i -.. ... '•LO<•. s J,.. .... "'C .. .... • "'JI .. ,,, ... '100811 •w\I Wf "1J J U'>&l ~.....-Utoo -119':"1 S8888 $5688 S5888 S8488 S8688 '79 DATSllt '81 TOYOTA 1981 MAZDA '80 CELICA '79 BMW 280ZX STARLET RX7 GT LIFTBACK 320i '"'"'-*" ..... i ... . ' ' 4 .,.., .... " 5 \Od i r ~trfO O s I-1111111 -~ 'Pd a11 stereo hltbio '" ' • tll"I'" • • ~. t" ~ (~317161 ........ ' II S~MOOI & lflOIP J11669 .. ,,. MW. •• ,_,.., ___ S4888 s79g7 , ----OrMge CO. DAILY PfLOT/Fftday, Auguet 19, 1985 \ LLAR • 4 Lmn. S Day._ .6 Dotlara.. • Ada mtv •·•nrd 1>arh . but no p<irhon of P'' mtrlt 11 refundele. • Additionel 11inm cnay be purthtttd for 12.00 etch. • f>flcn muat be inc~ m thr ad • Cloe•• not 1ppl' tu thr rt'1I l'•lllf, rtntal. Of htolp "'•n9'd clul!Gcationt or 1utomobJel prittd o'er 12000 • • .\v11l.l>ll-onh U• P"'''" pun 11hrrtrtera M'll • merchan6e. Call 642-5678 I ...... .. .... ..... ... .... ..... •• .... ...... hr.... ..... ... .... ...... ltr Salt ~ ... ~ ... ~ttr~lal~lt~J!!!~;;~~~!! , .. •=·=·=al=;;;;;;;;='='":1_ .... _ .. ___ ._._,....... l ...... 1112...... .. 2f !..,... ..... 1111 TMIDALYN.OT DODUNll .... I• *'11111.lffl• . fnla11.la 1007 YllULIYllTU 3!f'*lc::•'iJ,fo:;' ...... Cl.ASalf'IEO OFFICE HOURS a~TIOH lt!,..... 9LD "On The Pitt(" Spec 38A, 1 •1111111w UY. MUI YllW Brighi 1paclou1 Euc: 1807 lrvlM &(5--()184 ....... '~ s.w:. """F ~· E ' :.; llllU •... m 8ptt M ewir popu1ar a lll,111 New eus1om 3 tt«y 4 BR. home. 58' 38a. 3200 •"· LIOO ISLE a!-:.~ ':F '*°t-'--r"°B :.: Studao epertm.nll wllh Mldom on.red Pten "E" AfaufM SM.000 tat TD. 4 ba home w/elevatM. Lg LR w/lorm dine & lg 1WPf 1M Miii 5 BDRMS • °' ""'" & oo ,.... •--.... Pttvat• palloa end 9Y9l'I a wlrM .rr yd Witry. °'% H95 P91'/mo. ShoWI Ilk• $385,000 Bkr 9e3-83n tam rm + library or otno.. Large & e.autltull Avl 3 BATHS '-,~, .. t~ ': ""; ~' . ~- '~ ¥;, ~ .......... « To Plare your .. Fasl Re:. ult" Serv1re Directory ad Call Now 642-5671 ht.JU c:ttaQC YOUR AO tiny OCMI\ vi.w. 3 Bdrm. ownr -••.ooo lnol land. • model. Single ltory Cnll A/C, 3 c•r gar. lm!Nd. good J)(&-41111ng FAMILY ROOM ntal'1Ul'DAY rNt unh e>lul 2 Bdrm .:•;:~~h. ~u . P.r rAlv!.!_~ C.na ••1 llu IOU S-Ullful new pool & • price. J\obln-Owner 3 CAR OAAAQE ::C.,~~CU:::-~ front unit.~~ and I-___ .,.....,_, patio ·-w/1olar Lu1h land-846-5100n52-6211 RICHARDSON oca__., .,,.,, • °"" bit-In kttchenS. $325,000 'MUST SEE'. Call today IUll MnAll+.W ~ng on lg lot w/RV 831-3725 OPEN SAT 1-4 INVESTMENT CO =--=--"":.c.-~ ~ (71') 673 4'00 ... BPiln ~13 2BR/unll. Bay wlndowa, llCCMS. Only S325K. PP 251918TH ST (714)831-4320 OA _,. •--• .,.,,,,,..._ • ,.,. Not • flaw, a Bdrm, pool, ···---• 1kyllt... c.d•r aiding, 557-6284 °' 979-2831. OWNER (714) 873'-1783 ~:..~...!~~.";';.,i11 """" _ .. _,.,..,.._....._ •11••11-lhat'~l210,000/lerme. COME SEE ml By Own« loV9ly 5Br 3ba ~··--··--· .......... ..._.,,,,,_.,. •••tall... -------• 0vr Shl eayc:reet. autck IUYllWIY ... :_r:''~'°'u:"ic: vtew, low to .,tertaln? Speniltl 1tyt9 w1tt1 Bkr Moeen 7ee>-M43 •U ftl• 1111111 aale $245K 846-1273 3 br 2~ be. twn rm, grMt :,::,:-.,~,!:: YOt.1'11 low thl9 home. pteter9fnOCMI~ DUPLEX 1Bd 1b• H 8Mullful4Qdrm, 1V4 Bath DISTRESSSALENptHgll vtew, MCUl1~, pool, ten- .,... .. -"" .,,. ""' s.425.000 bedroome, laded glala, • t-ITllY $210,000 717 FERNLEAF oncukf•eao. Large yard 3Bd den 2ba $2lO 000 nl1, 111umabl• lo•n. ,,_,.,.. U,_.l()Uf t1()~fl wood floora, Frenoh Charming 48drm 381h 840-8182 by Owner with pallo. Alrlum court 852.2419 °' n&-<108'1 Priced to NII. $385,000. ""• ~ "°' .,..., "'1"*' • AM!tcn.875-8000 doora end laland hom• wllh elegant DUPLEX. Nloa c:ondlllon. yard entry. Pricereduoed 213/430-3629 :"'._:~~·,:a= ·------;._;·~~~~~~~~~ kitchen An •PPHllng Frend\ dooreend etalMd REDUCED S 1oK. By to $189,900 for fut Nie. l'f'I I ... ITIW • ...,. aam•n :' =:" .!! •:;::.,: ':: corner property wllh glw wtndow In den. New Owner. 873-7227 Call Patrick Tenor• Bach Condo. Lux & MC. Lo ._,. - c.--coll\ -.,.. ,..._. large pool..tze yard. Try c•rp•tlng and P•lnt. 831-1288 down. OWC. Bkr/Ownr -· ........ -•ttor....,., -10% down & UIUIM a Solar Meted pool and Jurnlne Creek 2 Br & den. $69,900. 839--1822 Spac:k>Ua 2 Bdrm + den ...... ... .... 1112 Investor Plttnert needed. Have more pr099f1Y than ~ Profit & tax ben- eflts. (714)844-4259 ILll OlllU ML Ill IHl,111 3 Br home. 1 block fro!n beach. Custom built by owner ~th high ceilings, stained glass., winding staircase. Must see. Call now. 12.5% loen of $238,000. ape with lo.. of bric* Aaaume 111 8~%. Re-oV9rtoOltlng undy beed\ Aaklng 1289.500. decking. $225,000. duc;ed lo $275,000 Call & bay, + 3 Bdrm renlal. 751-3191 831-8638 Of 64<Hl188. •Trltdee acoepted. Aaklng - ~"<>~~~~: c:: SELECT Lm'°'"n~!._.. a.+ Fiii. ••• $830,0~.~~;-r/Agt R~~l ESTATE ~PROPERTIES ,._ Hardwood fin, ftreptace, • 111-1400 ••-oml ...U new dahwtr/kllctl range. Tiii Mi iT ALU , -• Nearly ~ acn, landac:aped Copper plumbing, new It teem• dlfftcutt to find • ... ,, D fRllLllllEI by Roget• Qarden9. 3 =·8!l1~ r!>y ~=t i:,, N~ ~?~ .. prlvala bHchH, 3 good buy$1~.750 111n119A•f ble price In • Submit whal you h...,. lo Five luxury ~ bdrms. 3 baths. tamtty llY 11_,.1• 5Wl"Wft te&IOl'lf t~ f<>f equity In cWuxe Heigh II. Priced from room, pool, 1pa and --IU Ill ll. •1111'1 QUIET pre111gfoua ... 28R 2ba condo on bNut $309,000. to $385,000. more. Aak •boul •bout Ml-1121 One of lhe nlo9et 1treel1 In w/good achoole. good ful KHnapall 8Hch, Financing avallabl•. Window P•rlod loan. N9WPO(t Hght• Charm-nelghbonlt ~";'';: turnllhlng1 Included. Showing Sal & Sun. Priced at S497,500. Cll!I 8111. ltlC~ 1040 Ing 2 Bdem, 2 b6. Decor-of pride~ 0ha earned ""' .... ,,.,..... 12-Si>m. For Information Kathy()( Bud 759-1258· MOVING sXLE: sXT/suN 1tor'1 home. Surrounded :::... ~ .... ~ERE IS 112-1111..,.... end dlrec:tlona. call: (714 SI~ Family Home and 8am. 20322 Evergl•des by executive homH THAT HOME for you and &43-8915 °' 771-2573 45 Slip. Trade for: Comm Lane. Pine antiques, cot L•rge lot with alley your farnllY to enjOy thoee F R E E M A R K E T m111 UMI lndust ()( ?. Try calhl Agt Ibis, sores, bookcasea. acoeas on two lldel. •nd reward• fn a MODERN ANALYSIS OF YOUR IULn 831-*321 °' 831-4341 beds, hOYsefull of turn. 1011 or room tor ex· large 3 bdrm + den, pro- REAL ESTATE BY ,. __ 11 .... Refrlg, houMttold 1c-panalon. 1275,000 te11lon1lly decorated MtJL Tl-Ml LLION S llUl/IAJYllW .,._ 1014 oeuo<1ea 968-9948 lnlHhasthaltJ home In a pieetlaloul PRODUCER. CALL -•-••--R•-••t 1812•eu1.~0r Irv ••eaw/1h11n•yard,.Tarae PATRICK TENORE fltm •--..,..utumet.. lnia 1044 ,. ,.,... ' . ... -.,.. •-831-1268 Slngle 1l«y, 3,000 sq fl. Thia 10 yr "young" 3Br 1 111-1100 pool, IP• + much morel thr .. Bdrm ranch atyle 1V.Ba home II elegantly WEFIHT-WlllllE O~ 4 yra nn, an I ;~i~; I(\ A home. Freehly decorated decofaled w/earthlonea 48',. 2~ea. fem rm. A+>-lmlll lllllTI ~..,5oL:,~v!~~~;; 11i• r ~· & upgraded Subject to & designer wall~ -prox 2300 sq h Aaklng Prloed al lol value, thll """~ V Pf'Obate ~rt oonflrm•-Brk:k frplc:, MP tam rm, $289,500. op9n Sat/Sun older but cute 1 bdrm ~:r T.,!:'~= 11on. 1875,000 Includes MC syst, blk wall fen09, 1•5. 41 Lakeview. with studio has new cop- 0 teo,rol'IQ• l•"•t• of rtie fOI,., t(fO""b ed '*'Oldt ~ 'OW • •o,,. fo.,,, J."'P e ...C•d:I land. DON 0. THOMAS RV access & much morel Ownr/Agl 552-5710 per plumbing, flreptace, H V Ho.£$ $199,500. Soothern Call-alngte car gar and 50 x • • lomla Atty 546-5605 • W Inc~ lOfl 125 tt lot. Only $169,'.>00. GE 7WQIOO I· ~ I X G 0 B I' I I I I I G U P 0 Y I I 11 1· I I V 0 C E L 1 ;· My ~s _, ,,... 11111 on ,,... I' I I 1~ .:on"9yOI Dell As I <Helled oown IOI them I rtNtd I -" mutte< I dldn I 1h1n~ 1he 11111 suitcases I E N J J U E 1-· to anyone I' I I 1~ I 0 -r ••• ,.,. '"'' • Q-od 9 ..... -U.1"19 *O"dt t ~.~ C' ''O"P "''•P """'° ) be-o.. I ; I I I I I I I Seu Y •• p,_,.,.,t CIH Cla111fW, 642-567, Carmel Model for Sale. Super Condition. Carmel Model for lease. $1400/mo. No pets. Call: 640-LONG BY OWNER 3 Bdrm 1v. I IHI Call Sheryl 831-1288 -----....-""'"""- Ba. $145.000. OPEN ' EUUITlllll TUIRIP ... SU /SUN 1-5 &45-3217 I Greeltown & beach vlewl. ... IDHTlll ITllTD ... CHARMING & NEW 4 dect<e facing ocean. 2 Quality home ha It 11111 Su.., ah.,.. 2 Bdrm 2 bath minute w.lk to town. In-3Bdrm 2Ba. pool ..,._ --.. Townhomel, Bright, WeU lerlor Ille pa110 & foun-NEWPORT HEIGHTS 3 Bd Low down Open s'undav Iott model located In DellQned, near Ocean, d d & II fl 3 $225 000 _, Montloello Coate Mesa. Xlnt f:lnancl"". 631-7046 taln, hr w t e "· pool home • · 1-5 1107. OxfOfd Agt Community pool, 2 car ... Bdrm, 3'-418&, $"439K. At-COSTA MESA 2 Bd 845-9161 or 497_7;39 garage, new carpets & MT UITll lrac11ve financing. Ownr dupl9x St45,950 dr•pea. Full price Charming 3 Bdrm lormal 425 BLUMONT 494-6616 Alhef & Aaoc Tri-level condo for .... by $99,500 ' . &46-4883/6-45-9868 owner. MOVlng, muel NII, dining •ree, large lov. rm. 2 br 2•,4, ba trptc pool many exlru. A "musl MiHita Vitjt 1017 OPEN SUNDAY 1-5. ~18 s1« 500 714-64&-'.2216. Traditional ..... M ... Verde area. • Superior/Bolero W•y. · _ $144 400 Bkr 840-2878 BEAUTIFUL ELDORADO Neal Condo Park Udo Realty . . . HOME. 3 Bdrm, n. Bath, 28r 28&. p~llo. 2 encl ltat~ Ct11t ••trt BY OWNER. Mesa del Mar pool, llreplace, aprlnkler gare. Clole lo bct1 & pool 1111 ONGS 631-7370 4br 1V.ba, lg fem rm, lg syatern. Mexican Paver $125.000. Bkr 675-4010 1-~~~~~~"!'"9 pool, S159K. 545-3908 decorator hormi on quiet •llMll Pllll* .. _.. 1-w~=c=m::==~~~:..'..::;:::~~,.~~=~ cul-de-uc loc1tlon. Pr•tlg.OoverSho<-.bay BeautlfulloflCondo.Qr•t the camping "bug" INI UMd, Mii It now wllh • (714) 768-8478 Auum. fin. PP 831-4898 veetor. Roy 875-8099 Agt SCUll-Lm .... .,. 11 OlaulflHtiH IOO• ' for information & surprisingly low cost. OF NEWPORT e we getting CM'I* I • I not getting $158,000. Pnv1te party. vu, lab. 5br 4ba, H25K. 1st tlm9 buyer °' lo- year If you have • Cluelfted Ad. L.:::=~=====:.i..:=======~======--- l 1914 FOID TEMPO GL '12 llSSO lllG CAI 414 , 1~ .... "*" 1x1or1 ,,. * ni1 OtttMl """' ~ .pd 111 can ca111per slld t•ct41fnl colld (le '"""~*'Jim 5.,., • IDfilll Slot~ •M • lGIOOlll (SU. # lSlll '6495 •7995 '12 TOYOTA ClUCA CT 1911 FOID CUI£ VU 'II TOYOTA CEUCA CT ., """ ·-""' ti• • '""" ~ .... A(. .... nil ........ dlll IM '" fie • llQl.1111 !Sil • JY• I•••• ef CT.llfeml• LICINS• 4.; K tNY.TIOM A 9'IPAUt lfATION '5995 198.5 STOCK OVER INVOICE ON ALL 1985 CARS '14 vw vu conttr\IOn. 1wto steieo wtl bat (lie •880Ml.R) 1~·~1 •3995 1910 TOYOTA CEUCA ·12 e1m CA11110 ·-.... -......... ---.... AMJ .. lcyl. llMI~ S• t•d *·''" ,, .. ,,.,,,,,.,.,, .................. _ ... --...... • 1tQ1."' ,,,_ ,, .. lleU. Ula. 11111,.... .... dfell 1111, Iii..,.. (l.lc •m• •llSOn21 (53 l lSlt ) •4995 '6995 '12 IUSTllC 3 II I/I Auto ~t1to tm. l'IP"'l ailMlf! I or r'U.OUll IS" •lSCMI '4595 ..... 4 .._ .... -s.w cW ( ll00604) ($1' lllt1) •4595 1979 FOID VU '12 TOYOTA CWCA GT ................ _. .............. ........._ ~ tlld • uu (Sli #35Sl) (10 •01076) '6995 ........ ,...,.....,,,,.... ....... Olllll....,., ......... ~~ ........... --~ ...... , ..... ~ ,_..,_'98 95 '12 POITIAC TUIS II • ·--·--__ ........ Orange Coat OAtl V PILOT /FrtMtf, AUgult 18, 1115 - I -7 • I • 1 I e a so sc .... _ , aao Onlngt Coeet DAILY f'tlOT/Fttdly, Augu1t 11, 1988 .. ·-..... · ··· 1111 :; ·• 1 • •ll .., IM!!f llN ltll Wy!!f -11• t.11 w .. ..-. Ill! 1tJ1 Wuft4 1111 1!1• Wpl!f 11'1 ltlt •••tti llOI J ...... ~ ~ oo • um1 _... __ ,.,.. ____ .I l'Un lowtng, IJlll, ~ -&llllT lanklnf .. ""'1 lnMlnCI ,.. ~l ;·lill IU8MU .. YOUR *OOAONA DK MAR• ~ ctoM\ '° .nn, 30 'If '°' W• COiet ~ ........ .,. '°'the~ dlipt to ...itt Ill. --1 •• -1 PUT Tiii ll•ITUY CU1;: ·• ..... OWN HOlll 1500 eq n. rNI epw, Y"G wwt11 •t,....lo ,_,, tno Offtce of IAIL M.-111-.. In tYPinG """° ftl other' 1_...••-...-~ 1.._ PolltloN avllllbte at the !xp'd, matur•. Some .........._ ~ :;Y.J• ~"""'~ , • 4 Pwtung l)'WIWewtth loOklng tor atMJetlo, IN. Needcnet "°"'TM ~-6mcil--Of Ule cterleelduu.; Typing to T"9 • ...,,. v11-..,. ,,. Dally PllOI newipeper word•prooeaelng com• ~ --m~l ~~:.l. •!)• fJ' optlon.t,tl111mo.. ~~. ';"'~:;.,•::. emtcr, "PW Mltot tor '•derel Oepoelt In• ~ req Own ow • P'edarel Oepo•ll In-*""'~ 81turd•y and puwlthorthlndpf9f'd ~ .. !-~:--ii ... "~ · .1u;Q ' ,..._ ,,. CL/_. -~l-llJ.vl(ai -i ..... t _ ..... TO.IA ....... vlrieid dUt• ~no euranouorp. l'lu mu1t, Cell Judy, !'!_.~ ~:,.....~ ~ Sunday mornlngt Earn R.I llW'MtlnlAla. 1 pet· 1 ... -· w411 _ i,.1 1 • .., .~ • .,. ..,, .. -. ..... -·1 ~10 fUnctlon OtG• ton llnl'Md f -842-4321, ..i 311 for .. _,..,. __ .... ,.... _, 14 50 per llour P11.11 OU eon ort!Oe :I day W.-•. , ·-••. :.. ''4 • 7 ~ S o.J 1 lover enjoy• dining, u ... .-or 1en 84t-71a.. '' h ...... not~ • ..-1n111rance Dept. The allowance. Mutt l'lave Salf."S opet1 Nr oc Air· 1"' cs.no.. trevtf, ~ & ...._, ' acne Wl1 .,.,. _..... ent11 lt"4ll INSURANCE ._.. ,... '"100 "' • ~ ouu. 111. Tl'ltt .. the oner Send uper: llAlll ll&IT CLEAi< requlr .. the fol· llfVe cat "' pictl"«.IC> ..... pert. _.. OAIAOI IALI A.DI HOW ... , ' vr11~Y cletelled...., to PO 8oJc • lllDMI • Mlntynbenklngexper, UILY PtUT lowtno exper· 1>t at leett 18 YNfl old llOUTUY UAH.,llO IY CITYI 1 ..... ,, • lt07 l C.... ""1~ ta 5370, Ste 229, Senta The ~ 0oat1 Ody !r.:tnote dept.°' loen • Typtng 40 wpm ==~~~~:ECH Fl~~ IJll ol.op,!JllUOrtko, HI llLOW _ lttlan lllJ Ana, CA 82704 Piiot 11 ~help In • Ablltty to~ min llU.llTllS • 'amllWtty with PQlldte Part time, Looklnn for r• p ..... ._,. Typlngot w .... ,_ C.1ta1 •eflfat llU Cotti Ktll Ill~ llA" lllPDlm =a.i.ottvtt1on 32!..,_ ~tlbmt!M Wiii~ 40WPM . F~~:.~1':L"'1:,e.i;:: .:,:=~~com-"'" Need•totMfamlllar ~o,;:,;."ia.:a212 Rtdi0arm .. w,ie6'Mw, YARD SALE ixs Aefrlg ,., computer, need·-.-cMfe ptot1 up and ~ • Strong vwbll & written .,.. to perfofm oontlnu· munlcatlon lklllt w/PfOIOtype febrlcatton drlll prw, dinghy With gH 11ove, 21"comm 111'11.... to u.nderltand. two- 7 43a llv.ry of ad• pulllng communication tlcKll out colltctton .rfort on •Mutt bt contclenGloue & UNmbly, et'° 1 .. 11119 UOlnAllJ 0/B mtr, etec wShr p1rt1. mowtf, '03 Corvllr, 1/.C '55471 •month. lonety w/m COii tMOl'lel' tNtth .. t• p;oo.itlng llflkl~exper. 11 ~lrtd detlnquent aocounte. At & etttntl..,. to detlllt. of Nme. Contact Don M.rllttlng oompany r• eoo~ M1tgu1rlte. CdM. ton Vale HOl•t.1..'H 18 Hfl BAYSIDe VILLAGE WMtt to m .. t matu,. eel• end '• variety ol for th PCleltlon. IXI· p#totourltquldallonyou A• 1 Tl!CHNICIAN In our Davia, L'Garde. Inc qutrtt tecretary with S '"T t-~ 2718 San Joa-ou1bo11d, G.u. epener )00 E Coeat ~. Npt 8ch woman for lovt & oompa-ot~ dutlet. Clt\Clldate mum Ml~ wlll not •· wlll t>t Inv°'* wM oon-lntul'9nce ~. you wlll IMMHO. bookkeepl119 exper. Mu1t ,. 1 Hill Rd/becle of MOt()(cyclet etc. etc. Sat Ill· 1111 nlonehlp. Into 80't, l>Vt mutt t>t ext"*Mly or-:r ... J20b:.--.... • Pt':!!..., enond t•ctlng borrower• by tie reaponalble for: p••y Tiii type 80 wpm, wl11'1 the q'!.n , • 0 111 f rn Only. 213 E. 20tl'I, O.M. 1e1tw, IMnfian, muec:u-r ganlled, rMP()n1lble and .,. -• '"'"" phone to reeotw delln. • Verfflcetlon of -ablllty to organize offloe o .. eon •· ua Y u · fG · batdt .. llh 3003 Send ph, 11t name ere. to ebM to work well with ~F ~r'o· &~ucetlont. qu.noy problem•. You tneur•nce on 111 r111 TIU .... l IALll prOQtduree for growing Hamm<>(ld organ, Mite Haat. ltat~ I l IPIAITOXC AEXbiNdi Roger, Ad130, Dally Pilot other• • · · .o ...... g,... wlllrevtewbon'owtnfll• M11te loan• 1100. + H•• ,1.. company. IMS-2005 C:tltl ••ta llH A BOh Infant• I dlildren1 Ad\llOI tn All Matt.,. & PO 1580 Coate M ... 8end reeume Attn. U.. ~~:~~:, lnC=· & recommend ectlOn u • Piecing comprehenllve Wt Trall clothing Toys, WOMANS CounMltng 1815 SO. !I CallM28 Smith, to: no If ':/ Ilk. neoeeuty. You PoeMU llablllty lnturenc. on llOlnAllY MAGAZINES Fri/Sat Camino Reel, San Clem. Thole WhO would t>t Inter· 111111 OUST =· lnf&:atk:' ~ knowledge of COftll.lmtf F.0.1.C. owned propeny 0111 lltl lim tHIJ Mature (Lady Friday). 1 IOO SWAP lllT t..4pm 8402 Vetctler Ot Llo'd. 4l82· 7 2" .. ted In beginning • l&ILY"LIT call g:reonn°el It r~~~~i: • :=r~:=~or (114)111-1111 ~e:"ont~ir .. ~:=~ Ec:z.,g~=F•~!~: L11u1 ..... 1141 Lett I rna• 3004 c~':~1~":1-= on the P.I. 1111110 975-5-4 · EOE fem1tt111ty with ooltectton • Mllntalnlng •tote,.,, IUl 1nan UST Ing UOO. t-5. 5 da~ Ad1m1. Co111 M .... Ad· dflG#rt;. mite #Gmffure. FOUND 3.4 mo. old unity teactlll19 by .,, Of· O.stl .... Oa. Hiii Bankt119 lawt. Thlt polltlon r• In• currtnl 1t1tu1 Suooeurul RE Agl ..-. C.M PhonH, typing, mltelon & Parking FREE. ooueh. rug, chllrt, mite. •trlped F*'1 kitten, nr dllned unity mtnlMar 1n lllln AllllTUT qulr .. JClnt vwbel & writ· • P~e1ton of monthly aggr .... ve lk:enMd per· need auto, etc. 842-3844 SPIC99 810 432-5880 908 s Hvlew s 1 boy1 club 031~"8 the neer Mure piMM 1 ....... _ ten Miiia. Prevlout benk· report1. aon 10 tupervlM -,;ittloe, ••0tnAllY 4197-3581 -----,----I Clll IM&-8832 . AIDE F !iv.In PIT Ulltt ...,..._,_ Ing or flnanoe exper I 1 ComSMJtet Input Nerowt + thow prop--,,..,.....---=---i:---r:!"T7 Found 8113 Kitten twtMW ln wtnctw.;roltlfd ll•llWI ptua.Salarywtllnotex.Candld1t"mu1thave1p. erty Mull b• 11m. P1T.3 csayap/wt1, 125 ci.art>rOOkLane,on lnp1llt11• 1161 bfwn/wht Harb« View l11laenn +'250 mo IM5-23S'7 A Mlf·ltllter to ...... In c .. d S 19,000. p/yr proprltle experience 11111/0C. aalary $1000 + muit type, non-amoker ~!:' M~°ri:.s~=~~ ---. ... &111 _.. -P ..... call IM0-1529 t. •-1 401• the d~t & con-Pleuetend your reaume Banking It• p4u1. Mui· bonua. Send reeum. to ~775 --- FOUND ADS ARE FREE CaU: 1 .. • • ANS SERVIC! ~pref, trOI of budget tor owned to F.O.r.c .• 11tn: Pereon-mum Mlary II S11.000.. Dally Piiot Id• 122 llHnAIY Organ Mdl M. ctothlng, AntQ. "tr cabinet, ~lrll one OI &anoe SOUntlM Cordboarde. lm!Mdlete Real Elt•t• propertlee. nel, P.O. Box 75-48, New-ptyr. The F.0.1.C otter.• PO Box 1580, Co111 M ..... Secretary • UnderWtlter 11~~:~~ ·8.~~·ucn 1t4m• ~;:P P.lt~· f.': t:'bi!:: flneet Auto Dllmantllng opening. d1Y9. 780-8305 NMdt to Independently Port B • • oh , C • . P,'"' benefit• Peck:f:· CA 82828 for surety Bonding omc. f\.lmlture ore chra camp- Vard tor Sale Long teue, APAITllm IUUllR ,....,ch & control or 92858-7.,.&49 EOE ncludlng Dental & VI on I ~~ ~~-In Coat• M.... Good 3-Faml!Y Su Or11t itutfl I ........ '11mp1 .fc SAT 1tlnt variance Cont1C1 t...~ fOf owned Real coverage. II you WOUid •.. Ot SM Ofm.. 1 ltne ad Sat llQ "-. • · Ernie°' Ray, 8ga-.343 21 Unl11, eo.11 Mell. No &t'a'r.' proper! .... NMd• OllllnllllY Ilk• more lnformatton, 11ri" • typing• mull. '*gen-onty 9,.... No .. rly bird• A: ~.1 pett. Experienced, Mml· lo lndependenttu r• ASSISTANTS needed for Pleue cell Plflonnel, at flj il!JM er11 offto. dutlel. Exper 9.4 t8~4l~r1d58 St CM No de1~1 121S Hlgh-lul!HI VIP· 4 " retired. "5-088! llMl'ctt & comp11e' data: buey hair 11lon In 9'75-5400 EOE In lneurance or banking land Or, W•tclln ~nment ShOp th AITl llT&ILH You'll alto l>t'"f)on•lble Newport. &.tt.7197 HOIPnHllT helpful. Call Joa, Clothlng, toy1, motor-... .. tab. happy cllentele. wlll train. lntervlewl Mon. for e111blllhlng tickler & WllOAPI l&llT, for buay medlcel front of-556-0070 eyer.., queen bd. Toyota l :!f1tn lar111 lalt1 OOOd loc. Fun bullneN. d•"· 492•2005 flllng aytttm• lor the OOllllLlll eJCper. Xlnt oppty for r• flee. Full time. 64t.8824 Sim /RRIPT Truck "'" & whl1. Aug A eorlea only Sat 8-3 Terrific ttfml. Muat telll • budget .c-.... -.....1. llable honeet pertOn with T 1 klll 1 17/18. 2285 Columbia 74'4 Via Lido Nord M2·N71 .. __ ..,..,, P 1 en -• for d•t•ll Call 11-1mOlllT YP ng • • 1 mua Lido 1111 found baby blk/Wht cat 7 l41/64t.7975 AITt llDIAllO • Minimum 2 )'Mrt bank· art 1 me carrier OOUr\MI· _, · sv Anewer phone• & gen.,11 Everything trom Capt. chrt -------,.,..- v ct y N w p I Hg 11 111,. wuw Wheel Alignment, BrakM, Ing experi.noe In• note ort wanted. Helf. boYI Exotica, 4941"2131 Perm. part time. N.B. RMI office dutlel. Comput., to pot• & p1n1, bedroll•, Dlngy1 & marine aupplle1. IM2-0382 ., "'' Tune Up. Newpor1 Tire dept.orloandept. •nd glrll •ollct new LIUlllOlnOY Eatete ttrm •eek• IMlll• helpful, but c1n8m1ntent1,oldpro)1C1or Ladle• blka. houlllhold, -TILLITTllUTI Cir 3000 E. Coat Hwy •Mu1tt>tcon1<:tent1ou1& tubtc:rlptlon1 on their •nthuilutlcretlabletllm learn-on-th• Job. En-Stt8·5. 738W. 17th St. clothe SAT 8-3pm. 2908 Found Blk Ret mix Mlle 11 you are unh•PPY and corona def Mar ' attentive to detail. paper rout ... Mull enjoy for lltlgatton & tu •t-playar. Llrt accurate vtronment 11 Mor1gage --Alta v1111 Dr. Ea1tblutt1 under 1yr. Upright .. ,.. want to get out on your •Strong vwbal & written . WOfldng with 10.13 yr ~ornta~h N::.;;moker. typing 5 wpm, n-Banking & Real E1t1te. Gigantic Salel Furn, well -------- white on ch .. 1. tip & tall. own. our nrm hU 1 pro-AITt TIH llRYIOI communication tklllt. Olde. Eerty evening houre to~lrlng · Partne:,aau~ amoker, prof appearance Hrt 8_5 Mon-Fri Call Mr Nddle, 11mp1, 1tareo, Don't Miii the Garage Wide Blk leather collar. g r • m I n t • I • • and light repairs N.wport • Experience In ftllng. work days/ n .. tble l'lre. Birch St. Suite 2900, ~~u~!ndl~cl~~~ :::: Gonzales ~9-9585 appt ;~~41 :!',., f~~s·~,•~l~e ~~ ~~~~ S~~On~:t:.3' ~~~dlfi ~~ ~ communlc1t1on1 right Tire Ctr, 3000 E. Colet eorttng & gath«lng In· c°C:'~~ ~it.y Newport BHch. Ca. bookkeeping runctlona. IEOIRtn 839 Vie Lido Nord. Sri.It 64: 3859 nm here In So Cl/If. Polen-Hwy, Coron• def Mar. formation la I mutt. IM2-4321axt. 2()6 928e0 $5•58 per hr. and hra. are MUL Tl-FAMILY SAT. i----,..,,....,,......-.,,..,,-- er • tlll In alx llgur• flrat BANKING • GOOd typing 1klll1. -•••r-•-1 10 5:30 PM. 5 days. tl,21 P/11, 8am-4pm 31 '45 Karry LOTS OF GOODIES An· Found rat Orey/white ..-, You need $100K For more Information .,_ ...,., Liv.In Cate for Elderly C Un _ __. tfl e lor p 1 Lane Co•t• M ... Furn tlques, mlac 1tem1, player ... ~:-d ~"-1111--1•~-Call TELLER pi...-----11 F.0 .1.C. p..... , .. ,.,, .......... 1 w 1 Start lmmed. ontacl .,.,..., o c.< r 1-· • tebby Flea collar .-· ...,,.,.....,,.. ,......., ... IAILYPILIT ... , on........,, n M Denlte 7141_.76--0282 tlgtoue account In the clothea,dllhel,etc. ptano blkt1. railroad Flora/Pearl 6re1 Lag 950-2 82 for app't son'* (7141) 975-5400 Nawport. Dan, work South Coalt Plue arN ti••· clothH a toyt Sch '49'4-0328 • 851-3331, ...... IM6-7237 REOPTllEm Prtor Mlllt1ry orL1wEn~P1rklng lot aa1e, 8Dbu1~· Sat/Sun 8-'4, t127 tlffHn, GREAT WESTERN SAV· lllN &lllSTAIT ---llU/f.ff.. I f Re I n11sea mov ng • • Som«Mt Lane Found DESERT TURTLE f .D,'i 4021 tNGS, one of Clllfornle'e Clothing Mfg needt Acct 8:!!':' Balboa i.land. ~tu PllOIUlll Do you have a gOOd tele-orcement pre I red chllt'. lllhlng tlcilte & •-------- Nw 8'oolchtlrtl/Adamt leading nnanciat ln•tttu-Rec. AUl11ant, manual Da~' Clll appt 873-eMe Exp d Lo111 Proceuor phone vok:e & can type? P«ton• encouraged to toola. equTp Sat. 9/17 Sat t0.3 432 Prospect HB 983-5288 TlllTIHIS uon1 ht1 an lmmedtata tyttem now, learn com-· needed for growing A progr91alve growth apply PED S 959 & 8&1 W 17th, CM Bdrm Ml. antique TV, Found k-on PCH. N B , Wa buy Tnm DMdt opportunity for 1 Teller In puter tater. Dutlee alto In-OllTlllll llllflll Flnanclel Co. Xlnt Niiiy oriented company needt SEC R TY ~ER CE Red ti ., el I blk•. tcubl g11r, camp. -•-•••to. fllta, •-m our C0tt1 M ... br--.... cludt pl'lonet, flll'Si. OLf•l PUT-I & commllllon for the 1 P«M>n who has the U I VI ecora ng my g 90 lng/Nshlng g•r. furn etc acrON '''"t lrom Cappy ••• -.,...,, " n• ""'h Send above. Salary plu1 com-229 So GluMtt, Org have furn (old. old & old 1.,....__,.-.,.__,,,,_ __ Cele ldltlt 831-2'423 Call Wayne MatttleWI Mon-Fri. 8am-5pm. · ''V 1 peraon r• pany paid t>enefltt . Cati 833--8771 new) Gl111w1ra. boolca. Sal/Sun Found Tr..,urM _ · 754-6828 Vou thould h1v1 Cllh p/hr start. North Coata The Defiu Piiot hu Im-tume to Ad # 125 C/0 J 7 t ff tc All "'Iced 30., clualc recorde .ui• 1 FOUND ladles 1...eiry Vic handlln~ •1tperlence, ...... Maul & Soni. ___.,., •. , I for r... Dally Piiot PO Box 1850 Nancy or oe, ( t4) IEa1•m IUlllD limit. u . • . ,,. ''T"' 00 ,.,. ....... open ng "" 250-1640 for peraonlll tn-n to leave my garage & 50'1 Magazlnea. Antq1, of Oeleon• market. Cor-Btlt Waat.. Sl prelerab In 1 lln1nc111 9ee-1510 Karen tomer Service Clerk 10 Co111 M .... Cal 92828 tervlew EOE 538 _ 8 _. 02 empty. 5119 • 3 . Meyer Pl. b 0 0 k 1 , Eu, 0 p e 1 n one o.I Mar 8 4 <>- 81 8& * IEO•n••y; lnitltutlon and you mull work In our buay Clrcuta-••••1 OAIYU REST'"U"' '"NT btwn w111on/Vlctorla, clothlng, de1k.1: Scotch & FOUND .m.11 female " "" enjoy extenatve publlc UAT llRYIOlll tlon "-artment Mu11 bt -,. "'" I SllYIOl ST• •mlD C M 850 8833 Maxell tan.a (90 min) IHIUL IFFIOI contact Light typing and mlac minor repair• for ..,_ · Flttere & Awning lnlltllera I I L OOOI F II Tt •· • • • ,,_ · Betgte. Vic 23rd & 10 k""" are ,..,,ulred .. llboal charter fleet. dependable and able to Exp. helpful. 1M5-2244 I L I I ••, Exper. w/ref1. SS hr+tlme SAT 8AM 27• SherwOOd Scotch Floppy dlllc• -Ill Elden.C M 1548-7378 _, ..., handle heevy phon11 Exper pref. Mon 1hru Fri-& 1/2 Sun. off Union '78 · new I Wo w I Follow -------1The Jolly Roger Corporate 645-7100 with a pteuanttelephone IUllll 1 RllHI doy only Kitchen &' Nwpt Sch 1544-7151 . St. Relrlg . men• •kl balloon• to corner or Found Yef¥ very ugly dog, office It IOoklng for an ex-We' I I rewerd your IO•T Wl•llll voice. 20 Houra p/WMk brick . block, e1tper'd, for counter help. P/tlme, boot1/1kl1,.,·clothea Irvine Ave/Holiday, NB. an1wrs lo Skragtu. or-perlenced MCretary for enlhual .. mwlthanelCcel-• n Monaay • Friday. Call So. O.C. Contractor. MonthruFrlday, 11amto llllPPllllllGllYlll Book1/ch1rt1helvea ange hair, Baytlde Dr, the operation• depart-lentoompeniatlonpack· P/tlme. HS/College atu-8'42-4321 lor •npt. Atk .. 93-1123aft.rpm. 2 pm. Call George bel. Warehouee 111l1t1nt.SAT /SUN 9AM. ''452 S11t1Aaa lllO CdM 780-0'410 ment. This poaltlons re-age Ind the opportunity dtnt to wo(k on ketch. .... ., " " qulr" good typing •kill• for per10n1I and pro-831-8480 for Tracey. 1 lam or aft 2 pm only. Mon-Fri 7:30am-4.30pm. Swetchmore, Clg Park Oak Antlqun & rum, etc, LOST Gold M .. h Bracelet • pleaaant phone man~ fea•lonal growth. II you're Dental/Ortho Reoept lllfOAL ru1T OFO Mon th Fri '432-0870 $4 75 p/hr to II art. North Cul d• tlC Off Princeton. Moving mull NII. t 101 Watch OrMt tentlmenttl ner and general office lntereated, please apply Oll'T Fiii THAT Benefit• '4'h Oyt Exp Reception, lnaurance, or-It t t/I Colla Mesa Ron or Den. Furn. golf clubs, 3 whl w. Stevena No.18 Cor'ne< value. Reward 4197-3718 knowledge Prior word In perton to. RillHT 1011 Aeq'd NB 642•2828 thopedlc ex per de-H Hfll HfHtH 988-Hi 10 Yamaha, 3 whl bike. Brl1tol & Sunnower I & II ll " · alrable, 1111ry open (d~ P/F-tlme Studio Care •utp IJLP/llllYER Fbrgt11p1, mlec Saita 1_ 1 B 11 i~• 14 REWARD for IOI! talkl119 proceu ng on ne di ) CdM 875 7575 aft 41pm -,.. ! ,,.,. P11rot. Boyt' pet Grn computar 11111111 definite GREAT IRIYEI pen ny on ex per · • 770-01D 2 Tools, WOOd lathn, books, w/ytw head. Vic of Uni· plu11 Xlnt benefits & HOIEIOllD 1 Now hiring full & part time 80-8788 for appt. glUtware, clothea, doll•. Huge garage ea 1. MOV\()g. v,rv",!!..ty. 7P3r3k ,.~257Foxglove. wg:!:~ =p11::,~· ~~hpl~ WESTER II SELL ., g:: 6.~.;~d.s;:~ IEIHW. HOlnltlllT llnAIL IWllY SALIS ITITIOIEIY 30klt3chen3 B w:~·s.1~8~9<: ~r~·~~ .. g~;,. i::· .... ~ I n P•• r •on , btw ~ SAYllll!!S gram. Paid training Uni-C&rMr opportunity. full C M I N·B. aria. Wiii tram Store In OdM needs Salet I -• ___ Si.in 18-18. 8..&pm 20121 SCRAM.LETS 8 30am-4·00pm • TELEPllOIEJ forms. 14.25 pfhr 11111. time. Internal medicine. 642•05n Peraon. FrT 5 D•YI Xlnl Have aometnlng to NII? Bayview Ave, Santa Ana TIE ".LL' " .. I• llO. 3200 Park Cent« Drive 85e.,91 15 Salary commen1urat1 with 1tn•IL •••is working conde Eapec:l1lly Cluslfied ads do It well Hgta 75a.0299 " Costa Meaa, CA 92828 PfT or FIT Choiee of with exp. 850·'4322 • -flM cllentele 875-1010 ANSWERS 17CM2 lllltftt '"' houre 11 youra Call T H. DRIVERS. etou country lllfQ•• •Rm Lift ITA1.IQ FHlt Im Equal Opportunity A 810 c1 1 te1 Te I e. No exp. nee. Calif. lie -.., II Forn110, an I tall an SUMMER AJJliHCtl 6011 Farailut 1029 Boxing · PUdgy l l .112.:•0l• l Employar M/F/H marketing, 953-8870 req. MacGregor YIChta, lthtre frtlt tft, F /T Bakery & Cale In Fashion I lft lPPlJUOEI INTERIOR DECORATOR Clove . JejuM " _. • -----0••11111ER·lllS..w••11 1831 Placentla, C.M llft lt4. Oii, ... tft tlland '*:',..energetic, JOBS LES 957-8133 moves mull 11crlllcet My blg~E~z~~Dtlrtl on -ACCOUNTING CLERK N••• •port• Fn-PJT Per~':=n t. lllHITIHITIOll • .,,,.tMl-1111 ~,}g~'?n ~eyt ra!:. Beaut Rattan Din Ml the conveyor belt At I Exper In po9tlng, manual ..... ,, .... nt 1 Crown Hardware. Coron• IEUYlllY ..... ... w--·111 call St.111n 64M279 EARN *SILEI llLEI* $500. Cof Ible Mt S3751 rNC:tled down IOI them I AIR, knowledge of 1gl119 def M 873-2800 S6 • _... Refrigerators S128 & Up Hallaln Cotton Sofa/ heerd a man mutter, :., helpful. 556-8222 ,.._.. ".\ ., part & lull time avall. .50 AM & PM lhlfte Hourly llllUI SUH -MONEY W11her1 199 & Up lovesl S500; Sofabed (un- did 'I tl'll k he n I ~ CASHIER • Part-lime. Wiii p/hr. Lag. Hiiie. 788•3764 plu• ml!Hge 8&4°·2581 WHlllll Dry41tl, glS/elec $99 & Up uaedl 13501 Stunnlnl. c11~1 .~nEL~No':l, au,~ De~~!~~ ~~fill r,~;'V~·~ g•ln. ,J~~~r. Mrs. EASV ASSEMBLY WORKI EXPERIENCED In Roman PRIZES ALL APPLIANCES ~;::: g::S:,:.'S~f3~n •n"one ,,... -·. amp 1800. per tOO. Guaran-IOTOR Shade & n-1..--. mfg F llJ II t .. ' · Accounra payable poa-t d Pa t No E ....,. ,.._, I ar11 ••• Deco; Sola/lovnt pallel Clerlcal 98 ymen · X· Co1t1 Meu 642-1435 Ptr1111l1 J0l2 Ilion In buey Orange pertenc:e/ No Salet. De-llOITE TRIPS hottle1t 0H4fflH Cira orig $1500 sac: te50. A County Ad Agency A/P d.. ~ OLIJll TYPIST tall• aend ... f·lddreuec:t lllTIOllLll UNIQUE FURNITURE Oak glue coffee tbl tel ttrac lntett S/W/F 5-4 experience required tO-_ II you're• Nll·•t•rter and stamped envelope; El.AN 19'47 s. Mein St $.450, 0 1.k Bdrm $400 looka'44.5'3, ll51b, key by touch, typing 1 n .. 1bte1bout job1s.lgn-VITAL-903, 3418 Avallable In Newport llU&ILNllTltl THIS Santa Ana Cuatom Oak: 8' wtll unit ovee bch, lheater, travel, muat Excellent fringe ment1, the F.0.1.C. hu 1 Enterprise Rd, Ft. Pierce, Beech . Experience apply In perton, 2407 E. Btwn Edlng«& warn« on $575: col Ible 111 S375. sell. Jog, bookstwtne/ltre. benefit• Send reaume to· job lor you. Our dMelon FL. 33482 prflferred · but not co .. t Hwy, CdM. SUMMER Main St. Soa the Searl Sectlonal recllner 1011 Llvff In COM Meet prof. Mra Brecke. PO Box '-' I of bank llquldatlon cur-neceaaary.Muithavede-I 0 orlg S1800tacS7501ALL flnanclally MCure S/W/M 8710, Newport Beach. c u s. rently has opening• for EllllAll PEllll pendable tran19ortetlon. l&ILllAlllt D IL. I 1. 11·~22 XLNT QUALITY + CONDI tlmlllar other lnterfft CA 92658 aeveret clerk typlit who Cott• M ... Archltec:turll end be ov« 18 year1 old. axper Prlmarlly IOI 1st & t ntr 'I tat Open 10-8 Sun 12·5 No ree.sonabla offar re- Are you out there? Leta --- -average typing speeds firm Meklng «rand per. Seven day dellvery with 2nd layout 875-1825 IUU PILtT Amene Sxsretrlg w/ fUM<ll PIP 972-3.411 aee whit hlppenal p 0 WANT ACTION? Fina Whal you Wini In 50WPM The F.0.1.C. of-aon to work 20-25 hrt ~op:i:::g •. c~uF;~A•MY Salee 1 ... ,.,.,, lcemkr, h1rve1t gold MUST SELL Sola, love- Box 9'473, N B CA 928~ Cla&slled Ad• 642-5678 Deity Pilot Clanllledi lers a great benefit• p/wk. Pref. Arctl. etu-IM2~!33 lllllE IALU 11 you are too1dng for extra Caloric dbl ovan llv, gd seat, chair & ottoman, • package Including dental dent. Dependable car 1 Full time ealel polltlon apendlng money, or like cond. bet off r 497-7106. coffee & endtable -j : rn:11~1t111:.1 SYDNEY 0MARR , ..... s.iuurday, August 17 ARIES (March 21-\pnl I 'JI C olkCL needed material. be c;urr wols :lH' "\harpcned ·• fm:us on detatl'i fine print, ham chore~ f..nO'-"ledgc ol '>..tlct" rule~ and regula11Cln'i \ o u'll be on more soltd ground l'mot1onall) lina nct.tlh TAURU · I •\pnl 26-Ma\ 20) Domcst1r adJU'itfllent ocrur\, other t hange'i al\o take plan: anti relate to lovt" rclat1o nsh1p rolU'i on lh1ldren q 111ct). \peculation. added ix1pulant). demand\ o n )Our time Ciet t<ka\ o n paper ' · GEMINI (Ma" 21 Junl" 201. Stud; Taurus message for \aluablc htn1 £ mpha'il\ on ha~tC valuec; propen;, changes 10 dOOll'\tll i,ccnam1 Au·cnt on ltkc;t;lc. income potential. marnal !itatuc; Taurus. Libra. ')corpw pcrc;on~ tlgure prommcntl;. · CANCER () unc 21-Jul} 221 Man~ dcc1s1ons are subject 10 ('hangc Know 1t. kci·p plans flel(tble and o ptions open. Look behind Kenes. perlcct lethn1qucs str(·amhne prc.x:e<Jurcs. P1~es native doe\ have "our bc\t inlcrcc;t<, at hcan t.EO<Jul\ :!l \ug .?21· Lmph;lS1\onab1ht~ 10\\o11h .. 1andprcssurc ol meeting dcadhnc M one\ potC'nt1al 1'1 great. love rclat1onsh1p entails jtJdrd re\pon\tblltt> 'r ou could lOllcct a bonuc; ( ancer ( apn~om 1"1Cr<,on\ pla' oul\tanding roles VIRGO ( \ug 2 l-~pt 121 \i11ss1ng p1cn~'> tall into plan· much to \our Jdvantagl' Lunar numen(a] qde~ h1ghhgh1 prc~ltge ach1c-.c- ment and cnwtmnal ~at1<,fal1111n L.o ng-<,tand1ng task t'i fin1,hed \'o u "111 c·mcrgr \ tl lnrmu'i LJBRA !\q'll 21-0lt 22) \ 1gh1 t\ 'ihcd on arrnc; pre .. wu~h dark Keep prnm1.-...· to one who rclic'i upon ~our undef'>tJnd1ng Ma~c nt'w ~tart. reoal11t· th.11 love will pla\ major role Leo nat1 "e hclp'i you get to heart of matter\ SCORPIO tf k l 2 3-'\o, 2 1 l \\ 1sh ..:omc\ true.:. 1mu11111n 1s on target you II lh()(.1sc right lOursC' and could h11 financial Jackpot What had been a mild" fnendsh1p l'Ould be tran\formed into lov~ relat1omh1p t\quanan plays kt')-role SAG ITT ARIUS ( l'lov 22-0c<.· 21 I Yo ur op111111n will he ~ought h)' profnmmal :nsoc1art· \upcnor Rcfu'>t" to h<' hackl'd into rnrnc:r or 10t1m1datcd Ma1nt .. un 1lcx1b1l1t> and ~me of humor Member of opposite \CX pla;\ rnrnplrmcnt and means 1t CAPRICORN (Dt't. ~2-Jan 19) Roadblo.. k~ to progrcs$ 3fl' removed -focus on 1nforma11on, publr.,hing, 1rncllcctual cuno tt)' und tr;ncl opponun1t> Tauru\ &·orp10 pcr\on\ plJ)' )lifltficant role\ P'1\I error' can no~ be crast'd AQUARIUS I Jan 20-f cb. IR) \ uu could t>crnmc sncl(tncnbly 1n' olvt'd wsth 'm)Sleriouf' mcmbc'r of oppo,ttc \Cx Make anqu1ncs, ask quc\rtOn\, wkc nothing for granted. Kc) "to d1"'cm mottvc - monc)' could be '""olvcd PISCES ffcb 19-March 201 Empham on "here }OU hvc, OO\tc domestic changes. \('nou' attention to marital "~lu~ Unu,ual 110 '' on the wa) •· Pa\t fa.,or 1s rtturned. ~our fa11h will bt' re-stored Taul'\I native wall pro"'e smccrtt) rF AUGUST 17 f, YO R BIRTHDAY /Ou rccentl} undcNent cmo11on1J trl\.&11 Now, ho~cvt"r burden 1s lifted. \Ou'll travcl. vou'll be m o re popular and you could be \IC~ luck} tn money mattrn' You pa,,1onatr. rrt"at1v~. \Cns111vr to moods of tho~ around you ancer. CapnC'om persoM play important roles 1n your hft You work st under Pt't'S'Ure. art capable of mect1ns deadlines You arc 11mrntal 1nten~. you \C:'ldo m do anyth1ns 10 halfwa} mnnncr rdomrs11r ldJu,tmr.nt could include chan,t of rc'1drncC' manrnl an ~~mtl(r & vlalon cov.,age 11 you muit Out• Include e<· UllY 1vall1ble 11 the Pen-to go placea Ilk• Magic Relrlg $t50,wunerS125, Earthtone color• Xlnt would llke more tnfor. rand•. flllng, lite office IOI 3 children (2 echool nyuYer. Work In a friend-Mountain, Knotta Berry Ste<eo S75, Chalre (3) cond S250 lor 111. Queen metlon call personnel. at work. S.9--0644 1~) llve-ln pref. prlv rm, ly beautllul offloe taking Farm. or win Prizes and l50ea. Muctt mlec Mull bed w/2 nightstand• & 975 - 5400 EOE FILI OLHI P/T 5 day wtc. Lite houM-counter/ phone 1d1. Awards, Call ue nowt We Hit 648-8123 hdbOard $150. XJnt cond Cllf'lclf 15120 h,.. per Week Int«-keeping, tome cooking. GrMt Job for lrlendly have eeveral openln~• In Relr!Qerator ,250. Freezar Walnut flnllhed wall unit FILI CURii views held 8 AM to 2 PM drlv•r pref. Salary/wk outgoing lndlvldual. C M • H B or I/ SWO. Wllher & Dryer 150 675-6762 ~-- The Federal Dep0tl1 In· on the 19th & 20th, It plua board Cell Mary Apply In perton 11 the 8'42-4333 S 1251... Dl1hw11he r RCA TV remote S75 Col- surance Corp h11 lour Newport Nl111n. 988 5419--35-49 Pennyuver 1880 TELEPHONEJSALES S100,c:&lll54G-5848 feetable28xG8$100.Cor- openlng1 fOI tile ciertls Dove St. Newpcrt Beach NANNY ror lnlant to 3yr1. ~:;:.nua Ave. Costa 12W • 1IW·1 lw ---ner table encl -'50 Oct To quellfy you mull hive No phone calla pleua Lovl119, prof, your home IO IO IO Ca•tltl A table encl 135 756--0299 2 yra eicper In flllng, sort-Xlnt ref• 543-t238 ••• l!I II llmlll ~ I 1011 Ing & checking all forms FRIDAY TYPE WORKER .._ 81.f•Ht Stngle Bed new m111r .. 1 of documentation. Exper Detall orlenled, llte 1111111 People with Herballle, II lllllllYEI SR~20f 35 mm b ll\Olta & box ap;.tnge S50 obo tn •bank •note dept 11 • bkkpng.nexlble, n-emkr Rapldly expending home Sh1k1M. Amway, etc. IX· WILL TRAiii camere w/cue & Macro 548-1858 Iv magi plu1 The F D 1 C otter• t M·F t.'4 S4t.9328 h111th agency needs perlence 10 Join Natlonlll Zoom ,.,,, $400 Excel· s 1 & L grMt benellll pac:ka~ l1• ltatle1 •Htl .. llf R N.'S , LV.N.'1, C.N.A '1 Com, panpy In ealea fcel • 6FAIM·1p2·30f PMI Mon.hthru lent condition 7SG-0299 ~.8tthl""""o$~00111!9~11~ch57' Including Dental & Vl1lon • • • & Homemakerl for prlv, PIC ty rove yourMt or r . ro I mo1p are, "" v•... ., ..-" coverage Pteue call FIT PIT. $4 hr. M/F. Call duty nursing at home. •few month• In manage-lreewey cloM In An•hetm Fat1itart 1025 Solld oak Bdrm 111. penonnel EOE Sadl 8•5· 8"4-4-24110 DOCTORS & NURSES, merit or corporate po. arll 52'4-1890 Mr G. compl xlnt cond S500 975-5400 1111•&1 lfftOI 41000 Birch St lllon Wiii be youra Mr nPan 2 blr 110011 110 ea. 9x12 ROll·•~•Y bd 150 Lid· ,..., Hudson, 752-8804 beige area rug S35. derbac:k chra 110. Chnt OUlllOAl POT Tiii pt111an1 phone mann•r. Newport Beach 851-2772 8'" ES PERSONS F h Piece work form typing In Wardrobe mirror S10. of drawera unllnllhed II h T I & n llllng varlou1 office "•111111 LT IFO ,.L • renc our office. A"ernoone. Flr-laoe ecreen 110 Hm $30 8 .. 1-o .. 9 ft 6p •• rs. YP ng ngure ' FIT -' ' Paatry Shop, Newport 12·30 on. 2-4 Hre p/day. 720~1388/wk 478-2800 ' ' ,.., a m. ap1 Jett 780-3880 g~~l~E Ph~~~~:;,i:: PIT 11AM...SPM wtcdayt. B • 1 ch . K hr 1st In e lrvlne area Call for appt ex 18 , Wall Unit, 3pca, top Qua! CUlll TTPllT 3303 Harbor Blvd, Unit car r913 MllHge pd. IM0-812'4 880-0727 very attractive ell wOOd E-5 . Cotti Meu. 14415 ULll/P·TIIE WELDER, tpply 8d~o~~~h~ce~·=d &500, 940-41t49 G~a~r=~~.,!~~~~ 540-oe88 1 '",,to,ldl UlllTllT ... Mature woman. amt Lido MacGregor Yachta, 1831 and grMn norat 1110. WATERBED. queen 1111. PQl'•t• Of11ca ot ,,,. IUllALlrFIOI or c rant WMr ..... glftthop.Apprx.25hrwtc. Placentla,Coat1Mesa 87$~977 hHt•r, hetdboard. tturant chain Potlllon lull or pllrt time. S...00 p/l'lr Pull time, no exper. Call 10.1pm. 875-2'425 padded rlll1, gd cond requtru •Int typing 1klll1· plhr 505 30th St. Suite req. 47&-« 17 SALIS C1t1 HOS E~~:'r Al~p~nt~r.:.1r~ $75. ~ 102 exper w/word pro-203, N.8. 8'73·7811 ORDER DESK & War• Tlr .. Ind Auto Servic. llAlllH llTTlll hutch Rage to Rich" Whhe Bdrm furniture, lml ceutng • plus Vll1ed H• IAYIHI houH wk PIT Start Ne~port Ti re Center· l50 No~ 758-1019 cetm petchwrk cov-atareo. 2 llvlng room general otttce dut111, ., ._1.,.. tmmed 815-U81 3000 E. Coat Hwy, OdM anettdult ruffle & pillow uphol chrt 644-59&3 20-30 Hrt Plwk to 1t1r1 _., •-PAffT TIME , "--HIO th1m1, decor plltowe Wiii develop Into lull time LOAN PROCESSING For F v Skating c.nter l&UI TUllH =pl Trad love111t ' toll 2 •ackiu 1211 P<>9•tlon Apply In pereon OFFICER. lml'Md open. Floor Guard• tnlci< bar tome offlol WOl'lt AIO Lllau &asn tndtcoffM tbl. lempa, 21-iilllji;i~~ ........... p.;.;;.; 9am-4pm, •t. Ing, min, 2 yrt prooeetfng Bob or Terri 841-0022 • Cell em &4M18t LNve meaaeoe '4M597 reciter• Milo. ICCIU. All SPE€15AIRE XIA Tiii JtUY llHEll 110. & clOttng loana. exoar cond. Ev 58&-3082 COMPRESSOR l300. 17042 lllltnt lYt CLERICAL • poaltlon The tHtHI draw tn the M"'9 totMthlng you want AKC lrg Samoy•d M I UY rlllfTlll 850·8883 • •Vlllable lleo. £1 Toro of· w .. 1 t Dally Piiot to tell? Clu.tfled ad• do puppy Pedlgre, thot1, - 1"1H ltoe Call Tim Boland Clualfled Ad IM2-5971 It well tA2·5e78 8412-3030 Iv m1g Ed LES 85'7·8133 •t Ila l•ll 114/210-0111 788-5105 EOE Ryland or rm 21 or 109 CrNm Ml two chllN ICI atta1 • HOSTESSICASHIEA PM I •1 PD 1•303-25a.7979 1295 lounoe' w/pldt, etlffll 2 RAluu1ll:I Sf:iASUN OLEH nP11T •Nft, larnlty COffM thop II y I DI-• lamp' octagon and table T I c I( e T s c A L L PfT, travel Oflented butl· Call George eso-6735 • •• ••••• lfl 1139 S2Wl00 780-8M1 875-IM58 = n~~rn;·i :le pc;::! lllllOWllU : y~a!°';~z~~:.,~:. OFF WHITE "L" SHAPED 9' Bruni~ "Otlwle" 1k1111 •uent111 875-2250 Needed OObd l'loure, : .IHI Fil Riii · : percn/a.ge 487•5123 SOFA & l..OVE Sl!AT, =~ T~!:rJ,~lk• f'tO'IWt n ~ gOOd pay. c.n Robbie'• • "1U ~-,..._.Mt • n ic e cond 8150 · "' x Seti idle 1tem1 IM2·5878 Rag & Mop 548-0757 e -WILL., Liil M ,.,..1 e Clwlfled Adt 942.5978 &4l8-58l4 r..ve meauge tura S500 8'4418 : It you are ln High School or Jr. High: Da1·1y Pilat A~un!~ ~5.~C)(~ OVRLStRRPPlnG • and would like to earn $26.00 to : •••• ee • e •• e e power 840. OXY·ACT : $~.00 in rommismona and more each• • • torchlt t150 5-48-5842 tnCORPORRted • k ~.. .... u You k • • • """'· 2s" orr vv. me. wee -"' ...,, a ca · can wor • • WOOd cab s 120 & 19" cir F(LD SERVICE REPR~nrr : PART in the afternoons and : • ..,.. • TV a 00 t.'X.R I ATIVE e't>v n.tnga and .. uu h v time to enjoy • : GILUv t •I W&nll : _. Pc ~'~~~.-:' :!, =~~~~'1:°1ase~:.,'; ~~~ : your tummer w, offer romptete : : P•r1 time opeolnl lo Lapo• Be•c."h : 1250 714/163-n~ chin .. ano Con"9y0rl we are ._lnO a Rep • lraini.nl and provide lranspo.ration • • tree. Earn up to 6.00 per hour for • ~~::Pf*· r...,1111119101n1taH, Mtll1Ce equipment ana tratn • plus great priut, tripe. and plenty of • e collectioa for monthly wbtcriptlont. • 1.,......,...,...-:---..,..--- :!'omer P«tonnel In thief IM!nt1r1ance Ind : MO~I Th.ti la not • paptt route I : Experif'Dte pref rred but not re· : a.:: ~ ::.'~- we require -t-3 )'Mt't WOfk •itPIOenee • and at it not MVen daya a w k. Come • • quired. ttut b et l~t 18 yun old .• • ISMk1, keroeene ,_...,: -Strong Mechanical Ap111uae : help UJ fctl new customera for our: : C.11 10 AM -4 PM. Mr. KJrkland. • n\ltlC 487-5123 Some ElectrlCel l<t\Owledge • newspaper and have • good ti~• • · 642-·'321. 111. 207. : Kenmore wurw a Orytr, -Tr....., lnvot¥ed • whU you're dotna it. Come OUl and • e e xln1 conct , UOO .._ Strono lntlrl*'IONI Sklllt : what we on ta.lkina about and : • •1a.&T11111PT. • kfn9 .._ heldboerd a We PfOVide : ~Auto • you'U be 1lad you did Ct1J t«Uy and • : 142·4111 IM : ~:t~r~'°.,~ -Tr•V9f £xpente : ,rt.art Wmotrow.' C.ll Mi. F.rl : • • bol•I.,. $75 Reed & -ConlpetMJ\19 a.n.tlta • ~8-70~ or 2.41-8432 • • ORANGE COAST DAILY P1LOT • e.rton T1P4M,ry .... lend reeume to : ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT : : now 1111 .._ o.ie M-. CA tM27 : wre, I pc,~ fOf 12• Ov .. STRAW IMl'ftlMMW. ft'ft uo w ley ..... Coffa M9I, ClA. 1 • • AN~ °'jQifUNtf'( lMll'l..OYl" • ='=. =~ridge N. N'"f"1"a '""Uftr\lftft I r;.u • AN I~~ ~IT'Y llill"l0U111 • e • ' r1fft, • • . J 1 toe6 CMdof AllW . Fountain Valley. CA 112708 : ' • .5 PC Mf'V!l\g lot tt per ••••••••••• ••••• • •••• •••• • • ••• ••• •• •• • •••••• • • ••• • tact. t150 '' 7·&111 ._-----. I 0rang9 Coeat DAILY P1LOT/F~, A.ugalll 18, 1116 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Mete atadlum S Wik! party 9 00ld9n IOVCfl '"no 1• Male a111mals 15 Bone P<•' 16 Greek leltllf 17 Ottl herb Ii Preten<l«1 d19Cltln 20 Oofm1n1 22 Mall llQUO<!o 23 lnQu••• 2• ~attng to wtt 25 Claw 26 l'ue4 J7' fa1l9le 18 P1pedl9 .l 1 Fr.,,ch c•lv J• Ins .,id ovts 15 ltr~ bird 16 1n01C.alt0n 3 1 0.ll9' ,.a 38Wee.