HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-11-15 - Orange Coast Pilot\
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Serving Hewpor1 leech, Coeta Mesa, Huntington leech, lrvlne, Llguna leech, Fount.,n VllJtr Md SouUt Or1ft91 County
ORANGE COUNT Y. CALIFORNIA fRIO AY NO VfMlif R 1·, 1q8'J /', C E:NT S
· Hom~eowners seek $·53M for· cracks
. I
Owners of damaged homes seek relief
from ct ty' age!lcies overshtfting earth
By TONY SAA!EDRA
OfllieO.-, ..... l lallt
Owners of 53 homes ~portedly
dama~ bY. land movement an Costa
Mesa arc 5.eckin$ a total of $53
million from the city, as well as from
I 4 other state and local government
agencies accused by the residents of
neghgef\Ce.
A group claim was delivered last
World
Helicopters ferried
survivors from Col-
omblan volcano devas-
tation that may have
kllled as many as 20,000
persons./ A7
Sports
Edison High shocks
Marina, 51-14 In Sunset
League football show-
down./C1
Newport Harbor wins
whlle Fountain Valley and
Laguna Beach fall In CIF
volleyball semlflnals./C1
Date book
Bubbles, a Balboa Penin-
sula nightclub, will open
Monday with a 1930's
theme./Pege a.
INDEX
Auto Piiot
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Cluslfled
Comic.
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertarnment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police log
Public Notices
Restaurants
Sports
Televlslon
Weather
81 -12 cs
A3
C6
89-11 cs
811 cs
Datebook
810
Datebook
A6
Date book
A3
C4-5
Datebook
C1-4
Datebook
A2
week 10 the variolf alt!nCies by the
San Francisco law firm of Patnck E.
Catalan(>. • spccialtst, in liti8'1tion
involving ground movement.
· Four other claims -for S 150.000,
$85,000, $52,000, and SI .000-were
also filed in recent weeks against
Costa Mesa, bringing lt\e total against
the cny to 57.
Assistant City Attorney Eleanor
I
OVschool
contract
·talks hit
impasse
By ROBERT BARKER
Of tM.,.., ...... ..,.
An impasse has been declared in
the Ocean View School District tn
Huntington Beach an an effort to
settle contract ncgo11at1ons that have
been deadlocked since last spnng.
Contract demands by the teachers
would cost the financially struggling
district about S3.5 m1llton. S-uper-
intendent Dale Coogan said Thurs-
day.
The district. hit hard by declining
enrollment and skyrocketing in-
surance costs, faces a $700,000 deficit
even without a pa y increase. Coogan
said.
And before closing four schools tn
June, Ocean View has been spending
about SI million per year more than it
bas recei ved in state funding.
Ocean View Teachers Assoc1at100
President Bertha Moser Hollister
said, howe ver. that extrt revenue
expected from the Cahfomia Lottery
could finance an extra math and
science remedial teacher at each of the
district's 19 schools.
The extra teacher also would allow
fourth, fifth and sixth-grade teachers
a class preparation period each day
without additional cost. she said.
Teachers are asking for an 8 percent
pay increase while the d1stnct is
offenng a 2 percent increase.
Teacher demands and costs as
es ti mated by distnct offioals 1 nclude:
salary increases.SI million; remedial
staff. $720,000; teacher preparation
time. $720.000; health benefits.
$635,000; and additional physical
education teacher posi tio ns.
$270,000.
Teachers president Hollister. wh o
said about 85 percent of Ocean View's
400 teachers belong to the union. also
said Thursday that her group ts
stnvrng to win contract approval for
agency fees (all teachers. including
non-members would be required to
(Pleue Me SCHOOL/ A2)
Frey said she would most hkely
advise Clly Council members to
reject the claims Monday, setttog the
stage for the homeowners to file
lawsuits.
Damage has been reportCd at 14 I·
homes 1n north Costa Mesa, where
unstable soil is apparently causing
concrete Ooor slabs to crumble and
houses to sink. ·
Scores of buckling walkways and
cracking walls have been found in
neiptborhoods between South Coast
Drive, bf Street, Fairview Road
'Mid Sunflower A venue since the land
sh1fh were first nouced in early
September
Most of1hccrackmgand crumbhna
has been 1n the Grccnbrook and Mesa
Woods no1jhberhoods closes1 to two
city-approved construction prOJCCts
blamed by residents for the groulld
movement.
However. Catalano a1$0 points an
accusatory finger toward state. coun-
ty and city agencies that he says
should have been more mindful ofthl'
"lCOJlilphacal anstabahues.. of the
onetime farmland where homes.
shopping centers and business com-
plexes have been built
Accord ma to the claim. filed Nov 8
It the Costa Mesa ett)' clerk's office,
aovemment agencies oversccana dc-
vclopmenrof thcr-area did not talce
enouah precautions apanst po~nual
land movement.
The ground 1s sa1d to consist of soil
that tends t9 expand and coo\ract. It
also has pockets of"perched" vound
water. a spon&e-hkl' layer of ~·It that
expands when water ts added and
settles when 1t is ta.ken awa\ gl'ol-
ogists say
Agencies rcsponstbll' for the road-
A bird of a different feather
Joan ~o·• Kulpture, ''Olaeau. •• a bird of
an unorthodoz order, l• admired by Cbaae
McLaU.Chlln (left) of Center Tower Aa-
aoclata (left) and Joaquin Munoz, con•ul-
general of Spain. who reprHented the
&rttat'a nath•e country at the unveiling
Thunday of the Kulpture in Coeta Mesa'•
Center Tower lobby.
ways. w.ter fstems. drainage canale,
sidewalks and other pubbc factlat1es
m the ne1&hborhoods dtd oot Like
adequate steps to preserve the water
-iab1e and prevent -iantmdes. slip-
page and subs1dcncc:· the claim
states.
•Named 1n the group chum art the
c1t-yofCosta Mesa, 1ts redevelopment
agency. parkmg d1stnct as well as 1u
parks and recreation d1stnct.
Co-defendants arc the county
Board of Supervisors. as weU as the
count) Oood control d1stnct. the
(Pl eue Me IB8A/A2)
Cleanup
ofbay -
praised
Progress reported
fn lengthy battle
over sanitation
By SUSAN HOWLETT
Local and s1.atc officials ex.pressed
opum1sm Thursday over effons to
improve watl'r quality in Newport
Bay followmg a tentauvc rcpon
released b) the Regional Water
Qualtty Control Board.
The ongoing water quaht) l'fTOn!>
were discussed in.the Newpon Beach
Ctt)' Council <nam~ 4unng a
pubhc bnefing sponsored b) ~n
Manan Bergeson
s5embl) man Gtl Ferguson, Nl'w-
pon Beach Mayor Philip Maurer.
environmental spec1ahst Joanne
Schneider and Jim Bennet. l'xecuttve
officer of the Santa Ana Regional
Water Quaht) Control Board. were
among those 1n attl'ndanc.c
··1 havl' e pos1t1vl' f('('hng ahou1
this." Bcrge\On said ... , thll'lk wl''rc
·Corps of Engineers
to dredge Newport Bay
-A2
maJong progrt'~S ••
Maurer \a1d he wa' cncounag("(f ~
1hl' public tntl'rt''\t in keeping a high
le\ cl of water quaht~ in the popular
ba\ ~!though there ha' het'n 'ome
success in the rtl\ ' cduca11onal
e0 or1!> tn \!OP boaters trom Ou'ihtng
human "'a\lc 1n1 0 \,cwpon Ba~ thl'
batik tor dear "'atcr rcmatn'\ an
uphill one
Thl' 1hrt'l' prnhll'mHontnbu11ng 10
higher than a' cragc le' l'ls of bactl'na
and to"n' arc s1hauon. bactenal
(Pleue .ee BAY /Al)
HB-drops
curtain on
playhouse
-Lawsuit freezes cash
of NB lottery winner
--- --Kecnan·s order marked the fir"it
time in California a court has placed
restncttons on lottery wrnnings.
Marines to diver·t
El Toro landings
By ROBERT BARKE R
OI ... 0.-, Not IWI
Plans to find a home for the
Huntington Beach Playhouse 1n
Huntington Harbour were scuttled
Thursday following protests and a
petition drive by residents of the
neiahborhood. ...
Mayor Ruth Bailey said today
that officials iarc "respond in' to the
concerns of the commuruty by
withdrawing plans to convert a
l ,750-square-foot community
building in a park near Harbour
View School into a I 00-seat theater
for the amateur productions.
The decision was rcachccf Thurs. daX at a meeting at City Hall.
'The building was used much
more for Scouts and other youth
orpnizations than was first
known," she sajd. "And the Hunt-
lqton Beach Playhouse officials
dJdn't want to go where they're not
wanted."
(Pl ....... TDATER/A2)
Judge rules wornan
can spend $4,000
ofher 100,000prtze
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... .,.., "94...,,
The fonuncs of a Newpon Beach
woman who prayed over the only
lottery ticket she ever purchased
turned on her Thursday when she was
ordered to keep her hands off nearly
all of her SI 00,000 lottery prize.
Sharon Nunez said she dreamed of
a new house and lucrative invest-
ments after winnjog the mone~ this
week on the California Lottery s Big
Spin.
But Orange County Supcnor Court
Commissioner Thomas Keenan
dashed her dreams when he told her
to refrain temporanly from spending
all but $4,000 of her lottery winnings
because of a pendma lawsuit against
her husband.
The woman's husband, kaul
NuneL, who 1s a restaorant operator.
is being sued by the Perry Morris Co.
The company claims thl' restaurateur
owes $250.000 1n unpaid equipment
leases.
Nunez owns Kaplan·, Restaurant
in South Coast Plaza and dad own
Kaplan's Restaurants an West Covina
and Brea. Both of those are now
closed.
Christopher Blank. an attorney
rcprcscnlif!& the Perry Moms Co ..
sa1d Mn . Nunez' winnings arc com-
munity p~openy and asked thl' court
to prcvtni..t]le woman from spending
the money.
"She can oash the check. spend the
money and then tt's gone," Blank
said. "Then there's no w.y for us to
get at 1t."
Paul Mast, an attorney rcp-
rc!entana the Nunez famil y. said any
restriction on the lottery pnze would
interfere with Mrs. Nunez' n&ht "to
Sharon lfunea
do what she wants with t-er lift' or hl'r
property."
He said the lottery winnings ma)
not actually be community propen"
Keenan expressed ~r\.a11on~
about meddling 'With thl' lottel) and
lottery winners. He said 1t could haH'
(Pleue aee Wll'fJl(gR/A2)
Af.!!DPllOI Newj>ort's affluent image
Turn to , ... 81 for the
belt eutomoblle buJ9 ,
draws barrage of lawsuits
Vlsitina lnlanden * Newpon
Beach 11 a community dotted with
expensive blyfront homes and atrceta
lined with fancy cars -a community
drippina with weaJth.
NCW{>Ort Beach city om ialuay the
peroepuon has led to a bl.mac of
liability claims ftled by people with
dollar lian• in their eyes -oeoole
who wam to make it bit with a ·mulu-
milhon dollar Jud&mcnt.
But the imaae Is a miflee, accord-Int to city omclaJ an upen11vc
mlf'llie that is cau11na claim after . •
ci.1m to stack up 1n the cny clerk's
office. Bill Brown. Newpon Beach direc·
t6r ofSafcty and Insurance, views the
amount of mint of the liability
claims 11 ••prayera by attorneys wbo
claim 4am11C1 far beyond the tcOPe
of their chcnU' llCcideo
Brown aud Ne•pon 8elcb IS I
"&areet city" attnctiaa..,. penoeaJ
1njwy ud otbcrdalms bcCawe of1u
ftP'ltltJoa of' ricba. lut tbe WJe' .rt a
f.a1le one beea'* the dcys bQder't
and lnturancc COVft'allC does not
match 11s 1m-ae of un1tm1tcd fund •
he said.
From the cychM wh9 contends a ~rty 1tp1cd 1nte~t1on led to his
injury aCC'ldent to the wtmmer who
divn mto a sandbar on the ocean
000f, the (1ty haJ heard them all.
.. They come 1n all fashton " ac-
cordant to C'1ty O.k Wanda R
Whether ICt'lwkd on • sheet of 1ce-J paper or prokutonally med by a
ovil !'W'U attorney. all the datms
ftnd lhctr way to Ralaao The claims ,.. from the re~-
By PHlL SNEIDERMAA
Ol-0.., ..... llal«
Thl' Mannc ( orps will <thul do"'n
the longest runwa) at its El Toro base
for about three ""eeks he-ginning
Monda). hut Manne \l lliualc. !>aid
toda' re,·,~ t11gh1 pattt'rn' should
not create not\<'.' prublem) fur In inc
rl''itdents
\1annt' otliuals -..11d 1hc , hangt·
could i:rcate <Xl.l\mn.11 no1\t' prob-
lems for nc1ghhonng L1lc For~t
residents. hut the\ 'o"'cd hi ll-ep
the~ intrusion'> 111 ··a harl m1n1-
mum ..
( ol km L \hl•lton, rnmmun1l\
planning und hal~On (l fli\Cr fur thc f"'I
1 oro air base. )l11<l runwa\ '4R """'
Ix' clo~J for ahout three "'C't'l~ for
major repair "'orl Hc "11d dl'U~nora
llon nl the run""a' 'c. cnncrl'tC ha'
hamPl'ft'd th<" Uo;{" o/ .. 3m"'i11ng scar ..
uS<'d lo slo-. 1ct\ a\ the\ land. ~1mulattng an am rat\ .. amt'r iand mg.
• hl'llon ~1d '\la'' engm('('f"\ d<'-
C'Crt1ficd the UM" ut the arresting gear
nccess1t.at1ng thl' fl'p.l1r ""ur k
SUSAN
HOWLETT
P £R S Pf Cl l~t
mcnt oh $7 prhqe can sq_uasMd by
a C1t)' trash truck to 1 mult1·m1lhon
dollar allcpuon qain~t the pohcc
drpenment, he 5&Jd
And the claim' ha"e httn tncrcM-l!'I by tcaps and bounds o vn thl' past
ft ve yean.. R.aato "1d.
.. Wo'vt seen tarscr amounts nf
cla.am• for terser dollar amounts," • (Pl ....... QW'POllT/A2)
,.
.\t lllDOtlkct 14R 1\lhclonge\10I
El l Mn' runY.a~\ On the averagl'.
100 planc' u\t' the run"' a) da1h 1he'
!">a.Id
Shellon -.aid tha1 dunng the rt'pa1r
pc."nod planc' Y. tll he d1' ened 111
runY.3\'I 7R and -L. "'htl h run
ixrpend1cular to '4 Thl" change will
l"l'QU•fl' llviannc JC'ts 10 U'!JC a nrv. route
"hen apprnalh1ng for thl' ha~ for a
landing or "touch and go" el<'ret\C'
Dunng thr construction penod
hl'lton ~1d Mannt' aircraft Y.tll
approach n't"r Lion Countr) and
oixn rountr. nonh nf u1 urc \.\ orld
1n Laguna Hill'
In thr late 1 •nos. the la:;t 11mc
run"'a' '"'R -.a, clo~ lor an
e\ tC'ndl'd ixnc'ld I 11 oro fltllht'i were
d1,ened n,lnhwt'il of th<' base. tng-
g<"nna numrrou\ noise complaints
frum In int'' f I l amino Real com-
munn. hchon said
.\n\.o ne -.ho needs to report air-
craft noi!>C prohlems dunna thl'
ru nwa' rr~1r ixnod can call thC' Manne~ at 651-1702 or 651-3830
Crash hurts
Laguna cop;
driver held
•\ Laauna Beach pohcx officer
uffettd nttk and beck 11\junes earl)'
th1 momtn& when an allcacd dNnk·
en dnver slammed tnto tfie bK~ of
lu;Ekcd s-trol car on South COUt H way
oannc Manc•ch u 40, of San
Juan C'ap"trano, wit anated oo
su paaon nf felon) drunten dnvtftl
b) the C'ahfom1.1 Hiabway Patrol
afttr he repontdly rammed lftto the
ti.ck of Officer Bnan Kello· 1 pol11Ce
QI
Kebo. a 2S-¥Ur-old MtJ11on Viejo
(Pl ....... CaAM/AI)
,
-.... .... ,.,. ... .. ~ • • • • • • .... _, llf ... .._,, ... ~ •.6 .... ~ ~ •• -
Media unwelcome at hostage talks
~ liVu la HwadJISIOD Beedl. met
i.D a tdepbooe mta'Yiew &om bis
otlioe aa a medical lest.iDa a.nd
JUoolia finn in ADabcim. He llddod. .. , feel that 01ber families
of ~ abo believe ludl in-
comktaadoo oo tbc pen of tbe
media wUI ditnape ~ We
will be "" 11111'1 if dlis bappem. .. JacobleA'• S4-yea.r-old !al.bet, David. ii ditectot of American Hot-
pi_taJ iD 8dnn &.Dd WU kidnapped
Ma_y28. --OD Tbunday, t.bt arcbbisb.op'1
envoy, Terry Waite. held an ifn. ~pcu .-s coofcreoce in the
lobby of a west Beirut bold used IS a
command cater by the media.
Waite~• decision to talk to the
media aPC)ll.l'elltly came after be
lpOtlCd ~ and (lhototrapl\ets
Dee' where be WU '1a)'lftl and feared
they wouldjeop&ntizc bjs mi ion.
.. rd like to make a particuJar ~lea
that I am Mt to be followed by
anybody because if that happms..
&beo it will jeopardize my own safety aDd the aftty of other people, .. Waite
llML
Waite sajd be bad made conlact
with the kidnappers, addint, ''.Pro-
pess is beioa made. and, we're
movioa f orward.r .
Eric Jacobsen said be was en. counaed by Waitt's repon of pro-
greu..
But be added, "We arc tempcrina
O\ll '!C~!;i&m to protect ourselves in cue do not wol"k out.··
U.S. Tempe
•
~.ftt.~ '"0 .. TI ~ Wt1m -Col0-..
Srlewt" Rain F~11u Sl\Ow OccluOtO~ Slttoc>n .. y ......
"'--WMN< ~f "°Alo \JS °""' OA eo.--c•
Markets;meatc~ers-Back-Bay
trade insults on strike dredging ·
Prem ~u:t=-=~ violent supcrmartctstrlndi.sintegrated further advances
-
10 64 11 a •1 , •
.. a4 ,. u ,. to
A"1-97 to ~ 1e II 4' 37 M JI .. ., •1 .. a 41 ea 43 41 S2 ., 35
54 41
71 M ao oe n 01
IO M
50 42 97 ..,
·-· ., 02
.. 11
41 ao
today u strikers prcdict.ed a Iona, oostfy dispute and aa:uscd manaaement
oqo11ators ofbein& arropnt and \lDbeodiat
And~ store .... Qtativa detcribed the suikina rne.t cunen and
Teamsters as bciD& "dinosaurs" and blamed the unions for tbe messy diJpute.
-Ncwlotiationa. called Wedneeday byeledenl mcdiatortobreak-an impew in the l l~y-okt strike, broke off early Tbunday at the Anaheim Hilton. No
new talks arc scheduled
Talk.a between small ru,h-level teams for JD&nllCDlent and tbe meat
cunen' union, the United Food and Commerc:ial Worken., broke off after the
Food Empioycn Couecil rejected a major union cooccuion •. said meu cvtien
spokesman De Swinton.
'"ft loob like they want a Iona strike where they can ~uoc the qreement
to the 1940 level," Swinton u.id.
Swinton said the meat cut ten offered to sive in to the employers' demand
for a lower-wage sc:ale for new employees in mum for job security provisions
for CWTCDt employees. After a 30-mmute meetina, man•gement refused, be
said.
"They were arrogant," he said. "They left no room for oompromiac."
Manaaement representatives could oot be reached for commenL
Meanwhile. in tbe latest violent incident in the work stoppq:e, an
independent truck driver told polioe in Irvine early today that protesters
chased his ria and burled rocb.
Irvine police also investigated a report that the tniJer of a Lucky truck was
tipped over at the grocery store's warehouse on Alton Parlcway. But police said
tbe incident was an accident on the 1J6rt of the truck driver, not an intentional
act by pickets.
THEATER •••
P'rolDAl
Huntington Harbour residents,
who mounted a furio6.s petition
drive when they learned of the
proposal, claimed the playhouse
would deprive them of a public
meetinf place. add to ~DI woes
and brio.g unwanted commercia.J
aspects into their ncigbbomood. •
"We are very pleased that the
buildin& will be retained as a P,Ublic
building for the community, • resi-
dent Barbara Shapiro said today in
a prepared sta.t.cmenL -rhe people
of tlu.ntioiton Beach expressed
their views and our city govern-
ment leaden WCR very responsive.
I
We are all happy."
Playhouse representatives de-clined to comment on where they11
turn next i.D a search of more than
20 ytan for a permanent home in
tb«ity.
Before the public outay, city
and Playhouse officials bad agreed
to a five.-year lease at S l 00 a year.
Theater officials also ~ to
pour $I S0,.000 into the refurbish-
ment of the building, to build a
staaic and for raised seating. They
al.lo proiniled to share the build.in&
with ~borbood p-oups and
protect it 1rom vandalism.
87 SUSAN BOWLET!'
Of .. l!lllJ .......
Tbe House of Representativct has
approved a water development bill
that authorizes the U.S. Army Corps
of Eqineen to engage in a $2.5
millioo project to ~ and main-
tain UpperNewponliay, ~-Glenn
M. Andenon announced y.
Andenoa, D-Loni Beach, db-
ICribed the bill IS a ··~or water
policy initiative" authorizing funding
for pon development, inland water·
1 ways, Oood control projects, beach
et'Ofion, municipel water supply sys-
tems and other water~
A 2SO-foot-wide I will be dredeed and maintained in Upper
Newpon Bay to tbe boundary of the
Upper Newport Bay State &ologjcal
Prela ~ llClCOldina to Anderson. The Upper ewport Bay channel and the
channel below tbe Plcific Coast
ffiabway bridae will be citedFd I 5
feet deep, be said.
The project complements a just-
completed dredain& project in the
Upper Bay within the ec.oloaica.J praerve.
... Upon completion of this pro~ect,"
Anderson said, ••roughly two million
cubic yards of aediment wiU have
been removed from the bay. It will
have been restored in a condition
flmrina prior tcrl 930-wben stsni6-
cant tidal cbanaes began to occur."
In addition to bacterial contamina-
tion and toxic substance contamina-
tion, tbe wtation levels in Newport
Bay have resulted in concern for the
water quality in the popular resort
area. The water quality in the bay is beina monitored by the state Re·
sional Water Quality Control Board.
The biU now goes the tbe Senate.
BAYCLEANUPEFFORTSAPPLAUDED •••
From Al
contamination and toxic substance
contamination, accord,ing to
Schne1dcr.
The report includes the recommen-
dation that the city should make sure
there are enough pump-out restroom
facilities. It also recommends marina
operators include conditions in their
lease agreements specifying that ves-
sels moored in the marina must have
holding tanb. The report further
recommends lease agreements be
revoked if boat operators arc seen
dumping waste into the bay.
The report was ~ at the
request of the state Leaislature undef"
the direction of a resofotion sponsor-
ed by ~o. The legislation. SCR
38, reqwred the prq>eration of the
report on the water quality in the bay
and required ~ board to make
recommendations OD bow tO im-
prove the situation.
Althou&h preliminary information
on the water quality of the bay
indica~ .. higher levels than de-
sirable of bacteria and toxics,"
Bcraes<>n said the levels a.re "weU
below crisis proJ>:<>nions."
Schneider satd the monitoring of
sediment transponcd into the bay has
bceo conducted since the early 1980s
under a cooperative agreement With
the U.S. Geological Survey. the cities
of Newport Beach and Irvine, and the
Irvine Co.
Also being monitored is the
bacterial contamination of Newpon
Bay which can directly affect rec-
reation and shellfish harvesting. Thir-
ty stations at selected locations in the
upper and lower ponions of the bay
and the bay's major tributaries arc
measured week.Jy. Schneider said.
Schneider said the cities of Tustin,
Costa Mesa and Santa Ana should
adopt a policy similar to those in the
cities of Newpon Beach and Irvine,
which requires that landscape plans
for new projects address the control of
fertilizcn, J>C'ticides and irrigation
runoff. She said the policies help to
control toxic substance contamina-
tion. •
Maurer said the water quahty
problem is far from solved.
NEWPORT HURT BY 'RICH' IMAGE ••.
From Al
~o said. The yearly totals of
claims have more than doubled since
l 980-8 I, when thCR were about I SO
claims filed against the city, she said.
Brown said the odds get better for
the plantiffs and worse for the city
with each new claim.•
.. We're not exactly bankrupt,"
Brown said, "Still in au. the constant
plummeting of these claims lSn't
good."
Brown said the unp~1ctab1llty of
the courts presents another problem
for the city. Many claims thought to
be settled will be defended, and vice versa, he said.
"The lack of predictabJlity in the
cowi system affccu the insurance,"
Brown said.
Since March 1985, when an tn·
surance company canceled the city's
liability policy, the cost of msurance
Just Call
642-6086 ..
coverage tor Newport Beach llas
increased 900 percent, Brown said.
More than S60 million in excessive
force claims are pending ap.inst the
Newport Beach Police Department.
And, the latest count shows at least
35 claims against the city in the
aftermath of the Aug. 2 oil weU
explosion and fire that cawed oil to
JUSh over neighborhood streets and
into the bay near 44th Street.
Tbe City WU bard bit by a $6
million Orange County Superior
Court jury jud&rncnt to a¥£13-ear-old
swimmer who was para! after a beach·re~ted accident. e city is
appealina the award to John Taylor of
Claremont after the jury found the
city liable for not properly warning
swtmmen of sandben and ocean
da.ngm.
A claim was filed in January by
William Bwion Judd, 26, seekJ ng SS
million after he reportcd.Jy broke his
neck after diving into the surf in'
August 1984. A lawsuit alleging
similar da~ was filed by at-
torneys for Edward Tessier, 17, who
was paraJyz.ed after a diving accident
in Balboa. Just this month1 another
claim by a man who broke his neck in
the ocean was filed .. ..If we continue to get beach-related
cJaims like the Taylor case, we may
find ounelves uninsured or even self-
msured," Brown sa..id.
Newport Beach's high-rise build-
inp and business centers radiate a seme of wealth that could really hurt
the local aovernment, Brown said.
"We may be financially stable at
this point,' Brown said, .. But there
ma).' come a point in time when there
isn t enough money,"
Wlaat do )'M lib .._, tile Daily Pla.1? W~at doa't yo• lllle? C.11 U.e
oamber at ltft ud y..,. mn .. 1• wlll be recorded. transcribed a.ad delivered
to &k appropriate MJ&er.
ne aame if . ..._ auwert•1 tent« may be •IH lo record leller1 lo tlae
cdlior •• Hft::':~ C-trtlHl&on to "r Lett.en ~lama m1111 lodllde U.tlr
ume u4 tt •miter fer verUlcatloo. No l'lrnlatloe calla, please.
Tell "•laat'1 • ,..,. mllwl.
:::-
.. au1rao111d
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--...., 119 • ..,..-...., ........ ----"'~-..... ,.191, .. .....
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Prod1Jc11on
MenaQf!r
VOL 71, NO. 111
•
WINNER •••
From Al
a "chillinseffect" on the state games if
a person "gained nothing" by win·
ni~urther, he said it was the woman's
appearance on television that led to
,. 31
,, Tt
t3 7S
" S7 ,.-..
29 11
44 32
HU
M SS
50 43 n 53
41 35
57 37
her identity by the company suing her
husband. Keenan suggested the
woman could have requested
anonymity and avoided the whole
problem.
''It's of some benefit to the lottery
10 have winners on TV.'' Keenan
said. "It's an advertisement. a benefit
to the state and to edu~n."
S.7 21
1.1 oe
He said it would be wrong if every
person being sued refused to go on
television to spin the money wheel.
Sayi ng be didn't want to leave Mn..
Nunez without a penny, Keenan
granted her pcnnis.sion to spend up to
S4,000 of her prize money.
SCHOOL TALKS ••• "She may have made promises
after winning." Keenan conceded.
The commissioner denied a re-
quest for a writ of attachment. which
would have allowed the court to seize
the winnings outright. Instead be
asked that all but S4,000 of the priz.e
be protected until .. full ~ng eee.
19.
From Al
pay union dues) and binding arbi-
tration {a neutral pany wouJd ma.kc
decisions in teacher-Oistrict dis--
put.es.)
Binding arbitration is especially
important, she said, because of ~
called "Victorian Oause" proposed
by the administratioo.
District officiaµ could suspend
teachers without due prooess for
reasons of 1mmorafoy. insubordina-
tion and dishonesty, she said. Binding
arbitration is required, she said, to
protect teacheT rights.
As a result of the impasse dedar-
arion, the State Public Employment
Relations Board will be asked to step
in and certify that no more progress
can be made without an outside
mediator.
Neither Nunez or her husband
were in court Thursday but Raul
Nunez Sr., the father of the restaurant
owner, said the family is tired ofbcing
"bounded" by the media.
MESA FACING $53 MILLION CLAIMS •••
l"romAl ·· ·
county sanitation district and the
Costa Mesa Sanitary District.
Damages arc also beirtf sought
from the Coastal, Muniapal and
Mesa Consolidated water districts, as
well as the state of California, and the
state transportation, housing and
planning departments.
The claim allCJed the agencies
should have required more careful
"construction plans and techniques."
Moreover. state and local govern-
ment should have better inspected
building projects and public utilities
to make sure they were constructed
properly, the document sajd,
The claim alleges seven counts of
inverse condemnation, nuisance and
negligence as well as allowing a
danaerous condition to persis1. fail-
ure to pcrfonn mandatory duties, and
causing homeowncn emotional dis-
tress.
Catalano, in a Thursday telephone
interview from bis San Francisco
office, said the SI million-per-house-
hold fl&Ure sought by the claim may
be raised or lowered after bis office
takes inventory of the damages.
He added that be expccls to add
several more clients in the nonhside
neighborhoods.
F'rey said the arguments in the
claim were vague and amounted to
little more than &Jbberub. She added have said the companies are also
that govennent agencies were being conducting their own geological stud-
threatened with suits because the I~ ies.
year statute of limitations bad CX·-
pired for any legal action against the
bomebuilden.
"That is why, I believe, they're
going aft.er us," she said. "But I don't
see any basis for city liability."
Catalano's firm bas launched its
own geological study to determine
what caused the soil in the fashion-
able ·neighborhoods to expand or give
way.
A separate $35,000 study con-
tracted by the city is expected to be
presented to the council in mid-
Deccmber.
Residents suspect the slippage is
linked to an underground parking lot
being constructed for the South Coast
Plaza annex on BearS~t,just nonh
of the San Diet<> Freeway. They say
waterdrainioa into the large pit there
is coming from beneath the adjacent
nei&hborhoods, causing the land to
settle.
Additionally, homeownen say vi-
brations from construction on an
adjacent 296-unit apartment com-
plex by Arnel Development Co. is
a.wavatina the problem.
Officials for Arnel, as well as for
mall owner C.J. Segcrstrom &. Sons,
CRASH ••.
From Al
resident. was reported in satisfactory
condition this morning at Mission
Community Hospital in Mission
Viejo.
Both Lacoss and Kelso were treated
for injuries at the scene. Kelso was
theo transported by the hospital's
Life Flight helicopter.
Before being booked, Lacoss was
transported to South Coast Medical
Center in South Laguna for treatment
and later released into the CHP's
custod~. according to Hilda Madrid
of the Laguna Beach Police Depe.n-
menL She was being held at the
Orange County jail.
Lacoss, driving a 1979 Volkswagen
Dasher, was southbound when sbe
rear-ended officer Kelso's black and
white police carat about I a.m., polioe
'said.
Kelso was on duty monitoring
traffic near 2475 South Coast Hilb·
way.
Both can received major damaae.
R0ter'• Gardene Invite• you and you,. to attend
the un.elllnt and U9htln9 of The first Annual
CelebrUy TREE. Friday, NOffmtMr 15 at 6 :00 p.m .
l
The "Celebrlty Trtt" on dltplay here from
Nowmber 15. l• th• newat hlghlltrht of the Ropr'•
Garden• "ChrlotmH Fantaty."
Wv 1n1mduu lh• C.•kmnly Trn· 10 benefit IM Na11t1nal Comm11111• f()f Pr•1.fnlM">n of Cluld
AbuM .... h1eh " .... ork1n9 10 1cducr child •buH 1n rti. U ...,
c.i.tw11 ... ,..,,, .. o111\ll•d lo J<.nioh• •n orn•m""'' ...... ,. <lfl •utogHpMd l<tq frn I""' Thtty .... ~.
htt•nwly •r11hu\M1,llt frnm P<ful M(C'.<tttMy 1n '-u\'14'' l;.n<1i.nd to Jtm Ht'n<On ,,nd Mt•t P'95rv
,n N..,,. YMI. City ~ft Ju(h 111 Mniy Tyl«! MooH Bob Hope S.natoi P••• Wilton Lib.rau,
Sl•v• Coarv"ll I •na T unwrr Jof'lnnv CattQn Ch<lrlH ~huh1 and many oth«r~ h•vt conMbu1.t .. n '" 11\ci n&m" of ch1khm
G .. n""'"' r1•k>t>"'"'' h11v11 m"d" 1h1~ ''*-' ii rl'1th•11 Vnotl < 11n ht<lp melt" II mo1• m .. n1nqful
anol \h<rv. your "'"'" ~rrt by purcha\lng onw of th4t llrnem•nt1 Thi• pu1Ch..., I\ ecluallv a
1!011•1ton ""''h •II Pf<l(••«h "'"''1.l tn thw N•t1on<1I Comm•tlH lc>t "•v•ni>nn ()# Child Abutf'
J h•nk you for )Olnlng Roger's Gardens 1n making tht\ Chrlstmai
•n espern1lly heppy orw
The R~r s f amtly
'
B uLLFTIN BoARo
Scholarship dance
set at UCI Saturday
,_-he la Rau Assoc1at100 of UC Irvine will bold
its cisb annual schol.arhip fund-raising dance Sat~rday at 7:30 p.m. an the University Center's Hentaac Room.