-. 39 Permfl 40 Compac!flel • 1 Mist Grablt> '1 Senta •3 AuN!lln C.tl~ u S..~lei •5 Adva"°9t •1 ammof'•IK •8 Sra....,,at• 3 51 -Anneoe Beaupre S3 London CQ4n 5501 9'*1Cl'IM 5 7 A.11a.n r1v., 58 M8JI room oaa~• 59 Hub 60 Aeldll•O!'al 6 1 QulCll·Wln.0 DOWN 'lmp<IUIOf\ 2 High carO J Corundum 4 W•M Clty S Pe11yo~1 6 lhel t:Mtll 'C•rd game 8 Pronoun i Se>trtll 10111HCttt• t t CO!'lingtr1I ll AI~ 1 J Floppanc., ,, IOecl 11 Pert1elll'r 2 5 S.ndf194N! 26 Spnnoe 11 S1000.,.. IS U M S A 8 L EI s c A A Pl 'A R A L IRO N HEA VE IM A L I NE1111SMON GER B L E Cl T E E •ATTEST [ASP eg oR ESI -A SIA •C A T 15 E l F 1L AR •GLOA T •MOX IE ,, CE co LO L E MO NA DE M AN 0 R • D t N E R • s 0 0 1 iA T l Y E l F • l A MP- MA Y 0 R l E E R S IE RASE S • RO T R E T c 0 MP ~1 E N H A 8 1 l I -0 ~ .J. ..! ~ ~.~ 7'l ~tf'(I lO Ot>l1Qalion "''''~ "'-O' );;> COMf" ·1.tG"1 .,_,..,, U Pro0re95 31 ,Hint..- 111 P_.reo1oon 410 TwtJI ~ 1 MHQUilflde - CE RA V E K E OT E A ~~ §..! L l •• W11n1 uno.1 •8 COlne ,,,. H ton11Ure 48 M•lty 1tla1\CI 49 Hebltuate 50 l'it!<on 51 Mlaat 5:7 Run1enlake !.3 Sttllt•~IMNt.,. $4 Y-1'"9 !>e Won --walk • I 0 • 811 ~ Cout DAIL V PJLOT/F'rtday, August Ht, iee.5 r...on. oomat c1o1na ~ M: II ...-.d on ~ '/OW • "9.JC *1TIC( "8.JC MJnc:E ftltJC M)11C( PWlJC M)TIC[ AMlf'ICAN tAVINOI NCWftO"T AUTO DI· NuftlNl)'be.-.dtndtM MOnc8 Of' NOTICll TO PUaJ1C Of' NO WO ,_ AHO l.OAN ASSOC\ATION, TAILIHO, l020t llild\ Iv. OOYf1 ~_,_,a ~t llllU9Tlrl MA.I ll":lM~•=SCAJ=trr~=""~~CT ot1 MOTICS Of ~ ~ 1f7H IHt Wl\lttler .. o. • AN Height•, oontatntno lnfunctJVe or -.... ---••• • YOU ·-.... M'AUl.T ~d. Whmlet, Cell-Cellf, t2707 ottler Ofderl ooncer~ ~ ... ~~ ~,:TO""!-.!'": .. :::: , ._. ·-• -UNOIA ""'r"'Ht.,.. ... ID OF tomla toe07, T~: Jaeon A Neu1. 20201 llrctl dM*I of property, T.a.M..-c::;.. GUuf '°" .. .MO, UM=--"' TAuaT DAnD"6111/83 (11~1'M. Loen No StrMt •O. Hnll An• euppott,chlld~.cHd ...----T'•,..._ •L-UN~tsa YOU TAJ<r'AC-It. ~callt. 12707 typport, ettorney fff1, UllT .,_ C r-. ---· K you !\ewe My~ Tf\tt bUll"-9 II OOll· coett. and ~ otNr rtllif TOWN( UC1'0W ~ o.~ ~ '7, lNS, UllT coos u TIO TO '"°llCT YOUR ~ ~ cont.act • 19W)W duc:t.d by: "' lndMdu9I • fV'f be onnt.o by tt'9 POAATION dAlf!I ~~ Ctty of !Eountein Velley. llCUAITY 8AVINCl8 "~· fT MAY 8f Ot 1N ~t ~ Jeeon..., oourt Thi gemleftment ot y,_... W'°" the 10200 Slaw A*""I, F°""" MORTQAOI CO .. ftO"· OlO AT A ftU9UC SA wtlldHMylMwein.ur.dyour TNt ~ .. f11ec1 ,..i. tllclng of ll'IOMy cw delctibed deed of IN lain v~. CA woe. (714) ATION .. duty ~ IF YOU HUD AH EXP\.A-IOen ~ Cfle with the County c.,;c of Or· P'°'*'Y Ot Ottlel COUf1 Wll.~ Hll. AT PUii.iC f$3...332t TNll99 under the NATION OF TH! NATURE ' II ,. _ _... ~ OOledlnolfMY AUCTION TO THI HIGHUT On or abOut s.ptembet 3. delcrlbed d.-d of trvt 0, THI '"OCHOIMO :'.!:!:" ptcperty 0.: = .,.,..,., on August 14• llleo r.ut. P' BIDDl!R l'OA CASH 1N5, the City ot Fount.in Will. Sll.L AT P!,111.IC AOAINIT YOU. YO Y°"' pr~ ::1 M!I '-71 MAR 11986 Auto dealership opens satellite 1 in shopping mall AHOIO" THE CASHIEAS V~ wt11 requ11t tlll US AUCTIONTOTHEHIOHHT SHOUl.DCONTACTAL.AW· P'~ tN Mii II con-'. Publlehecl °':'fe'. CoM1 LeeA..,..,C--.9" OR CEATIFl!O CHECKS ~menl of HOU91ng .,.. BI 0 DER , 0" c A. H YER. .................. --8 2" .... "'~ -Ca.ti -.AA I tlonary the IP!em!D tN CIVIL COOf Ul'ben ~t to , .. ANO/OR THE CASHIERS 0n FRIDAY AUOU8T '° ~ ~;;;. ,;:~ ==:,A~~ · "· -· ;lu()IW;d ..._....., eoeat WARREN, M ich. -tt harcUy...am-.. revo u - IE.O'TlON 2t2~ ~et ..... $19,000.00 of,..,.,., OR CERTIP'IEC> CHECKS 1N5 •• , 1.00 P.M. HOM~ '*'*"bet YOU MAY , 247 Delly PllOt A=,. n openl~ of a new atore In a shopping center In Moline, Ill. fie ..,.,. Of ... In t.wful fl.Ind• un<* Tiiie ' Of the SPECIFlEO IN CIVll. CODf {EOEAAl SAVIMOS AN l.OS! I ~"'·L AIOHT8 I, • 30 1"5 • • • h fl t t m-walked Into Miiis on the Mall to inoney ot ttle Unllld Si.I•) H<Mltlng and Community SfCTION 2924h (~ •• OAN ASSOCIATION .• YOU DO NOT TAK! l't8JC NOTICE • F·214 Bu whent e ,.. CUI 0 - a11 t!Oht. tttle anc1 tnt.,..1 De\lelopmlnt Act 01 tt14 the ttme ot Hie In i.wtut Corporetlon, rorm1r1y PRQMPT ACTION ---------i took at the brand-new Chevrolet Nova, It signaled a new era In oon~ to and now held (Pl 93.-383) !or a HOIM Im-money or the United StttM) known a HOME FEDERAL NOTICE l8 HEREBY DEPARTMENT OF P\llJC N()TIC( the l81e Of automobiles. by It under .aid Deed of PfO~t pro)eet ~ted all right. tlOe end lnt.,...t SAVIN08 ANO LOAN AS-OIVEN; Thllt 8UNKIST S!A· THE TREASURY locat-.,. In the South Park t.•atl, Miiia on the Mall II the first Tn..illrl IN ptOpetty ~ •• 10925 El Chino, wnlch" conll9'j90 to ancs now held SOCIATION OF SAN VICE COMPANY la now INTl!.ANAL REVENU! ACTmOUe ..._.. WV M .., .. dWt1bed' bounded to the north bY by It under Uld Deed Of DIEGO, .. TNtlM under • d I I t d . T t SERVICE NAllll -A~ " t-..111t "deale-hlp In Chevrolet -and In General Motors . TAUSTO": STEVE Sl•ter A~. to lhe '°"'"' TruttlntheptoP9ftYhetlln· dlldottNl1dtlted5/'8/13 ~:'D:c.nc:T~~:,: NOTICIOf'lllJWUC Thi f~ pereon II ..... e ... IAONALL by r.it>en Avenue, 10 the .,,., 1Maerlbld e1gned by MA AK A. 8 15 111 euc ted b . AUCTION IA.LI dOI t>u.m.a "It'• a forerunner of aeveral alternatives being studied by HNEFlc.&ARY INTER· ... t by Euofld St~. to the TRUSTOA· JOSE LUIS ANGUIANO, A SINGl.! MAN ~LD J DE ~10 ANb Under tN authof'lty In s"t. HORSE .:::cHT SER· Chevrolet to the traditional one dealer/one showroom way of NATIOHAlC!NTAALIANK ~by Watd Street, and In BARRAGAN end rlCCH'dld 818113, II NOAMA 14._' Of OA10' H~ Internet~ Codi aeo-VICE. 2070t 1MCt1 &Nd. -"' I I d truckl •• aald Robert W Starr l T"UST CORPORATION. Ceneul Tree! 902.29. BENEFICIARY· ,IRSl SE· Document ~5 Of the BAND AND Wl"l • TNttOf tlon 8331 the ptoPeftY c» 19~1 Hunttnoton Beech, aefllng and Mn10 ng cart n • • ' Truet ... FBO MORTON tt hu been de1«mlnld. CURITV SAVINGS ANO Offlelel Record• of Orenge to MOl.ltl obllQetlone In ecttbld~hllabeenMll· Cetn. t2e48 Chevrolet general aaJes and MfVlce manager. "We have 8 MOSKOWITZ, ADP I 111&teucnrequee1t0t r ...... LOAN ASSN County,CelffOmle.WUl .... at hrYOf of: AMIAICAN 8AV· ed lor nonpeyment of O.wd E-.n Steiner, number Of pr:iraml already In the development s tage that 1.., 14. 0 00 1. INTER. Of tunci. wlll not oonatltut• ~a.a June '· 1983 u = euctlon to the~ IHOS l l.OAN ASSOCIA· lntemel r.-iue tu• due 20701 IMcfl 81Yd. 1112. truly could -vo utlon'-e t .... way Chevrolet and It • dealers sell NATIONAL CENTRAi. BANK en llCltlon tlof\lflcently en.ct· lnttr1 No 83-229133 of Of· t« c.ull In United TION u 8enefldery from 8..,_. Wood dbl f~ Huntington e.c:ti, c.llf, , .., 16: 1"' & TAUST CORPORATION, Ing the queTlty of the llumen lldel Rticordl In the omc. of Stet.. Oolletl, at the ~ on eian1 .. moet Tile. 3121 E. lAP-.n.. Thie bullMH It con· and aervlce our products." , rrva1 .. F80 QUENTIN P 1nwonment enc1 eccoidlug-tne Rec:0tder 01 Or~ NORTH FRONT ENTRANCE document no 3215 t>ook Anehelrn CA 12aoe. The ducted by:.,, lndMduel Miiia on t .... Mall la an e xtension of Miiia Chevrolet a main JOHNS.ON. A0Pd54H· ly the e~Mmld City Of County. T 0 THE C 0 UN TV 12364 Pll09 ea of Offtclel proPeftY'wlll be told It pW-O.erd E. si.iner '"' coo, Fount.in ve11ey 11e1 dedded Uld dMcl ot truat • COURTHOUSE. 100 CMC Alc:or~ 111 the offloe of IN 11c euctlon • P'O'Adld by Thia 1t•i.ment wu t11ed showroom, located about one mlle from the South Park Mall -Alcordld Mercn 21. t~ not to prepere an en-1Ct1bel the folloWinQ CEN'nR OAIVE WEST, In Coun lntetNI ~Codi"°" with tN County a.ti of Or· • lnatr No 83·128t31 of wonmentel ltnpect etat• PAACEL 1. AN UN· the City of Senta Ana. Of. ~~4~9!2!1 1 ~ lion MM and ,.._t.o 1'9QU· enge 1 County on July 1t, and lt'I been aucoessful. OfftCitll Aec0td• In the ortlct menl un<* the Nltlonel En-OIVIOEO 1111 INTEREST IN ~ County. Callfomla. .. the ,'';fi1;\ 400 00 letlone. Det• of 8*: ~ 1M5 "In the ftrat two week• that we were open. we had nearty of the Aloordlr of 0renoe v1ronmen111 Polley Act of AND TO LOT 1 OF TRACT rtgttt. title and intereet OM-;:.1 ti. eumbeneflc:lef int.-. 21. 1ea5, nme ot s•: L.ot ,..._ 4•000 people come through and we sold 10 cars .and two County. tta9 (PL 91-180). Th• 1oe10. 1N THE ctTY Of ~to end now held t>y tt under Mid Deed of Truet ,, ., 11:00 AM, Lot 12., ~ Orenge eo.1 trucka. We're --•iy p~ .......... with the r-pon· .... we ve been Aki deed of ""'' de-,_,. f()f IUCtl Olelelon COSTA MESA. COUNTY Of under the dMd ot trust In the hi -1one MCllred 2.00 PM. Piece of Sale: Lot Deity Piiot August fa .• 23. 30, ,_. ~ -...... tcnbel the following· not to preper• euc:t1 •tat• ORANGE. STATE OF CALI· ,.., Ptoe>ertY. dlecrlbld u: end 1 ......... .._... ,, et 3121 e. u Paame. September a. 1886 ttl .. Id o Id Miiia president of Miiia Chevrolet Lot 359 of Trect No 1712 menureufollowl. ThePl'O-FORNIA, AS PER MAP RE· PARCEL 1 ~her= ere pr-.n't~t: Anehelm, Unit Y, Lot #2 at F-2'3 ge ng, 18 av • ' .. per Mep recorded 1n 1eet 11 toceted In • medtum CORDED tN BOOK 455. Unh 244 .. lhown on thet Y beMftcllaly. 2400 Avtt• Ad., Lagun• "I know we're getting people who are just out shopping to &<><* so. Pegee 32 to 3e of d1n11ty retldentl•I ., .. PAGES 5 ANO 8 OF MIS. oertaln Condominium Pten =i:!; ~ def~ln~ Nl0\111. 4th Floof-Group __ MUC ___ NO_TICE ___ I atop In, take a look at wh, at we have to offer and then come In Mlacelleneoul Mepl In the wher• the effect• on the CEll.ANEOUS MAPS, IN recOtdld In book 12331. OeedofTNltluecurltyhlle 2r: Thie ottered: Only the -----------1 to our main showroom,' aald Miiia. offtol of the County ~ neturel end phY*el envtro-THE OFFICE OP: THEF pegee 124_~~ 741 tl"IOluelOr ve occurld In thllt tt'9 peyment r:tg.t'tt, title and Int.,... of flCTfTIOUl IU ... U He add.AA "T .. -••t .. •llte showroom Isn't ever going tO oorder of Mid County. menl wUI be rnlnlmel. COUNTY RECORDER 0 Otlldel .-di ol engl hM not been made ot: St..,. Wood dbl Foremoet NAllll ITAnmNT vu llV -VI YOU ARE IN DEFAULT An Envlronmenlel Review SAID COUNTY. County, Calllornla, on Falllntom8ke tnee/111S Tiie In end to the~ The following P«900 II replace our main showroom and service faefftty;-but It's going UNDER A DEED OF TRUST Record raepecllng the within EXCEPTITISNO TTRHO~~H· Augult 10. 1977 .. cleflnld peyment ot ptlnclpel end/Of wlll be on.rid for ... f,... dOlng bullnMe ... to give u• • crack at potential buyer• who mav never have DATED 31t1183. UNLESS projlc1 hu been mede by FROM UN 1 H .,.. In the Oecleratlon of f\Ntflo.. in .... , end en bMql.lenl queated the tntemal Rev· J.A' . .. , YOU TAKE ACTION TO the City ol Fount.in Valle) 1 t INCLUSIVE AS SHOWN tlont recorded In book .__, eu 91'1'19 ~will turnllh In-J. S MARINE MAINTEN· taken the time tO come over tO our main thOWrOOm. co OOMINIUM t 17.. 1394 1'31 peymenu. together wtth lat• ANCE. 805~ Poppy Awnue, PROTECT YOUR PROP· which document• the .,.._ ON THE N • pegee to cherg11 Impound• Im· fonnetlon ebout polllble Cofone def Met. Cellf 92825 "In fact, whlle we may Clo•• a deal at 'Miiis on the Mall,' ERTY rT MA y BE SOLD AT vlronmental revleW of Ille PL.AN RECORDED IN BOOK I~ of Offlc:lel Alc:or" d d I If. encumbrencee. wtltcn mey . . ' ...... A PUBLIC SALE. IF You project 111d more Mty Mt• 13830. PAGE 10'3. OF-encs tn book 111 ... P~ =the~!:,'!; llald :le be UNtul 1n delermtn1ng the P J~w. ~!i!°~: we'll dellverthe new vehicle through the main showroom so the NEED AN EXPLANATION forth 111e reuon• why sucn FICtAL RECORDS 1432 to 1485 lnctuetve of -°' Deed of Tru1t end 811 veiu. of ,,_ Int.,.., being M ~ 1~":26 customer .......... 0 ....... acquainted with ua and our service area.'• OF THE NATURE OF lHE 1tatement I• not required. PARCEL 2 UNIT 1 AS flclel fl«)or~ of Uld Coun-told Oeecr'l9tlon of prop-.,, • . ..,_ ,,,_,, PROCEEDING AGAINST Thi• Envlronmentel Review SHOWN ON THE CON· ty, end eny en\lndment• °' eubeequent ~·· wtllch erty:'Lot tl, Offlcelrtd COflo-Thi• bu1ln•11 11 con· he said. YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· Rticord ltonflleettheat>ow OOMINIUM PL.AN ABOVE erinexetlon1 thereto, end =:::::late=:.': tenu toceted 1t 3121 E. l.e dj'.:._~an~~-The mall satelllte offers 8 aelectlOO Of parts and TACT A LAWYER eddt ... end Ill •v•llable '°' REFERRED TO. l loceted ~~aln ,.., other tuml ~eble under Pelma. Anehelm, CA .. fol.. Thia «1tement WU flied a""-•nrlet, ea u.-11 aa cars. On dlsplay at the opening of U1J19 1929 Whltll•r Avenue. publlc 1xamlneUon end co-YOU ARE IN 0£FAUL ptoPeftY ,_..,.,_ .. Lot 1 of Mid Ill iow.· ~ 'ft'V M Coe!• M .... CA 92e2a pylng upon request ., the UNDER A DEED OF TRUST of Tree{ 9092. In the City°' g:.J~ruet Otl Of 1-~ecuum cleener, 1-llle with I~ ~nty = r.· on the Mall were two of Chevy's newest products -the Nova "(If 1 ttreet eddr ... Of Plennlng Oepertl'Tlilnl be-DATED 5125183 UNLESS INIM, COUnty of Orenge. Thet by ~ thtnof clMnef, 1...aklM uw, t·flfl = n on · common d11lgn1tlon ot tween the hours of 8:00 1.m YOU TAKE ACTION TC Stet1 of c.nfomla. U per the preHnt beneficiary extlngulehef, 1·eofa. tebte ~ and the AttrO van. propeny 11 lhown above, no end S P m.. PROTECT YOUR PROP· mllP ~ In boot! 407', under Md\ Deed of Truet end dlalr{old'). 3-bagt Of p bllehecl Or Coul "Thlt type Of satellite Showroom provides the perfect werrenty It given u to 111 No f\Jrther enYlronmenlaJ ERTY, IT MAY BE SOl.O Al pegea 30 and 31 of M• Ml uecuted end dlherwd morter, l·lot of auorted ~~ Piiot A ~ 23 30 exposure for OUr n-.-t models because It Wiii attract the ~ten.. 0t correci· revt.w of suett project I• A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU celleneout Mepe ot 0renge Mid T writt tlle(ec>prox 30 boMe). 4-.,..., ugue ' · · v..,.ve ne11).. The ben1flclery prQC)OMCI to be condutteel NEED AN EXPL.ANATIC>t. County, Cellfoml&. ~Ion"'!':~,: tNdc llr•.' 1·RCA WNnpool September a, 1985 F·24e casual thopper whO may have heard about them, but really underNldOeldolTrwt.by prior 10 the reque1t l0t r• OF THE NATURE OF THE PAACEL2: Sale,endlludepol/tedwtth '9fl1glretor. 1-<l04dlpot r• wasn't In the market for a new car at the time," said Starr. reuonofebrMChOfdettult teueollederelfundt PROCEEDING AGAINST An undivided '1120th Mid Tru9tee IUCf'I Deed ot ~etor, 1·t•.frlgeretor ---------b ll t 1n tne obl1ge11on1 MCUred All 1n1ere11ed egeoc1ea. You. You SHOULD CON· tnter•t 1n end to .. 01 t11e Trust and a11'the documentt . 1-111e cutting rnecNne. PlBJC NOTICE "We're counting on the fresh appeal of a new automo e o =:yan::~~:·,o ~~ :i:!io ~ti ~:°"ci!ci:: TA~x ~~~~~SON •A-3 ~: r:-.t ~':;'.: evldencl"L!!.., ~ t: -=c. 2-~=: ACTTTIOU9 .,..... create addltlonal business for Chevrolet... . underllgned 1 wrhtan Dec--ere Invited to IUbmtt written COSTA MESA. CA above referenc.d treC1. ~ ·~-~ ~ tuppllel, IP9Cet'I. etc.. 2· NAM! ITAnmNT laretlon of Deeauh encs 0.-comment• for: conalOlf,atlon ·111 a 1tr .. 1 eddreu °' together with ell lmpr~ dedare 811 wme NCUted box•• cerpet. gripper•. The following perton le mend IOf S•. end ~tten by the City ol Fountain Vel· common d11lgnellon 01 rnent• thereon, uoec>tlng thereby lmmedlelety due 1·12" electrtc ren. 2·2 drlW-doing bullr-. u : .--------------------------;::---, notlol ol bfeech end of elec-ley to the Plennlng Oepert-property Is lhown ebove. nc therelrom Condominium end~ end hlll elected • me ceblnet•. 1-cs.11. 2· M & J CLEAN UP, 380 11on 10 ceuM \he under· meot Sucti written com· werrerity 11 given u to IU Unls 210 through 329 I~ end doee her9b)' elect to otftc. chalre. 1·unl1onlc Hemlnon B. Cotte M-. llgned to NII Mid Pfoper'ty rnenll should be received et oompleteneu or correct· clullW loceted thereon. the tNSt~rty to Xl. 131B celcutetor. 2-ln· Ceflf. 92a27 I to Ntllfy Mid obllgetlona, 10200 Slater Avenue on Of n111)" Th• ben1llctary EXCEPT therefrom ell oll, :':.cs to Mt . ~ 1repld elecirlc typ9Mtter, 1· M I ch 1 e I J •me• .,,d thefMrter the undet· before September 1. 1985 under Mid Deed of Trull. by gu, mlner&ll, end other .... Ions red 1 phone en....nng rnechlne, Jerivaewtlcl. 380 Hamllton1 llgned ceueec1 Mid nota of All IUCtl comment• so r• reuon of• brMCtl or delaull hydrocerbon 1ub1tanc ........ DA TE: Tt'Sias · t-terge teble, 2 lmd redlol B. Cott• M .... Cellf. 12a21 1 breech end ol llectlon to be oetved wlll be considered In the ol>llgetlor1• MCt.tred tying below • depth ot 500 .1 ~ lntftel afMI l.ot #2: 1· 1982 Chelffolet Thi• butlneu 11 con· recorded Aprll 24, 1118S u end the City Wiii not request thereby. heretofore ex· 1 .. 1 trom the 11Ut1ece of Mid ....,. Anaalittoft. o . Mir-e Cemlno pldt-up truck. ducted by: eri lndMduel tntt( No SS..145581 of Of· the relMM of feoer~ fund• ecuted end delivered to tht property. but with no right of ,._, AMt. y ,,; t•rnt c •HI or n I• II c 1 n • • Mlchael J~I flclal Reool'd• In the offMle ot or te.k1 eny edmlnlttrative under1lgned a written O.C· turfece entry, u ptovtded In Publlehld (); 1 cO.t #FOREMST, Super Spon El Thll statement WU filed tile Recorder of Oreng• action on the within project laratlon of Deleult and 0. deed recorded In book Delly PllOt Auguet Mf: 23 30 Cemlno Chevrolet, mag. whh tile County Clerk of Or· County. prior to the date specified In mend fOf Sele, and written 12752 pege 1998 Offlclll September a 1986 ' F42' whMll (5), epare tn bed, 9'· lllQI County on Juty 24. Seid Nie will be made, bu1 ttlit prKedlng 1entenee. notice ol breech and of elec· Record•. • tidied lodctng tool box. 198S wtthoUt eovenent or w•r· The City of F911n1aln Val· tlon to ceuM the tJndet· P'-RCEL 3: PtB.IC NOTICE odometer 97, 110 no mejOf f'2l20l4 renty. exPf ... or Implied, r• ley wtll uoo.rtake the project signed to Ml~ICI fHOP«t} An 1xclullve 1uement denll. ProPeftY mey bl In-Publflhed Orange Cout gardlng tltle poeeeulon, or delcrlbed above with Block to satisfy 111 obllg1tloot, appurtenant to IYCtl Unit for f1CTl'TIOU8 9UIMll tpeetld .at: SEE ABOVE Delly Piiot Auguet 1a. 23, 30. encumbrancea, to pey the Grent funds trom the US and thereell the under· the uM end oocupency of .. .._ STAT9....,. (PL.ACE OF SALE) Payment September a. 1185 remelnl"il Pflnclpel tum of Oep1t1ment of Housing end signed ceuMd Id notice ot thoae P«flonl Of lhe A.-Thi followtng per.ona .,. term•. Full peyrnent r• • F-240 the note(•) eecured by Mid Urben Development (HUD) brNctl and of electlOn to~ atrlcted Common,., .. ~ doing bUllneu ... quired on ecceptence ot MftTIC( d4lld of Tr\Jlt, with tnter89t under Tiiie 1 of the Houllng recorded Mey 3. 1985 u lgneteel ln1he Dlcleretton ot DAT A MANAGEMENT hlgtlelt bkl. Sele In the eg-PlllJC ""' u In Mid note proYldeCI, Id· and Community Develop-lnttr No 85-180H3 ol OI· A.ltrk:1lon1 end ll'lowrl on ENTERPRISES 203 N Rob gregete only Term1-cutt __ --......,...__,__ ___ I vences, If eny, under the mef'lt Act of 1974 TheCltyol flciel Record• In the otftce 01 the Condomlnlum Plen tOf Way Anahllrn 'cA 92801 or C&lhler'• or certified LIGAI. ~ term• of IUd Deed of trull, Fountain Vetley is certifying the Rec:orelef of Orenge IOCtl unit. oe\lld C. w.itauct1, 203 N cf\edl only fOf f\Jll emount of DIP~ NRVICEI '-· Chllrgee, end •iq>en-to HUD that the Ctty and County, The llr¥t eddr ... or Rob Wey Anaheim CA Nie-no exception• F0tm DEVll_ ol the Trull .. end ot the Judy L KelM'f In her ol'fiolel Seid sale wot be mede, but othet common dellgnetlon 92801 ' ' ol Peyment All peyrnentl IPfMGI•~~ trutt• cr .. tees by Ntd Deed cepeclty as Coty Manager, wlttiout covenant or wer ol the •t>Ove r.., propeny Is Cetol A. Welleuc:tl 203 N mutt bl by cuti, certified MIOURCal II '"'" of Trull conH nt to 1ccept thl re,,ty,1Jt.preuor lmplled.,... known to UI u · 142 l.EM()flj Rob Way Anehel~ CA c heck cethler' 1 or Notloe It hWetl'fot 8::".: Seid ule Wiii be helcl on lunadtetlon of the feelefel gardlng lltle pou.slon. Of GROVE, IRVINE. CAl.I· 92901 . • tree.Kw'• chick or by • the~' - Frld.ly, Auguat 23. 19aS. It courts II 111ectlon 11 brt;>ught enwmt>r1note to pey thl FORNIA 92714 Thll busln .. I It eon-Unlted S\et .. po1tel, benk. ment s=""litl""°'""": .. ~,..,. 1 30 p m In the lobby 10 the to enlorce responsil>llltlM In remeinlng pl"fndpel tum ot Thi• Nie will be mede ducted br hult>end end wtf• ••pr .... Of telegnph rnoM) tel Relourcel IOn,Beedl bulldlng loc:et~ 11 801 rlletlon to envtronmentel r• lhe note(•) MCUred by Mid wttnout covenent Of WW· Dive c. Wlllleuch Otdef. Miik• chick Of money City of Huntington Soutll l.ewle Strwt. Orenoe. ""9WI, ~Ing end deed ol Trult, wlth 1nter .. 1 renty, ·~or Implied. Thll ltatement ,... flted order peyebte to the tMemet that ~he f~ ~· '---------' Calllomll 92ee8. action, 1nel that th ... u In Mid nole pro\lldeel, ed· r90erdlng IJtle, pa111111on. Wllll the County Cler1! of Or· AeYenlle Service for Neo•ttv1 .,.ton At the llml ol the Initial responslbljltlel hev. been vanoes. If any, under the Of encumbrencea. to pey the Counly on June 27 D. lcfllef*•, A9""4ll -• ~ and er• evell· publtc.llon of thll notloe, N tlstied Ttie--teG.r effect ol term• of Mid Deed ot trult. unpetd prlnclpel tum of ~ · · omo., 0toup rr. 4tlt "°°'· able fOf public: review com· the totel emount ol the un· the certlflcetlon Ts that upon '-· cnergee, end 1xpen-181.300 10, plul lntereet u ~ J400 AYMe "°9d, ~ menclng. peld l>el•~ of tn. obll· Its approval the City ol Foun-of the TNllM and of the Pfov\ded In the note aec:ured Publllhed Orange Cout N I' 11 •1 , c A 12 ts t Negetlve Dederetlon No. g1tlon NCUreel by the 1bov9 teln Valley mey uae the trusts crNled by ulel Deed by the deed ol trutt, plu• en Delly Piiot Juty 28 AUQU9t 2 714 Ml-4Cml 85-52 It • request to ,con-- deecrlbed deed ot trutt end Block Grent funds and HUD of Trust addition ii utlm•t•CS 9 1a 1985 · 18i o.t1· 8-14-85 ltruct two conc:r.t• tn-up •tlmeted c:otll, ••pen-. wlll have utlsfled tu Said Nie wtll be held on amount of S 1.447 00 If eny, · · F· Publilhed Orange cout lnduttrtet bulldlngl '"en D · and edvancea II S 19,052.94 respon1lbllltH1S under the Friday, September 6, 19a5, undlf the term• of the deed "8.IC NOTICE Delly PllOt Aogutt 18, 1985 lttlng Industrial penc. The The tote.I lnC11bteelneu N1tlorl'al Environmental Pot· et 1.30 pm In 1'1e lobby to of tru1t end f .... cherges ·231 P'oc>OMd project 111~~ being en eattm•t• on which Icy Ac:t of 1969. HUD w111 ac· the bulldlng loceted at 601 end expenH• of the flCTITIOUI au1,..11 81.,1 •c t.11\Tfr~ on the ... t tide ot hrt ! rhe opening bkl la computed cept an objecllon 10 lt.s •P-South Lewi• Street, Orenoe. Trultee. NAME tTATUllENT ruuu nu ~ LeM, 150 leet '°"' '" may bl obtalrled by celllng provel ol ltle releaM ol Calllorn11 9286a The Lender/Beneficiary The !Ollowtng pertonl l!'I FIC .......... 'I .... -., Stet er Av1., b1tw••" (714) 38S..4837 or (213) f\lnelsancsecoeptanceofthe Al the Ume of the lnlllal underth4ldeedoltrv1thu dOI buslneuat· "'""' --GolhardendBledl. a27-4865 the di)' blfOfe t!'Ht cert1tlea11on only If It 11 on publication or t'11a notice. 1lgned ancs delivered of the c'1L1F 0 RN 1 A 1 N. NA• ITATW.•NT Coplee of tl'teM reque11 .. 1e one of lhe fOllowtng bllMS the totel amount of the un-Trustee 1 Oec:letetlon of O. TERIORSCAPE PRO· The followtng perton 11 et• on flle with the Cit) Dated July 25, 1985 (•)Thel ttle cen111cet1on paid balance ol the obtl· fault of the obllge11ont ... FESSIONALS 1014 Florldl doing b1.11tneea0 u : T 0 N aetk, City of Huntslngton TOWN« !ICftOW COft· WU not In l1ct executed by g•tlon HCUreCI Dy the 1b0ve cured by Ille d4lld ol trult. Street Hunu' ton Beech TA AN s p RT A ' Beac:tl. 2000 Mein tr..i, Automated •tuDtlJll French mmtman AlaJ.a Prieur celebratee with a Ylctory ~ after drlYIDC h1a car on two wheel• throUCb the Parta Trocadero Plua neat to the Eiffel Tower lD Parla. The •ucceeeful nm wu a test of a new meebent•m, a wheeled automatic pneumatic jack, futene4 under the car, tbat may replace the old, tradltional mant ap~ to lift fthicla Into a two-wheel-4rl.tn& pc»Ition. The concept mtcht be uefa1 u a way to jam a car Into the tiny -and rare -parklDC 8JNlce9 ln the French capital. ft OR AT IO Ill • 1 u Id the oertllytng offloer or othet deter I bed deed ollrutt ind 1nd • Notice of o.teult end C.Jlf 92&48 ng ' CONCEPTS. 3089 Club Huntington Beech, Cell· Truetee, by T.D. l!"VICE officer of 1pptlcan1 ap-eatimaled co111. npen... Eleotlon to Sitt. whleh r• Ke,ile Young to14 Florid• Hou .. Clrcle, C01t1 Mele, fomle. Any '*"°" withing ---------------------------COMPANY, Ag1nt, e,: proved by HUO; 0< (bl that and adv 1 n c e s 1 a corded on 3t 1a185 u Oocu· Street HuntlriQton Beech Calif 92828 G tfl h to comment on thele r• Clftdy ldtoonovw. AMII· Ille 1ppUcan1 s enlflronmen· s 119 100 59 ment 85--091568 of Official C.llf 92648 · Alen Roblneon rt t • QUMll rney do to In writing !Mt lecretery, tot louth tal review rec0<CI f0< the Pl'O-11 11 posllble 1,.,al at the Aec:ordt Chrlt Ruuom 1988 3089 CIUb HOUM Clrcle, wtttlln 10 CW;9 of thl9 notlot l.ewle It .. Ot1n9e, CA 1ec:t 1ndtc1tes omlsslOf'I of a lime ot sele the opening bid Thtl Nie wtll be con-Anehelm ,3 C<>lti MeM eo.11 MeM, Cellf. t282a by provtdlng wrtttlrt com- t2111 required dec:t91on '1nd1no or may be 1es1 t'1an the tole! duc:ted by Agency Salel end Calif 92e27 · · Thll bu11,,... 11 con· menll to the Oepertment of Put>lllhed Of1nge Coul step 1ppl1Ceble to Ille pro-1ndebteelness due Potting, whOM eddl'MI end Thi• buslneu 11 con-ducted by"" lndlvlduel ~alapment Setvtoel. En- 0111y P1101 August 2 9 16 14!Ct 1n Ille envtronmental re-T~ 1otel indebted,,. .. phOfle number It p O Box ducted br G0-941'1net• Alan R. Griffith YlrOM'llf'ltlll R.eourc. Sec;. 198S view process Objections !*ng an estlmete on whlch 116113", Sec:femento, call-l<ellle y Thll 1tetement WU Ned tlon, P.O. Box Ul<l, Hunt· F-18-4 must be prepared and sut>-the opening DICI 11 computed fomle 9S886 (918)48&-2727 This 11::::...,1 ,.... llled wtth the County Clerk of Or· lngton a..ctt. CA t2Ma. "1ilted •n eccorcsance with mey t>e obtlllned by celllng Oeted 7125185 With the County Qerk 01 Or· eoge COUnty on Auguat 5, Cornmet\tl wtll be con· nan•ic NOTICE tne required prooedure (24 (4 lS) 945-8418 th• CS•'f ~ f'IDEllAl. IAV· ange COUnty on July 31 1985 .,.,_, by the declllor'l- rl.'IK. CFR par1 S8) end m1y be before Ille sele INOI AND l.OAN Al· 1985 ' ,_ meklng body In ltt delbef• ---------1delrl!SMCI to HUD II De-Dated Auguat 5. 198S IOCIATIOM, e C4M~t. ,_ Publllhld °':"re'. Coelt tlon on wtiether en Er'I· NOTICE Of' partmeot of Housing 1nd SECURITY S AVINOI .. True .... 8y: Linde R. Publllhed Orenge Cout OellyPllot Augue1 8,23,30. WOn!Mnlel lmpect ~ ~~~r:~ Urban Development. ArN MOATOAGE CDAPO"· Werner, MeNle«, Truat .. OllllyPllotAugutt ta 23 30 September&, 1985 F-244 lhould be prepered fOf the Ofl1ce 2500 Wllahlre ATION, N u4d Trwt ... bJ ~t September a 1945 ' ' ' protect. Purauant to Sect10,, Boulevtrd, Los Anoeles T.D. SERVICE CO..PANY, Pub11"'9<1 OrlllQI Cout · F.241 l't8.JC N()TIC[ Deted: Auguet 13, 1985 a 104(d) of the Internal Rev· Calllorn11 90057 Aoent. •r. 11\eron P'. Al-Dally PllOt Augull 2. 9, 18. __. .......... ,1 ........ J>11M .!~..._,a.. enue Code. notiee 11 118f'eb., ooiect1on11 to the reteate lleon, A .. 11tent lecretery, 1985 F· 1 u •-'C llftTIC£ ,.. ... •' •..,., -"""'' ~ given thet the annual repor1 01 tund• on basis otner than 1990 N. c.i"oml• Blvd., n~u ""'' NAMI: ITATW....,. Publllhld Oranoe Cout for the FISCAL yMr Merci> those 111ted above wtll not w 1tn111 c, • 1 k c A "8.IC NOTICE A•NDE> NOTlCI The lollowlng pereon II Delly Piiot Augult 18. 1985 31, 1985, of George N Heel-be cont1de<ecl by HUD No ~3717 ' INVIT1NG 81DI dotng bUelneet u : F-233 did M 0 Foundation, I prl· objection received alter Publllhed Orange Coast Illa Seued bide be r• ClEAR CUT l. TO, 838 vetl loundatlon, 1.1 1vall1ble September 18. 1985. wlll b4I Dally Piiot Auguat t8. 23. 30. "-oofded Dat« 111111; Olllled et the 0: of the w .. 1 Beker IY·t02, Cott• DEATH Nonce s at the loundltlon a P1'lnclp11 considered Dy HUD 1985 1n1trument Numbet: City CleB 3300 N9Wl>O!'t ~ .... Cell!. 9282a omc:. 10< 1n1pec1lon during Jud, l . Ke4MJ, City Man-F·22a M-291221: Trwtee .... No. Boulevard • P 0 Box 1.,88_ Frencleco J. Hodgee, 835 p-r~tar bualnes hours from eger VAM/111Hi "•ftrenoe: N t i · ch CA W•t Beker #Y-102, Coel• s:.a au 91ttz e.~to4 ~!·,malt~t•hnl! Publis'1ed Orange Cout 1CMI~ ... NO..,....I 9~~15unt~l•11:00A.M. MeMTh11' Ceblulf119n2 .. a2,9 11 C"""· Robert W. ~-':_:es1id·. c en .... o req.,_ .. , •· Dally Pllol August16, 1985 PlmllC NOTICE ,,. _..,.. "'" • •... 00 the 28th di)' of Auguel .... ~ dent o f '-A--.:&na e, 1 eo d•~ etter the dete ol F·230 IP' YC>Uft ~RTV 18.JN 1985 11 wtlldl time aucti ducted by: an lndlvldulll Calif Died Tue.day ttil1 publlcetlon P:o..eCl.OMMI-MCA.Ula • Frenk Hodgel · • The loundefton'I prlnclpel l.EQAL NOTICE YOU AM H.-, IN iOUR bid• lhell be QPet1led end Thie 1t1tement wu fltld Aum••t 13 1985 ln an 27 .. VI OftDfNA.NC! NO. 2'7a tied for Tllte of ,,.._. WI ...... Coun ,..._..,, of Or· e-' l olflcl 11 located II " C· Ml.IC NOTICE AN ORDINANCE OF THE PAV.NTI, rr ·~ II CONSTRUCT COMMUNITY th,,.., ly .,_., Oceanaide Heep t.a.l. tori• St . Sulll H Coeu CITY OF HUNTINGTON IOl.D WITHOUT ANY YOVTH CENTER Comreet •nge County on AUQUll 12• Mr Pettit was. ~ M .... CA 9282a The phone l.EOAL NOTICE B C E O G COUflT ACTIOM. Ind you 25 ~r. ' ~ ...... 19&5 . number there I• 645-9990 OftOtNANCE NO 2'7M EA H AM N IN THE may 11 .... the legel right to No. 11, .... _.... ,_ Eat.ate Broker for T .. _ I I 1 · HUNTINGTON BEACH OR · I ~ MMk'536--. .,,,........__. ~•not ,.............. 20 ln Qr ,,.. prtnc P• manlgel' 0 AN OOOINANCE OF THE O IN AN CE C 0 0 E By bring ';°'-K eccount n A$)pt'OVld by the City r.,.,,..._, : fe. ,,,.,_, IOl'De " ~ • tne roundetlon 11 George N CITY OF HUNTINGTON AMENDING SECTION 9081 ll•ndlng by peytng of CouncN tNe i2ttt dey ot Delly Piiot Augue1 e. 23. 30. ange County. Mr . Hlldded. M 0 BEACH AMENDING THE TO PROVIDE FOR CHANGE )'OUf' put due peymenta ~ AUQU9l 1985 September a. 1985 Pettit la survived by Publllhed Orange Coul HUNTINGTON BEACH MU-OF ZONING FROM HIGH· permitted coeta end ex· Wende IL. ........ C"' 1'·242 Dally Pilot August 18 19as NICIPAL CODE BY AMEND· WAY COMMERCIAL TO pet\MI Within ltlrw montna Ca.ti "8..IC NOT1C£ two llON, Mr. Jamel ~-239 ING SECTION 5 16080 RE· HIGHWAY COMMERCIAL lrom lhe dlt• '"''notice of Pr~lv'e bidders mey Pettit, of WUt· LATINO TO THE LICENSE COMBINED WITH SERVICE defeull WU recorded Thie obteln one Mt of bid docu-°"ANGii COUNTY mi.niter; and Danie] FEE FOR LOCAL AUC· STATION SUFFIX ON RE.AL •mount I• $8 151 .... of mentutnoc:o.tetlheofftol """'°"COURT Pettit of Hun''"'"""" ---------< TIONEERS ANO AUCTION PROPERTY LOCATED AT 9iaia5. Ind wilt lncrMM ot the Put>llc Wortce 0epwt. NOC .... C...--........ t\8.IC NOTICE COMPANIES THE NORTHEAST CORNER until you' yr eccount ~ ment. 3300 Newport DJ. w.t Beach. Gravemde 8tt· I -' SYNOPSIS OF ADAMS AVENUE ANO curren ou meynot ........ to BoulevVd. PO. Bo• i7ea. ....AM, vkles Friday, Auguat ~NOTICEINVfTINOlfDI Oreline nce No 2784 MAGNOLIASTREET(ZONE pey tlle 1rttlre unpeld pOt· Newport Beech, CA CA.~ 16, lPM at Pacific Th• COUf'll)' S1n1t•tlon •mend• Ille Huntington CASE NO 85-7)' tlon ot your account, _, '2853-8915 Pt.lntttr. OAl.E 0 . BLANK v·-·· Memortal Park. 011trlc11 of Ofenge County. BNch Munle4pel Code by SYNOPSIS t~uj1 peyment WM ct. For turther tnformetlon. Aeepo.ldent· OA..V OEN-1ew ' C1llf0fnl1 #Ill recelv. IMI· •mendl!1g Section 5 18 080 Ordinance No 2783 men but you muet pay cefl Kennett! I.. Perry, Pt<>-NIS ZUMwAlT 3000 Pad.fie Vlew Or, ed bid• untll TuHdey, rntrlc:tlng ,,,. ll09f'11ng of 1inen<11 Oi1trte1 Map 8 (S the •moun1 •t•ted •bov9. ject M~ et 844-3311 C.. No. D224881 Newport Beach. Pa- At19ust 21. 1955, 11 11 00 1ucllonMr1 af'ld 1uc11on 9061) 01 the Huntington HO'#l'llef. YoU Ind yout Pub!llNd Orenoe Cout IUWDMI dfic View Mortuary A M Bide mutt be r~ companlea to 111a1 allOwld 8eecfl Ordlnence Code Dy blntflclery or mortgeoee Delly Piiot Auguet l8, 1N5 OM ""9T ' et the Olltrtctt' Admlnl .. by Ille new CellfOfnle SIJtll chenglng the ;toning 00 rMI mey mutually llO'" In W!'ll· F.237 ...... """"* Direc:1on. 644-2700 lrtetve otllcet by lhe csete Stetutl, Bulin ... and P~o-proPeftY from C4 Highway Ing pl10f to the time the~ NOT1Cm Y•..,. ..._ end time hertlnet>ove Mt leM10n1 Cod1Sectlon 5714 Comrnercl•I OitfrlCt, 10 C4-tic. of .... I• potted (Wtlldl "8.JC N()T1C( ..-. ,.....,....,.,.... forth •I wnlch time they will The ordlnenoe II•• th•t SS Htohwey Commercial 11'11)' not be Mtti. than the ._...... ,... ....... ,.. bl PubOcly opened end ,... lltlould be M1eblllhed 0tiir1ct • ~ Stetton, on end of ttte thr..-month •• _.. --.. '*IN ..... ,... ,... «Jternlftld 11 the otttoe of the 1Ubl«t to ret.. per em· 1 o 52 ecr• llte •1 the north-period ll•ted ebove> to, ACTTnOUe MWU ....., ...,.. •.,., ..._. Olttrtcte. 10844 Elllt Av· pkr;Ma u ci.telled In See-.. et CorMI' Of Adami Av· among Olhef thlngi, 11> MAm ITATlmNT ...................... enve. 'ountefn V.n.y, Cell· lion 5 ti 010 of the Munlcl· enlHI and~ Su.et Pf'ovlde lddlllonal lime In Thi fo4tow4ng l*'IOftl art If y0u w11f11011ek the ecs- fomta. for,,,. foftOWtr'lg pal Code THE FUl.L 'lEXT OF THE wtllQh to cut'• the defll\llt by dOlng buelMea -lllCe of en enomey In - THAE! (3) PROCESS THE FULL TEXT OF THE ORDINANCE IS AVAIL.All.! lreMf• ~ the ~ OI N(W UMAN Cl.EANEA$, metter, you ehould do 10 GAS CHROMATOORAPHS ORDINANCE IS AVAIL.ABE IN THE CITY CLERK'S Of'· otn.rw!M. (2) wtllbhh 1 2062 ~ IMS . Coste r.omptty eo thet ~ Mft· WITH SUPPORT EOUIP· IN THE CITV CLERK'S OF· FICE ICl'ledute of ~'! In Mw, CA •2121 en ~ tf eny, m.y bl MEHT P:ICE ADOP'TEO by the ~t) Otdet to Cute yout __,.,, °' ~ MllllOdOQAI, ,. fMld on tlrM SPECI FICATION NO ADOPTED by the City Councllof lhe Cltyof Hunt both(t)and(2) Unooln.IMM.CAta?14 AV.OHJltedtlaelido• E· le7 Council of the City o1 ~-ing1on 9w:h •1 .,, eel-After $tw'el monttle from Enln MW~. 1e Un-l'WldMo El tt1bunel IM*'e a.da mult b9 eubrnltted lngton 9ueh at en .O· tovrned r90uler rMetlng !:: ~;:::!:'e: oeln. IMnie. CA tl'7 t4 deddlr oontr• Ud. eln eu--on ti. lorm ~ by the Jouf'Md regular mMtlng hetd T'*CSly AuOuet I . TNI bualnee• II con-dlenGle • "** 911'! Ud ,.. Dlltttett 1n eccordenoe wtttt held Tueecury, August 8, tt8$, b't the loflowtnO rail reoordatlon ~ n... ~by: hulband and wife IJPC)nd1 dentro dit 30 "'- all prcMllOM of the epeclft-1115. bY the fOllo>Mng roll c.11 vote AYES Coun· on). ~ IN ~ OMnnill Matendeglu LM 11 lnformacton q119 catlone. cell 11ote A YES Coun-cftmln KICfy M.8c:Alflet•. l*r'CI IOl'ectoeed t.lllO" or • TblJ ttatement waa Ned _. ~IOnl, bid blanllle OlrNt'I Kelty MecA It•. Mendie lhlley, "nlly MPWefl written 1111' .. ,_., 1lflttl the County Olel1l ol Or· '81 Ulted CleaM tollcllat e& ""'f11rtMr lnformetton may Mendie 8elley Finley. OrM n Ttlol'l'IH NOEi ~)'OU end~ c:redl-enge County Ofl ..Alty 30, ooneeto Oii un ebogedo _, beoeteinedel.,.~ld-Or.-n Thomu NOES Counclt men None '°' =~'::"~ 1915 •t•lalnt•.~~ ~ 1~ 540-2910 CounCllm•n None ASSCNT None ~ -"' ._.. • .,,... ,_,., lnmldletM*!te, de ei1ta 0ttel·2411 ASS!Nl ~one CITV Of HUNTINGTON tOlloptNtMlof::Wpr<t PubllNd Ofanoit C0Me rnenere eu reepueeta All• J erown. hcnteity CITY OF HUNTINGTON • (Ac H A' I c 11 M W1Y by~ ent Delly PllOt .. U0\111 2 ••. 11.•IKtltl .. ..., ...,.,.. pu.- loard• of Olr.ctor I . 11 A c H A 11 c I I M Wlf\rworth. City Cletk "':"" by 'f<NI 23, 1116 ,. 190, .. rea91tf'ltde • '*"PO· ~ ...... "' 8enlt.uon oe.tttcl• 'Nen""°°"'h. City Clel1c Publllhed by the 0.-enge Cl To tw out the emount --"' Mft'l'V'r 1•TO l"~l RdPOHOINT: ~D..-IKI by tt'9 Ofange Put>lilheO by IN Orange Coat Dally Hoc AUQUIM ft "'9U\f PlllllK The petitioner hl9 fteed a o.lly"°'Aullll' fl, c;mtOlll'yPllot~uevtt fa. tOH F-216 r:i::.r:ro::=: PICTmOUalllll••• 1= ~~"fol:'! 11.221 F-234 CIOlur1 °' NyOut Pf'OC*1yll ltlAm ITATW' relPOI• :.r.: 30 deya ~ '" f~ '°' eny 01her The ·~ pweon •11~ d•t• t1'l4lt "* IUm • HAtt90R LAWN· MT.OUVI Mortuary • Cemetery Cremttory 1625 Gisler Av• Coe1a M.aa 540.55~ NJICI MOTMERI MLLUOADWAY MOfmJMY t '0 Qroedw9y Cotta MeN &42·9150 • Get car ready before vacation trip begins Make sure systems are go. then drive def enstvely on road CHICAGO, IL. -Mllllona of Americana have hit the high- way this summer In search of adventure In the great out- doors, or rest and relaxation under the sun. As vacationers gear up for the lut few weet(enda of summer, they should re- member that driving requires more than just loading the kid a In the car, dusting off the road atlas and fllllng the gas tank. "You Just can't alt back and enjoy the ride," aald Walt Alley, director of training at the Midas Institute of Tech· nology In Palatine, Ill. "Long- dlatance driving at highway apeedt requlr.. extreme conc.ntratlon and the ablllty to react qutckty." According to Alley, one of the moat avoidable auto aoct- dente 11 the reer44tnd col- llelon. With heavy week«td and holiday traffic, you may be foroed to make a IUdd«t atop. eepeotalty If the drtvet In front of you hit• the brak• unexpectedly. • ''When the car In front of you mak• an abrupt etop, tnatJnct teffl you to elem on th41 brak• lmmedlately. Un- fortunately. thll ~ not alw8Y9 be the beet action to take," Alley ukt. "tt'1 much bett• to drt.49 defentNefy and to keep • proper foUow- lng dlatanoe.'' In good weather, under normal tremc condition•. the A'Atomotlv• Information Council edvlMI motorttta to keep a dlatance of one car length for every 1 O m iles per hour yoy are traveling. For Instance, If you are driving at 50 miles per hour, then you should keep a distance of five car lengths from the car ahead of you. Under poor weather conditions, an extra car length Is advisable. If you must stop w ithin a short distance, It Is Important not to lock ttie car's brakes. If the brakes lock, gradually release the pressure on the pedal until the wheels roll again, but don't lift your foot completety off the pedal or the braking action wm atop. "In order to use safe brak- ing techniques, your brakes ahould be In tip-top shape," said Alley. "Before you do any long distance driving, a com- plete safety lnapectlon should be conducted by a reputable eervlce center." Other preventive meaaurn can be taken right In your own driveway. Check your car'• maintenance IChedule to ... If It le ,time for a tune-up, oll change, or other service that may have been overlooked. Alao, cheek your car fluids, lnoludlng engine on, engine coolant, tranemluton nuld, brake muter cytlnder fluid, end wtndahleld washer nutd. lnapect hOM8 and belt• for creek• and have them r• placed, H nee 1 uary. To help promote ute high- Wa'f trew'I, the more than 1,800 Mldu Muffler and Brake Shops acroa the coun- try are offertng fr• under- tt.car ufety lnapectlona. For more lnformatk>n on your car'• ey11em1. wrlte for tM fr• brochure, "Ge1tlng to Know Your C.r.'' from Mldaa lnternatlonll Corp., P 0 . Box 11172. Chae.go, Ill. 80811. .. --~-~---.J"...-l..L --'.-!~..&...·-------... --- Or11nge CoMt DAILY Pfl.OT /Frtday, Augu.t 18, 198& S18 ORR 211 ILDSlllBILIS TO CBllSE FRiii · i 811 . BILOW OU·R COIT! . . 1111 ILDSlllBILE CALAIS AND 4 FIRINZAS! / BELOW OUR COST! 1·11 JIMllY -... OVER OUR COST PDIB IT PULL IT.! TOW IT WE'LL 1111 YOU T·TOll ~ w.tor ~ 1111111 S.' 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POW9t' stwrtne. roof (Kk, rellve wt.els, ontv 32,GOOorte mites. <9730VZXl . $3499 OVER INVOICE '82 DODGI COLT Autonwtk:, mint condition, tow mites. (1FHP?03} '13 tOYOfl COIOUA WIN AM/FM lt9r90 Cl'IJltte, elr CiDfd.. ttonlne, eutomettc, ,,.. ferntty ~r. (1GRl706l MAIN & WARNER 540·251 '2 ,,.... ........................................ ... ..... .... . ~-· ~~--16 •••• .,, .... l .! llqPilat FRIDAY. AUGUST.16. 1985 At 20, Gooden proving to be bneti911'• beet pitcher. C2. 8chnellenb1rger ha • new ch•llenoe •t Loulavllle. ca. Delly,...~ ., n... De ,,.. Like an· octopus, Whitfield waits, gets bis chance, puts on squeeze LOS ANGELES '(AP) -Terry Whltfield's primary JOb of late, by his own admisSJon, has been "cheenng the other JUYS on." Which 1sa.notherwayofsaytn,he's s1ttinabackand wa1tin&. And waiting. And waillng. But the WllJt stopped Thursday when the veteran left-handed pinch hitter responded wtth a mammoth tw0-0ut, two-run homer m the bot- tom of the eighth inning that hfted the Los Angeles Dodgers a 5-4 v1ctory over the reeling Atlanta Braves. The Dodgers improved their win- ning streak to seven, while the Braves dropped their fourth ma row. The win, the Dodgers' ninth 1n their last 11 games and 17th 1n their last 22, improved their already- imprcssive lead 1n the National League West to mne _games over San Diego and Cincrnnau. The Dodgers closed out an e1ght- gamc home stand that included only one loss to the Cincmnau Reds. Now they head out on an l I -game. four· city trip beginning 1n San Francisco tonight. The I>odiers also have the best road record 10 the league 3().23 Da ..... (Reuu 10..7) a1 San Frand9co (Blue M) Tl...-. 8:05 p.m. TV: Channel 11. Radio: KABC (7QO). He·s hving quite well, actually. ·Wtutficld 1s IO-for-33 (.303) as a pinch hitter v.ith se'en RBI and two homers His winning blast came off loser Bruce Sutter, 7-5, and 1t earned to the deepest part of the park. st.nugbtaway center field "Sutter has been tough," Whitfield of the ace Atlanta reliever. "But he got a ball up 1 was Just conc!cnt.ratmg on trymg to hit the ball hard." Kent Hill (72) con&ratulatee llike Lanaford after hi• 63-yard field &oal and Barry Redden (30) goea oTer top for TD. In descnbing the latest Dodger VJctory. Manager Tom Lasorda dredged up a line he used m the pennant-wtnnms seasons of '77 a nd '78, saytng, ··Right now. we're hke an octopus. If one tentacle docsn "t get you, another one will." Fernando Valenzuela. 14-8, ben- efited from Whlttield's dramauc homer to record hts seventh stratght win Valenzuela hurled etght torungs, giving up foui runs on seven hits, one of them Dale Murphy·s two-run homer 1n the fifth that gave Atlanta a .i.21ead It v.as M urphy's 31st of the year. Tom N1edcnfucr pitched the runtb for his 12th save Redden stars i&Rams review "We JUSt ran 1010 a hot team," e\plll1ned Eddie Haas, the manager of the Braves "T~y·re not domg many things WTong n~t now." One streak did end for the Dodger !tafT Bob Homer smgle home Brad Kommmsk in the Braves' first, the first earned run allowed b~ Dodger p1tch1ng 10 52 mnmgs. And 1l was the first earned run the Braves scored in 28 mnmgs He leads them to rout of Cardina ls, but t h er e's no compar in g him to Dick er son·· Steve, Di'-5, who started the third quarter.t was 4 of 5 for 42 yards. while crowd-1avorite Jeff Kemp was 3 of 7 for 50 yards. wt th his perfonnance "Obviously, so was Green. A.J. Jones could smile at his effort. He rushed eight times for 45 yards including two touchdowns. Whitfield, 32, was the "tentacle" on Thursday, dnlling his third homer of the season and first since May 8 "It's a tough life," he said of the role of pinch hitter, "but it's a life I have to hve with." By SHARON FRUTOS Of the Delly "°' *'-" It was easy to compare all three Rams quarterbacks Thursday night at Anaheim Stadium. All three played, had stats and all three even were reviewed by their critic-roach. -But when It comes to sketching the progress of the real star of the Rams' 39· 7 rout over the St. Louis Cardtnals, there's no companson. Barry Redden, who's steppt'.d mto the starter's role whtle Enc Dickerson remains m his holdout pattern, accomplished enou&h to ovcnhadow any talk of the absent Dicurson Tbuooay. Redden, who played only the first half, ran out from the shadows, rushing 12 times for I 09 yards and two touchdowns, and t looked every bit as comfortable as I that-other-running-back 1n the spot- J li&ht. Redden scored on a ooe-yardTUn in the first quarter and an eight-yard run in the second to give the R.ams a 20-0 halftime advantage, o ne they wouldn't relinquish. ··r liked the perfonnancc of Barry Redden," Rams Coach John Rob- mson said. Robinson's already made 1t clear he will discuss Redden and Dickerson independently, but does not want to be drawn into a Redden vs. Ot~keDQP appraisal. "I don't want to get into com- parisons between Dickerson and Barry," Robinson said. How about Robmson's quar- terbacks, all three who saw acuon? ··Dieter Brock bad an almost perfect game today. He looked hkc he'd been playing in the NFL for 11 or 12 years," Robinson stated. "Dills and Kemp handled their jobs well," he added. In one halfof play, Brock turned an an efficient, if not lackluster per- formance. He completed 13 of 24 attempts for 165 yards, and should have bad more completions. Henry Ellard, the Rams leading receiver on the night with five catches for 75 yard&, dropped a pair, ,as did Ron Brown. "I felt pretty good all along." Brock said. "We finally got something going . the passing game. "The teams could have been sharp- er." be said, "but overall it was an excellent game." The Cardinals couldn't have echoed those sentiments. · On the A1ght they were held to a mere 211 offensive yards. including a miserable 49 yards rushmg. "Our offensive hnc did a good JOb tonight," Robinson said. "Defensive- ly we forced btm (Cardinal quar- terback Neil Lomax) to move around." Lomax was 7 of 13 for 78 yards "I thought 1f we put enough pressure on him be0d have to keep movm~." he added. Kevm Greene was both mover and shaker for the Rams. The rookie outside linebacker gathered six tackles, four sacks and two assists, and got away with a little dancing after each. "Greene did a n outstandmg JOb," Robmson said. ··r was really pleased Also getung an on the sconng were lockers Mike Lansford and Ken Potter Lansford hll a 27-yard field goal to put the Rams on the board first at 5: I 0 of the first penod. Redden scored twtce, and Lansford booted a 53-yard field goal with seven seconds Icfl In ttle ftm half Rick Mcivor. who took over for Lomax in the third, was sacked in the end zone by Doug Recd for a Rams' safety to put them up. 29-0. Mci vor suffered the wrath of the hungry Rams' line. He was sacked eight times for minus 44 yards Midway through the 1h1rd. the struggling Cardinals finally scored. Mcivor conne1;ted with Clyde Dun- can on a 42-yard touchdown for St. Louis' onlv score of the IUlme. Potter hit a 31-yard field goal at 5:35 of the fourth quarter, and Jones went up the middle with about 3:00 rema1rung 10 complete the game·s sconng. Delly ,... ....... .,""' De,. ........ .._........,. Angels initiate longest ho1Destand against A's -.;. After taJung a well-needed da> off, the ~gels return to the Amencan League West pennant wan tonight v.hen the~ open their longest homcstand of the season agamst the OaUand A'~ Oakland wdl be the first of four v1s11ors to o\nahe1m Stadium. opcrung a four-game set at 7 30 this evenmg. Tim B1nsas 19-2) v.ill get the nod for the A's against left. bander John C'.andetana < 1-0>. who To-'.,,.t'• Game will be malong his third start fo r the -.- Angels. Follow10g the A's into town will be three teams from the Eastern Oiv1s1on -the New York Yank~s for three games. the Detroit T 1ger; for three and Baltimore for two Oakland {Bfrtsas g;;.2J at Angela (Candelaria 1-0) Time: 7:30 p m. TV: None. Radio: KMPC (710). more. The day o ff Thursday had to be a blessing for \fanager Gene Mauch, whose pnching staff unde~ent thl' ulumate test in ~attle earher in the week, as the 1eam played livt' game!> 1 n three days. wrnning but two. And, he's hoping his troops can rebuild 1t!> It-ad 10 thi: l\L \\-est, which has dwindled to 11 i game'> over th~ IJ'l~h<Hg1ng ~n~ll CH\ Royals. Gou Layoff no problem BUFO RD.Ga (.\Pl-..\m' ..\kott btrdied seven of 10 holes dunng one stretch and fired a ""-under-par b'i Thursda .. to take the first-round lead in the · \\ orld Champ1on-;h1p 11f Women's Goll Alcott. commg otT a tv.o-v.t.•d layoff and having pla)ed onl) onu~ 10 the last month, built a thr~-shot lead on the billy 6.007-yard Stouffer Pine Isle Resort Golf Course on Lake Lanier Islands SO miles nonh of Atlanta. Patty Sheehan. wtnner of two events mis year. was second v.ith a 4- under 68 and Judy Clarl al ~S the oldest pla)er 1n 1he ehte licld ot:.1 l shot 69 \l. rid Champ1un)h1p e'ents 10 I Ql!O and • 9111 .\koll. 2'-t>t:gan her h1rd1c <;urge ln the ti llh a lier 1al.1 ng her ,ml) boge) on the 12\-\ard. par-~ founh She aho b1rd1t'd the \1 \th had a par and tht·n put togrther tour h1rd1es 10 a rov. belllre gllmg par-par-h1rdu.· and fin- 1,h1ng v.1th round ''1th four pars 10 sucu.·ss1on "I pla~ed av. tull~ .... ell ".\Icon said "I JUSt kt•pl tinng al the pan, which IS m, game I nn t•r ha1 I. off I hll the ball v.ell. got ii 1n good ros1t1on and madf' \Orne gn~a1 puttc; I was 'ery plea~d V.tlh 11 •• AlcotL .,.,ho ha!> lhret' ma.ior cham- p1on'>h1P' among her 21 car~r \.lC· tone, got fi' f' llf ha eight b1rd1e<; v.1th puth in the l 0 to 20-foot range Dieter Brock fadea to pua. cant Earl Perrell breab In open, Ra.m8 Coach John Robln8on check.a h.alftlme .core (20-0). Defending c hampion "-3nl \ Lopez. a four-time winner in her last nine ouungs, had four birdies in succession tarly in the round hut then faltered and was uC'd at "0 "'llh Beth Daniel. wtnncr of the fir'>I tv.o Her unh hoge' came on the fourth \\hen ht'r aprroach "'~' shon and s~ then tailed to '1nl.. her putt after ch1pp1n~ to '-'tthtn 10 l('("t Louganis wins diving crown Cl.A YTON. Mo. (AP) -Greg Loupnis outscored his nearest competitor, Jim Gray1 by more than 30 points Thursaay to win the I-meter springboard finals at the U.S. Outdoor Diving Cham- pionships. The 2S-ycar-old Loupnis. of the M ission Viejo Nadadores, totaled 607.14 points. Gray, also of Mission Viejo, finished with S76.90 ec>in~ Third plaoe went to Matt ~n, of Austin, Texas, with SS9.71 points. In the womctt's J..meter spring- b oard semifinals, Kelly McCormick. of Columbus, Otuo, totaled S26.4l points to top Michele Mitchell or Mi ion Viejo. Mitchell finished with 4S7. I 7 poants and Wendy Wd- liams. alsopfM1 on VtCJO. WU third with 453.24 point.a. TM meet. wh1ch wtnds up .on Saturday, serves as the qualirying tnals for the World University Oam later thi month in Kobe. Japtn I Dodger st~ff has had~ run of success 52-tnning string with no earned runs a club record LOS AN0£LES (AP) -Their names arc Welch, Valenzuela, Hcrsh.iaer, Reuss, Honeycutt, Niedenfuer, Diu and Howell Those Los Anaelcs Dodaen pitchen com bined for 52 innings over six days without allowina an earned run. The strina. which ended in the first inning of Thunc:ta,.·s S-4 victory over Atlanta, surpaucd the previous club record of 48 set in 1966 when Hall of Fame mcmbcn Sandy Koufu and Don Drysdale led the staff: .. This is the most complete staff I've had SJ nee rve been here," aid Tom Lasorda. who 1s in his ninth year as the Dod&cn' m r. .. We've aot five stoppen i what we've got," 1&1d catcher Mac Scloec11 after WcdnC1day niaht's PJ.!lC in wruch Bob Welch ran his score! 4'trcak to t 6 inn.inp and dropped his earned n.in a vcragc to I 67 in a S.O Victory over Atlanta. Welch, 9-1 for the ICUOD after elbow trouble in the sprina, had two com~t.e pmcs dunna the S~mnina streak that bcpn last Friday nlJ}\t at\er he allowed a second innina home run to CinciJU>tti'1 Nick Eu.sky. Hi eiahth llii&ht ". tory the pitching staffs m~or lcqu,c.lcad1na 19th hu1out th1 icason Also shanna the honon were: •Fernando V alenzucla. 14-8 who •~nt all the way for a victory over the Red Saturday nt&ht. allowina only an unearned NG He p ve up four earned runs tn ciaht 1nninas -a>mst ti nla on Thunday, but got the victory when Ttrry Whitfield. batti~ for VaJeniucla, hit a 1wo-run home run m the ciahth •Jerry Rcu 1().7, who burled a compl~tc- pmc botouc unday. •Orel Herstu~r. I~-' who pllchcd "' l·n 1nn1ngs ~fott going out for a p1nch-h1ttt"r Monda., night He gave up one run and 1t was unearned •Rick Hone)'CUll. 7-10. who hurled 'lix innings, and reliever Tom Niedenfuer the final th~ as the)' lcomb1ncd for another shuto ut Tuesday night. •Relievers Carlos Diaz, ii.en Hov.ell and Niedenfuer combined for two <;COttlC' mn1na~ an relief 10 the game Hersh1scr taned N1C'denfucr also earned a save 1n Thunday's game "This 1s hke an ep1dem1c and I'm glad it's catchy. To aet fivt auys go1na all at once. that's awesome," said p1tch1naroach Tom Pemno k1 "I don't ttmember that happemna. Thcrt'o;, u uall) OM or twnout ofk1ltcr." The Dodgers had an 18-21 fC'Cord on Ma' 11 when they bcpn ~ctr cl\argt back The f'C(Ord gnct then 1 i S()..2~ Ntcdcnfucr ha' contnbutcd s1anific:.n1I" to tbe team resurscft(C. allOW1J\I run' 1n only fiH of bu I t 31 appearance$. ~ Wedne3day nlaht'• shutout. the Ood r staff earned run a"nqc for the tea n was JU.St 2.81 . Throuah 11 2 pme the OodJC" have ~ottd 04 Nn 388 of them eameid Opponents havt 9C'Orcd 91 run'-but onl't '\ 18 rt earned r Gree r assumes State Open lead \ f.~ Tl R \ I.\ Pl -Brad Greer l,f Hun11ngt11n fkalh tired a '-und_er parti\)Thur°'ld.a> tog"e him a ~4-hnlC' total of 208 and a one·strolc kad aficr three rounds of the.-S-io.M>O \ahforn1a State Open golf tqumamcnl Greer h<lld' his narrov. ad" an Lage o"er John \1cCom1sh of San141 \1ana and Mile Rlacltlurn of Orange Par~ Fla entenn~ ll~a' ., tinal round Alonr at 110 atkr shoounga 70 'Thu~' v.a~ \1arc ~meut of Orana.C' Pan "ic'1 11 211 were StrH Hao;.lono;. of El Pa4'0 and \11lr.e \11le" ot ( J 'Pl"CS'i four 'hot\ otT the pa<e at 212 nuenna the final round ~ John Grund of San Gabnel. J1m Woodward of C\1mt Valle):, and John Burckle of N~n Beach. Burcklt. who held a o~ trokc lead after \6 hot IOl.rtd to a 76. Nc~t at 21.l ,...ttt Davt 8eany o( l..Muna Hall Don Levtne El ; Oro c. and Bob Lunn of ramcnto ., .. \ •I .. Cl Orange COiitt OAILY PILOT/Frldey, Auguat 19. 10a5 Ready or not~. ~ere comes NFL on televisioIJ which the clock normally would conunue run the referee will restart the clock after ti peoAlty bu been assessed or declined. The l second clock for aemna off each play w beain earlier after incomplete passes ' pifeups followint runoJna pJay1. By BAIU\Y WD.NE.8 ,..,....,.., Preseason broadcasts of National Football Lcque pmn beain in earnest this weekend, with each networfc telcv\lina a pme. Saturday ruaht. CBS will televue the Cowboys and OWJm from San Dieao. On Sunday afternoon, it will be the Redskins at the Raiden on NBC. ABC bu the Super Bowl champion 49en hostina the Broncos Monday nilht tn11&htful of all NFL sportscasten, will handle WUh~ton·Los Anaeles. The reiular Mon· day Niaht Football crew of Flank Otfford, 0.J Simpson and newcomer Joe Namath will work the Denver-San Francisco match. As 1n the past, then: wtll be el&ht com· merc1al break• per ha~r. with the final break ~t the two-minute warruna. In aeocral, there wiU be four breaks per quarter and all w1JI l~t two minutes. But umeoull taken by teams will last 60 seconds rather than 90, and the networks arc rtspons1ble to be back on the air when play resumes. Each commerc~al break .will be time~ by pmc officials. A savm&! of six minute is possible. While the usual tan retponse to exhibition pmes is a sh.rut and a Quick switch of the dial, the networks seem to feel NFL ~cs in the summer hold a apecial attrtction. They are the only prescason contesu in any spon which draw network cove~. '\'iewcn can set an early llimPK oftbe top football announcina team• Tor each network. Smooth Pat Summerall and efTervC1Cent John Madden will do the Oa.llu-S&n Diqo contest. Dick Enbera and Merlin Olsen, the most Those pmes will test the NFL'• new rules and commercial format policy help speed up the pmea. A m~or concern for the leaaue, which bas seen iu ratinas plummet for three straitht seasons is the le. of the pmes - an averqe of 3 hours, 9 minutes last year. When a penalty 1s called on a play after * * * A8C"a rat1nat for the POA tournament la weekend were the hiaJlest since 1980, a year which Jack Nicklaus dominated the tou nament and mcreased the view1na audienc SPORT S BREAK ---- NFL ready to take one 01ore check of instant replay ~ . NEW YORK -The National Foot· EE ball League, which last tried instant replay •II• to review officials' decisions in J 978, begins an e1Jht-game experiment with it again this weekend. But the viewina audience isn't likely to even know it's happening. The experiment, wh1ch beains with Saturday ntghl's p.me m San Dieao between the Charaers and Dallas Cowboys, was approved by NFL owners at their meeting last March in Phoenix. to be used in natiooally-telev1~d exhibiuon pmcs. But under no circum- stances will tt be tried during the 198S regular season. The NFL tryout is similar to the appeal used by the Uruted States Football League 1n televised pmes dunng its spnng season in one respect-1t applies only to non-ptnaJties like out-of-bounds and possession plays And as in the USFL cue, when ABC declined to become an official participant an the pme, the monitors can only make ~ls off replays that come up an the natural course of a tdecast. "The rt 1s no network involvement at all," says Val Pinchbeck, the NFL's director of broadastina. But the NFL experiment is unlike the USFL's ID that coaches do not appeal calls to an offiClal watching rcplay_s. Under the NFL plan, an official in a booth monttors the game and reports by radio to the umpire on the field any call that maybe questionable. ff a replay comes up within 20 seconds, the official in the booth watches 1t; if not, the call stands and the pme coot1nucs without anyone in the stands or at home k.nowina the call was even questioned. Quote of tbe day Reda •poll Padree' comeback Toll)' Perea'• pinch-hit sin&le with two Iii out in the 10th inoinadrove In l\oa Oater to break a~ be and pve Cincinoatt a S-4 victory over San DitSQ Thunday at Jack Murphy Stadium. The Reds, who squandered a 4-0 lead 10 the ninth, rallied in the 10th and in the process, pushed the Padres nine pmes behind tbe Doc1aen in the National Leque West ... In the East. the Cardinals moved into a tie for fU"St with the New York Mets u Olde SmJ~ walked on four pitches with the bases loaded and two outs in the 12th innina, aivinj St Louis a 4-3 victory over Pittsburah and a sweep of their doubleneader at Busch Stadium. Darrell Porter rapped a two-run slnale and Kart &eptklre aUowed five hits over eijht innina;s aa the Cardinals won the opener, 3-1 ... At Shea Stadium, La Dybh'a'1 two-out sround rule double in the eiabth t.n.nina broke a 7-7 deadlock and ...,._ lifted the Mets to a 10-7 victory over Philadelphia. Des{>ite aiving up five earned runs on eiaht bits tn five inruoas New York pitcher Dwtpt Gooclea bad no decision and kept bis ~nonal l ~e winnioa streak int.act ... Vuce Law 1 iwo-run homer paced Montreal to a 7-3 decision over Cbicqo at WriJ1cy Field, sendina the Cubs to their 10th loss 10 11 pmes. BW Ga1Uck1011, 11-8, pitched 6'f>innings to win bis fint game since July 26, with relief help from Bert Roberie and Rudf St. Clair . . . Risht-bander Mike Scott'• six-hit pitchina and an error by shortstop Jote Uribe which led to three unearned runs helped Houston to a 4-I victory over San Francisco. Aadre Tlaonio11 belted a ~run Iii homer to biabliJht Oeveland's fou~ruo ninth innina that pvc the Indians a 7-6 victory over Detroit at Tiler Stadium PETE ROSE COUNTDOWN C109lnt lao~ Ty Cobb Wllat Rose did Tbanday: Hewas0for3 in the Reds' S-4 I(). inning victory over the San Diego Padres at Jack Murphy Stadium. Donett •till out $20,000 (fine) m THOUSAND OAKS -DaUas Cow- boys Coach Tom Landry said Thursday that holdout runnana back Tony Dorsett would still have to pay his $1 ,000 a day fines for missing 20 days oftrairuna camp. Dorsett came to a settlement with the Cowboys Wednesday night, agreeing on a new five-year contract "The fines are sllll mt.act an·d he bas to pay at," Landry said ... You can't make an exception for a Rohrer l• Cr08by chairman John C .. (Jake) Rohrer has been named l!I chairman of the Crosby Southern Pro-Am ' Golf Tournament for the second con-· sccutive year, it was announced by Ken Steelman, the president ofSS2 Oub, a support aroup for Hoa& Memonal Hospital Presbytenan. Rohrer, LNewport Beach resident for the past five years, has been a member of the Bottd of Directors for the 1S2 Qub for three years and has served on the Crosby Southern Executive Committee for four years. He moved to Southern Calt- forrua from the Sao Francisco Itel ID 1980. The Crosby Southern Pro- .(m was initiated in 197 S by the SS2 Club as a satelltte of the Btng Crosby National Pro-Am Tour- nament held annualJy in Pebble Beach. This will be the 12th year the event has been held locally, raising more than $650,000 to be Rohrer used for specialized equipment and services for the hospital. The tournament is held every year at the Irvine Coast Country Oub. Third national title for Adam• Lynn Adams of Costa Mesa has VJ earned her third national champ1onsh1p and No. l rank.inf followinJ the end of the 1984-85 Womens Profeuaonal Racquet· ball Association season. At season's end, she had captured ihe prestigious "Grand Slam of Racquetball,'' with champ1onsh1ps in the WPRA Nationals in Fort Worth, the DP NationaJs in Boston and her first Ekteloo National Cham- 'onshi The Ektelon title ended five years of frustration for Adams 1n the event held annually in Anaheim. Steve Sbatt, rcurcd Los Angeles Kings forward. on owning a stable of horses for his new sporting passion -polo: ''The best pan of thls Sport IS that YOU &Ct lO Change your legs after every penod." McGee •ign• Lakers contract INGLEWOOD -Veteran JUUd m Mike McGee bas signed a multi-year contract wtth the National Basketball Assoc1allon champion Los Angeles Lakcrs, the team announced Thursday. No terms of the agreement wert announced. Thursday niabt. Ocveland, trailina 6-3 aoina into the ninth, Vlctimized loser WWJe Henaudn, 7-7, for the second time in les.s than a week ... Elsewhere in the American Leque, ~Ripka hit a three-ru n homer and drove in anomcr run with a double to lead Baltimore to a 9·1 victory over visiting Texas. Siorm Davi•, 7-7, won bis second de- cision 1n a row, scattering six bits while strikina out seven and walkina three for seven inninas. Sammy Stewart pitched the final two innings as the Orioles won their third game in a row ... CeelJ Cooper hit bis fifth career arand \ slam in the seventh ionina to lift · 1 Teddy Blpera and Milwaukee to a 7-S win over the Chicago White Sox at County Stadium. With the player." Landry said, "I'm happy Tony IS back. It's very aood for him. lt was the point where he needed to get back." Landry said Dorsett would not play in Saturda)'.'s National Football League exh1b1tion game apinst Sao Dieao. but would play in an Aug. 26 game against Chicaao in Texas Stadium. Jn addition to the major "Grand Slam" events, the 28- ycar-old Adams won WPRA tour events tn Auburn. Mass .. Essex, Vt., and Oklahoma City, as well as teaming with Terri Gilreath for their third straight WPRA Na- ti onal Doubles Cbampionsh1~. A In doina so. Adams convinc- ingly regained the national championship. Televialon, radl~ TELEVISION McGee, 26. averaacd I 0.2 points per game last season, b1s fourth an the NBA. The 6-6 fonner UnjversityofMichigan standout was a first-round draft choice of the Lakers in 1981. "We're delighted we have ·stgned one of our promisina. young players," said General Manager Jerry West of the Laken. Tbonatoa score tied at 3-3 going into the seventh, the Brewers loaded the bases apinst Chicago starter Floyd BUDJ•ter, S-10, when Cooper hit a 1-0 pitch over the center-field waU for his l 0th homer of the season ... In the Metrodome, Keat Hrbek'• pnd slam and a three-run homer by Gary Gaettl paced a l S-bit attack u Minnesota crushed Seattle, 14-S. Gooden shows he's human, but is still best pitcher today NE\\ YORK CAP)-Even the Tan Woodsman had a testimonial held in his honor to ex tot the greatest hean in lhc Land of Oz. or so the Hollywood version of this classic children's talc goes. So wh) has no one thou&ht to hold a testtmontal for Dwight Gooden as the best pitcher an this classic child's game of baseball" Perhaps it's hJS youth, only 20 years old, or has lack of e11pcnence. 1n only has second major league season wath the New York Mets. Perhaps it's caution, the Jaded purveyors of this game havana seen too many flash-10- the·pan pttchers Or, perhaps, he has been discovered to be flawed. It certainly can't be that he isn't the best patcher in the game today. for he IS. In has most recent oubng. on Thursday, he got knocked out of a pme agamst Philadclph1a afte' five innings, giving up five runs on eight hits He gol no dec1s1on 1n a I(). 7 Mets victory. preserving his 12-game win- ning streak. "It was a weird day. I JUSt didn't do my part." he said -provina only that he is human, even thouah he miaht be the best. Were there a testimonial for Gooden. Detroit Tiaers Manaaer Sparky Anderson might be the first to speak. "I think Gooden's 'ot to be the best pitcher an the pme,' Anderson sa ys. ''The A mencan League has most of the best players, but the NatiooaJ Ltague has the top two pitchers - Gooden and (Fernando) Valenzuela. Ofthosc two, Goodcn's the best." Some other remarks from the testimonial dais: Jim Frey. manaJer of the Chicago Cubs: "He's a special kind of pitcher. You don't expect to score su or seven runs off ham. You hope to lc.eep the game low~onn1-act a walk, steal a base, put a hat or two together -and beat him 3-2 ... 1f you can." Gary Caner, Mets catcher: "He has more matunty than any 20-year-old rve ever seen. There aren't enouah ad 'ecuves to describe ftim. Catchin DwiCht Gooden him 1s like s1ttina back in a rockmg chair -he has such areat command of all his pitches." Mets Manljer Dave Johnson: "It's a mixture of his maturity and his command. He studies the hitters. He's not just a thrower. he's a student of the game. He's learned the hitters, and he knows how to pitch to them." Even Gooden. seldom pven to (Pleue eee OOODltN/CS) "He has a lot of work to do and needs to play some aprnst Donett Chicaao and aeinst the Houston Oilers in the final prcseason aame, ' Landry said. "It will take him two to four weeks to aet back into top shape for the season opener.·· The Cowboys open the regular season Sept. 9 aga.inst the Washtnaton Redskins an Texas Stadium. 8 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco. Channel l l. RADIO 7 30 p.m. -BASE BALL Oakland at Angels, K.MPC (710). 8 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodge~ at an Franc1sco, KABC (790). \ Sports on TV for weekend Saturday TELEVISION 8 a.m. -WRESTLING: Channel S. 9 a.m. -WRES'l'LJNG: Channel S6. 10:30 a.m. -&ASEBALL: This Weck 1n Baseball. Channel 4. • 11 a.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 9. l l:IS a.m. -BASEBALL: Boston at New York Yankees, Channel 4. I p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodacrs at San Francisco, Channel 11. 2 p.m. -HORSE RACING: The Travers St.Ike~ from Saratop, N.Y., Channel 2. 2 p.m. -GOLF: LPGA World Championship. third· round play from Shaker Heiahts, Ohio fdelayed), Channel 4. 2:30 p.m. -GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS: A tnbute to Hall ofFamer Jackie Robinson, Channel 7. 3:30 p.m. -SURFING: Men's, women's and tandem competJtion in the U.S. Open of Surfina from Malibu (tape), Channel 7. 4 p.m. -FOOTBALL: 81• 10 preview, a took at the contenders for the conference title, Chanrt.fl 4. 4 p.m. -BOXING: Channel S6. 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Dallas at San Diego Charaers, KLZZ(600), KLZZ-FM (106.S). 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Oakland vs. Angels. KMPC (710). Su day TELEVISION I p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco. Channel I l. I p.m. -DRAG RACING: NHRA Top Fuel Orapter Nationals, Channel 4. 1:30 p.m. -SPORTS SUNDAY: Boxing -Juan "Kid" Meza defends his WBC super-bantamweiaht title apinst Lupe Pintor from Tljuana, Mexico; John Madden visits NFL trainint camps, Channel 2. 2:30 p.m. -GOLF: LPGA World Chamr1 onsh1p, final round from Shaker Hei.ahts. Ohio. Channe 4. 4 p.m. -WORLD Ct.JP SIUING: Men's downhill from Las Lenas, Araentioa, Channel 7. RADIO I p.m. -BASEBALL: Oalcland at Angels, KMPC (710). 1 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodaers at San Francisco. KABC(790). 1 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Washinaton at Los Anaetcs Raiders, K.Rl.A ( 1110). . 4:30 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: North American Boun1 Championships from Beaumont, Tex. -------------------• (tape), Channel 7. 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Dallas Cowboys at San Dieao Chargers, Channel 2. 10 p.m. -BOXING: Channel 34. 12:20 p.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 9. RADIO I p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodaers at San Francisco, KABC(790). 4: SO p m. -BASEBALL: Montreal at St. Louis, KNX (1070). Wasiak reaches milestone VERO BEACH -Stan Wasiak became the all-time winninaest m.anaaer in IIllDor-teaauc baseball when his Vero Beach Dodaers of the Oass A F1onda State Lcaaue beat West Palm Beach 11-2. The victory. w~ich evened the Oodaers' season record at 62-621 pve the 6S-year-old Wasiak a career tot.al of 2.497 wins, one better than Bob Coleman. !\ Royal Robbins.. Natural Fiber Clothing Style wfth mountaineering heritage. ''fn'f' j1v~{~ Look for the Daily I Pilot's feature pages for Home and Garden now ap- pearing in every saturday Rookie Fehr surprise leader by* one shot at PGA tourney GRANO BLANC, Mich. (AP) - Rookie Rick Fehr. t.aldna advantqt of rain-softened areens.. shot a 7- under-par 6S Thurldar to take a one-- stroke lead over Pau Azinaer after the first round of the Buick Open at Warwick Hills Golf and Country Oub. tournament in July, w!\ere be missed the cut. Fehr, of Seattle, started his round on the I 0th hole and played the back side in 3-under 33 with birdies on the 12th, 13th and 14th holes. Playina the front nine an 4-under 32, Fehr birdied the I 1t, 4th, 6th and 8th hole He didn't card a sinsJe boaey dunna the round. HOLU9Alt MOUNTAINEERING 3840 So. an.tot 81. • ~ S...ta Ana. CA 92104 - .l.. I •1' •. .... morning's paper. To Advertia.e In Thie Section, CaU 642-4321 • Fehr, 23, a fonner Briaham Youn1 Univenity ao_lf star, has no card to elay on the PGA Tour and the Buaclc O~n is only his seventh Tour event this year. Ho•tvtr1 a tie for n1nth place in the U.S. Open, which was held about 30 miles away at Oak.land Hills, helped Fehr cam S31,S69 already. That's mort tha.n the I SOth man on last year's money lilt earned, which meant Fehr can play the rest oft 98S, even without• card. . Fehr, wbo hat pent mou of the season play1n1 events ln the satellite Tournament PlayersSctib. made hu last Tour stAn at the mmy Oa<v1t Five _Jolfers, Bill Krauert, Scott Hoch1 Orea TwiJas, 011 Morian and Charhe 8ollin11. all were two strokes off the lead at under-par 67. Azinaer, 2S1 the medalist at the PGA qualifyina school la'\t fall, needed JS strokes on the front nine of the 7.014-yard, par-72 layout. then birdied the first four hol~ on the beck • 1de. He added another binUe on the 16th bole for a 31 on the final n1nc holes. Allnacr's only m11takt was a boCrY on the 431 -yard, ~r-4 se(X)nd hole where he carded his tone bogey l iO IC ). 11 >r It n r- ·' -------~---------------------------------Ci l -Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT /FmJrt. AUQWlt 18, tllS ca • Taktna the IWrh road · Cbarlee Wlaite ramblee for J~• tbroUb It. Loa.la de· fenee ThandaJ Diaht u llama breeae to '"'9-7 uhtbltlon football Ylctory o•er tbe cantlna1a at Anaheim ltadlum. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Raider hurt In practice OXNAJU>(AP)-Freeqent wide receiver Rod BatkJdale a 1printer from Arizona. suff'md an ankle il'\iury durina prletice at the tram1na camp of the Lot Anaelet Raiden. B&tkld.ale who caUJbt one pus for nine yards In the Raiden' openjq eJthibition pme with San Francisco 49ertSaturday, had been bothered by a aprain of the same ankle earlier in tralnina camp. "He'a been favorina it ever aince he fint irijured h." Coach Tom Flores said Thul'lday. "You could tee that in the film oft,he 49er pme." Barksdale is one of nine wide recieiven comJ>Ctina for four or five 1pot1 on the Raiden' final roster. h wu not known bow lona he would be out of action. Rama cut five The Rama have cut five rooties and put thrte olhn on the 11\)ured reserve lilt, reducina their t.r11nina· camp roster to 72. Wide recieiver Danny Bradley, a seventh-round eick ft~ Oklaho'!!a1 defensive end Steve Gibson of UJ Poly San Luis Obispo and wide receiver Sam Moore, Sam Houston State, were put on iJ\iured reserve, the team announced Thursday. Safeties Ed St. Geme, Stanford, Jim Palmer, Boise State, and Kevin Brown, Nonhwestern, plus wide re· ceiven Jonathan Finstuen, Occiden· tal, and Raym.ond Arnold, Hayward State, were put on waivers. By cuts and htjured reserve moves, the Rams have eliminated 10 players from their roster this week. •Hmfutloii bmrlfJI toanuunent Cahrom11 ~l~~t champion Denic~ Kelly Wlll race N~w York dtttwei&bt ch.amp Nel10o "Rocky" Orut 1n a IChcduJed 10-round troh'• ehm1nallon ioumamtnt bout at 7 p m Aua. ·20 at ~ Forum Jn another S1roh'• wcl~r-ci&ht cltm1n1uon bout, AlP.honao Lona. ranked 1-40. 2 1n Cah· rom1a, will meet Olcnn Smath, the USBA's ninlh ranked n&hter Kclfy, of Lot A.nitles, 11 unbeaten at I J-0.1 Onu, 14-4, has never been knocked down in h1oi I 8 pro1Cu1onal f\&hts. AJJo on the card 11 Stroh's m1ddlcwetaht champion Lindell Holmes or Oe1ro1t, who will face Cahfom11 Jr m1ddlewe1aht champion MardO Roybal or ValleJO m 1 scheduled IQ.. rounder. Tieken •~ av111ble at the Fonim box office and all T1c:ketmutcr locauon1. For mo~ 1nformauon, phone (21.l) 67}..1300 For uc:ktt u1formallon. phone 1.40-2000 8-3 1&11d i:mder bulretlJaU Early rqisttauon 1s now beU\I accepted for the fall seaaon of the Newpon-Coaia Mesa Fast Action 6-.l and under b&skett.11 leque. 4a4ue pmes a.re rlaycd 11 the Ntwpon Cbriauan ffi&h Schoo IYlTI on Sunday after· noons. Teams are classified into A, B and C levela for better competiuon. Individuals in need of 1 t~m will also be aocc:pted and placied on existma teams. Reaiat.ration for an 1ind1vidull 1s SSS for the ae&IOD and two jersey's arc included 1n the fee. Team real at.ration is S 160 plus S22 per pme 10 cover pme fees. SiJn-upt pnor to Sept. 6 will save S2S off the team pnce. To reai•ter as a team or an 1nd1V1dual, phone Dan Anderson at 831·2•45S ~aera"'-U The ellbth annual SOcal Nauonals. featunna AMA draab1ke rac1na. will be held Sunday Aua. 25 at Carltt.d Raceway The event will feature AMA dra&btltcs compeuna for national points and nauonal run records. The track will opeo at 9 1.m that day, with practice at 10 and the m11n event at 2 p.m. C&rlab9d Raceway 11 located north ofSan Diqo. seven miles east of lhe l·S exit on Palomar Airpon Road For more informauon, phone (619) 292-4444 TIJ~bred niabJf at .l'DmCllUI . Pomonu 47th *"II t01l wiJJ be the ricba In the tl'IClt't hinory, Purw morues totall"'I U ,6S71l4l will be awarded dunna the 11-dal mcei111a. wtth S2,3Sl.916 be1n1 allocated rot thotO\l&l\bmS ewntt alorw. The lnauM 1s Sl~.000 over last year'• to\11 PW'IC dastn~uon. 'Ett.hl«n thorou&hbml aialtes eveni. will k ttheaulcd dunna ibe mceuna. plus llmulca.su •nd ..,.nna offered on eutttn at.Ilka cwnta. Ten 1take1have1ncre.eed tbcar added·money value• for 19U. Topp1n1 the hat ta1thc Pomona lnvliadonal Haruficap. wtudl 1nc1tUC1 from S7S.OOO to SI00,0001uaranteed. ~ lnapctmon, thePomonaDetby, LasMadnnaa and romona Hand1capa arc Breeders' Cup-deaainattd' races and offer bonu1 ~maurna to each of the IOP ~ fin11hen wh1cb an: nominated to the 198' Breeden' Cup nica.at Att_t.lNUCI Ra~ Couttt an New York on No". l . Pomona's meeu DJ bcsiJU Sept 12 at noon and con\Jnun throuah Sept. 29 lk!Of1eboard Cbam~abfS-Thi with annual Mo~y e Bodyboud Pro-Am Champtonsl\Jpa will be ld Aua. 31 11 the Harbor Beach m Octtrwde Th11 oont.est, wluc:h was the first annual event to offer a ca&h pune to profcuJonal bodJ.boatd ndcn, wiU have paruc1pen1a from CaJ1forrua. the Eu1 Coast and Hawaii oompeuna. Profeu1onal nders will com~ for 1 $2,000 cash purte and amateurs will vie for pnzes. The event will bqin It 7 a.m. with lhe profeu1onal prehm1nary beata. For more 1nfonn1uon, phone Mary Webb or Mary Lee Chnstensen at (619) 439--0900 l"rl.ar'• Club L&l'en rout The Nauonal Basketball Auoctauon c:bam· pion Loi Anaeles Lakm and thetr coach Pat Riley will be the subJCCU of 1 Fnar'' Oub Siaa Roast on Tuesday, Oct IS at the Beverly Hilton Hotel - The Roastmaster will be Milton Berle and all team members Coach Pal IWey and IUJ us1siant coach«. Owner Jerry Buss. President Bill Sbarman and General Manqcr Jerry West an expccied to be 1n attendance. Persona interested ln 1ttend1na the event should phone Cheryl at the Fnan Oub at (213) SS~8~ Or CO-Chairman John FranCJS It (213) 277-0782. Call it parody, not parity Schnellenberger' s new task Architect of 1983 At some schools, victorres n oolball are the exception rather than the rule .. We have commuectto1rnprove-on our touahness. This dOUp eoula go title for Miami has out andbave some collisions and yet come back the next time and scrim-another challenge mqe ap.in. We scrimmaacd often By HERSCHEL NISSENSON 1978 opener. and still bad J>:CC?ple on the field LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -lt was "'~....., Nonhwestern failed to win a pme instead of the 11delinet with injuries. not exactly a prcdlcllon, but it served If it's true that somethina ap-in 1978, 1980 and 1981 and settled for Before, if we tried to bit two straight Howard Schnellenbergcr's purpose. proachina parity bu arrived in col-one measly victory in 19761 1977 and days, we (>robably wouJd have had 30 Lou1sv1lle's new football coach lqe football, it has somehow man-1979. The last t.hrce years nave been people iQJured." held up a tattered paperback, the aged to avoid places like Texas-El virtual wonden by comparison-3-8 For the fifth year 1n a row, story of Miami's march to the 1983 PasoJ.. Nonhwestem, Oregon State in 1982 (Dennis Green wu named Nonhwestern's prnes will be broad· colleae football champ1onsh1p. and Kice. Bia Ten Coach of the Year for that cast by radio station WAIT m. The book was ready to ao, be 1&.1d, Those schools last year were a achievement) and 2-9 in both 1983 Chicaao. Is the real wait nearing an almost immediately after the Hur- combined 7-37. They have not and 198:4. end? Will the JO.year mark of ricanes beat Nebraska, 31-30, m the totaled more than seven wins since Durio• its 21-ycar, non-winning 13-96-1-.123, a close second to Oran1e Bowl. 1974 and the intervenina years io-streak, Rice has broken even twice -UTEP's .122, ao up or down? lt was, he added, "just something to eluded debacles such as S-39 (1977 S-S in 1970 and S·S·l in '72. And Green refers to 1984as"theycarof think about." and 1979) 6-37-1 (1978), 6-38-1 desfite an 0-9-1 record in 1968 and missed opportunites. We were in Schnellenberaer has been thmlc.ing (1982), 6-JS (1981) and 6-39 ( 1980). 0-1 in 1982, the Owls went positive-more pmes than ever. Weoould have about that book a lot lately. He's not Amona them, they have not en· ly bonkers in 1964 ( 4-S-1) 196 7 ( 4-6), won three ofour first four games Last predictina a quick nauonal title for joyed a winnina ICISOn since North-1973 (5-6), 1980 (S-6) and 1981 ( 4-7). year if it hadn't been for missed the lona~owntrodden Cardinals, but Howard Schnellenber&er western went 7-4 in 1971. Texas-El How bad has it been? opoortunities. he sounds like a man who expects to Paso, which hasn't won more than lf Coach Rav Alborn had said that .'l"fhe goal for 1985 is to get over add another book to his collection. Missouri Valley Conference, and · h d 4-7 1... • th · ~ f th 1982 that's not the national level " two pmes smce a ea y mara. in e turru.na pomt o e season that hum{>. to take advantage of those Schnellenberaer stunned the sports · l 974, and <?rqon State both recorded was the openina kickoff, he wu riaht. opporturuties we missed a year ago. world last December when, after Schnellenberger said he isn't con· their last winruna campai~s in 1970, Southwestern Louisiana, the open-We've made a si~cant amount of turning aside baa-money offers from a ccrned that his reputation as some- but Ri~'s onaoin4 S!-"nJ of 21 ina-pme opponent. was supposed to progress. I think 1t is realistic we can host of pro and colleae teams. he thm$ of a miracle-worker mi&ht be consecuuve non-wmrung seuons be a breather. But before Alborn had win four of our first five games this agreed to take this job. tarrusbe<I if Louisville doesn't take off "If I'd thou.Jltt about that when I tint took the JOb with George Allen when he went lO the Los Angeles Rams and they badn 't won for yea.rs and yea.rs, I'd have more lflY hairs than I do now "When t went to the Dolphms m I 970 wttb Don Shula, when he fint started there and they hadn't won at all, I'd be ba.ld. If J'd have womed about th.at before Miami, u (the natJ onaJ cbamp1onshtp) never would b.ave happened." "People who understand the tremendous Job we have ahead of us. who know footbaH. wtll rccoanizc that 1t wtll take t1me, • Scbnellenbcrger added -1 think the vast maJOnty of people recognize when you've had a program as retarded as this one has been. that it'~ not aoing to happen overnight " The success of the first season will be difficult to relate to wrns and losses, he said "M) first )Car at M1am1 we won fi\.e, they had won sn the year before But we made great stndes "I think 11 can happen. I'm nol sure 11 will be as quack " (the Owls were 6-4 way back in 1963) taken a deep breath, USL's Clarence year." A Louisville nauve who was an All· ~q_ui_c_kl_y_. ____ _ ~~~~~~~ ~~~ 1s an NCAA record. Verdin returned the opeoina kickoff That hasn't happened since 1963, Arnencan end at Kentucky, be said a Ooina strictly by consecutive los. for a touchdown. but the W1Jdcats open the 1985 factor an his dcc111on was the chance ma seasons (a .SOO year is merely a But for sheer futility, it is hard to season at Duke. which has had only to come home. The other lure was a non-winningone),OregonStateisthe m.atchTexas-EIPaso.Overthelast 10 five winnina seasons m the last 19 chance to tum Lou1svdle into a current leader at 14, with Nonh-xcars, the Miners are 14-101 for a After a trip to Missouri. North· football power. No one envies him western and Texas-El Paso at 13 and wi.nnina" percent.age of .122. Ob-western faces Northern lllino1s, In· that task. Rice at 12. viously, they were flushed by the diana and Minnesota. La.st year's two Lou1sv11le hasn't had a winning Amona other ianominies suffered success of that aiddy 4-7 mark in t 974 victones came against Indiana and season smcc I 978 and trad1uonally durina the lean yean, Nonhwettem ... which came on the heels on an 0-11 Minnesota. has been a whippina boy for the maJOr set a major-colleae record by losina 34 disaster in I 973. "There's a clear understanding of colleges on its schedules. consecutive prnes between the sec. So whr, is the l 98S media auide how to be successful at North· Scbnellenberaer aarecs this JOb 1s ond contest of the 1979 season, when entitled ' Miner Maaicr' One reason western.'' says Green, who is in his formidable, even more so than the the Wildcats beat Wyomina, 27-22, is UTEP's first redshirt program a fifth season. "We're not going to let rebuildina provam at M1am.1. and the fourth pme of 1982, when year aao. our opponunities getaway this year." "They're similar m that both they pounded Northern flllnola, 31-6. "What is helpinJ us now is beina Northwestern 's strength will be the proa.rams have been down. and been I The Wildcats also went from Nov. able to &et enouah players here to offensive line, which Green calls "the down for a long time," he said. "The 23, 1974, thtouah Oct. 301 1982, a .have a good intra.squad aame every belt offensive line we've bad by far difference 1s that M1am1 at one lime total of54pmes1 without wmningon Thunday for the Rdshiru," says since l've been here." had played at the national level, 1 the road. They dtd, however, manaae Coach Bill Yuna. Another is the Orqon State's 10-year record 1s where even the year Lowsv11lc went to play a 900reless tie at lllinois in the _._eo_n_di_'u_·o_n_i_na_Prosram ___ .-"/'--------1 S_-_93_--_3-_._14_9_. _______ .......,_9_-_l_(i_n_l9_7_2_)_. _t_hc....;y_wc_rc __ m_th_e...L.1 __ _ GOODEN ••• FromC2 IT ALL ADDS UP . G ttouseot 1mpo; bl ..:. J.uJ MERCEDES )•l ... • J '. J , , J "*'n'-. ,,.,, .. ,,.. r1111n1•* ............. '--•"'tw'-................... 4""111o hyperbole, has s~ken out in has own behalf: "When I ve aot the ball in my hand, I'm an charae. I feel like I can't be beat. That's the way every pitcher's aot to look at it" On Thursday he could well have been beaten. Only su Meu runs in the fint two inninas kept Gooden's wiMlna streak intact. Gooden meanwhile, struaaled with the control that ba11erved hTm ao well in the past. 47 Sprint. EPAEST.MPG .· GaliforniaS #1 milea e champ. "I kept fallill§ behind in the count,·· Gooden said. 'I felt like I had aood movement on the fastball. In fa~ it wu one of my beat. But I kept falhnt behind with it, and when you do tha~ It beClomes a pretty &ood pitch to biL There arc, of course, mechanical reasons -mattet1 related to the physical wor1d -for Oooden's succeues and failures On Thursday, Johnson said Oooden looked matic1n hiulcllvery, but he alto countenanced ~t taJdna credit away from the Phillies. ••ncy bit hrm hard," John10n said "They just hit the bell well today.~· Gooden bu a Cree, easy mouon that producea a 95 mph flstball that skipt, hope and IYfl\a all over the place. and ubc wants, be can throw it harder. He throws 1 parabolic curveb&ll that roll• to the precipice and drop& off' the ec5ae or Devil'• Tower befo~ reacblq the better. And he has added • cbanfeup that bo throws ocasionally to IJV't cerebral bitten brain cramps. . WOULD YOU LEAVE ME UNATTENDED? * Haw you ntmtd a QUa".dlen '°'your ohlldrwt? * Who will m.nage uaeli for your cNldrwt and grtndctllld!WI? * Do you know that, wtthout I trutt your chllcl,..,, and granclCNlclr.,. muat ~ QIYtn your •tat• at aee 11? Coma to•.._....., on wtlll end truat~• you wit! dt9CUM the fonowtng toplca wtttl ettomey ........ A.~ ....... .n est•t• ptannlng ~ltt, * How to chOoM 1 gutrdlen or tNtt ... * How to mekt *',. YOUf •tatt goee to your children or granctcMc:tren. not ~ ..... * How to cs.duct your ctttldnln'• ~ tor OOUega, private ectl<>OI. leuon• .