Tiic trio "Los Lu1scs" will start the festivities ~uri~a ~e cock~il. hour, followed at 9 p.m. by
Califas, entenam1na to the b_eat of salsa, jan,
cumbias and contemPorary music. Tickets are S l S
each or $25 for couples and can be purchucd at the door.
Proceeds will be used for scholarships to unde~duate, &raduate and medical students on
the bu1c of community service and academic
excellence. CtJI Li2 Maestas at 856-6612, Charmion
Hemandet at 856-7881 or John Martinez at
8S6-14S1 for additional information.
Money •emlnan slated
Two seminars on money management wiJJ be
presented Saturday at Irvine Valley College. The
• utJes ~''What is a Trust Deed?" fro m 9 a.ni. to 4
p.m. an Room A301 and "Accumulate and Protect
Your Assets" from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Room A305
The fee for the first class is $35, which incl udes
a workbook, wh1k the second 1s priced at $20. Call
the college's community services office at 559-3333
for details.
Crafts bauar ln Irvlne
The seventh ~nnual hohday crafts bazaar wlll be hel~ Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m . at the Irvine
Senior C~nter .. 3 ~andburg Way, Irvine, and the
community an invited.
Vendors must be Irvine residents 55 or older
and there will be a small table fee. Call Bebee 9omber~ a1 660-3891 to reserve space or for funher
mfo nnation.
Career seminar at GWC
Coastline Community College will present a
seminar Saturday on achieving career pote ntial
from 9 am. to noon tn the Huntington Beach Center.
20661 Famswonh Lane, Huntington Beach.
Dick Robens, a creer counselor and labor
market analyst, will conduct the program. The fee is
S 10 and add1t1onal 1nfonnat1on may be obtained by
calling 24 1-6 186
Hollday boudque planned
The Fountain Valley Junior Women's Club will
conductaholidaybout1queSaturdayfrom IOa.m. to
4 p.m. in the Fountain Valley Recreation Center
gymnasium at the comer of Heil Avenue and
Brookhurst Street.
A variety of crafts will be offered . Call the club at
963-3546 for more infom1ation.
Glrls' day scheduled
A ''Girls' Day Out" afternoon event, including
makeup sessions, aerobics, crafts and a tea pany ,
will be held Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. at Deerfield
Community park, 55 Deerwood West, Irvine.
School-age prts between 5 and I 0 years of age
arc invited and the ~stration fee 1s S 12. Call
SS 1-8638 for additio nal information.
Injury lawsulta cUscuued
The bare bones ofa personal 111jury lawsuit will
be the to~ic of a scmmar presented by Coastline
Commuruty College Saturday at the Costa Mesa
Center. 2990 Mesa Verde Dnve East, Costa Mesa.
Paralegal Faye Eccles and registered nurse
Evelyn Childs will conduct the session, and personaJ
injury attorney Michael Lancaster will be the guest
speaker. The fee is $30, which includes lunch and a
work manual. Call 241-6186 for details.
Klds' madnee ln NB
In celebration of Natio nal Children's Book
Weck, the Newpon Beach Public Library will
present a special movie matinee Saturday at 2:30
p.m. at the Mariners Branch Library. 2005 Dover
Drive. Admission is free.
Two films will be shown -"The Electnc
Grandmother" and "Winnie the Pooh anda Day for
Eeyore ... Call 644-314 7 for add1t1onal m formauon.
Fa•hlon •how at college
A fall fashion show will be presented by
Saddleback College's fashion design and merchan-
dising students Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Center
Coun of the Mission Vie10 Mall.
The free show will feature students modeling
their own creations as well as those of mall
merchants. Call the college at 582-4541 for more
information.
'Frog Prince' ln Irvine
The Lilliput Players will perform "T he Frog
Prince" Saturday afternoon at the Heritage Park
Youth Services Center, 4601 Walnut Ave., Irvine.
Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for children
for the children's production. Tickets will be sold at
the door and funher information may be obtained
by caJljng 660-3928.
JubUee Sm1en 1n NWael
The Pacific Jubilee Sinaers will ma.kc their first
Oranae County appearance Sunda)' at 7:30 p.m. at
t.tie Shepherd of the Hills United Church of Christ,
30121 Niguel Road, La1una N1guel.
Tickets arc $7.SO for general admission and
$6.SO for students and senior c1t1zens.
Mu•ldal program •lated
A showcase of Broadway musicals will be
presented Sunday aflcrtoon by the pcrfonninJ arts
section of Irvine's Community Services Division at
2 p .. in the auditorium of Turtle Rock Community
Park. on Sunnybill Way at Turtle Rock Drive,
Irvine.
VOCAi instructor Natasha Yufe will conduct the
pfOIJ'lm, and admission is SS for adulla and S3 for
children. Tickets will be available at the door and
mo~ ln fonnation is •vaHable at 660-3928.
Friday, Nov.15
•No mectinp scheduled
Monday, NOY. 18
• 6 JO p.m., C.ta M ... Qty c.-ctl, O ty
ouncil Chamben. l7 Fair Dnve. • '?·JO p.m .. 1"99 ,,.._. C-mlttla, O ty
Council CMmben, 17200Jamborec Blvd.
•
... •
Oftnge CoM1 DAILY PILOT/Frldey, Howmber 15, 1M6 '* .a
Offtoeee
•The wt.ant•
CUt ..... of
•'Tiie Wt.ant of 0.'' prepare · few tWr ·
prodactloa, to -~ed at tlae et.
Mark~
Claucla lD IC'ewport
Beacla tla1a ----9114. ham left an
Tom V•n•we. Bill
Cos and Joe
!'-lll!'OC:Raua. M.t.lri-
Vaadenllce aad
II.II. W1alte Oaak
tlae WIQ.s Wltela .
of tlae ·-· pla,.S by Kim gtncannoa.
See today '•
Datebook calendar
foT detaila.
0.., ..... ,......,, L.-......
Road project funds split
By LISA MAHONEY
Of IM o.11,_ .,_..
Unccnain of getung full federal funding
and feanna the wrath of an angry pubhc,
the Califom1a Transponation Com-
mission adopted a two-tier funding system
Thursday for Its next State TransPortat1on
Improvement Program.
By separating prOJCCts into two
categones - one of certain funding and
another for projects that can get under way
only when extra money is available -the
commission hopes to sidestep a dilemma
over how many road projects It should
include in 1ts Ii vc-ycar transPon.ation plan.
State road. transit and cenain airpon
projects depend in pa.rt on federal highway
funds. In developinJ its 1986-91 transPor-
tation plan, commissioners found them-
selves 1n a quandary over whether to
submit projects amo unting to 100 percent
of antjc1pated funding or a reduced
schedule on the chance some of that
funding may be wuhbeld.
Tbe commission found itself facin~ an
angry pubhc last year when some projects
listed in the transpon.ation plan d ad not get
under way because budgeted federal funds
fell through.
To avoid funher back.lash. the com-
m1ss1on adopted a two-uer plan that will
put d ty officials and others concerned with
road improvements on notice that some
projects arc no t certain to JO forward, said
Bruce Nesulnde, comm1ss1on chairman.
Congress recently cut $650 million an
road improvement funds for California.
fon:ing the commission to delay numerous
landscaping projects in order to free funds
for construction.
Additional federal h1,ahway funds a.re
tied up in a congressional suuale t0
balance the natio n's budget and reduce a
mounting deficiL
Lawmakers arc cons1dcnng whether k>
wttho ld a Port.ton of the highway funds the)
plan to approve fo r next year and credn
that percent.age aga.mst the deficit.
If such a bill were adopted, st.ates would
be granted a ccrtatn amount of federal
h~way funds. but'prevented from spend-
ing perhaps as mucb as 15 percent of their
entitlcmenL The Possible discrepancy
between approved and actual budgets
loomed as a logistical and a pubhc relatio ns
problem for the state commission, which
must begin work on its five-year plan in
orderto adopt it in July.
Cou-nty-peace groups plead for summit
By USA MAHONEY
Ot ... o.elr ........
Orange County peace groups urged
President Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev Thursday to t.ak.e st.cps
to reduce the threat of nuclear war when
they meet for summit talks next week 1n
Geneva.
"We hope you plan ... to have a scnous
dialogue on reducing the threat of nuclear
war and on a moratorium on testing and a
resumption of negotiations for the signing
ofa Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty," said
Marion Pack, spokeswoman for the O r-
ange County Alha ncc for Survival.
Pack made her comments during a press
conference in Santa Ana. She was joined b>
representatives of several peace-seeking
groups incl uding the Orange County
Coalition for Peac.c and Justice, wh ich has
31 member organizations.
The alliance displayed 3.025 s1gnaturt's
on a pcuuon urgmg that nuclear '-"Capons
testing be permanent]) ba nned 1n both
countnes.
The signatures wall be added to those
gathered b) the nuclear-freae group an Los
An$eles and other peace groups around the
natio n for prescnta uo n to the two leaders
in Geneva.
Reagan and Gorbachev 1A1l1 meet next
Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss a
variety o~ concerns.
In a speech Thursday night, Reagan told
the nation that he is go ing to Geneva on "a
mission for peace" that he hopes will
conunue in futu.re years.
Reagan said his purpose 1n meeting
G orbachev is to ·•try to map out a basis for
peaceful discourse even though our dis-
agree ments on fundamentals will not
change."
Sccretal) of tate George P hultz said
the two sides remain far apan on arms
control issues. ..There 1s no freedom any plaoc 10 the
In July. the Soviet Union announced a ' v.orld while we arc threatened with the
m oratonum on nuclear weapons testing horror of nuclear holocausL Two of our
until January 1986. Soviet leaders asked most preaous freedoms are freedom from
tbe United St.ates to follow suit. but fear and fTeedo m from wanL Nctthcr of
JOvemmcnt officials declined and instead these freedo ms 1s possible wtu.le the two
in' 1ted the Soviets to v.1tncss an .\mencan most Powerful nauons arc d1verun, our
nuclear wcaPonS test. ~urces to crea~ instruments of tonun
In calling for a permanent testing ban. and death." she sa.i.d .
the alliance's Pack observed that "The Speakina for the JnterfaJth Peace M1rus-
arms race has continued unabated. the tt') of Ora.nae Counry, the Rev. Fred
stockpiles 1ncreas1ng as new and even more Plumer wd. ".As pco{>le offatth we bum bl)
deadl} weapons move from the d rawing call u~n our president to meet with
board 10 development a nd deployment As Micha.JI S. Gorbachev asa true brother who
the numbers and deadly force of tht'~ da1l} stru&J)es with man> of the same life
weapons increase. so do world tensions and and death issues of the world."
o ur fears as well." Said Paula Bruce, spokeswoman for the
Honensc Gruber. who represcnied 700 Orange Co unt\ chapter of Women's 4.c-
members of Leisure World Concerned uon for Suclear D1Sannamt'n t. ·· '\s a
Citizens for Peace. called on the Reagan mother. I wan1 our children to continue to
a nd Gorbacbev to fo~ter peace and fr«· enJO) the beauties of the world wtthout the
dom in thelf talks. constant threat of nucle4r anmhilauo n ..
Oftl c1als at the !'Jcwpon-\1esa l n1ficd customer pumped S4 1n gas l hursda>
School D1stnct reported that someone afternoon but became 1mpat1ent wailing
broke into Baclc Ba) High School. J90 E for someone to collect and drove off
Mo nte Vista. and stoic S5.166 .!8 in wuhout pa)tng
computer equipment "-"ednesda) The • • • thief entered b) breaking 1A1ndO'-"S nea r the· Someone reponcdl) stoic a arm bag
classroom doors. police rcpon s said contaJn1ng S 1,515 in Jewell) from the • • • ladies locker room of the Los Caballeros
Woman in dumpster
didn't die violently
'\ thief reportcdl) broke into a ho me in pons Complex. l "':!"0 Ne\I, hope. Thu.rs-
lik.e that." La.zar said. The tox1colog1cal the 500 block of West Wllson St~t da' Ao autopsy on the body of a woman
found this week in a Costa Mesa dumpster
failed Thursday to reveal any signs of
violence, forcing ho micide detectives to
wait several weeks for a toxicolog.ical
~~rt.
tests will show whether there were an~ Wednesda} and stole S.:!75 in cash S3.000
drugs, alcohol or other substances in 10 Jewelry and S 125 in miscellaneous
Rodnguez' body. items. Pohce reports said the intruder
Th I. d Wcdnesda'-entered through an uost.a1rs "1ndov. e woman was oun , • ' •
'We're in a holding pattern now. Yo u morning by a man rummagrng through a A thief. probably attempting to stea l lhe
dumpster behtnd an tndustnal comple:il at c.ar stereo, forced open the rear sliding
3 199A1rponLoop.She waslaterident1fied window of a light blue 1981 Volkswagen
thro ugh her fingerpnnts. Lazar sa1d pickup parked in the 2200 block of Canyon
really need that cause of death before you
can start talking to people," Lt. Tom Lazar
said this morning. ''But we're going to play
it as a homicide until it's proven other-
wise."
Examiners TCPoncd that 24-year-old
Linda Gomez Rodriguez of Santa Ana was
"not shot, stabbed, beaten or anythina else
He added that Poljce were unsure of the Tuesday. However. he aparentl) '-"BS
time of her death. Gomez was last Sttn b) scared off before he could steal anything.
relatives about 7 p.m. Monda~ a1 her pohce repons said •••
grandmother's home in Santa Ana. Lazar Someone rePoncdl} stok t"o s 1 o hot·
saJd. ties of red wane and a S 7 holtlt' ut
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~•champ~e froma~me1n t~l~lhloc~
BantlJICton Beach rePoncd stolen 'rhursday from a 1982 of Republic Tuesda\
A man sponina a small aoatcc ~ot away Volkswaien Jetta parked 1n front of 1 Deer
with S300ftom a drive-throu&h dairy and a Sprina home Oct.~ l • •
man wearina a baseball cap stole SI 40 from A thlef reponedly broke an to a home in
a liquor store in two unrelated robberies the 3800 block of Park\ 1ew Lane and stole
Thursday afternoon, Police ttPortcd today. $220 10 cuh Poh~ re pons said the
AttheCal-VaDa1ry, 15942Edwards Ave .. intruder entered. through a shdtng glaM
the suspect bou&ht a plloo of milk before door.
be puJled a 1un. forced the clerk into the • • •
walk-in cooler, and fled with the cash. At A four-wheel can wonh betWttn $200
the Ubeny Park twuor store. 17685 Beach and $400 was reported stolen fro m a school
Blvd .. the suspect Walked around the back at 4200 Manzanita trttt Wedncsd.a)
of th.e counter ~retendin:f to look for ni&ht • • • matches before e pull a &\an, and A resident an the 100 block of Bnarwood
arabbed the cash. The first suspect was reported that vandals p<>ured glue on the
deteribed as a 25 to JO.year-old Hispanic entryway to his home Thu™1ay.
male. about S feet, 11 inches tall, wcia)lina • • • .150 J?OUnds. The second suspect was A panicipant in lhe Internatio nal Ra~
detcnbed 11 a 25 to 30-ycar-old white male, Rally.~ 1781 S Sky Park Blvd . rePortcd that
about S feet. 9 inches tall $7.000 in stereo cqu1pmen1 and nev.
• • • clothin& was stolen from h1 ~u Thursday
F ountain Valley
4. S200 car stereo v.-as reponcd stole n
from a gr&) 1985 M1tsutmh1 parked o n a
dc~ler lot at 10540 Talbcn .\ve some-llmt'
1n the pu t week. r.. • • •
A thief broke into a red t 9 5 Toyota
pickup truck and, rtPonedl} stole S 1.245 1n
property mclud1na S200 in Jewelry and
S200 in cloth mg last unday TM-incident
occured m the l 7SOO block of Santa
Ros.aha. police repons said •••
An attendant at a Han ( 'hevron servtl't
station. 17980 Maa,noha t . rtPottcd that a
Newport Beach
The attendant ofa service station at 220 I
East Coast Haghwa) reponcd that a man
drove into the statJOn Wcdnesda), pumped
S 12. 75 1n gas. checked his 011, and drove
awa~ without pa}1ng, • • •
The ownt'r of a gray Nissan Ma11ma
parked at the comer of Ford Road a.nd San
Miguel reponed that a th1ef brok~ into his
car and stole his clothing Wednesda). He
told Pollet' that a S 1.650 suit ang a S 135
shin v.ere among the items taken • • •
'\ S 300 ca r sterro was ttPoncd stolen
trom a red 1983 Vokswagcn Sorrooo
parked in the lot of a H u&hes market. J.433
\ 11 Lido. ~ ednC'~a' • • •
~ S30 pur..<' con taming $20 an cub ~re
among thC' item!> taken from a copper-
~olored I Q70 \' olL.swa,en Bua parked an
Lht 200 block of Poinsettia Wednetday
The tou l loss was estimated at Sl96. • • •
Someone reported!> stole the con-
ven1blc top and the body panels from a
arccn 1981 F11t Spyder parlccdtotherearof
a home 1n the 500 block of Oubttouac ~metame i.1nce T ue-sda,y ~ lOM waJ
esttm11cd 11S1.000
A thtff reportedly stoic aJcohOI and
iewtlry from a home m the S900 block of
Price Thursday. Police reports said the
intruder entered throuah a back door
window. Police did not '\now bow much
WUWlCtl. • • • Cash tot.aliftf S2.5S was reponed stolen
from a home 1n the 4900 block of Heil
A venue TblU'lday.
Soatb Coanty
A S7S ,olf ~ containma a $300 stt of
l()lf cubs WU rtponcd \tolen from the
prqe of a Laauna N1auel home 1n the
2'400 block ofSiJ\'et10n Lane. • •• AS I SO car stneo and a SSO bicycle V.'CT'C
Parking lot C<?llilP-ses
under weight of crane
• • • SomeoOe rt1)0nedly stoic $400 an t.ennu
equipment frOm a s.ilvcr 1977 To_yota
Cehca parked u1 the caJ1Mlf1 of an
a]Jll111.nat in tbe 6100 b6oct of EdJ1ltrr
A venue Tuetday nlahl.
lntae
A car llrtte> wonb m~ than t.-00 wu
reported stolen from the trunk of a vehicle
i-zked ln the lJ500 block oC CU"Culo
Corona an Dana Potnt.
CoMaas-
A S40 WOm&ft 'a wttch. I S40 tote bq md
$291 lJl l\Ct'CO equ.ipmcnt WIS reported
stolen from a home 1n the 700 block of
West Wilton ll'ftt Wednesday • • •
TM pavement at a part.ma lot m
downlOwn Lquna Beach collapsed Thu.no
day undet the pressure of a county-owned
CTane, forana the cnnc into tht> storm
dn.ln below.
Tht parkin& lot 1s at 8 road11ra y south o!
fourth tnrt. The pa\emcnt ll"e .,.,)'
about 3.JO p.m . A lararr crane.,..., used to
1 ft the machinery from the storm drain
foroft& poll« to c10le Broedway bttwm1
Fourth Street and hc:i.6c Coal Kilbwaf
for about 6vc boun.. eccord.&QI '°
Llnda Par\cr
No one was uvuttd ill ibt eocideat Md
the StlttlS 'Nert reopened Jutl after 8-...
The stonn drain ma.kCI its WIY ..,.
l.quna Canyon Roed and lbroup a.
downto""n am
..
..
•
Cal State doctorate bid assailed
LOS ANOELES (AP)-California
State Univenity's plan to offer doc:>
toral dearees would be "a radical
dcpanure" from the state's m111er
plan for bj&her education and should
be blocked by the Ugislature, Cali·
fomia reaent.s say.
Under a plan adQpled in 1960.
craduatc and professional degrees
were awarded to the nino-a&mpWI US
system wb.ile Wldervaduate cduca-
uon WU made the rocus of the I I·
campus Cal Slate system.
UC resents. meeting at UCLA
Thursday, critici1ed me ao.nounood
intention of Cal State to move into
the doctoral-dearee arena.
"Nothina could be more ~
iQJ'' 10 California's sys1em of hiaber
education, resent Edward Caner laid
of the Cal State plan. "It would create
competition for raearch (dollars).
The state simply cannot afford it."
de~re from the (slate univer-
sity's). .. assilned role" under the
CalifOf'!lla Muter Plfn for HiJber Educauon.
scholars rather than practitioners in
education and enf,ineerina,
"Should further study suaest there
is an unmet need (or doctoral dqR:es,
the university is prepattd to address
that need,,: Gardner added in a
statement 1 nursday ..
Carter suaested that tho 'lqjs-
lat~ should block CaJ State'• plan to
begin offering doctoral dep-ees.
CSO Chaoc.tllor W. A.Me Re-
ynolds, in announcing the plan
WednC$da~, said Cal Slate should
begin mOV,JDJ into the doctoral field
in at least some Sllbjccts. because of
the shortaae of teachers and enaj-
Patrick Callan, director of the
California J>ost1CCOndary Education
Commission, said the Cal State
announcement "has enonnous turf
irr!Plications and in some pcoP,le's nunds enormous status unpllca-
tions."
neen..
UC President David P. Gardner
viewed the move as "'a radkal
However, Gardner countered that
the added doctoral programs would
be desianed primarily to produce
Dog 111 on 16th birthday
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A birthday celebration
for Sido, iM pQOCb saved five-y~aao by lqjslAli.v~
action. turned sour when she suffered a seizutt while
being eurn i ned to see if she was healthy enough to attend
the bash. .
But the 16-year-old d<>&. who lrigered a leaal battle
that led to a court ruling and a state law signed by then
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. specifically sparing her life, was
"up, about and alert" Thursday night, said owner Richard
Avanzino.
Sido, a sheepdog-and-collie mix. bad the attack at
3: 15 p.m. Thursday, a little more than an hour before the
party was scheduled to begin. Her heart ilOPJ>Cd but she was resuscitated, Jiven oxygen, and medkatton through
an intravenous device at the San Francisco Society for tile
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Hospital.
"They're giving her the maxim urn chance for life,"
said A vanzino. SPCA president, who added she was
attended by S veterinarians. 4 veterinarian assistants and
3-animal health iechnicians. A vanzino -abo spent the
night at the hospital with the pooch, who is over I 00 yean
old in human years. ' .
"The lady looks like she's doing real well," he said · Thl,l~Y· "She's definitely· stable at this point. We're
opttmJsllc, but guarded about our enthusiasm." ~ido, who bas been piqued with fainting speUs in the
pa.st, 1s expected 10 be home in a few days, A vanzino sajd.
The sheepdog~d-collie mix became the center of
controversy when owner M~ Murphy was found dead
on Dec. 211 1979 in her Mission District home. Ms
Murphy's will specified that Sido be put to death because
she feared nobody would care for the dog when she was
gone.
Avaniino refused to cooperate and worked to have a
new law passed to save the dog's life. Once the case was
publicized, more than 3,000 letters poured iQto the SPCA,
offering support and pleading that Sido be spared.
""LQ I pl I
BW and Lynn Woelh of Freeno haft papered file wall of
their apartment kitchen with toem, lottery tlcketa.
Losers' wallpaper:
That's tbe ticket!
--------------------------~
FRESNO (AP)-It would take lots
of losing lottery tickets to wallpaper
an apartment, but Bill and Lynn
Woehl already have one wall
plastered with the colorful pieces of
cardboard.
hopeful Woehl said 10 an interview
Wednesday.
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Woehl, who admits he is a com-
~pulsive gambler, bas purchased 2,500
lonery tickets at SI each since the
California Lottery began seven weeks
ago Thursday.
And he's won only S 110.
He threw the losers away at first but
then bc&an decorating the kitchen
with the l 'h -inch by 31h-inch
pasteboards colored in soft shades
with grey backgrounds. Naturally, the
pretty pastels arc marred o n the right
side where Woehl rubbed off the
coating over various dollar amounts
-but never the three of a single
denomination that denotes a winning
ticket.
Woehl and his wife, Lynn, have
stapled 2, 100 losing tickets in neat
rows on their kitchen walls. One wall
already is completely covered, and
the WochJs arc working on a second.
... spent $300 Saturdax, but we
have a chance to recoup, ' the ever
Even thouiJt the 42-ycar-0ld swim-
ming pool plumber is out of work at
the moment, he buys S 100 worth of
lottery tickets at a time.
The habit has been hard on their
possessions, as the Woehls have had
to sell a television set and some
furniture to finance more lottery
tickets.
But they think it's cheaper than
taking trips 300 miles to Reno for
casino gambling which they claim to
have done almost weekly before the
lottery began. Those trips entailed the
cost of a baby sitter for their four
cwldren and transportation.
But Woehl docs wonder why he's
had so few winning tickets, the largest
$5, in a game that provides instant
winners up to $5,000 and a chance for
S2 million grand prizes for holders of
selected $I 00 winning tickets.
"I called the lottery last week and
asked 'What do I have to do to win?'"
_Woehl said. "The guy told me to
spend it in one place instead of going
to several diffe~nt p)aces."
C-uriosity leads fugitive
to phone court for verdict
By tlle Aseocta~ PreH ..
LOS ANGELES -An art theft defendant disappeared just before jurors
finished deliberating his fate but was curious enough to telephone for the
verdict -placing a collect call to the courthouse. "rve bad them flee before,
but not call," Deputy District Attorney William Crisci said Thursday. "It's
very bizarre." Defense attorney Douglas Young. who talked with defendant
Ronald Gerson during the I ~minute call to the counroom, said be urged his
client to return to court. "But 1 don't think I'd have (returned) if I'd been gi ven
14 years," Young said afterward. "Something about that, that interrupts your
life." Getson, 38, who had been free on SS0,000 bail, disappeared from the
courthouse Wednesday. shortly before delivery of the verdict. Jurors convicted
Gerson of burglary and grand theft of the Vincent Van Gogh painting "Bridge
Over the Seine" from the home of developer Ernest Herman in July 1984.
Democratic leader tmts mood at USC
LOS ANGELES -The head of the Democratic National Committee
chose the the University of Southern California, which Walter Mondale found t~ be an inhospitable campaign stop, to begin the party's aeries of public
dial<_>Jues. Just 14 months ago, Mondale, the Democratic presidential
candidate, showed up on the USC campus and was heck.Jed. The episode wasn't
forgotten by the Democrats. Comnuttcc chairman Paul Kirk intenti9nally
chose USC for soli~ting st~denu• opinions and s~tioos for the party.
There was no hcckJ10g of Kirk when he spoke to a political economics class
despite a show of hands proving the class to be 90 percent RepubJjcan. '
,
Jogger geta big award for boardwalk fall
LONG BEAC H -A woman who claimed she tripped and suffered a
CELEBRATIONS 801 W. BAKER
JUST W. OF BRISTOL
__ .. __ .. painful back injury while jogjna on the Alamitos Bay Peninsula boardwalk
received a $1 75.000 jud&ment against the city from a Superior Court jury. Tbe
jury voted unanimousfr. after a five-day trial that the city, ownen of the
boardwalk. wu responsible for the injuries suffered by Karen l~ne Loera on
Aug. 1, 1980, when she was 21 . Her attorney continued to assert Thuraday that
the problem with the wooden boardwalk remains, but the city's attorney
denied that nails were sticking up at the plaoe where she fell.
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is all yours
HEALDSBURG (AP) -A veter·
inarian has vacated his home and
office in hopes of luri~ back a
runaway circus-trained chimpanzee
named "Chipper." Beer has aJrady
been tried and failed.
Without human voices oomina
from the property, Chipper miaht feel
safe eooua.h to come in from the cold,
says Dr. Glenn Beajamin.
The clever ch1mp etcaped with hi&
mate a week aao today by picki"' the
lock on its caae at Benjamin's ammal
retreat. Tbe other chimp i1 beck
home.
Temperatures in the hllls dropped
10 near·rtiOOrd lowi in the 20s and-30s
at ni&bt this weetc.
Benjamin aaid h'e tl\inks the animal
makes a aiant circle in the woods of
Sonoma County, retumina to the
same area each day.
The chimpanzee was aponed
earlier th.ii week by a cowbol tendifta
canle. The man told 8eQJamin be
offered the chimpanzee a beer, whkb
it took before runoina off.
Bcr\ja.min aaid he bu lned camp.
it\& out in the wooca boptng to spot
the cbimp&MCC.
.. That dJdn't work, so now we·~
j ust aoina to hoi>e he aeu homesAc.t:·
he saJd .
.-..-.i--
Flat industrial production
douses hopes for rebound
By TM Aaaoclated Pns1
U.S. industrial output stayed flat in October after a
small ~line in September, a disappointment to ~nonu1t1 w~o h~ exoeclCd a sharp rise based on a gain ·
to manufactunn&Jobs fast month.
The PederaJ Reaerve Board said today the index for
industrial production remained frozen at I 24.9, 1.8
percent above the level of. year aao.
lnd~triaJ production had declined a slight 0. t
peroeot m September followina a bi& 0.8 \)Ct'CCnt August
IDCt'CUC, wbicb had been the larscst pin t0 more than a
year.
U.S. industry bas exhibited slu.aPsh growth for most
of this year as a flood of foreian unports has robbed
dotncsti£_manufacturcrs of ulcs..forcing scattered plant-
shutdowns and layoffs.
In another report today the Labor Depanment said who.I~ pri~ spurted o.9 peroent wt month for .the
largCst increase tn more than four years. •
The jump reflect.ed the end of cu\-rate autorl)obite
financfoa and a bi& ~n in fQod prices, and came despite
continued declines m psoline prices.
However, despite the October pin -the largest si~ce a 1.0 percent aain in April 1981 -the Producer
Price Index for finished &oods was srill rising at a
moderate 0. 9 percent rate for the fint I 0 months of 1985.
Meanwhile, the Treasury Department says it will sell
a record $61 billion in securities to raise cash foUowina
conareuionaJ approval of leaislation raising the federal
debt limit to $1.9 lrilUon and avertina a government
default
Producer
Price
Index
Seasonaly AdJUSle d
Monthly Change in
Wholesale Prices
October
Or.ngeCout DAILY PILOT/Ff'ld8y, ~ tS..1885 *Al
Rajneesh pleads guilty,
agrees to leave country
By lk Ataoclate4 Prt-11
PORTLAND. Ore. -Bh-awa.n Shn:c Rajncesh beaded out of the country
today after chan&in& tus pica to auihy on two fcdeTal unmlJ.l"&tion cbaran and
aarceinJ to leave the Urutcd States al\cr four tumultuous yean in Oregon. As
part of a pica qreement with federal au\horit.ies, the lodian.auru tt:eeivcd a
suspended JO.year sentence, was fined $400,000andqreed to leave within five
days. He promised not to return for fi ve ~without the U.S. attorney
acncral's written pcrmisStOn. Rajneesb p auihy to one COUJlt of
conspirin& to arranac sham ~of bis disciples and one count oflyin& to
the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service about his intent to renwn 10
the United States permanently The rcmainmg 33 counts against him were J dropped. The fine lncludes S 140,000 in prOllCCutaon costs. ·•1 never want to
return again.'' Rajocesh told U.S. Dtstnct Judge Edward wvy after entenng
the guilty pleas.
Art1flclal heart patient dle.
Half see hope in Sumiliit t8.lks HERSHEY, Pa:-Anthony Mandia. whose bfe was extended nearly a
month by an anificial bean and 1 human heart.transplant, died Of tnfectlon on
the· sa_me day tw~ other temporary arufic1al hean patients left hospitals.
Mand ia. 44, of Philadelptua, who became the first bu man rcctp1ent of the Penn
State artificial hcan Oct. 18, died Thursday in Milton S. Hershey Medical
Center, 17 days after recc1v1ng the hean of a West Virginia woman.
NEW YORK (AP) -Fifty percent
of Americans feel the Geneva summit
mcctinancxt week will improve U.S.-
Soviet relations and a third believe it
will lead to an arms-control aarec·
ment, according to a New York
Times-CBS News poll published
today.
The poll also indicates that 7S
percent believe President Reagan
"really wants an arms-control agree-
Mengele
hunter
criticized
meot," compared with 47 percent
who think Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Gorbachev does.
The poll of 1,659 adults was
conducted by telephone between
Nov. 6-10. It bas a margin of error of
3 perccnta~e points.
The president and Gorbachev were
seen as willing "to malce reaJ con-
cessions" to get an agreement by 36
percent to 21 percent, respectively.
Only 17 percent saw both men as
prepared to compromise.
When asked what the United States
should do if forced to choose between
developiDJ a defensive system in
space or giving it up and negotiating,
53 percent said the United State1
should give up a space defense, while
33 percent would forgo negotiations,
the Times said.
The survey found widely different
notions about what the space defense
system is intended to do. Tbiny
percent said it is meant to protect the
entire U.S. population; 28 percent
said it is designed to protect half the
people, and I 5 percent said tt 1s
mtendcd to protect less than 10
percent oft.be population.