-o. • * How to aVOkt probet• end leOel feM * How to avo4d M ml~ dMtl'I tuta TT1"ti":1~C: 1J;N:t'"· WllftM ,.Ollbl aAVJNOI • Corporate Ptua. N9wpor1 lllliCf\ -C.. 611-6300 to r..-ve your IMtt AD•Haoft • PM , '47 EPA EST MPG Use for comparison Your m1leage may differ • •Manufacturer's suggested retail price for a Sprint includes destination charges and dealer prep. Tn. license and other options 1ddit1on•t lmpo edfor Che ............. .....,. K.n ... Clly O.lr.ltl\d c11ic.oo S..lllt Ml~I• T81lH Toronto New YOl'il 0.lrojl .. n1mot1 &ol!Of'I Mllw~M c1e .... nc1 ~ • • I I "' . •AIT DIYllaON Tl 41 .. 41 '° S3 51 s- S1 SS Sl '° 3' 7S TiwrMllV'• s.c- Cle...Wlld 7 O.troll • .. tllMOf8 t, Tnu I MllWIM>te 14, Sffttle S Mllw8ut.M 1, Cllboo S T .. ¥'1~ 0.lr.lellO (BlrfM\ t f l et Aft9IK IC•~le I 01. n Cttv81811d (HfffOf'I • 171 et O.trou (O'Hffl S·SI, n K811MI C1tv (L .. l>nndl 10·61 ., Toronto IKtv t 41. n lo•lon (Bo¥d 11•101 81 N..,1 Yon tCowlfY 10-SI n Tuea lltvnett 0 '' et 8a411mot• 10 Martinel 1·7l. n S..ttle <Swift 4 61 et Mlnne\011 (:ld\rom a 11), n ChtcaC>O (08'tll 1·01 •t Mllwavt.ff (9VNll t·t ), n $8!\lrdl!V'• ~­°'Ir.lend •I Afte9h, n S.•llle 81 Mlnn4JM)le K•nHl Cllv •< Twonto &oltOtl at New Yorll CtlleeC>O et MltwavkM Clev8l•nd 11 D•trolt Textt 11 81lllf'TIOI'• n H1tteMI LMtue WIST DIVISION W L Pct. GI ~ 61 .. 6IJ1 Cine Inna ti S9 SJ .SV 9 Sen Diego 60 S4 S24 9 Houston SJ '° '69 lSY"J Allente ., 6J ~ 19 Sen Frenct•co 4J 10 311 2S·.., Ntw Yorio. SI LOUI\ MontrMI Cllkego PnlllcMIOflll PllllDUrOI> EAST DtYISte»I 69 4J 69 4J 's ., SS S7 S2 ti l3 71 ~Y'I kWM Otd9en S At1en11 • Ntw York 10. P,,lledtll>/lte 1 614 616 SJO •91 t60 1'1 s I• 17 .. JS, St LOUii 3·4. PUtlburon 1 l !Heonc:t oame 12 nnlno•> Mo11rr .. 1 1 cr11ceoo 1 Houlton • Sen Frenc!tco I Cincinnati S, Sen Dlevo • 110 1nnlno11 TldllY's Glmtl ~ lRevn 10·71 et Sen Frenc•1eo (Blue S·•I. n P,,iledt!Pllla I Rawltv 9·61 et ChluCIO (80lllllO 0·7) New Vork !Lvncn IO·SI 11 Plt11ovr9" (ltl!odln 6· 131 n Montr"I ILHklV S· 111 et "St Lovl• (FMICl'I 4-S), n Cincinnati !Soto 10-13) al Houslon (K-10·9), n Allenle (~titer 16· 101 et Sen Dtt90 IH•wklnt 14·41. n S.NrdeY'• ~ ~ 11 Sen Franci.c:o PtllledttPllle 11 ChleeOO New York 11 Pltt•OUron. n Mo!llr"I et SI Loul•. n Clnctnnell •I Houlton. n NATIONAL LEAGUE DMtttn s, erav" 4 ATLANTA LOS ANOILIES abrhlll ebrllbl lt.OMll•k rt Cl\ml>lt on Rltmn u M.i¥onvd Hornlf' 10 Her-II OtwkftlD HUOCH"CI '° MTllmo Pl! ISentdlcte Plf'rv Pf! J0Jllnt11 P For\111' P Dedmono ~p W1nno11>11 T...,. • I I o Sa• ?o S 1 2 0 I 0 0 0 9R1nM1 U 7 0 1 0 • I I 0 Lanc:lra d l 0 0 0 • I I 1 Brock 1D J I I 0 l 0 1 I Me"llAI rl l I I I • 0 0 0 MetuUk H 7 0 2 I • O 2 O Guerrtr II 1 O O 0 > O O O Dvnca11 n O I O O I 0 0 0 SclOKle c l 0 I I l I I 0 91llor lD I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ltllnk:I\ e>" I 0 0 0 7000 MldndOH QOOO 0000 Veltnilao 3000 I 0 0 0 WhllflO Pt> I I I 2 0000 N~p 0000 0 0 0 0 1S • I J Ttte11 kwebv~ JO s 10 s A .. flta 100 OlO 000-• Lei Antielts 010 110 Ob-S Ge,,_ WIMlnG R81 -Whillltld 12) OP-Allenle I LOB-All•"'• 6. L01 A~ • 2~UIMll. Brock. Ot>erlr.1911 Hlt-Mvronv 131 1. Wnltheld OJ S8-Kommln11t. 191 Brock (•I Se• !?Ol 5-ftvtllll SctoKle SF-Ma,.1'1111 IP H R ER 9B SO . ..,.,.. JoJOflnln For11er Otdmon Sv!ttr L.7 S L.MAM96tl • • 1 l 0 I 1 ) l 1 2•) I l 0 0 , l 0 0 1 v11tn1le W I• I I • • NltOnfver S 12 I I 0 0 JOJOhnton OllClltd to 7 l>elttrs n 5,,, I I 0 1 0 1 1 0 WP-V11tn1""1 9111t.-\1111<t11rv~a T-1 l'1 A •2 169 AMlt avenen 9ATTIHG A9 " " Hit ltll Pd. &lf\louer 110 3' 91 s 21 19• Cerew lOI •1 13 I 21 ,,. Jones 2IO S1 17 •• St 27S Down I no 154 ~ 94 t) SS 264 S.Conl1<• .. 10 17 I 6 266 Jecioon m "' ll II ~ 7S8 ~Ill\ ,.. CJ n I 16 2S6 Nerron 113 11 71 ~ ll , .. Boo!M )16 1l ,. 4 34 2'7 Gtrtltf 73 s II 0 3 1•1 0.Cln<M 33t 40 13 13 S8 146 Grich m .. IO s ) I 239 HOWl41 SI t 12 , 6 73S Schofl•ld )01 3 I Sf • l? 1'6 Wlttono "' 1) )6 • 11 II? Htndrlo 12 1 2 I 1 167 T"9h 3,642 494 '" 106 .. , .2n PITCHING IP H 99 •so W-lERA· HOlllnd • • 3 ' O·O l 13 """°'' 6S S6 .. 46 7·S '66 Cliburn n '3 1• )1 ,., I 75 Wiit ,,,\.', ISS .. 11• • 1 ) 12 Celldllerle 10 • 4 1 I 0 ) 60 Romeniclt 152"" 160 .. ., IJ • HI MCCetkllt 119 '> 123 43 .. • 1 HO Cwt>ttt ~ 40 IS It 2 I Jt) SlllOll IJOVI "' w 4S s-• • 19 Zenn 31 .. •• •• ,., • )7 S.ncntr 4J,, •I 1S tl I 0 Ht Tllftlh um IOU )74 .,. 6$-4' u, ~vtt Mbofe ?I Cliburn l \e~htl I LITTLli LEA°'UE ALL·STAIU MNw'I ( 11· 11·"9" ltd) WHTIRN tta~ALS (•t""' a.mMllllfll) nwn.v-1 ker°ft Oenv111t INorth..-11 Cellfcw-1111 1 7. l<Hrlll (Utehl 1 M .. ICell (SoutNfn C1lll01nlel I, Fetr· 11tn111 !Alalll.81 O , ...... 0.- SlO -"""'"" ''°"',,.," Celltorn111 "' lteltlOll Hiii\ (0rl901\1 • p"' ~VI IH•w•lll "' Denvll • tNwtNfn Ct 1lforn111) k1'11r•"f'• ~-a o m Ct11mlll0Mhlo NOTE Con•«Metton t>r eek el 9'"'fl 11\0 tdltdu~ tK" 08't Clft ut9e LMeue let I.e. .......... "-'" l'lnt ._.. ~ He••'' 7 CX.811 vr.. ' Note (kMn VllW ,,-.y\ aO<I·~ IOll'Oht In tlM ~"•m1nell011 ,_,,.,_, ... lnll l'\MIO ltlCO ·~ .... uo uo lOIO UICOHD •ACI. 1 1116 mllel Ml .• Fortune (McCml 11 40 4 40 , IO c .. sco lov (McHereuel l.IO 3.00 Oh Mv Omer (Otlllnouu•v•> s.oo Tinlt '"' '1$. • S2 DAILY DOUaL8 I• .)) Nld '137 '°- ~D aAC8. t l\K~ Felf Wlltt (McCerr<M'I) 4 00 Klia Y-$1tttr (Plnuv~ Medem AIX U• (Torol 240 uo uo uo uo Time 110 ..S 8XACTA 12·61 Hid ,,. SO 'OUllTH lllACI ...... lurtOnO• Gel•w•v Teddie IH•wl9vl '40 l 40 , IO ltoctlv lted (McCerronl > .0 l 00 ~C>euet'l Prlnc.t (OelefloulMVt) 4.AO Tlmt 1 It 2t S ,,f'TH ••ca .•. ..., 1utt0n0• Good Hntan IOlll1vl 10 to For HlmMlf ("90roael l'MaMllll Po-(SltVlf\ll 490 )'° ... uo S40 Time I 16 ~ l!XACTA 12 41 !Mid l?IOOO SIXTH lllAC• t lvrlOr!Os Mv.crttn<i.-!Solhl ll IO 1110 10 IO OOl!ne't Terrie !Hewltvl IHO 6IO T,.. P1n1rv (MCHeroue> 4 40 Time 1"10 •IS HVENTH ltACIE. ''' turl_, BahdrV (PlnCav) J 20 HO HO Nen'1 CerNr (~lll 1UO ) t0 M.9dle Girt !SltVlf'I) 3.40 Time I. 1' 2/S u EXACT A !6·•1 Pelo us 00 n PICI( SIX I) 2·2 or 9-2-t-6) 1>eld US, 100.00 to """ wlnnlne tleklll (\ht llOfMS l S2 Pick SI• cont.Olltlon !Miid S11S 20 10 2M wlnnlno llellett (flvt l\Of'MI) 11 16 mli.t on lvrl EIGHTH RACE. I Zoffenv !Mt:Cerronl PIM Ind Ole !Toro) 8ol<I Rvn !Plnc1v1 7 00 HO UO 320 uo 760 Time 141 I S NINTH lllACE. I I 16 m11tt 91.ck Mar1>.11ter (St•n•l JJO J.IO l 20 Pola Purtvil (Hawley) 120 • 40 Muter Cewston (Sollll 6 40 Time 1 4J 2 S U EXACTA 11-111 oeld \10900 12 DAILY DOUBLE 17·7) !Miid •19 .0 Alltndenct 1'.110 Ram• >t, C.rclnl'a 7 S<ert bV 0U.f1iln SI. LAUb 0 0 7 0-7 llama 10 10 t 10-n l'ntP~ lhm1-FG Lentforo '11. S II lt1m,~edd1n 1 rvn !Lentford lllelt.). "S3 ~ Plf"led Rema-Ridden t run IL•ntlord kick), ·~ Ram,-FG Lenttord Sl. 1• S3 Tlllrd PW!ed llem-Safllv (Mcivor l.Clr.eted l>v llNd In end zontl, 0 U Remt-A Jon411 6 run ILan1toro llielll l-41 SIL-Dunc.en •2 P8U trom Mcivor 10'~ ti.l<t•I ISO l'euntl Ptried Remt-f'G Potter 31, US Items-A Jon.\ 20 run !Patter to.lekl IHI "-40,Sla Stl. Re"n Flril dOWlll 17 11 ltVShn·vard1 17-ft l6·24J P111Jnv verd• IU 2• 1 lttturn verd1 I •1 P1ut1 IS·2t·2 10-3'·0 S.ckl Bv 3· 16 f ·S. Punts 6·42 )·42 FvmDllS·IOSI 1·0 l·O Plf\e 1ti.1·verelt S-3' 1·SS Time of PO\MWlon 2S 27 J.4:33 INDMDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-St L01Jl1, 0 Andeoon S· 16, Ferrell 2·10, Lomu 1-t, Mcivor l·I , Mile"'41 3·2, Woolfi.v 3·2. Wllktr 2·2 Item\, Ridden 12· 109. White 9·62. A Jont1 •·•S. Gvmen 1-10, Stone 2·9. Kemena 3·7. Dirt 1·1 PASSING-St Loult, Lomu 1 13 I 71, Mcivor 8· 13·0 140, Mecltev 0·2· 1-0 R1m1. Brock 1l·2'·0· 16S. Oltt • s 0·•2. Ktmo l+O SO RECEIVING-SI Lou11 MllcNll l·ll, Ovnca n 2·S3 Novec11< 2·26, Dunn 1·'6, Tt1om11 I l? Tlllev l·I•. F'1<rt4! l·I, W•H•er l·S 0 Andtnon 1 l . ~"" I I WOOlflev H II 1tem1, Ellerd ~ 7S. Bert>t< •·Sl, MCOooelO ? JI Grent 1·21. Rtd4tn 2·7 &rown I It HerOI< I 1l Yo;;no 1· 12 WI\ te l·ll, Far~ l·lO MISSED FIELD GOALS.-None HFL H:h~ 1tandln9i NATIONAL GON,I RIMC:I Wftl W L T Pd. Pl' llll'lll 2 0 0 1 000 .. NewO<leens I 0 0 '000 31 Sen Frenctsco I 0 0 I 000 1' All1nt1 0 I 0 000 I• Cll'lh'• Mtnnesoll I 0 0 I 000 16 D•lrolt 0 0 I 500 JO ChlC-a<> 0 I 0 000 ) GrMn Bev 0 ' 0 000 l TemlMI Bev 0 1 0 000 27 IHI NY Giant\ 1 0 0 1.000 Sl 011111 1 0 0 1'000 27 Pnll•de1on11 l 0 0 I 000 37 W11hl110IM I 0 0 I 000 11 St Lovlt ' I 0 500 11 AMEltlCAN CONl'•ltlHC• Wtsl l(an1a• Cl•v I 0 0 I 000 Se n 0 •'90 I 0 0 I 000 Denver 0 I 0 000 ··~· 0 I 0 000 Stet rte 0 I 0 000 c-.. p lltb<••llt ' 0 0 I 000 Ctt><:•nne•I 0 I 0 000 '""fjano 0 1 0 000 Ho...tlon 0 2 0 000 1 ... 11\d 1n1p0tl\ I 0 0 I 000 9utf110 0 0 I 5JOO Mii"' 0 I 0 000 Nt.., E"9••no 0 I 0 000 NV Jll\ 0 I 0 000 ~V'lkw°t Item• Jt ~· LOUIS , T ..,..-, co.mt OtlfO•I •• \e•ttlt $1~aV'•G- •nd•1n1ool11 I t ClllCaCIO NY Jtll et Cln<lnnell PnlleClelonle 11 Cltvel•lld Pttt\OUIOll ., M1n~ta Alltllll 11 femH 9ev l vtleto 11 Mle ml GrMn Bev 11 NY Glentt HOV\IOfl et New Orltall\ New rllOttno et IC41n191 Cltv Oen111 •t \An 0111><1 SUMllY's G- W1&111no1on 11 lt•ldln ,....¥', Olll'llt 041'1Vtt 11 ~n ,rrtn<IKO NflL Hhlbfften ~ TONIO HT Ot tro•t 11 !>tattle IATV'tDAY Alielll• 11 hl'l\IMI 91¥ 9vfft l0 11 M•1l'llt 0•'"' ,, 5en 0 "° v'-Ba,. II ~ iO'• G·•"'' HO!Aton ,, New 0r1 .. 111 Ind •naootl• •' Cnll't90 N-e,,._ ,, ICellM\ c ty 'M• Yon Jtlt •I Cln<lllMll ~~edt'Dfl•• 11 CltYflaflO p.11.ourph a1 Ml-w•• SUNDAY "'•-"<111110fl ,, •• ...,, MOflfOAY ()MvH 11 s.n ,.renclw:o PatDAY, AUO U u 12 20 71 , ., 77 7 u If 10 ll ?O 11 PA 10 ?O ?I 17 ll 10 10 ,7 ., 40 3 11 1'· •1 21 , lO 1' ,. 11 lS I? ,. 1 10 I• » ,, •.m• v• Pl\lle!MIDNe et Ceivm«Ju1 °'uo Clnclf'Mll 11 e>.!roo N-'"'''"" 11 We~ntton l'tllftlkK ... et SI Louf\ • ~ .. n Angel,. Dodger schedules J! •• ~ Anaela OD lladJO K.llPC (710) Anaela OA TV Chunel 8 ·' · -Doctcen on Radio KABC (790) J>odCen 01l TV Cb&Dael 11 I • ~TVGM)e lunct.~ .... , Tuetday Wedneeday Thunday Friday aaturd8y AUi· ~· 17 A'11t .... 7.30 ·~ at Giants. I A'1a1 ....,1 •°"'9" at GlantJ. l 11 11 20 21 22 23 .. A'sat ...., l A'set ..... 130 Y~..s 1t ...._ l·JO Yankas 1t .... 7'30 Yriees at ..... 1 JO ...... llrllillles,430 •fl&tfS at ~7·JO eDMpn 11 , 4 JO rr.:;!~uo e It 4'JO •DMltn II Giants. I • DMltn 1t l'tltllaa. 4 JO ...... It PWia.. 4•3() 2S 28 71 • 21 ao 11 Tipn.t ~ OrtOles at~ 130 Ort0its1t ..... 730 •= el YW.S. 5 •,:aivw.s.5 .... et YlllUU. 1020 ·~·t 1030 •IW( .. at ts. 4 30 • .,.....11Mets.4•30 It~ 7:30 .. DMrn. 7 JO Pllllmlt~ 1 Sept. 1 2 I • -I • 1 •= at Y111ktn. 11 ...... =1030 .... at Tcers. 430 ._,. at ffltr$. 4·30 .... atOnom. s ~ at Onola, 4 JO Ucios at ~ 130 lilsb It ..... 7 30 at DMstn. 12.20 11 .,.......1 Ucios at • 5 20 Ucios at DMsen. 1.30 • • 10 11 12 13 14 ~· 11 Ortoles. 11 Roylb at .... 1 JO RoY1is It .... 730 Royals It Aflr*, 7:30 lms•t .... 130 Taus at ...._ 7'30 Twsit .... 7 DMltn 11 Bram. 4 40 °'*"9 1t Bma (2), Md1 1t DMctn, I 2.40 lhMltS1 at Bma. 4:40 ~ at emu. 4:40 .,.. .. II Rtds, (2) 3 • .,.._.ti Reds, 4 15 ,. 17 11 11 20 21 .... at CNcaco. 5:30 AllC• at Chtcaco. s·30 Ttm1t .... I AllC• at Clueaco. s 30 lodilns at ~ J-30 lndieftsat~ ·~ 11 Redi. 11.15 DMltn at PtdtU, 1 Dads., II Padres, 1 Astros at °'*"'· 1:30 A.stros at .,...,.., 6 .,.._, et C ts. 8 • .,....... l 22 23 24 25 28 71 • fndtans at ..... 12 Chtcaco at ~·· 7.30 ClllclCO II =· 7·30 ~ CNcl&o It t'Y· 7·30 .... It """'11$· 4:30 .... at lndtlll$. 10'30 •Dlclc., at Giants, 12 ....... IOS,530 ~at As ros. 530 .,...,. at As 10$, 5•30 G11nts 1t ....... 7.30 Ctlnb 1t DMpn. 1 SATUttDAY, AUG. 2" Mleml el lbldln All1n11 111 Gr"n Bev ti Mltw•vk" ClevMtld •I 8uftalo tndl•nellOll1 11 Dlr1111< Ken191 Cltv el Houllon New York _,.,, •• N-Vork Gl•nfl TemlMI Bh e t Ntw 0.-1Hn1 Sen DltoO 11 Sen frencJKo Seettll et MIMHOll MOHDAY, AUG. 26 Cn<'90 11 Oet1e1 THUIUDAY, AUG. 2t Oetrojl 11 Ptllleoell>l\la ,.UDA Y, AUG. JO Relden at Clevllend Clnclnn•ll 11 lncllenaooll• Mleml II Allen!• Mlnnt\011 '' O.wt< New Or1ten1 et S.11 DltoO New Yor<k Glenll el Ptllll>VrOll Sen FrenctKo 11 Seattle W1tlllneton II TtmlMI h v SUNDAY, AUG. ll New Eno11nq el •ems ButfelO " Chlce90 Hovllon e l Dellll New Vork Jeh •I GrHn Bev· St Lovl1 et Ken.-, Cllv HFL wMlltY tcMdUlet (W•EK 11 541ndeV • SetlC. I Delroll 11 Alllnte, 1 p m GrMn 91'1 el New Ene1eno, I Pm lndleneooUt 11 PllltburOll, I om Kensal City e l N.aw ontans. 1 Pm Mlmel et ~tOll I om PM~le 11 Ntw York Glentt I o m St LOUI\ •' Cltvetand. 1 0 m Sen FrenclKO et Mlnntt0te, 1 pm s .. 1111 " Clnclnnetl. I om Temoa Bev •' Chkago, I om Sen Diego at 9vffel0, 4 o.m Denver 11 Rem1, • pm New York ->tll ,, LM Anveln lle!Otn •om MMtlltv, Sept.' wunlnoton et D•KH, t om (WIEI< 2) TiwnOIV, s.pt. 12 Lot A"981tS lteldtn at Ken.-, Cltv Pm SUftdtV, s.pt. IS BvffelO et Ntw York Jell, I om Clnclnnall •• SI LOUIS, 1 0 m. 0•1111 11 Detroll. I o.m. Hov1ton •• WHlllnolon, 1 o.m "-'"'' ,, PhllldtlPllle, I P.m New En11tend 11 Ct1lc100, 1 o.m Minnesota 11 Tempe Bev, -. 1> m lndlel\toollt et Miami, 4 o m New Orlten• al Denver. • o m New York Glenli 11 Green B•v. • P.m Atlente 11 Sen Frencllco, 4 om s .. 111t 11 Sen DltoO • om Mende\', Sept. 14 Pllllbur911 et Clev ... ncl, 9 Pm tWHf(ll Tllurwltlv; s.t. If Chlcel1Q 11 MlnnlMlll, I om SIMtleV. Sept. 22 Cleveland 11 Oe11H , I pm Dtnv., •' Allente, 1 pm Detroll 11 lndlenaPOlls. I om Houston el Pltt11>urut1. I om N1w Enotencl et 9vf1110, I om PTllleOtfl>llle et We'11ltt0t011, 1 Pm Temoe Bev et Ntw Orlten1 1 om $1 Lovl1 el New York Glen!\, 1 pm Sen Dlt9o et Clnclnnell, I Pm l(enw• Cllv e t Mlemf, 4 om New Yori! Jlh Yl GrMn a.v ,, Mllwtvl<N, •om !>en Frencltco et Los AnQttel lleldtn, • om Meflday, Segt. D R1m1 11 St1111e, 9 o .m. (WEIK 41 SUncMv, '-"· 2' DallH 11 Houston, I om GrHn Bev ,, SI. LOY1S, I pm LO\ Ano1lt1 lleldttrt ,, N-Enolend. 1 om Mlnnesote 11 Bullelo. I o.m New Yori\ Glenlt 11 Ptllledtle>flle, I om S.11111 et KenMs Cllv, 1 om. Temoa Bev et Detroit, I o m W•lfllnotOfl 11 Cl'llceoo. 1 om New Or1t1nt 11 k n Frencl'CO, • om Ml1m1 11 Denver. 4 P m lndl1neooll1 et New York Jt l\. • D m At1ent1 11 lbms, 4 11.D'\ Clevllancl 11 S..11 DltoO • P m ~v.Setlt.JO c1nc1nn111 11 Piii'°"'""· t om IWE•K SI S4'ftdlY • Oct. 4 avtt110 " 1nd11neOOl1'. 1 o m ChlceCIO et Te~ 8ev. I Pm Detroit 11 GrNn Bev. l P m Ntw E1191end II Clev ... nd, I om Prut~I• e t ......., Orlien• I om Sen FrenclKO 11 Allenlt, 1 om Ptltt~Oh 11 Mleml, I 0 m HOVllOll 11 0tnVll', 4 D m New 'l'or<k Jtn 11 Clnclnllell • D m "''"'"' C11v 11 1.6' Af191fft Ile._, 4 om M•nnesote .i 111-. • D m Sen Dle9o 11 Sffltlt, • D m 01111\ 11 Mtw York Gl1n11, I om NltMitv,Od.7 St Lovl' 11 Well!lnoton, t Pm 1w1•1< •> lw*v.Od. U llV"llO 11 ~w Enollind, I om Clev.iell_j! 11 Hol.lstOll, I 111.m Denver et llldltntPOlls, 1 o m Otrroll '' w11111~1on. 1 o m ,_,,.,,. et T lmo41 9ev, I D rn Mlnntsote Vt Green .. V e l Mllw1Ult" I om Ntw voo . Olent1 ti Clll<lnn.11, 1 11 m PllU~ll ti $1 L.oult. 1 t m PllllburOll 11 0.11111, I D m Ntw OrlteM et LOI ",.._. ltt~I. • orn K1n11• Cltv et '-" 01"0 4 • m Clll<eoo •• ~ 'renclKO • 11 l'I\ AIW.nll 11 Sttllle, • o I'll ~\l,Oct.14 Ml.,,,i 11 Htw YOl'l Jttt, t 1 m IWlllC71 ..... ,Od.. C1nc1nntti 11 HoutlOfl, I 11 "' o ...... ~.lom llldlenH Ollt el tulteto, I •"' lOt A""'8t •11dtrt 11C~.I111 m ._.,._...at.,111m Htw ~ 11 Atlenle, I e.lfl WMll<l'll'IOll at Hew York Glerll•, 1 111 m i1 L.oul• •• ~thOufllh, ' 111'1\ \en °'919 el Mlnnftai!I, 1 111 m S.11 f' ftllleltCO .. Ottroll, I 111 m ..._ Yn Jett t i ..,_ ll'ltlalld, 4 •"' ... lfll e t °"""', • • m TllNll ltv 11 Miami, 4 D m MIM!n, Oct,, ~ .. ., •I Cl\lc.ffO, t • m .... IW••Kl l 5"'*V, Oct. 17 Alllnl• 11 Odes. 1 om &vffelo et Pt!tteo.lotlle, I o m Oenvlf' •• Kensu Cllv, I om Gretn atv et lnd.leneOOll•, 1 P "'· Houll<M'I et $1. Loul1, I pm Ml•ml •• O.troO, 1 Pm Mlnnttole el ClllQOO 1 om Mtw Enollncl 11 Ttmo41 &ev. I om S..1111 el Hew York .Jtll, I om W1\hl119ton 11 Cievellnc:t I om Plll•l>uroll 11 ClndllNtl, • o.m New York Glen!\ 11 Ntw Or111n• 4 Pm San FrenclKo II lllems, 4 om M9fMtly, Oct. ,. Sen DltoO el LOI Al!Qtlt1 Ralcitrt. t nm Ktl ....... , ChlCHO ti G 9ev, 1 P.m Clnclnn•ll 11 Bvfl•IO, 1 om. Ci.vtlend 11 PllllDUroll, l om Detroit 11 Mlnntsote, I o.m Ke nsH Cllv al Houlton, I P.m Mleml 11 New Enotend, I o.m T1mo1 Bev 11 New York Glent1, I Pm WHhlneton •• All•nll, l Pm LM AnoMt ltel~t 11 Seellle, • om Ntw Orltent et Rll'llt • P m ~w York Jtl• el lndlenePOlli. • Pm Pllltadtlonl• 11 Sen FrenclKo. • D m Oenvet el Sen Dlloo 4 o m ~ .. ..., .. OtUH el SI LOUii, 9 Pm <WalK IOI SUIMll-y, Mw. 10 Atlente 11 Ptllie(M!Ollle, I Pm Cltvellno 11 Clnclnnell, I o.m D•lroO et Ct1lce90, 1 Pm Gretn &ev •I MlllntSOta 1 om Houlton 11 8vflelo, l o m llldleneoolls 11 Ntw Enolencl. I Pm Items et New Yorll Glenll, I om Pllt\burOll II Ken.-1 Cllv. l Pm $1 Louis •I T1mo1 &ev, I o.m Steltlt et Ntw Orteeni, 1 om Loi "notlel Reldlfs el Stn 0111><1 • Pm New York Jt11 11 Mleml. • om 0 11111 11 W11t1lnoton, • om MlftdltY, Nev. ll Sen Frencl1co et Otl\ver, t om IWlll< Ill SUncllv, ""· 17 8 vH1to at Clevl41nd, 1 11.m Chlceoo II Oei!H, I p_m Temoe Bev II New York Jtts, I o.m Rems 11 ""'"''· I D m Miami II lndlen1POll1. l o m Ntw 0ri.en1 v1 GrMn Bev al Mii· wevlt.H, 1 om Pltt\t>vroll ·,, Hovllon, I o.m SI Loult 11 Pllltedllphle, I p m San Oleo<> 11 Dtnvtr, 4 D m Mlnnesol• el Oetrofl, 4 Pm New Enolend •• See tti., 4 Pm Clnclnnell 11 LOI Angetes lttldtrs, • Pm "''""' Cllv 11 Sen Frencl•co. 4 D m Mende\', Nrt. )I New York Glenl1 el Welfllnoton, 9 P m (W•aK 12l Sllftllay, Nev. )4 A!lente 11 ChlceOO, I Pm Clnclnnell et c iev ... nc:t, 1 om Oetrojl el Te me>e Bev 1 om Sell DltoO ,, HOV\lon. I pm WH1ll119lon •I PlllSl>Ur91l, I 0 m Mleml el Buff•to, I om Ntw Entllend el Mtw York Jiii, I om Ntw Ori.ant •I Mlnnt\011, I 0 m New York Glenta et SI LOUii. 4 om Phlledl4oflle el 08"H , 4 P.tTI Green Bev et lbms, • Pm 1no11neooll1 11 Kenw1 Cllv, • Pm Denver et LOI Anoeltl lt1l0tr1, • Pm fMrldlv. Nrt. JS S.11tle II Sin FrtnclKO, 9 om <W•IK IJl TtwrldlV, Nrt. 21 New YOfk Jll1 II DetrOll, l? 30 om SI LC>Ylt et Oet111. 3 om SUncMy, OK. I Clev ... nd et New York Glen11, I pm Denver 11 l-'11tl1>uron, I p m Hov11on 11 Clnclnnetl, I p,m Tamoa Bev 11 Grffn Bev. l p.m. llem1 11 New Orlnn\, I Pm. Mlf'iMSOll et Pllllldtllllll•, I o m Ntw l!nolend II lndleneoolls. l om LO\ Anotltt R1ldtn 11 ""'"''· • Pm K1nw1 Cllv el kettle. 4 om Sen Frencltco et WHlllnoton, • Pm Bvff•lo 11 Sen DltoO 4 P m Meftdly. o.c. , Chlc1e>0 '' Mleml, t om tWIElit141 Tlwn8y, Dec. s Pt11'°'1r0fl el Sen DleOO. • o.m ..... OK.. Altenla el l(en1" Cltv. I om W•llllnoton et ~. l o.m 0 •111• et Clnclnn111, I 11 m o.woll 11 New Entitnd, I Pm lnd~I el Ollcffo, 1 o.m. Mleml •1 Gf'ten .. .,. I Pm tffw Or1HM et SI LOUii, I om N ..... Yon< Jtfl el a vffelo, I D m LOt Anotltt •eldefa el OM"''" 4 o m New Yotk Olent1 el Hou11on, 4 om Temoe lev •• MIM990te, 4 om Cltv"8nd el S...1111, 4 P m MIN!lly, DK.' • .,,,. •' s.it Frtne1tc0. t o.m CWlllC IS) .._,.v,O.C.14 Clllce90 ., New Yorlr. Je"· 17::>0 D m K•n•" Cllv et OenV«, 4 Pm '4IMIY,OK.U tvffllO 11 ~ttlburtll, 1 t.m Clnclnne11 el waa11tno1111, lo m Gretn l•v el Ottrolt, I D m Houlton et CltVtllnO, I om llWl!t~llOllt ti TtrnH lev, I pm Ml-.o1e el Allente, I 111 m Hew Yorlr. Glent• e l Delles, I Pm ~ Fr•"'l.c:o el Htw OrlHn•, I om '91~o ot t.ft Dteoo 4 Pm St louh el ltatM 4 11 m S..ttle el Loi ",,..._ lte!Olf"t • om M9Mllly, o.c. " Ntw £ /IOWIM el Mleml, 9 P 1'I , .... '" "'*•·OM.• ~ et Soellle, a 111 m ......... OK.,l ftlll~tfl e t N.-YOl'll G1on11, 11JO om W••MletOfl et St Lw11 4 111 m --..o.c.17 "!\ell'• ,, .... OtlMl\t, ' • ,.,, luffelo et Mleml, I 111 m Cllleaee 11 Oetrtlt, I 11 m ClllCW\911 et Hew (fllland, I 11 m Cit~ el Nttor Ytt'lc ~'i 1 t m Green ley et T'.,.,_ lev, II m ~otlMIMnot•, lem &en C>itee e t hftMt Cltv, I 11 m Houtlon •• ~ •• 4 Pm De ' ef $all F'-fldect 4 • m ,.._.,,O.C.D I.It .,,.... •• , ••• , ..... ' "" I NO HOU~-MAIOH Men's golf tourney tat ~ IMM. M6c:ll.I It k:k F e11r 11· »-4$ Peul Atlnotr 3.S-lt--.. SC.Oii HOd'I lS-l,_.7 811 Kre ttert lS·»-.7 Gr90 TwlOel 37-30-47 Gll Mol'oen 3S·n-.7 Cllenle W ino lS·n-17 O.rv Heiltl«t ,..,.._.. Lennv Wedkln1 ,...,.__.. c eMn """ ,...,.__.. o.Ml1 Tr'l•ltr 3'-~ 9ob lOhr 32·~ Jo.v $lndli.t J2·~ JeCk Renner 34 .• u--.t Georoe lurna U·»--il lllll Celdwelt 3'-J.4-70 JoM COOi!. lS-U-70 Vlc1or It 1991edo 36· )t-70 DA Wtll>rlflt -ls>lS-70 Met1I McCvmo« ,.. )4-70 9ob Gll4W U·:i.t-10 I ll Bvt1ner 3'·1'-70 Jim Hellll JS-JS-70 M. Celt:av9'clll• >6·34-70 111 l r-1tton 3S-3S-70 Twrv Snocloren l2·3t-70 Gerv PIMt 1'·36-70 Jim Thon1• Xl·lt-71 tred FUCMI 3'-JS-71 loOOY Wldklfll l7·l4-71 Slltlltr HHlll ~ ~-»--11 VellCllHMtnlf' GervMcC.ord WlllleWood Tommv V11tntlne TM. C'*' Mark Lvt L.errv Iletltr Alltfl Miiier ltev ~lovo ~l~rtSmllh Mldl Soll ll•IPll Llndrvm PelLlndMV Mllr.tHll Sltve ftllo L.errv Mitt ll·>s-.t · Bretl UPOll' 3S-U-n c111 s;1111toor1oue1 wn~P4evw Jeck Ferenz Mlllt Nlcoltlll JS-,,._.. Tonv Siiia 3'·U -1t WfVnt GredV 3.S-,._.t Ken Green U·l>--6t John Adem1 U·,._.9 ltOCMt' Mellt>le U ·,._.t Gery PleYll' 34·3~t Torn Purtler lS•,._.9 &IN GleHOfl 3S-l4--6f Oevld Grellem >S-~ lob Twev 35-,._.t Jim Otftl ,._,,_..., Donnie Hel'M'IOfld l3·,.._., ROC>trt Wrenn 35-,._.f Clle!'lel CpodY ~l>--6t Jim Simoni M·U-ft ltld\ OtlPOt 34·U-°'t Lou Gr•"'m 3'•3-t-70 JOOlt MIJCld 3S-3S-70 M.c O'GreclV 3S·U-70 Jeff $lumen lt-)1-70 De n POll4 lS-lS-70 Ptlll Hencodl 32·3t-1t Dtn1t Welton M·3'o-70 PIVnt 51-•rt ))·37-70 Anttv 8een 33·11-70 Steve eow,.,,.n >6-:i.t-70 Oevld Lundltrom 34·3'--70 Lennie Clemtnl1 3"7·U-70 RuuCodlr•n 3'·J.4-70 Bred Fellel 3S-3S-70 S.mmv Reclltls 37·33--70 Devi Elc:hllbtt'IW ll·l7-70 Amv AICOtl Peltv Shltllen JudV Clerk a.111 Denlel Nencv L.oot r K.elhvB•~ Jent &leloek a.11vKlno 8onnlt YUi!' Pet Bredlev Jen Sttohellion Alice Mltltr Andr-~9" JS-36-71 Otoroe Arc lier 3S-U-71 Howero Twllly J6·3S-11 Dev• e.rr l7·U-71 J.C SnMO 3'·3S-71 Berrv JMCkml 3'-JS-71 Dennv Ectwerds 3S-l6-71 eoo e 11twooe1 »-u-11 JOllfl Tr 800 37· M-71 Jeff s.notr• )5·36-71 9rlen Fool J7·)t-71 $1t¥t Jontl :M·U-71 Frenll COMll" 3'·,._n Jim Melford »·U-n 8000V COii U·U-n Peltr Ootle<nult 3'·36-12 Dele Douelen 36·3'-12 Mlkt lk"l9ht 31.,,._n K~'I' Knox 3'-U-n lven Smllll l7·lS-n Gerv lt~nwn 3'--36-12 HSendtr l4·-n Greo Power• •·)t-n Oerenc.t Rote 34--n ~rlt Brook• n-n-n Oe111 HIM l7·lS-n JOhtl FOUQf'll 3S·37-n Ron s1rec1t >S-37-n ~ S.uen 37-JS-n Ernie Gon1e1t1 31·34--7'1 John OeforHI l7·3S-7'1 MlkeHv~ JS·37-7'1 T C Cllen 34• ,._73 Devt Oe11I• Sttvt UtOltr Tom Ltllmen Jeff Coston Loren It ooerts Mlkt McCullouotl Tom -*'« lnl Jev Oelsl111 JoMHemerlll Gordon Joflnton Devlcl TllOft JlmGe .. otltt Eel Flori D•Vld Dorin Mlllt~Vln ltov Ble11C81ene 1111 Celfee ltOO C"'1 Ciiio a.ck Bii hreln Mill• lert!Olell \Anet Teft 9 roeck ltOfl Commeni S1tvt&r-edv Llnon- JoM NcMln Jev To'#tlMl'ld llOCMt" Ven D'l'ltt Brien Ctlerttr Torn f e-lnolon 9red Brvent Ed Muir ,..wr,.....,......,. (at MMll"MI) J2·l>-'~ U ·)4--1t 33·,._., lS-JS-70 J.4·3'--10 lS-36-71 lS-»-71 JS-36-71 l?·U-n 31-is-n >7·3?-74 le·l7-7S ,,... ............. c.eH9mla Statll ()peifl let V""""81 Jtmmv C-1 (U.S.) dtf v1111 G1f"uielll1 (US.I, .... 4. 6·2, JoM McENOI IU51 dtf NehGn Aertt l&rulll, .... o ..... I. llemlllt Krl1llnan Ondl•I dtf Jotlen Krltll (U.S.). 6·4, 6·4, Jlmmv Arlaa (US I dtf Kevin Curreft IU S ), •-•. •·l. 6·2, Sttferi Eelblrt ISwtdtnl dtf .._Ill Sundatrom (Swedtnl, 7·•· •·4; Anderl Jerrvo (Sw.clln) d9I SllOflent lklnnt9v <c.necs.I. 6-1, 6-2. lvetl Lend! (C1ldloll0vltlle) d9I flm Mtvotlt (U.S.), ,.,, •·t; Ellol Tlltldllr !U.S.I Olf S.mmv Glemmetve IU $I. •·4, 6·4 8red GrMr Je>nn McC.omlsll Mike Bledlbllr" ~re "'"'"' SllVI H11kln1 Mllt.t Mllel J<>nnGrU!ld Jim Wooctwerd John Burcklt 0 ........ 11.,. Doll Lt"'"' 1100 Lunn 47.,, ·•t-109 ... ,J·'7-?09 10-10-...-209 n 61·71>-210 II • 70-71>-, ll 71·'6·74-211 70·73-...-112 n-10-•~n 70·'4-7......,12 7•·70-6'-213 7H2·71>-2\a 7o-.f-7 4-71J - W-'*"1~ (•t St. LAuftl Qua,..,... ....... Cllrlt E verl LIOVO (U.$) dtf LIM IOflOlf" IU.$ l . .,..,, 1·•; H•ne Melldlllr.ov1 ICttt'*lonkle) Cit!. SuMn Metc.erln (US), •·t, 6·3, AndrH T-verl (Hun· oervl d9I lonnle GMUsek IU.S ), 7·•. ,., Local architects na.me three new associates Ronald Neuor, Axel Stoltt and Geraldlae EcUer have been named associates of McLarud, Vasqan & PartDen, I.De., a Cotta ~esa architectural and ptannma firm. The tno arc the first associates o be announced ~tncc the firm chanacd its name from Carl McLarHd A11ocl1u1 Inc. last May. Nestor is a pro1ec1 designer who has been with lhc firm since NESTOR STOLTZ 1983. Stoltt 1s a pro1ect architect, also employed by the firm since 1983. f<:kncr -the first woman named an associate -is controller and business manager for the firm. She bas been with the company since 1980 • • • Pam Purvis of The Westin Soulia Ooa1l Plata and Du Carralter of the Newport Beacll Marrion have been elected to the board of directors of the Orange: County chapter of ne National A11octallon of CaUri.Dg Execallvea. Purvis 1s vice president and C.arrahcr 1s treasurer Don't put much stock in economic forecasts By JOHN CUNNIFF .,..._.AMl)'e1 NEW YORK (AP) -If you want good, solid 1nformat1on about the economic future you should consult economists. Right? Maybe not. Herc's what three of them arc saying in forecasts issued dunng the past couple of weeks: -Growth will be weak. "By 1986 the economic expansion likely will lose steam, and slow growth can be expected to persist throughout the year " -Growth will be strong. "U.S. growth should accelerate from a l percent rate dunng 1985 to a rate close to 6 percent dunng 1986." -Growth will be neither. with real gross national product nsang 3 p<'r- cent 1n 1986. compared with 6.8 percent in 1984 and an estimated 2.4 perc,cnt in I 985. Good money 1s paid for such forecasts, which arc issued an vast numbers by financial instituitions, broke~ umvcrsities, think tanks and, or course. the federal govcm- men1. In all, however, the randomness of their aim resembles the target pattern of a rather mediocre pistol shooter, OTC UPS & DOWNS OvER THE CouNTER coin caller or dan tosser. II isn't that they don't have infor- mation. They do, in vast quantities. But when humanjudgment is applied to the: information it seems to take on that familiar random pattern. For this and a variety of other reasons, several large banks in recent years have: disbanded, reduced or reorganized their economics depan- ments, will\ New York's Chemical Bank being lhe latest on the list The "weak" forecast comes from Jaclc-C8rkon, c:Rtutive officer and chief economist of the National Association of Realtors. Carlson believes a modest ccon- omfo rebound may be expected for the rest of 1985, rcsultin' m pan from lhe stimulation oflower interest rates But the rebound will be bncf, he says, and slow growth w1ll persist 1n I 986. Based on his csttmates, gross national product might average 3 percent in the third quaner of 1985, 2.5 percent in the founh quaner, and only 1.5 percent to 2 percent in 1986. Edward Guay, chief economist of CIGNA Corporation, an insurer, disagrees. Growth will be strong, he says, and a boom period will begin before the end of the year and into 1986. . Otanoe Cout OAI v PILOT lfrtdlr/, August 1e, 1taa ca C~ Nfll COllPOllTE TRANIACTIONI, Cl S8th umtvenary Thlrty-eUbt yean after Hap Da.ta and Chrbholm ucb.rfa .. S'rown ecraped toeether $1.500 to •tart their own bualnea oo Barbor BouleYard near 19th Street ln Coeta lleu, Dam Brown ~ion-appliance atore celebrate. an anniTen&.ry u one of the oldeet ln the harbor area. Chrla Brown •a aoo. Stan, naoa the bualneee which la now at 411 It. 17th St. ln Ca.ta Ilea. Hillman opens new office Hillman Ventures, Inc., one of the nation's Jar&est private venture cap.- ta! firms., bas opei;ied a new office 1 n Newport Beach. "The opening. .. rcOects Hillman 's optimism in Orange C-0unty as a leading arowth area for tccbnology- bued companies," a Hillman press release stated. • • • Irvine's Sanviata Development Company has 1:hosen the Irvine finn of Breton Construction, Inc., to build the F~way Home Center 1n San Bemadino. The $7.2 million commercial pro- jcct will offer 94,073 square feet for lease. Land Arch1tecture of Costa Mesa will landscape pan of of the project. MuruAL FUNDS ... Industrial output posts slight gai.n Economyhasno signs of recording predicted growth WASHINGTON (AP) -Ou1put at the nation's factones, m1oea and uulities edpd up a modest 0.2 percent io July, conunuina lhe lmJeu performancenhibncd for most of the put year. The Federal Rnerve Board $&Jd Thursday that tbe July pm leA industnal productJonJust 1.4 perc.cn1 hi&her than it WU a year l&O 8y com parison, 1ndustnaJ production arew 12.2 percent in the 12 months endina in July 198-4 as the country pulled out of the steep rec:ns1on. Since that time, the na11on's indus- tries, batlered by forei&n compet1t1on, have found it difficult 10 make funher production pins. Tbjs weakness in the manufac- turina sector has affected overall arowth. The aross national product arcw at a barely discernible I perc.ent annual rate-dunng the first six months of the year The Reagan adm101strat1on 1s con-fi~ntly predictioa tbal the economy will rebound to a growth rate of 5 percent in the second half of this year. but private economists say the rcpon on todustriaJ production and Other economic stausucs so far for July don't suppon that opum1sm PriSCJlla Luce, an economist at Wharton Econometncs, said the: weak pina 10 toduwi.a.I production should continue for another 12 month•. .. We don't expect to see a whole lot of strenJlb in tbe 1odut1NI ICCtOr untJI at fcut th11 time next year, .. tbt uid. "It will be the ,same uory of manufactunna weakneu u a result of I.be hi&b dollar and impons."' However, she s.atd Wharton wa1 oot forecasuna a recession, cxpcctJna lfOwth to ptck up IOinCWh.at m the second half -altbou.ii not at the pace seen by the admuusttauon. John Alberttne, pn:sident of me American 811S1ncss Confereooe. a coaliuon of tu&b-srowth compan;~. forecast ar<>wth wouJd chmb to between 3.5 percent and 4 percent an the final half of the year Wllh the: rebound spurred by Che interest rate dcchnc:s that have occurred so far th1' year. "The recovery continues to inch along, stubbornly refusing to pve 1n to rumors of a recession." be said. Economists noted that news so far tb11 month has JIVen little support to the admin1strauon's more optJmjst1c forecuts of second-b.aJf growth. Un- employment an July remained stag- nant for the sixth strai&ht montlf and retail sales posted only a modest 1ocrcuc after t~o months of sharp declines The aovemment also reponc:d .Thunday that Amencana took on $6 8 b1Jhon mort in mSlallment debt than mey paid off 1n June The increase was the smallest monthly gain this )car -I: Jtt11!1 tilRii i!I ,£1+1 Investlnent seDlinars set ... Crest Capital Inc. is sponsoring free dinner seminar\ on investment planning. The seminars wall address such topics as enhancing cumnt income and retirement income. IRAs. Keoghs and ways to reduce yout income taxes There is no obhpuon to an vest. The seminars will be held Tuesday at the Golden Saal~ Hotel 6285East Pacific Coast Ht&h'lilfy in Lona Beach at 7 p.m. and Aug.. 22 at th~ El <\dobe Restaurant, 31891 c.am1no Capistrano 1n San Juan Capistrano at 7 pm Rciervations arc needed. C'all 826-6713 or (213) 425~8500. • • • International transportation compan) Oeu Worldwide has announced Or. Jon G. Stoes1ta1er as the keynote speaker for the .. On Top of Our World '85 .. confcrcncc to be held Oct 17 and 18 at the Weslill Soada Coast Pl.u.a hotel an Costa Mesa StocssingeT as an tntemauonal pohucaJ anal}St, ICC\urer and award wrnning author of 10 books on worid politics. He has tauaht at M.I T . Columbia. Pnnccton and Harvard, whcrt' he earned has Ph D H" 1s a fomt('r actmg director of pohucal affaH'\ al 1he l n11ed l\,/at1ons and a memlx'r of thC' Council on Foreign Rela11ons t ~----... ........ ..._ ________________________ ...... ___________________________ ~~--~-~- .. Due to trenamlaalon problem-, today'• ftnel Ne• York atock ll1Un1• were not evellable. • Tllllll&Y'I OLUlll PllOll Olv ~I SalK 1.A•t Cllt ._._ -. -~ .... •14 Stock trading slow NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were broadly lower in afternoon tradina today, althouah the market's losses were moderate. . -The Dow Jones average of 30 indu~tnals, up a fraction Thursday, was off 3.36 at 1.314.40 two hours before today's clos1na bell. . Losers overall held a 2-1 lead over piners on the New York Stock Exchange. whose composne index lost 0.29 to 108.30. Tradina continued quiet. Bia Board vol~mr totaled .S6. 72 million shares at 2 p.m. EDT, against 60.21 million at that hour Thursday. The market's shde came amid signs of conunued slugishncss in the economy. The Comm~roe Dcpanmcnt today said hous- ina stans fell 2.4 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.6.S million units. The decline was contrary to the expectations of many economists, who had looked fora July gain because of recent declines in mongge rates. On Thursday the Federal Reserve said consumer credit outstanding rose S6.8 billion in July, down from the gains ofS8 billion to S9 ~ilhon in the previous four months. Econom1st5 531d the July increase might indicate a slowdown an consumer spending. Meanwhile. Wall Street braced for the expiration today of several stock·1ndex opuons On previous expiration days. stock pnccs have taken sharp swings jn late tradina as professional traders closed out positions in both the options and in the stocks that compnsc the indexes. On the NYSE's active list, Rockwell lnter- nauonaJ Jumped l'h to 41 •;, after rece1 vang an S8 billion Air Force contract to build 82 S. I B bombers. ,.. At the American Stock Exchange. the market value index fell .1.00 to 231.86 WHAT AMEX Dio WH AT NYSE Dio Due to transmission prob- lems In New York, today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. AMEX LEADER S Due to transmission prob- lems In New York. today's llstlng will not appear In the Dally Piiot. CoLD QuorE s METAL S QuorE s HlW YOAK (API -Spot non,_,._ ....... prtoel F"dl y AivmlftWll • 4S 10 c.nt1 per pound. HY Come• epot montll doMd TIN Due to transmission prob- lems In New York, today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. NYSE LEADER S . . . Dow JoNE S AVERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY Due to transmission prob- lems In New York, today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. famow lahz.ls ... FUNKY WINKERBEAN THE FAMILY CIRCUS "I don't even HAFT A see out! I know we're close to the ocean 'ca use my LIPS are salty!" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson 6/6~ C:••""'""'M'°"•l_t .. "< ..._ ''I think you deliberately bounced your ball Into the gravyl" DRABBLE GARFIELD MOON MULLINS JUDGEP~R Orenge eo.1 OAILY PILOT/Frid , .Augvl1 18, 19U C7 BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE by Charles M. Schulz --------~ " ' 1 DEAR SNOOPY Tl-ltS IS 'f'OVR OL' S~OTHER SPIKE WRITIN6 AGAIN F~OM THE DESERT'' TOURISTS SEEM iO LIK'.E 11 ACTUALL'< MV WEAVING DIDr{T TURN OUT ALL THAT 6000 5_,<L ~ ~ ~AND WOVEN BLANKETS'' "The wortd'a pa11lng me by." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham 4 J I ·.,t I ~ ._;"~ ~ ~-~ l I ~ ; ·~ I =3JLJ by Kevin Fagan by Jim Davis ___..., BLOOM COUNTY TUMBLEWEEDS BRIDG E L ---- Both vulnerable South deal• NORTH +8U <:>KQJU 0 75 •J U WEST +KlOH4 <::;> 54 EAST •Q J V'l097U 0 98 o 1oeu + K3 • 10152 OUTH +A 92 7J A <>A KQ J4 • A Q84 The bidding out.h Weal Nortb Eaet I 0 Pu 1 I <::" Pu t by Harold Le Doux l • Put 3 ~ Pue 3 T Pue Pu1 P ... Optnln1 lead: Five of •. Amons th. ,muy play tech niques. the holdup 11 O'\t of th• euiHl to matltr But It ean prove deceptive . Con1idt r this hand and df'c:1ded wh•ther South, declanr at three no trump. •hould hold up th at'• of 1padt1 one round. two round• or not et a ll Only tht fact that hU. ace of hurts wu 'inJlflton •nd that. Lht refot"e, entrl • to dumm7 would be hard to hnd. cauHd outh to M by Berke Breathed tJI NOJKJ • • j()N, )QI« ~ 'If JVt/J' I MIXW6 ~JVJV lfJl«hl«£5 -;.:-\. MAIN / {J I \'"-'14 b Tom K. Ryan HELD P B'Y HOLD·l'P const rvatsve in the auction 'nd ven turl' no fu rther than tlirel' no tr ump His Judgment proved to be sound. for t'Vf'n nine tr1c:k1 were not e11y to make S1nc:e 1pade1 probably were 5-2 and therl' were only eight fast t ricks and oo entry to t he I.able. 1t OMAR SHARIFF .. wu obvlou1 that a hold up play In spades waf going to I>. etNnUal to mah the coat,...ct. If South doea not hold up, h• •ill be d•feated re1udl1 ... of wh ch defender hold1 the kin1 of c:lubt. ff dedaNT holda up t tte I~ of spadH twice, he can be dtftattd with rood dtfenae. WHl mu1t over take h1• partner'• epad• return and c:lear the 1u1\. Then he c:ao c:uh hi• winnen "hen he pt• 1n with lht kins of clubl. Of count. th1J plan would aueffd If Ea1t ha• th• kln1 of cluba. The double holdup ui 1pade1 11 not • ntlal-It Eaat hu a l hlrd spade. dederer un lo e no mort th.an.th"" epad 1 .~a club What dMlart>r must con•11dtr. h''" l'\:fr •' how ~o assure the cootrar\ 11 \\ f'~t hu fivt' spadl'' and the kin I{ ol clubs r.orrttct lt>chn1que 1s to win thr sttc:ond ~padt with tbt ace. ci .. h t hf' acf' of hurts and four round' of diamond" ll' ~d1aust thtt dttff'ndt>rs CHARLES GOREN cards 1n that suit, and t hf'n throw W ''' 1n with a spadt' Ht> ran lakt' h11 'padt' trick~. hut thrn ht' muat f'llher put dummy on tud with 1 hf'art or el•• lud 1 c:lub into df'd&rl"r'1 tl'nare 10 JlVt' h1m tut ninth trick. u ... , ....... ,... .... , ... t.t c.reeWe? wt C'laarlu G.-• IHtlp , •• nu,.., ••:r ~-. * ....... .a DO IL t.t ,....it.lea a.ad for taknat. Fer • c•p1 ef 9tl1 00 IL ..-iet, M-4 Sl.8$ te "Cw .. -0 .... let," tare el &liale • •• ,.,.,.,P.O. I•• Ill, hlmJR. .J. . Mu• ~llatte t pa,..W. te N ew.,.perbeob. -----------------''-"•---·------~ .L .. • o'r.ng. CoutDAILY PILOT/Frtda A~u.t 18, 108S ID CREATE ITS FRESHF5f COFFEE EVER, MAXWELL HOUSE HAD TO BEAT ITS SINGLE MOST RUTIILESS COMPETIIDR. Time i the enemy of all things fresh. And, of course, ground coffee is no exception. . Recognizing that freshness is TIME. fleeting, Maxwell House set out to cut 1 down the time between grinding and MAXWELL HOUSE packing. In doing so, they have BROKE THE TIME BARRIER. successfully created their freshest ,. ~" Now Maxwell House has found f"' .tir.JP.h1i;~\1t'.t~ -• co iee ever. . -i:~,,,... · · . '!,\ an exclusive new way to pack THE STORY SO FAR.·-t . . .. ~ . ~\~ co~ee. immediately after '~ ~ • •••. ·:~;+: gnndmg. After a coffee bean is ·~\ . ~ · ~~;~;, It's called the Fresh Lock'" roasted ~nd ground, it \{~\ · r • ~packet . It allows Maxwell House reaches its very, peak of \1.:, /' to pack coffee sooner tl)an ever fre hness. That s why, after before. Literally within minutes of . ~nding , it is es~ential to se~ coffee grinding. So now, Maxwell House can into a can as qwckly as possible. seal into each can grinder freshness. But, until now, freshly ground coffee had to wait before it could be vacuum packed. And as it waited, time took its toll on precious fresh- ne and aroma. •';ow Pd< k1·d ~"'""'' fu•,hf'r ""•lh th• Frl''h I_," k • p.11 kc t MAXWELL HOUSE TIME BETWEEN GRINDING AND PACKING . ... •Without lhl' fr I' sh l.oc.k. park Pt GRAND OPENING. It begins with a "whoosh!" the moment you open the can. A sound that says more elo-. quently than words that Maxwell House is fresh. And the aroma? Well , it speaks for itself. . Try the freshest ever Maxwell House~ Coffee. Now more than ever, it's Good to the last drop~ IT COULDN'T BE ANYTHING BUT MAXWELL HOUSE ~ - Max\\cll llou\e~ Occaffcan.ucd Coffee not a\':ulmk in 'omc ;ut1_, GENERAL FOODS Cout Nancy Kidder has been appointed acting dean of admissions, records and guidance at Golden West College./ Al Calif om ta An ex-KGB agent tells how San Diego's proxim- ity to the border makes It a perf~t target for Soviet sples./A4 Nation Federal Investigators say the cloud emitted by the · Union Carbide leak con- tained mostly cancer- causing toxin, not pesticide./ A5 Louisiana residents say Danny wasn't strong enough to qualify as a hurricane./ A4 World More evidence Is found that a Japanese Air Lines Jet lost most of Its tall before crashing and klll- lng 520./ M Sports Dodgers' lead grows to nine games In Nation al League West after 5-4 win over Braves./C1 Huntington Beach's Brad Greer enjoys a one-shot lead at the California State Open golf tour- nament./C1 Entertainment Cartoonist Bii Keane keeps "FamllyClrcus" entertaining by watching kids and going to the movles./WMkender Wandering through the temptations at lrvlne Ranch Farmer's Market requires a game plan. /Weekender INDEX Auto Piiot Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classlfled . Com lea Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoecope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Pollce Log Public Notices Restaurant a Sport1 Televtaon Weather 81-14 C7 A3 CS-6 89-11 C7 811 812 Datebook 810 Date book A8 Date book A3 811 Datebook C1_. Datebook A2 Turn to Peg• 81 tor the beet automobile buJ• TOMORROW: . . FAIR '"-11 FOMCAITI ON A2 -. - Serving Newport Buch, Coata....., Huntington Buch, ntne. Ulgun.leech, Fount.In Vllley Ind .-11 ~C-" CALIFORN IA FRIDAY AUGUST 16 1cl8') ;•.Cf N T c, . e e e ars a1 oors· e ess r1soners The equeeze of mmmer When the tide com• in on the crowded beachee of Balboa laland, aun worahlpen get to know one another better. Albert Ma.rdlldan Importer admits faking smog tests By STEVE MARBLE Of ... o.llf ........ Customers who have plJl'Chascd exotic forcian can from Newport Beach auto importer Albert Mardikian must have the spcns can destro~. shipped out of lhc country or modified to meet ri&id ettissions standards. Mardikian, one of the nation's (Pl ... llM lllPORTSa/ A2) SPON will carry banner of Coast off shore oil foes Newport group plans to coordinate eff arts of local communities By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of die IMllr ,... ltaft . The Newport Beach env1ronmen· ta1 roup Stop Polluting Our Newport Wll coordinate the efforts of local community groups in opposing 011 dolling off the Orange County coastline. SPON. an acti ve opponent of John Wayne Airport expansion and la'le develoi;>mcnts in Newport Beach, wtll meet Wlth leaders oftocat homeowner assoc1auons to plan strategies 10 prescnung their arguments against offshore 011 dnlling. said SPON President Jean Watt. SPON's participation was an- nounced Thursday night at a meeting on offshore dolling held at the Newport Beac h City Council chambers. Watt wd Newport Beach residents will plan a massive show of oppos1- uon when lntenor Secretary Donald Hodel holds a public heanng o n the drilling proposal Aug. 31 in Ncwpon Beach. A tentative agreement caJls for opening six ntne·squarc·mtle tracts off the Oranf.C Coast for 011 explo- ration and dolling. The ciues of Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Huntinaton Beach and San Clemente have united to ft&ht that proposal, ciUnJ potenttal problems with 011 spills. atr poltuuon and other environmental hazards Oil drilling opposed 2-1 in university poll By LISA MAHONEY A maJonty of Orange C ounl} residents sa)' lhe) don'l "'anl oil ng_) off thl· coast. accordtn~ 10 a UC Irvine survey taken in June County residents oppose offshore 011 dnlllng almoin 2-lo-I accon.ltng to university researchers who polled 1,008 randomly chosen count~ resident\ pnor to the anno uncement of a federal proposal lo offer 54 square m1ks ot ocean floor off Newport <tnd Laguna beaches for 011 and gas e'ploral1on Of those asked 1flhey wo uld hke to see 011 dnlling offlhe counl) lOas1llne 10 the next fi ve years, 60 percent said they did not. 34 percent fa"ored lhe idea and 6 percent said they were no t sure. The quesuon was part of lhe un1vers1t} ·s 1985 Orange Count\ ~nnual Survey, s scheduled for release an late September Campus spokeswoman Elaine Beno said the unn,ersi ty de·cided to relea~ results of the 011 dnllingquesuon early bC'cause "we felt 11 was umeh o;1nce there was such d1 scuss1on going on." Coastal communities have untted 10 o ppose a compromise worked nut between the U S Depanment of the lntenor and some Cahfom1a congressmen that would permit an existing moraton um to lapse on 1.350 square m1le<i of pro tected coastline in exchange for a 15-)ear ban on d nlltng else"'herc along· Lhe coasL Factions 10 fa vor of mo~ dnlhng 1n federal waters ofT Cahfom1a are al'o (Pleue eee POLL/ A2) Watt said SPON's ro~ in Newpon Beach Wlll be much like the c1ttzens' group-\OS (Save O ur Shores). which 1s <QP1z1na rallies and pettt1on dnves 1n Laguna Beach. Attending Thursday's heanng was state Sen Manan Bergeson. R-Ne~­ pon Beach, who offered her rupport to the oppos1tto n of offshore ml dnlhng. Bcracson said she lelt the tcntall\e aarccment anno unced Jul) 16 b\ Hodel and some Cali fornia congicssmen was struck for pollt1CJ1I rea~ns and did no t refl ect the ~t interests of Californians. In ano ther development. Rep Ron Packard. R-Carlsbad. who~ d1stnct (Ple&M eee SPON I A2) Sheriffs OfficiaiS, supervisors voice anger over ruling- s, JEFF ADLER Of ... 0..,NMS..., A Los Angeles federal JUd&e has ordered the doors to the Oranse County Jail ~lammed shut, bcgsnmng Aug. 25. to any incoming pnsoners for whom no bed can be supplJ.od Wltlun 24 ho urs. The order was wued by U S Dlstnct J udfe Wilham Gray two days after a heMlng on Jatl overcrowding and thejudgr's impromptu tour of the Santa Ana main JIUl. The tour was (Pleue aee JA.a/ A2) Crystal azers ackon Coast -City officials see bans being lifted- after court ruling__ By TONY SAAVEDRA OI -0.-, ...... S\1111 O range Coast cit) offiC1als predict the}'ll ha"e to lift their bans llf'llOSl fonuneiellers following 1he state Su- pl't'Tne Court ruling Thursda) th3t said a s1m1lar proh1b111on 1n ~usa was unconslltut1onal Officials said the\ don't need a crystal ball to forM that their ord1oances against fonune-telhng busincs~~ ""orr'1 stand up against the preceden1.<,ett1ng dec1s1on that .\zusa 's ban '1ola1ed free SJ>CtX h la"" s The que~tlon no"" fau~<l b' Costa \1esa Llguna Bcach lf\tne and Fountain Valle\ 1s ""hether the' wtll s1mpl! repeal their ordinances or reSLnct the ps~ch1c peddler<o lo c-ena1n areas <iome ctt1es also talked ot licensing the seero;-for-sale Hunungton Beach lifted tl'> ban on commercial \OOthsa.,ers more 1han a }ear ago m rrspon~ 10 a la~ sun filed b) a G' ps\ mother and her daughter v., 1th the door no~ openmg on such proh1b1ted businesses a~ astrolog• Related story on A5 tea-reading. palmist!") .ind other l) pes ot prophec-) for a tee Orange Coast otlictah had fe~ lea~ about the 1mpalls on their c1t1e-. The\ also J1dn 't Sttm ea~er 10 ac~pt an tn' 1t.rnon b\ AJusa \ita\or Eugene Moses for other ( alttorn1a cll1~ to c;hare-the legal ~OMS of appealing the t>-1 slate det l\1un to the L1 S uprtrne Lourt "It's not our number one pnortt} " Laguna Beach Ctt) Manager Ken Frank. said ·v., e ha H' the \ame k.inds oi concern~ aoou1 unsus~tmg people t-emg duped b\ un~rupulous 1ndi"1duah But the que,t1un 1s ""he1her to hJ\l' a proh1h1t1on to save icon umer~I l rom them'iehes ba'i1call' .. Co'iW '1e"1 ""as among the Orange (aunt\ uues placing. a moratonum on commel\:111 fortunl" telling la t \tar after an apfl('llate l oun dccl red ~zusa' ~roh1h111on uncl>n\tttu· uonal Tom Wood. <.-osta ""fe~·s city a11ome\. o;a1d mo<;t otlinal\ ant1c1- (Pl~.ue .ee P'ORTUPflt/ A2) State minorities will be majority sOon Blacks, Hiapantc • Asians ma ual white population by ear 2001. surpass It by 2005 81 DOUG WILLIS .• /' ,,.. .. , ...... ,,_..... ,r Califonua will bcc:oma more crowded and more davenc ncially in the nat two dealdc:a if curredt lreodJ in ammip'ation, tnn ponatJon and land coau continue. By the time lOda!i;ldnderprttnen arecompletintco inthcapri~of the year 2001, ~ y'a racial m1n- onti will nearly equaJ tk non· , • I ' Hl!f.!lDIC wttitqa who have dominated Cabfomaa 11nqe the 1849 Gold Rush. And by lOOS, Califom1a'• His. panic. Allan and black populauon will outnumber non-Hispanic whites statewide and some of tht atatt's m~or Wban centers W'lll be domi- nated pohllc.i2' cconom1caJI} and culturally by t :ay'a minonttcs. I~ tnftk co tion and hl&h land co•ts alona the Cal1fom1a coast arc encourq>ng hou "'' and manufactunna booms mland that wdl bnna increased urbanit.atton and added e«>nomic and poliucal clout to tnl&nd c1ucs from Sacramento to Rivers1dt. And those who remain 1n the San Franci!co. Los Af\&CIC1 or n Dtqo utbao areas will be llVlf\I cJo r tostmtt in hiahcr dcnS1ty hou '"'- and the)' wtll face evcr-1ncreas1na ltlffic conic uon and lonaer oom· mutes to wOf'k. The •vcraac fruway ~ dunna the momina pnk penod 1n ~ Anccles ..,;11 dechnt from about 37 mllC1 per hoor loda)I to about Ii mt~ per hour by lht tum of tht century. and the amount of ttme flttwayt arc cloacd wt th sto p.and-go tnffic w'ill nearfY quadruple Tht state's populatJOO IS &t'OWlfl& nearly 10 times taster than the ratt of cx1>9M1on of the h\ahway and other transportat1on ayttem ~ m t of the ns-naion of the hl&h1Way )'Stem ~be aimed at serv1na car poob and mast n n n u1Cn. Despite tbe increased urb&n dcns1· tics, the t m · nty of California's land 'Wiii conunue to be dtvotcd to farm. timber and rccrauonal usn • -" and Cahtom11 will remain the na· non's lcadin1 qncultural uate. In a scnes o t <\ !CC>Ctated Pfas 1nten itws, cronom1~t\. planntf"l and > demoaraphcrs from busines,, sov· ernment and the acadcm1c rommuni· ty ~ that a.s1an and H1 s-nl 1mm1s:r-t1on Wlll he ont> of the most 1mponant fo~ chana1ng •lifomaa 10 the ne'\t two decades They all al1<> agreed the st"e'a inland communiue where land and hoUJ1ni al'e' 1till relauvety inupcn· SJ\'C, W\\I lfOW It I mucb r rate than the cumnt urban oentcn on t (Pl-... M:mORJTIS8/ A2) I ' , l .U Clr1lflOO ~DAILY PILOT/~rleloy, AuguoC 11. 1885 Teen admits giving gasoline to her baby RJVl!RSIDE (AP) -A teen-qe modN:rwboforcedber l~month-old IOll 10 drink~ &om • bottl.e, cauaiq bllGd'iM_ Ind lajllries !bat could kill the infant. race. up 10 nine yean ln priton fbr child abuae. Loon Ann Fimbtel, 19, or Beou· mont. p&elded au.Ut)I to tbe felony cbartt Tbunday 11.fter an attempted muroer c:lwu WAS dropped in OX· chanae for Iler plea. She will be tenlenccd Sept. 18, .. There it little evidence -that ahc wanted him .dead," Deputy Disuict Attorney Don Inak.ecp said in Cll· plain1nt wby prosccuton decidc'(I to drop the ammpted murder charae. The woman wu movina Ju.ly 14 from Beaumont to Hemet, 80 nti1cs cut of Loi Aftlclcs. when the infant, Georp Fimbres. wu pvcn the aasollne in a baby bottle. Inskeep said ahe wa1 havina prob- lems with the boy's father at the time of the incident and may have injured the child to aet revenac on the father · and others, The i.nfant has been in Loma l..inda Univenity Medical Center since shortly aft.er drinkina the psoline, but 11 the tl.m1ly'1 ttquttt, the hospital declined to aivc the child's currenl condition. . AlthC?uah a lona-term/roposit it 1mpou1brc1 lawycn an others u. sociat.cd with the cue Mid the boy suffered blindnela and da.rnqe to his heart, lunas and kidneys. "His medical condition his flue. tuated from day to day," said Gary Myers, the woman's public defender, ln1keep said the boy may suffer permanent damaae and could die. If he dies, the mother will be charaed with murder, be said. JAIL CLOSED TO 'BEDLESS' INMATES ... From Al c Jud&e Gray's S«:Ond of the summer. limit will be I ,400 inmates, accordina Kc found ovcrcrowdina is worse now to the couM order. than it had been durina his first tour. The population in the jail, rated to The order stunned both super-' bold 1,191 inmates, has ranged as vison ind Sbcriff'1 Department of-ttigb as l, 700 inmates 1n recent ficials who point out the county has months. Last ni~t, I ,S6 I inmata aonc to peat lenaths in recent wcrcheldinthcjail, 18ofwhomhave months, spend.in& m.11lions of dollan, been bunking out on the jail floor for to reduce crowded jail conditions. · more than 24 houra., the undenheriff '"We have to comply with the reported.. That wu a decrease from judac's order," commc~tcd Unc:tcr--the I 694 inmates housed in the jail sheriff Raul Ramos this mom1na. last S~nday when 39 inmates slept on "How we do it is still under study." the floor. Ramos added that no matter what Board of Supervison' Chainnan plan finally is agreed upon "neither Thomas Rilc,r expressed arut "dis-- the Board ofSu(>Crvison or the sheriff appointment with tbe coun order havcanyintcnttonofrcleasingpeople and pointed that the county has who are a danger to the community." worked hard to comply with the The county bas been under court court's directives. order to rcduce1ail overcrowding and Low-risk inmates have been trans- prov\de bunks for all Jail in.mates fcn'Cd to tenu erected on the arounds since March when thcjud~cfound the oftbc James A. Mesi.ck Honor Farm county in contempt for fa.ding to~a°" o ther inrn.tes .~~ been trans-- bis 1978 order to reduce the J&1l femd from the main Jail to the Theo population. The county was fined Lacybranchjailin~. lbetcnts, SS0,000 plus SID per night .f~r each which can hold 380 inmates., arc inmate forced to sleep on a J&ll noor ex~ to be replaced by modular for more than 24 hours. buildinp that arc slated to be in place Gny's latestordcrfor the lirst lime at the Musick farm by November, cstabltshcs a population cap at the jail Riley said. and directs county jailers to remove "His(thcjudge's)intcrcstinpcople within JO days extra bunks that had whohavcn'tbcengoodcitiz.cntisjust been crammed into cigh1 jail not ri~t," the board chairman dormitoria. added. Our story should beaivcn the The order to accept no pnsoncrs for same wcif,bt as the AO.U attorney's, whom there arc no beds effectively but it doesn't look like ii is. His sets the jail papulation at 11657 method is to release prisoners. We inmates beginning Aug. 2S, cxpla.ined have the strona feclina that if you Richard Herman, the American Civil have committed a crime you should Liberties Union attorney rep- resenting inmates in the jail ovcr- be locked up for n,.. Riley com- mented. Herman said the court order does not pose a threat to public safety, but finally deals with the jail ovcr- crowdin& problem directly. "The most minor types of of- fendcn who arc no da~er to the community will be out,' Herman said ... Those who arc a danger will be in jail. Those who aren't, won't be. That's the way it should be." The ACLU atomcy, a Balboa Island resident, said Grar·s .action was ·a "wonderful thing.' And he lauded the court for its "courage and insiaht" in handling the problem. '"this happened because the coun- ty did not properly deal with the problem. Their solution was to add beds rather than reducing the popu- lation," he said. Herman also said the county has three options to comply with the judge's directives. He suggested the county make better use of its branch~ jail capacity, issue citltions rather than arrcsttng people charged with misdemeanor crimes such as failure to pay child suppon, petty theft or public drunkcncss or begin releasing inmates several days or a week before their sentence is about tO?,xpirc. A special county jail wk force th~t has been meeting since March 1s scheduled to mCet early next week to review options and and recommend a course of action to the Board of Supervisors, Ramos said. crowdin& case. ' After Dec. I. the jail population will be kept to no . m~rc tha~ l ,SOO inmates and bcginruna Apnl I the POLL: OIL RIGS OPPOSED .•. SPON ... From Al includ~ the southern tip of Orange County, is ~ucsting that five 011 drilling tracts off Oceanside be moved farther nonh along the coast to an area stretching from the San Onofre nuclear power plant just south ofthc Orange County line. The move, Pac.k..ard said at a Thursday news conference in Carlsbad, will allow oil drilling off Camp Pendleton and keep oil plat- forms farther from residential areas. Packard has asked Hodel to con- . sider the change and won the agree- ment of the Navy for the proposal, said Packard aide Yvonne Murchison. The Navy's sea lanes would be obstructed if oil platform~ arc allowed in the tracts ofOccans1dc. Murchison said. The move would place the tracts farther from shore, as well. she said. From Al unhappy with the plan, but for other reasons. The otl industry and pro-dnlhng congttSSmcn say the compromise should have included more and better ocean floor tracts -ona that promise to produce more petroleum products to reduce the country's dependence on imported oil. The survey results come just two weeks before ln1erior Secretary Donald P. Hodel is to arrive on the Orange Coast for a public hearing on the drilling proposal. . . Mark Baldassare, an associate professor who directed the survey. said a rc_prescntative cross section of county residents came out against oil drilling. .. Upposition ... crosscs almost all ge01f3phic areas, incomes and ages.·: he said. Dissatisfaction with the idea of expanded offshore oil installations was slightly higher amona coastal rcside~ts with 63 _pc~ccnt opposing drilling. Of infand dwellers, S9 percent were against more 011 ngs. Fifty-four percent of Republicans polled didn"t want more 011 exploration while 67 perttnl of Democrats felt the same. Those reporting incomes of undcrS I S,000 and more than S7S were ~bout evenly split on wheth~~ more drilling shoul~ .be allo~c~. The ba~ancc tipped slightly toward o ppos1t1on, however. Oppos1t1on 10 oil ngs was higher among those with incomes between SI S,000 and S 7 S,000 with sentiment ranging from 5'9 to 68 pcrccnl against drilling . The only group fa voring more offshore oil activi ty was residents older than 6S, 49 percent of whom said they wanted more exploration compared to 42 percent against. ... Survey results arc consistent with those taken in previous years. Baldassare sai<i. .. It fiu the trend shown in past surveys that Orange County residents arc very concerned about potential pollution to the environment. whether ii relates to water, air or toxic wastes:· he said. MINORITIES HEADING FOR MAJORITY ... From Al I ' ' •• • I ~lervveatherover~kend °'°'* will thldltn • bft Saturdlly 1n coutm vel ..,tMIMtv.1.-ottfOPk*=r:;-onMattypW,~ The'°' fOf 8 p,m, EDT, Sit. Aug , 17 lout CllHomla. IN Nttlonal W• &eMo9 M)'t. 8f.lnlhlM It upected to \Ute hold bV ef't.,-,,oon along the cout ~t 1.mpatetur .. wlH be 9'1ghtly oooler. HIGM wlH rtnge trom the IOw 70. at the bMot\fl8 to the mld-IOe In fnltind vdeye. A10nQ the Or111g9 COMt I,_. wtll be IOw oloudt tonlahl and 8iltu"'•Y. _,.,. moot~ ounny 8otU<doY Oftwnoon. 9Mght~ cooler cfayt. Hight ranolna from ti,. IOw 70. •I tn. ~ to upper aot lnllftd valleys. Lltti. dWIOI Saturday exoept Inland valley high• mid IOI. Lowt 58 to se. P-rom POUlt Conoeptlon to the Mexlcln Bofd• -Ovw lnMf wetet• Ught verleble wind• through Saturday except IOUthwMt to wesi a to ti knot1 In tn. efternoon 8eturd•Y· Wind wevee 2 to 3 fMt. SouthWNI awell , to 3 t•t. Contlder1a.10W ok>udlMN with partial clMflng In thti afternoon S•turdey. Outer wat••· POlnt Conception to San Clemen1e ltiancl and out eo mllM, moe:tty northweet to west -..Md• a to 18 knot• through Seturday wHh combined MU 4 to I fMt . Contldetablti low ok>fildlneN wilh pert I al clMrlng In tM •tt..-noon end ......nlng ... A>.~. {!!!r,., ...... . ..... ~~~,,..,,.,_cooe _. hOUrS tonight •nd S•lurd•y. ,_..., ... ,_ " u "' " .. " St>Owt •• .,....., "~""' S"Ow Oc:'ll.ld•<I ..,,..,,. St11.onar~ &y '-•-WM!l\9! """"""'• to()A• U 5 0.01 01 (,-t• U.S. Tempe . ...., ·--........ ........... A.den" Aflenlle C"'1 ---· ....... ----...... "-~.SC a.-on.w.v Ctwlotle,N.C. .g::: .. """'""'" """"'"' Colutooblll.l.C _ .... C..--d,N.M 0-.FlWorl,, """'""' ~ .. -fl .. .....,.. .. t0 17 Mpit-11 P..i ., to,..,.._ ., '°'"'"'~ M 11 -Yarli to 71 ~.V• 17 to Old-Cl!y '' ,, ~ " 11 O<le!"IOO 71 12~ 17 11 ~ 13 ''~ 12 to Ponltnlf,lik. .. ., Potllend,Or ., '''"'-... 71 flWelQll .. " "-Piii" C"1 12 ... IWlo .... _ 12 70 S...AmMIO 83 Ill Sit! ......... P l'I. 12 10 $MUl6 .. " " .. " .. ,, ,, .. " " n .. " .. " " .. " " " " "' .. " .. '' 11 .. " " " .. " " .. .... " .. .. " .. " " " .. " ""'-.. " . .,._ .. " -.. " -.. .. -"' " --" .. """"' " .. ........... "' " ·-.. .. -" .. ..,, ......... .., " .. ......... .. " --" .. ........ .. .. ..... .... .. .. ltlnt1 lilw\e " .. T"-Vlil<y " " , __ " .. Y-'11'/lv .. " Tides fOOA'I _,_ :l:4fl p,m " ......... t:M p.m ... = ··--....... .. 10~1 ,, Ill &polt-IM 13 a,,_ 11 97 TQP1111 811 57 T- IM 87 TulM ~ :~ WMhlnglon n " " .. 76 ., 101 70 " .. .. " •ATUN>A'f Fiie! i.... •:Ml ..... '·' Surf Report .... -~ Gt-Atlc*I• .... , ... -llldl9t Ill alt .i.ak.wo.MI --- :; ~ Extended ,. 55 " " " " " " " " .. " M " ~loloo ,,.,, ... ..,, ... •.32 P.m. '·' ...... ""' 10:3tp.m ... S...n .... !Odey 11 7,)11 p.m., ,_ s.turd.,-11 s·1e • m. w1<1 ""' 8Qall'l <M 7'.31p.m. Moon -~ 91 Iott p.m., •-klll0Sey91 7:11 ...... Md-~., 1:12 p.m. FORTUNETELLERS MAY BE BACK .. : From Al pated that the state Supreme Court telephone interview Thursday. would uphold the ruling. La1una Beach, Irvine and Foun- .. To outri&ht prohibit fortune-tell-tain Valley were among the cities not ing businesses seemed to run afoul of passing moratoriums. Now they are, the First Amendment, as seen by the 1n effect, left with unenforceable coun.in other QJlings," Wood said. fortune telling laws. The moratonums were intended to A Sttretary at Laguna Beach City act like a safctr net, giving cities Hall !laid her telephone was kept something to fal back on while they ringing Thursday by Gypsies and decided how to deal with commercial other. crystal ball-pzcrs asking when P$YChics. they could set up shop. . · Ncwpon Beach wcn1 one step "It's clear that we'll have to revise further last year, removing iu ban but our ordinance," said City Manager confining the businesses to certain Frank, who said the law prohi.bits commerci•I areas. Bob Burnham, city JKYChic-rclatcd activities, except for attorney, said that he was unaware of religious purposes. any problems with fraudulent for-City Attorney Phil Cohn remarked tunctcllcrs. that he would probably recommend Nevertheless, Azusa M_ayo~ Moses _that fonunctcllers be licensed, much warned that fonunc tclh~g is mor:c -like adult cntenainmcnt businesses, than j ust seer cntcrta1nmcn1. it with the city checking baclqrounds amounts to sorcery. '°'.1.0~sadded that and issuing permits . the business of pred1c~1ng the future Laguna Bcach'sordinance has been was tnherentl y deceptive and could on the books since 1953. A ban not be compared t9 prOJCCllng the against commercial sotithsaycrs was economy or forecasting the weather. one of the first ordinances cnac1cd by "fonunctcllers take advantage of thccityoflrvinc when it incorporated people who arc weak and charge large 14 Y~ ago. amounts of money," he Y-id in a City government officials said most of the prohibitions throu&hout the state were pretty standard and approved as a matter of course. Jrvinc Assistant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. said the city had received only one inquiry about establishing a fortune telling business in more than a decade. Brady was doubtful that prophecy merchants would be lured to lrvine, because there were few storefronts available for such businesses. "There's not much teascablc space where a fonunctcllcrcan draw people off the streets," he said. "We're focused toward major retail centers instead of mom-and-poP. type busi- nesses on the ma.in drag. ' Fountain Valley officials were aJso doubtful that fortunetellers would be attracted to their city. "I really don't k.now if the City Council has a strong view on its ban anymore," said City Attorney Alan Bums. addina that he received on~ lone inquiry about a week before the state Supreme Court ruling. "That person must truly be clairvoyant," Bums joked: IMPORTER GUILTY OF AUTO FRAUD RAP .•• From Al largest importers and modifiers of emissions standards i~ they wish to said customers paid for the em1ss1ons European sports cars, pleaded Juilty keep their cars in the country. tests and conversions. last week to nine counb of falsifying Convening European sports cars to A person imponing a Europcan- cmissions tests with the Environmcn-meet U.S. standards can cost upwards made car must post a bond with U.S. ta! Pro1ec1ion Agency and a sin&lc ofSI0.000, he.said. Customs Service before brintgg the count of mail fraud. Mardiktan. who had steadfastly auto into the country. The nd is The Corona dcl Mar resident will released when the EPA approves the be sentenced in federal coun in Los denied he faked emissions tests on emissions results. Sc 16 H , 50 imported cars, could not be reached n---usc Mardt'lcian fitLcd em,··· Angeles on pl. . c 1accs years Sc I fh' 1 h ~ • -in prison and a $90.000 fine. for comment. vcra 0 is tc ep one ions tests, the bonds were improperly cOast. But there was a sharp dtvis1on of opinion over the imponancc and impact of the expected 1nland build- ing boom. becoming a more spectahzed econ- omy, while Los Angeles v.ill conunuc 10 have a more diven;ified economy with a broader base 1n entertainment and its apparel, chemical, plastics and other non-high technology manufac- turi ng. M d 'L ' 39 . h f numben; have been disconnected. ...1,. •• , to the car ,·mporte•, govcm -ar 1 .. 1an, , ts I c owner o ,.. ,,.;u • Napa -arc obvious targets for Trend Importers of Newport Beach The Syrian-born businessman mcnt lawyers said. development. And industry will be and Al Mardik1an Enginccnng of entered his guilty pica during the The government began invcstigat- moving there as well as residcnt1a.I Costa Mesa. He also owns a car third day of his tnal. Mardikian's 1ng Mardikian's business practic:cs in and service developments.'' Mid-business in Hermosa Beach. ncehcw, Garo Mardikian, pleaded i 982. He filed fo r bankruptcy the The most dramatic physical ci'tange 1n California is expected in the suburbs surrounding th e Los Angeles and San Francisco urban ccn1cn;. where new manufacturing and office centers arc following home builder.; 1n search of cheaper land and less traffic con~stion. There will be fewer major changes 1n the physical layout of Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose and other urban centers. But the culture and flavor of those urban centers will continue to change as their Hispanic and Asian populations grow at much faster rates than either the black or non-Hispanic white populat1ons. High technology - incl uding the current computer and clcctron1cs 1ndustnes, but expanding into gen- etics and medicine -will be an 1ncrcas1ng factor 1n the economy statcv.idc Bui th_cre will be marginal shifts. with the San Francisco-San Jose areas Just Call 642-6086 1 There will also be a trend to develop proportionately more new blue collar jobs inland, where land and housing costs arc lower. And industncs of every description will move, as home builders have, to new less congested, less costly suburban hubs. "Highway construction won't keep pace with population, and this should lead to more clustering. Butclustcrin1 doesn't have to occur around the current major urban cores. San Luis Obi5po, Visalia, Po rterville, other areas we don't think of as that laric. may cmcrJC as urban centers,'' said Frank M1ttelbach, a professor of urban land economics at UC.LA. '"The outlying areas -the Ventura counties. places such as San Bernardino. Riverside. Santa Crui, delbach said. Federal prosecuton; Mid customers au11t y to three counts of mail fraud at following year. The residential building boom 1n who purchased cars from Mardik.ian the same time. In a recent interview, Mardikian the Sierra foothills and similar re-between 1981 and 1984 now must He faces 15 years 1n prison and a accuscdthegovcmmcntofhoundin1 mote regions of the state will con-have their Ferraris, Porxhcs, Lam-$3,000 fine. him and suaested he was a victim of tinuc, especially due IO the increasing borghinics and other expensive cars Mardikian was accused of faking the nation's "Pinto mentality.•· He numbers of financially independent exponed , modified or destroyed. emissions tests and supplying the said he was being harrasscd because retired persons. But compared to the Prosecutor Williams Sellers said EPA with phonr dOCUJncnts, which be supplied exotic vehicles to cus- cxpectcd population growth of the the car owncn; must meet EPA constitutes mai frautf. Prosecutors tomcrs with high-perfonnance taste. inner cities and suburbs, the change ;;;==========================================~ an_d growth in rural Caijfornia will be minor. , Schools which have been under- utilized or empty since the post- World War II "baby boom" gener- ation graduated to young adulthood will be filling up a~in. ~~ the same time, a growina senior c1uzen popu- la1ion caused by longer life expectan- cies will boost the average age of Californians from about 31 today to 36. Next -Econom.J1t1 partlclpad.111 ID Ille AP CallforDla f•tue ••rvey pre41cl 1laac ID !Oil CaJUorai. wlll laave llave •boat lhe u.me ml.I of lllP- lecllllolou 1Ddaa1ry. SHUTTERS SPECIALLY PRICED Wllal do you like about the Dally Pilot? ~'hal doll 't yo u lllle? Call the number at left and your me1aa1e wlll be recorded, transcrlbt"d and de livered to the appropriate editor. The time Is right to enjoy the cool comfort and beauty of these attractive moveable shutters, The 1ame %4 .bour an1werta11erv1c·e may be u1ed to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our t.e:11er1 column mutt Include their. name and ttlepbooe number for verification. No clrculatlon cal11 , please. Tell us wba1'1 on your mind. Cl culallon 714/142-4333 DoHJ Piiot • Oellffry -I I• Querenteed 'i:'6'4~' Daily Pilat C•••lfted adwertl•lno 11•tl42·H11 All other department• M2'""321 MAIN OFFICE ... In the colors, sizes and styles you want! ......,.,...,._.,. ~ !'OI.' Oii ""' -too' P9Cll" "" • ., p,,,. °"" bfltor• 'p"' 11'111.,.,...._ ... u. -.._,,..,PIO ~y ~ ,OU9Cll'IOI_,.,,.,. ~Ool''•"' Gllllt..11;11• 10 ..... ..,..,..._ ... .. -c-Tal1p~ -~~ ...... l...,.,.~ .... __,_ __ _ Karen Wittmer C@;nen11 Managei Frank Zlnl Ed•IOI Rob9rt l . Cantrell (\ p,OdU(.!u'll'l l.4a n110-• Howard Mult.nary ,A.dVer11t1ng 0it9CIOI Roumary C'hurchman Con tr Oller Donald L. Wiiiiama C1rcu1a110t1 Maf'l8Qftf JJO W"' &.~ S1 c;o.ie ,,_ l A M ... addl"-lo> I 'l>8() C.0..• ,,_ (,A ~ {,(lpyo'IJM •llt3 0.•'9' C-1 ~ Coot-c>e"' NO ._ --...i---.... n .. oo -• ................ -y ri-,.,.~ ~ .............. .......,,, ""~ .. , - 5"':""" c-*'• -.. c...i ........ Celi•O>-!U"I ,., !IOOI ~"P"f"' try WI-S~ 1'I "'!I""""' 1Jy-t 100"""'""""" YOLn,NO.m • Call (714) 548-6841 or548-1717 • 32 Years Experience M&11ufacturlng Quality S~uttere • 1 I Al I • AUG. 16, 1985 DAIIX PILOf ENfERTAINMENT GUIDE VOL. l/No. 33 'Galileo' lofts SCR intO third decade This is the firsl ofiwocolumns on South Coast Repertory's upcoming season and its outlook for the future. Fresh from a heady season-long celebration of its 20th annivenary and buoyed b~ overwhelming publfo support, South Coast Repertory plunges 1n10 its thud decade next month, no longer a rookie in profcssionaJ theater's major leagues. "I n:ally believe SCR's finest moments still lie ahead," executive d irector David Emmes commented in a pre-season interview. "We've come into our own durio~ the last few seasons and we're no longer Just a 'promising young theater on a national level." Undcnconng this conviction., SCR will ta1m ch the 1985-86 season ScpL 9 wi th Benoit Brecht's monu- mental h1ston ca1 drama "Galileo." a play both Emmcs and oo-artisuc director Manin Benson have been anxious to put on stage since they 'T"DVI first conceived their vision of a TTn.s profcssionaJ theater over 21 years ago. "This is a project of immense propon ions." noted Benson, who wall direct the story of the Italian a.strooomcr who changed the world's conceptions of the cosmos. Veteran actor Dana Elcar (seen last season an SC'R's .. fhc G1gh Conccn") wi ll play the title role, supponcd by a cast which includes all six founding members of the company and its three other resident actors. "Gahlt.'O" wi ll play through Oct. 13 and will be followed on the main stage by a world premiere -especially commassionod by SCR -cnllllcd "Before I Go1 My Er.c Put Out" by T imothy Mason. Emmes. who will direct th as one. describes 1t a~ a "very strong. new play with a tremendous ~n'iC of language. wit and literacy." It deals with a successful American novelist and has wife encountering upheaval 1n their Caribbean retreat. and will play from Oct. 22 through Nov. 24. The ( O'ita Mesa theater's sixth annuaJ presentauon of .. A Chnstmas Carol" will highlight the holiday season, running from Nov. 30 through Dec 24. before the West Coast premiere of Larry Shoe's "The Foreigner" amvc<i for a Jan 7-Fcb 9 engagement. Ernmcs dcscnbcs this one as a ··seemingly wacky farce" about a shy Englishman v1s11mg the Deep South who pretends 10 10peak no English -and wands up m an outrageous macl~lrom of events. mclud1nga run-m with the l<u KJuA Klan Shakc~pt>are's "'A' You Like It~ opens Feb. 25 as the Theater Discovery Project. offered 10 local high schools. and plays through March 'fJ Jan lhasberg. who staged the world premiere of "Reckless" on the SCR <iccond tagc last season. wall direct the class1c comedy. "Buncd Child," acclaimed as the ft.nest play from Puht1er Pnze winner Sam Shepard, will be d irected by Lee ShallaL, who turned \hcpard's "'True West" mtoa resounding hit a few scasons~o. The drama ofa decaying Midwestern farm family wall be on stage Apn l 8-May 11 C'los1ng out the matnstagc season will be the West Coast premiere of .. Jailers" by David French. whose "Sall Wa ter Moon" was a pan of last season'sSccond Stage lineup. Benson wall d irect the backstage farce which he praises for its detailed examination of actors' paranoia and the creative personality It runs May 20 through June 22. Ne~t Wf'Ck: SCR's Second Stage season and the company dmx:tors' pro;tx110ns for 1hc.·1r theater's futurr. (1ennal Managn Karen A. W ittmer £d11or Frank Zina Art D1rec1or S teven Hough C trrnlalion Manager Donald L. Williams Production Manager tlobert l. Cantrell r>111rtioo~ 1\ published c"cry Fnday by the Oransc Coast Pubhd11n1 Co., PO Beu IS60, J)() W. S.y t. Costa Mesa, C'A 92626. Telephone (714) 642-4321 RtpLtr buttnesa "°"rs an: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .. Monday th'FO\lah Fnday Deadline for calendar of evenls 11cms and letters is S p.m Monday The <'nt1rc con1cnu or Da1cbook are copynahled by IM Oranae Coast Pubh~llfna Co All nahts •~ ruerved t Daffy PHo1 Datebook/ Hiday, Augus116, 1985 By PBJL SNEIDERM.AN -Nice guys finish last. Except for B1 I Keane a mild-mannered, 62-yea.r-old grandfather who creates the natio~y syndicated "Fani~y Circus" cartoons.. His ~wn fi ve children arc adults,. yet he still manages to_ cap~ the JOYS and frustrations of.childhood -and parenthood -ma 'P.3J1Cl that focuses on four younpters, none older than 7. He says, "I like to keep my attitudes young by observing Irids and seeing movies .... (Cover portrait by Lee Payne). . ,. --·l"'.-••. ,.~,f,· --& ------- CA TCB KARMA CHAMELEON IN llESA •... 4 BOY GEORGE -Britain's top recording artist of the year will lead his Culture O ub in performances at the Pacific Amphitheatre on Saturday and Sunday. Tickets arc $19 .25 and Si 4 for their concerts that will be followed on Thursday by Rick Springfield's show at the outdoor venue. For a full list of the week's events, be sure to read today's calendar listings. ' THISBENEFITWASONESTARSBORT •• 14 BY EVE C. LASH -Where was surprise guest Tom Selleck? As the Muscular Dystrophy benefit banquet progressed, it really didn't matter. There were plenty of celebrities, baseball stars and the Third Marine Aircraft WinJ Band to enten.ain the crowd at the John Zimmerman memonal dinner. Plus a Selleck look-alike was discovered among the guests. OUT Ci\I Tl-E DEVELOP A GRAZING STRATEGY •••••••••• 22 BY BEVERLY BUSH SMITH Visions of calories and wonderfuJ aromas dance through your head when visiting Irvine Ranch Farmer's Market at Newport Center. So it's best to have a game plan for sampling all the fare -from barbecued pork slices to frozen yogurt. This first of lhrtJC primers on how to graze from sushi to salads helps you enjoy the market's expanded hours to the max. I E'-ARllVENIS TOPB~LIJIG ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 w llNE • 8.Pml'rS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 21 RESTAURANT OF THE WEEK ••••••••••••••••• 22 RESTAURANT DIRECTORY •••••••••••••••••••• 27 ARK LA1"DBRS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20 ''We ought to be getting more than 25 miles per litter bog!" N ice guys finish last Everybody knows thal. And there's no plaoe for nice features about nice wholesome families in today's newspapers, Which prefer to spotliaht political corruption, toxic waste dumps1 murder trials and lurid love triangles. Everybody knows that. Then how do you explain the success of .. Thc Family Circus"? Tbedailycomicserics, wbichjustcelcbratcdits 25th year of publication, now appears in al.most 1,200 newspapers. The cartoon is featured in 32 By PHIL SNEIDEBMAN °'_.._, ........ paperback compilations and 10 treasury albums that have sold more than 13 million copies. .. Family Circus .. characters have even leaped out of the funny pages to SW' in three animated TV s~s. They've shown upon .. FamilyCircus .. T - shins, posters. beach towels, coffee mugs, calendars.. jig.saw puzzles and collectible figurines. And how do you explain .. Family Circus" cartoonist Bil Keane, a nice, mild-mannered 62- year-old grandfather? His own five children are adults. rct he still manages to capture the joys and frustrauons of childhood-and parenthood-in a panel that focuses on four youngsters, none older than 7. .. Child~n themselves don't change, .. Keane insists. "The accoutcnnents change. The toys and some of the language may change, but the attitudes don't change. ··we have fourgrandchil~n that I follow around for ideas to keep the cartoon fresh. I like to lceepmy attitudes young by observing kids and seeing movies. I think it would be possible for a cartoon to become StaJ?&Dt. but the important thjflg is that the reader who identifies wittt'Tbc Family Circus' knows it is a J 98S family that could live down the street." To keep up with the times. Keane bas included jrcftrenc:es to Prince and Cyndi Lauper. lie'sgjval younaBilly newsncakcnwith Velcroclosu.rcsin place of the laces that always seemed to come unucd He's put the family on the road in a modern mini- van, Despite the3econtemporary touches., some people mi.t'll lllUC ilat the haircuis. clothina. and above all the wholesome lelllibility of the panel are more cbarlcteristico(tbe l 9SOs-the era wbeo Bil Keane's own children were youoaand mischievous. ButnoonetcemStobecomplaininatooloudly. ln &ct. rcaden in tome cities have rated "The Family_ Circu1" as t.heirfavon1e funny-toppina even "Peanuts.•• Keane has earned uch devotion by aimi DI not 'Family Circus' outgrows "I'm makln' o list of al the states we see on license plates. I've got 49 to go." for the be Uy laugh. but for the smile ot recognitJon . .. The unusual thingabout'TbefamilyCircus' is that f'm not afraid to be tender and show love " Keane says. "Some of the cartoons~ not mwt to be funny. They make philosophical statements or talk about the power of prayer. Jn fact, I'll throw out ideas because they'~ too exaggeratively funny and not as beUevcable as l want the strip to be." To maintain credibility with bis Middle America audience, Keane bas based his cartoon family in a split-level Midwestern home. But since 1959, the anist himselfhas ltvcd principally in Paradise Valley, Ariz. In the summer months, Keane and bis wife, Thcl, escape the desert heat by rclocatin,g to South Laguna. He says Laguna Beach was a favorite vacation spot for his famify. He picked his Blue lagoon condo complex partly beca.use it'sC<\uipped for the Keanes' fa vorite pasume, tennis. Still, South Laguna is a long way from Pennsxlvania. where William Keane was bor:n in 1922. (He shortened his name to "Bil" while working on a school humor magazine with several buddies who also spelled their names with unconventional twists. Tbe cartoonist eventually made .. Bil'' his lcplname.) "lean still remember my childhood in Philadelphia," Keane says. "I lived through the Dcpresston. I had two brothers, a sister, my mother and my father. I can mne.mber the happy ttmes. likc aoi• to the beach at Wildwood, NJ. t can remember my fathcrcuttina the lawn and my motbcroookina an the kitchen. I remember the happy feeling ofour borne." • Kcanc'sanistic sJcills just seemed 10 come natwaUy. , "Wbeft I WU pna to hi&h school, I tauabt m~f to draw by unitating the mapz.ine c:artoon1sts I idoliJJed, IDOl\ly in the NcwYotker. lstill tbintit's a .,od way foryo4&a1attim to learn, tbouJ!:t l.d reoom.meod they ca.tea class in COft\mercial arts for tbebuica. "But they sbou.ldn •t Jet that stop t.bem from <:<>pyi na their favorite artists. If I DOC plaajarism. Tbere•s =·" thoCRative arts .-ho cloeso'1 imitatc.E tbumidol" T"<> o ne searly idols \\'Cte Al Ca.pp. wbo aatcd "Li'l Abner," and Cbartes Addams. best three rings "See if we con get one neor the ke machine." known for his morbid humor panels. Keane spent three years m the Arm-r dunng World.War II. His drawings appeared m·Yanl ma~me and Pacific Stars and Stnpcs. In I C)48. he ma:ned ~helma Came. an Australian t\e had met while stationed the~. The couple bad five children For 15 years after the war. Keane was a staff arust for the Philadelphia Bulletin newspaper During the I 9SOs. he began drawing the syndicated "Channel Chuckles" cartoon feature about tele- v1s1on. He also drew free-lance cartoons for vanou~ magazmcs. ~tty soon. Keane rttalls. the frec...lan~ canoon work "became the la.JI that wagged the dog ·· ~nd bequH basothcrnewspapercbores. At the sam~ ume. Tbel Kcanewasgrowingwearyofthe harsh Pennsylvania winters. Ind the famihy moved to Arizona. lnspa.ration for family humor wasn't hard to find. . "I started drawing the cartoons at home with 1he k.idsunda-foot." lhcartist says. ··1 didn't have to look any further ... Kane sold his new i-nel to the RcgJStcr and TribuncSyodicate.,and the first waspubh hed on Feb.·29.1960. Tomate1tstandoutamoaaothcr sh~i-nel cart.oom.. Keane put bis characters a.n tbe round and calleCl his cartoon"~ Fam 1ly Cirde ... ~months after 1t appeared, Family Cud e map.Doc threatened tosueovcrthcoom1c's utle. K~cba.QIO(l h to .. The Family Circus.." which he decided was more appropi iatc. anyway ~-DANB/Paa• 121 Deity Plo1 Datebook/ Fnday, August 18, 1985 2 • A• IGI IS I SM TW TFS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. 10 11 12 13 141 5 1617 -18 1920212223 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 CQI l\llRY Friday AMERICAN MADE perform!> from 8 pm -1 30 am at the Cnvy Hor~ Saloon, 1580 Bmokhollow, Santa Ana 549-1512 Saturday AMERICAN MADE, !>ee Fnday hsllng Sunday CRAZY HORSE featu re!> the Cali - fornia ( ountry Mu!>1C Awards w11h an all -Amencan barbecue from 4-7 p.m and conunuous hve music. 1580 Brooldlollow, Santa Ana. 549-1 512. llonday JOHN ANDERSON performs in conccn at 7 and 10 p.m at lhc Cra.z)' Horse SaJoon, I 580 Brook.hoUow, Santa Ana SIS.SO adm1ss1on. 549-151 2. Tueeday WINDFALL CROSSING performs from 8 p.m -1 30 a.m. at lhc Crazy Horse Saloon. 1580 Broolchollow, Santa Ana 549-1 512. Wedneeday WINOFALL~ING, sec Tues- day hsung. Also tonight only arc free country dance lessons by Ron and Donna at 7:30 pm. T ha.nday WINDFALL CROSSING, sec Tues- day hsung. Cl AS91CAL Friday ED HOLZ, producer, composer. arranger, orchestrator, conductor and musician. performs Mo n -Sat. 4 30-8:30 pm . at the Anaheim Hilton and Towers' Avenue Bar. 777 .. Don •t Talk to Stra.nien .. Bat yoa 're Rn to ftDd pleat)' of maatcal frlenda amonc tbe fana of former 909p opera .tar Rick. 8prtacfleld when be perfonu at 7:30 p.m. Thanday at Paclflc Amphltbeatre, 100 Fa.Ir Drln, ea.ta lie.a. Ttcket8 are $16.50 and $12.50. 4 OWty Pllot Da1eb00k/ Friday, Augu11 16, 1985 Convention Way, Anaheim. 740-4268. Saturday ED HOU, sec Fnday listing. lloaday -~ ED BOU, see Fnday listing. Tueeday THE WESTMINSTER CHORALE gathers each Tuesday from 7-9 p.m. and invites anyone to parttcipate in their concerts, sing outs, and other act1v1ties planned. The broad reper- toire includes many musical styles. Westminster Senior Ciuzen's Center. 895-1700, 775-3376. ED HOU, sec Fnday listing. Wedneeday • ED HOU , sec Fnday listing. Thund&y ED HOU, sec Fnday lming. Friday CLARINETIST BOB KEANE and His Orchestra, with Lorraine Feather, play for dancinJ and listening in a series of swing dances. 8:30 p.m -12:30a.m.,Anahe1m Hilton and Towers, 777 Convention Way, Anaheim. Dance lessons arc offered at 7:30 p.m. and are free with the $6 general admis~ion. 740-4268. LEE FERREU, pianist, sax- ophonist, vocalist, and comedian, appe&rs with Hal Ratliff and Laura Vida. T ues.-Tburs. 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m., Fn.-Sat 9 p.m.-1 a.m., the Newporter Resort, 1107 Jamboree Road. Newpon Beach. 644-1700. LINDA CALOWELL, vocalist. ap- pears Wed.-Sat. 8 p.m.-12:30 a.m. at Cano's Restaurant, 2241 W. Coast H1&hway, Newpon Beach, 631-1381. CECILIO' KAPONO perform in concert at The Golden Bear, 306 Pacific Coast Highway. Hunungton Beach. 9~5436. THE ACTORS appears at the Sunset Pub from 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m., 16655 Pacific Coast H1ahway, Sunset Beach. (213) 592-1926. RAVEU, now open in The Reais- lry Hotel, is a plush new niahtclub which features state-of-the-art sound system-and music videos. Dancing niahtly until 2 a.m. with Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. from 4-7 p.m. Free valet parkini, proper attire required. No cover, no minjmum. 752-8777. THE HOP presents lhe First An- nuaJ O ass Reunion witll__a_buffct from 5-1 p.m. Featured hosts arc The Righteous Brothers. 'SOs attire re- quested. Other activities dunng the week: "Rocle and RolJ Heaven." a tribute to rock's legends featuring Greg Topper, Monday at 8 p.m.; "Rock Around The Ooclc," a history of rock and roll featunng Jason Chase, Tuesday at 8 p.m.; Crazy Contests each Thursday; and lots of dancina Fridays-Saturdays with e mcee J oel Steven. 18774 Broolchurst .. Fountain Valley. 963-2366. Sahl.rday CULT\JRE CLUB appears in.con- cen at 8 p.m. at the -Pacific Amphitheatre, 100 Fair Dnve, Costa ~~· Karma chameleon comtna Brttata '• top recordlDC arttat of the year Boy Oeor&e will l•d tbe Culture Clab at 8 p,m. Satuday uad hnday tn Pactllc Amphltbeatre, 100 l'a.lr Drift, C011ta lleu.. Ticket.a for tbe concerta co9t $19.25 uad $14. Phone 834-1300. Mesa. $19.25 and $1 4 admission. 634-1300. THE HOP, see Fnday hst1ng. THE LE'M'ERMEN perform at 8 p.m. at lhe La Mirada Civic Theatre, 14900 La Mirada Blvd., La Mirada. 99'4-6310. UNDA CALDWELL, sec Friday liJl..in&.- CEal.JO fr IUPONO, sec Fnday listing. THE ACTORS, sec Fnday listing. LEE FERREl.!Lt sec Friday listing.. RAVEU, sec Fnday listina. Sanday CLARINETIST BOB llEANE and His Orchestra, with Lorraine Feather, play for dancina and liatenina from 6 p.m.