But even among the 58 percent who
said they thought the system would be
successful at destroying enemy miss.-
iles, neatly half said tbeywere willing
to give it up if necessary to get an arms
agreement.
Sixty-five percent believe that nu·
clear weapons will be used some-
where in the world in the next 15
years, but only 29 percent think it will
be used by the United States or the
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expect the fi rst use by some other
country.
The res~ndents were almost
equally divided on the question of
whether the summit meeting was a
good place to raise the issue of human
rights viqlations by the Soviet Union.
Fony-scven percent believe it is a bad
time and 43 believe it is a good ume.
Eighty--0ne percent said they were
convinced that . such discussion
would not make any difference m
Soviet policy.
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D.C. homelea •helter open•
WASHINGTON (AP) -A 600-bcd shelter for the homeless has opened
in the nation's capital while demonstrators protested bemg forced to leave a
makeshift, crumbling shelter that was ordered closed. After several coun
banJes, some still pending and others under appeal, the federal government
Tbunday night opened the doors to a new fac1hty 10 Southeast secuon of the
city. The shelter, designed to replace a bug-infested structure four bloc"5 from
the Capitol, welcomed more than 30 new rcs1dcnts by m idnight. Earlier. as
vans from the Department of Health and Human Scrvtccs hncd up in front of
the old facili ty, about 70 occupants of the shelter chanted, "Hell no. we won't
go," and yelled obscemllcs at those going into the vans.
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TERRE HAUTE. Ind. (AP) -
Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal de-
nied charges that he inadvenently
blocked efforts to find Josef Mengcle
alive by giving out false information
on the whereabouts of the Nazi "Angel of Death." ,------....__ ______ .__ ___________ __.. _____ _
Benno Weiser Varon, Israeli am-
bassador to Paraguay from 1968 to
1972. s aid Thursday that
Wicscnthal's claim in 1967 that
Mengele was living in Paraguay
steered Mengele's pursuers awa(
from bis actual secret home in Brazi .
"In the business of Mengele, he
failed; he failed miserably," Varon
told a panel conducting an inquiry
into the reported death of Mengele.
"He didn't do his job well."
Many experts believe Menacle
drowned near Sao Paulo. Brazil, in
1979. Bones dug up outside Sao Paulo
in June were believed to be those of
Men4ele, who is accused of pcr-
fomung genetic experiments on twins
at Auschwitz during World War II.
Varon said Mense le was allowed to
live out bis life in freedom because of
the incompetence of Nazi hunters.
Wiesenthal, who lectured Thurs-
day night in Bloomirlkton but was not
scheduled to appear before the in-9uiry panel, responded that Varon
• had done nothing" to help in
Wiesenthal's efforts to find Mengele.
Also, t he information about
Menacte living in Paraguay "was not
my invention," Wiesenthal said at a
news conference.
The Wiesenthal Center for Holo-
caust Studies in Los Angeles aJso
reacted sharply to Varon's charges.
"When you consider the apathy
and l~k of concern shown by some
countries, countries which should
have been concerned, Simon
Wiescothal carried the torch and kept
the· Angel of Death' and the atrocities
he committed at the forefront of
world attention." Gerald M~olis,
director of the center, said m a
statement released in Los Angeles.
Wicsenthal and the center, as well
as Varon, have said they believe
Menacle is dead.
Some members of the group coo-
ductina the inquiry, CANDLES -
Children of Aoschwitz Nazi's Deadly
Lab Experiments Survivors -say
Menacte was spotted at least twice
aince 1979.
The founder of CANDLES, Aus..
cbwitz survivor Eva Kor, said
Wiesenthal and tbe center have
torpedoed the twins' efforts to learn
what they were subjected to during
Menple's experiments. The infor-'
mation is critical if survivina twins
~ to be treated for ailments they
believe resulted from the expen-
menta, Mrs. Kor laid. CANDLES dreams of seeing
Menaelc brou&ht to trial, Wicseothal
said. "It was alto m y dream."
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t"lf' "'~'9~' <I '"' •1 OZ per s.J w.J "' .l•la~
n '-t' .:;IO'<'u\ '1)1(1<<. '" Jt>'•"'t' • , O...,P<emt''"
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IOok CUI looP nylon pile '8
N 5Q yd In 8 colors
ln11olled
25~ "9o .,., •
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I
Laguna c~uncil
swlms against
freeway tide
The gesture may have been noble, but it brought to
°*1d the old_caution aaainat @.tlin& off one•s nose to
spite one's face.
Tuesday night, the Laguna Beach City ~ouncil
voted down an ordinance that would have imposed fees
up6n land developers and. allocated the. money to the
construction of the San Joaquin Hills Freeway. The vote
seemed to be a stand on pnnciple, since Laguna Beach
bas staunchly opposed the new freeway on the grounds
that it would violate open space and encourage new
development.
Laguna Beach prefers to discourage new develOJ>'-mcnt.
. But what Laguna Beach would prefer is not what is
going to happen. The county and four cities have
adopted the developer fee ordinance, thereby activating
the. Sa~ Joaquin Hills Corridor Joint Powers Agency,
wh1ch 1s bureaucratese for the gang that will plan the
freeway and oversee its construction.
Citizens of Laguna Beach have reason to be proud of
the character exlu'bited by their elected officials who
defended a lost cause in the face of overwhelming r~ality.
These same citizens have reason to question the quality
of representation afforded-them by their council.
All th~ City Council of Laguna Beach accomplished
Tuesday, tt seems, was to remove the city and its
residents from the process that will determine the
ultimate character of the inevitable -and essential -
freeway.
Despite its wishes, can the City Council of Laguna
Beach stop the development of the southern reaches of
Orange County? Of course not. Nor should it.
Despite its wishes, can the City Council of Laguna
Beach block the freeway that will provide access to the
south end of the county? No. Should it be able to block
that access and, thereby, make it more difficult for
people who would work in Orange County to live near
their jobs? No again.·
Is the City Council of Laguna Beach defending the
potential homeowner by rejecting developer fees and
keeping that cost from the price of a new house? Not
really. For in all transactions, the ne~otiations between
the buyer and the seller ultimately will be intfuenced by
the market. The seller will seek to charge the maximum
the market will bear - a developer fee not withstanding
-and the buyer will seek to pay the minimum price for
the house in question. Should the two fail to come to
terms, the buyer will seek another seller and the seller
will seek another buyer.
This is basic stuff. And, as an issue, it is further
mitigated by the city's own contention that only about
l 00 houses will ?e built th.ere. in the next 10 or l S years. ~at the C~ty Council did :ru~sday was deny itself
-!Uld its coi;isutue~ts - a voice m the planning of a
freeway that is certam to have as great an impact on
Laguna Beach as, ~or examI?le, offshore drilling.
Would the city be stlent on offshore drilling?
Certainly not, nor should it be.
.Neither should it cut out its tongue -or is it cutting
off its nose? -on the San Joaquin Hills Freeway
question. There comes a tiuie when good government
demands that elected officials compromise in order that
they may best represent the interests of the people who
elected them. For the City Council of Laguna Beach that
time came Tuesday-and ~ssed. '
Opinion• expreued In this apace are those of the Dally Piiot Other views
expreued on this P-0-are those of their a1J1hor1 and artil1s. RMd4t< ~~~.la Invited The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626 Phone
Craftiest politician can't
coDJpete with pharoahs
Early Egyptians thought a ruler
shouldn't hold power indefinitely, so
they ritualistically kjlled their kings in
the pnmc of life and replaced said
unfortunates. This pattern dad not
appeal to later pharaohs Instead of
dymg 1n sacnfic1al c.ercmon1es, they
simply resigned, as 1t wcTC, then
replaced themselves wuh themselves
anew every JO years. Out with the old,
in with the new Same pharaoh.
Minor ofTenders aren't Jailed 1n
Yemen. They're locked 1n leg irons
and turned loose 1n the streets -to
do what they do. clank, clank. Even
children get this chain reaction
Is it possible that the ground 1n the
Arctic can get as much heat from the
sun durinJ one day as the ground
alonJ the Equator'? Tavern types win
sman wagers with this one, too
Aoswer is yes.L 1n the Summer -
because oflhe L4-hour Arctic day.
Q. What's a "baby.waker"?
A. A flrecrackcr. In the vernacular
of the Virain1ans.
Q. Can a prize-winn1n1 cow can
really prod~ 30 calves a yea(>
ORANGE COAST
llilyPilat
A. <.:once1vably, yea, conceivably.
If her embf¥OS, sometimes split, arc
implanted in other cows, with a
breeding every two months. yes.
Q What does the name "Tokyo"
mean?
A. "Eastern capital" When 1t was
first founded 10 1603, tt was called
"Edo" meaning "Door of the Bay." A
feudal lord so named 1t when he
decreed the town was his head-
quarters
If the wrestling promoters would
1mpon a Nuba fighter from Afnca.
they'd sec a performance they m1&}lt
not have seen before Nuba wrestlers
begin their bouts by hissana at each
other and flicking their tonaues hkc
snakes.
On maps of the Sahara is a spot
called "Tree of Tcnere." Nothing is
there but one scrawny acacia tree.
There's no other tree within I 00
miles.
The mayor of Auausi.. Wis .. re•
portedly wa.nu a law to require hones
there to wear rubber ploshcs.
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1r•"c•llJd
col•m.al•t
frenlr Zlnl ro.10-
Tom Telt Yar...,..lctoto-
Oon ,.., .. ,
Ctl)ft•IOt
~ -r (II 11'11 '" JTI Yf"I ll•t !lt co.-.... A40r.-'°''"' .,,,.,..,.. •. """' """ <:.-,._ CA 0'8)8
Ci:Me lhef'r !lp&,11 fe•IClt
·'Architect Wll/Jam L. Pereira ... had a profound effect on the Orange
Coast durtngthe past 25 years ... a planner, a visionary and an arcnltect
r ~ ER ... EXCUSE ME,
6UT WOULD YOU MIND
TURNING DO\../N YOUil
who was a part of a great archltecttm11 era. ''
MARTIN BJlOWSlt colvmnfat
PHYLLIS
ScHLAFLY
MUSIC.? Friedan
admits
,__....... ..... -feminist
C)
Architect William Pereira
left UC Irvine as a legacy
Hollywood influence
reflected in many
buildings along Coast
Architect William L. Pereira, who
passed away suddenly Wednesday,
had a profound effect on the Oranse
Coast during the past 25 years. Bill
Pereira, whom I knew as a personal
friend. was a planner, a visionary and
an architect who was a part of a great
architectural era.
Although Bill never forgot his
several years as a set designer in
Hollywood's motion picture indus-
try, and perhaps allowed a touch of
Hollywood to overstate h1s design, it
was that Hollywood flair mixed with
architectural function that dis-
tinguished this man:-
Whcn the University of California
sought a site somewhere in OranJe,
Riverside or San Bernardino counties
in the late 1950s, Pereira was selected
to recommend a site -and bis first
choice was 1,000 acres in the rollin&
hills of the Irvine Ranch. He was then
named master planner and super-
vising architect for the subsequent
institution, the University of Cali-
fornia, Irvine. ·
The UCI campus expresses Pereira
fully. The circular plan, the exciting if
over-designed buildings -a state-
ment.
The Irvine Co., wh.icb contributed
the 1,000 acres for the UCI campus,
asked Pereira to.,iudy a plan for the
entire southern part of the
then-93,00Q.acrc Irvine Ranch. Per-
eira envisioned a university town
adjacent to the campus - a univer-
sity town center -which is finally
talung shape a quaner-century later.
He also envisioned a research and
development complex adjacent to the
university, and this concept nearly
went astray -only to recently re-
appear as a potential for UCl's
inclusiona.ry area.
Pereira cited the major, mixed-use
commercial center for the Irvine
Ranch on a bluff overloolcina the
Pacific Ocean. Named Newport
Center, the 450-acrc complex again
reflects Percira's unique flait -a
circular road and a number of
Pereira-<Sesigned buildinp -includ-
ina the striking Pacific Mutual Ufe
Insurance Company headquarters.
Reprdless or perhaps because, of its
HollywOOd stylina. with walls splay-
ing outward to make a design state-
ment1 Pacific Mutual is always the
buildina toward which visitors to
Newport .Beach point with a joyous
"What's that building? ..
Pereira designed the first two
buildings in Newpon Center, 550 and
SOO Newport Center Drive, in his
unique overdone style. Two other
Newpon Center buildings, Wells
Farao and Great Western, begin to
show the influen.:e on Pereira by bis
staff to try to move into the then-
current mainstream.
For the heart of Newport Center,
Pereira bad envisioned a shopping
center which .extended all across
Newpon Center, integrating closely
with the office buildings so that they
would work together. Unfonunatcly,
cold business and great architectural
vision do not always mesh, and
Pereira's concept for Newport
Center's Fashion Island shopping
center was dropped in favor of
another architect's plan which
isolated the shopping center in the
ccntcrofascaofparking. But that was
necessarv at the time.
In Fashion Island itself, Pereira
designed the Robinson's deparunent
store. still a classic.
For an architect who designed
monuments, Pereira also wu a plan-
ner who understood spaces. For the
Irvine Ranch, Pcrcira's original mas-
ter plan would have arranged major
development along the coast, where
thousands of people could enjoy the ocean, and left the ~t anterior
essentially open for qnculture. Alu,
he again understood spaces, but not
the realities of urban/economic de-
mands.
In the early 1960s. the Los An~elcs-
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
MARTIN ~
BROWER
headquartered Pereira firm opened
an Oran&e County office in the red
barn at MacArthur Boulevard and
Ford R~.wbich, in truc'Hollywood
style, Pcretra called his Corona del
Mar office, even though it is in
Newport Beach.
Bill Pereira was in Oranac County
often, continuing to attend ~lanning
meettngs at UCl and penodically
visiting the various presidents of the
Irvine Co., hoping to win some new
commissions on the land he loved.
But while Pcreira's insights into the
orifins of the master plan for the
Irvine Ranch were cherished, bis
planning and architecture were no
longer sought.
I last saw Bill Pereira as l was
leaving UCI Chancellor Jack
Peltason's inauguration earlier this
year. I beard my name called out, and
there was Bill Pereira, walki~ briskly
on bis cane despite a limp be
developed due to an orthopedic
condillon in his later years. He was
still wearina the colorful academic
robe he wore when be marched in the
earlier academic pTC>OC$sion.
No one else walked with this proud
man with his always strikin& mass of
rich, gray hair. No one rcally knew
who he was. I walked with him to his
car, and we promised to lunch
together soon. Bill Percira's driver
then took hitn off. and I waved at this
76-ycar-old legend who refused to
retire. never to sec him again.
MarUa Brower pebUde1 tlte H••·
lester "Mu11a Brower'• Oru1e
Couty Report."
Khadafy suspected of plans
to drain Egyptian Nile dry
W ASHlNGTON -No one in the
American Southwest needs to be told
that access to such water sources as
the Colorl\dO River can spell the
d1fferencc between lush farmland and
jackrabbit country. Powerful
interests have battled in the courts for
decades over the right to share the
limited water supplies that can tum a
desenareen. ·
Kalfa world awa-r. Libyan dictator
Muarnmar K.badafy is plannina a
"water war" of his own. But he'll fi&bt
it with carth-movini equipment -
and tanks and planes 1fnecessary. His
lona·ranae objective, intclliaence
sources suspect, is to brin& f&ypt to its
kncei by cuuina off the waters of the
Nile, which have sustained E&Yl>t for
millcn01a.
Ostensibly, Khadafy's vandfose
scheme to run a p1pehne 1,200 miles
from an undetJtound lake in
'°uthcm Libya to the Mediterranean
coast is simply an ambillous plan to
make the desert bloom where the bulk
of Libya's population lives. The
project, wbicb could cost u much as
$2S bill on, wou.ld irripte .. 50.000
tetts alona the toast. Khadafy has
dubbed h11 project-rbe Great Man·
ma.de Ri ver."
The economic JO&) of th~ pipeline
11 •rauably benian. if a bit
hardnincd, con11dcrina that its ot>st
is more than double Libya's entire
annual income from oil sales. But it's
the suspected political goal that bas
Western intelligence sources con·
cerned.
Both EaYJ>t and Sudan arc fearful
that if Libya suooeeds in draining the
underground lake in the Kufta Oasis,
their own aquifers will be drained,
too, petha91 lowerina the level of the
Nile far to the eaat and Lalce Chad
even farther to the southwest.
The £cyptians fear that Khadafy
wouldn't atop at just poachina under-
around water supplies, but has a
secret plan to extend his pipeline
from Kufra south and then east to the
NiJe in nonhem Sudan. The distance
would be about the same as the
publicly announcied pipeline from
Ku&. to the Moditemncan. The
EJyptiana note that K.had&fy ii
already bu1ldin1 a I 60-ml1c road
from Kuh to the Sudanese border-
and the Nile is only another 32S miles
away acrou the empty desert.
AlarmJna eV1dencc that Khadafy is
plottlna a water war wu uncovered
by E&Yotian intell~ earty Jut
year. li 'Wu a plan, c:onfi.nncd a year
later by a defectina Ub)'an Dilot. to
bomb the Alwan Hiah Dam in
southern f&yp dralnina the huae water reserves in Lake Nauer and
robbina Cairo 700 mJJes nonh of llfe-&lvina water and electricity .
•
J1c1
AID£1SOI
and DALf VAN A TT A
Kbadafy himself was aurpriainaJy
candid about his ambitions in an
intef'View last A,.iaust with a Cairo newspaper.
.. , lmqine that it is possible " he
said, ••to Unk the Nile to the Orcat
Manmade River in Libya, that the
Libyan and f.ayptian desert& can turn
IJ"eelli and that the Wesiern Dctm
can )'leld fruits and become a vcen
carptt. ... I would imaaioc that Lake
Nwer will be lfokcd to al·Ku~ the
source oflhe Great Manmade Raver.
Will we not thus crate ,.,adue on
earth?"
A les.s beatific view of Khadafy's
intentions wu exprnred last year by
t.ben·Praideat Oaafar Nimeiri of
Sodal\, who wu ousted in a coup
April ~· He told reporters that
K.hldafy wu aJrady w-sina a water war. ..caUIU'll ltlrvallo n throuah
controllina the River Nile water."
Jn Ad1t1M u4 Dai. Ya Aua
atW ..,..,.,...., e»tsrn•••«a.
mistake
The New York Times Magazine.
which three years ago gave us an
article called "Voices from the Post-
Fcminist Generation," has just put
another nail in the coffin offcminism
by publishing Betty Friedan's article
called "How lo Ga lhe W omen's
Movement Moving Again."
That title and the accompanying
artwork clearly convey the message
that the women's liberation move-
ment is stopped dead in its tracks.
Friedan bas discov ered that young
women believe that "women's rights
arc not chic in America anymore"
and that feminism bas become "a
dirty word." She admits that "the
movement is in trouble," that it bas
been wasting its energy in "a bitter.
vengeful internal power struggle."
and that feminist nostalgia harks back
to "old rhetoric. old 1de.as. old modes
of action."
Friedan made her fame and fortune
by interviewing suburban ho~
wivcs, diagnosing their difficulties as
a "problem that bad no name," and
reciting their litany of tiresome com-
plaints in her 1964 best-seller called
"The Feminine Mystique." She is the
founder of the movement of women
who believe they are an oppressed
minority.
Friedan's article is a direct appeal
to the non-radical feminists to re-
f.IOUP and take up the fight for
'second-s~e feminism." Her betcs
noires in this battle are the Reagan
administration and "thC' paralys1s
that fundamentalist backlash has
imposed on all our movements," on
liberalism and humanism as well as
feminism.
It's clear that Friedan has learned a
lot that her radical feminist sisters
have yet to learn. Since she is the
godmother o f the 21 ·ycar-old
women's liberauon movement. her
admissions in this lengthy article arc
significant.
Friedan's recent interviewees, she
says, are women "ttyins to 'have 1t
all,' having second though ls about her
professional career, desperately try·
IDJ to have a baby before it is too late,
with or without husband, and maybe
secretly blaming the movement for
gettin& her into this mess."
She urges women to "confront the
illusion of equality in divorce," citing
the new book by Lenore Weitzman
called "The Divorce Revolution: The
Unexpected Social and Economic
Consequences for Women and Chil-
dren in America." This book details
how, after all states adopted easy, no-
fault divorce laws. divorced women
and their children suffered an im-
mediate 73 percent drop in their
standard of living, while their cll-
husbands enjoyed a 42 percent rise in
theirs.
Weitzman shows bow the "equal"
division of the marital property was
grievously hurtful to wives because it
denied the wife a share in the growth
of the husband's earning power which
she had helped to create, and also
because it usually meant the forced
sale of the house ~which formerly was
awarded to the WJfe and children).
The truth of the matter is that the
economic consequences of the no-
fault divorce laws were not "unex-
pected;" they were predicted by those
who then opposed easy divorce laws.
Millions of women have been econ-
omically devastated by the change in
divorce laws ...;... one of the few
leaislative "successc:s" of which the
feminist movement can boast.
Friedan freely admits that "femin·
isu oriainally supported" no-fault
divorce. lnws. Now she calls for
"uraent ~ roots political support
to get rid of ihem."
After admitllng th~ were wrong
about divorce laws, Fnedan calls on
women to "affirm the differences
between men and women." Would
you believe! She brashly admits a
fundamental error of her movement:
that "first·•taae feminism denied real
differences between women and men
except for the sexual orpns them-
selves."
Now she says what must be to
um.nli&}ltened first-stage feminists
the ultimate heresy: "Brina in the
men. It's passe, surely, for feminists
now to see men onJy as the enemy."
Finally, Friedan admonishes fem-
inists to "move beyond sinaJc-iuuc
thinkioa" beause she does not think
that "women's i:iahts arc the most
uraent busineis for American
women. The important tbina l$
aomehow aettina t~ther with men ...
Perhaps Friedan s Tirnet article
will develop into anothet best·tcUina
book under a new title, uThe Femin-
ist Mystique.•• It CC11aioly is an
intemtins study in psycboloCY to
catalOJ lhe ~ attitudes or
feminists 11 the bioloSJcaJ dock ticb
on. The feminist psycfic 11 profound!>
c:ontndictory.
Howe~r. an even better title when
Friedan wrltet about ''beyond the
second atqe" would be .. The Femin·
ill Mist.U!' P*JD.11 ~i.nr I• • 1yMH:a1a1
~It.
-
Britai~ and Ireland sign
historic peace agree1nent
., ... Aneda .. Heat
BELFAST, ~o~ Ireland -The prime ministers of Britain and lie.Ian~ sianed ~ histonc ~ment today ai ving the Jrish aovemment a formal voi~ 10 runrung .the violence-tom British province of Northern Ireland.
Behiad • heavy shield of security, and as a.nary Protestant protesters shouted
.. ~lloutl" nearby, Britain's . Marprct Thatcher and Jrel&nd's Garret Ft~d rract at a caatlc.o~ts1de Belfast and JlU\ their names to the,ground-~rtakina accord. The pacttuntendcd to help end J 6 years of sectarian violence
10 No~ern Jn:~nd, where t~e Roman Catholic minority bas Iona demanded
chanp in a politJcal and social system dominated by the Prole$tant majority.
Debt repayment moratorium eztended
JOHANNESBUR9, ,South .Africa -A Swiss banker ncgotiatinJ the
reP!lymentofSouth ~ca s $24' bLlliC?n foreign debt said today the government ~ ba,vc to e,xtend lit~ o~ foreaan loan repayments because of de&aya._in
&naflllD& ~eltre~h~ulin1 Fntz Leutwiler, a formerchiefofthe Swiss central
bank who 11 ncgonauna ~uth Africa's repayment, said be put off until at least
January a pl~nned mecuna Nov: 26 between the government and 28 creslitor
benb. He said the government as expected to announce soon an extension of
the, four-month ~ebrrepayment moratorium beyond the Dec. 31-~te it hact set.
Ez-Nazl leader 11e1sed ln Argent1na
BUENOS AIRES -A former Nazi SS officcT accused of ellecuting 38
Polish Jews and suspected ofbeina behind the deaths of thousands more was
arrested near Buenos Aires, federal police sources said today. Walter
Kutscbmann, 72, was arrested Thursday in the community of Florida, six
miles north of the capital, said police sources who spoke on condition of
anonymity. The sources said Kutschrnann was taken to Buenos Aires police
headquarters. where he was being held in a jail cell.
Peret1 patche11 quarrel with Sharon
TEL A vrv -Prime Minister Shimon Peres accepted a partial apology
from Cabinet member Ariel Sharon and withdrew a threat to break up bis
government., but warned today he will fire Sharon if he critjcizes government
policy again, a spokesman said. The warning from Peres, leader of the Labor
Party, came at a meeting with Foreign Minister and Likud bloc leader Yitzhak
Shamir that was aimed at closing the book on the...crisis that t.bsatened the
coalition government, said Peres' spokesman Uri Savir .• 'Sbaron failed to
retract fully his accusations against the prime minister, as Peres had
demanded.
Ivory Coast coup leader slaln
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast -Liberian head of state Samuel Doe said today
one of his bodyguards shot and killed Bngadier Gen. Thomas Quiwonlcpa, the
leader of a bloody attempt to overthrow his government three days ago. In a
radio broadcast., Doe also said the Liberian capital of Monrovia was "tense"
and imposed a dusk-to-<iawn curfew. He said anyone found on the streets "one
minute after sU: o'clock" tonight would be "executed on the spot." The
president~lcct said the warning applied to diplomats and other foreigners, as
well as to Liberians. He said the anny "docs not intend to k.ill citizens." but said
his soldiers "do not know who the rebels are."
NATO meets on weapons purclutses
BR USS ELS-Senior NA TO defense officials met today to discuss one of
the most contentious issues in the Western alliance, the development and
purchasing of weapons and war equipment. U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary
William H. Taft IV was. to give theaJlics the first full explanation ofa proposed
program for encouraging U.S.-European cooperation in the development of
new arms during the one-day meeting. The Europeans were to present a Joint
statement, drafted at a special meeting Thursday in The Hague. Netherla.ods.
setting out specific proposals to improve coopeTation in anns research and
development.
Dall to det1lgn Spaol•h plaza
Onaooe Coat DAILY PILOT/Frtday. NcMMnber 15, 1988
Colombia volcano kills 20,000
Blazing wall of mucfdestroys
most off our farming villages
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -Rescue helicopters
ferried numbed' survivors of a devastating volcanic
eruption out of the vast reach of gray mud that cqvered
then Andean villqcs today. Officials said as many as
20,000 people were feared dead.
Those who lived throuah the blazrng ash and wall of
mud unleashed by the Nevadodel Rwz volcano inched on
their stomachs across the mud to reach trapped neighbors.
Hundreds of bodies were found.
The volcano ended months of rumbling with a fiery
eruption late Wednesday that melted its snow cap.
'The whole'
world began
to scream'
BOGOTA. Colombia (AP)
Snow<appcd Ncvado del Ruiz
showett:d -an Andean co1fco.fann.in&
city with a warn.in& of volcanic uh,
and then the .. whole world bepn to
sac&m" ~ It belched fire into the
mibt sky and buned the city 11nder a t~nt of mud, sutvivon said.
'"There was no time for anythina. Simultaneous heavy rains engorged the Lagumlla
River before dawn Thursday, turning 1t into a rushing waJI
-Of mud that deatroyed at least 85 percent of Acmero, a
coffee-farmina town of 50,000 people 30 miles from the
volcano and 105 miles northwest of Bogota.
Another 20;000 people lived in tbc nearby towns or-
Santuario, Carmelo and PindaJito, also buried by mud.
The church was buried, ibe tcbool,
the theater," said Marina F~ de
Hucz. who ran lfom her home wi(JJ
.. her IO.year-old dau&hter.
"More than half of the populatiap
Radio Catacol quoted one rescue( as saying screams
still were being heard today from survivors who chmbcd
trees to escape the rush of mud. Such mud slides have been
known to reach 60 mph. razing everything in their path.
An air bridge was being established today to bring
injured from Mariquita, an emergency center, to Bogota.
using four military and four private a.ircraf\.
"""' was buried under a torrent.of tnud
that came with a horrible noise-. It
draued houses, cattle, tree stumps
ancfjipnuc rocks." she said Thurs.-
day 10 an interview with the Bosota
rad.to ch.am RCN.
The I 5.~foot mountain melted
-Its snawcap when it erupted late
Wednesday. and sent a wall of mud
~..._,;;,,,,_ ______ ,down the LaniuniUa RiveJ" into The United States was sending heUcopters, tents,
blankets and medical supplies from U.S. military bases in
Panama. In Washington, the Agency for International
Development said 12 helicopters were being sent.
A coordinator of emergency medical services at
Guayabal, another emergency center, said in a radio
interview that disinfectants were needed so 63 bodies there
could be held for identification ..
II# l pt 111 Afmcro. Officials estimate Armero is 85 Dased, reecued yoUD19ter awaltll care In percent destroyed, and that the death
Armer o after de.ut&t:lq Yolcano. toll there and rn neighboring towns
been found as of early today. It based its count on !°:k:C 15,000 to 20.000. That would
information from the Civil Defense. Red Cr-OS&. ~ . 1t -0oe of the greatest-natwal
The coordinator said water was in short supply there,
with not enough to wash the wounds of the 10jurcd.
GuiJJenno Rueda, head of th~ Colombian Red Cross.
told CBS Morning News today when asked about the
number feared dead, "We have the facts but not the figures
yet, the exact figures, but we believe in the Armero region
it's about 15.000 to 20,000 but we have some other injured
and deaths on the other side in the coffee~growing area of
Chinchina." _
The Caracol broadcast network said 700 bodies had
Defense Ministry and national police. disasters of the century.
Hundreds of bodies were betng taken to a soccer "It all started around 6 o'clock last
stadium an the village of Guayabal, four males from rught wtth a sho~r of ash, bu~ we
Armero, said Associated Press photgrapher Carlos were _told at wasn t anything senous.
Gonzalez. that 1t was a natural phenomenom
Television film showed survivors 1nch1ng tbe1r way an.d we stayed home," Mrs. de Huez
across the sea of mud. Many crawled on their stomachs to said Thursday. .
avoid sinking into the quicksand-like mire. One man dug :·But at around 10 o'clock at night
laboriously with a sauce pan to fr~ ayounggjrl halfburicd the ash rain increased ~d the whole
in the muck. world began to scream.
Beauty from
Iceland new
Miss World
LONDON (AP) -Holmfnour
Karlsdottir oflceland began her reign
as Miss World today. and the nursery
school teacher said she hoped her
pupils would miss her as she em-
barked o n the world travels that come
wtth the title.
Karlsdottir, 22, performed tlaw-
lessty m answering questions during
the Thursday night pageant held at
Royal Alben Hall. Her smile never
faded, and she said ::tfterward she was \
never nervous.
Dunng the swimsuit compeution,
the 5-foot-8 blonde wore a bathing
suit cut far more modestly than the 1
outfits worn by most of the other 77 j
compeutors.
The first run1lcr-up was Mass
United Kmgdom. Mandy Adele
Shires. a I 9-year-old model.
FIGUERAS, Spain -The ailing 81-year-old surrealist painter Salvador
Dali has agreed to design a plaza for the Spanish capital that will feature a 230.
ton a,ranite centerpiece dedicated to lsa.ac Newton. a spokesman said. Work on
the 9,200-squarc-yard plaza is scheduled to begin in December and Madrid
officials said it would cost SI . 5 million. The granite monument is to be caJled
"Homage to Newton," a spokesman for the painter said. Dali and 6 7-year-old
Madrid mayor Enrique Tierno Galvan signed the avcem~nt Tuesday in the
painter's Galatea Tower home here where he has hved since October 1984
following hospitalization for serious bums suffered in a tire. Bolmfrtoar Karlaclottlr
Miss USA. Brenda Denton, of
Hobbs, N.M .. was second runner-up.
Dcntoo. 22, is a computer program.
min$ student at Texas Tech Univer-'
sity an Lubbock. --
FORCED TO SELL
DUE TO ILLNESS
UP TO 50 °/o off
(Oak Axtures tool)
Oeelers W*Orne
Porcelain & Cry1tal Animals & Games
FUii TREE IAMES & OIFtS
3440 VIA OP01'TO NewportBMFh
Get a wave
from it all.
175-4131
, .. n r hu"nl"-' or pll'.l'un-lhl'rt·' no pl.1• l· 4v1tr hkl thr U.ilho.i
Inn hN 1t'' tht-unh hotl'l on lhr hr.Ith in 't"Vo1X•rt Ant.I "'tlh
"''' \ .. ruum plll 11 rnr1H• tht-•.1rl .1nt.1 "1rnt1oounh .i •m.111 mn
"11h ..1 htit l•11T1m111Twm lO 'ot:rl1ll' l.ln prundt'
lht·rt· .ire nu hnn, "'"'~ l mv.J, 11r k1<'6. ..1hkl· fum1..tltnj(' "''Ol I
.11nl wi1hh11tltu10l'HICl'I' ln,t<"~ll\\IU II l'Of'l\'pt'N>nal11rt.l 'ot:r\lll
""'rt ~ou rl' rt'l•'lt"lllt'tl h~ n.inw 4u1t·1 'Un'4.1•on tilt· ,,.,-.11rr .inll
tharmin(l Mcditcmnnn 't)'frll 1ml0rlor. m.111) v.hh f1n'f'l~l·'
t >nitinally built in 11/\0 .ind ju't n ·,,·ntl)' re·•lfll·nt"tl .1lkr .i
totllplctl' rt'nov.11111n. the: U.1ltlt1.1 Inn t11mh1nt.., till' lu,tn· 111 tilt
P"'I ""uh tilt· luxurlt'' of till· prt·'4.·nt
'IPll l.ln H11K1'4.· fn1m •l<.l'An 11r h.ir ''"""" r1K1m~ ,.ntl lll\lnl 110
"" h i.J.1lly l·omphrm'11tU)' '4.·rvltt'' "' 11~ m11mln1t p.11wr 'ht1<'
""""·.ind .I full lunt1n•'f'IUI hrt•.ikfa..i 1\00 C'lll h rtlCllYI ... fum1..Jic.·ll
"uh j(lll'" ~thnifltoo. .100 " frt·"1 fltiv.t·r h<1u4ut·1
Till.' •I.illy mc:nu ~t uor rt 1.1urAnt fl'.itun-' < .1lif11m1a .1nll lun11
n• m.il t lll"~' '-' v.l'll .i, thl· frt·..n l.tll h ul 1hl• tlJ\ fmm ~ V.f"trl '
l.11tll.'\J l>of}'fn:tn At'\ 1 t>.11k1 """'"ll "OO t.thk ... 1t)(· lo•>ll Jll'll\..lr.1111111
.in .1hoo p..in of !Ill: t 'tr.1\lnhn.iq l ul1n.1q t•xpt•rwntc
Mum.inlll 1M1TM•nhll .inJ hlj&hh
n'ltH\11Y11.·n~tllt· lllt· J\.11""1..1 Inn
11 ' thl• JX"'t'fl'I. I jl\ I .IW.I\ 'l'ill0n \OU
\\lll'I Jl'4;am'l' ht'l•H'?n "'ll .inJ •he.·
11nllnn\
~"' t 11mrl• 1t· 1nrorm.1111111 "' "'"" r '~"""' tclflt~<.I )''"' tr.1\\ I ~Ill 11r ,;11111, •lint •
On ct~ sand IU Ncwpon
ltl • .," "' l>t·un""' r I I
Kalhua Inn. If)'\~ ~ """1.1 1Jlt'fl1I ur 1.all I "'I I H••'\ \~ll
•
MATTRESS Afl>
BOX SPRING
SETS . FROM
IS Yui
FKIOry
Warranty s1s900
Table and 6 Chairs
-~:~.JI ....
All WOOO 's49900 wttl.E MY LAST
SWIVEL ROCKERS
STARTING
AT s1s900
FROM
ntal DllAWING FOii WORLD'S
LAllGIST CHRISTMAS ITOCKINGll .... ~u••cblun .
Alcohol and drug::-.
~ht> depend~ on them to ~t't throu~h the
dav. Becau:--t• .. ht> feel~ all alorw. \nd think~
~he-~ (1uietl~ ~oin? craz~ in:-.ide. ~hf' ran·t
imagine Ii' in~ \\ ithout them.
But tlw~ 'n· d~~tru~·in~ h~r lift. and coulrl
en."ntua ll y kill her. rnle~~ ~he ~{'b help.
Profe:-.~ional mf'diral help.
( hw plan• to find that ht .. lp j ... at
( :arel nit.
arel nit i~ a medicall~ ::,UPfn i~
alcoholi ~m and dn1~ trt"atmt>nt pro~am that
\\Orks. Carel nit ~tH.'e~fulh lrt>ab mor~
p('ople for ak·o holi ~n1 and if ru~ problem~
. than an~ otht•r pri' ate pr~rram a' ailahlf•.
U ith pt'™mal in~i~ht into the :-.pc cia]
kind of sufft•rinµ thP fenrnlt> alroholit·
t•mlu rt'::-. tlw nwd ic ·a I pro ft ... :-.iona I:--at
Car~l nit ha',, tTc'att'<I a ''arm .... upporti' ~
a tmo~ptwn· 'dwr(' \\nnwu ran nu1quer their
clwm iea I < lt •f" 'tHl~nc~.
If \nu ur a '' oman \ ou loH' ha~ a
prohle~1 \\ith alcohol or~1n1w,.call Can-l nit. t
\\t• fall twlp.
(714) 650~1090
CO STA ME SA
MEDICA L CENTER HO PITM;
301 VICTORI TREET '
.O._ T MES \. . L I R I 92627
••. ...,._ .. _"""•"'• • -.r>--l••C-
........................................................ _. ........ __ _.. ................ ..--... .... .-.-...--.-.------~~~~~~--~.__~-------~~~----~~~--
r
----~--~------------------~~~~~~~~~~-.... ,. • r .... -..... ._. ~
.;
'
A8 Orlnge Coeet DAILY PtLOT/ Friday, Nowmbef 15, 1985
UC Irvine revives Asian language course~
Rising enrollment of Orientals. focus
on Pacific Rim.studies cite as reasons
·By P&n. SNEIDERMAN
Of .. °-" '!I" ...
For the first time in a decade,
Chinese and Japanese languaae
courses arc beina offered at UC
Irvine. UCJ officials said the increas-
ina Asian enrollment at the campus
and a new emphasis on Pacific Rim
pr01f8mS prompted the revivaJ.
-
UCl's Asian taniuaae courses this
fall were restored at the urging of Dr.
Richard Barrutia, 'director of the
campus' lin1ui1tics program.
.. We're startina from scratch with
two Chinese teachers and one
Japanese teacher,'' he said.
He said about I 00 students arc
enrolled in these conversational
language classes ...
~Holiday-Gift~
•Cf FT 90XES 'lo"91f oott~ ~rt 41 $5.10.
Ooliblt' !IOOlf $!1.2S l rl!)M' DCXtlt SIS 9S
• CUSTOM. OOURM£T BASkETS. St.irt "'
$15.98 to $150
• P£11SOMAUU:O LA8ELEO WINES.
The prrft'<l 91tt1 U<~ custom11t!O
w.U yOIJI -(' uf n.lme5 ()(
c:..~ ~ tOqt.'I>
•PLANNING A HOLIDAY BASH? Coll J\ !or
ir rom ;11v tte •e Q(ll t"" ptorlt'll 'IX>! •·>O
oj'"'' .,./!'\,~
• "d ':.t' • • .,. ,~ ·"'~' ' (.V1•~":r • «a'IOI'\\
~ ' ,.. 't" r flow.,,.,.., I A .,..... .~ ov•
()\If" ,~t.turdr'! 'W'StWlilJ <,;r1f ,. ,..-+' w""""'
CALL OR COME IN ANO PLACE YO\JR
HOUOAV ORDERS TOOAY
UCI officials said restoration of
Asian langullJe courses is in step with
the University of Califpmia's new
concentration on countries bordering
the Pacific Ocean.
In bis 1986-87 budget proposal, UC
president David Gardner has re-
quested about S 1.3 million for pro-
pms and research focusing on
Pacific Rim nations. This proposal
includes expansion of the UC Educa-
tion Abroad Programs and funds fur
establishment or a Graduate School
oflnternational Relations and Pacific
Studies at UC San Diego.
UCl's Barrut1a said another reason
the Japanese and Chinese language
courses have returned to tbe cur-
riculum is the risina number of
Asians enrolled at tho lrvinc campus.
The number of Asian freshman has
increased steadily over the past five
years. In the fall of 1980, Asians
accounted for 19 percent of the UCI
fmhman class. By the fall of 1984, the
proportion had jumped to 31 percent.
This fall's freshman class is 34
percent Asian.
In past years, Asian language
classes were offered throuah UCI's
[)cpartment of Foreign Languages.
Businessman, commentator,
provocateur. Jlm Wood writes
a column that will give you
''SomethlD.g to TblD.k About.''
Every Sunday In the Daily Pilot
then through the proaram . an oom-
parati ve culture. In the m1d-1970s,
the claSK$ were dropped because of
insufficient fundina.
.. We couldn't sustain the kind of
program that Asian lanauaaes de-
strvcd 1• said Dr. Dickran Tashjian,
profes5or and di~or of the program
in comparative culture. "We're very
pleased that it's been mtorcd."
Barrutia began worlc.inJ last year to
return Asian language claSSC$ to
UCl.He has now turned his attention
toward securing funds to make these
classes a permanent part of the
curriculum.
-
NO PAYMENTS OR FINANCE CHARGES 'TIL FEB.'86.
~ 0% %
On all Sealy bedding including Posturepedic
-
SEALY SPECIAL PURCHASE
$ 59;~~.
REG 139 95
Full s1zp ea pc Reg 199 95 SALE 99.88
SEALY POSTURE ARM 11
s 12 88 ,,.. .,
Full ~·zr• "" pc Queen size <;f't
l<tnq 'illl' 'W,I
REG 259 95
Req 359 95 SALE 179.88
Reg 799 95 SALE 399.88
Reg 999 95 SALE 499.88
.. '·
SEALY POST\JftE ARM Ill
GENTLY RAM OR EXTRA ARM s149ss r.,,.,..,, '"' ...... "
Full c,1111 "" P<.
Quepn '>•IP ..et
King s1 zP set
REG 199 95
Reg 359 95 SALE 119.88
Rf>q 799 95 SALE 449.88
Rec;i 1099 95 SA1..E 549.88
SALE ENDS WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 20
'WMEN YOU USE OR OPEN A WICKES CHARGE , ..
SEALY POSTUREPEDIC RRM
8 8 ·
REG. 199.95
Full size ea pc . Reg. 299.95 SALE 149.88
Queen size set Reg. 699.95 SALE 349.88
King size set Reg. 899.95 SALE 449.88
QUEEN AND KING SIZE SOLD IN SETS ONLY
3 TOUGH GUARANTEES: If for any reason you re not happy with your furniture when you get 1t home. we wlll take 1t back within seven days If you find the
identical item 1n stock elsewhere w1th1n seven days for less. we will refund the difference We will give you a five-year limited warranty
agamsHactofy defects 1n workmanship and construction Details available In our stores
4 WAYS TO CHARGE: Our convenient Wickes Revolving Charge, American Express Card. MaattrCa~d or Viu
ANAHEIM· Santa Ana Frwy and Magnolia Phone 71 4 821 8550 VAN NUYS: San Diego Frwy and Sepulveda Blvd between Burbank 1nd Victory Phone 818-780-2244
WEST COVINA San Bernarctino Frwy and Vincent Phone 8 18-919 1971 COSTA MESA: San 01eoo Frwy 1md Harbor Blvd Phone 714-540-8242
Open MondAy thru Friday 10-9. Saturday 10-6. Sunday 12-6
• .. •
Arthur Brutncton
Engineers
name Irvine
water chief ..
Arthur E. Bruington of Irvine was
installed as a director of the American
Society of Civil Engineers at the
society's annual collvention and
transportation conference. held re-
cently in Dctro1L
Bruington is general manager of the
Irvine Ranch Water District, over-
seeing water and sewage service in
Irvine and adjacent communities. He
pre. viously spent 30 years with the Los
Angeles County Flood District.
He will serve a three-year term on
the civil engineering society's board
of direction and will represent a
district that consists of the Pacific
Southwest states.
Bruington has been active in the
society since his student chapter
membership at the California In-
stitute of Technology. where he
earned a bachelor of science degree
and a master's degree in civil engi-
neering.
He also is active in the American
Public Works Association and the
American Water Works Association.
b'YbJe 1rant recelnd
The Art Center of Dcsjgn in
Pasadena received a S 125,000
match_.inf grant from the James Irvine
Foundation in support of the school's
scholarships, financial aid ands~
programs, it was announced Fnday.
The funds are to match increases in
the alumni giving program over a
two-year period, said Edward P.
Hanak. the school's senior vice
president.
"The Irvine Foundation grant
gives us a wonderful new incentive to
encourage alumni to increase their
giving during 1986and 1987," Hanak
said.
The art center listing about 7,000
alumni was founded in Los Angeles in
1930. It offers graduate and under-
graduate programs in industrial dc-
sign , ad v ertising ,
1raphics/packaging, illustration,
film, photography and fine arts.
Pre.ldbJI Judie elected
Judge Marvin G . Weeks was unani-
mously elected presidi ng jud$e of
West Orange County Municipal
Court in Westminster.
Weeks bas been a municipal court
judge since 197 5 and previously was a
Orange County Superior Court ref-
eree, a U.S. district court com-
missioner and deputy counsel for
Orange County government.
His one-year term begins Jan. 1 ..
1986. JudJe William Mock was
elected assistant presiding judge for
the 1986 term.
J&rcb of Dime rally
An off-road rally benefit for the
March of Dimes Foundation will take
participants throu$h the back country
of Oeveland National Forest Nov.
23. I .. . cd The "Celebrity4X4Ral y, aum
event, will bc&in at the junction of the
North Main Divide Road and Ortega
Hiahway. The 43-mile rally will end
at the Sanda.k complex in Corona.
The goal is to raise SI 0,000 for the
March of Dimes .
For information, call the Trabuco
Ranger Dis\rict at 7 36-181 I.
,,.,. care tuk force
The Lquna Beach Child Care Tuk
Force, compoecd of sevcraJ com-
munity orpnizations was recently
formed to identify and address exist·
!na problems in the child-care system
in the area. ~ task force has already beaun
preparinJ a 'directory of child<are
services m Laauna. Once completed,
it will be available at key community
locations and throlJ4h direct mail-
inp. future projects include a needs
U1C1Smeot survey, child care scbolar-
sbjpt and follow-up on the new st.ate
ptOl1&tn for Kt-up monies for
latchkey prosnms. ~na chlir of the task force is
Undl Yarnell.
Classy . uto
Advertised
in the
llllyPllll
..
Starring
role fits
'86Nova
Top billing for style,
fuel economy, price
given by new buyers
Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT /Fno.y, NoY9mber 15, 1915 81
.
WARREN, Mich. -Fuel econ-
omy, styling and price are the
primary reasons early buyers of the
Chevrolet Nova give for making
their purchase. Virtually all -99
percent -say they are pleased
with their Nova and would rec-
ommend Chevrolet's newest
model to friends and relatives.
Che-.y Sprtnta are arrtnn, at the Port of Loe ~ele. ln 1ar1er the entry-leTel, Japane.e-bullt mJnlcompact bouta an EPA record-
namben than e•er. The 800D-to-be-releued Sprint 'ER" modef of ahlttermc 60 mllea-per-&allon blgbway fuel economy ratlnl.
A survey of buyers who
purchased the Nova shortly after It
was Introduced June 13 In 25
mlddle-U.S. states also showed
·that nearly half ( 4 7 percent) were
women.
Want the best mileage per gallon? Sprint
Like two other small models -
Chevrolet's Sprint and Spectrum
-Nova went on natlonwwide sale
Oct. 3. The three were Introduced
during the past year on a regional
basis.
"Nova has proven Itself an at-
tractive vehicle In the market-
place,'' says Thomas A. Staudt,
Chevrolet general marketing man-
ager. "Now that it's avallable
across the country, Nova has
established Itself as a world-class
car -at an affordable orlce. ··
(Pleue eee JllOV A/82)
J)Oltn.J
LOS ANGELES -Chevrolet
Motor Division's spunky little
Sprint, America's fuel economy
champ, will be available In much
greater quantities this model year
than last:accordlng to Edd Rog-
genkamp, director of California
marketing.
··Because of voluntary restric-
tions on the part of the Japanese,
we were able to Import Just 17 ,000
Sprints during the 1985 model
year,'' Roggenkampsald.
"Buyers attracted by the low
purchase price and high fuel econ-
omy, not to mention Japanese
quality, snapped up the first Sprints
almost Immediately. Our (jealers
didn't know whether to laugh or
cry."
Sprint has been available since
May 1984 In only nine Western
states. Approxlmatety 80 percent
were sold In California.
In 1986, however, Chevrolet has
almost trip led the volume' -about
50,000 units-available In both
two-door and newly Introduced
four-door models. Although
Sprints are now offered na-
tlonwlde, California dealers will still
enjoy a big share of the total.
Another Sprint model, the "ER,"
Is No. 1 on the Environmental
Protection Agency's fuel economy
charts for 1986. Its EPA-fitlmated
60-mlles-per-gallon rating In high-
way driving makes ifthe flrst auto
to reach that plateau. The Sprint
"ER," which also recorded a lead-
ing 55-mpg EPA city rating, wlll be
available at Chevy dealerships In
January.
"Sprint appeals to a market
segment that Chevrolet has ser-
v\oed for many years," says Rog-
genkamp. "It's definitely an entry-
levet car -at $5,580, which Is why
dealers have sold them to so many
uaed car intenders. When you
consider the purchase price and
the lower flnance rates on new cars.
It's no wonder."
Sprint is one of two cars Chev-
roJet Is Importing from Japan -the
other being the Chevrolet Spec-
trum. For an all-Amerlcarfcompany
that once used a "baseball. hot
• dogs, app4e pie and Chevrolet"
Pleue eee SPRDfT /82)
LUXURY YOU CAN .. AFFORD
1986 COUGAR 1985 M.ERKUR 1986 MARQUI
2~ TO CHOOSE FROM* 30 TO CHOOSE FROM* 30 TO CHOOSE FROM*
•12,999 or
s199 +-;~x
• Automatic
• Interval .._,ers
• Tit Wheel
• Leather st..mc Wheel
• Speed Control
• Rear Window Defroster
• Dual Power Wheels
• Polycast Wheels
• Titted Glass
• LUlll'J Galore
113,999 or
s199 +~
111,399 or s199 +-;t • Power locks
• Automatic
• Ai Con<itionil1
• Tit Wheel
• Speed Control
• Power Windows
• luttl'Y Wheel Coven
• Aloy Wheels
. •,...Ties
• Ai Concltiolq
• Eltc Rear Defroster
• Eltc AM-FM Cassette
• Performance lWnited • Rear Window Defroster
• AM~FM Stereo
• 6 Way Power Drive Seats
• Ai' Concltionit1
• Eltc Stereo Cassette
• llbnNted Vanty fllrror ·
• PO.er Door Locks
• Tirttd Glass
• Remote Control fllrron \
~
.... C.Ll. SlUllAO , ........ SlOM fectlry ..... ~" .. °'*· sm .M .. Wliltt ltlM 0.A.C. (Sir 5121) • U-.. C.U. D5SZ Tlbl ,_ + lu. St-' C.A-1 a..-. II llllllm LUM 0.A C (Ser llM) 41-. C.Ll. D5SZ Tltll r.b. + tu. SlOO UI ...._ti...._ l ... O.A.C. (S.. l407)
.. -Many cars to choose from. Prices wl vary. -llLE,.,. -lfJIJ ,..
Orange County's Oldest Lincoln-Mercury Dealer • "Home of the Golden Touch " • Friendly -Sincere -Honest
2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa (714) 540-5630
. ,
Car phones catering to co1J1muters' C"onvenience
Nowdrtvercan buy
aooKJ-quality cellular
unJt for under 999
wtthout lntemJpdng your con..
VWMtlonA
You c. now buy a gOOd-
q~ oellw phone for 1e1a tftM · 1,000. High• that IOUndl
compered wtth tfte price of a
~ ctW11•1ia1r1 regular t8'ephone. ceUular phone ,.......,_... prfoee ere about half what they
C. phonee ere turglng In ..,. a YM' or '°ago.
popuWtty wttn bu81nea and Modeta wtth memory dJaHng,
f:t°t111IOMI peopieWhO spend a hand•free ..,._.,.. and other
of time 1n their can end don't conwnlenoe Md aatety featur•
WMt to be out o4 touch tor a ere now priced In the S 1,500
moment. rangit, and for around $2,500 you
The recent growth la due to the can get a portable phone that ftta
lower prtcee Md Improved..,. In a bf1efcue and can be ueed
._ mede poeafble by cellular wherever you go, In or out of the
~. car.
UntM the. nrst cellular phone Cellular phone prk:ee are Ukely ..,.n.m ippeered In Chlcego In to drop tMN'I further, but the oost
1983, only conventional mobtle aervtoe ltaelf could con-
f)honee were avalla6te. BecauM tlnue to average around 40 to 50
the older 9Yftem allowa onty a cent• per minute during weekday
damn or eo dttYert In a metro. ~nea houra (lower at night
poltM .,.. to communlcat• and on weekenda), plua a
~.a 30-mlnute wait monthly acceaa charge that can
;... to get on the Hne wu not range from less than $20 to more
unCommon. than $100.
Now, clOM to 70 U.S. ctties lnatead of buying the phone,
haw cellular systems Which you can rent the equipment at
dMde a ctty Into sections, or prices that may b8 enttcfngty low.
cela, up to 16 mlle8 wide. Each . lndlanapolls Telephone Co.
Cll hu Its own tranamttter and chargt19 $29.SO per montb for
r9ClfVW oonnectiCS Wfth tt'Mt equipment rental, plus the reg-
phone ayatem. A.a you drtve ular monthty aooeas and usage
acrou town, computerized feee and a $175 -4nataUatlon
equtpment IWttchel your call charge. BeH Atlantic Moblle Sys-
from one tranamttter to tt1e next teme i>ffera a rental phone for
$49.95 a month wtth 100 mfnut•
worth of tree calla eec:tt month
during off-peak houra; you aleo
ha~ to pay a $200 lnet.Uatlon
charge and a $40 1tan-up fee.
In moat cttiee that haw cellular
"ayatems, there'• onty one com-
pany provtdtng leMce. The FCC
allows • maximum of two eervlce
operators In each metropoUtan
ar•: ttle r;eglonal tef.ephone op-
erating company and one other
company. In Ortando and e
doun or eo other ctt .... you can
compare aervtce and pricing
from two competing companies.
ln1tallatlon coats $100 to $300
or more, depending on the ve-
hlcie. Antennas average around
$30. Theee coats may be ln-
ctU<Md In-the price of e phooe-or-
rental plan or charged separ-
ately. •
Major ri)anufacturers of FCC-
approved. oeUular equipment In-
clude AT&T, Hitachi, Motorola.
NEC, NovAtel, Oki, Panasonic,
Western Union and others. Poor
trantmlaaJon and reception often
hu more to do with the quality of
the antenna and lta lnstdatlbn
than the phone equipment.
Interference 11-fftal lfkefy to be
a problem on a ceflular phone
than on the ofder type of moblle
phone, but ceUular lfgnaJa may
be weakened or distorted by a
tall bulfdlng, an overpass or even
the lea'IM of tr .... s.rvtce
problem•. IUCh u hMring two
converutlona or tMllng cut off,
can be common during the ltrat
few montha that • <*lular ayatem
It available In a ctty.
Tatklng on• cellular phone I•
not aa private u ullng a regular
phone because vofoe lfgnala are
......... a' a
Car production
accelerated
lnlftw"Del
An Indian 8lkla aato
worker tnepect. a new
llanati-SL-lrt ftblcle
lll&Jla.factw.recl In the .
new jolnt-Yentare fac-
tory In .New Dellal.
Tllere are more malti-
national corporatlona
r· Mttlq ap 'joint ...a-
ta.ne 1n Ind.la aace
ltd• Oudhl took of-fice a ,...,. aco.
tranamftted by radio wa~. All It
tak81 to pk:k up a converutlon 11
a apeclal aoannlng rwoetvw .any-
where within about eeven mll•.
Beil Atlantic Moblle Syttema la
trying out a new encoding ~•tern
In Wahington that coukf eventu-
alty make cellular conversation•
more private. A propoeec;f law In
California would make tt megal to
MYMdrop on car phone ~n
vwaatlon1. 1
The editor• of Changing Times
magazJne note that there 11
controvw1y about the effect of
car phon• on drtver attentive-
,,.... So far, the phonee are ueed
(~ ... C~/IM)
LOTUS
Bauer
Motors
ISUZU
SPRINT INCREASING •••
From Bl
theme In Its advertising, that may seem a major change In
direction.
But Roggenkamp holds no such opinion.
"Chevrolet always has and always wtll have the Interest
of our customers at heart," he said. "We are America's
favorite car company because we sell America's favorite
cars. If we must go offshore to find them, ·we wlll. We owe It to
America's car buyers.
1 2925 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
ALL 1985 BUICKS ILOUR I ENTORY ·
WILL BE .
SOLD AT I
1985 REGAL
List Price •••...• '14,272
Bauer Selling Prlee •• '12,394
SA. VINGS '1878
List Prlee • • • • • . . S 13,069
Bauer Se-ling Price •t l,718
SAVINGS'l3£il . .
List Prlee •••••• '20,570
B•uer Selll8g Prlee •• '17 ,920
SA. VINGS '2650
.. IMS
PARK
AVENUE
List Price ••••• ••9,387
B••er Selling Prlee • • t 8,882
SA. VINGS '2485
I e OVER FACTORY INVOICE
• 1
' NonCE TO THI! BUYER • 'nl.e ,...,.._ e.tal U\cl~ ten_, ~ .. _. ........... --.tiea ..
end ia not• n.ft t-wr, ~ ~ .. ~ ..,._, 'n.-DO -7 .__, lnr'1IW ...._ .........
• • .,
"We are a market-driven company. We provide
products people tell us they want. And people have
convincingly told us they want fuel efficiency, low price and
the quality that they percefve In Japanese-built cars.
''We have come a long way In Improving our domestically
built products. But, until the people begin to realize that, we
have to respond to the marketplace the way It Is -not how
we wish It was."
BaJer 91lrft'J9 Indicate Cbenotet•a neweet model
lfOYU -foa.r-door laatebbuk. aboft, and foar-door
notcbback-arefaTOnd for fllel economy and price.
NOV A PRAISED •••
From Bl
The Nova 11 produced by New United Motor Manufac-
turing Inc .• In Fremont and It available In two models -a
four-door notchback sedan and a four-door hatchback. With
the rear seats folded down, the hatchback provides a
generou1 35.5 cubic feet of cargo apace. Spllt-foldlng rear
seats allow Nova to carry three passengers and substantial
cargo at the aame time.
Both models are powered by a transverse-mounted 1.6
llter four-cytlnder engine and avalleble with either a ftve-
tpeed manual tranamlealon (with fourth and fifth gear
overdrive) or optional three-tpeed automatic. Nova recelves
an EPA-estimated 30 mlles per gallon city/ 37 mpg highway
with the manual and 27 mpg city/ 31 mpg highway with the
automatic.
Three out of four buyers knew the Nova Is built In
Callfomla and 55 percent were aware that Is Jointly built with
Toyota. though the dlatlnctlon between a General Motora-
Toyota Jofnt venture and a Chevrolet-Toyota Joint venture
wu blurred. The avallablllty of the Toyota engine was cited
by 12 percent of buyers as a prime reuon for purchasing the
Nova.
Early Nova buyers gave high marks to the fact that the
tubcompact Chevrolet 11 the result of a Joint venture project
(onty 2 percent regl1tered any unfavorable. comment• and
the fKt that Nova 11 avallable through Che'lrolet dealerahfps.
The phone keeps ringing. The dishwasher won't wort.
'1t>u'~ got a splitting headlche. And roN the baby's crying
her head off In the bade bedroom. '1t>u drop a dish. you
bump your efbow, the crying gets louder . and sudden~
you're hNded for the baby determined to shut her up.
Stop.
Take time out.
Srt down, tl"Nthe ~ count to ten very~ If the
anger's still thert. punch a pillow Take a hot bath or a cold
shower. Whatever you do, don't tak~ hold of your child
untJI you get hokt of yourself .
'
J
' . .
-, . .
..
Or11ng9 Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Frldey, Nowmber 15, 1816 -
,
The Best deals On wheels for Thanksgiving/
•
WE·'LL GIVE YOU $500. OVER TRADE ALLOWANCE!
BUY ANY NEW '85 or '86 FORD TRUCK, RANGER, ·BRONCO OR VAN BEFORE THANKSGIVING
AND WE'LL GIVE YOU AN EXTRA •500 OVER TRADE ALLOWANCE! ,...
SUPER USED CARS & TRUCKS
'80 CHEVETTE #9001 $2988 '82 DATSUN i:6238 S3688 8210
4 Spd ., Like New 4 d Air 32 000 Miles . TOYOTA '82 CAVALIER #6210 $2988 '81 s4999 ·COROLLA #62so ..
4 Dr., 4 Spd Air 34 000 Miles
'82 FORD EXP #9011 s3999 179 CHEV. BLAZER s5999 #6257
Auto, 31,000 Miles Black Beauty, Loaded
'83 FAIRMONT #6267 ~4988 '84 ISUZU P'UP 4x4 s5999 #899<4
Like New Auto Air Lo:..Miles .)
ESCORT #62ao s4999 CHEV. 1 ..-:)N· $AVE '83 ~ '73 I"'.. \. 0
Auto, Air, Like New
• 0 . .108
Auto Air Lo Mile
•
' --Vl;~d
\ (21 3) 921-8681
..
. '
...._.. _____ .._ ___ ....__~-------------~~---------~-------
II
J
-~-· - --...
M Orllft09 OoMt DAILY PILOT I Frldey, Nov.mber 15, 1986
OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL Us~ of seatbelts important
during your holiday travels 1886 S-16 JIMMY'S
f \0,000.00 0
l>t,uS TAX~
APA
FINANCING
ON SELECTED
MODELS on approved
credit
IN STOCK' CHICAGO (AP) -Holidays are a time Of
Increased automoblle travel for f amlly visits and
cttlebratlons. It Is atao th• time when It's most
Important to remember to buckle up, warns the
American Association for Automotive Medicine
here.
Traffic crashes are the third largest klller In the
United States. after cancer and heart disease,
notes Elalne Petrucelll. executive director of the
association.
In fact, she adds. a report recently Issued by
the National C-enters for Disease Control In Atlanta
stated that more than 50 percent of deaths and
serious Injuries from automobile colllslons could
be prevented by wearing safety belts.
Although In many states the use of seatbelts Is
now required by law. It Is Important to get Into the
habit of btlckllng up even where their uae ts-not
mandatory, Petrucelli points out. ·
• Petrucelli offers these tips to Insure that
nothing wlll mar th~ festive season during holiday
travel:
•People generally drink more during the
holidays. Although you may not be drinking, the
danger from your fellow drivers makes It even more
Important than usual to wear your safety belt.
•lt'sagood Idea to stow packages In the trunk
of your car. Instead of on the back seat or on
passengers' laps. That way, there wlll be no
excuses for not wearing a seatbelt.
•Be sure to dig out all the safety belts In your
car -both front alJd back -before setting out on
your holiday journey. Easy accesslblllty en-
courages balky pasengers to use their belts.
•If you are driving In snowy or Icy weather,
your chances of having a colllslon are greater than
In fair weather:-So just when buckling up seems
most Inconvenient (bulky clothes. etc.), Wi ea-
peclally Important to wear your seatbelt and fasten
It property. •Before making a lengthy drive. you may want
to remove heavy overcoats for both eas1er buckllng
up and a more comfortable temperature during
your trip. •For the best protection. be sure that the lap
part of your belt Is positioned as low as posslble on
your pelvls. Your shoulder belt should have no
more than a flstful of slack, to allow you to move
around. •Look to community resources for child
safety seats. Some local pollce departments and
community organizations now stock quantities of
chlld safety eeats to accommodate additional
yQungsters who may be visiting your household
during the holidays. If these groups don'' offer .t his
service .. try to get one started. · . ..
•If you're planning to rent a car for your trip,
make sure child safety seats are available. Some
car rental services will provi de seats If notified
ahead of time. Other companies are sure to follow
If they receive enough requests.
•If you are Involved In community work with
senior citizens, you may be driving them to and
from holiday festivities at the senior citizens'
center. Since seniors are especlally vulnerable to
serious Injury In a crash, It's particularly Important
to remind them to buckle up. Seniors who suffer
from arthritis will appreciate your helping them with
their belts.
Porsche assumes
full distribution
RENO (PRN) -Porsche Cal's North America Inc. wlll
assume all distribution duties In 12 addltlonal states on Jan .
. 1. 1986, It was announced In Reno today.
"Laat year, when Porsche Cars North America assumed
total responsibility for Importing, marketing, and distributing
Porache cars In the United States, we established agree-
ments with three Independent distributors," explained John
A. Cook, president of the Reno-based auto Importer.
"Under the' terms of these agreements, they would
provide aervlces for us for a period of time. even though the
dealers are atl under contract to us," Cook said.
-"Also under these agreements, we can assume all
responsibilities for the distribution of Porsche products In
these 12 states at any time.
"We have elected to do so effective Jan. 1, 1986, ·' Cook
said.
The three Independent organizations are World-Wide
Volkswagen Corp. (Connecticut, New Jersey and New York):
Porsche-Audi Northwest Inc. (Alaska, Idaho, Montana,
Oregon and Waslngton): and Volkswagen Mid-America Inc.
(Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska).
"We appreciate their efforts during the past year,'' Cook
added, "and feef that now la the right time to Integrate the
dealers In these geographic areas Into the same support
systems we've established In the rest of the country.''
CARPHONE SALES UP •••
P'rom82
primarily by business people who spend a lot of time drMng
and who have better safety records than the general public,
so there la no statistical linkage between phones and higher
accident rates.
Even so, Insurance companies, AAA and the owners'
manuals that come with some cellular phones recommend
pulling off the road to talk. A few states have proposed laws
that would make It Illegal for people to use phones In moving
vehicles, but the cellular Industry argues that pulling to the
side can be equally hazardous.
1986 MU~ANG LX 1986 AEROSTAR
For more, Information, see "Cellular Telephones -A
Layman's Gulde," by Stuart Crump Jr. (Tab Books, $15.95
hardbound, 9.95 paperback); and "The Cellular Mobile
Tetephone a Year Later" (Runzhelmer & Co., Publlcatlons
Div.; $45.00; 555 Skokie Blvd .. Suite 245, Northbrook, IL
60062.)