-midniaht at the Breakers Hotel, CaJifomia Room, 210 E. Ocean Blvd., Lona Beach. $7 admission. (213) 432-8781. RAVELS, see Friday list1na. THE HOP, see Friday hattna. Monday THE HOP, see Friday hstina. CLARINETIST BOB KEANE and HisOn:hC$tra1 with LorraineFeathcr. play for dancma and list~ni~. from 7:JO. I I :30 p.m. at the Alpme 11Jaae. the New Alpine Inn, 833 W. Torrance Blvd., Torrance. Free admission. (2 13) 323-6S20. RAVEU see Fndu_tisti.na. Taeeday THE BOP, see Frida)' listing. LEE FERREU1 ICC Friday hsung. RAVELS, see Fnday listina. Wedaeeday RA VEU, see Friday listina, LINDA CALDWELL, sec Friday listina. LEE FERRELL, see Friday lisung. Tla~J RICK SPRINGFIELD appean an concert at 7:30 p.m. at the Pacific Amphitheatre, 100 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. S 16.SO and S 12.50 admission 634-1300. THE BARRY JAMES OR· p.m.-1:30 a.m.; the Alex Taylor QUARTET, sec fnday bstmg. Quartet Tues. from 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m.; CAFE UDO, sec Friday listing. the New York Jazz Connectiolt'Wtld. RON'S IN LAGUNA, see fnday 1•-..=~;l'\~~·L.Jl=1i~·--· Anaheim Bowl Ballroom, 1925 W. Lincoln. Anaheim. 774-4710. from 9 p.m.-1:30 a .m. 2900 Newport lisung, . CONFREY PlllLLIPS, see Friday listing. Blvd .. Newport Beach. 675-2968. C DNT I NU .ED THE NEW YORK JAD. CONNEC-RON'S IN LAGUNA, see Friday listing. Saturday TION appears each Sunday from 8:30 CAFZ LIDO, sec Friday listing. p.m. at the Off Broadway, 1108 E. CBESTR.A, directed by Joe Graves, from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. at the Avenue bar. RON'S IN LAGUNA, see Friday K.atella, Orange. 639~3354. "WBIZZARD" with GERRY SCHROEDER appears from 8 p.m.- midnight at the Sunset Pub, 16655 Pacific Coast Highway, Sunset Beach. (2 13) 592-1926. oerfonns as part of UC Irvine's 740-4268. 1. · r.tooocru Under the Stars." Bring a CONFREY PIULLIPS, who has an istmg. Monday picnic dinner and enjoy pre-concert intimate style of playing jazz piano, THE GEOR GE GRIFFIN CAFE lJDO, see Friday lisung. entertainment at 6 p.m .. main per-appears at the Newport Mandarin QUARTET, sec Friday listiag. CAFE UDO, see Fnday listing. formance begins at 8 p.m. UCI's Tues.-Sat. from 5:30-9:30 p.m .• 3950 I' ~NFREY PHILLIPS, see Friday T'aeeclay Aldrich Park. lrvine. Free admission. Campus Drive, Newport Beach. istmg. CONFREY PHILLIPS, see Friday 856-5252. 852-0900. - - ----1· t' -Thmeday _ REDS perform at the Sunset Pub CAPE UDO presents Judi Lee Sanday _ _ 15 mg. CAFE UDO, sec Fnday listing. from8:30p.m.-la.m.,16655 Pacific playing thepianoandsingingMon.-GEORGE VANEPS and TONY CAFE~~sec fnday listing. THE GEOR GE G RIF FIN Coast Highway, Sunset Beach. (213) Fri. 5-8 p.m.; the Lido Jazz All-Stars RIZZI perfonn from 7:30-11:30 p.m. Weclne.day QUARTET, see Friday hsung. 592-1926. Thurs.-Sat. 9 p.m.-1 :30 a.m. and Sun. at the Sunset Pub, 16655 Pacific RON'S IN LAGUNA, see Fnday LEEJl'ERREU..seeFnday listmg. 3:30-8 p.m.; "Freeway," featuring Coast Highway, Sunset Beach. (2l3) BRUCELEONARD,aswing vocal-listing. _LlN_j)A. CALD~ ... see Friday Max Bennett on bass, Sun. 9 p.m.-1 592-1926. · 1st formerly with the Charlie Spivak CONFREY PHILLIPS, see Fnday listing. a.in.; "Dream" Mon. from ~ "THE GE-ORGE GRIFRIN or.chestra,-appears eaeh Wed. at the listing. DAVID LINDLEY & EL RAYO X ,.-------------------------------------·-------------are featured at the Golden Bear, 306 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach. 960-5436. RAVELS, see Friday listing. THE BOP, see Friday listing. ,epzz RON'S IN LAGUNA offers dis.- tinctive dining and uncomparablc entertainment with Davi<i Raleigh at the keyboards performing a sophisti- cated hip-jazz-blues style of music. Wed . ..Sun. 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. 1464 S. Coast Highway., Laguna Beach. 497-4871. THE GEORGE GRIFFIN QUARTET performs soul-stirring jazzTburs . ..Sun. from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. at the Anaheim Hilton and Towers Lobby Bar, 777 Co1avcntion Way. Anaheim. They also appear Sun. Recordlnl •tar John Andenon will •o beyond ••The ltye of tfie Rurrle&11e•• when he per- fonne at 7 and 10 .~ p.m. llondaJ at tile Crasy Bone Saloon, Santa Ana. Tlcketa $18.&0. Pilon• 5'9-1612 for reeez•atlona. MUS/C ,/N THE AIR • -NEWPORT CENTER f AS-~ l t l ) N I S LAN l) .. join us for a kaleidoscope of music presented daily begin- ning August 8. Preview fall fashions first at Fashion Island. Watch for informal modeling Fridays and Saturdays. Performance Schedule: Monday-Friday 11 :45-1 :45 Thursday & Friday evenmgs 6:00-8:()() Saturday & Sunday 12:30-2:30 Neiman-Marcus, Robinson's, Bullocks Wilshire, The Broadway, Buffums and lrvme Ranch Farmers Market Over 80 fine stores m all. Just off P~cif1c Coast Highway betweeq Jamboree and MacArthur Blvds. m Newport Beach. OaQy Pltot Oltet>ookf Friday, August 16, 1985 I ,1 ... :~A~~~1 ... 11iiiiii.l\1:1AJ•-I CONTINUED d1scuss1on among art collectors and consult.ants covers reasons why indi- v1duaJs and corporations buy art, how they buy. and what relationship artists can have with lh osc who want 10 own an. Presented by the Irvine Fine Arts Center $4 members. SS gcnt>ral adm1ss1on. SS2-1078. Saturday A SANDCASTLE BUILDING workshop 1s taught by Kent Trollen, local architect and world sandcastle champion. Session for beginners starts at 9 a.m. and the advanced follow at IOa.m. Th1s1s heldaspartof United Way's Campaign Kiclcofl Sandcastle Contest. Seal Beach City Beach. J USt north of the pier. 97 1-7300. "FACILITATED TOPICS AND GROUP SHARING." An ongoing exploratton into new poss1b1hues of loving ltfe, learning about yourself, and makmg new fnends, 1s offered at 7:30 p.m. For infonnat1on, call 631-3S26. A CONFERENCE FOR WOMEN features 18 work.shops ~hd 1wo gunl speakers a1 the Westin South Coast Plaza in Costa Mt>sa "Strategies for uccess. ( arecr, Personal and Fam1h Choices" 1s th e theme of the i::on'- ference. which 1\ d~1gned to add~s lhe contemporary problems and con- cerns of women. Maf)one Ha.rscn Shaevitz, author of "The Supe r- woman Syndrome," 1s the featured morning spealcer. 8 a.m.-S p.m Presented by Coastline Communtty College. $30 fee includes luncheon at tbe Westin 241-6186. Ttlada~ ""ADULTS RETURNING TO COLLEGE." Saddle back College coun~lors discuss the cuniculum, opportunities and services availablt' at Saddleback. Designed for adults interested in returning to school for personal and professional developm- ment. 7 p.fl\.. Science/Math 313., 28000 Marguertte Parkway. M1ss1on Viejo. 83J-4S71 "STR~ MANAGEMENT." Pres- ented by the Counsehng Services and 'Spcctal Programs Division ofSaddle- back College as a public service Noon. Library JOS. 28000 Marguentt' Parkway. Mission VieJO 83 1-4S7 1 FILM Friday "HA WMPS," a comedy about a U S Cavalry outpost which replaces hones with camels. 1s presented to famili~. friends, and entire neigh- borhoods tonight as part of a Family Film Festival held each Friday night. Bring low-backed beach chairs, blankets. pillows and the kids 10 the outdoor amphitheatre on the Golden West Campus. 15744 Golden West St., Hunttngton Beach. Picnic ttme is 6:30 with the films starting at dusk. SI .SO admission. $6 per family maxi- mum Festival conJinues through Aug. 24. 89 1-3991 Wednaday "THE ART ENTHUSIASTS: C ol-Friday lec1ors and Consultants .. .\ panel "ANYTHING GOES" at the Buena . «:. / IA-. --1 Discover the BEST in Education At the Coast Community Colleges Orange Coast College Coastline Community College Golden West College The Cocist Colleges Offer Convenie nce. Affordab1ltty , D1vers1ty, and QUALITY I A l •'V ""• •'•u '. ,,, .. You Get the BEST in Transfer Programs, J ob Trai ning and Career Advanceme nt Regiatration ia Underway Now Fall Classes Begin AUGUST 19 . Call Today For Registration Information· Orange Coa•t (114) 432-5112 Coa•tline (114) 5"-1600 Golde n West (7l4) 895-8306 P .S . ·--If you can't begin in August, "la te-s tarting" classes will get unde rway in September and O ctober. • Dally Piiot Detebook/ Fr1day, August 16, 1985 . America goea to apace Dynamlc luen add to the ezcltement u eoq and dance prodacdone recall hl9torlca1. aTiation aceompn.Jamenm ln a new •bow ander the wttura of the Spruce Gooee ln LonJf Beach. lluaJc from u2oiC).l' .. Star Wan" and .. Star Trek" accompaniea the action at l , 3, 5 and 7 p.m. throacJa Sept. :l. Park C1v1c Theater. 81 SO Knott Ave., Buena Park (82 1-1010), Fndays and Saturdaysat 8 p.m throu&h Aug. 31 "A CHORUS LINE" at the Grand Dlnner Theater. I Hotel Way, Anaheim ( 772-77 10), nightly except Mondays at varying curtain times through the end of the year "EVERYTHING IN THE GAR· DEN" at the Irvine Community Theater, Turtle Rock Community Park, Sunnyh1ll Road ofTTurtle Rock Drive, Irvine (8S7-5496). Fndaysand Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Aug. 24, matinee Sunday at 2 p.m. "GREASE" at the Harlequin Din- ner Playhouse, 3S03 S. Harbor Blvd .. Santa Ana (979-SS 11 ). nightly except Mondays a1 varying curtain times through Sept. IS. "JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT" in the Drama lab !fhcater at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa (432-5880), Thursdays through Sat- urdays at 8 p.m .. 2:30 p.m. until Aug. 2S. "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" a1 Sebastian's West Din- ner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492-9950), Wt'dnesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at I and 7 p.m. 1hrouah Sept. 22. "OLIVER" 11 the Curtain Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real. Tusun (838-IS40), nightly except Mondays a1 varying curtain umes throuah Oct. 27 "THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE" at the Huntmgton Beach Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue, Huntington Beach (832-140S). Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Aua. 24, maunees unday and Aug. 11 at 2:30. "SHAK ESPEARE AlJVE" at the Gem Theater, 18262 Main St • Oar- den Grove (636-7213). Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sunday' at 7:30 until Aug. 31. "THE TAMING OP THE SHREW" at the Festival Amphitheate'j I 28S1 Main St., Garden Grove (63o-72 13). Thursdays through Sundays at 8 30 until SepL 8. "TOM SAWYER" by the Fountain Valley Community Theater at Gold· en West College Forum II (895-8378) final performances Saturday and Sunday at~m. "THE ARROW" at th~ Newport Theafer Arts Center. 250 I Cliff Drive, Newport Beach (631-0288), Thursdays through Sat· urdaysat 8p.m., Sundays at 2:30 unul Aug. 25. "WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?" by the C.abarct Repertol) Theater in the Curtis Theater, Brea Civic CuJturaJ Center, I Civic Center Circle, Brea (879-686S), final per- formances tomaht and Saturday a1 8 p.m .. Sunday at S p.m. S.ta.rday "ANYTllJN°G GOES" at tbe Buena Park Civic Theater. Sec Friday h~t· inf. 'A CHORUS LINE" at the Gr1nd Di nner Theater. See Friday listang. ..EVERYTHING IN ..TBE GAR· DEN" at the Imnc Commun1t} Theater. See Fnday ltstina. "GREASE" at the Harlequin Dtn· ncr Playhouse. See Friday ltstina. "J~EPH AND THE AMAZING TEOINlOOLOR DREAMOOAT" :u Oranac Coast College. Sec Fnday listina. "LAST OF THE RED . HOT LOVERS" at Sebastian·~ We t 01n ncr Playhouse. Sec fridl!}' hstina. "OLIVER" at the Cunain ('nil Dinner Theater. Sec Friday listing. "THE PIRATES OP PENZANCE" at the Hun1inaton Beach Playhouse Send yo kids to e Disney Cha-1-1el t · er. Your Id~ will love Walt ~ney's magical animated classics The Sword in the Stone and Allee in Wonderland. They'll also enjoy a ton of movies your whole family will sit down and watch together for a change. They're guaranteed to light up your child's summer like the wave of a magic wand. Summer's the time for nature studies too. The Disney Olannel has terrific movies this summer. They're perfect for a family evening together --with subject matter that will appeal to all of you. Summer's the time for laughter. Enter the Disney .cartoons. The Disney ('..hannel brin~ the outdoors indoors, for closer observation. And will send your children outside with new insights and awareness. There's so much more. You11 just have to subscribe to see. Call your cable company today. ----------. -- ---- - ..-----------------. -Copley/Colony Cablevision ·~ of Costa Mesa ~ 549-3500 f1. L---------·------------------------------------------------\ I :Al C D N See Fnday hst1ng. "SHilESPEARE ALIVE" at the Ge m ThcatCT. Ste Fnday listing.. "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW" at the Grove Shakespeare FcsttvaJ. See Fnday listJng. "TOM SA WYER" by the Fountain Valley C.ommunuy Theater at Gold- en West Collcie. Sec Fnday listing. "THE WHITE ARROW" at lhe Ncwpon Theater Ans C~nter. Sec Friday listing. "WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?" at the Brea Cultural Center. See Friday hsung. Sa.nday "A CHORUS LINE'' at the Grand Dinner Theater. Sec Fnday ltsung. "GREASE" at the Harlequin Din- ner Playhouse. See Fnday listing. "JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT" at Orange Coast College. Sec Fnday Ii sung. "EVERYTHING IN THE GAR- DEN" at the Irvine Community Theater. Sec Fnday listing. "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" at Sebastian's West Din- I D ncr Playhouse. Sec Fnday lisung. "OUVER" at lhe Curtain Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday hsung.. "SHAKESPEARE ALIVE" at the Gem TheatCT. Sec Fnday listing. "THE WHITE ARROW" at the Newpon Theater Ans Center Sec Fnday listing. "WHO'S AFR..UD~ OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?" at the Brea Cultural Center. Sec Friday listing. Tueeday "A CHORUS LINE" at the Grand Dinner Theater. See Fnday hstmg. "GREASE" at the Harlequin Dan- ner Playhouse. Sec Fnday listing.. . "OUVER" at the Cun.a1n C'all Dinner Theater. Sec Fnday listing -Wedneeday 7A CHORUS UNE" at the Grand Di nner Theater. Sec Fnday hsung. "GREASE" at the Harlt'.C)Uln Dan- ner Playhouse. Sec Fnday hsung. "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" at Sebasuan's West Din- ner Playhouse. Sec Fnday hstmg. "OUVER" at the Curuun Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday lisllng. , GRAND OPENING Saturday August 17, 1985 10am to 6pm Exclllltg, EdUClllloM# Md O.'N#opnHlnllll To,., Sook• •nd Tuchl1t11 Ald9 from AtoUnd The World Toys for Fun and L811t'nlng, Tool At ' I M ISS I ON V I F..JO "SHAKESPEARE ALIVE" al the Gem Theater. Sec Fnday llsung. Tbanday "A CHORUS LINE" at the Grand Dinner TheatCT. Stt Friday listing. "GREASE" at the Harlequin Din- ner Playhouse. Stt Fnday listing. "JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHICOLOR DREAMCOAT" at Orange Coast College Sec Fnday listing. "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" at Sebastian's West Din- ner Playhouse. Stt Fnday hsung. "OLIVER" al the Curtain Call Dinner Theater. Sec Fnday hstang. "SHAKESPEARE ALIVE" at the Gem Theater. Sec Friday lisllng. "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW" at the Grove Shakespeare Festival. Sec Fnday hsllng. "THE WHITE ARROW" at the Newpon Theater Arts Center Sec Friday listing. htday THE LEWITZKY DANCE COM- PANY, known for its innovative choreography. performs works in- cluding 8 dancers/8 hghts. Suttc Sat1c. and Game Plan 8 p.m .. Cal St.ate Long Beach's Un1vers1ty Theater. 27000 Crown Yeller PerkwaJ, luff• 581 lllulon Viejo Mall (Upper level next to Bullock'•) (714) ....... I Dally PJlot Deteboc*/ Frtday, August 18, 1985 a S8 SO general. SS students and seniors. (2 13) 498-5526 8a.nday -TEA DANCING IS featured each SundaydunngAugust from l:J0..4:30 p.m. Guy Halfen y and His Soclety Combo Ort-hestra provide toe-tap- ping tunes from the '"bag band" era. Located in lbc Jewel Coun, South Coast Plaza. Coua Mesa. 241-1700. Monday _ SOUTH COAST MUSICAL THEATRE holds aud1t1ons for their fall season directed by Daniel T rcv1no and choreographed by Peggy Graham. Needed are actors, s10gcrs and dancers with strong ballet and Jazz training. 7 p.m., University dance room. 4771 Campus Dr , Irvine 640-6306 Leonard., formerly with the Charhl' Spivak orchestra. Anaheim Bowl Ballroom~ 192S W Lincoln Anaheim. ~2 donation. 774-4710 SOUTHERN WHEEL OF FJUENDSllJP, for ages 4S and o"cr meeu for Happy Hour from S-7 p m at H.T .'s RcstlUf&OJ.. 164 1 Sunflower, Santa Ana . .544-280S. THE MEADOWLARK SWING DANCE CUJB holds ntaht claS<>e\ and dancini at the Mcadowlar~ Country Club. Beginning dance cla \, at 7 p.m., intermediate at 8 p.m and social dancing begins at 9 p.m \4 with class, $2 for social danc1nJ only. 16782 Graham St., Hun1tngton Beach. (213) 493-7162. WBEl!!L OP FRIENDSHIP, for singles over 4S, meets for dinner at Marie Callcndar's in Tusttn at ti l<1 p. m. 961-0606 or 529-4836. Wednad.ay Tbunday THE MEADOWLARK SWING SOUTH COUNTY SINGLES gather DANCE CLUB, see Singles Wednes-for dancing and entertainment at x d 1 "p.m. each Thursday at the Crown a§'~~~~ COAST MUSICAL House Restaurant, 32802 S. Pac1t11 .,.___ Coast Highway, LaJuna N1gud THEATRE, xi: Monda}' listing. 499--2626 or 496-5773. SING• ES Friday SOUTHERN WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, for ages 4S and over, meets for Happy Hour from S-7 p.m. at the Saddleback Inn Restaurant, 1660 E. First St., Santa Ana. S44-280S WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, for s1n&Jes over 4S, meets at Teu s Looscy's 1n Fullenon, S:30 p.m., for a T.G.r.F. 961-0606 or S29-4836. SatmdaJ - PARENTS WITHOUT PART- NERS of lrv1nc-Newpon hold a monthly dance from 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. with hve music. refreshments. and a pot of gold drawing.. An orientation for prospective new members 1s held from 8· I S-9 p.m Harvard Park Clubhouse, Irvine Members $4, non-members SS S49-l 13S SOUTHEl\N WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, for s1nglcuges 4S and over, meets for an early bird dinner at S p.m. at the County Linc Restauf"IJlt, 461 S Bamnca, Irvine S44-280S THE TEMPLE BETH EMET SinJ.lcs. for 8:&C' 30 and up, go to l < ll'Vlne to cnJOY Harry James in thl· last summer conccn under the star. Bring food and dnnk. sweaters J chair, and a blank.et. The sroupw1ll be sated next to the balJoon. 6 p m 772-4720. Ei C . Frida, - THE ART-A-FAIR FESnVAL of fers de monstrations, pa1n11ng lessons, live entertainment. gue~t speak.en, free portraits, pnze draw- ings, and celebrity guest art1\h lhrouih Sept. I. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-10 p.m .• Fri.-SaL 10 a.m.-11 p.m. La'unaCan~Roadat Can)on Acres, Lquna h. $2 general admission. 494-4514. A HOR.SE SHOW IS held throush Sunday at the Oransc Coun ty Fair- grounds, 100 Fair Dr .. Costa Me'WI 7S J-3247. Satuclay AN OUTDOOR ART-CRAFT F AJR 1s prestnted by the San O ementc An' and Crafts O ub &om ~ a.m.-S p m Sanda More than I 00 anists and craftsmen 1 display and sell a vanety ofitems. San A DISCOVERY d1scuss1on and Clemente C.ommunity Center, IOON S0C1al 11 hosted at 7:30 p.m. each Seville, San Oementc. 492-4631 Sunday at the Orange Coast Unit· arian Church, 12S9 Victona St., THE SOVTllERN CALIFORNIA Costa Mesa. $2 admission. 848-2082. HOME 6 GARDEN SHOW, the WHEEL OF FRIENDSWP, for largest show of its kind in the U.S." sinaJcs over 4S, meets at Meadowlark presented throuaJt Aug. 2S. Exh1b11\ Country Cl ub fo r brunch 81 11.30 include producu for the home and a.m. 961-0606 or S29-4836 garden •. includina room add111on-.. homc~provements, xcunty \'f'\· Monday terns. ts, spas, landscaping. and many thCT items. Helen O'Connc.·11 THE SINGLES TRIVIAL also e tcrtams daily, and "C hina PURS_UIT CLUB meet at 7 p.m. For-La:nd !nchantmcnt" is the theme.· more anformat10n, call 786-4926, Of lbe Spt!Ct.acular flower show. Sat THE TEMPLE BETH EMET noon-I I p.m .• Sun. noon-9 pm ' SINGLES,aacs 30andup,mecllo go Mon.-Thurs. 2-10 p.m. Anaheim dancina at the Phoenix Club, I S66 S. Convention Center, 800 W. K.ttella. Douglass, Anaheim 772-4720 Anaheim. 63.S-8330 Tueeday A NEWCOMERS' ORIENTATION 1s held each Tuesday with the Ncw- pon-1 rvine Chapter of Parents Without Panner\ 8-9: IS pm Coffee and conversation foll ow!>. Call S49-1I3S. Wedneeday "JD'S" SINGLES DANCE CLUB features lessons at 7 p.m.. and dancinna frotn 8· 11 p m. for the over 38 bunch. Also included ·~ miitcrs and contcst1, and men arc admitted fru bcforc 8 p.m. Fcatu~d as Ina Rae's make-believe ballroom mu.sic with thl' swi n&ina vocals of Bruce ARORS£SHOW.scc f nday h)t1ng A GUN SROW 11 held at the Orange C,ounty f a.irJrounds, 9 a.m.-S p m . al 100 Fair Or., Costa Mesa. $3 SO aduJts. $I .SO children. 989-1587 THE ART-A-FAIR FESTJV AL.~· Friday listina. A STAMP Ir COVER SHOW is held from 10 a.m.-8 p.m., and Sun. from lOa.m.-5 p.m. F~turcd isa U.S. Po\I Offic:t SubstatJon w1th plctonal cancel marking the IOOth anniversal) of the psoline-.powered t utomob1le club m~tinp and tables, and door prizes .. Quality Inn., Convention Woy at Hat&or Blvd., Anahdm. 50¢ admiuion Wlth this hst1na.. '41-IOJti Sanday ---POET WANDA COLEMAN and Blues singer Wanda Nowiclu appear at a Rookery Reading. 5 p.m . at Mills House Gallery. 12732 Main St . Garden Grove. $3 adm1ss1on . 638-6707. AN OUTDOOR ART·CRAFT FAIR. sec Saturday lasting THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ROME 6 GARDEN SHOW, sec Satur- day listina. THE JEWISH COMM UNITY CENTER of South Oran.se County bolds a picnic with a acuy1ues that include a volleyball tournament, a frisbec throwing contest, softball. Jewish folk songs and dancing. For the kids lhett arc water balloon games. eu to s. three-legged ra~ and craf\S led by Peggy Feder. AJso offered 1s an amateur cake bakmg contest. BqJns at noon a11he Wilham Mason Rq.ional Park 497-2070 THE ART-A-FAIR FESTIVAL, Stt Fnday hsung. A STAMP a COVER SHOW. sec Saturday hsllng. A 'HORSE SHOW, see fnday h~ung.. llonday THE ART-A-PAIR FESTIVAL, Stt Friday listing. THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HOME la GARDEN SHOW. see Satur- day listing. 'rue.day THE BALBOA SKI CLUB gathers for a meeting and dinner from 8-11 p.m. at the South Shore Yacht Club. 2527 W. Pacific Coo!.t Highway. Ncwpon Beach. 54 1-0263. THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HOME Ir GARDEN SHOW, sec Satur- day listing. FASHION SHOWS arc presented each Tues. and Thurs to music on the harp, noon-I p.m., White HouS<' Rcstaunnt. 887 S Anaheim Blvd. Anaheim. 772-1 381 TREART·A·FAIR FESTIVAL, see Fnday hst1na Wednaday -THEART·A·FAIR FE.STIVAL,scc Fnday listing. THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HOME & GARDEN SHOW, see Satur- day listma, Thunday THE ART-A·F AIR FESTIVAL, see Fnday listing. THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HOME 6 GARDEN SHOW, see Satur- day listing. FASHJON SHOWS, see Tuesday listing. ADVANCE "THE CRmCAL EDGE SYM· POSIUM" featuttsarch1tccts Michael Graves and Charles W. Moore as panelists di1euss1na contemporary architecture and furniture design. Presented by the Newpon Harbor Arts Museum on Sept 14. 91 m ·3:30 p.m. at the Nclsonn Research Auditonum 11 UC Irvine. $30 for NHAM members. students and seniors, $40 acneral adm1ss1on. 759-1122. . !LEN! BOUUDIS, prOJCCl . man· qcr for H1ll·Pinckcrt Architects. conducts a tour of four Or1n&e County build1nas Saturday, Aug. 24. Tht buildings arc by architects who arc currently rcp~nted in "The C'nucal Edie.. tllh1b1tion at the Newport HarboT Art MuJCum. S35 includes a special luncheon. 759-1 IU. JOHN WILLIAMS, acclaimed com- poser. presents his own favontc music from "Indiana Jones." "Star Wars." and "Superman," as well as composjtions by friends such as Andre Prcv1n, on Sat., Sept. 7. S21 includes ticket, transportation, re- freshments and a boll dinner. Departs Irvine Civic Center, 17200 Jamboree Road. Irvine, at 6 p.m. 6~3881. DISNEYLAND'S JITR BlRTB- DA Y is saluted by the Hollyw~ Bowl AUJ.-""24 and the Performing Arts Scct1on of Irvine's Community Services is planning an evening excursion to celebrate. Bus depans at 6 p.m. from Irvine Civic Center. 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine. $21 includes ticket, transportat1on. ~ frnhmcnts and a boll dinner. 6~3881 . NORTHERN EUROPE as the de~ tinauon of an art tour offered by the Newport Harbor An Musucm. Many renowned museums. gallcnes and collccllons are visited with part1C1· pants enjoying special guest status. S2,246 per person, double occupancy, includes deluxe accommodations for 13 nights. transportation Vla deJu,11e motorcoach. professionally guided visits to over 12 art sates and many meals. Sept. 15-29. 1-800-227-3800 - -O..,olJJ.& £TeDta BALBOA PAVILION, 400 Mam St., Bai boa. The pavilion is a state and national historic landmark and marine recreation center which fea- tures daily narrated cruises' of New- port Harbor. deep sea sponfishmg tnpsdaily. U-<irive and charter boats. 673-5245. BRIGGS CUNNINGHAM AlJTO. MOTIVEMUSEUM,250E. Baker t., Costa Mesa. Aouquc cars circa 191 2- prescnt. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wat-Sun. 546-7660. DISNEYLAND, 1313 Harbor Blvd.. Anaheim. The 30th An- niversary Parade cntcna1ns 1ucsts at I and 5 p.m. daily and the New .. Main ·~-- MICHAEL FAYE Haircutting For Men experience O.lty PllOt Datebook/ F:fday, AugUS1 18, 1985 • - ~lHE wt .,1111Ch11&1tataau1aca•11• 0 .1.L ramwmnl'Ollaeoc A Oi11141r .,_Te .... OiMlma ........ OIO..,S C..,. W-AllCl1Ml,U \ HUNTINGTON STATE BEACH ENTRY RE ..,,.. ...... t 1IAM .,.,. ..•. I llAMS N1IJ.,.. _,. ~ .... t'Ol'll .. _ __. ----CM.l.OtOCM09Cll(1'W) SJNMl • • Deify Plot Dwlllbcc*' FrtcMy. ~ 18, 1985 0 N --------, bled streets, lantern lights, and 70 ~"· WiiWWWt &mlftlS&n? mn:DlJ? llWl11181 anw ... REDt.AJm5 . ' .. -"' . • '. p ~4 murals of European scenes painled on at.enor walls by European artists. 894-0747. .. QUEEN Ill.ARY, Lona Bc:ach Harbor at the end of the Lona Bc:ach Fmeway. A spcctacuJar laser ~ duction 1s offered through Lat>M Day f~~~~~~~~;~~ii along with a ctwmina puppet show cntit.lcd .. Talc of the Salty Dog." C.ostwned daoocrs sing and dance to Cole Porter's -Bon V oyagie," -SingJn • not jtut a JeWdry ~ ... FREE ~CHAIN BRACEl.ET wid. 17'5 ,........_ ..... h tWoal • Lc:adn in wholesale pndng to tf\C publ.ic • Dest&ned and manuf.acturcd on pttmha • Custom daamond ld'riQI • Jrwclry repir • R ing 5Uing 7 I 4 /6SO.l I I I 1636 N~ Blvd. Cc:.ta Mesa ,,_ .......,_,__. Mlw.fJOft) ~~ ... - in the Rain." and -Stnke up the Band." Each evening at 9 p.m. bnngs -Saiute to America." a lavish ground and aerial fircworb song and dana: productJon. Exhibits include special effect sound and light shows tn the f.nsjnc Room and Wbcdbouse re- cnactin& a ocar<Ollwon at tea, and an exc.ensive Worid War n display dcpictu'I the ~n's" llCtivc role as a troop1Jup. Daily 9 a.m.-9 p.m. llAGING WATERS, east oo Via Verde off the 210 Fruwa=water attrw::tions indudc The t -a seven Slory dclcent i.n less than four ··seconds. and Ragjoa Rivers - America's lal)ICSt and longest inner tube rapids covering a quarter of a mile o( rapids, dams, and soilhnys. Moa..-Fri. 10 a.m.-10 p.m.. SaL-Sun. 9 un.-10 p..m. $10.95 8dwts, S8.9S 11CS "-11. S92MSJ. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO lllSSION, 31882 Camino C.apisuano. San Juan Caoistrano. Fcatun:s Sc:n:a Cbapcl, cali&wrua's oldest buik1in&. t.be na.ins of tbe Great Stone Qurch. IOldicn bamcb, beautifuJ ~ and two museum rooms wttb artifact.a from Native American and early Spanish culture. ~:JOa.m.-5 p.m. 491-1424. WOll.LD, 1720 s. Sbora R09d, Mission Ba , San ~· Njptly .a.avilics i~ude a dazzlina boat IJUwk of lights oo M1aion Bly, 6teWOf'b, a country Jambol'rlC ~i~~~~ =~~~~': .. Dolphin DiKovcry," t.bc AROO Pt:lloiD Encoua~L.. S7 millJOn Ulu'bit tbal bouleS""" peopins. aod killer whale Sha.mu. Duly 9 Lm.-10 p.m. t.llrousb Sept. l. (619) ~3901 u PLAYS .. A CBOBUS LINE," an award winnina musical, is in its Orange County premiere at lhc Gnind Dinner Theater, I Hot.el Way, Anaheim (772-7710). Per- fonnanoes are &i~ niJhtJy except Mondays al varyina c::una.in t1mC'\ through the end of 1985. ,..EVERYTHING IN THE GAR- DEN," a drama about prostJtullon 1 n the suburbs, i.s bcinJ Pf'CXO &.Cid by lbc Irvine Commurut)'. Theater at • Turtle Roct C.ommuruty Park. on SunnyhiU Road off Turtle Rock Drive, lrvinc (&S?-5496). Per· formanocs will be given Fndays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. lhrouah Aug. 24 with a ma.t.ince Sunday at 2 p.m · '"G~" a ~-musical about t.bc 1950s. is the an.ract1on at the KarlcqWn Dinner P!ayhou!>C. 3503 S. Halbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-S5 I I ). Perl'onnanoes are gs ven nightly except M'oodais at varymg curtain times through Sept. 15. "JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DR.E.UICOAT," a musical SC'1 in biblical times. p:on stage as the summer mus1~f Orange C.out College in Costa Mcsa(432-S880). Pa1ormances are Th~ys through Saturdays at !( ~Sm. a.nd Suodayut 2:30 until Aug.. \, "LAST OP THE RED HOT LOVERS," a Neil Simon comedy, 1s Lhc late at Sebastian's West Dinner Playboute in San Clemente (492-950). Perl'om>.,,ca arc given Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at I and 1 p.m. unlll Sept. 22. "OLIVER.,'" the musical version of .. Otiver Twist," is on StqC at lhe Curtain c.au Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real. Tustin (838-1 S40). Performances arc given nightly except Mondays at varying curtain times through Oct. 27. .. TBE PIRATES OP PENZANCE," a Gilben and Sullivan musical, is bein& prescntcd by lbc Huntington Beach Play- house, Main Street at Y orttown Avenue in the Seadiff VIiiage shoppmg cent.er (832-140S). Per· formances arc Fridays and Satur- days at 8:30 through A'-'8-24. .. THE TAMING OF TBE SBBEW,'" a Shakespearean com· cdy, opens tonight at the Grove Shakespeare FcstJval i" the Festival Amphitheater adja<lcnt to the Gem Theater, 123S2 Main SL, GaJ'den GroV\: ( 636-721 J). Performances arc &ivco Tbundays through Sun- dayiat 1:30 until Sepl. 7. "'l'Olti SAWYER." a rnusJcal vcnion ol the children'• c1assJc. completes its run ror the Fountain Valley Community Theater at fOC'um 11 in Goldca-Wcst Collele. Huntinston Be8cb (19~37B) rusal petfonnancea arc Saturday and Sunday at 2;30 p.m. '"TRB W&llB AJUlOW "an ong- mal musical abovt Robln Hood. conbnucs at the Newpcw1 "Theater AIU Ccn&a, lX>I OiW Drive, Newport 8acb (631-0288). Per-bmuc:a will be pvco Tbundays tbroulh Sa~ al a p.m.. an- days at 2::30. u.nbl Aas. 2S. MuSEUMS BOWERS MUSEUM, 2002 N. Main St., Sant.a Ana. "An Olympic Winner" presents the collect1on of color photographs by the Register's photo staff. Ooscs Sunday .. Ban Chiang: Arctiacological Treasures from Prehistoric Thailand" includes over 1.000 objects fashioned from bronze, shell, clay, calcite, and glass excavated from the Ban Chiang region of Thailand. They date from 3600 B.C. to 200 A.O. Conunues through Sept. 30. Also presented 1s a not.able display of baskets woven'by the lodians of the Panamint moun· t.ai ns in the ·Death Valley area. Through Jan. 6. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.·5 p.m .. Sun. noon-5 p.m. 972-1900. LACtJNA BEACH MUSEUM OF ART, South Coast Plaza Sue, Carousel Court. "California Con tem- porary Artists 26 and 27" feature!> sculpture installations by Mineko Gnmmer and paintinss. drawings and prints by Joanne Juhan. Through Aug. 31. Mon.-Fn. noon-8 p.m .. Sat.- Sun. noon-5 p.m. 662-3366. NEWPORT HARBOR ART MU· SEUM, 850 San Clemente Dnve, Newport Beach. "The Cnt1cal Edge: Controversy in Recent American Architecture" examine!> s1gn1ficant changes occumng in contemporary American architecture. Running con- currently is "Future Furniture," an exhibition of futunst1c works by 15 architects. artists, and des.liners. Both th rough Sept. 22. Tues.-Sun. • 10 a.m.-S p.m. 759-1122. GALLERIES THE AFTERNOON GALLERY, 503 Parle Ave .. Balboa Island. Orig- inal watercolors of Ruth Hynds and Nancy Phelps are presented as well as sculpture by Richard Hall. mixed media by Mimi Sharon Stein, and impressionist oil paintings by Dede Wilcox Eddy. Continues through August. Wed.-Fri. 2-6 p.m .. Sat.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. 675-8675. ALLENDALE GALLERY, 1540 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Ben· nett st:ulpture is shown exclusively. Tues.-Sun. IOa.m. to 5 p.m. 497-6005 or 675-9534. ARTISTIC I GALLERY, 17300 Seventeenth St.. Tustin. ··Meuot1nt Masten," a national touri ng exhibit featuring Tom10 Yokot and K.B. Hwang, 1s ellhib1tcd through Sunday. Mon.-Fn. 10 a.m.-6 p.m .. Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m .. Sun. 11 a.m .J p.m. 731-5432. BLUEBIRD GALLERY, 1540 S. Coast Highway , Laguna Beach. Works bf early Cahfom1a artists including Payne. Hills. Wendt Harris and many others. are on display indefi nitely. Tues.-Sun 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 497-S377. BOWERS MUSEUM GALLERIA, 2036 Main St., Santa Ana. Paintings. glassware, prints. jewelry, fibers. ceramics and fine art 11ems arc featured indefinitely. Wed.-Sat. I I a.m.-4 p.m.. Sun. noon-3 p.m. 972-1900. CALLIGRAPHIC ARTS, 22 19 Main St .. #3~. HuntinJtOn Beac~. Works in vanous media by Calh· craphk Arts' insvuctors and other artist• arc shown through Aug. 31 Mon . .S.t. 1-5 p.m. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 96()..5775. COAS'IUNE COMMUNITY COL- LEGE,CollefCCenter.11460Wamer Ave., Fountam Valley. Theart fac.ulty of the oollcae bas placed van~~" paintina.s and 1eulpturc on edubn throu&h~pt. 9. Mon.-Thurs. 8a.m.-6 p.m .• rn. 8 a.m.-5 e.m. 546-7600. DESIGNS RECYCLED GAL Ll!:AY, 6l9 N. Harbor Blvd., Full- erton. "Glass -Summer '85" 1s preacnted th rouah Aua, 29. The work of 15 American glass artists 1s showcased. Mon.-Sat 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 879-1391. ETTINGER GALLERY, 2222 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. "Visual Ans: '85.'' an all-media open juned ellhibit, with juror Roland Reiss, is featured . Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-IOp.m., Fri. 9a.m.-S p.m .. Sat. 9 a.m.·I p.m. 497-3309. GALERU CAPISTRANO, 31681 Ca mino Capistrano, San Juan Capi~trano. Opening tomorrow is "Poster EJ1travanganza," a show of famous images by R.C. Gorman, Helen Hardin, John Nieto, Georgia O'Keeffe, T.C. Cannon and more. Available framed and unframed. Through Scft. 15. Dai~y I 0 a.m.-5 p.m. 661-17 I. GLENDALE FEDERAL GAL- LERY, 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. The Watercolor Connection, a group of distinguished Southern California painters, shoW5 recent watercolors through Aug. 28. 675-0388. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE Fine Arts Gallery, 15744 Golden West St .. Huntinston Beach. Sculpture, paint- ings, pnnts and other art worlc by the Studio Anists ofHunungton Beach is on dUplay beginning Mon. and continues through Aug. 29. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-2 p.m., evenings by appoint- ment. 895-8361. HOTEL MEIUDIEN ART GAL- LERY, 4500 MacArthur Blvd .. New- port Beach. A ward-winning water- colors by Ruth Hynds, depicting the energy and beauty of the California coast and Newport Beach/Balboa landmarks, arc featured through Aug. 30. 476-2001. BUl'fJ:'INGTON BEACH LI- BRARY Information and Cultural Center, 7111 Talbert Ave., Hunt- ington Beach. Jorge Arau's tapestries, woven with the fibers he dyes from a cactus filament called henequen, are exhibited through Aug. 842-4481 , ext. 33. LA BAGUETTE, South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. The seascapes and florals of Janet Bryant, artist. actress and singer from Newpon Beach, arc exhibited. Daily 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. 640-1 130. NEWPORT BEACH CITY HALL GALLERY , 3300 Newport Blvd .. Newport Bea€h. Featured arc Olis and pointillism by Kellogg, and brush and ink by Soozy West Through Sept. 25. Mon.-Fri: 8 a.m.-S p.m. 528-1258. l~GNIACANCf Flt l:GO 1:15. lt.1t ed war ds llOO CINt ~.1A ~···. ·.: ".:····· 613 8350 "t"" II' f • If. .. M SAT/911:30 JAl:tl &:lS, lt.1t Fuuy fll•menta featarecl Jorae Araa dye. the cactu ftben be uee to create the tapenrle. on dbtplay ~ Aacaat at the Bantmatoo 8eac.la Library and lnformatfon Center, 7111 Talbert AYe. LAKEWOOD 1i...c-ntc , lnJIU1 .... ...,, I. c..-·• -----IMll '° -,.,..,. ... ............. ,.....,.....,. . ............... .. ----.............. .............. --IUM-WTMINI ................... ..,_.. '"' lt.Aal c.AUUllON """ .............. "'*" ....., .. ,..., ... lllTU9H Of '"' LNIN9 DUD• 1"41 loll .... -... •Mt ----YIM Of 1'MI OUOON"' .............. -·--....,-COCOON ... .. . ............ , .. ----YOUINTIDS 11t ·--ldt r.u1•tt --THI UIDl.-1ai • .. Ml ... .. , .. ---f'OUOW '*' -... ·----~11.000NITll.., .. ..... Ill VllADO -·· .... , .... ------UClt TO M nnuu -.......... •Ul- Wll•O SCtlNCI ,_._, , __ _ -~~ ~Y.UnoN -1•1 --·-CIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES• * CINE·ft SOUND! At t"-sy_.... ,., 11H1n4 Meet to Y"' AM CM * rMlie. If" r .. o ~ 1CCWfV ,..tion, tlfi"I your own AM portable. N -'11 Start DUSK C~U!* 12 ALWAYS FREE ANAHEIM ORANGE .t • ' I• ii ..,....._.._... Mal10M,.,..._... _.__, ..... _ .... IUP • --... .,.. ............ IWll..., •n ,..., li ti' ........ ·-, .... JN/f. ........... w ,,, .... .,.. BUENA PARK !l',B·.• IJHllJt .. flil•el• ........ * * * * TUI Of M llMON .-• , THI MIDI -•ai ii10 ..... PnflCT111 .. .. ._... ~ ICllNCI.... ....., .......... .......,, ........ ,.. MJl WCY._ .. ,. _.wn'MfWO-.. lo HABRA ... ., 'Ull '-~' . ---~- MIAWN .... UI • M Ulr • ·-- o.lty Ptlot Oateboc*/ Frtday, Augult 18, 1985 11 • I ;A ... •-.. •--1 ... RI C D N T I N u E Coast Highway, Lquna Beach. Oils and mixed media by Walburga Schauar and watercolors r Lori Quarton arc presented throu Sept. D 1. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-p.m. ------------------------494-4422. ORANGE COUNTY CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, 3621 W. MacArthur Blvd., Sp. 111, Santa Ana. The fifth annual Juried Show, 1uried by Josine lanco SWTCl.s. is held throuah Aug. 23. Wecl-Sun. noon-S p.m. 549-4989. ORANGERIE GALLERY, 480 Ocean Ave., La&una Beach. 494-5656. Mixed media works by Polish artist Ewa Chodkjewicz Swider are off~ alona . with ceramics by Victor Vctbalaites. Thro1.1&h Sept. l. Daily IOa.m.-S p.m. 494-5656. QUORUM GAUZJlY, 374 N. SANDSTONE GALLER\', 384-A N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. "Summer Kaleidoscope" offers a aroup show with gallery art1sts and reaturcs watercolors, acrylics, oils, oil monoprints, pastels, and Chinese brush. Tucs.-Sun. 11 a.m.-S p.m. 497-6775. THE MOSLEM PRESENCE IN ORANGE COUNTY An examination of the county's 20,000 Moslems, their lifestyles, and how they practice their religio n, with o special look at a Ramadan religious observance at the Islamic Society M osque in Gorden Grove. TONIGHT -8:30 P.M. JIM COOPER'S ORANGE COUNTY SIGNATURE GALLERIES, 1000 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach. Oils and charcoals by ~nowned im- pressionist artist Aldo Luonio •~ exhibiltd for the first time. Continues throuah Aug. 548-9353. SPACE $7 GALLERY, 701 S. St. College Blvd., Fullerton. Continuing is "Reflections," a show wh.ich com- bines the figurative paintinp of Rosalyn Chodos, Teiko Horita and Pat Metivier. Closes tomorrow. Wed.-Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 87~9194. rut GALLERY, 611 Anton Blvd., Suite 120, Costa MC\I. "Some ot th~ Best" presents paintinp and draw- ina.s by gallery arti~ts tbrouah Aug. 31. Eachfeaturcd lrtJst has had one- person exhibits at the pllery. Tues . Sat. 11 a.m.·S p.m. S4S-ARTS. TllAILS WEST GALLERY, 1476 S. Coast Hwy., l..qw1a Beach. A collec- tion of R. Brownell MoGttw 01 I paintings are shown for review and sale. He is world rcknown for ha!> vivid colors and photo iuhsuc ponrayal of the Nav~o people. Daily IOa.m.-5 p.m. 494-7888. KEANE OBSERVATIONS... (' PromPafe3 The cartoon focused on a fatherwholookslikea young Bil Keane, a busy mother who was inspired by The I Keane, and three children: Billy, Dolly and lcffy. Soon, thearustdccided the youngest, Jeffy, was too old for diaper and baby food jokes, so the cartoon mother was portrayed as pregnant, and on Aug.1 , 1962,thethirdson,PJ, was born. Keane had all the youngsters grow up a bit, then be frou them at their present ages: Billy is 7; Dolly, S;Jeffy, 3;and PJ, 18 months. The Keanescouldn't manage the same trick with their own children. Today, the eldest, Gayle. 35, manages a Sacramento plant boutique that also seUs .. Family Circus" mementoes. Neal, 33, is a l...osAngclescomputerdesign enpncer. Oleo, 31, isan animator for Walt Disney Pro- ductions. Oris, 29, is a marine ta.ry. 0 1 think it's healthy,•• Keane says ... The thioas that Garry Trudeau does in ·0oonesbury. • be couldn't have done even 15 years aao~h's acynicaJ outlook on life, but(the new artists) are not afraid to stand on a soapbox and say something." Although his own cartoon sometimes contains a bit of whimsical commentary, Keane in~, ··1 neverwanttocomeoff as M~vanielist because my mam job is to entcnain." Which is not to say .. The Family Circus" arouses no reac- tion among readers. Along with the admiring mail from ~ers who believe Keane bas been peelri03 into their own homes. the cartoonist does field some criticism. ----------------------------------! biologist in Northern California. Jeff, 27, assists bis father with One reader scolded Keane for not showing the children with scats belts fastened in the famil y station wqon. Another was angry that Keane showed a hazardous bleach bottle among the child.ten's toys. (It was actu- ally a plastic milk container, the artist later explained.) GEAR UP FOR BACK-TO-SOiOOL ... wltt\ -Cobed Denim"~ l.AMs Ortgltd 501. In (WI# cokn ~ cofton. sllalght leg. &~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND· NEWPORT BEACH· (714) 644-5070 11 Dally PtJot Oatebook/ Frtday, August 16, 1985 "Family Circus" spinoff projccts and answers some fan mail. How did the Keane youngsters feel about being the subject of a cartoon panel? .. When they were smaJI, they were too little to read the funny papers,'' the artist recalls. "But when they got a little older, it brought them some notoriety. Sometimes it would be embat- rassi113 to show Jeffy draaina around a blanket and sucking his thumb when thercalJetfwasa student at USC.·· With threede<:adesofcartoon- ina behind him.Keane is in a Jood position to size up the tndustry. In 1981, he was elected president of the National Car- toonists Society. He was named the society's Canoonist of the Year in 1982. .. S1}'le_1_in cartoon.in& have changed over the years," he says, ··A gag that could be drawn for the Saturday Evening Post in the 1950swouldo'tevenscll today. The humornow inanier, farther out. and the public is more broad-minded. When I started 'The Family Circus,' I ooukin 't haveagagabouta toilet-or even show a toilet. 