Air Con41tionJ.na
All{Pll Cueette
Tilt Wheel Steerln&
Cl1li8e Control
Aut~matlc
830LD8
REGENCY Aulomet~Pwr 8tr119, Tiit
end MORE Auto, Air, Pwr Wind, lcit1, ...a. end mYCfl MORE VIN l13~ v~ •84524e
14999°0 • 00
12T·BIRD 128-10
HERITAGE LONG BED
PwrWlnd. lock1, ... ,, Air. V-8, 4 tpd, ':4eot AVIO, Tiit. CNIM
VIN #105-424
14COAVETTE 71DAT,UN . 2IOZ
8099 St..o. Tiii. CNl9e, Atr, Pwr Wlndowl. OrulM
4tp.ed MOAE
VIN II 131853 VIN #157110 • 00 • 00
12HONDA IODATSUN
CIVIC P/U4x4
Air, AM/FM, CMN11e. Mege, Wide Tiree,
51Pd AMIFM.c-tte
VIN •0319M VIN #37096e
00 •
FORD
13MUSTANG
QT
V-8. 5 tpd, Tiit, Cnde. M~, plul MORE N 1212051 • 00
11 BUICK
SKYLARK
Auto, Air, Pwr 8teer1ng.
AMIFM,C...
VIN #24082t • 00
83T-BIRD
HERITAGE v-e. Auto, Alf, Tiit.
M11g1,P9IM
VIN #151115 •
83FORD
RANGER
4 IP(I, Fun Trudi
NEWEST
AND
FASTF.ST
GROWING
FORD
Kenya showing off
first Uhuru sedan
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -General Motors Kenya Ltd.
demonstrated Kenya's first locally aaeembled sedan, called
the Uhuru -the Swahlll word for freedom.
·The Uhuru, ptlted at ttte eqolvalent 6f $20,400, has an
1,800 cubic centimeter engine, front-wheet drive and a five-
speed transmission.
The manufacturer's managing director, M.F. Dieterich,
said at a demonstration of the new car Thursday that about
30 of the vehlcles already have been sold to tour companies
and state-subsidized corporations.
The Kenyan government owns 51 percent of General
Motors Kenya Ltd. and the U.S.-based General Motors Corp.
owns 49 percent.
Trucks score sales
increase for Dodge
SAN FRANCISCO (PRN) -Northern Callfomlans
apparentty decided to keep on trucking In-October,
lncreulng ..,.. of ~ ~ truck• In Chryatw's San
Francleco aatea zone by 8.2 percent over October 19M, the
company hat announc.d.
The lnerMM, 8CCordlng to Dwight Goad, zone..._
manager, pulhed Nlel of trucks up to 1, 155 vehtclee
compared with aaJea of 1,087 for the month of October tut
yMr.
So far thla year, Chryaler-Plymouth and Dodge dMlera In
Northern C.llfornla have told a total of 39,906 cara and
truck• compared with aalea of 33,81 3 for the first 10 months
of 19&t, tor an Iner .... of 18 percent.
In addition, Goad r8P()f1ed that Chryaler'a oWtall
market lh1t• tor hl9 zone ~ad rleen to 9.4 percent compared
to 1 0.1 peroent lhare a yeer 11go.
• ........... ____________ ...................................... ----------------------------------------~--~~_;_~----------~
---~~-~-Orange CO..• OAILY PILOT/Ftkiay, ~ 15, 1915
Motorists failing to make maintenance checks
llJL8.NlltCI -
HOUSTON· TEX. -Many motorists In this
country are making a dangerous and expensive
mlatake: Although about 70 percent go to the
trouble of pumping their own gasoline, most fall to
cneck the tires or under the hood
A atudy of self-serve customers' automoblles
by Shell. 011 Co. revealed that m9re than half the
cara were at least a quart low on oll, and about a
third were low on either engine coolant power
ateertng fluid or brake fluld. Another third had at
leaat one tire well below the recommended preaaure.
•"8cl9tor: It'• Important to have enouoh
antifreeze In the rld'8tor. But don't remow the
radiator cap whit. the engine la hot. The antifreeze
level can be checked wtthout removtng the Cap tt
your car hu 1 plaatlc overftow contaAner (there are
different teveta for hot and cold engines).
If your car hat no overflow t1nk, and the engine
I~ oold. remove the radiator cap. The rldlator
contains .the proper ampunt of fluid If the level la
about an Inch below the bottom of the flller neck.
The safety-and economy-conscious dr•ver
·can often avoid costly repairs through regular
check-ups and preventive maintenance The
followlng Items were taken from a llst devetoPeci by
Shell engineers and automotive experts. They are
afmpte to do. and can Indicate If a problem Is developlng.
Check the top and bottom radiator hotel for
cracks and bulges. Check for leak• at the
connections. Do the same for heater hOtea, llnce
they carry antifreeze. too. Shell agren with auto
manufacturers who recommend changing radiator
and heater hoses every two years.
Buying
rental
car a
good bet
NEW YORK (AP)-Thinking of
buying a used car? Consider auto
rental agencies.
Car rental agencies sell more
than 80 percent of their fleets
each year, either directly to the
public or to wholesale sources,
. such as car dealers, according to
National Car Rental.
Natlonal says It sells Its cars to
consumers at below normal retell
prices and offers a 24-month.
24,000-mlle limited mechanlcal
warranty. The company says It
sells Its cars when they are no
more than 12 to 14 mor,ths old
and with about 21 ,000 mlles.
Hlstorlcally. potential buyers
have been wary of rental cars
because of percelv.ed abuse from
the number of different drivers
using them.
Rental agencies, on the other
hand, say maintenance Is more
Important.
National offers this advice on
where to shop for used cars:
-New car dealers. "New car
dealers typically keep their best
trade-In cars and wholesale the
others. Most new car dealers also
have the facilities to maintain
cars they aell and wlll usually offer
warranties. These factors make a
real difference When deciding
where to buy." ·
-Used car dealers. ''Many
used car dealers have a large
selection of lower-priced cars
that have been bought at com-
merclal auctions or received on
trade-Ins. You'll want to locate a
reliable service center or mech-
anic before purchasing."
-Private owners. "While the
best used car bargain often
appears to be offered by private
owners, bear In mind they won't
usually offer a warranty or give
you any .guarantees. However, If
the car stlll carries a valid new car
•a.ttery: Many of today'• car batteries are
labeled "maintenance free," and don't require that
the fluld level be checked. But the ktvef In otder
batteries should be checked. You can do this by --
Advocating seat belts
Top country •lneer Barbara llandrell tapee a telntalon
commerclaf lD Nuh'rille encoa.ractnc the 1l8e of aeat belts.
In the forearound la the ma.acted Jacaar ue wu rlcllD.i lD
when ahe wu lDYolYed lD an accident lD September 1984.
Mandrell la •till recoYeriJ:lC from lnjurlee recelYed then.
Nissan sales down
CARSON (PAN) -Nissan Motor Corp. In U.S.A. Is reporting
sales of 66,499 vehicles during October.
C.P. King, senior vice president-sales, said Nissan dealers sold
51,632 cars and 14,867 trucks during the month. In October 1984,
Nissan dealers sold 58,388 cars and 28,270 trucl('S.
· King attributed the decllne In sales to reduced Inventory
following a record sales month. During September, Nissan dealers
reported the best monthly sales performance In the company's
history.
Total October sales included 6,953 Nissan Sentras and 8,080
trucks built at the Smyrna, Tenn .• plant. During September 1984,
7 ,898 Smyrna trucks were sold.
So far In calendar year 1985, Nissan dealers have sold 480,442
cars and 226,302 trucks. That figure Includes 28,030 domestic-bunt
Sentra cars and 93,386 domestlc-bullt trucks.
service warranty, you may trans----------------------------1
fer It to your name."
-Lending Institutions. Banks
and loan Institutions also sell
repossessed used cars.
-Car rental companies. "As a
rule. prices from large car rental
agencies are lower than from
retell dealers, and the cars are
popular down-sized models. too.
Most rental cars also have re-
ceived better scheduled main-
tenance than the average car.
and usually carry warranties. But
shop around."
T oyoto sales
; for October
· top last year
TORRANCE (PAN) -Toyota
car and truck sales In October
were ahead of year-ago levels,
according to figures released
recently by Toyota Motor Sales
USA Inc.
Sales of 60,55-4 cars .and
25.531 trucks were up 23.-4
percent from October 198-4.
"Avallablllty Improved during
the month with the arrival of the
new 1'~8e model•, but our deal-
' era atlll have leu than a 10-day
auppty of new cars" Mid Bob
McCurry, TMSUSA senior vice
pM<tent.
1 "The 1986 new model year Is
·t going to be ex1remefy com-
• , pettttw," McCurry Mid. "Com-
petition II br=n Ing the very latelt In high tech Into the mar-
ketpface wt1Me ping hotd down
' tM pnce comunen haw to pey
• for"·" Sae. durtng the month were
eperked by the lntroctuctlon of
!'II the alt.new 1 HI CeMca. The
b ~n.wCelcet.t\ne
·' a et.wt to front-.._. d~ Md
the OT ..S model 11 pow•n•d by 1
rao.-proven. -4-cyttnder. 16·
l1 vatw, twtn-eam engine that put•
out 135 horMPOW·
a. magnon a. magnon
pontiac subaru
•TRANS AM
• FIAEBIRD
• 6000 STE
• PARISIENNE
•BONNEVILLE
•GRAND PRIX
• T-1000
•GRAND AM
• SUNBIRD
CONVERTIBLE
WE
SELL
EXCITEIEllT
•
2480 Harbor 8'vd.
Cost1 Mesa
•
Newport Beach
(714) 549-4300
SLASHES
•PRICES!•
LIQUIDITllll
1985
MODELS
UNDER ANY
CIRCUMSTANCES
WE WILL
NOT BE
UNDERSOLD
• ..
SUBARU
2480 Ha1Hw Blvd.
Costa Mesa
•
Newport BeKh
(714) 549-4300
remo'l'w""Q the C8pe to ... tt the ftu6d eome1 up to the
bottom of the ftller neck.
When tt'a at the right a.v.t. the ftuld touchel the
ftller neck and "pucken" a little. If the leYef Is low,
add wat«~
Whether the b1ttery la old or new. check the
cables. Make aure they're tight and unfr1)'9d.
Llght-cotored powder on the termlnaJa result• from
corrotion, and ahould be clMMd off.
•Tiree: You lhould check your tire pr...,re
with a gauge about once a month, alnce a tlre that's
'
uat 25 percent low can IOM on.fifth of Its useful
lfe. Undertnftated tlr• aJIO waat.e guollne. For
radial tire owners, don't let the "radial butoe"
dlagulee an underfnftated tire.
Worn tlrea don't give you the traction you
need. Check tlree for trMd Indicators, which are
bultt Into the tire and appear when treat Is worn to
the tut one-sixteenth of an Inch. When they show acrosa two or more grooves, the Uc.e .all.Quid be
. GM~UStrade
jabs in briefs
WASHINGTON (AP) -General Motors Corp.
cast about for a scapegoat "almost lndlscrlmlnate-
ly'' when called to account for an alleged safety
defect In Its 1980 X-cars, the government ~ys.
But GM counters that 1 the government's
summary of evidence presented at trlal against the
1980 X-cars Is flawed by a "penchant for
unsupported assertion" due to a lack of solid proof
that the defect exists.
The two sides traded Jibes in briefs made
public last week, prepwed In response to pos1-trial
summaries of the ~ that each party filed last
month.
GM told U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield
Jackson It suspects the authors. of the govern-
ment's summary briefs on the X-car trial "were not
present at the trial or certainly missed major
portions of It."
"Plalntlff's (the government's) repeated de-
partures from the record are . .. serious and
symptomatic of the absence of record support for
Its key assertions," the automaker added.
The government/ meanwhile, reminded Jack-
son of a series of GM actions that the Justice
Department believes shows GM knew the 1980 X-
cars were unsafe when It marketed them.
''Beforethls litigation, GM'sexecutlvessaid Its
staff was 'not doing Its job,' Its drivers complained
of 'rear brake lockup,' Its president said It was 'the
number one problem' on the car. Its customers
complained by the thousands and Its recall notice
said the car had a 'defect."' the government wrote.
The Justice Department. acting on behalf of
the Natlonal Highway Traffic Safety Adminis-
tration, filed suit against GM In August 1983,
charging the 1980 X-cars were prone to lock their
rear wheels too quickly during braking, creating
undue risk of accident and Injury.
r~. If you don't know wMt tN9d lnClc8'orl
look like, Uk your mec:han6c Ol -..tomobtle ~.
•Uehe.. horn, wtndrSJlrl~ a..,,
8Ml8tant to help cMck the Mghtl -
headllght• (htgh and low bemft), emwgency nun.re, lid• markers. parking llghta, llcer'9e p&ate
llghta, tlll ltght1, baci<up llghu. tum algNll9. Light
bulbt are usually ... Y and lnexpemltw to replece.
It'• ... Y to cMclc whether your Korn h0nk1.
Don't wait untll you need It to make lure It Work•.
Do the wlndthleld wfpers spray correct(y? Do
the wl~ra clean the wtndahleld?
Alto chee* to be sure 8'1 dalht>oard wllNn.g
llghta work When the engine II cranking. Common
warning lights Include alternator, brakee,
temperature and olf preaure.
•llelta: To check beft tenllon, preaa your
thumb down on the middle of each belt. The bett
shouldn't glv'e more than about half an Inch. Look
for frayinQ .and cracka. T-Wiat-beha around to
Inspect underneath. The fan, water pump, alter-
nator, power steering, air conditioner and 4wnlaalon
control air pump all use befta to drive them.
(Should a belt break white driving, have It fixed
as soon as you can. Shell experts recommended
carrying a "universal" belt In the trunk as a spare
for emergencies.)
•Motor oU: Motor oil Is the lifeblood of your
engine. Checking Its level Is one of the most
Important and one of the easJest form• of
preventive maintenance. Pull out the dlpstk:k, wtpe
It clean, put It back In all the way. then pull It out
again. The oil level should be between the "add"
and "flll" marks.
Consult your owner's manual or a mechanic as
to how often you should change the oll. Shell
engineers stress that changing the oil regularly la
extremety Important.
•Brak"~ To check your brakes, push the
brake pedal down. Shell takes the view that It
shouldn't go more than halfway to the floor. that's
too far. The pedaJ should feel like It's hitting
something firm. If It feels spongy, you might have
air bubbles In the brake llnea.
Next, push down hard and count to ten. If the
pedal keeps going down. you could have master
cytlnder troubles. (To Check power brakes, the
engine has to be running.)
Check the parking brake by setting tt firmly
and putting the car In "drive" or first gear. If the car
moves easily. your brake needs attention.
•Leaking ftutda: "Driveway drips" can be
signs of Impending problems. To check them out.
spread some paper under a cool car overnight.
Check the paper in the morning.
Clear, condensed water from the air con-
ditioner Is ok. But If anything else Is dripping. your
car may be trying to tell you something. Leaking
transmission fluld Is pink. motor oil ls dark brown.
and radiator cooJant Is usually either green or rust-
colored.
Preventive maintenance steps such as these
promote safety, air quaJlty. fuel conservation and
your personal bank account.
E.S. Pierce. manager of Shell 0 11 Co. 's Reta/I
Learning Centers for dealer training, Is an expert In
the fleld of automobile repair and maintenance.
DON'T LET HIGH PRICES
GOBBLE YOU UP!!
'86 Cabriolets, Jettas & Golfs
Have Landed at
and the remaining
'85's are waiting tO take off
~ •"110 OVERPRICING
.,.o0 •• ~. NO GIMMICKS
~"0-•.· NO PRESSURE
.. NO· HASSLES
ltop lty 6 ••• why we are one of
the ...... , powln9 YW dealers In So. Cal • ...
1"42 South BrtetOI, Santa Ana (1ntWMCtlon of Bristol •"d Ed1nger) • (714) 5-i6-022Q
•
•
,.. .. ,, __ ,..,_
..
'86 P'UP
LEASE FOR $13545 per mo. .
NO MONEY DOWN. 48 mos. @ 135.45 per mo. +tax. Cap cost $6866.00.
Residual $3809. 70.
Long bed, 5 spd. mirrors. slldlng rear window.
'851-MARK
LEASE FOR per mo.
NO MONEY DOWN. 48 mos. @142.62 per mo. +tax. Cap cost $7850.00.
Residual $3547.35.
4 dr. 5 spd. stereo cassette, alloy wheels.
m
211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK (714) 521-3110 (213) 921-8881
1986 PLYMOUTH IMP
HERE 'NOWI
flSllilSl" QR
AS SEEN IN
W 1DG\
4 WHEEL DRIVES
IN STOCK NOW
Orenge eo..t DAILY PILOT/ FrtOay, Nowmb« 1&. 1986
Compiled by Neil Clark and Dick Rdodunt
Q: Our WKOlltm was nmwd wlttn tltt fut/ p11mp "'our car /UllC'd I ha~ ht'ard that 1ruta/11111J. an f'lt•ctri,· pump !Nt.,.ttn tlte
fwl tonic and tht mechanical pump i.11/ kttp the cur nmn1nx even 1/ the mttltanical pump fa1/j Would this work' -WP.
A; U1l4er cenain circumstances, it could. The mechanical fuel pump uses a flc:~iblc: d11phram to draw p50hnc: from
the lank ,..,d pu'sh it to the carburetor. The diaphram is
eneflized by lKe enlJ.lle cam shat\, IO the irump will oper-
ate only when the enaine is runnin1. tr a mechanical
failure stops the d1aphram from operatma. a properly 1n-
1talled electric pump could continue to push fuel through
the disabled mechanical pump, allowmg the engine to run
This advantaae could become a hazard, however, if the
diaphram developed a leak. Usina the mechanical pump
alone, a leakin& diaphram would stop drawing fuel . and
~eoai~would stall. An electrical pump thar keeps-the
cnaine runnina; while allowing fuel to leale in the engine
companment, could result in' a fire under the hood. It's
probably be\ter to carry a spare mechanical puni'p, if
)'Ou've been havina fuel pump prol>lems or you'{e goi.n&
away on a trip.
/
Q: I've noticed that the steering In my To}uta pulls a little.
in fact, if I taM my hafllb off the steering whttl. th<' car will
stttr 1tst(f to the left Can )'OU tell""' what causes this. and
wltnhn or""' it u da~rou.s? -S.A.
A: The condition and alianment of a vehicle's front sus-
pension have a dramatic efl'ect on its steering and stability.
Any of the followi ng cond itions can contribute to the pull-
ina you describe: unequal inftation pressures of the front
tires, worn or damaaed bushings or ball-joints in the front
end, improper alianment, or a saaaina front spring. While
a minor pull wouldn't be danaerous ir you could con-
atantly correct fo r it, an interruption of that effort could
cause you to drin out of your lane if you became distracted
while drivina. Find out what's wrona.
Q; Something ha.f gone wrong with my 1966 Jaguar XKE
A: It sounds as 1hou1h the vehicle's d utch 11 beina held
1n the d1stnp1ed position , preve n11n1 enaine power from
repch ing the transmission -hke it would be if you never
removed your fool from the clutch pedal. Since the car has
·a hydraulic clutch, it's hkely that the clutch slave cyhn-
der-which is mounted on the transmission bell housin1 -
has jai:nmed In the rully utende position. keepin1 the
clutch disengaged even though the pedal has been re-
leased. This onen causes a Joss of ftuid in the cl utch mas-
ter cylinder. Inspect the ffuid level in the muter cylinder,
and look for stains or puddling under the bell housing
Repairs shouldn'1 take long. but lhe parts may be
e11.pensive.
(l: What should I du 1{ I think I 1·e JlOlten a wnJc of con·
tam1111JJtd gasolme' -J.G.
A: You shout<! have the fuel tank drained 10 prevent any
prolonged use of the fuel. and get a sample of the fuel
analyzed, to determine the type of contamination in-
volved. (Check the Yellow Pases under "Chem ists-A na -
lytical and Consulting.") Contact the manager and/or
owner of the service station to state your findings, and
learn who supplied 1he bad gasoline. Report this informa-
tion to the State Department of Weights and Measures,
(714) 680-7896; the agency will conduct its own 1nvcstiga·
tion and notify you of us findings
I stant>d the car this mornm1. stepped on tht clutch and put Questions for this column on automotive mdinJt>flllflCt and
the tranJmluion "' Fl RST gear. but the car K'Ouldn 't mo~ as rtpau should IN add re sud to
I ltt out the clutch f"dal; it wouldn't move"' any gear There THE AUTO TUTOR
a" no noises to 1nd1catt that anything had broken. What Automobile Club of Southern Cal1for111a
could have gone wrong' -A.J. clo this newspaJNr
AMC sets all~tirne Jeep sales record
-SOUTHFIELD. Mich. (PAN) -American
Motors Corp. has reported that Jeep vehicle sales
In October established an all-time sales record.
"Spurred by the addition of our new llne of
Jeep Comanche two-wheel-and four-wheel-drive
pickup trucks, our dealer• sold more Jeep vehlcles
last month than any other month In our history,"
said Peter G. Guptill, vie.president, North Ameri-
can sales. "Although we've potted new monthly
records three times In 1985, breaking the previous
all-time sales mark of 17,<4<47 set In November 1978
Is quite an achievement."
Jeep sa~~s In October of 18,338 vehicles
exceeded last' October's total by 28 percenl. The
previous record for October was In 1978, when
15,778 Jeep vehicles were sold.
"Our Jeep sales momentum received an
added boost on Oct. 15 with our offer of 8.8-
percent financing on 1986 Jeep Cherokee,
Wagoneer and Comanche models," Guptill said.
"The 8.8-percent financing remains In effect on
these models, as well as on 1986 Renault Alliances
and Encores, through Nov. 20."
VISIT OUR
A WARD WINNING
SERVICE DEPARTMENT.
THE #1 CHRYSLER
CORPORATION SERVICE
FACILITY IN ORANGE COUNTY.
OUR SERVICE TECHNICIANS
ARE ASE CERTIFIED!
(
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR )
AUTOMOTIVE fERVICE EXCELLENCE
CHRYSLER
thopQr CORPORATION
GENUINE PARTS
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Fr1d-:y, ~-15. 1W 87
Racing technology adapted in Saab family sedan
The Idea.la that led Saab to
develop and bulld three oener-
ataon. of turbochwged englnea
are aJtve and weu. The new lour-•
cytlnder. two-titer engine of the '
1986 Saab 900S la not turbo-
charged, but It wu designed with
the .98me goal In mind: The
lncreued perfocmance should
beneftt everyday drl~ng, not be'
peaked out for·enjoyment only 5
percent of the time.
"We are working towards the
perfect engine." aald Gunnar
Laruon, Saab technical director.
"It lhould be responsive to any
gear, at any speed. Racing en-
gines are powerful. but only at
high engtne speeds. That kind of
performance Is of no use In
traffic."
Nonetheless; the 1986 Saab
9008 uses Indy racer tech(\ology
-twin overhead camshafts, four
vatves per cylinder, electronic
fuet lnjecilon -but for efficiency
and driving pleasure. not all-out
performance. It took Innovative
thinking to make this racing
technology work In a famlly
sedan.
The effort was worthwhile. The
1986 Saab 900S runs smoothly
with a flexlblllty previously un-
matched by any normally
uplrated engine Its size.
One way to Judge Saab's
1uccea la apeclflc output, thf.
ratio between horsepower Md
engine size. With 125 horae-
power from a 2.0-llter dlaplaoe-
ment. the new Saab engine hu a
specific output of 62.5 hor ...
power per llter. Thia Is high for an
. englno that maintains good flex-
lblllty.
Setd Larsson: "It's among the
highest specific outputs for Euro-
pean cars. This doesn't mean the
Saab 900S la the fastest but
certainty the beat engineered."
The four-valve-per-cylinder
design Is Ideal for combustion
eff lclency. The spark plug ts
plac~ at the center of th4t
combustion Chamber and the _
fuel Ignites quickly and evenly,
wUhout hot spots that cause
, knocking. This allows a higher
CQ.mpresslon ratio, which •Itself
Improves efficiency. The Saab
900S has a compression ratio of
10.1 to 1.
There were challenges In
adapting racing technology to a
f amlly sedan. Larsson explained
that for efficient combustion to
take place. there must be a
turbulence In the combustion
chamber, a whirlwind that blends
the fuel-air mixture. But with four
valves per cylinder -two Intake
and two exhaust valves -the air
Inlet Is so big that the air enters
Rolls"' Royces
from yesteryear
still riding high
60 .percent of vintage motor cars
made since 1904 remain on road
8y HARPEA'I 8AZAAA ................
Six out of 10 Rolls-Royce motor cars made since 1904
are stlll on the road. Including the five owned by Queen
Eltzabeth, one of which Is second-hand.
Those Rolls-Royce cars range, according to an article In
the November Issue of Connoisseur, from Thomas Love Jr.'s
yetlow 1904' 10 horsepower model to the 25 Sltver Spur
Centenarys made to commemorate the first 100,000 cars the
company haa built since It was founded.
The Centenarys, which at 1125,000 each cost $15,000
more than the standard allV9f' Spur, are royal blue with a
special numbered plaque. Their amenities Include not .only
the usual Rolls white gloves for changing tires, but solid silver
Inlays In their walnut veneer, four crystal nip glasses and two
allver-plated flasks In the bar and a sllver S.T. Dupont pen in
the presentation case.
The new streamlined Rolls-Royce car Is a far cry from the
wooden spoke wheels and brass horn of the orlglnal. It ls
wider and lower, with sharply raked windshield and 30
percent more glass. It lacks fins, protruding bumpers -
anything, J.C. Suares wrote. "that gives a car more
personallty than a llma bean."
"One gets the feeling that the parade's gone by," said
Elliott Cooper, a New Yorker who owns 37 vintage cars.
"These cars are not sexy anymore. They look like a cross
between a Volvo and one of the U-Haul bins you see on the
New Jersey TurnolkA "
Michael Schudroff of New York's Carriage House Motor
Cara Ltd., which sells more Rolls-Royce cars a year than
anyone else, said:
"The car Is what the times call for. It Is compact and
understated on the outside and magnificent on the Inside."
There are 2,500 Rolls-Royce cars a year made at Crewe,
England -about as many as General Motors makes In a
single shift.
Some 3,000 workers assemble each Sliver Spur. Sliver
Spirit or Bentley Mulsanne from 80,000 parts, of which they
make 60,000 -often by hand. Among the few preassembled
parts are tranamlaslons from Saginaw. Mich., the same
General Motors hydraullc gearboxes to be found on a
Pontiac.
After a car Is assembled, It Is tested. Engines may
undergo 25 hours of continuous operation at speeds up to
more than 100 miles per hour.
Engines are teated fo( silence with a stethoscope. The
cars are quieter today than 30 years ago when thelr ads
boasted "At 60 mph the loudest noise In the new Rolls-
Royce c~mee from the efectrlc clock.·'
In the leather anop, It takes 10 hides to upholster each
car -Imported from Scandinavia where the animals are kept
behind etectrlfled fences rather than barbed wire that could
abrade the hldee.
The factory Includes a chautf evr school where Rolls
driver• are taug"t: "Do not slouch or drive with your arm on the window alll even when atone. You wlll not have full control of the car In an
emergency and It look• urltldy."
About 1,200 Rolla-Royce Motora cars are sold In the U.S.
8VfKY year, according to ConnotSMUr. Monaco has the
hlQheet per c.plta ownerlhlp, about one for f!IVery 100
1nftabttant1. Chlna hu the lowest. one for f!IVery 167 mllllon
people. In the thetM'9W Sovtet Union, Vladlmlr llk:h Lenin
0tdered nine cart -one of which. a 1919 Sliver Ghost. Is on
lhow at M09eow'1 Lenin Muaeum.
How hot is engine?
., The AMODIMed ,,_.
Your car'• engine produoee enough hMt -
4'50 degr ... -to keep • etx-room hou .. warm In
zaro-cMQr• weather. eccordlng to the Car Care
Council of Oetrot1.
The engtne would mett " not tor the coo41ng
tyltem, wh6ch •beorbe 30 percent ot the genereted
: helt, the 1t1odatlon eaya. Another 10 percent i.
• •b9orbed by the engine and pMMd on to the oH In
the crMke9M white much of the reat the hMt goee
out the exhauat ptpe.
'
the cylinder without enough vel-
ocity to create a whirlwind at low
engine speeds.
Saab found a simple way to
Induce the desired rush of air In
the combustion chamber.
The Swedish engineers
reasoned that a turbulence
would be created If the air
traveled past each of the two
Intake valves at different
velocities.
· pleuue. Three body etylee a le are
the two-and four-door Md•n a.ad thn:e-
door hatchback.
"If the air enters the cylinder
hef\d faster on one side tha.n the
other, It wlll spin around, stirring
up a homogenous fuel-air mix-
ture." aald Larsson. This holds
true at any engine speed.
"We could have made one Inlet
tract narrower than the other,"
he said. "But that woul dhut high-
speed performance. We modi-
fied shape Instead of size and
obtt]ned the velocity differential
wlthoutpenalty. · ·
One of the Inlet tracts has a
round croas-sectlonal shape, the
other ls shaped llke a capital "O."
To take advantage of its com-
bustion efficiency the Saab 9005
Is fired by an electronic Ignition
system. It has no points, no
centrifugal or vacuum advance.
lnsteead, ignition timing is
programmed by comput8f based
on a pre-determined map that
tnatantaneowty ed)ustl for en-
gine ~ end toed. Adcldon-
alty, a knod< ...,.. protKta the
engine by retarding lgnl1k>n tim-
ing when nHded.
~ of the Saab 9008
benefit: ThW car wit run hllC>PMY
on .... expenliw low octane
fuet. .
TM fuel Injection Is eliectronlc
.. well. It " the new 809Ch LH-
Jetronk: system that, lnateed of
measuring the v<Mume °'air that
enters the engine, meuur .. aJr
mass. This way the system can
compensate for the thinner air at
high attitudes. hMt and humld1ty.
And because It la 9'ectronic, the
fuel lnj9ctTOn ta lighter. more
compact. with better retlabutty.
It haa a back;ip function that
allows the car to run, albeit leu
eff lclently, In case of f aUure In the
air measurement system. Should
this happen, a warning llght on
the dash alerts the driver that the
engine Is running on a fixed fuel-
ln)ecilon strategy Instead of con-
tinuously ad)ua11ng ltsetf for
prevalllng conditions.
Servicing the (tf1W twin cam
Saab engine la easy. The valve
litters are hydraulic and never
need adjusting. There are no
points to worry about and Ig-
nition tlmlno takes care of itaelf.
ORANGE COUNTY'S # 1 DEALER
ANNOUNCES
THE ALL NEW 1986 HONDAS
HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION
TOTAL
DRIVE OFF
SI00.82 TOT AL
OF PYMT8 91517.00
On Approved CNdlt ORDER YOURS TODA YI .
'fa':
per
mo.
(to
mo..)
AIR CONDITIONING
AND
AM/FM STEREO
CASSETTE
UNDER $3995
'81 Datsun 210 '81 Datsun 210 '80 Datsun 210 '80 Accord 3 Dr
H/B Wagon H/B H/I
5 spd. cass. (1DMF449) 5 spd, AM/FM cass. Auto (945YS0) 5 spd. air. cass. (062055) sunroof. (10LG859)
$3895 $3795 $3899 $3998
'80 Datsun '80 Datsun '80 Chevette '81 Honda Civic
610 510 A/C auto. Auto. air ( 1 OOZ2 77)
5 spd, A/C. (10784) Auto. (704YZT) 51 .000 m1 ( 1 BUC8861
$3695 $3695 $2988 $3985
EXTRA SPECIAL USED CARS
'ID looortl '82 Toyota '14 Accord '83 Accord
4 Dr Corolla 4 Dr U 4 Dr
PIS, air, caas. 5 spd, AM/FM , 5 spd, A/C, cass. 5 spd. sunroof, A/C. cass.
5 spd. (4'90ZER) 29.500 mi. (71 ~285) low miles. (2BEZ930) beige. low mt ( 1GGC005)
WH $11,115 ... NOW
$4886 $4699 $9595 $7995
..
l .
.... ----~ ... -., .. !¥'-.. -· _. .. ._.li;jf .,.....,.. _
0rMge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Friday, NcMmber 15, 1115
rov oTA
COMES EARLY THIS YEIR
BRAND NEW '18
Escort Ponys
8 .8°/o Authorized Ford Motor
credit financing on
approved credit . 48 mos.
BRAND NEW '88
Ranger'S'
,,.. s5995
U8 8 .8o/o Authorlz8di:::i
Ford Motor
credit tlnanelng on
MllwnllW'I credh. 48 moa.
1171,0ftD
MONCO
V -t .WIO, lludlet -II • ,. ... ,, ....... 90
ll<e; •4 IOXAYl(lllP. •3t5e)
•5595
From $9395
1500 BELOW
FACTORY INVOICE
+D .. ler lnatelled option• on All
1115 RANGERS A 1115 BRONCO 11'1
-'f!Je~-~ ~·
NOTICf. 10 BIJY[R COSl Of INYOCl ID.I.US fACTOllY IO.DMCll
MMRTISINC Alf) fAClOllY SU~£. n IS NOT AIU fACTOllY COST I'm
10 Tll OlAUR. THl COST ON IMllCl IMY Al.SO NOT E UCT Tll
llTllATt COST Of Tll VOCU .. WW Of M DEAUR ICSTAllCD
0'1QCS, llUATlS Alf) INCOOM AWAllOS ra Tl( llWUACTIMU TO
M OCAl.CR.
f ..
-
from s1195.
Poletown's
-transformed· . .
for high-tecll
GM ts cranking up assembly plant
to manuf acttire 9ne car a minute
9J IDWARD MILLIR ,, ..... .,..
HAMTRAMCK, Mich. (AP)-One of the moat dramatic
transformations In auto history Is nearing completion In an
old ethnic neighborhood called Poletown.
In 1914, the Dodge brothers, Horace and John, bullt an
auto aaaembly plant that beeame a beacon for the struggling
working classes of Eastern Europe.
It employed fathe~ sonsr brothera..alaters and coualna
and was kriown to generations of Hamtramck residents aa
Dodge Main. • ,
At one point, as many as 30,000 people !Oiied behind
and around Its eight-story brick walls, working their way Into
America's middle class.
But tbe Chrysler Corp. bought out the Dodge boys In
1929 and abandoned the plant In 1979 as too expensive to
operate. Chrysler was nearly bankrupt and, besides, the ~ompetLUon from foreJgn Imports made dinosaurs of plants
Ilka Dodge Main.
Good rall llnes and highways ringed the area, however.
and General Motors Corp. bought the'property and most of
ttle land for blocks around In Hamtramck and next door In
Detroit.
Many residents of the neighborhood, known locally as
Poletown, fought GM but felled to save their neighborhood.
Houses, schools and churches, as well as the old plant, fell to
make room for a factory that would sprawl for 362 acres as If
erected In a cornfield.
Now, GM has cranked up the Poletown assembly plant
to make more cars per year than Dodge Main ever did. The
rate wlll be one car a minute.
Instead of masses of workers there wlll be fewer than
5,000 on two shifts -plus 2,000 programmable devices.
Aboot 330 of those are robots, many of which exhibit the
humanllke senses of sight and touch.
Poletown Is GM's current high-tech masterpiece, a
' forefrunner of the Saturn carmaklng complex It plans to bulld
In Tennessee. Production has just begun on one shift, turning
out the 1986 Cadillac Seville, Cadillac Eldorado, Buick
Riviera and Oldsmobile T oronado.
Robots, automated machines and computers steal the
show here. In some parts of the plant, human workers are
eerlly absent and the robots appear to be running the place.
High technology begins here when truckers hauling
parts pull up to the loading docks. Instead of~ traditional blll
C.dlllac dlmton of General Moton recendy a.n-
•elled 1988 ltldorado produced In Poletown plant.
of lad Ing, their paperwork consists of bar codes, llke those
carried on packaged food at the supermarket.
One swipe of a Ilg ht pen reads the code and notifies the
plant computers and assembly llne workers that the latest
shipment of windshield wipers, engines or headllghts has
arrived.
At once, one of 60 automated guided vehlclea,
computer-controlled and drlverless, Is dispatched to fetch
the parts and take them to appropriate work station,
following metallic wires burled In the floor.
In an effort to Improve quality, there wtll be no warehouse
at Poletown. The Industry h81 been switching to dellvery of
parts on a " just In time" basis, which cuts down on defects
and Inventory and labor costs.
Supply companlee are patched In to the factory's
computer network, knowing when to send out the next
shipment of parts and when to order another shipment of
materials from Its own 'ubcontractors.
Most parts arrive here only four hours ahead of
assembly.
To get the cars started, sheet metal pieces are shipped
to a subaasembly point by conveyor and fitted together
loosely with tabs, much llke a toy car la assembled.
These shells move to the body shop, where 150 electric
weld Ing robots zap the pieces Into place. Some robots are
programmed to wheel and turn and perform a dozen welds.
Although hlghly sophisticated, welding robots have been
around for years. What's new at Poletown Is the prollferatk>n
of automated machines that can "see." They wlll help blind
robots place the doors on the cars.
Another computer vision system makes sure the parts
are allgned properly by examTnlng the metal, making a
computerized proflle, then comparing that with a model of a
perfect car body stored In one of the plant's computers.
Robots also will Install the wtndahlelds and rear
wlnctowa, squirt waterproof sealer around glass and Joints,
Install the rear wheel housings and rear axle bushings and put
on the tires.
The paint shop wlll be almost totally staffed by robots.
Like welding, robots have done this t81k befere. But at
Poletown, the paint shop robots also wlll be programmed to
open and close doors so other robots can spray Inside.
Computers and automation get together for another
high-tech trick -tracking the cars by computer chip.
When a customer orders a car from the plant the body
style, paint color and options desired are stored on a
computer chip placed under the noae of the raw body shell.
Computers read this chip Information 81 the shell wind a
through the plant. Parts for optional equipment such 81 a
sunroof. special sea ta or tinted glaaa are dispatched to meet
the shell at an auembly station.
The chip teUs the painting robot a what color to apply. If a
two-tone 11 dealred, the 1hefl ls looped through the paint shop
for a second time.
The planning for the Poletown plant wu done on the fly.
so many changes were made after con1tructlon began.
The good rail llnee that helped attract GM to the 8'te
won't be uled -trucker• wtll be retied on to make the Juat-ln-
tlme 1Y9tem work.
Lota of apace wu i.tt over when the UMmbly 1tatlon1 .
were lnataHed IO a ftfth type of vehk:le, the two-tMt $50,000
Cadlllao Allante touring car, wlll be added to the ptant for the
1987 model year. Some parta-maklng operation• alao have
been moved lt*de the plant.
GM wlll be retytng more and more on co.,,puter-
lntegrated manufacturing tyttema for Saturn and for It• older
planta. It hu turned owr 111 lta own comput• work to It•
eubtldlary, Electronic Data Syatema Corp. of DaHu, Wtlk:h
OM purchued tut YMI' for S2.5 bllllon.
Many Europeen l=anta, and lat• Arabe, ap9nt their
entire wortclng llwl at Matn wtthout tearntng Engtllh.
At Potetown, the ftrat 2,500 work•• aJrMdy have rung
up more than 2 mllllon houra of tral{'llng for their high-tech
Job_1,GM~.
'
I
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;
Orange COQ\ DA.IL Y PILOT /Fr1day, ~bet 16, 1985 ..
' '
CALL 642-5678 IF CAWNQ FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM IOUTtt ORANGE
THE ART OF SEUJll IS
MADE EASY Ill THE
DAILY PILOT'S ·
CLASSIFIED PAOES.
C .. Clt YCXM AO
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•hi .,,., '"'°" ,,. '" •tht!fl1 \•""'f""
•01 _,,,,,,., • ""•• °" '•'90"••t>Mt
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t.reu ••l llu HU l!!pr! ... ~ 1111 c.. ....... , l 1112 1144 lf!J!f! lw• mt C..ta .... 2124 0191 fut • • ..,.. .._. Wt
Cozy Collage w/rtflW kltch. .... .... llU fualll flllf'ltW ..!.,.. •1..,. ... ,.0-,2i 1 · !50• Sprawtlng 2 llf'Y 4bf fuH ba TOP AAEA M!SA PINES Lrg 11peteh 28R 28J\. 2 NEWPORT MARINA APTS bath & b<lck frple. Nice -• · .,.,.,., -· .... -2 ~ft ... -•l"t ktt kid• balcl ,.., "' b9eCtl No On the wet• lwturiou41 back yrd • rMT unit. Stunning large newer UY I .U Y1IW 552·6007 after 7pm 11oer200•.•153Mt'9o 18R Hka new cozy trplc .,, •
Make this CdM's beat 38drm, 3~8a. Country Custom home Ot\. BIUtf 28R a O£H TOWNHOUSE "-1 Rlty ,.. pvt.bad</~ yrd & pauo' ~· 34112 La S-ana 28r 28a w/Oen W/O buy at S239 000 Pun Franch Estate. Gata overlooking water 28R .... Garage. pool IC>ll ~. '875/mo se1...a77 hkup, lg kHd'lan. trptc.
Propet1 ... 120-9422 guarded private rurat 2'Ab• up11alra. tg 3rd br 8~,~~le ~?~~ac,a'~n~o VERSAILLES CONDOS S640 No ~· 549-2447 But. IMc~ ;:i,:.~ ';;,,l>dl 1 1115
community Latge !amity 0< otftoa w/ba down 2 1 bel •1 156 500 2Br 28a An amant ... & IRlllD llEW 1BR ieX. upper unit. b.ic •Al SO• l~~~~R !i~:.:~:. t!~ ~i :;rsot.'=N'g ~~a i:,~~ ';:'~ ~.~ I~~ A~t 78&-7500 MC 1980 A.gt 631-"960 gar. lndry rml SS-40/mo 28r 28a StW1Jng at I 1395
toe. $305,000 875-3280 RE. 751-78&4 to 12250/mo. 3Br 28a. 2 car gar No pets VIiie Selbo• 28r 28a. I 1&55 1 Pro Circle 78()..()919
'c t • toz4 llllOlllH~ K.Granlerl UnlqueHoma LN $1150 (8f8)888-5510 ~2=~'~6.~t meatiBJIU TSllllT 1'2·1111 380rm-28a, yrty 1.iear I 11 • na &75-8000 or 159.9214 or (8 18)34~ n•o ••••T11l1TI a-·s Tt-ir•• 1t>e1200•cn1.mog.•.r7•g•:...12fr?~cr 2er 26a IP• nr so Cat REMODELED 5 B 3'Abe. ev•• & wttnda ----v S-4.. ..,. PIU.SlSS,ooO 549.3658 lamlly rm, frplc & l)OOl 3BR 2ba Townnome Air, llatl Au ~lllD fm Del ttul oc.an bfec• -l Br 2,h
Of M-f 10-6 64~1 IMklng l :tU..5.00. Call ITllT Hll•t po.ol, 2., CAL garage SCP doea43br '6a hmy Tneaoe attractl\19 new 79 ouf" 780rm. 28• V::. l~w~r~ Yr -----"----1 owner 84&-0917 or 38' • 28a ar all bl11ns S950tmo, 552.5093 spot w/pool appls gar Apts 1 .. ture pOOI ape. :'ltoh garageL .~"~...:'.1!:' IM'f1750/mo .&7>8990 UITllll lnlt&LI ~5-&2&6 Bkr · for eppt Only H sO. ~et? I• 6"4 t Beeulltvlly located I airway p a1 Io I 7 O O • k 1 d ' private p1110s Of deck• I '" rps o .. 0 ...._...,
3 HOfMI on a Lot ltat~ C..at . TELERENT &75-8UO conoo. RSJ CourM 2BR 53~·6190 a..1 Ally lee garage or carPort. m a S..utllully landscaped Eacblutf TwnhM Apt 38<
mMDTATI
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Great O M locatlon,1<:ross • den. 2BA. XLNT I L C M -peaulllully l1nosca1>ed 9&0-&331 28a. 2 ca< gar No petl
lrorn park • $205.000 Metre 1011 Ctttl •na 124 s1 150/mo 960-3521 HI• Hit t trt setting Heat pa10 2BR 2BA. gar 1nory. 4 5950 ~1 10 S..5 F
takes Ill St X16an• Twnhae 28r 2 eR/den. wet bar. 21;. 1660 aqf1 Lux 2Bd2 Ba ' 2116 1 Beorooms $575 Plell Quiet Slreel. 1 mlle FurnllMd 38' 18a. Gar-....... .........
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PERRT1~~~~3~R~~~ Rltr. ~38:·:~~.lgp!~SVis:x'· ba1h, Intercom & vac den.gar.ga•edSl290tmo 2 Br 2 ba. carport. P<>Of. 2 BedroomC s 11r.e11n $67d roct>eac~ Nol:ts2~75 a g e . f rptc , v i ew
----------• 1 or....,,. Jacuzzi/BBQ S1250/mo (213)399-8041 Ow~ spa, nr So Cat Plz 121 llTll ITIEn all ra10 1·1 Sf100/mo 67!>-•912 &r
LIKE new 4Br 31>1. lam &1 •• Lu. ••n ll renr. 135 E. Wiison nr -545.-7131 or 731·5168 COSTA MESA ~· din rm, lmmac, nr ocea.nl • Elden Ave. ue opt avell NORT+iWOOO CONDO 1Comfl!' Center/Plaeenua1 •.,, LIDO ISLE Bay View 3
1149,000 845-7198 LAO BCH 2 BR Mobile lBR $675 mo to mo * 2 13 Nobel AVil * Open Daily l0em-6pm b<lrm 2 bath. new~ ,-Home. Low space rent. •Sharp clean East side Agt Carson. 552-2000 Nr So Cs1 Plz & 0 C Air· 1•2_ 1.2• S 1350/mo Yfti llWI WAITS MT clOM 10 beactl 148.500 2Br 18a nouse Fnc:O yrd port Complex. 3 Borm. .. .. .. 673-0072 6191753--0719
c -.... ... , ... ......,..
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Nice 3 bdrm, 2 bath (714) 541-6797 days & patio, encl gar New Rancho Sen Joaquin VIiias 2ba. lrplc patto, led yrO, Sorry No Pets 2Br 2Ba pvt patio. painted paint, crpts & drps Lndry 2Br, den. 21-\81. ale, S 1075 mo lncidl gronr. & clean. New crpt1. enc.I NEAR Dover & W•tolltf 1 College Park home O.t St t araa Must peaa credit crpts, drps $1095 Very College Prll T!'l-ptex 2Br. gar No pets 5650 BR pOOI ap1 8ulhln1
w/great location Seller I It check. No pets S625 + 1elect1ve Walk to tenn11, 1750 MC dep S.9·9475 1''tb8, D/W gar-lndry Dolores 840-5~ Avall lmmecl. $650/mo.
needs cash Jua1 r&ducecl Pref!lty l SSO MC dep, 770·5629 golf & Senior Citizen's 8Y OWNER, Condo wtyro I !city $650/mo 645-7736 BANBURY CROSS APTS no pets 6"~ Iv m.g
10 $139,000 21,i AOllPllOfl 3BR1~BA.dbl gar,ltgyd Center675-4152 28r 1~.Ba Nr SC Pin EASTSIDE CM-B.BCllelol 2&3Bdrms S650Up ~port HeTghts small
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with VIEW. Bui your 886 Towne. S985/mo L le L 21 .. 1 178,900 owc-2 558-604 7 unit w llarge yard 16761 V~t Ln 842-&604 guest nouse Garage T r a dit ion a l dream home I UM· Corne by and see IJHI IC• ,. A rt t I Stviretrtg W -4569 "•TS WIL"-E I S495 No ~· 6"5-2390
R l BOLT Co. S45. « •~BDRM 2BA HOUSE* fl aea 1 IE side Conoo 2BR 1 ~ba -.,_
-.1va -c
-.CIOllY -~·CM& ....... ,,
ea t y financing. Casey T EASTSIDE . 1Br. 1B• No Frig. wl d. Great view ....... • 1 I garage/pool Prel adults Extra large 1 BR 1ba. cath Nwg~~~~~~ ~~t:! 6.1 1-7370 (707) «l..7036 dys, (7 ) gar. trig & stoVil. No pets S 1250 lse 551-3037 • Pt a 1 a I a I no pets S725 mo Eve cells lrptc pool/spa 160IB 15tn St 650-8213 442·2554 aves 1 respon Adtt only S550 2607 6"8-2848, dys 548•9J.4 1 encl gar Hunt Hrbr area
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---•mn• Credit v req'd 631·2242 Close to bch & shops Se-_
1
$660tpio 846-3S.1 Redecorated 48r 28a. WaUI leaU 10411 ... rt Pr•t JSIO Cl & I lB lB eluded setting Charming 2Br 181, trplc, garage LA MANCHA APTS ---encl gar Yrly Sl350/rno -ean pr vete r a 2Br 1Ba home Hrdwd $850/mo 675-5809 or 2Bdrm 18ath S625-S675 FURNIS HE D S 1ud10. E 631-8335 O 7~155 B UT. Ocean Vu Custom *llAlllllTI Im* with yard & fruit trees firs, frplc. window seat. 553-8500 Ask ror Jim gas pd no pets 642.5073 refrig wl d gar pool & ---l ... C'l'OllY .........
~ ...... Home. 3Br 2Ba. llv rm. ASPEN CREEK RESORT Perlect for single or cou· Lovely pallo Garage. --. tennis Nr bCn No peta llUlllU llM
lrpt-+ self contain guest Chair 15 at yoor beck pie with good refs S575 $l275/mo 497.3718 DELUXE 3Br 28a frptc Large 1Bdrm pOOI lndry ctgs or gays Pre! prof
quarters Prloa to NII door.Proleaalonelly dec· No pets 540·•752 gar . no pets , blOCkl S5501mo No pets M F 21.30 $475/mo S900Yrty 281 1ba.•10Y9
$249K. Owntll' 499-3861 Oflted S!eee>t 8-10 Cov· Convenient Studio Close from bay 559·7 194 Carpor1 642· 14() 1 Ullls pd ttt _ last -S250 retrig No pets 5-4a-5682
I.YI-OIYI tll'ed prkng, sauna, SC>•. om. oen to bCn & shops Bath· 3Br 2Ba upper Oar new sec dep 963-663A 1s pec1aculu 1Br 18•
One of only2homes avaH. 241--0292,Ev 651-8514 5481 Telerent 875-8861 S345/mo 497·3718 28 1'..;B I pie pool cs;~N 1 S45~7~~~a llSTAITll I cargar.ln<lry.yrty S1200 Great view w/tome white r a. r · 0 pe s 3BR 1p1 WIO nkvp, ln<lry IM 675-4912 8ltr
MTA-
~A.,._ ,. ....... "" 5150 per night Oys 1•1,pV1patio,S485 1ee roomno k11ch,pvtpat10 Ctreaa•elMar 2622 1 10340 V 1 1 I --bay1oceanview1Frptc 2
water. 4300 sq ft. 58R. I.I. Exc~laft 1100 EASTSIDE 1 BR. Clean, nu Laguna c:narm 3br 2 ba. $800/mo (714)759-3319 *Lr 1 & 2 bdrm newt roOIJl Ir let arllr deck .. ~.-.~ .. -,-1-1-1----~-... -.-tr-a_l _____ l_OO_,,, 5be, lge Uv rm, din & tam _ paint Garage & yard I. lrplc. walking 0181 to bcn. o~ (8181790-9921 red~ qu•et pool 5494 u~, ~89limo g I Steps to bCt1 Upetrs 2Br
Fu lilt rm, study Large garden Wtrfntt T/l /leat lllf $650 Avl now 998-3434 North end S 1600/mo 188• Monrovia 548-0336 j 2221 ALABAMA 18• View 28 r 2Ba
& yard Pvt beach Wlll M11ortrede $110,000 E'sldelovelyotdr 2Br l b• 675·5061 Cotta Mtll 2624 ---- -TSL MGMT 6"2-1603 dwnatrs.~crpt,lrlg & llU HL UI S 1,375K 494--0033 equity Asking 1295,000 sep dining rm, huge yard, ~3Br Executive House. $565tmo-S735/mo lrg ---ra"99 Both compl reoec: Btaan/C.a•11 3 BR 3ba Gd terms 2 car gar A.vi now white water v~ lease 1 Bedroom $500 beaut 1 & 2 BRs ell Lge 2BA 1ba d1n1ng. gar· Ortve by 1807 w Balboa 41Nll1H,IOO l..,.rt letc~ IOI Own/A.gt lef1 state & SlOOO/mo.998.J.434 "Sl600t mo 497.Jsn Unturn No pets Dltins,lrplc Must-age W111gas pd e.ectl& B tvO & c all Belly Gtatral 1002 Beautllul pool home 1 BR luxury Versallles muit dealt Can add othet ___ 1 6"9-'2440 366 Avocado Talbert S5251mo Art 751-8850 Moo-frt 10--4
Great lloorplan Living Condo Unde< market at R.E. notn or cash 10< Eutslde 2Br 1Ba Opht, kJ IL 1· 1 2152' Br 1 e81922 W1lleoe TSllllT Uf-1412 6pm/w~no1897-1300 Ver11111e1 Bach elec *TIE ILIFFS* room with llreplace over· $92 000 Must aelll rlQhl trade. (802) kll ehen. encl patio w/gar •!••• 11•1 . Gar, retng, upSlatrs No I SUWlll VILLAIE range trtg , 2nd lvl
2 Master Suites Architect looks rear yard ind pool. Owner 84&-1252 996-5567, 714/677·5292 & yard S750 548-3155 3er 2'h Ba Condo pvt yard. pets $520 Agt 550-10 15 lUIWLl HW ' ""/balcony, MC gale &
delight! Coatly & most Come aee this ope><>rtun I.I ..... 1 S EASTSIOE 3BR 1ba. trplc, I pool $975/mo 1st/last • I Br 1Ba $550 ·~ S350 1Br. Ing ra~. laundry I w-llT1 pfl(ng S650tmo tat. lu t
creative remodel. Prk· ty. CeU 548-2313 *lllfFl Ollll* • gardener No pets I sec dep. 2131514-3905 2Br 1Ba $650 ~ $400 pool c~~~ No pets "' -S200 MC ~37
Ilka setting w/magnlt IPll UT /Ill 12-4 WAllT OUT? _ $800/mo 6"6-3177 STEPS TO IUCll No pets 631-8427 C M 931 w 19th s~~8-0492 I Ltve wNlte yov nave VERSAILLES -Lrg 18 R tn
bay/nhe Ute views Ir· tn YllT& lllfT& , EASTSIOE 3br 2ba c<>ndO. ICondo 2 ~atr Bdrms. B-BU R 1 ----•Spectacular apts qu1e1 toca11on w/m1n
replaceable •1 discount 3br 2'hba, 2 car gar .. frpl Wt ~•J r1114l1atl1I quiet, gar , lrpl p1tio no lrplc. mttitowave nr 1 r 1 a patatrs 9 rig CASA IE 111 * 1 & 2Br l & 281 suites ocean vtew. full aec
pric. ol $310.000 Fee patlo-pool-1800sl·$160K ,,.,....i-•.. _ .. ,.4 11 ~·· retaS960 497-'2 149 Ritz/Goll Avl now $925 1981 Maple Ave $43<> ALL UTILITIES PAID •Spacious townhouses $795 mo 644-72 11 .gt Hastings & Co 640-55e0 74n n30310 •448138/E ''"' -• Sierra Mgmt 550· 1015 Compa•a ~-e yov r-1 •Fireplaces - ------_,..., .,..... ••J•llll IF 11t. E'SIOE COTTAGE(older1 979-79901W·786-5680/H • vwv• -· -... RY ----------2H I 1 Itta IT Newly decor11ed cua1om \ * Pr1va1e balconies or YH HlllYI IT _,.l.5A -,....--------l PllllSIU 11111 ..,., H llltJ I lllJS ~;,~r L~b•P;o::~1'":~~'. It 2169 E'side 2Br 'iba. lrp1c'. gar. oes1gn fettures. pool Garoen Pattos GATED VILLAGE ~OM
•tuHLIAll ·--------•Fantastic lo• end Income WHk, Cell II ftr w/d hkvp No dogs. .. L Waterfron1 w /O h kup n o pets bbQ. covr'd garllil• sur -l WIYHt• MUNITY. 2Bdrm 2i't8a Prime location on tree on 2 huge lots Owner I ., _....... h 't 18 5 ,... 5695,mo roundeo wun plush land-1 1800 sq ft of PURE
lined Poppy Ave. Unusual • wants to sell end Is ti• ta ...,,,,, I 25/mo, 5 7•2337 Decorator FURN. Conoo 2IO a -L Ma• seeping No pe u •3 Llgnted tennl• courts LUXURY Gtrage SPA 1n
Sludlo design with 3 & 2 OPEN TO AlL OFFERS. lht .,, 0111 ••I Ir FINE CHOICES -$1595/mo 67l--0896 ·•"" -Furn1st1ed 1 & 2Bdrm I •2 Swimming p()()ls master suites Dlnot'lg
Bdrma pfus private PLAYA RE &73-1900 ireta wfttl 1.,.,., SCP $700 rent option lBR oceanfront nouse E'sioe lBr Iba gar n.o 365 Wll!.00 6"2-1971 •S1ream1 & P<>Od!> room. ""oodt>urmng f11•
p atios, flreplacea. all ••. • Pr ...t--comfortable size 5 room patio yard garage Vrty pets $565 756-8557 TI •E ~ lit SOfry no pets ~. maowaw O¥ell bullt-ln• and even • tiny .,.~ pool home }acuzzl too S975i mo 650-2493 2Br 1'"rBa 323 E181h I ce •• I Ir~ • •Furn..n1n9s avail prtvate pa110 ELEGANT
oceen view Excellent •hHll• l•&lill 131 1100 •UM110* --Garage trplc patio No 2BR l BA pvt patio gar LIVING only 15 m11'1Utes
rental history • just Otd ar Beach Cottage • E·Slde hM 3br stone lrplc BIG CANYON golf course pets S695 Agi 550-1015 I ,.,0 tlkup QUl4'1 No pets WHll NOT CALL tt> So Co Pl&u. JUSI N II
S325.000 beckons tile handyman Int I llU, 2br 2ba condo $1400 -- -I Watfll' paid S675m•o 113-1191 Newport Blvd & IOU1h 01 IW PllffOTI to restore It's quaint I I mature yard nr shops & Ben 6«-014 1, 676-5736 2Br 1Ba completely re-1 2038 Meyer San OieQo treewey 2473
(714)673 .... nn a·ty•-. Jull·Sl"""S to the Newpor1 $800 539-6190 ---fin1Sf'led 2052 Garden TSLMGMT 642-1603 SUWllDVILUll!f I Or1,.,,.A..,. 631 -54398" ~ Note naw, 3 bdrms. pool, iv -... I /C. •n Best Rrty lee •NEWPORT CREST• Lane s775 mo ~5•3081 I ' • .. .,_ 1
spa and ooean/hlllslde beach and have family talft • ----4br 2''rba. over 2000 sq tt. i Lge 2Br Iba unllJrn new 15555 Huntington l/Ulage AP°' only
view Love to entertain? picnics at the nearby FURN. Contempo '>right, oak bar. elegant decor Front apt.2BA lBApa110 crprs & 1ev0lors xtra tge Lane trom San Diego ---
You'll love this home. park. $154,900. You'll Ctatral 2102 cneerlul 2 sty twnse 3br obi gar .. pool, tennis. 710 Jeme9(8 t8)709-6715 sndck cov carporr ~rHW1y nort"' ot Beecn
$395,000 agree It's PRICED TO ---------den, 2ba. dbl ~ar. w/d, walk·bd'l avt 12115 $1700 (714)642-11271650·7743 wooded 1ndscpg stream to McFaooen ""t!SI on '· 1 "' '"4 • ''
SELL FASTI l l&ll Fl• l)OOllJec S900 56-7934 mo Sherry Coshow Bkr 2BR 2BA lux apt wlfrpl 2 poots rec rm $650 McFadden 6 ..,,.., r-nJ1 .... ' H'''
I IJ~:!,~~ 8rs~l'S Don't wllt..cllll today 2Br 28a .. stove. refr' ~ Lg 2Br 1Ba. gill, w/d hkup 631·2242 Of 6"5-6002 ar No pets s100. mo 854 2692 eves NllT IUCll'S ftlEST I
141-1411 gar $595. Others ee $625 No pets. 2178-B * NWPT CREST exec 2 Br 6~9 w 181h 631-8213/E Lg Ytew Apts ne.110 Park QUIET RESORT LIVING ---------1-----_6314 Teterenl 675-8860 Plece_n_tl_a_54_5-7983 3ba. yrty tse small ocn vu 2-B-r -2Ba prvl patio I Frp1c 11au1tedce111ngs lrg •Sparkhng n~utteCI pool I UPTO
$900 OFF!!* HB nr perfect Ill bungalow More Ilka a hse S400's lbr S9851mo uni 838-7488 carpor1 srorage stieo soa Prvt oa1cony •Court yard v•ew dining lllULl l&Y IEPISSIUlll ULEI appls provided free u)ils Oii Newport b lllns 2 Sly. 28R. Oen. 2''t8A Beeutll~I bOrm view ol Newly redecoraleo •Vignette eeo areas
Ocean view . p rivate Slot toO S300'a ~urry 539·6190 provided others avail condo 1860 51 2 !pies, golf course $650 mo 1 Ct11ld ok No pets •Twhgt11 dine"' court yrd
beach. perk, pool, tennis SAVE THOUSANOSt• • Best Rlty lee 539·6190 Best Alty tee highly· upgradeO. fully
1
596 Joann St Call tor 1631-6107 or 855·0665 gazebos
Gated area. 38R 3ba. Act fut to take advantage SMALL noose In El side Wanteo· A raspon11ble !urn 'fl/TV. frig Comptet 8PPI 549-0433 Mes& V91'de lge 3or 2 oa • Soaciour. Apawnents
beam celllnga $465,000 8 nearly new Townhomes llLOlllT PL&l "l" CM 2BR. 18A wlyd S700 ad ult for b eaut1l ul has pool tennlSs
1
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tn Costa Mesa Attractive BEAUTIFUL 4BR + 4•,o, ba OCEAN VU apts 2BR 18A. townhome. 2 mastllf suit· fees paid mo I New crpt d w garage p atto 1mmac un urn LIM ISLE TllPlU 2. Beoroom models Call <t600 .,.,'" Cell 720-1704 l blk to bch HB 16501675 es 2·~ ba. trplc, ate 756·8100 or 720-8090 s650 No ..,.11 s.c o-2495 $850 mo 673·8632 911lew dove lan crpt flT•ss
CUTEIS, TCH IS. Sendyt>eachS795.000 S.6-2313 --.... ULn s11001 .. -•ug walll·•~ctosets c Tetum-Rltr 769-1552 Ill C&lfll 11tlll ~&.SI pooHjec. mo 3Bdrm 2 Batn Newport *STUNNING Lg 1 & 3Br PACIFICA •Gall'<! covered prkng I
Absolute bar~aln -don't Ptllf IUl&IEIEIT S.C6-4~2 --Sl'lores Yrty $975/mo 28a Garden Apt Pool "' s1orc1ge I 111111 YllWllMI 114/lll-117• Newport Hites 2br 2ba ro-675-4912 Bkr $555 & $725 110 w l8tti TOWIHOllES t too miss this one Pres1t~OUS • mantle lrplc enhances BR PENTHOUSE N Brand new SP8C•OUS 1BR All UTILIT ES INCLUDED llHOlll 112 , 3 bdrm. 2'A beth EC •-JL--lalaa• 106 Oecor lelsure patio at 3 ew· S360 18r Optx 1 person wioin py\ .:Jeck pool
SWlllllC. plH
rHcll 19Qrt! Serr,,
IO •th . lofeh
O'H d1it, 9 to i valU41, charm and super lo-townhome w/securlty. --S695 539 6 190 Bes 1 e><>r1 Heights. ocean 111ew ll·smkr only w I 7th St Oc
cation! S329.900 with a p()()I. spa t tennl1. Try * •BAYFRONT 3BR 2BA -1 ee 1000 sq It terrace. 1acaz:z1 nr Whittier 548 3829 carports lndf't' tac ·
1 & 2 Beoroom
2 ~room TOWNHOME
r: urn1sht10 & 1Jnturr>1sheCI v s11 ovr mOdel Daily 9~6 ~ood good 9)11Stlng assumable l<Wo down (No QUll1fy1ng) Upper CX!plex. wsttr/dryr. OPEN SAT /SUN 12·4 tub S 1800 MUST GO cupancy Nov 1 No pets
loan. 5 bdrm•. lovely or tease. FOf detalla ~I l rplc. gu S 1350/mo Newpor1 Hts-326 Ogle THIS WEEK 631·8000 • IEllOIM APT 268 E l6tn SI Not Hgts ,.__ • 1 • J • $595 mo 63 ,_ 1266 curbside appeal ..,.,..... Cereal t ar PatrW;k 760-8702 agt . 720-2590 or 6"6-7213 2Br. pallo. gar. unlurn. no 3Br 2.,;Ba Condo s 1000 -WestSJde 2 story 1 • ba Curt Heroerts 11 agt
munlty pool. Many extra •• ~i~~\: A Flash de class waterfront pell $780. 997-4219 s 1200 security Family pa11os d11nwut1er i<1ds
So•·~ ..,o pets 4 p.u1mfnh
emenlUea. ~AUi CONDO Lovely 2BR •4 .• ~· I ef d N 1 6.45 3765 OK No pets Avail 1mmd POOL Patio frplc X-1ge 111-1101 2ba furnished unit on ' 3br estate loaded plus TIDY 48R 2ba pr 0 pe 1 -S725tmo 6115-6646 msg 1Br $580 2Br $680 $500 bea~h at Klhef Owner wlll i!I rent option S 1800 cell S 1095 discount 3Br yrly 1 btk to bch Lots sec Uni E side 557 -2841
LA au1NT A t-4ERMOSA
t 6;i 11 P9rl\!11de Ln HB
147·14'1 f 0 ~· f I I
finance w/$5000 dn F/P lllffl UYflllT 539-6 190 Bes1 Riiy lee 557-31 t8 I ol pnvacy & prk11g • 2 car 3Br 2· .ea Condo w/22car B t I I
[ l l s t06.000 pool Owner ilMI I -gar New crpls blllns. attacned gar Avail 1 1 Quiet 1 r rp c POO Ll1aaa ltac~ 2641 r""\ l J ~ A.gt. 852•16771eves 3BR 3'Aba. Lge dining rm I , UNIQUE 2 sty lBr Condo trplc s1295 675.2607 N-smkrs only $950 mo pa110 gar $615 No pets l BA .,., 111-near t>eaieh •~=-== ·=·==~J~"':·;=:7~1----.. & lamlly rm. Extensively Ptaaasala 2107 111ew or water1all & lakes -640-4950 or 760 5020 399 w Bay St 650-6357 1 -d die tom end lrpl. micro. 2 car gar pool 4 bdrm Im rm. pool vu L rg pa110 rplC great expan e us 28r 1 car gar S950/mo & spa $795. 545.3115 or exit toe $1980 mo S7251mo 28<l 1 .ea l 'lCIOIS cond $6'5 mo 832-4 190
unlr'E' plan. Spa/pool yrly, Utlls pd Deys, 549-2447 760-8782 or 975-9889 Towntlovse Gar lndry 2 Br 2 ba oerdeo apt all 2Br tBa No eno ocn \II.I
. ·' ,..