1 took a cbanoein1bowin1Mommyas prqnant before PJ was bom ... Keane is pleased with the increasedlatitudearantedto contemporary canoonists who mix humor and social oommen· K.cancdrawseach "Family Circus" panel i.n pencil. Hisart assist.an&, Bud Warner, docs the fi na1 ink.i ng. "The most laborious part is the drawing," Keane says. .. That's work.. The ideas, rm continously working on -in bed at night, on the beach, in the car and even on the tennis court. ••When a drawing is com- pleted, J feel like a Steven Spielberg because I've completed a full production. I've picked the cast and the ca.men angle and given the characters their dialogue and costumes." Keano'1 friend and occasional tennisopponent, "Peanuts" creatorChar1es M. Schulz, has decreed that no other artist will draw CbarJjc Bmwn aruU;om- pany aftcr Schulz put.s down lus pencil. Keane'sownconlractstatc that after hisdeatb, "The Family Circus" will continue, but bis family wiU select a artist with a complementary writina and drawina style to produce i L Still, Keane doesn't dwell on that prOlpect. "I never think about retiring," the cartooniluays. "Why Ii ve up what you like to do the best? As lonaasJ can sitat adrawina board and thi,nkcoherently, I'll be doing the feature.'' Impersonations keep on rollickin·' McDowell· s medleys put lots of charm into ·New York Minute• By RANDY JAY MATIN o.lt .... C-o S $ I Hard country, country rock .. stop. Cross-over potential. true-to-roots, back to t:.sics. .. S. T -0-~ While everyone is arguing over who is loyal to country music and who -was country when country wa.sn 't cool," Ronnie McDowcll 1!> 1ust treating his audiences to a rollickjn' good time, one that even Grandma would enJoy. Performing Monday night at the Crazy Horse, McDowell showed that he isa classic lady-channer who looks like a young Englebert with or without his moustache. Just take a pnder at the cover ofh 1s latest album "New York M mute." What doyouthmk? McDowell grew up m Portland, Tenn. (a town he~bcsa.s having a population of under 3,000) hsten- mg to the radio and copy1 ng the stylingsofall thccountry greats. His 1nnucnccs include Elva!> and Johnny Cash. But McDowell sounds mon: like Johnny Rivcrsdoangan Elvis impersonation. He's got that mys- tical, haunting quality ofRaven' voice with the husky v1bratoofElv1s; a tea.I smooth blend of the two that aUowsh1m to get down to busincs~ This "business" included a mcdleyofimpersonatJoruoftheold timecountrygreats. McDowell pulled ofTa believable Cash segment with a colle.;tioo of verses fTom •• Jacbon" and "Orange Blossom Special'' His impressionsofHank Williams doing "Cold, Cold Heart" didn't work as well and his rcnd1t1on of"WaJtzAcrouTexas"Just fra:z.lcd. Bassist Doug Phelps also aot antothcact Wlth an awful George Jones shtick. ... was tryang to sound hke Johnny Cash and Dean Martin and Law- rence Welk," McDowell told the crowd, "anybody that come over the radio." But at was with a tribute to Elvis that McDowell made his reputation and his fint million..selling110jJe. "The King ls Gone" was written the dayaf\erEJvisdJcd and through somcmiraclcofmarketjng was preucd and on radio and in the stores that same Friday. For lhc most part McDowell and band produce Tijlit, hummable mus c fit for Sunday afternoons or lazy sum mer weekends. And there•~ a roekicrsidc to his music. Songs such as ''Country Boy's Heart" and ''New York Minute" use the same Chuck Berry chords that have made millions for everyone from the Rolling Stones to Bryan Adams... "I've got a country boy's hart and aroct•n'rollhcart."McDowcll , ~claimed. But the lyrics to "New York Minutc"sum 11 up mo~ simply ''I could love you an a New York minuteand take my Texas time with 1t.'' Mc Dowd I may seem to ao a hllk Ronnie llcl>owell overboard With the lady-lullcr rou- tine especially whale roaming the audience with a cordless mac, croon- ing (In PraaseOf)"OldcrWomen"to has later-middle-aged fans. But like Elvis, McDowell has a wbolesomc.Jood natured quality that allows him to gel away with what would bccomeannoymg schmaltz in other hands. In fact McDowell could probably tell off- color jokes 1n Sunday school and draw a smile from the teacher. edwaras .. :.::is :J::i ·,·,.., 631 .3501 ... •-': ... ~ :.l ... _l" -. .:."£_.:. "'ftlm"I •zc&IW' ........... .. ______ ,. edwaras ~E St. 646·5025 -.~A ·_g·~ t.•:.i~, ,·.... ,·&~[~I .... _..,... .. ......... .... w,.. ... .......... .._...UM ......... . .._ .... ,... 11 ..... ... .... _...,.. .......... ........... .__, .,._ ... .. .. ....... .. ........... (N) ""PH 911"1 • &i&IW" .. Usa.1111. ... ......... edwards. E"8 ·1. ~ 830·6990 -)tir...:f:_.:'"''• _,&;L;\ .,.Q:A-.·~ Y~":i ... ,•£. ... edwardssc ... • .. :::.s·~:.~~"A .i91.1111 ;. · ............ ,.,,. ' , .. 4.~.. ~ ... ''=~' - e 0 war 0 S : °' E '.'A :. ES. 8 9 t · 3 9 3 S A:·-.-... ·~ '"· ,.\·"\,I .. ·~- .... ·--.._. ..... .. ..... ...... ... _ ..__..,. .. ............. 11-. ... -<N> "'IUIW ...... ......... ........ Deity Pttot o.tebook/ Fnday, August 1e. 1985 1a ) .... ...._..._~*--.......,. Rlcbard. Sandra and Joan Zimmerman enjoyed llDA benefit u did chapter preeldent ltllabeth Amd8on and Sen. Pete wu.cm. One star missing, but banquet gets raves 14 Oafty Plot Datebook/ Frtaay, August 18, 1985 By EVE C. LASH .,.., .... 0.1 J a I Surprise auest Tom Selleck didn't sbowupfortheMuscular~ trophy Association benefit at tbe Irvine Marriott Hotel as scheduled, but-in spite ofbfs absence- more than 400 MDA supporters enjoyed the John Zimmerman memorial dinner. •1'he mostexcitingthingofthe evcnina for me was mcctina (Cali- fornia Anacla pitcher) ltea F~ That made my evening." said Deub ea... ofNewport Beach. Wife Terri said, .. I'm having a ball I'm still waitina to see Tom SeUcck. rm at table 2S and he's reserved for table29. lcansitandpwkathimall niabtlona. But, ifhedoesn't sbow ... l'JJ look at my Tom SeUcck toor-atikc hUJband." MDA Ora nae County Cb.apter President EU&abetll Am .... (host forSa.PeteWU,.)said, .. I think this isa peat event. this is our first dinner and auction. But it will now bean annual event." She said proceeds from the affair (about $30,000) will 10 to the Oranae County summer C&OlP pro- pam whCRJohn Zimmerman de- vdoped his love of the Marines.. Zimmerman, I SofFountain Valley died in January of muscular dY1trOl>hy. He captured the beans of' Amenca when l>mident Rcqan arant.cd bis final wish to be made an bonof'l'J Muine and be buried in the presutious Punchbowl National I Cemetery. Teen idol, "K.ists Are People Too" •tar MlcMel v.., with date'°" tress~ Sadtll (co.star on Bachelor Party and Hot Dot 61m1) were busy takina pictures wt th suesu. Othen takinapictures were about I S very attncti ve Ram dll:icrlelde:n posina with Wil10n. Smith and Youna were'a'dmirina a soon-to-be-euctioned. cuddly cocker spaniel .. I love thisde>J. We'resoina to have to bid on n." &&id Smith. .......... llDAfPeCel& . - Terri and Denn.la Cannon of Newport Beach. MDA •.• PromPace14 John's parents Rlclaant and Sud- ra Zimmennu (with dauahtcr Jou, 1 7) said," John would have been very proud that his name has been associated with such a worth- while cause. To have the Marine Corps and Sen. Wilson involved, as well, would have been a special source of pride for John." Wilson said, "I think this 1s a wonderful event John was a re- markable young man. He crammed more m bis 15 years than a great many people do in a lifetime." The Third Marine Aircraft Wmg Band played fortheevcningas diners enjoyed filet with shrimp and Nantua sauce and Savarin ring with peach melba for dessert. Fountain Valley Mayor Ben Nielson with wife Linda joked and said "The food was really good. For $50 a ticket you usually get chicken. I $0 to thescthingsall the time. F1lets usually go fora good S 150a ticket. This is a bargain." The Nielsons purchased a bike in the auction. "We're trying to figure out how we're going to get it home. I think we'll take it home in (James) MeDoepD'a Mercedes. He just had it detailed, but I'm sure he'd love to · do it" Other items auctioned included trips, dinners,jewelry and even a Mascrati Biturbo auto for $22,500. "I was the onJy person who bid on a Mlcuel Aadlony watercolor. I have no idea who Michael Anthony is and my husband (Job-JRM Financia\ Inc.) isn't happy about the purchase," said Mltl Malacco of Costa Mesa. Others enjoying the bidding were Frank and Pat MiclleJeu, Ted and Mary Jackson, Loa and Pat CGrbo, Doria and Jlm Alla, (Olympic Champion) Bob Ma&Mat, As- semblyman Nolan FrbieUe and wife Ina, Supervisor Ro1er8tantoa · and wife Karen and Jim VIUen. The event was coordinated by Orange County7-Eleven stores(a division of the Southland Corp.) to benefit the MDA. 0 Paparazzi is edited by Vida Dean, DailyPilotSty{eeditor. John and llW llalacco IJoaCht a watercolor. "CARL REINER AND JOHN CANDY MAKE A SUCK COMEDY COMBO." , "Sign up right now for 'Volunteers:" R1chdrd Frerdmdn. NEW HOUSE NEW SPA PERS -A~ Winlten, NEW YORK POST " ••• A VERY FUNNY MOVIE. GO." -Gwy Franklin, KC8S-TV. LIVE AT FIVE (L.A.) l1l;Gjltl>j=~ IUlMA'Mll Plltilic's Buen• Pm Dove In 821-4070 OMleGf PXthc s 0r anoe 0nve 1n 8.14--93111 Tom Hanks and John Candy are building a bridge between two a.dtures .... • IUOIA 'Mil COITA MOA UA~ UAc-Ns ~.-1 ~ •CllTA.uA ""'* c-.. 54'3102. ....... - even if no one wants it. O.lly Pflot 0.tebook/ Friday, August 18. 1985 11 ... .. ) "THE BEST, MOST ENTERTAINING, AND FREE-PIRITED MOVIE T HIS SUMM ER.**** (Highest rating)." 11\A Tf)()A Y. MM< lurl "Pee Wee is a genuine comic hero. Loony. It makes you laugh:' 1,01111 MOleNIN(;AME.IUC.A. A8l0 n ,Jw1 ~ PH-WU HOMAN P1E-Wt1's llG #V1#TU"1 "• '"-'1~ .. 111\A •"fl h •tt•t ,it4.l._.,, ...... -.i ,,, ""tt tOWW41rii•l"tt 'atl "-'\INtNltMt ,..,._.,..1 I •l~hf ltt I""•• """'" t' • t()'lf ral\,_.. .!\t ...,.., I tllf•hlMI I'll ...,. o......,..,lllt °""',_," f I fM~flt dw-11• f ,.....,~ \r~ h *I .. ,.._,, el A C 1f'W'U.,.tl''f _..,, .... liAM t Mft Uf fllj ••A• 1'tt l~lff lto\fftM4"\ I fWlf Ml Unt ...,,, -.ita UAt I \A••• 1••NllllfMWtfl .. ,~,,. .-ftt~•lo\JCl•-..Mf"tl''AtWAW.tW ...-w .... nMbC~Jl.-. ___ ~-=.:.-=r ···~.-... .... __ :.:_-::._·-_-=-_---_··~------·~· ~~~~~~~·~_J Mllllm U9-1770 "lllTI mll Ul·Ml "U _. (Zljf 01.-u Slaltllt.,. DIWMDSMMICllY9 -,. ... JQIMI( ~· "tllTI mu nl-4114 ----IJa.&tM UAllMJ 4 OJWMDS fOMI comJ OJWMDS -.> T9 _,..121•1• "'IL .,_ Sll·MOI ._.,..ml ... , ..... CDWMDS ll TOIO CEICM'. _,_952..CtU ..,..S51-GIS5 .... 1111 ftl·JI~ UA llMS I CDWMl>S W<l<W: OJWAa CIDM EJ ....ura. lllll 1119 1 • Oalty PllOt 0.tet>ook/ Friday, August 18, 1985 ... as ion 11e-.-. ____ __.. ___ _ PORT THEATRE on fi2&0 I · I I ' ". f I '~ t.t ~ OOMCME •• MEddll Mecan'• IUI" 111831 Jctwl SdNldlr. KM\ Douglla -t::m-DOONGIHOW eMUALS fl)llll(ME • "Jar Of ~ .. 111791 Connne ~. GlerW Ger\o -1._ . ..,... •• "Hwly ~ .. 11117) ... .W0\111 • * ,_. "Tiii ICeeglM'' I tt751 Ad AoerM, Mid Hlrldl Fist talk criticized RADNOR. Pa. (AP)-The macho men of telo1s1on lack the emotio1 auributcs that pcnonify real men. A~ Katra, TV nar and fonncr Natior Football Lca1ue 111-pro lineman. uys. Karras said." A real man accepts women u eq\4811 -talks with them. n al lhcm. cxchana.cs Ideas. A real man tso't 1fraid to admit he's afraid. A n: man isn't worried about rolc-playtng." he wrote in the Aua. 17 TV Ouide. K&rra.s said he., nol 1rnptCUCd Mth the macho 1maac conveyed by ta Keach as Mike Hammer or Mr. T'a B.A. 8arac\i Nor does he find T1 Oanion's role u San\ Malone in "Olcen" to hrs hluni, "What's his lire all about? Try1n1 10 put the make on every woman wl walks into bis bat'! Macho. Macho Onc-dimcn$1onal," he wrote. The footbaJJ player-turnedctor 111d Bob Newhart'• role as innketp Olck Loudon and Bi.II Cosbfs ponrayal of Dt.1icathchfl" Huxtable appeal him. Hcuid thesearenon-vt0lcnt.1cnsit1vemcn who don't talk Mth er.cir fit hkc Mike Hammer or Mr. T " 'Ncwhan's' Dick Loudon trca1s his wife as 1n equal He listens 10 oth people's problems and hares h11. He don not Judae pc-ople by his O• prc1udrccs. He 11 no1 doamatJc, .. Karras said. - 113) - .... c.. E - '411 71) ... , - ot al 10 !T IO u ·---~--·~----------...------------~111!1!1"------~--.... ~---------..,........, ry<in Adams: When the work horse is hoarse ncouver's favorite son shows crowd has star's swagger, staying power DY JAY MATIN esc foreiJl:lers arc clever. For the British have made a mint ng Chuck Berry-style rock 'n' roll k to us Americans. Now 11 lS ada's tum with Vancouver's nte son Bryan Adams. y was this guy sounding hoarse. ms has been on the road for some e now payina his dua and ld1ng a mass audience. But even at his hoarsest.. Adams 1s more fun than the competition: Spnng.stccn and Coupr. Adams is so Amencanizcd that his whok show Sunday night at the PaC16c Ampruthcatrc has taken on the tone of a hv1ng MTV conccn SP!=C1al. From the snappy coord1- n&rion oft he lighting to the now of the soop themselves, everything has been practi~ and meuculously timed for maximum response · What 1s so surpnsmg 1s that a show that sticks this close to formula can come off as fresh as it <Sid. But Adams 1s a charmer and a work hoarse ... er, horse. till the end. In this case 1t was well past the end. Adams who 1s obviously in need of a rest kicks into overdnve putttng on an 1mprcss1ve show of energy and crowd pleasing stamina. But the more he pushes rus vocal chords. the longer the hne grew of"ear. nose and throat men" waiting to give him their business cards. What you have hm is~ case-of world class, arena rock full of great anthems such as "This Time," "Cuts Like a Knife." and "Su.in mer of 69" which Adams held out on until the audience demanded 1t by chanuna the numencal portion of the utle. With a No. I record to h1~ credit. Adams bas a lot to celebrate but the show to have caught was last January at the PaJlad1um. There you could have seen a leaner. hungry Adams JUSt bcginnm1 to feel the accclerauon of an album he was 10101 to call "Bryan Adams Hasn't Heard Of You Either." Now that he is at the top the question lS how long can he hold on lo the spot? Well how Iona did Bob Seger hold 11? Adams probably has more staytn& power because 10 ~1tion to catchy sonp.he has a bit of the old Rod Stewart swagger yet his approach is entirely masculioe. long we have beco depnvcd ot M1tcbeU's keen sense of humor and h•~ secret weapon tn lyncm Pye Dubois M1tcllell wntes proeress1uve rock tun" and Dubois embelhshcs them with a Zappa-hke sense of humor Has present en~mble, The Ktm Mitchell Band, appears on the surface to be JUSt another hard rock/metal entry. The lyncs arc laced with "buu words" such u "couldn't stop" and "electm. hock." Y.e.t probins a little deeper into the supplied lync sheet Dubois' cralhncss emeracs-Take the lyncs from "lager and AJe'' 1n which your typ1caJ local slob 1s trying to make an 1mprcss1on on an equally menuous youna lady- o winner in space cola war The only thing to watch out for 1s the evidence of an inOatcd ego Adams 1s at that danger point now where tbe audience cheers anything he does. If Adams raises an arm so do 18.000 adorin• fans aod they know all the words to has songs. . over to the Jukeboil I stag· g.crcd/for a love song to scatter m} body before hcr/d1dn·1 have lhc change .. so I started humming in-a· godda-da-v1da " stronauts: ·we ad no desire to rain the cans' The drinks, flown as an engi· neeriog evaluation of two designs warm because there is no refnger- ation on the shuttle. He said the drinks were full of fizz and froth. .. It's hard to say if they would SPACE CENTER, Houston be enjoyable (if they were cold)," P) -Neither Coca..C.Ola nor said Fullerton. -'They weren't at psi came out 8 winner with the . th.a~ temper:aturc. We .. had no allenger astronauts wbo tested desire to drain the cans. bonatcd beverqes in orbit for He said there were no 111 effects e first time. from drinking carbonated beverages in weightlessness, "but I can't extrapolate to any great desire to have them." Mission Commander Gordon u1Jerton1 in the first news con· reoce stoce the astronauts re- med earlier this month from cir eWit-day mission, said ednesday that neither the Coke or the Pepsi they sampled in cc was very enjoyable. .............. ····»: ·-··---·-...---.,._ •-a...'-flt,uu u-............. !fl\19 --Mut ,..,_ .,,. .. ---~· .... 141 MMm ----............ ~ ~-.. .... UI-,,_., ..... ,_ ,._...., ......... . '"'"' The crew members were asked if they would select the carbonated beverages over the fruit juices that normally arc · flown on the space shuttle if the "SPECTACULAR ... wtl\ a beltef eente of humOf. 'Mm( It lnMilttbte II >f tEW 'ff M ,,.,.. JfJTY'I "'" "AN INCREDIBLE, EXCITING ANO ORIGINAL EPIC 1t1at I thil* It ~ of IM beat ftlmtof IM Y90f.H "' ·~ l.p.1l \ lll;Qet le.er! • -ST-•11 IJl.1770 .-Tim& 1..-sClllM conu tJt.41•1 ..... 1..-sll fOIO .. .... ·-tM.LJ'f ... , .. IU-1111 NUllTll fOI fWOTOll US-4147 --~llJIMOCM 5Jl.4491 IMITA• CDMIDS•tOl .... , ... 4Dfllllil •• ..... ... .,_ drinks could be refrigerated. They all shook their heads. .. The drinks we have on board now arc quite attractive," said astronaut Tony England. Tastes seems to change in space, he said, adding that even though the whole crew prefers coffee 011 J.hc ground, there was little coffee consumed in orbit. ·- Fellow Canadwi Kim Mitchell 1s still high class m his comedy ol borrowed shoes. Formerly with the acclaimed Max Webster band (ac- claimed everywhere but m the States) Mitchell was last seen here operuni for Blondie at the Wh.isky. That should give you some idea of how This wry w11 comes from the same team that com{>oscd ~uch songs as "High Cbw In Borro"'cd hoes" and another one about cunng a hangover with ubatt's 50. probably the wont of Ctnad1an beers. Mitchell should ca51ly appeal to the )'OUQI hcadbllngcn who c1im'ntl~ subsist on a steady diet of ratlS and 1100 maidens. "An ingenius corned~· that's in a class b~· itself .. and ifs a class you should sign up for this "·eekend.'' -Pal< ollin .... CBS \10R'\l'\(J 'l-\\'-' "'Real Genius' H~es up to its tide. A smart satirical comedy with a high level of imentiv~ and crisp direction by Martha Coolidge:· -Krvin ~. l,U, ANG•:U:~ llMf~' ..Thumbs up from both of us. I laughed out loud." -<~ ~ri and Rottr • tlt'n • AT THt MO\-lt' "****'Real Genius' is a genuine comic gem and a joUy good time." ~ikf-Clarl., l ~A IOOA\ "At last! Some in-'Genim' fun." -IOril HOtWyOiCI, LOS ANG~ DAILY N•'W!'; ... R~I Genius' is a fiercd)' funn), terriflcslly entertJlining falm that ~ocs way beyond all of this summer' strictJy f oolNl fan~" .... 1c1 ~"*"· tr.llolK .' \ *MTMTOl IOCM IRWll (ClwardS HuntlllQIOn fdww~ CrlelNI !JnMnoly IAl&lll\ llM:M #OWT(A fOwatoa SClllll UA Mii COlis1 481 1711 89J ~ 148 008I «lol 1811 01W1U c.i, C4nt ~ ~l Deity Pilot Dat~/ Friday, Auguat 18, 1985 17 .., ) f I Humor of 'Man with One Red Shoe" stumbles By BOB THOMAS -....-.,.,. ..... Memo to studio production chiefs: If a filmmaker suggests malang an Amencan version of a French com- edy. order the blighter out of your office. Time af\er time. Americans have tned to duplicate Gallic comedies. but the translation never seems to work. latest evidence: "The Man with One Red Shoe." It must have seemed like a good idea at the time. "The Tall Blonde Man with One Btaclc Shoe-had amused audiences in both France and the United States. Why not place an Amencan, say a hot actor like Tom Hanks, an the same s1tuatJon? The Roben Klane script ponrays Hanks as a concert viohnjst caught 10 the crossfire between CIA factions. Dabney Coleman is trying to depose his chief, Charles Durning, after a Middle East mission has been bungled. To put Coleman off the scent. Durning ins1ructs his aide, Ed Herrmann. to choose someone - anyone -emerging from a flight a1 Dulles Airpon as a decoy. Herrmann picks the innocent-loolcina Hanks, who is absent-minded enough 10 be wearing one red sneaker. Now it begins, the two spy corps attempting their misdeeds as the obliv1ous Hanks conlinues his daily ----STARTS TODAY---- *~ MiSSiON VIEJO •CiimiGl • wtS'TiiilNSTER Mann Bl-. PlaU Edwards v~ Twm Clnedome EdW~rds Cm.ma 529·5339 830-6990 634·ZSS3 West 891 3935 •costu1w •NWetACfi ~ vWEmli1HSrili Edwards So. Coest Edwil"ds Newpor,t Stadium Dnvt In Paclfk s HI Way 39 Plau ~2711 Clnema644-076l:> 639-ano Df ·ln 891 3693 ·=Saddleback ,:~c;~~1 ( .:..PAU::.Eo,._ ) 581 ·5880 j.,llt...-inCAt f1tYour MICM r~or oortlllltr.adlOrS'fOlll ~•I •• o.ly PtlOC 0 10bootc/ ff1day, ~ 18, 1~ ltfe. The situation could be hilarious, but the secret aJenlS make Inspector Oouseau look bke Sherlock Holmes. Despite the valiant effons of slciUod farceurs, the comedy falls flat. Perhaps, in view of lhe CIA 's past malfeasance, there is nothing funny about killer spies. Nor in Coleman's exasperation with his subofdinates: "Does aJfybody here remember how to lcill a man?'' Nor in a bumbler searching through a sewer for flushed evidence. "The Man with One Red Shoe" bas a few amusing moments, such as when Coleman and bis miruons watch behind a see-through mirror as qent Lori Singer attempts to seduce Hanks. Also when violinist Hanks wanders from the music during a symphony concen, infuriatinJ the conductor (a hardly~ecogmz.able David Ogden Stiers of"M-A-S-H"). HanJcs has proved io TV's "Bosom Buddies" and in ''Splash" that he is one of the best of today's light comedians, but he has little chance to display his talents here. Nor can Carrie Fisher and Jim Belushi escape the crassness of their roles. Durning as a ponJy Machiavelli and Coleman as the expl<»ive bureaucrat arc type- cast. Rated PG be<:ausc of language and suggestive situations. "SKIP THE BEACH AND GO SEE 'COCOON' ... A movie to buoy your spirts for the whole summer.' -Pat Collins, CBS Morning News, CBS TV 7t •• 1UCI Ill.If milt -·-ts2 .... l D. 119 511·t5N ........ U..ElT• .-Tl ma 541-2111 WDll 11111 ID l ts-SUJ l...a SllTI UA IEl..STO TWIN ClllTPUD -.na ... 1J1.m1 ~-TW ... H1.-s 09181•1HWl llAIM ll7.fl4t llCIUIC(llAU llAIM IJ4-Jt11 ucmCOTU • JS• MUY STOCO SlllY, M PISSlS THEY'RE 8ACX FROM THE GRAVE MDREIDYTO PARTY! Motion Picture Association America raring defin111ons: G -General audiences. All Ill admiued. PG -Paren1al guidance suggcstc Some material may nol be suit'bfe I children~ PG-13 -~peciat J)lrental au1 ancc strongly suggested for chlldr under 13. Some material may inappropnate for you111 children. R -Restricted. Under 17 requi1 accompanying parenl or adu1' &U4J ian. X -No one under 17 admiuc Some states may have h1gher 1 res1nct1ons. 'Future' still fronts box office HOLL YWOOO (AP) -Thn newly released films found 1herc w1 into the upper ranks of cuTTC'I releases last weekend. but none w; strong enough to unseat "Back to ti Fu1urc." The Universal release grossed $8 million over lhe weekend to incrca its total gross to $96 million an JOSI s weeks. Paramounl's "Summer Rental starring chubby funny man Jot- Candy. debuted at No. 2 with a gro ofSS.8 million . Ano1her newcomer. "Pee Wee BiJ. Adventure," was third at $4 million 1n its firsl weekend of w1c release. However. the Warner Br&. release averaged $5,484 per scree bener than "Back to the Future." The Chevy Chase comedy "N tional Lampoon's European V c.auon" slipped 10 founh place with gross ofS4.3 million. · Columbia's "frigh1 N1~t" wi scared out of the No. 3 spot ll held tt prt'vious week and dropped to fill on a gross of$4.3 million, averaaina bit less 1han "Yaca1ion." "Weird Science" brouaht 1n ~ milJion, fallinA to siJtth1 and Tri-Star "Real Ocnius l)Ulled 1n $2.6 millic on its first weekend to cam tt scven1h spot. Herc arc the top seven ~ssir films over the weekend wtth dL tributor, weekend arosa, number • screens. total irou, and number • weeks in release. I. "Back to the Future;· Univeru $8.2 million, l,S20 scrccnt. $~ million. six weeks. 2. "Summer RC'l'IW," Paramoun SS.8 miUion, 11S8A tereens, SS million, ffrst weer.. 3. "Pee Wce's Bia Adven1ure Warner Bros., $4.S mtUion, 8~ ICreCna, SS. I million, tbnle weel ((tnt weekend of wide releue). 4. "National Lampoon'• Europea Vacatton," Warner 8ro1.. $4 million, I ,S47 acrcens, S3S. 7 millio1 three weeks. S. "Fri&bt Ni&ftt," Columbia, $4 million, f.S4S tcreen1, S 13.3 mt1Jio1 twoweeU. 6. "Weird Science," Univerul1 S million, 1.172 screena, S l 1.1 milho1 two weeks. 7. "Real Genius," Tri-Star, Sl million, 990 SCnlena. $3.S m llliot oneweelt. • of d. or d· :n be es d· d . ge - 2 x n a 's 5 le . '· •· I• • IS e h a 3 's n e ' .. >f ~f 9 .s n J l, J I, 6 •• ---.... - SECRET ADMlllER.: Saory about ichad Ryan (C. Thomas HowcU). a school student who ftnds a &ctter the bottom of his locker which .sets • a romantic chain react.ion that sscs the gcnerati~pp and threat- s an unsuspecting suburb. Also ning Lori Lau~. Kelly Pluton. rcctcd by 0.Vld Greenwalt Writ- n by Jam Kouf and David Gn:cn- lt. D..A..R.. Y .L..: Or Data Analyzing obot Youth Lafcform. An action- 1£CJ11Ure ti lm-aboui---an--e ordinary young boy who proves m ply too good to be true. .. to pctfcct be real. Swring Mary Beth Hurt. 1chae.I McKean, Kathryn Walker BarTCt Oliver as Daryl Dim:ud iTT110U-WihCXI, WI itteirby David mbrosc. Allan Soou and Jeffrey hs. Rated PG. A VIEW TO llilL: Roger Moore once ap1n as James Bond who ttempts to thrawt a comic-boot adman's attempt to take over l.bc or1d Also starring Christopher alllen and Grace Jones as the 111ians, and Tanya R~ as Bond's lond heroine. Rated PG. her own school. so she enrolls the foUowtng Monday m a ocw school - as a guy! Also stasrring Clayton Rohner, Billy Jacoby, Toni Hudson Screenplay by Dennis Feldman and Jeff Franklin. Directed by Lisa Got· tlieb. emu JUST w ANT TO RAVE FUN: lnspll'ed by the hat rock song of the same title, ''Girts Just Want To Have Fun.. is a comedy-musical romance played ap1nst the colorful backdrop of contemporary music and dang: It jsa 1980s loy.c.story ID which girt meets boy, girt loses boy, but finds him once apm -lD the middle of the dance floor on t~ nauon's number one dance show, "DTV." Stamng Sarah J esa1ca Parker, Lee Mon~om­ -ecy, MOlpn Woodward. Wnttcn by Amy Spies., directed by Alan Metter own. Wntten by Leora Bansh directed by Susan Sc1delman THE PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO: Wntten and directed by Wood) Allen A romanuc fantasy about To m Baxter 'Jeff Daniels). a dashtng 8- movae star who steps off the scecn and back rn ume to coun C'cetha (Mia Farrow), a Dcprcss1on~ra housewife who's sitting through the movie (from which Baxter has Just stepped) tor the fifth ttme. Also stamng Dann~ Aiello. THE SI l!GGEIL'S wu.&.Wnuen by Neal Simon. This story centers on a mismatched couple forged by c1rcum· stances into what appears to be an tll- des1gned team. Stamng Michael O'Kccfe as Darryl Porter a young outfietd for the-Atlanta Braves, and Rebecca De Moma> as ~bb' Palmer, his rock-singer wife .\lso stamng Manin Riil and Rand' Qwud. Directca by Hal Ashby. FLETCH.: Chevy Chuc st.an as 'regory McDonald's mvesoptivc porter/sleuth. l.M. Fletcher, who hes on assumed identities and a Wyatt (Ila.a llltdaell-8mlda) and Guy (Aatbcmy lllcbael Ball) don hea.S,ear for 0 Wdrd Scieaee" e:spe.rlmeaL DESPERATELY SEEUNG SUSAN: Comedy about. a kooky, bored, New Jersey housewife. Ro-berta (Rosanna Arguctte), who fol · lows a flamboyant love affair being carried on through the personal ads invol_ving a young man (Robert Joy) wbo 1s -desperately seeking .. a ccrun Susan (Madonna), when bercunosaty gets the belt oJ her and she invites herself into the hves of these str3ngers. Before long, she's propelled into a breez1 comedy of em>rs in which Susan s identity becomes ber POUCE ACADEMY %: THEIR FIRST ASSIGNMENT: Innocent bystanders take cover' That Police Academy crew in blue 1s back and coming on hke gangbusters in .. thl.'1r first ass1gnmen1.:· tamngSteve (1ut tcnbcrg. Bubba Smath. David Grat, Michael Winslow and Bruce Mahler Wntten b> Barry Blaustein and David Sheffield. Directed by kn; Pans. teady st.ream of patter to hide his real urposes as an 1nvestiga_tivc joumal- t for a ma,or Los ~ ~ cwspapcr. Also stamng Tjm athcson, Dana W heeler- 1chobon, Joe Doo Baker. M. mmct Walsh. Directed by Mtehacl 1tch1e, screenplay by Andrew rgrnan. BREWSIER'S MILLIONS: Rich- rd Pryor stan as an IJln& 1emi-pro ball player who inherits $300 1Uion from an eccentric uncle, on he condition he can spend S30 11l1on in one month. Based on the vel by GeoJs Barr McCutcbcon. lso '1atting John C.aody, 1..onctte cKec, Pat Hin&Je and Stephen ollins. Dirccud by Walter Hill nplay by HC'f'S4:hd WcingJ'Od nd Timothy Harris. Rated PG. CODE OF SILENCE: Chuck Nor· s stan as Detective Eddie Cusack, a ough ChtQgO cop who is called upon to solve the kidnapping of the ughter of an undcrworld figure, and prolCct a rookie cop wbo must decide whether lo mform on his fellow offioers. Also sumna Henry Sjlva and Ben Remsen. Directed by Andy Davis, written by Dennis Shryack and Michael Butler RUsn.ERS' RHAPSODY: A west- ern comedy starring singing cowboy Rex O'Hcrhhan (Tom Bcrcngcr), the clcan<Ut and glonously dressed 1940s sliver screen cowboy. Also st.aningG.W Bailey, Manlyu Hencr, Fernando Rey. Sela Ward, and Patrick Wayne. Written and directed by Hugh Wilson. PUMPING IRON II: THE WOMEN: Sequel to "Pumping Iron" with Amokl Schwarzenegger and Lou F~~ (The lncrcd1blc Hulk). this moVJll 1s about two doz.en (cm.ale body builders who compete in a Las Vcg;As body building contcst. Starr· nng some of Lhc top female body bwldmg contenders. Bev Francis.. Rachel Melish. Emceed by George Plimpton. JUST ONE OF THE GUYS: A fast- paced comedy about a dctennmed young woman who sets out to prove she can make it in a man's world. Joyce Hyser stars as Terry Gnffith, an adorable 18-ycar-old with ::vcrythmg Ice show teams Goofy with skating champion LAKELAND. fla. -tinda Frauannc. teams up with Wah Disney's ~to tick off' the new leUOD of Keo.ncth Fcld's latest ice auuon. Walt Disney', .. ~ Kiaedom On lee. .. ~~~le, wb.icb otrcn a ocw in~tJoo of Disney nostaJaia with aU Disney pcnonalitics, will pmn .er'C 1n Lakeland. Goofy toaca up bit mUldea to take on a bold new role as ""Sport Goofy, Athlete ot the Qotu.ry, .. and displays bis irrepressible antics in this lavish . of wort6-c:lw atadna. depn.t costum.u:i&. and music.a.I tcore rich wtth Disney &vorita. Ol~Ok Silver Medalill Linda Fratianne. now in the fifth year of bet career, bu c:apcivued more t.ban IS millaon pa&ron1 with bet fiau~tint taleob.. An accomolithrid_entertainment hQdlincr, she at one inspirational ~ ~teilcirt.tic dri.ldren io t.bc audience how even .. impoaibk" dreamJ cu oome true wbca '°" pve it your best. Wah ~ MaPc K.UiFom On Ice -the lat.est live family cntenainman extra~ cre&led by Kenneth Feld -will •t.a&C the (ftmic:re pcrfOnnuc:es m this mid-Florida city at the Lakeland Civic Cent.er for•~ days bcin anbutina oo its intoUtiooal tour. go1 ng for her. She finds that being the liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. .. most popular e rt on campus won't ... TOTAL DBJlllT...coMPUTB.Y CAPTIVATllll&. help her win a JOurnalism contest at ~ REFllEIHllll Y DIFfDIEllT." A9a ,_, New v~oc PO~, ~~·-~~ ........ _ "THERlll=. aJllEDY. y SUMMERS ••• l&AIUOUS.." Jlldl l<IOI. NEwsweB< WGA2NE: "A MOVERJR AllMiES:' Gere Shllll. THE TOOo1'Y SION N9CfV * * * * IHICMSl AAlll'C. "A .EWB. Of All EITERTAll!BT.'' Gene S..... CHICNlO TRIBUNE NOWPLAYWG .. -fHE GOO.f MUST BE 1'~fJJllibY--•-.. _...··-~· ~~ .-~1· erl wards TOWN CENTER .. ·,,~.< .. ,,.' '751 -4184 l&IU 12:10 2141 litO 1111 ..... KEY Jf~E ·-----• EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT 12-2-4-5:50-7:50-9:50 edw ard s TOWN CENTER ·fl• ~; H~, .. 't 4 ~"1 "'~751 4184 ~ ~ • • , 1M r ~: : ·• 1 • CO!>lA ME!>A ---=· o.My PMot Oatebook/ F~. August 16. 1985 1 e I I -~ I f I • --..... F .- ) .. ....... . Parental complaints inescapable evenat60 DEAR ANN LANDERS: We a~ the children of elderly parents who arc ph}s1cally aod mentally m good condition They are financ1aJly com· fo nablc. as ~ell 'rhey are tuTless 10 their com- plaints No matter how much time and attcnuon they recei ve, 1rs not enough While they do not ask d1rcctl}'. the hints arc obvious. They want to move 10 With U!.. We know where they stand on entenng a home for the elderly. It would be no go, regardless of our effons to find suitable surroundings. We can't take them into our homes because they would insist on running our hves. They have always been domineering. intrusive and difficult toge.Ullon& WJlh. Also, Ann, we arc m our 60s and have our own health problems. Although we don•t hang out the family linen for all to sec, we feel guilty and sec cnticism m their faces a.nd·in the questions they ask. Ttus situation 1s very difficult to hvc with and we don't know what to do. Can UJXUllY r .. ArtlS W'ALK INS fwn r-._ ~ * . * Oil Y U.75 Ulllm leiJ' DRIVE-INS :~~~ CITY CEOTEA 0 l.M nu / J111 OllAIGl I Mirtte tH CUltOl'IEAN VACATJOll CP'Q-tJll J :U 7:41 ,1ut STADIUm a ill 1111 llc•r!lt ''t! Sttf'!"' TNE .. IGllnt) s '"'"' CO•Hlt hrfect , .. , WE•llDSctDICa _.,.,. 1 :U J :20 l:ZS 7:IO I. l :JS l"rltllt Nltllt (R) 1 :21 VWAll CW THK DaAOC* S :lS .. t :.U .. , ,.1.,1 MIMll!ltll llDrrAL (N) SHOWS AT 12100 2 :00 4 :00 1:00 1 :00 • tO:OO a&A&.. elDHUS CN> SHOWS AT 1 :JS J :4'0 S:4S 7:10 I. t :SI cenruAY cineoome [;l Stint In .,,.._, .. ..., .. 12:10 2 :40 1 :10 7:o0 • IO:tO Nil ..... .. '" ....... JAT 12:00 2:00 4 :00 1:00 l '.00 .. 10:00 SA.VUIADO .... ta) THEATRE CLOSED TONIGHT! 2010 (l"Q) lie.AL....,. .... , 11'1"1 CO-Mlt My sc .. noe ProJ•« (l"Q) ..... tmAJ(~ Tlll:cillwl t t• lt•m•o l'lrsc lood f>tr1 2 (It) you belp us? -NO EASY SOLU- TIONS INT AMPA. DEAR TAMPA:. v .. will k M•aed If J" • ud M•M4 lf J" 419't. ~ dM old felb la tllietr ... lleme a• .... H petalble. Hire llelf U dteJ cu .. loqer care f•r. daem· tel\les. nJ1 ll dM best IOl•tto. •er tile eittuutucet YM deserik. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a I 6-year-olct1ltgh-scboo1 guy wrlttng in response to "Sick at Heart in Michigan." l was a reddess driver. I received four tickets and had two minor accidents. I was beaded for trouble. A few of my Dad's friends started telling him whenever they saw me tcanng around town THE BRIDE: The story of Dr. Frankensiein's second creation, a perfect woman intended to be the ma1e for his original etealurc. Despite the fact that Eva owes her very life to Frankenstein, he finds be cannot control her or have her for his own, as he would like. Columbia Pictures' .. The Bride," stars Sting as the Barcn Charles Frankenstein and Jennifer Beals as his lovely creation. Also starring arc Geraldine Page, Clancy Brown, Anthony Higgins and David Rappaport. After my second accident, Dad got touah. Although I'm too old to be spanked I cauabt it pretty good. I got my license taken away for two months and my curfew lowered by ooe hour. We had 10me heart-to- hean talks and each time my parents' love came through 101•-J and clear. l strai&htened up. I have my license back now and ha..v~n't.hacUo be disci_plined_sj~c.c. Tell parents their kids need them JUSt u much when they're teens. Getting touah works; I know. Thanks, Mom and Dad. I love you. -SAFER TN GRAND RAPIDS DEAR GILAND: AM I leve YOU ,_ wrtdlic ..... ...,,..., letter. AIMI ~sraW.dem a. you ,..,au who SClS caught Up IO a bizanT conspiracy. This Amtmcan adapta- tion of the French comedy hit, .. The Tall Blood Man With One Black Shoe," is produced br, Victor Dra1 ("The Woman in Red' ) and directed by Stan Orqoti ("Mr. Mom") from a screenplay by Robert KJane. SUMMER RENTAL: A comedy about a harried air traffic controller (John Candy) who takes his family to a rented beach house which they qu1ck.ly discover 1s not the tranquil ~"-..~~10 w~~·.Af' wm,::e1T~ hideawaytheyweTcsec.kini.ABcmie , so s :10 1 11 o a. 1 o::ao 12:00 1 :U J:so ''" l'rltllt '"°'"' <•> BnlJstein production of a Carl Reiner SILVERADO: Based on a screenplay by Lawrence K.asdan and Mark Kasdan, "Silverado" was filmed entirely on location in the area of Santa Fe, New Mexico. It 1s an exciting new look at the 1880s frontier. a story of four reluctant hereocs drawn together by the adven- tures on the trail to Silverado. Once their.I they Gnd not safety, but danger. a threat only their unlikely alliance can challenge. Written. produced an<t directed by Lawrence Kasdan. Stars Kevin KJme. Scott Glenn, Rosanna Arquette, John Clcese, Kevin Costner, Brian Den- nehy, Danny Glover. Jeff Goldblum and Linda Hunt. 1 :u t :u / 7oMM film starring Candy, R1chard Crcnna, ;:~~~D~R~IV~E~l~lll~S~o~-~·~OO~W~k~~IV1~/~7·~.JO~W~kl~M1~/~U~ll4~·~'1~2~F~r-~u~ ..... ~~ ... ~ .... ~~~-.i Rtp Tom and Karen Austin. THIS YEAR. THE FUNNIEST FAMILY IN AMERICA .. INVADES EUROPE I a.m_,.. ••11111151h eaa ..-SllN .... Ullnmt·••·••·••·" .... 11111.-.-...... .n11 r,,.. ... llEJ ~ ............ .. '-• -.... lmlll .. ...... ... 11,.mo 'ACflC AIWDI OI_,. IM& 5.zt.5ll9 MltmAP\JZA ...... tsz..mJ ... llMJ. ..,., ... .,,..1 .. EDWMDS CIBA cono f'lllT• WAUD '39·1500 IDWMDS FruffUf nun -154.UU CDWMOS lllWOSITY U.._Sll-1611 PACflC QAT[UJ um& .. '97-1711 EDWMDIS SO. COAST U8N ..... U.-2553 mfYCITTCOOOI &Ill& -540-7444 EDWMDS•TOl WQi I ID Hl.OW UA MJUINSTO WUJ-18 H1·3'9l 'ACFIC •AY 3' ._._,. u Detty PllOt Oe1ebook/ Friday. August 16, 1985 WEIRD SCIENCE: Gary Wallace rs not very popular with the girls. He and his pal W~tt are watching a cliP. from the onginal "Frankenstein • when &hey g.ct an idea. They feed pictures of gorgeous centerfolds into a 'computer and, following an ex· plos1on. they create Lisa, beautiful, steamy and breathless. the answer to every young man's dreams. The film was written and directed John Hughes and stars Anthony Michael Hall, Kelly LeBrock. llan Mitchell- Sm11h and Bill Paxton. THE MAN WITH ONE RED SHOE: A riotous, romantic under- cover comc-Oy about an innocent musician, played by Tom Hanks, COCOON: A science-Canta.Sy about an attractive group of cstraterrestrials who come to Earth to retneve some · mag.ical obJcctS from the Gulf of Mexico. Dunng their v1s11 to Flonda. however, they encounter a younger chaner-boat skipper who bcglns to fall 1n love Wlth one of the v1s1tors. and a group of senior c1t1zens who begin to feel and act half their age. Together they embark on a great adventure in which they all learn more about love, life and friendship than they ever dreamed possible. Starring Don Amcche. Wilford '''WEIRD SCIENCE' m A RJNNY AND ENTERTAINING MOVIE ... -A ... Ellett, "AT THE MOVID'' It's all In the name ofsaence. oo--i-....... ~ .. A lHV£RSAL PC1\Al£ .~ ......... tw•••· ... - lllllllANWI CllSTl .. "9U9T• WIWY UA-. f-C-... (,.....,_... 'mm? c..i.. ~ .. •COSTAMUA t1'-llU .. 1500 ... .... (--~ ~-II LAlllMOA (,~-·-l\1'M ... ,..,. '11*1 ~& !AOIW (~~~· ~ ~J,t . .,m, ..-~lo-·~-l ....... ~ ....... __. -AMC Otlf'9I .,,_ s.'170300 --Clly~ Qt,.~, ..... ~°""'"' t•ano •WiWIM ...,.,""~· .,,_~.., for laaqiq ao.p. We Deed mor patt11t.al tavolvemeDl u~ •• aoueue cH1dpllae. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: "Happ as a Lark in Ham1hon, Ontano adv1ses after 3S years of mamq that if you treat your husband hkc king. be will treat you like a queen. I, too, have been married 35 ycai and treated my husband Ii~ a k1oi tn"l"erorn, he has g)ven me fhe re carpet treatment -walked all ovc mt. -FINALL y CALLED r QUITS IN UTILE ROCK. DEAR R0<1 WM& &Mil YH I 1-i! Forstve me fw 11•1 ... lite broba rtt0rd, ......... , cu •&I all over )'H wtdtoel JOU pe1 mb1loa. Bnmley. Hume Cronyn aod Bna Dennehy Screenplay by Tot Benedek, based on 1 novel by Davi Saperstein. Directed by Ron Howat ("Splash"). PRIZZl'S HONOR: A John Husto film stamng Jack Nicholson an Kathleen Turner ... Pritt1's Honor" a bizarre comedy about a Mafia h man (Nicholson) who falls 1n Lo~ and ma.mes a woman who turns O• to be his female countcrpan. Als stamng Robcn Loaia. John Rae dolph. William Hicfey and Anjelic Huston. Screenplay by Richard Co1 don and Janet Roach, based upon novel by Richard Condon. ST. ELMO'S FIRE: Story about tightly knit group of recent collct graduates who face their .. freshma year of life". Following their gnd1 ation, the ensemble group of youll men and women confront, as mdiv1c uals, all the issues ofhfe after collct in the 1980s: their commitment careers and rclaoonships. Stamri Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy and Jud Nelson ("Breakfast Club"), Ro Lowe. Andrew McCarthy, Den Moore and Mare Winningham. Wn ten by Joel Schumacher asnd Ca Kurland. Direc ted b y Joe Schumacher. GOONIES: Based on a story b Steven Spielberg ("ET, .. "Raiders c the Lost Ark," "Jaws") ··ooonics focuses on a group of ordinary kic whose discovery of 1 secret map i their sleepy seaport town swec~ them into an extraordinary adver ture filled with bean-pounding pcri Directed by Richard Donner("lns1d Moves." "The Omen"). Stani nl Sea Astin. Josh Brolin and Ke Huy-Qua1 Rated PG. PERFECT: Based on article which appeared in Rolling Stoll magazine by Aaron Latham. Joh Travolta stars a a Rolling Stoll reporter who covers three ~parat .stories, one-of which 1 a &rend p1ec: on the current health dub boot where he bc(ome romantlcally u volved Wlth Jamie Lee Curtis. a aerobics instructor. Also st.amll Anne De Salvo. Manlu Henne Laraine Newman. Screenplay b Atron Latham and James Bndae RAMBO: FlRST BLOOD,'P ART I The United tates 1ovcmme1 w ilks Sylvestcf.SWlonc -from-ft prisoh rockpile (where he was place after his rampaae 1n lhe movie "Fir Blood") 10 Vtetnam to hunt for MIA But the sec:rcfrve enterpnse 11 a tetu and Stallone winds up fi&htina h way out of the country with a ft MJA.s in tow. Screcnpl1y by Stallor and James Cameron (The Termi1 ator). Rated R. • c i 5 ~ -j II • k • n n d d a e n a .- e ... ~ b 11 ·I I 'i ,f .. I. e n ~ e n e e c n n a . y 1. (: . .. p s "N ~ I· • TON THE TOWN _~~ best bets. These wines arc usually not marked up at as srcat a percent.age as the lower pnced wines. Funhermorc, unlike many high pnccd wanes.. th~ wines do not carry an extra markup for the reputation of the winery. are coming into this country at very anrxtive pnccs because the dollar 1s extremely strong compared 10 lhe franc. ernacular's not vintage Don't be afraid to be adven- turesome. You m1gh1 be very pleasantly surpnsed to find \lo aneA- pcns1ve Petit Sarah or Zanfandcl that as an enjoyable substJtutc for high priced Cabernets. Furthermore, Pi not Blal'cs and Fume Blancs can be as pleasurable with fish or poultry as those expensive Chardonnavs. So 1f you like Olardonnay. con· sider a Macon Blanc, it's the same thing. If you arc a red wine lover. you can find some excepl1onal values in Cru Bourgeois Bordeaux wines es- peetally. 1f the~ wines a~ from a supenor vintage. We ~ve vintages too hule attention an Cahfom1a. We so seldom have a poor year and we aJmost never have a disastrous harvest so this consider- ation seems...of futle imJ>Qrtance when selecting native wines. EOFV LA.BITZK& Picture yourself in your favorite taurant -the li&htiq is sol\, the us1c 1s ~tJe, pernaps even classi- 1 This 1s where you go to reward ursclf with an outstanding meal d, of course, a deli&}ltfuJ bottle of ·ne.Upon opening the wine list, wever, you suddenly realae order- & wine in a restaurant is not as easy 11 sounds.. It really does require me outside education . Part of the difficulty ames from the cl that wine lists arc wntten by Wine fess1onals who deal with wine ery day so it is hteraJly second turc to them. Sometimes, key facts, ch as vm~ dates and geograph1- l appellations. arc inadvertently milled. I came across JUst such a wine hst \ e years ago when l was stayina in a ery posh California hotel. Our party f seven was pciously seated in the xunous dinma room. Kavifli d1s- vered a very well stocked wi ne shop n 1he hotel lobby that afternoon. l as anxiously IOOkirlJ forward to lecting that niaht's wine. I was quite surprised to find two h1te Buraundies at very atlr.let1 ve nccs on the wine hst: Chablis remier Cru and Meursault. Un- onunately, the person who wrote the I J.. ...... :W ' ~ !!!!! ~~ ~ ...... I I II I ~ j rJ Ill ,. I hSLnegJretcd to indtcatc tbt> ~hipper or the vintage date on both of these wines. These factors are very 1mponant in choosinia Burgund} because there 1s a great deal of variance in qualil) from shipper to shipper and from }Car to year. At this point I saw no ma1or problem. I knew that a few simple que\llOns would give me the infor- ma11on to make the proper choice When I asked the waller about lhe wines he acted as 1f I were~ a fool. He blatantly stated "How should I know who shipped the w1nt's? .. When he made no effon to answer my ques- tions I asked him to find somrone who did know. After leavana an a huff he hastily re tumedandwh1lcexplain1ng that his capt.am was not on duty he thrust two bottles at me so I could make my choice. Tht' make matters worse. the waiter proceeded 10 make1okes about my inquiries aJI evening. This type of service 1s not com- monplace in the restaurant industry but this s11uation does illustrate a point. If you arc a wine lover you should choose restaurants that have either an 1nfonnatJvc, easy-to-read Wlne hst or a staff that can find the answers 1n a courteous manner Now, you may hke to make vour I ) ..