HARBOR RIDGE '398,500
Reduced to sell! Owner
has purchased another
home. Bring offers. For-
mer model and In excel-
lent condition. 3 BA. family
room and view.
IN N I WPOUTCC NTCH
b44 9060
1379,000 '•·· 722~60 2131941-2939, eves & _ _ j room nice E1s1de ioc wlcnds, 673-8230 Xlnt 4br 2ba house In BAYSHORES desirable 2629 ORANGE AVE new crpt paint & paper nr OCl'l beam cells gar wasn <!.ryr tikup E11c1 viii pd $995 494-3044 FllD•lllT.LO Luxury 2Br Condo, ocean Mesa Verde. Lrg din rm guarded ga1e commun1-TSLlllT IU·1'03 garage $695 559-1638 I I
B I' 1 1 hb h d view. sec: bldg. unfurn bonus rm . gardener ty Prlv beacties 2 Bdrm. I Cozy 1BR 1or sngl emp Saa Clt•t•lt 2176
eaut u neg or 00 · S 1350/mo. 957-5875 lurn1sn To June 16 SPECT6 CIUl &n 1tdu11 oniv No pets S575 ... 25 La k81oma H 75 2ek Thia lender repo priced Elvtr, S1000/mo-1 yr IM 3 697 o 88 &'--f .eld • ~ ,. .., " well under competition 997·6382 or 638-3094 Dul ftiat 2121 1 S9:0/mo~21 ) . 4 h~l: I 1. 1 ·gar •pool & lrptc An incl ut11s cable stove & ,~.ba Ctose to bcr-
need• • r alnt brush and "'-::--2" Baach Cottage 28r 28a. blllnl $575 Fee 64L 4 '91"g 111 lasl dep Clean nicely luro11ne<l plenty 0 TLC Latge 4 .,., ... ••I •u l 6 HARBOR BLUFF TOP lrplc Now l'1ru June 8.6 &rllllllm TELERENl '6T~·8860 Reis reo 0 49•·7986 Encl gar 637-79!8
Bdrm, 3 bath ~th family Cute 1Bd 181 OPlx, sunny 3~ ~!>u~e: 3::e.PO:O No pets $650 /mo 'h MHTI fHE 225 La Paloma S650 2BA
room. library & custom patio, Genie gar dr opnr •bu __ u __ 240-2258 or 673-7544 l seautlful Garden A.PIS meSliBllU 1>.ba Walk to o.8C"'
pool In well pla11ned I $6~0 &44-7220 o r Super 1b< lfT'llll villa .. Fr I BLUFFS 3Br 2Ba, new Patios decks spa Heat LIOICl~~SllYIL~aEITLIO&LSIY ctean encl gar 637-791!5
yard. 1285,000 250-1022 drt, court yd, quiet. S525 crpt. drps. pain\. 01w paid No pets TtnllMES -1 n•
-
" \I I 1'1 1" '' 1 2Br 18a Oplx upstairs stv 1 873-~3 ll ot 673-4803 S 1200 No pets 759-0666 2Bdrm 2Ba $720 Ct t..in ftr ltll 180 deg OCEAN & moun. Siuanrny lncdlearyn 2NBoR P1~t~. " ' " j ·, 1 · s -2b -,b I --1398 W Wiison 631-5583 • la1" vlt!WS Wooded and ., ~ 111 IMI ' lftf · d sh/wsnr. gar. re r o. up« neat r •· gar · cozy 1 BR nouae on 1~ llm Fifi 'fire~ 1 t:>lock to beacn 800 mo 493-27 10
REAL ESTATE 424''tLartcspur 759-1763 $635 GarOen allowance I Canal S1200tmoyrly lse . dbl P"vlllf' patio t>righl, Seat"" C M --4ff.5095 or 873-3313 332 I anu l=rplC YI Ulted celllngs • •••• th• ITMIOO 2BR 1ba. f/pl. oc:Mnslde 1-Call'°" ap~ &75-2 meat. .. u • gar pool & sce No pe1S ,. ega')• Owll-ln n•w -·, I•--------of hwy Front PIM , gar Ftut1ia DELUXE· DUPLEX 3BR 2Bdrm 2 rBa S895 \llctie~ 1 & 2 l>t!d unit• ... w/auto dr opnr a W/O I ¥1119 2134 1~.t>a 112 blk to Cnanne4 &rAITllEm 666 w 18tl'l from S·1 l50 to $?500/mo Altracilve 28r Upatalrs IAllM NW -S 1200/mo. 759-0980 -, Nr Udo oentar 500 3&tn ~ llllTI FREI 6"5-2739 ~ 4 163 WettrfrH t lt•11 IH . bltins Gar wash rrr
58 R SomefM' High up BEAUT bay view Rent/~ ~f;:t1 ~~~1 St S1250trno ~4-7289 Immaculate ltrge Garden Y1LU CllHVA Quiet Nr lrwy & snop'
grd1 1398.500/IM0-7258 twnhM, 2bf lrplc. decils. =~S:00·1539-8190 1 Eulblutl like ,,.. 2Br Apts Baavtilully land-EaststOe spacious IBdrlll Su~b tocetron . Across 1&75 m~ 7~6-74•3 IUIM f11W ..-S belt loc. In CdM S 1475 S..t Alty I• 21.;Be _.. Oen S 1000/mo 1 Jc• Ped g r 0 u n d s $600 mo 2Bdrm 1 811n • from ocH n & park 28r I 2Br • Oen n~ty dec:or
S<>m«Mt 5 81' 3 car gar &73-6388 or 873•3735 i Open Saturday 2-4. 4091 pOOll9'>t petto deck No s1so1mo Most utlls 011d 2Ba & 1Br 1ea Helled atao tg 01110 gar Prt~pal~ only Canyon privacy nr bch la1t. k 214 I Vista Roma 831·7887 I pets $530 No pell or wllerbe<ls POOi ~ea• round Luati I o..m.r·s Unit Nr SC Piza
S3 15,000. ftrm eA4--0530 I 3b/2ba dbl gar Prof. cpl 2e R 1ba. WIO nkup. BM
1
•UDO ISLE 38r 28a Avl 1 ~:~r 5595.1815 2323 EIOen S<&a-7854 and~&Qtng Sec gar999 S&50'mo 18$-1'"3
llUT lft-llAll lfll $ t300tmo A.gt 7~ 18! ~~~~:=west & now No pets S 1700/mo I 2Bdrm 1 .s1 $70~-$7 tO WI lfffl l ClllOE ' ...-.ai0t •!14-8083 f91tia --2'H
.....,f • ...., --- --Wet'lt I Mlee110n 0 grM1 9'5-J
b4<; 1104
3 ...... oom 2 ... ::re:: JH MIM Creek Plan 1 2Bf _ IM Bier 499-3400 2250 vanguard 540·9626 f •=rt leac~ iift u-_
Hgta Stat.500 Ownr 9kr + Oe n. S 1750/mo *" Tll Ull* HV Hms 4BR 2BA S1900 28d 8 s715 11.,,ng? w e can otter anv· 1~UOO Aafrlg. disn-l 2. 1. ~-d/W "80 rw ~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~ CM()..7000 Of 9A5-752i 831-8&38or640-&188 1Bt 1B•. OCMn \lleW, pool. COM. 28R 2BA s 1200 bed~; ;B~. seoo thing from I tmall 11pl to ... ,.,,,., & 910119 inciu<*I I 871 1 Telerent 87~80
": .,,,. ' f) -C biC. Mu~a. MC get• Adlts &o«er 640-56&4 l5 I f 2 l sl 548·2408 a 4 bOrm tlOUM II look NO PE'•s 545-4855 ---=~~~' s~.~~~t.-~<r~· pref d Nosi-t•992-4508 1Nrb<:h2Brt0en.2Ba.llp., • ing in CM NB or HB 1BORM E.ASTBLUF'F IMiac.lntall
....--. ELEGANT Townlot w11om C>Mm cells. e>atlol, ~r 18drm $& 10 think of us llrll tor that Near Shop1>1no Center No
•'-'""99 ..., ... , o1 ..,. I hom9. 5 b40c:kt to b9eCtl $1195/mo 4ff.15e3 280rm 1 ·8• $705 c~ of IC!H lllving pets 1710 840•1364
'""' _. .. 11i..1 _., M-28r 2'1\8a. rrplc. tam rm. Prlc*1 to rent faetl S14*b 131 E 18th 848 &8 18 TSL MOMl 6'12 i&J3 ..... DM .., ,. '°'"' , ... , """"" -• 1°'"* dlninO rrn 2 ~ NB 2bf w/gat 1725 Chlldl - -Tlttnlll"9 ot • """' l\Om. 28f i e. SlCIOO mo utll Lag id\ rm. pvt C pntgs tar:a• Qrdnr 1nc1 .... AAllll• MH 190 S..t 8echelOt $525 t0t IP'lnO' See the 11'1•~ 10 t9 w a.~ • .,.. Aero•• ~ l>")f-OU. S3IS , • I ,
I
F1 LI E ,s, HI t I t2 ,.,,.,. M 2-91"2 ""'"''" , .... ~m u :nn .... .......... from b•v &13 1674 -. . . . ·-. . -=--•:... Rtty tee _ j 16i"e 18th St 842 oeM I :C.~Z; 'Si1I " 281 ibe NEW ~1. I eet uttts 494-, .... Ho P9'•
w-..1 _,._ SE.4VtEW Slk 2•; b4I 'I -It ,.,.._ 2 ,.ooms Npt 8dl houM
l Ut 11..J.. y !Studio w/f\11 khCMn, •ll.1 tam rm S.C. poot/tennll geii.ge Pie. wsnr v · ,_ ~n-.mttr. 1340/mo • I; CE RD Y I tf ...., II utlls e>d. Only '375. tee 1 1200Q/mo2131'30-3Utl WOODLA• VUAGI '::; 9~91~ $~ utll S100MC 175-.3823
'-· ..... 1-.J.l_....l'__._I --t 8422
faletW\t e7MM2 ' A•AllTlllllll •Clean 28R 28A BlUFFS ...a tum ""'~*" •-•• y p ., ..& I 1Juat ~•to OCMfl S4t5 fll llmft" Pool Ir pie carpor11 11 11'°' pMoa, ~ pd
I 8 A R 0 L I . Wl'9ll •reflNOI09l•t• o1 '°"'°' .-W .. r 1«1 net bMiC abOde Child tine QA TED VIL.LAGE COM-<.o""' -' '"'°' 1111' I"""" ,,.., •o•s ('Jv.i ! , 11.,.tn•l•blt ~, ,~ U 50 Ho ~ ru-eo 1 1 U50tmo C...-S.2'73 ~--....r-r.r--,--'T--1 ,.,,,, .,.. ~ 1or ~ °' '°' pvt ~1o 53M 190 MUNITY 28dnn 21;aa , , , So r • . , 1 .,,. r bd/ 1 Ii ,. I I ~ • .,.. ~ .. ean Ol'ltt A-11 Aa .......... ~..a I ... , Alty ... I 1900 aq ft of PUA£ !01• , ... Jf\ <'4\1 n eU . M • .... ¥"' n •Liii iil.i An* -llm matr be ht
• • • • . flooe ffle IOll WMIMIO piece ol .,.. ~ .. , -----lUXUAY o.,.. SPA In Df.:ll .. 0 ... ~ pt IS ru k\E I knct\ pool. pr $4004 ·~ ---~~-=-....,i ••tetr• 1t11 11 -I ~IVATI! PTY/Newty con-1 mattat SUit.. Otnino ,.._1 •IHI.~' -28f 18~ 102 At1llbea Don viii 11t lu t s .. ~ a e L T T 0 Ml-56 71 I structed a.QC t'Wnflme in room WOOClburnlng ftr9" ··-· 975 f720fe75-1~ f!•l'Wltnot ~CM ' I' I I I' I 8 ~~= !"'~':!:;., ·~ I I a.c:IUatW guetdeel .,... plaaa. mlerOMIV9 OYen -·---....... IM -f9m----untum---..... ~,.....1,_...., .... ,.,..,. for Information I"" 2~ba DI• kltd\, 1 Nlv•1'• patlO ELEGANT 1 •11111 ...... " l lNID04l P9nln nlol ,. •ture /be to':.. to ·-I rrp1c, .. uer. torm dlll' (iv iHO onl'y 15 mhl• 111111111 -.an• ~~'?n."-:e'L and :":C.-tno1tem 2~
l j:lW.)Hnir I' r I" I' r I' r r 11 & surprl ..... stngly ~!ft ~:rlMl:~::::·1 ,0So Co.Piua.1Uttaeat U.S.1Ut t 111•1m-.. OElU>CE DUPLEX: s~ CM.,..5'•301.,,a ,._Poole>~ t12 fTli to =~~ ~~ .. ,..,_ 1"'-ba 112 C>*to ~ Mlf w .,.,, .._""°"' • .,!M, , , I I I· I I I I I I 'I low cost. I ~o :;:-::c r':. Oranoa ,,. 13 1-~IBy Tl&. N CS ll ., 1...-1 MM •> Nr U<)O ~ 500 *"1 "'"""occ :!!!.,,.~ .. 1 ,-2!
.. • ... .. .... • ....... -11 -.... 2 ,.. I SCl'PI Ot'fy St • 1250/ .... ~. 7211 -mo. • ·-111 W UTI la1w1n111mar11 .... ......._ _ _
\
a10 0nnge Cout OAJL.Y P1LOT/ Fridey. Nowmber 15, 1818
""°'-M/F • "" I. be •/pvt
Mire, kftafl pMQI, 1 bll
-. (It, .... uttl lndd. l400 mo lr&.U35
CALL TOOAYll
ISi FllLllS
Your Dally Piiot
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Repfeeentatlve
M2-U21 tit. lot
I
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SYDNEY
0MARR
. ----
~enge Cout DAILY PILOT/Frtdlly, No¥emo.r 15, 1815 811
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC~
l MOt>g<>llan
hOly man ·
S Absorb.a
9 Play gullat
14 Amongst
16 Talented
16 Pancake
17 C<lbt
18 Pained sound
HI Rope
20 Sola
21 AOCIOH peak
23 Most ruddy
25 St0U11
28 Smaltar 1nou1
27 Earth
29 Service
32 AOf/f
35 Eye pert
3e eom.-on
37 Image
3eH~
39 Custar tllCM
40f-
4 1 Holln
42 S.tne
4.:1 Can ptOV
" KltClflenwara '5 Rattle blnj
48 8eiga
'8 Kidding
2 3
S? Young aopa.ar ance
56 Con ;unct 1()(1
57 Leal( Ikon
S8 ~uora
59 Bao guy eo SteelhNd
g 1 SlaP'e tooo
82 lnateed
63 Farm or~
6A Pottsn nver
85 Smell
oon
1 Worll
2 Ammon411
compound
3 Ouarned
•~clals s 8t llnCtl4ld
8 ~°'less
Co<\9')tr8
8 Canvas
or0due1
9 Ro9tar
tO Peoola group
, 1 Calmed down
12 --no gooo
13 ~IOU· 21 UnOIMad
22 Polter plOy
24 Playthino-n Otar ...
28 Single"~
30 Sen11ble 3, Epoc poetry
OOll«:tt()(I
32~
33 Cec>lt.t OI
Yemen
3• SubMQuarlt
35 UnleU
36 E,per,~t
38 AeltgtOuS
42 Angt81 1 ,,,_,
u Some taonc:.
45 l•Stlesa one
.~Overcast
'8 Comc>ulll>O"
49 Hallrttl
!>O ~ndtnav1an
St Eur~
52 Sartiatian
· !13 AbOUI
10
So& MO'flle r Ole
~!I S1a1cec1
.,g AbOYe 00@1
13
'
I
8.1%
11111011&
t S10 BLAZERS t PICK·UPS t CAMAROS t CAVALIERS t CHEVEITES
..._Tc ..... ., C.O..., C...-, 0..-
1 11 ~h t\. 1985
48 MONTHS
TO OWN
5 ISl ~h
48 ~a::
S1i70 79 1*.e tu, lie dOC ._down ~
P9Yl'*'il s 10.802 27 ( 1923) (123232) On
~Credi
•121 ~h. -
S-10 PICK-UP
·57 88
1985
S-10 BLAZER 2-WHHL DllVE 8781
1985
CAVALIER
48 MONTHS 81888 TO OWN
S 1684 33 !lllA 1£> lie doc !eM OOwn Oeier•ed
payment SM50 81 1353!>1 (27!>8951 On AW~
Credi!
• cvl. s sr>d. cass Don't miss this
one• ( ICZMS"61
$3888
'82 DATSUN B-210 WGN
At. ps, tw. cc. stereo. cust whls.
s \eat tlGT J664)
s4999
'83 CHEV. CHEVmE At. ac. stereo H\Jrry on this one
12AF84891
s3999
'84 BMW 318i
S sr>d. ac. ow, d19 cass. s sunroof
Must see
SAVE!
'84 PLYMOUTH HORIZON
• cvl. at, 1>s. ac I 1 HU86061
, 4988
4-0oor.
5 Speed
1986 CHEVROLET SPECTRUM -
LEASE
PER MO.
PLUS TAX ·
48mo CloMcl(ncll-Of'~cncM Tl ~·S~712 O.-eyl19381M
(AP 48 m aflet publlCatoon S.-•nlndt0tl$ 13021321 ,
. Joe MacPHERSON'S
'83 FORDE
• cyl. • sr>d. cass. vas pincher.
t2ATMJ08) $3988
'84 MAZDA GLC
4 cvl, • sr>d. cass. take me hOme•
128TF1S6)
.~4
6Cvl. at, os, tw. cass. wwc 167181 I
$4888
llllVERIARY
'78 TOYOTA SR5 PU S·~Pd. Camper shell. Immaculate!
Low Miles! llK47S9•1
$2686
'83 RENAULT ALLIANCE
AM/FM stereo. air concl. auto, S-SPCI AMIFM Sier. ate. etc. p/s.
o lstrng. E11tra Clean (1FVA976) Must See To Aooreclate IHNL8UJ s4 o $5686
'84 VW CONVERT
AM/FM ster. a te. auto, black bty,
'84 TOYOTA TERCEL
alloy whls, low m1 1 11JVS373)
SALE PRICED!
OVER
INVOICE
Air conclillonlng, automatic. Eco-
nomlc Car! Like New llJFL869J
$4886
'84 TOYOTA CAMIY
AM/FM ster. air cond. crse cntrl,
immaculate• Low Ml' (1 KVS23'2 J
ALE PRICE
'81 MAZDA RX7
S·Sod AM /FM stereo. air cond,
moon root, allov wheels ll BHBSSJ ) $
5 Speed,
Bucket Seata
1986 CHEVROLET NOVA
''
LEASE
PER MO.
PLUS TAX
( ,
l111JPllat FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 16, 1985
8elnta' fana turning devlllah during loelng etrMk. C2.
... View LMgue goee 3 tor 3 In CIF tennla pl8Jotta. C3.
ai..,""',..... ~ 0-W ..........
ltd18on quarterback Mike Aneeloric fadea back to put and runnlng back Kaleapb Carter finda a blC hole to run through during Chargen' big wtn.
Edison lowers boom on Marina
Cha rgers con vert 7 turnovers into easy
51 -14 win in Sunset Leagu e s h owdown
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. ai.., Net ....
A m o nth ago Edison High football
coach Bill Workman was gjven a
~entle reminder -his team was 0-1
10 the race for the Sunset League
football championship.
"This is off the record," he said,
"but I want you to know something
-we're not going to lose again in
lcaaue."
A few hours ago he was &reeted by
Marina High football coach Dave
Thompson, who said, "Congratula-
tions, champs."
"It's co-cham ps," responded
Workman, who could afford to be
gracious after watching his team stun
even its own crowd m a resounding
51-14 "u~t" victory over the
Marina VilOOJS. The verdict left both
at 4-1 in the final standings. but with
Edison holding the No. I card from
the league as it awaits next week's CIF
Big Five playoffs. Edison is now 8-2
overall. Manna falls to 6-3-1.
"Marina's a good football team,"
continued Work.man. "I have a
feeling they arcn 't d one.yet. It was JU St
one of those ojgbts. We were read)
and everything went right."
Quanerbaclc Mike Angelovic was
near-perfect, completing 11 of 13 for
247 yards and two touchdowns.
Sophomore tailback K.aJeaph Carter
stood out with a slashing style that
bowled over Marina defenders again
and again on the way to 133 yards on
18 carries. with 129 of that com ing on
16 first-half carries before 6,000 fans
at Orange Coast College Thursday
night.
Can er scored three touchdowns.
carrying from I and 43 yards o ut and
taktng a 7-yard shovel pass from
Angelovic. ·
T ight end Ken G riggs turned m an
awesome first half performance, con-
necting on a 48-yard touchdown pass
to Mike Henderson after talcjng a
p1tchout from Angelovic. and
latching on to four balls for 88 yards
-an average gain of 22 yards per
r~ption.
Marina's Scan Magula tn ed to
counter Ed1son's attack with 194
yards on 19 carries -but an
overwhclmina deficit in the turnover
VOLLEYBALL -----
Sunset standings
I.M-W L T
Edlaon • I 0
MerlN ' 1 0
WH1mlnt1er 1 1 o
Founteln Venn I 3 O
Huntl1191on S.ecn I 3 0
Ocffn View I 3 O
TllvrMIV't Seen
OWrMI
W LT
• 1 0
' J I ~ ' 0 3 6 0
3 6 0
1 1 0
EdlM>n SI, MerlN 1''
T...-1~(7:JO)
Founteln Vellrt et Huntington S.eel'I
Oc.e.n View et WH lmln1ter
column destroyed whatever ho~
the Vikings held
The turnover tallv· Seven tor
Manna. none for Ed1s0n
lnterccp11ons by Ed Pang and
Casey Jones and fumble recovenes b)
Phil Nabal (twice). Joe Moms (twice)
and Kurt Shanor set Edison up for its
most lops1dcd victory ever over
Manna in a senes which now
st retches to 11-0-1 . with onl > the
scoreless tie m 1983 mamng per-..
feet ion.
Mannas · first mistake ~t up
Edison's first TD as Gnggs took
Angelovic's pitch on an end-around.
stopped and went deep to Henderson.
who caught the ball at the goal hne
against double coverage.
Marina-responded With a 60-)'ard
touchdown run b~ Magula. and a fter
Edlson retaliated '.I.1th a 64-yard
march in 7 pla)s. keyed b} a '2-)'ard
hookup to Gnggs and culm inated b-.
Carter's shde ofTthe nght side from a
)ard out. the V1kmgs were on 1he
move aga.m.
A roughing the kicker penalt) kepi
them m control at the Edison 49 but
then mistake No. 2 catapulted Edison
(Pl eue .ee EDISON/CS)
Lakers'
best
start
After 11 4-1 02 wtn
over Trailblazers
LA nowis8-l
1.J'lGLEWOOD (AP) -Bcauna
the Los Angeles La.ken 1' tough
enouih when all they do 1s show up.
The l>ortland Trail Bl.aurs, uo-
fonunately, will play them under
those circums~nces
"We have so m uch respect for
Portland that I thank 11 helps us play
to a h1&her level," sai.d Los Angeles
Coach Pat Riley after the Lakcrs ran
up a 114-102 victory over the Trail
Blazers Thursday night at the Forum .
"I told the team before to rugbt's
game that I thought Portland was the
best team we've played this year. I
still believe that. ..
Behind 30 Points fro m Earvm
"Magic" Johnson and 29 more from
James Worthy. the Lakers hcJd off a
founh.quarter rally by the Trail
Blazers to wm their eighth game in
nine o uungs this season -the team's
best start m franchise history.
Twtce before. the Lakers had won
seven of their first eight, the last time
bemJ m the 1982-83 season. but faJJcd
to wtn the next game.
This year. however. tlune,;s were
chckrng at that higher level Riley was
talking about.
"Magic and I seemed to com-
municate well tonight." said Worthy.
"We know each other well and our
chemistry was cspcoally good."
It was more than JUSt the Trail
Blazers that brought Johnson's play
up a notch
"I lcnew tonight that wtth Byron
(Scott) out tha t I needed to score morc
and I looked for my shot more
frequent!) than usual," said Johnson.
"I lcnow m my mind I can score
anytime. but I do what 1s needed to
wtn"
Portland Coach Jack Ram~ wd
his team JUSt needs a little more
cxpencncc against the Nauonal
Basketball A.SSOCtation's top teams.
··w.e·rc sull }Oung in a lot of
pos1uons. but we all believe that we
can compete wnh the Lakers," be
said.
·The l..alcers' Johnson agreed
··\\ e·re going to ha' e to pla} well to
beat them an)11 me." said Johnson.
"'The~ ha\e picot} of talent and aJI
they need to do 1s get their confidenct
that the' can beat the best teams 10
the leaRue"
OVhas
shot at
playoffs
Sailors in finals; FV ousted
S eaha wks. Lion s ·
meet ; Harbor tries
for unbea ten m a rk
Ocea n View High's Seahawlcs have
a sho t at their first-ever ClF Big Five
Conference football playoff bcnh -
and go for 1t at Westminster High in
one of two Sunset League finaJes
tonight.
Afso, in a traditional showdown,
Newpon Harbor guns for its first
unbeaten league champiol\ship in 43
years, facing CorT del Mar.
AIJ games begin at 7:30. Herc's a
capsule look:
Ocean View ( 1-3) vs. WestmJn1ter
(l ·l ): Ocean View can go to the ClF Bia f ive playoffs with a win, com-
bined with a Huntington Beach wjn
over Fountain VaJley, or force a coin
flip to break a three-way tic. West·
nunster can go to the playoffs 1f It
wins or ties. A running team, ~n
View has averaaed 91 yards a pme in
Sunset League play. Site: West-
minster H igh.
Foutalli ValJey ( 1-S.) v1. ffut-
lq1.M Bead O·S): Both have en·
dured disapPointing seasons with the i-ssina p me failina to materialize.
Fountain Valley has an outside
chance for the Clf playoffs with a
win, combined with an Ocean View
upset of Westminster, which wo uld
force a c-0in flip to determine the
Sunset League1 No. J reprcse~tatlve.
Shane Foley
Site: Huntington Beach.
Newport Barbor (M ) v1. Corona
del Mar (Z·•>: High-scoring Newport
Harbor is led by quarterback Shane
Foley, who is rewriting Harbor's
record books. He is 144 for 23 5 ( 61. 2
percent), for 21087 yards and 20 TDs.
Going for tbear first unbeaten league
season in 43 years. the Sailors have an
18-4 edge in the scnes over their
traditional ri vals. Site: Orange Coast
College.
Cotta Mesa (l _.) v1. E1tud a
(l·4):Tbe two Costa Mesa n valsclosc
out the Sea View season wt th Estancia
leading tbe series, 12-5-1. ha vmg won
six times. John Carlson's a vailability
(ankle sprain) is dubious for Mesa.
wruch is a blow to the Mustangs'
hopes. Estancia has fo ur runners who
have run for 91 yards o r more in a
game. Both teams art 5lim in
numbers. Site: Newport Harbor.
Allison-:-Ev-a n s em erge to lead Ha rbor
aver S a n ta Monica a nd into title match
By SHARON F RUTOS
Of_ai..,,.......,.
Newport Harbor's girls volleybaJI
team has Its dcpendables - a net set
that performs wt th veat regulanty.
But Thursday night, the Sailors
were a slop off the pace. and 1t took
the emergence of two less-heralded
Sailors -Jenny Evans and Sara
Allison -to get past scrappy Santa
Monica in the CIF 5-A semifinals.
IS-13.15-10.14-16, 15-7.
Allison, a 5-9 Junior setter. 1s better
known as a back-row specialist and
Evans. a 5-11 sophomore outside
hitter. usually handles the mid-
section. But when their teammates
fo und the go ing a little rocky. AJlison
and Evans smoothed out the net game
and enabled the Sailors a trip to the
finals Saturday night against top-
ranked Mira Costa (8:30 at Marina
High) ..
"Two people played mcredibly well
toniaht." Harbor Coach Mike Neece
said. "Allison and Evans. Jenny
usually starts slow. and Sara's usually
1n back. When 1t gets tight, she
(Allison) 1s at her best. She saved us
and saved us and saved us." Ncccc
added.
Newport d idn't stan slow. 1t JUSt
had intermittent lapses in its passing
game. The tl"Clld continued through-
out the f'irst three games. and the
Sailors had to close the gaps in the
fou.nh.
Harbor had to contend with the
V1kinis' strona front line and its
ability to capitalize on Sailor mis-
takes.
The Sailors slipped by Santa
Monica in the fir'it game o n a Lara
Asper ace The second game saw the
Vikings go up. 6-0. before Harbor
could Ile at 9.9
In game three. the aalors had o nly
nerves 10 blame They Jumped out 10
a 5-0 advantage. and took a q>m·
mandmg 14-5 lead Bui four match
point opportunities passed and the
Viktngs· Mananne Dixon served six
straight to pull Santa Mo nica within
one. 14-13. Several Sador errors at the
net allowed the V 1kan~ to tie and win
on the block of 6-1 senior Kathleen
Dixon.
Neece didn't over-react to the loss.
"I to ld them we've j ust got to
relax." he said. "We have to go after
the game. We have to go ou t and
match their 1ntens1t:r If you sit back
and wait. the) 're going to talce
advantage. thev were real high."
Evans ( 13 kills) and Laura Power
( 12 kills) took command of the hitting
in game four. while Allison continued
her rescue mission.
Becky Sherwood and Evans got
awess1ve on the serves. and the
Sa1lors regained the momentum
TraC} Krueger ( 15 lulls) and Asper
blocked a shot at the net to put Harbor
at game point. and a Power up
clinched the victory.
The passing pmes or both teams
peaked in the third game p roviding
crowd-pleasmg raJhcs. but to Alhson.
who had I I kills. the real rally camC'
before that.
"I had to Jet the team 101ng." shC'
said in expla1n1n1 her surge at the net.
"It's JUSt a Oulce I had a Sood game
(Pleue Me IUWPORT /C2 )
Snow-man melts down issue with an apology
'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The youna man
whote 1nowblll may have cost the San FrancilCO
49en a victory ap1ns1 the Denver Broncot says
he's tony and won•t take a SSOO reward offered for
his story, the San FranalCO Examiner aaid on
Thursday.
The m131u1ded missile landed near blclcup q~rbeck Matt Ca vanauah on Monday n.iaht as
he wu about to apot the ball for a Ray Wcnchina
fiead pl. C•vanauab said the ano.mll d11tnictcd
bim and cautcd him to bobble the anap.
Wenchlna was unable to kick the bell and
Cavanauah launched a pus. that was incomplete.
ThelCOfeat tbetimc was 14-l ; the49en~nton to
Joie. 17-16, dropp1n111. their National Football
Lcque record to S-S
"I'm really sorry about what I did and I want
to apoloaize to the 49en a.nd to 49er f ani, .. said the
youna man. who asked that his name not be used
bccaute be fears retaliation or loss of h11 parcnu ·
season tickets.
"1 don't want the money," he said of the
reward pos~ for the sno wball tbrowcr'1 story. "I
feel Md moue)\ already. Everybody thinks rm a
Letk. and I j u1t doo't want the ~ 10 San
FrancilCO to think all Bronco fans arc ~r\s."
Altho• the anonymous hurter Sot to ttt the
ent1~ ~. doMnt weR ejected ft-om Mtlc Hl&h
Stadium for throwina :no.ib&U1 on the field. The Eumincr let tr\naient rules for 1dcnt·
1fyin1 the snowt.ll thrower. and said the )'Oung
man convioocd them he wa the n,aht one
.. h ju t ba~ncd o n the spur of the moment."
the man said 'Mc and my buddy both th~
snowbells at the same time. H11 tut the left upn&bt
a.nd mane bounced an front of Cavanauah ...
8ucd on v,bttc the man was llfUJlt. .be ':hrew
thcUtowba.U about lS yard But tbea~ fin
tm 't hippy about bu ftal
.. Evcrybodl around us stancd caJhna u
jttb.;" hc-.d.. Tha1'1 when I "9hnd that 1t wa
stupid. And that's why I'm 11vi na aW11y tht ticket
f'or the San Dtcao pme (on Sunday) and '°'"'on
nation. rm Lahn&• k>t ofnbbinaon thiund it'
not all aood·natwed." •
Jackie Cook
LAGUNA'S
SEASON
HALTED
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
ai.., ""' C.. I p I
The Laguna Beach High g,1rl~
volleyball team's season came to a
quiet end Thunda)' night. but 11 was
an end that took 1onacr thnn mos•
p('oplc had expected.