--~ ...... ;ill M U N G R V T •G E" SEAFOOD Sunday Champagne l -Brunch Omelette Bar Fresh Seafood Bar Pasta Bar BelgJan Waffle Bar Including fresh dams, oysters, shrimp, king crab, prime rib, fresh fruit luices, salads, desserts and more!!! I 0 a.m. to 3 p.m. s J 295 per person s59s for kids under 12 Santa Ana 714 • 979 • FISH own choices. You may not want lQ rely on the opinions or recommen- dations of others but you still want to get the most for your money. Here arc some tips for successfully choosing wine in lhe restaurant. First of all. stay aw~ from the house wane. Generally, this 1s a lesser quality blended wme that may $CU for as little as S2 a bottle in the su~rmarkel. In a restaurant you m1aht expect 10 pay as much as$5 for a carafe ofth1s wine The medium priced wines an your • Once-you have narrowed your choiccs.~ou might then ask the wa11er or captain about one or two specific wines to be su~ you are getuna actual opinions and not JUSl the manager's special In a m.tautant with a good reputation, however. you can be certain that the wme b14ycT knows his business. Probably, every wine on the hst wall be quite CDJOyablc You can find some truly exc1ung 1mpon.ed Wlne values_ However. ordcnfli these wines requires a httle outside research. Many French w1nes l In Europe. however, the climate 1s not neaTly as stable. For thts reason you should try and make sure the European wine you arc selectmg I!> from a d~nl year. You m1gkl1 even consider carrying a pocket vintage chart to remind you of the better yea~. Personally. I tr) 10 frequent ~ taurants where the staff is enthusiastic about wine. I have made (Pleue eee WDJEfPaCe :12) CELLARS ................. .,. .. ....., .... ,.. ea:re ,...., ........ FROM OUR WINE CELLARS Louis 1-.rtr Cristal CU•'ICH A French Classic! wr.ERY PR1CC 145 00 II-Tm PllC( s2g•s S.,., C... lisuuarj! 1N2 ._... ...... t~This medium dry.German Riesling can compare to your favorite Piesporter. Try some at our Super Low Price! Winery Price $5.25 ............... 11-TIM Price $2.99 Salb Cru lelltma ...,.. Hll ..wt-Ken Burnap, former owner of THE HOBBIT restaurant in Orange, is now making sensational wines m the Santa Cruz Mountains. This Merlot could be the best ever made in California! This wine 1s extremely hm1ted. It won't last long! Winery Pnce $10.00 ........................................................................................ 111-Tillt Price $1.99 11111ns 1112 Zllfll••I This 1s a beautiful VIII It. U.. ltll Plllt leir-Th1s wme will California Zinfandel. It is rich and fruity and it astound you! This 1s a top quality Pinot Noir at should last for many years to come. a table wine price. Winery Price $6.50 .. '. ....... IH-TIM Prtct $4.ll Winery Price $9.60 .......... lff.Tlllt Prtct $3.M ...... 1112 ~This 1s probably the CMl'lts lrl& C... llw-A California best Chardonnay Jordan has ever made. It 1s Favorite! Crisp and fresh, this is an ideal medium-bodied with a complex balance of -Summer sipper! flavors. Winery Price $6.06 ............ n. Price $3.41 Winery Price $1 5.75 ..... Ii-Tiiie Price $11.95 ---CllllC •IT TIE •nm .. IAl---u"""' MCIST 17 C41 BaldtMll. llom 8'ldNlell v_,.ds. .. 11t at 11111 llllM !>¥ PIMl""C SOlllf ol INs award -,. ..,. lroin Noon until 4 00 plll UTNNT llCIST Z4 Joey ~. llOlll Cltn Ulen Wlnefy •• bt llOli'lnC 1111 ~ WIN$ lrOfJI floOll •llttl • 00 °"' Sir.NY AICIST JI Lou Preston trom Pmtoft Vulrt•~ Wiii be pou1i,. Ills ~ lndldld 111 lhl$ .-1 wtl be IOllll of Ills r.... ~ ""MlllC Clbtllld S.V~ VISll 1M _. btr llOlll floOll llllttl 4 00 pm SITIBAY SllTlml 7-Boc:e Jones, lrom Sonoina~trer Vineyards. Wiii be llOllll,. "'' dlUIC Cllar~ •I CMlf W1M bit. Dn OM .. 111~ Ill Sll~ rOOlll Oflly SO you 111111111 flllt IO 1'4 hlft tMly Ht ttll lit h«t troll! Noon IMll• • 00 pm s.. ............ """"" ...... " ·~·-'-"-..... -.... _ _.._ .......... ,,. ..... .............. , .. _. ................... _ ...... _. __ 250 OGLE ST. COSTA MESA 650-TIME Deity PMot ~/ Fridey. August 16, 1985 a 1 ) ! . Live Entertainment In the Lounge Nightly and Sunday Afternoon llSERVA TIONS 675-5777 ?tow 11ou don't >tl'l'd to 90 to 1'01t9 X.C1t9 /or /int' eaJttOJU41t' & S~cMUlalt c#Utiu. The talenta of Dan, Rita, Diane and Lenny Garofalo prcnide the family redpee and GARY'S By CHRIS CRA WPORD ~c...' 3 After 30 years in Willoughby, Ohio, Dan and Rita GarofaJo were headed for retirement in San Diego last year. But their son Lenny, of Newport Beach. cncou~ them to view a r:cstaurant property for saJc in Costa Mesa. "We hked it.and we purchased 11 lastJanWlry," sa1d Rita. Rita has 35 years' expenencc manaf ngrcstaurants 1n New York and Ohio, and Dan, in add1t1on to his carter asa machinist. worked as a bartender for banquets. Lenny had worked for c1gb t years in Phoen 1 x as a bartenderand waiter before moving to Orange County. Now they have pooled their talents along wuh daughter Diane at Garfs, a neighborhood, family·style rcstaurantat I 550 Superior Ave. Dan handlesaJloflhe bookkeeping, while Rita oversees the kitchen." I do aJJ of the sauces, roasts, and heavy cooking," she said, "and then I have others who help out" Lenny 1s in charge ofbartcnders and en tcrtam ment. while hissuter Diane works as a waJtressduring the lunch hour and twoeveningu week. The GarofaJos' other children, hvina m Ohio, arc daughtcrLiDda,son OanicTJr. and his wire Joanne, and four grandchildren. The family background (Dan is ltaJ1an: Rita 1s lristt. Italian) 1s reflected tn their menu wtuch features. aJong .......................... enterta.l.nment that make Garf9• a popal Coeta lie.a nel&hborhood rataarant. W1 th steaks and seafood, a vanety ofl talian dis.ha . prepared from handed-down family recipes. These include lasagna, different kindsofspaghctti. manicot11 fettuc1ni, and bceffungctto. "We'll prepare any special dashes that anyone wan Italian orothCl"Wlsc, as long as we have enough oottee . .' added Rita. Garf s serves brt:ak.fast from 8: 30 to I 0 Mondays- Fridays and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekends. The breakfast specially 1s omelets., said Rita. .. all varieties. acxordmg theprefercnceofthccustomcr. We can make lbem up however they want .. The T ucsda y speciaJ is lasagna. with salad and gar! bread, $3. 95 for lunch. $6. 95 for dinner. Wcd:ncsday's special 1s liverv.ith bacon and onjonswhich includes a roll and vegetable With the SJ. 95 lunch. wlulc the dmnt includes a choice of spaghetl.I or baked potato, saJad. ar garhcbread forS4.95. .. On Wednesday nights, we have Amateur Night with an open mike." said Lenny. -1rs mostly singles an duos performing. and wegivea first and second pnze.- On weekends, entertainers Blu Rivard and Bobby Brcnnansingand play guitar and piano. "ll'sa variety• easy listening. pop, and rock." Lenny suet The restaurant ~itionaJly has pool leagues. dart leagues., said Rita, plus-.. some nice-outinp-bus trips the race lrads. for example." Garfs retains the Wcstemdccoroflhe prev1ou5 tenant, but thcGarofaloshaven'tdcaded yet whethc'rr change it ''It's wha lever the pcopk want,•• Rita SaKl "Maybcwc'U be a Spaghetti Wcstcm,"joked Lenny. So far, response to lhc new rcstallt'ant has been go< wd Rha. .. We have a lot of new people. and the old 004 stayed. The neighborhood people~ here for dinner, t il'samanerofolhcrpeoplcknowingwbcrewearcaod what we have to offer. I think the people wbodoc:omc here enjoy lhc family atmos~ and the ckMreoess th.I we have with everyone. It's the b1gbJi&bt of t.hc pl.ace ... ---~-------------------------Y;:Wc;::;:,;~;1 FOR INFORMATION ON g,,.., ~' (!Am 'kJlllJllllU PLACING AN AD IN MJ. & ~ fft/. & ~---.... ---~---6:30-10:30 6:30-10:30 ------------- 8 052 <:14 dllllt, c?l (/(' 111 a~IU-' a1w1. IS Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, August 16, 1985 CALL (714) &42-4321 WINE LISTS •. homPa&e21 '°~ cxciu04 d11COwnes Uuov recommcndauons rrom wdl formed waucn and waiuaacs. f;. lunately, mon: and morr rataun people ~.re becoming k~ I about wi~. It helps to kup. their J< new and mtcrat1na. Tbc racaun menu may •tty the amc tOr 10 ye but ~th QCh new van-. the w11 &.re a la tt Jc d I f'ferm I. I - lO ic r d d ,, 0 d s UI -'. gh n- >r • nt >le bs nt If\ ~ ~----~~~--------111111!!~--------l!!!l!llll!!ll!!!!!!! ......... '"":::l .... ~~~~~·-.. _•_!1.!1.!I~~~-.......................... ..,. .. ... LEMON CBJcg.EN 10 01. (wbole) clllcken breast l egg yolk '11 teaspoon salt 1la teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon oUve oil Cornstarell MAITAJ Mai Tai Mix: \.2 cup orange juice l cup water Lemon Sa•ce: 1 cup water "' envelope Bini's dessert mix 4 teaspooaa Hgar \.2 cap sweet and sour m ix 3 teaspooa1 wlllte vinegar i teirspoou1emolrjllice ! teupoo111 Soatb Seas mix base ! teaapoou Passion fruit synap % drops greaadlne Mix well and cluli t,; teaspoon ult 4 sUces Ired 1llcecl lemon Marinate chicken in mixture of egg yolk, salt, supr and olive oil for 20 minutes. Cover with dry com starch and deep fry until golden yellow. Cut in one inch slices. Heat water, add sauce ingredients, and continue to heat for two minutes. Put sauce on chicken. Serves two. For a 14-ounce bucket glass. fill glass with ice cubes, add one shot each of White rum and Gold rum. Next fill glass to 90 percent full with Mai Tai mix. Float a half shot of Myers' Rum OR top. Garnish with a cherry and a slice of pineapple. Recipes from Wong's Seaf9C)d RestaaTant, Hutington Beach. Fine Continental Cuisine and still an Adventure in Natural Eating Casual breakfasl & lunch • rc•rmal Dining for l>mner Experience the splendor uf dining out in an elegant atmosphere with good nutritiou~ rnt11ls. NDIA'S FINEST CUISINE Restaurant CrttJc's Comments "ASsuredly, o~ of So. California's most 1mpress1ve edifices of ethnic culsl~." -Herb Baus. Register Sunset Dinners 1 5% off 5:.J0..7 p.m. Sun.-Thun. Award Winning ROYAL KHYBER Cuisine of India \. 1000 8ftttot "orth (at Jamboree). Newport Beach (714) 752·5200 _ .... 01 . ~~~U"'" .. \). ~e0'9 at.mneANDREA WALTERS D119CtM 11y TOM BLANK Cl\of909,.p"4MI bf PA TII COLOMBO looll, lllffllc a Lyflc• by JIM JACOtat a WARREN CASEY Lunch & Dinner oast our 25th Ann.iversary with a delicious Acapulco Margarica. It's a special treat when you creat yourself to one of these three Silver Anniversary meals. So raise your glasses high. Here's to good food, good service and fair prices. Here's to 25 years of success you can caste. We especialJy recommend our hottest new entree. Fajitas. A. Fajitas: lender strips of marinated beef. chicken or whole shrimp grilled with bell peppers. onions and tomatoes and served on a sizzling skillet at your table. Served with rice and beans. Beef or Cbicken -$6.95 or Shrimp-$8.95 B. Taco & Enchilada Combination: A delicious beef taco and a cheese enchilada. A favorite. Served with rice and beans . . $5.25 C. Acapulco lbstada Grande: Your choice of machaca. ch icken or pork. in a fluted flour toLtilla shell, layered with beans, lettuce, tomatoes and cheese-. topped with guacamole and sour cream . . . . . . . . . . $4.95 • Mexican Restaurant & cantina NCelebrarirtJ? 25 Years ef Success >bu Can la.stc" J . I • " Anaheim • 1410 S Harbor Blvd AHo~s from D1sn<yland Q56 73110 ~rdtn Crovt • 12101 Valley Vltw SI On Vallty Vltw South of Chapman Avt 893 75t3 l osta Mesa • 126.2 S E BnStol St I milt south of South CNSI Pb.z.l 754 M.28 Over 20 10<.rnono; in Southt.'rn California. lhcck your kxal yellow pa~ec; l\llrrl\alC' non "lulholk brvt'r.tg~ pu••kkJ for l"°""' unJtr.tgl',"' Uf'O'l ~ "'"''-'"u Otn~r l'fltt' lncli..i.e. .. ll "' nwrc,1111.i Oll<'f ~"" lul\ :<' th1""1~h l\UiitJ'-1 2.'I 'lflt •'dil.Jblr "" 1.allr O\ll •lflkf' • '""-' >\,.ipuko RN;aur.tnt• Dally Piio t Datebookl Frtday, August 16. 1985 ts ---· r ) OUT DN THE TOWI' I Combination Lunches Half Price I Do you know how to sampl~ Good Homemade Mexican oo I Full Service Bar I fi d • " l 11AMtoJPM 1•1-;411&1)'onei&.,c,,.gettttueconct 11 a gourmet 00 emporzum! 1768 S. Newport Blvd. at half Pfb. !Equal or lnMr vw..1 LI Costa Mesa 645-0JJ4 &ood thru August ZJ, 1995 I S h "Asenseofc~citemcnt...fut ________________________ :J tart a primer on grazing tee niques roocSs. .. but with flair ... " "~!!!:!!!~~~--~~~~----"-to use at Irvine Ranch Farmer· s Market -.. ~couney•nentorrofl ~ ~ • trendy. ~ --------------------Tbescwcresomcofthcoomm 7 FREEDMAN WAY GRAND OPENING • Longest Running Show on 8rc>.owty • New Yoo ~ Critic Award • WlllM!f of 7 Tony Awatdl • Or9nge County Premiefe By BEVBRL Y BUSH SMITH "V cry European ... wonflcrful of friends and family, aaes 22 to ( ..._ .... Cw 0 3 aromas. .. " with whom I CJCplored the Irvine 1----------------------, RancbfarmenMarlcetinNewp Two for One Dinner Selections Center in recent week.a. I'd purposely waited for the inJ pandemonium of openina week.J subside. But ifl thouatn I'd find t "gourmet food emporium" less 1 bustlin&. I was wrona.. So socceu is the market, in fact. that it's expanded its boun to 7 Lm. to I( p.m.,Sundaythrougb Wedn.esdi and until 11, Thursday throu&b Saturday. Served 5:00-7:00 p.m. Weds, ThW'8, Fri Allhouab my favoritu.rchitcc tural advisor found it difficult to define the structure's style ("Not modem, not quite post-modem' we both loved the UJC of spece be You step into a &lorious array of produce, then on to a IO&ri.na thn Boue Speeialliea Caribbean Pork Shop 19.95 Otkar Port Royal $9.96 Pork & Shrimp Kabob 19.96 Cllicken Chicken Oscar Teriyaki Chicken $9.96 18.26 Beef Prime Rib au jua Top Sirloin seJood Stuffed Snapper Stuffed Flounder $ l l .2b story biah diningatrium with pit $l0.9S pillanacicentinaneu~tnYJ. T lighting isauperb. Day~t seem flow down from the ceiling, even $8.95 night. $10.95 A bazaar of different purveyor No ReHTY•tion• pn:pared delicacies, from frozen y~ to sushi, rims the atrium. LOOKING FOR A W1tbsomanycboices.youdefin (expiru 8-30-85) II\.&-..=~ GREAT PLACE TO EAT?. nccdapmc-ptanwbenyoucom ~· LE'-"'.Jll \ Blaclr"-nl'• I• loatetl Z Wocb Soudt ol catattbelrvineRanc.hMartet. See Datebook's Dining Guide Jobn Wqrw.tbport(olf M.cA.rtl.ur) Onmyfirstvisit,larrimiatal -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:::;::=;;::=:;::::::::;::::;:=:;:=:;:::::::;:::::::;::::::;:::::::;;:::='i=.:::;::::;:~~;:=:;:==:;::=;::=:;;::=:;=:;=::=;:~:=~~~~~~~~~l llLm.aodmadcthe~eof -browsing first. then tryina lO buy "' ---4 Westminster Mall • ff .•• •• -.:,~; .. U Dalty Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, Auguat 18, 1985 lunch. By this time, there were D< tables in the atrium, and it wua I of a jugl.ingact to carry our food (Pl---CBOJCaJP-. GULLIVER' c..A 'Place to CVine R servationR Ea e ntial! mts 2, tial to bis- ban fut I y ~ .k i)C uo at aof tdy HO IOUt I rit up .• , ,. -- TI-ETOWN salad's we1ghL $3.19 a pound ("Go for t.hc peapods," advised one penny-pincher). and rm t.old most people spend from SJ toS4. WcU. I haven't told you howswut the desserts arc at the Market -or about the wine and beer bar, o r ... There's lots more to come neat week IRVINE RANCH FARMERS M.A.RIET, Fashion Island, NN'J>On Beach;7~1100: 7a.m.-10 p.m .. Sun.-Wcd., 7a.m.-l l p.m., Tbu.-Sun $395 . BltEAlaZAST • All . 10 ... • c.afonla l'nlta • 1*- • Boe • C.oJd c..nu. • c.tap lecoe • !at LUNCH s495 H All·UJ"' DINNER s595 ..... ~ Salad Bar. Homemade Soup, Fresh Rah. Mut Cowx. Poultry. V~getables Poca.to, Dasert ~~~~+--------------... --------------------~ For A Complete Evening Out lunch 11 :30 •m to 2:00 pm sushi, steak and seafood dinner 5:30 pm to 11 :30 pm happy hour 5:30 pm to tJ:30 pm · au.hl8ar All rou-can-.. f ''om our l•mou• ..,.,,, bef duflltfl tlt1' heppr houf -tfJ °"' cl•-lc C.lllOfttla #foll, and fal .. a toeet to rt.. clt•f•I $10. Combination Dinner A lu•clou• combltMtffon pl•I• thet Include• ,.,,,,,.,,,., chicken, • cltolce ol r•llo•l•ll of orat•,., fie•, ml.o aoup . end morel $5. ... 3355 Via Lido · Newport a .. ch • (714} 875-0575 Dalty Piiot Oateboo4t/ Frtday. August 18. 1985 I• ) ~---.... ,- I -I l LEMIDI Cdebnta flnt blr1Wa1 On Aug. J Newport Beach's "little neighborhood French Restaurant" celebrated its first annivenary - and Switzerland's 694th. And since juicy and even bis colleaaues (wcll- known Swiss chefs from other res- taurants) wondered bow he managed to bring out the "Roschti" (a special Swiss potato dish not ~lly meant for a crowd) so crispy and tender. Ni.Jht di oner for two (1 $37 v1 a Splendiferous Champaane also for two (a $31 .50 value)! ~~~~~~===============~~==:,, both Walter and Marica are Swiss, :; the dinner pe.rty-for invited guests Indeed Le Midi personnel proved their claim that .. It's like stepping back in time to an era when exceUence offood was only matched by generous hospitality." A hospital- ity ra~ly found these days! Good Luck Le Midi and keep up the good world 3421 Via Lido, Newpon Beach -6]5-4904. Tbis is Just part of the act the elegant Bob Bums Rest.a\. Fashion Island this summer. Each Wednesday n1ght I Aug. 28, the restaurant ii lighting CaJun cuisine m its bl Thistle Room. A complet Orleans menu including • jambalaya and crawftSh ct~' being served complete wit ieland entertainment. . It's like stepping back in time 10 an era when excellence of food was matched by generous hos- pitality. -so; Wtfetff"Ver you need pimperlng Come to our French Country Home. Come to Edooerd MANET (1 2-1183) ~on.,,. 0... TM attire may be different, the tradibon 1s the same 3421 Via Udo Newport Beach., '7S-49CM •• HIDE-AWAY RESTAURANT DAILY DllllER SPECIALS '2.95 • Qidlea Fried Steak •VealP ...... HI • Liver w / Pried Oalou • ~ GoldY Pried CMekea • inlb. Gl'Otllld Sirloin Steak • Plall A CMpe • Sened w / soap or salad, 6 v~etable & ~ol~ of potato. WE DARE THEM ALL Yt.'S, nobody can do 11. A lull one pound Maine lobater dinner for '691 '. Two one· p ound M a ine lobste r s for • 10 .. •. A Happy Hour Extraord1nd1re. A 5dlad &r Considered the best m Cah/orn1a, fpa/urinq Ala skan Crab and Florida Shrimp. A Chocoldle Sweet Bar that has nn equal. More Fresh Fish than the rest. Yes. that s Anthony's Pier 2 ·s un lhru Thurs di/ night. Fn 5 lo 7 only Sdt 5 lo 6 ........... n. f~:r~~=ll .. I .... 774-0IU Diiiy PUot o.t9bookJ Fr1day, August 18, 1985 • only -was all Swiss: food, wines, music (live) and plenty of Swiss ch~r! ..At the long family-style t;ables were seated people who had never met before. But Americans, French, Gmnans and Swiss....JQOD tputed their mutual-love for Walter's artful cuisine. For once again he outdid h.i 'D. self. With the place filled to capacit9, each Qf the five courses still came piping bot to the table. Fresh-Water Perch "Menunierc" was tender and ....... _110,.0.Hll--• I W Ob 'rt 0 1 Hl9 ,_ la Clll9ll ...... n..,...... ........ _,. ..... • .,_,TMI_....,....,. • ......,.,_ I a...e"'W.'-11_,flltllll._., .. .... • IOt. ..., .... '°" ..... -............ , -S... S.. wl..-M --. 0t Ille MM a ' S-8twtnlp...., __ ...._, _.... ••• BOB BURNS A place &o be a l~ky wluer! Just put your name and address in their guest register here and you may be the winner of a weekly drawing for a complimentary International WE PROMISE YOU f.)000 CHINESE FOOD LUNCHES, OINNEAS, TROPICAL COCKTAILS. 8ANOUET FACllJTIES CATERING. F000 TO GO OPEN7 DAYS SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON FOOD TO GO 3" 8eectl 8lvll 827 1210 ....., Knott'• A'**"' 99~ • • • Vou'I io... --lwnout Ftl9cl TMI !too- ._ Coft'8IOS-TIW ""'•llw-- l'O'fV9...., The! loocl -·· ... '°" ·-Ml:J Clolf'1 ~ ..... "*" n. cN4 -be .. ....., .. ,o..•• ~T~~ ...... -pr-0... .,au·• .... -..._ TWo.lfyou_ pr_ Opeeo ..... - -I boll' you e Theil ID9d T• I 5-rvln9 dinner 6-10 p.m. Monct.y tb.ru Sulld.ay (cloecd Tuesday) We eave beer 6 wiae. tool !~9hm;~ ........ tt ... 675-0161 :!.:."•'"'(at •vi International night conti11}1 Wednesday in September Vienna Night with chambet and the delectable lighter fa1 Austria. The many delight.I tomers who have expcrienet ter Chef George Kook0< previous Greek Nights and New Orleans dinners arc pro< popularity of these very culinary events. And of course the splenc Suoday champagne buffet ' fresh. carved meats, cgs bl omclettts to order, Belgian salads, cheeses, fresh tna. ns and more conttn capture the culinary atten those lookmg for somethin. special for their summer~ For your chance to win a brunches or International dinners, just sign the guest rci the restaurant at 37 Fasbior (between Bullock's and Br<>1 For ~ations call ~20.: • • • GUWVER'S Revealt Eq1ld Trifle reeiJ The recipe for making G1 . famous English Trifle is rev1 the cookbook, Cuisine of CJi from Famous Restaurants. Levie of the popular Los Aogi Irvine eatery Cu1sme of C.J1fom1a, fc more than 80 rcapes from restaurants throuahout the published by the Cal1fom taurant Assoc1auon (CRA). , headquartered in Los Angel offices m Sacramento and 0 "Our patrons often ask w recipes of our best loved dish as the English Trifle, so Y delighted to provide CRA wi by-step instructJons for pt it," says Levie. 1---------------------------1 The 114-page soft- ''_THE BEST BK UPI.CH IN TOWN!'' -"general consensus.. , ~Beach cookbook tnclUdC$ 19 ft photographs. It fcaLuret rec appetizers, soups, breads.. saJ vegetables, ca dishes. meat.,· seafood and ~ta entTees a sens. All recipes in the co have been reduced from com restaurant ~rtions to reaula and entcnamment-siud por each restaurant's chef cookbook also includes chapters on how to match fo wine and how to prepan: bui and sauces, as well u a aJ0c culinary terms. To obtain a S9.9S copy of of California. check your toe store, or order d~)' fr publisher: Triple M Boob. F 720114, Allan)a. OA l03S8 t S 1.50 for postqe; tend S 11. for each book ordered), Royalties from the book benefit CRA's Eduational dation, which provides ICbo to stale taidents who arc 1 for careen in the foocbcrvio try. For infonnation. con1 Educational foundation • 384-flOO or 1-800-2$2--0444 TON THE TOWN HE BARN Have lhl' prime of your life chooaing from the ext.en1ive 25 it.em menu. Sttc<alut, seafood, u1ada. Italian and Me11can dishes, and lllOff. West.em ch1trm and country ambience. Lunch M F, Dinner M-S, Heppy hour M-P 4;30-7 p.m S.tellite diah. 1..... entertainment and dancing :iun Champagne Buffet Brunch 10 2;30. S.nquel fecilitie.. 14982 Redhill, Tuatin 730-0115 HE ORIGINAL BARN ARMER STEAKHOUSE Yt:11' Tney are lhe ongual. 1-~amous for their one end-1 half pound l'ort.erhOUtle 11teau ind featuring cltsplay broihna. Proudly serving for :i.i Vtar$. Lunch Mon. Fri 11 2. Dm· nt'r n111htly Mon. Fri fro m 5 p.m Sat & Sun. from 4 p.In. 2001 Harbor Hlvd , C'Cltlt.a Mesa. 642 9777 BF.NNICAN•s Fre-ih food 11erved with 8 Sade or fun. Mt•nu features unique appeli.urw, "<'l~d11, Heafood, croi.Mant Mnd w1rhl!'.'!, bW'f(era. Ml'11can di. hei1, nod o.n uc1lang brunch menu l .um.:h and dinner from 11 a.m wrekdaya Brunch 9 3 on week.ends Full be.t with specialty drinks. lf11ppy hc>Ur 4-7 weekdays In Coeta Meq, Sooth Coul Plua parlung lot by Sak'a Fifth Avenue 241 39~l8 In Weslmm.lt.er, b45 WMtmanat~r MnJI 891 -4522. Oenetn« eveninp m Westmarut.er locellon BOB BURNS Superb 1.1 tl\e word w dHCri~ thia finp dining at.abl&1hment.. Serving N .. wport for 18 yea.rs, 1peciali1int in Anl(Us reiaed ~r. tht' fine9t. you can get AIAo feelu:rin« fre1b (1.11\. veal and duclum. The linen covered tables, candle. end (reab flowera add t.o the t>legence, with boothll and h1ah beck chairs for privecy Flickering lenterna and clul1caJ music capt.ure t.be cbarminc and w_erm atm<lllpbere. Open for lunch, dinner and their 1plendifel'OU8 Sun- day brunch. Extensive wine latt. :l7 Fashion Tal&nd. 6«-2030. BRISTOL BARA GRILL · At Holid ay 'l"radit.ionally 11n 1111 ~rican fevonu-pltM:ie to eat. end pnced for famtly diniO(C. F.verythalll Crom jujey at.Mda end chope w 11pec11l chickrn diahel and rresh tc"..ef9Qd. Bounteou.a Ml.d be.r Sumpt.uooa daily lundwton buffe Open deity for dinioi and mdrtait. 3131 Bristol St. Coat.a Meea, 567-3000. ' CRAiYBORSE STEAIHOU Authentic counlt)' dln1na, rat.urina f.4.t.em Com Fed IMef-Prime Rib, frnb ...rood .n<t apet..li&i.na in their fem()\18 ~n·fried 1'4leka. and deuert.e. Lunch Mon.·Fri. 11 3. Dinner Mon. un. I'> p.m . (Dinnw ~•lionia pareoteed), AuLbe11lic Wutern decor, dandn1 ind live rnuaic in U,,. aaloon Oyer Rd Eait/Newport fwJ., S.nl.a Au. M9 1612. DILLMAKS The Dillman family 111 famoWJ for t-heir trsditio~ warm hoep1tal1ty and fine food. Finest prime rib in Balboa and fresh fish daily. <'•>m plet.e dinner spectala daily Friendly tlt'rvice and a fun, delightful at m011phere. Open daily for lunC'h and dinner. Brunch Sat and Sun H()I Jo: BalbM. 673-7726. GARF"S A perfect place t.o bnng lht! wholt! remny. Garf's features steaks and eeafood, but specializes in ltaJtan dishes also Man1cou1. la..'lag1la. spa ghetti; all homemade The al m011p~'!!e ~ fri<-ociiy &nd lhe !lt'rvtC'e iA iul Servin,c brea.kfMl, lunch end dinner. Week.night special'! Pbonl' orders accepted. 15SO Super111r Ave .. CO!lta Mesa. 65().:11 l6 THE HIDE-AWAY Tired of ea tang .>UL Al phll Pi. v.1t h nu pnvacy? St!iucla no more' Thl' H1dt- away provides privacy with it.I booths and partll1on,, pt!tftet f11r busine:lll lunC'ht-e>n:. and rom11nt 1r dining. All newly decoratt>d uffE'h llK ll relaung atmosphere The <!penal l1e>s are St>afnod and -fO\HkJ Al fordable dmang ror th!' wholf' f11m 11) Variety of dtoly t1pt'<'lll~ llomt> m.uff' soups and Mi11C:l'!4. Ref'r & wint' llt'rved also .'>X74 F..dmger at Spring dale m Marana Shopp1111( \ 1l11tl(f' H unting1.0n Beach 1'140 tk'll M 1CALFORNIAN HEMINGWAY'S In Lhe style of the m11n h11'.Mt'lf, Heminpay'5 as • rt'lebr11taon l>f edventure, of romance and the art of livin,c. An award wtnml\i rei1 t.auranl offenng European cu1111nt' Wllh a CaJifom ie accent e nd an ut.eosive wine II.BL Dinner nightly Lunch M-F. The atmosphere 111 wann and friendly and filled w1Lh enthuaiaam. Eatabliahed 11ince 1972, lhia restaurantlcafe is located m Corona del Mar al Pacific C'oe.11t Hwy. at MacArthur Blvd. 673 0120 MARRIOTT · Nicole• Grill Maqwt.e wood broiling is tht sped ahy here. The menu reature11 rrcsti aeafood and prime meall and 11enaaLional Ca1un Creoll' 11pecials on 11 daily beais. Dine in 11 Cllflual. relu ed atm011phere wi th ront.empor•ry mU11ic. Imported prmt.e from 1-;lll land complement the ellrective decor Dinner ill M!rved Mon -S.t from 6 p..m. Nioolt'll 111 k>ceted within t.M Newport Bacb MarTiott Hot4'1, 900 Ntwport Center Or c·,.u W>-4000. JADEDRACON Step into the wonderfuJ world or thf' Orient.. The Jade Ora,ion 11pocal1Jm ln Suehw11n A M111ndann c:uilint111 of old Chin-. Your bolt i11 w .. u.('t! l""' whh Ch ( Vi Ch n. Open for lt1n('h, dinner, S.L and Sun. l>am Surn (Chint141 Tea Cakt Brunt'h) U1tn quet racmu .,. avaitablfl and hoer and win are eerwd.. El'Cani dinintt at atfordebt prices. 12100 BMch Blvd., St.ant.on 896-81933. u·s RESTAURANT If you love Chi~ rood. you'~ sure Lo enJOy d1na.ng here. u Li's prom- Ulee truly authentic Chioeee food Thl' menu offen1 a wide variety of uollc dishes, from a LI carte to t-omb1nalion.t.. Breathtaking decor m a supremely beautiful at · moephere. Tropical drinks lo quench your LhiraL Open aeven daya • week f()l lunch end dinner. 8961 Adams, H untington Beach. 962 9 115. ~ N Beach Blvd.; Anaheim. 827 1210. MANDARIN GOURMET A truly lll)f'Cial place to dine, the Mandarin Gourmet has *n a gold award winner and owner, Michael C'haahg wu voted Restaurateur of the Vear Specializing in Peking, Shanghai, Szechwa.n and Hunan n11.111nes, Lhey offer an array of deli- c:ac1ei1 mcluding Peking Duck, dumplings, whole f1.1h and more 1umptiou11 dishes. Elegant •l· mOllphere, 1mpecceble service and ext#~~\'~ ••M i!!t 1500 Ada.ma. C oeta Mesa 1>40· 19:17 WONG~ EAFOOD Thi~ authentic Capt..one.<,e and "zechwan cuas1ne features the fret1heal of M>afood dashes specially prepared hy Hong Kong chefs Live 1 rnh and lnb8~r are available fresh 11ut uf the tank' Thui unique. gourmet dinery offers an elegant atmu.o;pht>re with enu rtainment bv Chen Williams Friday and Satur dav l'VPnangs Wo~ll Seafood 1s open <1evtn daya a week. 80fi2 <\d11m!. Ave at Rearh HI. in Hunt 1111(to n H4'11rh l'all :i:Ui ~7i CCJNTll'\ENTAL MEDITERRANEAN ROOM · Airporter Inn Congenial and secluded from Ll)e hw.) airport .. urroundmg& The Mt'daterranean Room offf'rs superb rnntmental cuisine for lunch, din· ntr and Sunday brunch Top enter uunment nightly an the Cabaret l..oungt' The Captain's Table 11 open for danang 24 hours. Perfl'cl for watch1~ C'ahfornia sunseu ia the ~'light D«k Lounge The Airport.er Inn 1s located al 1~700 M•<'Arthur Blvd an Irvine &'U 'l770. CAFE LIDO Known as Newport'& Cannery Vil lltl(e jau spot. Enjoy gourmet foud w1lh jtOunnet jazz in an intimate and ro7.y atm<lllphere. Dinner n1Jhtly 6 p.m. to midn1gtfL Ente,... tainment nightly 9-1:30. Sun. jau M!llll1on 4· 1 a.m. Happy jazz hour 5 8 Mon Pr1. Ample perking. 2900 Newport Blvd., Newport Buch. 675 2968. MARCEL'S Voill1 Marcel! Oeli11htfully refresh ll'lt menu Cutut1ng fresh sea.food and Lou111ena Cajun speciels Gourmet oyster bar Elepnt yf't r.uuel atmoaphere. Live entenain merit •nd daneing featuring OC's fine l enlert.einment Dancing undf'r lhl' atan! J.,unch rmm 11 a.m. Danner nightly fmm S p.m ()ys"w l\flr ull 1-00 e.m 130 E. 17th SL, Co•ta Moae. fi.46-88M. PUFPIN'S An edventurl' an nalunil e.atJn,. fo'rl'lh quahly •n«~if'nCA p~pu4'CI m • t 1mple Y"l eletnnt wey. Award winnma rKa~. Cerden M'!ltin(f 1n a fe!uropean <'Aft' .tyle almMphl'l'ft. (~I hreek.J11t and lunch. Formal dininic for dinner. Sun Thul"I. 7 am 10 p.m., •'ti. It Set. tilJ 1 l pm ... 3050 E.. Coat Hwy., Corona del Mar. &40-1573. RIVIERA Relu to gracious aerYlce an an elecent, intimate atmoephere. Ex pertly prepared cootinenul di&hff by Cher Richard Serener, since 1970. Thia 1werd winrung rel· taura.nt alAo orfen an es tensive wane list, and ·fict'lli in t.bleside prep-- arations and fiambes. Open for Lunch l 1:30-3 p.m., Dmner from 6 p.m. Eicellent banquet fadlitiea. Cloaed Sun. and holid•Y" :iia:i S Bristol. COllt.a Mesa. 640 :1840. THE TBIRD FLOOR Known for au(>f'rior continental cuisine, The Third Floor prom u1e11 to capture 1l'1 !'tt(ltp;n1tion u one or the (lMl!l rest.aurenl.3 an Orangl' County. Speciahzmg in t.ables1de preparel.101111 and Wllfl« only fret1h roods. Ambience exudM elegence and subtle quelity lntunate but '?'.!~ t.r.!im.iduitng dmm~. Loane<i within the Emerald o( AllA.M1m Hot.el, 1717 S. Wat SL, ac-N.168 from Oui neylend an Ana h eim Call 714-999--0990 Emerald Hotel,; al3o m Hawau. the Hawauan Re gent and MBun.i Lana &y Ho""L' FRENCH CAFE FLEUR! Take a seat an Catt' ~·1l'ur1 fur hreal. f!Ult. lunlh nr dinner J.:nJO\ un l'lt quas1te .. n~ m1nmeM mflut>nn•rl i.-. 11 Frenlh touch. Hut )&.:l Mt1nJ1t\' thruu~h lo'r1da\ from '> \lO !Ill !Ultl pm nnd an t>Ulstand1111: wh1tt' l(lovl' hrunch make th111 I ·ur1· tht• place to meet Opt>n 7 duv' 11 Wf'i>k, n.00 am tt1:;1u p .m Modt-ralt-h priC't'd 4fi4.10 M111Arth11r Bh1t Newport Hearh i";f, .!(1111 LE BIARRITZ Ex(>f'rienC'e t'xquuott-Frt'11d1 "'"' inc1al cw.ane whale dmmit an th1' anumale t'renC'h <'hatea11 ~J>t'l lltl lief! include raC'lt of lamh. ~·l'ttl Marsala and a beaut1fol l\t'll't·t111n of fresh fish Homemade award wan ning dessert& P.n.)Oy Sun brum h with unhm1lf'<I chaml>8¥llt' an elaborate buffet.. 11 hot f'ntrt'' and dessert all Sflrvto<l 1n a C'UtY, relax ed atm08phere. to'ull her with domest1C' and imported wine M itt lions Lunch, Mnn lo'r1 , Danntr. seven night!\ Sunday hrunc·h. 04 N. Newport Blvd . Nf'wpc1rt Bf'111•h 64!> 6700 LE CH AR DONN A Y Thl' fine11t an rle&11c 1-'rf'nch 11nd nouvellt' C'u1111nt' an plu~h 11um1und mr-Excite your ~~ with Su prt'ml" of Duck walh poochf'd tJtn fom1a Pigs or Lobster C'&l~rt1le an a Chudonney wtnf' uuC'e wath chanterell6 f<~xlt'n.s1vr '>t"lt'Ct1on of win• from A temiwnn:me con trolled cdlar l.uoch Mon Fra 1 L30-2:~l0. l>anMr Mon S.t from 6:30. Sun brunch 11 2.30 In~· l.ry Hotel, IHHOO MacArthur Rlvd • Irvine 7~2 8777 LF. MIDI Sewr1l th1na11 m11kf' lhlll awartl wm nana hadtoewey truly Pf'Cla.I W1h.f'r, thrir Sw11111 r hf'r, tre1ned 1n M>m~ of tht' bnt ~. Pa.l11c-e S t Mor1U. Piii~ {;11~d. Baur au l..ac, 7..urich Authenti c <'11 1 11ne Pmwnt1llo llt'tiOnal sou~l ~ • tivelt & Sund~ hnmch 110 \lnlq at'• bke •lA!s>i>in1t be<-k in time to an ere when uc:.-.Llf'n~ of food WWI OUlkhed by lf'~f() hoaplt.ably •• h.-r1t.elity r•"4'ly fnund thail d•Y. JOU1 Marica and WeJteJ" LD lhr11 F~nch country home. Lunch. din ner and Sunday brunch. Banquet racilities. Cloeed Mondeya.. 3421 Via I.ado, Newport ~ach 675-4904 INDIAN ROYAL KHYBER Take an enchanted journey into India without leaving Ora.Ille Coun ty. Authentic Tandoori d111be1 elegantly presented in the MotJhul trad ition. Meal and fish dishes prepar~ and marinated tn a blf'nd of herbi and fresh ground spice.. Impressive design and decor t.akNI you back to the 16th centur) Lunch, dinner, Sunday brun.-h 1000 Bristol St., Newport Re11l·h 752-5200 ITALIAN CARMELO'S ThUI ultra-smart ha\f'n or e1cep t1onal lt..alaan .md C'nntanent.al ruasane 18 unl" l)f tht-morf' re"ardin)I( plact'l' ..,, d int' f''rr .. h past.a and '>pt'('lal ··i.icht ·-'811re• art' c.:arl"fullv prep.ued II\ 1 hrl"t-111 t hl" lint"lt lt.11 1an 1 bet.. !>111110 har entl"rUranmt'nt complement.. l hl" fun t1tmor.phert- Pat10 damnl( .ivi1il1tl1le '"' the "Un loven1. Opt>n Tu~ Sun frum Ii 11 m for dinner :-.un Hrund1 11 Oil .! u I lfl.!O K Cmo-t llw' < ·,.r,.1111 t!.·I M11r li7fi 1\1'.!'.? OONATJo:Ll.l'S FAmuu~ J>IZ7.Ji r ht· 11n.,:111 1I l1tm1h• ltalutn '""' 111r,111l ;-;t'~ 1111. 1)l1r fs muut. p1zz,1 ~ p 1•t.1 ll1nt-111 .. r t~ke 1'tlll Beer 1nrl v. tn•• ''"'' -..·n '"' F' mil-. dinml( tor <111111tl1t1"11 t111ht mit hudget. 9.uo \\ "'""' \\I 11 Hu,hard. ~hand 1h1 ~1111 .. r in l'lav1an PlllUI, 1-'ount,un \ 1lli-\ 'ih:I ~~'I .'1 A RCEl.LO'S rh ... "~"rd winnrr uller' on r' lt!ruuve int-nu ~!)t'(·111lt11n1t in vu-.1.1. vt>al, cmppino 11nd lhe1r lam"''• handm11de p1u.a F-'<c.cthhi.ht'd '""a· 197a. thas femily ownt'd n"!taur.1111 h&o C'aptured the hear~ of hrun1 h lovers. ~ides unhm1ted rh11111 paitne, Lhe lavish buffet indudt"o h1•t and cold entreeti, 11 !l4'afood har 1rnd des.wrt table, Sun 10 .I l.un1 h Mon.-Frt., Omner 7 n111h1.w 1t Wt't·k 17502 Beach 11t Sla1~r. Hunl1n11t1111 Heaf'h 842-5.'IOfi VILLA NOVA A bf'11utiful bilv v1rw creatt"» th• romanlll· ..ett1n~ that has made 1 h1 V 1lla Nova • ··11pc'C"inl kind of pl110 .. ' for over fifty ytan. Superh n 11 .. 1n1 rrom Ct'ntral and Northf'rn lt11h <1erved 1n Old World duum r, tellSlve w1M l111l Dtnnt·r n11th1h 'Plano bar Full ml"nu till I llO " m 3131 Wetit Coa.~l Hwv "'t""'I'"" Beach. 642 7880 NEXICAN MICA A Thell food •~ hkr • trap to Mf'l1ni' Hnap1t.11ht-.. 1tot-h1u11i 111 h11nd "'1th lhe11 mull.Al, "Ma l'a....i t"ll Su ta~." or mv hou..""' " vo1Jr h1>1. ,. K~tuh liah~i 'lnf l' I !ti:l.. ti 'I nu W1 tf'l rn,.nd~ 1'0)0\ dtnlnj( ht-no OJWll d1lh frnrn 11 am for 1.un' h l>an nl'r 1111.i ('oc·kc.a1L. E11ter\a1nroen1 WMi S11t niihlJl an lht• Bumi R41om ·~ E 17th !'\\ • CCtllltA M h4 ll~ 08lly Plot Datebe>C*/ Friday. August 16, 1985 27 .. •· , ) l. • I --~------~----,-:----..... ----------..... ------.-.~--..... .._ ... _.. ..... !111111'------.. « I IT ON THE TOWN NATURAL/HEALTHY FORTY CARROTS "Delic1oua fuhioo food.'' per Henry Segerstrom. Discover that reaJ good {eeling of eating gTeat tailing meals prepared daily, natural and healthy Original recipes. Freah juices squeezed daily. A great place for Dinner 7 days from 11 n.m. Sunday Champagne Brunch Between Bull- nrlu and I. Magnin. So Cout Plaza, lnwer level. 556-~ iw. SEAS:OOD STEAl<S ANTHONY'S Pl ER 2 The Southern Caltf Ht>i;tauront Wr1tert voted thlll one the winner uf the best value re11taurant4 Their &eafood 111 the talk of the town with :W-35 fre11h fish daily C B~ Tele v111on claims I.hey have the best happy hour in <1rAnge Menu has caJorie count for the weight conscious Open nightly for dinneT. Localed on the beautiful Neviport Bay at 103 N. Baytide Or. 640-5123. BLACK BEARD'S Noted for their intimate "P1ratet of the Caribbean" atmosphere. Their famous Caribbean pork chops 111 a rare culinary find. The extensive menu also off era heuty beef ent.reea and fresh eeafood. Lunch is eerved 11 3 Mon.-Pn. Dinner from 6 p.m. Happy Hvu1 ~~iuri.-f~~. 4-7 p.m. Tantah'ltnf( o~lf'r bar 1pecialitie11. Wide s•:reen TV Two blockt1 eouth of John Wayne Airport Newport Reach S.11·0080 T HE CANNERY This h1Rtoric waterfront landmark m Newport'11 C'11nnery Villftil' fea- tures fresh local lieafood and 1-Aet- ern beef C'ons1su-nlly good aervice, 1J~n for Lunch. Dinoer, Sun. Champagne Brunch and Harbor Cruiaea. Entertainment nightly and Sun. aftemoona. Enjoy the IOU114te food gaJley-euperb clam chowdM! 3010 LaFayette. 675-5777. REUBEN'S OF NEWPORT Thia ia the original and baa been iiervina Newport Beach for 26 years. Their 1pecialty ia aeafood and at.Mb. Chere aped al aelectfons daily and' famous for their brouted chicken, too! A beaut.iful waterfront . view of Newport Bay enhance.-the atmoephere. Perfect for bu1ineae entertaining and romantic dining. -Located at 261 E. Coat Hwy., New- port. ReMrvationa accepted. Phone 673-1~ THE REX OF NEWPORT Located on the oceanrtont acroea from the Newport Beach pier, The Rea ia the 0Tange Coe.at'a moet excluaive aeafood reetauraot. Well known for fresh Hawaiian rourmet fi&h 1election& and epecializing in 11weet Channel Jeland abaJone, ten- i!i:r 't't':!! !nd prime meats. The warm ambiance oi th.i µadd!"!! booth», gothic paintings and the wl'll stocked wine racks lend to Res'• convivial atmoephere. The Ru of Newport is the choice of locaa as well as vieitors. Recipient of the pre8tigioWI Travel-Holiday ·award. Caeual/elef(anl attire Lunch, dinner. CaJI 676-2566 for reservations. Valet parking. RUSTY PELICAN Fresh aealood and Iota of it! Come dock younelf here and dine over- lookina the he9utiful Newport Bay. Featurin1 15 to 26 fresh f11h aelec- tiona daily rrom around the world . No wait aeafood bar ln the loUJlle. Lunch, Dinner, Sun. Brunch in Newport. 2733 W. Coe.at Hwy., 642-3431. Jn Irvine-Lunch, Din- ner, and Happy Hour. 1830 Main, MS-4774. TALE OF THE WHALE Experience a etep back into Lime to a place wbere you can dine at your own leisure. Enjay the romance of old Newport with a panoramic bay view. E:1cite your senaes with their eensational tea.food and traditional favoritiea. Breakfut 7 a.m., Mon.· Fri., Lunch 11-4 Mon.-Fri .. Dinner 4·11 Mon.·Sat. Set. and Sun. Brunch 7-4, Oyster BAT Frt., Sat. & Sun. Banquet facilities up to 500. 400 Mam Si... Bilboa. 673-4633 THE WAREHOUSE NewpoTt'1 mOBt innovative water front dining experience. Chet Charlet1 Kal&gian f~~\!~~ frellh sea- food and international cuisine. Hi1hly acclaimed, award winning Sat and Sun. Brunch, al1<1 featuring patio dinin((. Incredible oyater bar, exqui11it.e ambience, eiceptlonal tive entertainment. Banquet• and cater· ing available. Lido Village, Newport Beach. 673-4700. DINNER T1 EAi ERS GRAND DINNER THEATER Imprelaive dining and profet11ion11I productions are aure to please earh time you visit. The e1ttraordinaf\ buffet offers rout buon of heel glued ham with a fruit uuce, Gear g1a chicken with peaches and ala.ti· and the Mahi Mahi ii ee.rved in " ..peaaant aauce. Tri-color Cet.tucc1ni and cream ia a real favorite. Enjoy dinner and a play tonight.! Grand Dinner Theater locai..d within th1 Grand Hotel tn Anaheim at 1 Hotel Way Call 772-7710. HARLEQUIN DINNER THEATER Every cuatomer can be ellpect.ed lo be treated like a celebrity. The theater offers ecrumptioua meal with t.op production• in an elegant atmo.phere. The aumpluoua buffrc includes rout baron or betf. chicken aAd fi1th diabea, pasta~. sali1dA, vegetablea, and einful de11 ~erte. The Sat and Sun. brunch 1ndud; • .; ;il:-lctj' !Jf ~ diabea. The Celtbrity Terrace it available for private dining. The individualh decoratf>d private balcony room~ "verlook the 450-eeat bortethot shaped main room. The HaTlequin ie located at 3503 S. Harbor in Santa Ana. Call 979-7650. GUICE TO ORANGE COAST RES tJ\t •RAN I S ~ ~ ~ ·S § Restaurant ~ ~ AIRPORTER INN !'unt1nt>ntnl $9 ()(1 Sl89f> $."1 !1'1 l'l\l.'> 1117'1)1/ M.ccArtln" 111 "~"~,.. ANTHONY'S PIER :t l!tl N A<i,..O• 111 ,._,.,.,..fl'IJI ·~lltfh t"'4ll ~-1·1 :-,1•11lood lruni •11 !I 1 T HE BARN nu~ru Jfl 141181 R«dh1I~ I..,,,,, UI UJI BENNICAN'S .\n11·rh in !;( ....... 241 """' 't\to.•l"un.lrr , •• II ... I ·~ BLACKBt..ARD'S 'wllli•o<l •ltJO M•rt•f"l•k f\.,...port tk·a~ h"" I 11CM1 RRl'fOI IHH & \,Hll I llohJ•• Inn Amt-r1tan $6 11:, $1.! \j;", s:1 9r;.s1 oo U U Mo•t") I .. ,,. \h·--, .• .... , TflE CANNERY ..... ·····.cl I 7'• ~l1 ~;, tOlf• l~ ... .,...,,,. ~~ I:\.•., t- CRAZYHO RSE ~Tt~AK llOl'SE ..... l'llk• \M&• ffr.-.~tt II• "' ,.,,,. ~ .. ·• f • !'>1•t1l1MICI O ILLMAN'H l\n11·ru an ~I ~Vl ~I 9» 'lll!I' H'•'• i;o1 .,.. H.o ... t!Au,. .. fl ,, " ,JAJH, ORAGON f rt•Ol ... .!. ;,, 1711., e...• BhcL ~ '"' •U f "t.111 .... 1' !rum ,; ;41 LE BIARRITZ t r1•111 h ,f', ,.,., "i*f ., .. , 414 .. ''"""" HI '"*I" ti lt•IM t '•-' t t Uf' LE MIOf Fron• h frum ~H ·~1 Frum .. -, , ... , 'Wll \'1e I .11., ,,.,,.,,, tb • h • I• I LI'S l 'l11nf'~I' $1011$1 .!00 11'.l °7'• $\',(I ~t Ad•"'" u,,,,, "•"·t ''°'""'' • • •It A DARIN GO\"RMT.T I "l11nf'Y from Siil IWI I rum $4 !i(1 16CW'I Ad..,. ' ,.,, .. \1 .... I ,, MARCEU~'S 116'12!1. .. ~ f\1"'1 limo ..._ .. t .._.. It 1l1ttn lrrom .,,.,.;~, ''""' '" 2·. MARCEL'S ' I u1111n~nt11I $11 IKl ,,;, tMI ~·I l"I '<IU~I l'kt,. 171h ~ ( .•• , ... \1t .... "" '" MARRIOTJ' uon:r. r ""'"'"'''" lr11m 111111 ~11••· 0. ~...._ ...... .,. •"-· h •• ·~ ... Ml CASA \11IU110 11111 '"''" & 1omlM1 a 111 c llrtl' & romoo -It 17'1! I l .. , • ..,_ •• • R UBEN'S 0, NEWPORT SPt1fofiri from $11.!l'> frnm S4 ir, I ... h -f 111111111 from Sl'Hl!'J frum S-t 96 { 1hf11rn11n '·' 11\ $14 1)11 I !:1 "1 ).'\ H'• C 11nt 1nent;tl from II~ 00 Suf1Nwi lr1111\ SA n~, •• 95 -; u~, ( h1111:~ l~um S79ri fmm s.:-.76 .. DeMy Piiot ~ Frtdey, August 16, 1885 ;;- ~ ~ ~ # ~ ~~~ Q:J~ ~ ~ 'lll :o!>IU '.c1 from ·1 Oii .. 7 4 10 6 :IO 9 '.IO 11 :.Ill ii 1.9!l from,::! -;r, 1:107 Imm ~I 1·, .. 7 ·• ; $8.9fi $2.00 $5.00 ~.'141 i>\!°lll H11l11i.1'' $;1 '!.f> '1-4 ,,-, 111 .. 'llrll' S.tOO 'I~,,., t ";' ~rum $1.! , ... , Sll !'KI -- ~.uu 1 •• m u .• m I~ H!i from 1:1 00 4.:10 14 lrum $6»,"i h7 $9.9fr--.. "7 $1:.!Jill 11i.!lfi 18.ib. * * * * * • \.\~t Mall * * * • Bt-l'r & • Wulf' • .Wf'r 6. Wint * 9,.,., & . Wmr * • * • * • * • • • ·- • • * * * • • • • • • Ill 700 up to '.\(Ml up lo 600 up to ~l up tu 110 up to 7~ up to .!I Ml up lo Clh ut:o Uf. lO 100 up to \Jr~ up to 160 unto • .IO * • • • V11hd1d •