After the Anisu bowed out nf thC'
('IF 5-A playoffs wtth a semifinal lou
to No. I seeded Mara Cmia at
Newport Harbor High. Laguna
Coach Btll Ashen wasn't thnlled wtth
losina. but he C'Crtainl) was plca~d to
act u far as the Artists did.
"It was a frustrat1na los\." hC' said
after oom1ng within one match of
mtttma ewport Harborfor~t1tk
"But nobod e"Cr fiaurt'd ~-r·d 8('t
this far. We weren't ranked anywht'rc
in an) polls and we made 1t to tbc
~nufinaJs.
"o\nd I'll tell )'OU -.bat. we'll be
ti.ck )lelt year We're hke t0me-
bod} ·, ualY S1 ter -)'OU don't e'pttt
u but we alwa)s show up for the
ball ..
Laauna ho""Cd up to fatt the
Mu1tanp. but Mara C'mta took the
lead and danced all the wa) into lhe
finals W\th a 1 S-U>. I S-4. 15 th~
(Pleue-LAOURA/C2)
I ' ..
Ba ron s· bid to ga1n-
fina ls derailed In -
five-game setba c k-
By RICHARD DUNN
~ ..... C.r1111..._,.
.\ loose. carefret" attitude 1s some-
11mes thC' best approach to take an
sports ~hen all the marbl~ are on tht'
hne
~an) times the team with the
most talent dOt"Sn't comC' out on top
Rather. 1t''i the team 1A.1th nothing to
lose and C' en thing to gain
Such wu the case Thursda' night
1n the semifinals of the CIF 4-A voile~ ball playoffs at Edison High.
where host Fountain Valley lost a
hcanbrcakmg. suspense-filled match
to Notre Dame .\cademy m five
games -15-1:1. l~-15. 3-15. 15-7.
and the all important game fi ve.
15-1 '
Notre Dame .\cadcm) will be go10g
to the ( IF 4-A finals Saturda) night to
face to p-Sttded Marlborough. J!oun-
tain \ alle). thC' second-Sttdr-<i squad
m the tournament. wtll not.
"When 11 comes down to lhe
pla~off\." \aid Fountain Valle}
Coach Marlon Sano. "n·s not a
matter of IA. ho thC' better team 1s. h 's
thr team that po<iscs~ the ab1hty to
'.I.ant 1t more and 'iUstam thr effort."
There·, no questio n that the Barons
( I 4-4 I \I. anted 1h1~ one badly -the
tea~ Oo\l.1ng do"n man) of lhc
pla,erc;· e"e!I af\c:r the match told the
\I. hofc stol)
But the Regals. with .. noth1n& to
lose and e' cryth1ng to gam, .. ICC.Ord·
1ng to Sano. were able to come
throu~ and upset the Barons.
"With that annude and that basis,"
he added. "the~ did evcry1h1ng they
could -and 1t 'lusta1ncd them
throu&h and that's how they did 1L"
Notre Dame Academy (an all &irb
~hool from hcnnan Oak~) was
down b} four pomts ( 11 -7) dunna the
final game. but had the momcntwn
"'hen 1t counted
"The) JUSt had those momenta of
tntenSJt) that payed off." Sano said
"We JUSt couldn't sustain 1t ton\lht.
··we !.hould've walked out o(heft
m thrtt (pmcs) ..
Pu-haps.. but the Barons bad no-
body to blame but thcmxJvc:s. In tbc
end -and throuahout most of \be
match -thC} were then own won.
encrntcS
~ .
"We wen-'Ult out of sa nk &on.lllt\, more~ than any o ther effort we"'ve
had tn the C1f playof&. .. coatu1ued
no. who last Tunday nicfn after Id.a
(Pl••-~)
•
..
0rMge CoeM DAILY ptLOT/ FrtcN!y, Nowmber 15, 1985
Pr'MIAP ..... .._
Cwef Pntil ICOftd two CAltles ID & !I tou.nd of 66 tbat propelled him PQ1 '-.:3 LJlt and laso die eeconckouod
nunctay in \be Kamlua lDICrnatiooaJ i.a •
Hawaii. PaviD. wfaDer of the Cdonitl National
lnvi•cioa eutier Gil eeuoa.. ftAilbed two triOI over
NEW Oil.LEANS -After alm011 19 EiJ yean of frustration, the UIU&lly tolerant., c • • 1e>met.imes funny Wis of the New Orteaot •
Saints arc tumina~ uab'.
tbeBaycouneattbelCapahaaOolf'Oubin Jll, I l sbou WMSer pm. L)'k, tbe cunau Britiab Open c:nampion
who bas dominated thia c:ounc io.re«nt events, fiDally
ran into tome cWBculty. But even four boleys and a double bosY coWda't keep him ftom a 70 that was
c:aPIMld off" with an aisle on tbt 18th bole. He Rnilhed wftfl-a t 36 toW. tiabt under and tbteeofl'lhe pece ... At
IGtdi&D w• Ja, ..... of Berwyn, Pa., defeated lo~ ftiend 0. ~ Brew~r of Huo~on Valley, Pa., 3 and 2, to win the ftft.b annual Uruted
States Mid-Amateur °'8.mpionship at The Vin•
Coech Bwn· ft11u bu twice beeD douled with beer II be left the ft~ and last wieek tbe M:llm WU
pelted with lemons decorac.ed with black Oeur de lit, the
Sa.inti' emblem.
"I've never seen us anywhere that uaJy," Phillips
said. .. But only the ones that are
doi.n& that. and that's a tm&U pcrcentaee.
O ub. It was the ICICODd Mid·Amateur title for Slael '°
three years. The tou.roament it for s.olfcn 2S yean old
and up wbo have a ban<licap of five or Ins.
"You don't condemn every. bodf. becaute of 1 S people, and
thats all it is. There prot.~ aren't IS peopl~ c:olJl,l'Don ~
to do thal It ain't lib it's SO,
people. You're taJkina a'bout
maybe 10 people!' •
It's not as if the 'saints, 3-7,
..,.,11_ have never suJfenxt a five-p.me • -.-losina streak before. Over 19
years -witb two break-even seasons l1and.ina u the
team record for suooess -there have been .even years
that included streaks of five or more losses. ThrouaJi it all, the fans kept. c:omi.o&. Home
attendance bas averqcd below S0,000 only twice -in
1977, when the Saints went 3-11 in the last 14-pme
aeason, and in I 980, when New Orleans was I· J S.
Even durina that 1-15 season, the fans didn't throw
things. That was the year of the big beads, when
tupporten showed up with paper bags over their heads
to avoid the embarrassment of beina seen supportina
tbc National Football Leaauc team.
Few of the Saints pfayers found the bq beads
amusina. but at least they didn't pose a threat to safety.
Most of the missiles and curses are directed at Phillips. .
"It may be because Bum's been given the lonacst
time of any coach here, .. said offensive tackle Dave
Lafary. "No otherc:oacb has been around for five years.
"And no other coach has bad the adversity he's
been through the past two years."
' Lafary was a part-time starter in 1980, and he said
there's none of the factionalism or finger-pointi.ng this
year that marked the 1980 .squad
"Eve~y on the team knows he's not carrying
bis own weight. .. be said. "How can you point the fin&cr
at anyone unless you've played a great game younell'r'
· Derland Moore, a 13-ycar veteran defensive
tackle. said the fan behavior this year remindS him a lot
of the 1975 season. 2-12. and 1980.
Quote of the day
Job Cauoa, Tampa Bay, defensive end,
about the Buccaneers' 16-0 victory over St. Louis
Sunday, their first win in I 0 games this season:
"We've been playina with the 'Maybe Brothers'
on our team -would've, could've and
should'vc. WeU, we waived them this week."
Ktnaa'Janecyka118pended
MONTREAL -Goaltender Bob Iii Janecyk of the Los Angeles Kings has been '
usesscd a fivc-pme suspension as a result
of an incident in which be reoeived a major
penalty duri.na a National Hockey League contest
apinst the Philadelphia Aycn, Nov. 3.
The suspension was issued by NHL Exccuti ve Vice
President Brian O'NeiU. who conducted a hearina in
Lot Angeles Tuesday after viewinf a videotape of the
incident in which Janecyk swung bis stick at the Ayers'
Peterl.ezcL ·
"Jaoccyk's actions couJd not be deemed as a reflex
action as there was a short delay between the collision of
the two players and the blow by the goaltender " said
O'Neill "It sbouJd be poinc.ed out that althou~ the play~r bas not bad a previous history of this tyPc of a~vtty, there can be no excuse or miugating
etreumstances for striking an opponent in this manner."
Jn accordance with league bylaws, the suspension
takes effect next Thunday, seven days from the date of
the decision, unless the club notifies the league within
24 hours that it waives the right of appeal.
Mattingly undergoes •araery
NEW YORK -First baseman Don • Mattingly has undergone minor surgery to
correct a tendon problem on the little finger
of his right band. the New York Yankees
said.
The surgery, performed by band surgeon Dr.
Charles Malone, corrected a catch in the extensor
tendon of the finger and requires little or no
rehabilitation.
After the operation, Mattingly appeared as
scheduled at a banquet in Hartford
81.ztb •tratcht win for Rock eta
81•11 tlcCn.1..JCX>red. a seue>n·hi&b-m lf poinu and Abem ~·•• added 2S more to ~ Houston to a 112-107
National ~etbell Association victory
over ?:/cw Jeney Tbunday niaht. Tbe victory marb the
Rockets' sixth straiabt and .. ves them an 8-2 record and
the lead in the Miclwat Division. The Nets, 6-S, lost
their fifth in a row on the road ... In other NBA action,
WtrN B. Pree scored 19 of his 20 points in the second
half and ftU 8....,. bad IS of bis 17 after the
intermission u Oeveland rallied to top Indiana,
112· l 04. The Cavaliers, who trailed by as many as 16
points early_ in the second quarter, took the lead for
lood at 8M8 on two &cc throws by Eqar Joae1 with
:24 remainina ... Alez Eqllu scored 33 poihts,
includina Denver's last five, to provide the Nuggets
with a 112-109 victory over San Antonio. It was the
Nuaicts' seventh victory in nine tries, enabling them to
remain a balf-pme behind Houston, the Midwest
Division leader ... B6Ue J...._ bit 11 consecutive
points in the fourth quarter as Sacramento downed Golden State, 112· l 03. The Kings' victory ended a
four-pme Warrion' winning streak.
Flyen keep~ streak alive
IUdl Setter'• aoaJ at 11 :04 of the final Iii
period triaered. "Philadelphia to a S-3 '
victory over Edmonton Tbunday night for
the Flyers• 11th straight victory' in their
first game since the accidental death of All-Stat goalie
Pelle ~· Philadelphia, meeting the Oilers for
the tint time smce they lost to Edrt)onton last year~ I in
the Stanley Cup finals, won with rookie Dana Jeuea
in the nets ... Elsewhere in the NHL, Ma.rt Outer,
0.. Gll.meu and lUc! Nattreu scored goals in the
thircJ period to lift St. Louis Blues to a 5-3 victory over
Quebec ... Toronto captain RJct Valve scored three
&oals in the third period to lead the Maple Leafs to a
comeback 6-6 tic with Boston. Mariaa Swmy, with
two goals, and Wnclel Clark also scored for the Leafs,
who saw their club-record winless streaJc grow to 13
games.
Bowa to manage in Las Vegas
LAS VEGAS -Former major league iii
shortstop Larry Bowa, citinf a decade-long
desire to become a bascbal manager, was
named Thursday as skipper of the Oass
AAA Las V cgas Stars.
.. I have been preparing myself to become a baseball
manager for the past nine or I 0 years," Bowa said.
Bowa, a 16-ycar veteran with the Philadelphia
Phillies, Chicago Cubs and New York Mets, said he
hoped be could be a pan of the development of young
players all careen as I have."
Bowa's name surfaced
Wednesday as the leading can-
didate for the job.
He replaces Bob O uck, who
wu released in September by the
San Dieeo Padres, the parent
organization for the Stars.
Bowa said Wednesday he
' bad been contacted by the Padres
orp.nization and talked to club
.,.,. . officials last Friday. He· said he
was offered a playing contract
witb the New York Mets for the next season, but turned
th.at down.
Bowa aa.id he felt managing the Stars wouJd be a
peat opportunity.
.. I think playing in the big leagues ... I've gotten to
know a little about working with players," Bowa said.
"Triple A Lobs are really hard to get so I consider myself
fonunat.e.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
7: 30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lake rs at Oippen, Channel 9.
10 p.m . -PREP FOOTBALL: Ri verside
Poly at Fontana (delayed), Channel 56. RADie
7:30 p.m. -PRO BAS~ALL: Lakcrs at
Oippen, lC.l.AC (570), KMPC (710).
'
,
.. . ..
..
Roadblock
Laker center Kareem Abdul-Jabbu bold.8
Ilia IJ'OQDd u Portland'• Klkt Vandeweche
ntee tbroaab tbe air and Jamee Worthy
trlee to bat~ away. Laken won.
BARONS •••
From Cl
team's quarterfinal victory over Long
Beach Wilson said that "you can lose
in the semifinals and still be respect-
able."
The Barons, who drove behind
Sunset League MVP Stephanie
Snyder, all-purpose standout Jill
Myers and all-world .spiker Jackie
Cook (31 kills) in this one, no doubt
ended their season with respect-·
abiJity.
·•we won the Orange County
Championship, and we won our
league," Sano sai,d. "No team has ever
done that here before. We ac-
complished a lot this year."
So what happened to the Barons?
.. TheX (the players) were tense." he
said. 'They wanted it more than they
could control."
Myers, who had 23 digs, 14 kills
and was involved in 16 blocks, and
Snyder, who bad 49 digs and was in
on 24 blocks, made a big difference by
the net, contributing heavily with key
defensive blocks and timely shots
that carried the Barons.
Cook, meanwhile, was drilling the
ball between Rega.I dcfenden ill
night. Christy Svalstad, who bad 41
digs and a doun .kills, also had an
important hand in the Barons' wins.
Fountain ValJey, which dominated
game three ( l 5-3) to take a 2-1 edge in
the match, fell flat in game four and
could never pro~rly rebound in
game five, although it had leads as big
as9-5and 11-7.
"There has been a lot of life
growing-up situations that the girls
have had to deal with (this year)."
Sano said. "They're a highly goaJ-
oriented group of girls."
NEWPORT •••
From Cl
Sometimes I play good, sometimes I
play bad. It just happened tonight was
my night.
"They (Vikings) were really fired
up (after the win in game three). I j ust
took a deep breath and played
aggressively and tried to get us back in
the game," she said
Andonthe6-l,6-l,6-I frontlincof
LAGUNA·DEFEATED •••
From Cl
step, win.
·They didn't overpower us," said
·Ashen. "They j~st found the open
are.as. We bad balls going off our anns
and just didn't play well at all."
The only time Laguna Beach found
itself in the match was in the first
game when the sc<frc was tied at lO
after Kara Cronin dropped in a serve
for an ace.
After that, the Mustangs rolled off
five straight points to win, I 5-10.
Jn game two, the Artists found
themselves guickly behind S-0 and
then I 0-2 before losing I 5-4 when the
Mustangs' Lindsey Hahn nailed the
winning kill.
Behfod 2-0 and facing a three-game
defeat, the Artists tried to puJI
together but it wasn't their night.
"We tried to get the offense going,"
said Ashen. "But we just didn't pass
well. Once in a while we were able run
some quick sets and get some rhythm
going. but (Mira Costa) always
seemed to come up with the plays
when they needed them."
Before flme three, Ashen tried to
regroup his Artists but it was to no
avail. The Mustangs tore the heart out
of ~una Beach by rippina off a 9-0
lead in the series clincher ~fore
coasting home a I 5-8 winner.
But while the Artists didn't enjoy
much suoccss as a team on tbe ni&ht.
Ashen did cite some playcn who
played well for Laguna.
Senior front-linen Wendy Whiting
and Valery Foley, alonf wtth junior
middle blocker Kathcnne Boehmer
helped keep Laguna afloat before
Mira Costa sank the Artists for the
year.
"I thinJc Wendy, Katherine and
Valery all have a chance to make All-
CIF," said Ashen. "Our season turn-
ed around when we moved Wendy
from setter to outside bitter. She's a
very good player, our best"
Ashen thought the two teams
played similar styles, not much power
but &ood placement and a lot of
guickncss. He thought the deciding
factor would be the Must&ngS' su-
perior height on the front line.
It turned out to be the case, u Mira
Costa put up a blockade against the
Artists spikes, sending them back
special delivery.
"We had some good shots," said
Ashen. "But they got a lot of big
blocks which was frustratina.
"But I don't have any complaints.
I've never had a down year in the four
years I've been here," be said with a
smile. "We'll be back."
Martin says he won't
manage Yanks again
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)-Billy
Martin says one thinaabout his future
is certain: He won't manage the New
York Yankees apin.
Martin made that promise
Wednesday night at a charity dinner
in Rochester hosted by American
League umpire Ken Kaiser, an area
resident. After beina hired and fired
by the Yankees four Cirnes, Manin-
said he's had enou&b.
"This is where it stops." he said.
Martin was fied last month as
skipper of the American League team
and replaced by Lou Pinena.
said he still bas five years let\ on bJs
most recent contract with the Yan-
kees and he wants to know where he
stands.
"I'm going to sit down in a week or
so with George and my agent. l want
to know just what my future is. ~t
now, I don't know what my job 1s,"
Martin said. --He said be hadn't ruled out the
possibility of managin1 elsewhere.
"It would take a lot to make me
move," he said.
------
Santa Monica, Allison was to the !=!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!5i point. · "We've never played apinst a
team that big." she said. "You can't
hit down on them or ther, just •get
.. I hope Pinella docs so well that
nobodr, wiU think of me," Martin
said. • In fact, I sent him a letter
conll1'8.tulatina him when he got the job.<r.-
Eddie Sapir, Manin's lfCnt. said
last month that several m~or lcque
baseball clubs, as well as a team in
Japan, have inquired about Martin.
Martin bas manaaed in Oakland,
Detroit, Texas and Minnesota during
his career.
1·
A Very Special Shoe Department
# 119 Fuhion Ialand • Newport Beach • 759· 1622 • Bullocb Willahlre Wing
I
...
blocked We just hit smart.' But Martin, first hired by Yankee
owner George Steinbrenner in 1976,
Sports on TV for weekend
a1 rcnn .:>tatc, ~.l.c (1 l~J.
12:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: USC at Washinaton, KNX (1070). •
I p.m. -COLLEGE P'OOTBAIL: Oreaon State vs. UC~ at Rose Bow'i_~~ (710). .
5.30 p.m. -l.'\ILLIW£ FOOTBALL. Cal State
Fullerton at Northern Arizdna. KWOW (1600).
6 p.m. -COILEOE POOTBAU.: Fresno State at
Lona Beach State, KNAC FM ( IOS.S).
6:30~ p.f1\. -PRO B.UkBTaALL: Qjppen at
Denver.KMPC(710).
7 p.m. -COLL&GE POOTIAU.: Tun.El Puo at San Dieao State, KSOO ( 1190).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BOClEY: Pittsburah at J(jnas
Kl.AC (570). '
8111Jda7
TELEVISION
10 a.m. -PRO POOTBALL: Rams 11t Atlanta..
Channel 2.
I p.m. -PRO l"OOTBAU.: San Diqo at Denver
Channel•. •
I :30 p.m. -BA.SEBAIL: Winter t.eque pme from
Ponce, Puerto Rico, Channel 34. ~30 p.m. -COLLBQE FOOTBALL: USC at Wuhinaton (tape), Channel 2.
RADIO
I 0 a.m. -PllO FOO'l'BAlL: Rams at Atlanta., -KMPC (710).
10 a.m. -PaO FOOTBALL: Ch.icqo at OaUu, KNX (1070).
I p.m. -PllO ll'OOTBAU.: Cincinnati at Raiden. KR.LA.ii 110).
1 p.m. -PllO POOTBAU.. San Dieec> at Denver KLZZ{600). '
7:l0 p.m. -PRO BAI~ New Jmey 11 Lakers_ Kl.AC (.S70).
Running
it up isn't
his style
Wftte's Roadrunners
ease upto take 42-20
triumph over Artists
By DOUG WARD Dellr,....c ............ ,
W~at docs one do with a JS-0
half\1mc lead in the rqular-season
finale, with the CIF Central Con-feren~ football playoffs awa1llbg next week?
For addleback High football ~ch Jerry Wme, the answer was
sunplc. he ga vc ha reserves a welJ-
deserved chance to play -as tus
Roadrunners went on to record a
42-20 Sea View League conquest o(
Laauna Beach
"It's tough to ke~p your momcrt-
tum when you're up by JS at
halftime,'' Witte said d1plomatically.
Actually, 11'!1 tough to lccep your
momentum when you take your
stantng quarterback and star running
back out of the game which 1s what
Witte did late in the second quarter. Marina fUCh quarterback Rick Vanderrlet
trlee to ecramble away from pair of ltdt.on
o.llr,...,......., 0..... .........
defen•n Tbv.nday da.rt.ni Cbu&en·
51-14 Yictory at <>ranee CouI Collece.
,
OrMg9 CoM1 DAILY P1LOT ff~. No,...._ 15, 1111
EDISON ROMPS, 51-14 •••
homCl
uuo a tcria o! IO(Mi fon~
Morrit recov~ me ftllnble and
Edilon moved S6 yvda ift S pla)'l.
Ric:k Sherm.an ao1na over from a yard
out for bis finl of three abort 1COnna
runs.
The Owtm forced a punt a:nd
went 86 yardl in 9 play$, s.hOWCUUll
Cat1et'1 alubina ttyle at the expeoae
of would-be Marina taeklen, capped
by hi~ard 1COrinajaunt ao which
he 11.i throuah and ran over wb.at
appeared to cenain roadblocks. That made it 24-7 with 3: 18 let\ in
the half -but 'the disaster had just
be&un. Pang's interoepbon with 1:36
left aot the ball back for Edison and
one play later it was 31·7 u AnJelovic
went deep to Henderson, who cauabt
it on tbe 16 and slipped tbrou&h wfiat
wu becoming a thorouahly ft'Ustrated
Marina secondary.
The cnswna c ckoff was fumbled
away, Morris covered the ball at ~
Marin.a 26 1.0d two pass uu~rference penalties and a 7-yard shovel pus to
Carter made 1t an ovcrwhelmJ.Da 38-7
With 31 seconds left in the b.a.U'.
Thompson, who endured his wont
loss ~ver as a coach, told rus team at
halftime, "Buckle on your straps and
play your damndest."
Workman told his club: "We·ve
had leads before and haven't been a
good second-half team. Keep your
beads in the game and execute.··
The resuJt: The V tkes coughed the
ball away on a fair catch on a punt
Nabal covered the baJJ at the Marina
20 and ftve plaYt laW Sbcrmu weac
over.
Anotbcr MariM pwu aes up
Ed1soo'1flDa1drive.1 5a-,.rd man:la
lo m.alce it SI· 7 wnh Rill 11 :2'
~awru.na.
""*' Fin • 6owN 14 •~·vwo.ee l l-?M
'"Nllll8 'it!OtM " Pt illne ~-12•2
11'\#111 2·21
F~-1Umolel IOll t-S
'"-lli.t•vereh Mnellt"' 6-5'
.. lf U-110 -lrlH
M l 1-0 .... ,,
INO.VIOYAL lllU»tMG
Mer~Ull. lf-lM, Staflotd. 6·2l, y.,._
w rlei ~ 17. Cran; 1·4.
Ect-<¥1« l6·lll, Sl'IWMI', •·11. Slw'nwl.
•· IJ Pell«IOll, 1-1. ·~I, 1-6; 1.Ae, 2·),
Motel, 1·3, J1111ic., H . An9910vlc. Mar·mlftut 14
INOfVlOUAL "ASSING Mer-vanowrlet • ._.12-2. 1t
Ect-AllfflOvlc. ll·l)-0. 247. Grlee\, 1·1-t,
... s11net, 1· l·O. 7
INOfVIOUAL 11t•C•IVING
Me•-Sl9f'l9f' ... ,,
EO-Vrl001. 4·•. Hetldlr'Mln, 2-lOI; Cenw,
•·43, Juattce. 1·~. SMrmen, 1·12, Trullllo. 1·7 Saddlcback High built a 35-0
halftime lead and then held on to beat
Laguna Beach High 42-20 before
1,200 fans at Newpon Harbor High
Thursday night.
Laguna Beach actually outscored
Saddlcback, 20.7, in the second half,
but don't let any of that throw you,
this game clearly belonged to Saddle-
back and 1f not for the mercy of Wme
the score could have been downnght
em ba rrasstng.
Mistakes cripple Irvine again, 14-13
"They played a great game ... Anists
Coach Cednck Hardman.said .. We
got a break. when Saddlcback put the
second team 1n. but I'm sure the kids
are proud of themselves and I'm
proud of them too."
Myron Butler and Glenn Campbell
returned with 11 :27 left in the game
. after Laguna Beach had pulled to
within 35-14 and managed to restore
order, puttmg another touchdown on
the board and sendmg Saddleback to
the CIF playoffs wtth a 9-1 overall,
6-1 league record. The An1sts con-
clude the season at 3-lJ>verall, 3-4 10
league, a record dimm1shed by three
forfe it losses, one in lea~oe play.
It took Saddleback just I :04 to set
the tempo for the evening's festiv-
ities. After Campbell broke loose for
52 yards on the game's first play, and
Butler followed by hooking up with
wide receiver Danny Ontiveros in the
ngbt comer of the end zone from 15
yards out to give Saddleback a 7-0
lead.
The Roadrunners got their second
score when a Laguna Beach fake punt
fooled no one and gave Saddleback e~ccllcnt field position at the 50..yard
line.
* SaMIMdl 42. Le9UM ... di JD
Sare lrt Quef1w1
1.. .. une 9Ndl o o 1 lr10
S.ddi.oeck 21 1' 0 7-2 s.o-<)ntlv9'01 IS pau from Bui.., CMuw_.t
kfdll s.c.--o..1 ct o.n from Buller CMuwtll
kid!) S.d--Ontlv9f'ot 19 run (Muwtll kick)
Sect-Senta Cru1 63 run wllll tuml>le r9COvtrv
(Mt•wtll klckl Sect-Came>ti.11 47 run CMtxwtlt tdcl\l
Lt-Lana '3 run CVlck9f't ktckl
LB-L.tna n run (Vickers kick)
LB-<ummlf\Qs 21 o.u from Klml>lll Cklck
felled)
S.o-<>nllv9f'os ~pan lrom CamPOttl <Mt•·
wttt kick)
Altlf!denet: 1.200 !H llmtled)
Error-prone Vaqueros hurt t hemselves
in season-ending loss to Mission Viejo
By STAN GRANCH
Oelly ..... Ctrr11111 .. ,,
Critical mistakes -they were
costing Irvine H1gh's Vaqueros even
when they were on a four-game
WlDning streak.
But they were even more damaging
as they fell out of the running for the
South Coast League title and eventu·
u -..
ally a CIF Southern Conference
playofTbenh, and finall y, they helped
kiss away their last shot at consola-
11on Thursday ni~t.
The Vaqueros final game of the
year was another heanbreaking loss.
this 11me at CIF-bound Mission
Viejo, 14-1 3.
Irvi ne Coach Terry Herugan was
. frustrated by his teams' loss, saying,
"Mist.a.kes, they have lulled us all year
and \Acy rud it again tonia.ht."
Wi'lh the loss, lrvme finishes the
season 6-4 overall and 2-4 in lca&ue.
The Diablos advance to the playoffs
next week with a 8-1 -1 record (4-1 -1
tn league).
A concerned Bill Crow, coach of
M1ss1on VttJO. sa1d."Wc made too
many mist.Akes tomght; we were luclc)'
tO Wtn."
Both teams moved the ball well,
but turnovers destroyed many scor-
tng chances as Irvine had four
turnovers compared to Mission
Sea View trio roll to wins
Wa rriors; Newport, CdM h a rdly tested;
Vikings also ad vance into second rou nd
The Sea View Lcafue displayed 1ts
strcn~ io the opening round of the
CIF gJrls 4-A team tcnrus tournament
Thursday with aJI three entnes ad-
vancing to Saturday's second round.
Sunset ~ue champion Marina
also stayed alive with a near-shutout
performance, and in 3-A play, top.
seed Mater Dei romped.
A capsule look:
Woodbrid1e l S, San GoraonJo 3:
The Warriors' doubles teams swept
past the Spartans to give Woodbridge
the lopsided win at home.
won by the Sailors, I 0.8, vmtmg
Newport had a much easier time 10
this one, dom10a11ng in singles b)
winning cal.ht points.
Margo Mullally needed a tie-
breaker to defeat her No. I smgles
counterpan, then captured 6-4, 6-0
decisions. Simone DeChesne also
swept from her No. 3 spot by identical
6-4 scores.
It was also a su~ssful outing for
the doubles team of Vanessa Bunnell
and uslie Ryan. who swept and
helped Newport improve its mark lo
17-3 overall.
The Sailors will tangle with th1rd-
seeded Westlake on Saturday.
"The compeuuon becomes ~
stiff now," Manna Coach Bonnie
Stormont said. "If the kids let any of
thts go to their heads. we're in deep
trouble.
"Now they've weeded out half the
teams so we know they'll be that
much better." she said
In the 3-A bracket
Mater DeJ 11, K.atelJa %: Singles
players Shannon Lavelle. Vicki Cor-
dova and Lisa Cimini lost only one
game apiece 1n dominating thetr
K.atella f~s.
In doubles. sisters Jenny and Lisa
Smith also swept as the Monarchs
mo ved to 21-0 overall this season.
V1e1o's three.
Irvine took the opening kickoff and
drove the ball 65 yards on four pla)'S
for a touchdown The dnvc was
cappe(I by Gary Rentcna's 44-yard
run.
lrvlbe then tned an onside luck and
the Vaqueros should have recovered
tt, but the ball went off two Irvine
player's hands and landed out of
bounds.
With the ball at thctr own 46. the
Diablos went the distance on 12
plays. The touchdown came on a 2-
yard run by Todd Yen.
In the second quarter, M1ss1on
Viejo scored ~in with 4 I seconds
left before haJf\tme on a 19-ya.rd pass
from Brendan MU'rphy to Bob Doran.
The drive was made (><>SS1ble by an
intcrecption by Jay Phillips.
On the rugbt Murphy was 7 of9 for
100 yards and one touchdown, while
Doran caught 6 passes good for 9 I
yards and a touchdown.
After tradmg fumbles tn the third
quarter, Irvine scored midwa y
through the four\h quarter as Mike
Steinke ran five yards for the touch-
down. The dnve covered 80 yards on
l Splays Wlth the key play coming on
a fo unh-and-28 at the lrvme 20 as
punter Bobby Hamelin was roughed
Then the Vaqueros elected to go for
two points on the con\ers1on. but
Jam my Raye's run fell shon of the end
zone.
Crow was pleased wnh the wa> his
defense played, saying. "The defense
regrouped and made the lc.e} plays
when we needed them. That's the sign
ofa playoff caliber team:·
With two minutes to go 1n the
game. Irv ine had the ball fo unh-and-
S<Cven at tt5 own 47 The Vaqueros
decided to pass. but Raye's attempt
was intercepted by DaVJd Bancroft.
The mt.erccption, lmne's final
pla} of the year, was a microcosm of
the season for the Vaqueros.. Tum.
overs haunted lrvme all year, and
they did again last night, especially
one fumble 1n the second quarter at
the Diablo 3-y~ ltne.
Rcnten• a se01or,played well both
on defense and offense where be
gamed 77 yards on just S carries and
scored one touchdown. Raye, also a
senior. was praised by Crow, wbo
said. "Raye 1s a ·fine athlete. He can
ran and pass. plus he is a strona
luder."
On defense, lrvrne was lead by
Hamelin, Raye, and Georae
Koutures, who accounted for most of
the tackles, including some that
stopped possible large gains. Ea.ch
also recovered a fumble.
* IWUMn V1910 14, ~IS
kw'lll't~ ,, .. ,,,. 1 0 0 6-1)
Ml1"°4'I Vi.lo 1 1 0 .,_ 14
lr--enlerlt ... f\jl\ {l(o.JfUAS ldCK)
MV-Ye<1 2 •Ull (11-.on II.Id<)
MV-ootan 19 o.•• f'rotn Murf/lfl¥ (A--
111C11.l ,,_Steinke S run (run tahedl
"'"-l.500 IH luma'-41
GAMa ST A Tisna
lrt MV
"''''' oown' lS 16 lt11lf\tt•lf1rcsa11e 34·12• '2-151
F>eu•ng "•'CS.'" .. 100
P .. l'llO )'"t-1 7-f-O
'"""" t>-0 ·-· FumO!ft·tumOIH IOI! 2-7 .... ,
P-ttltl•lf•fOI -llltd l·l )-2S
INOfvtOUAL aUSHtNG
1r..-.anr ...... )·n 8rosnen. t-U. sre111u
•·34 Ml-)· 2l Goodlin, 4· lt. lll vt I· If
MV-Y9'1 1t·IO. SWMIV. 11-S6. M urpfnf
I•· 11 Er-Hor·mlnul 3
INONIOUAL l'ASStNG
1rv-lt•v• l -6·1 46
M V-Murr>t>y 7·9·0 100
tHOIVlOUAL •ECIUVIHG
1rv--&ren11ev l-46
MV-Ooten 6·91 PrttlO<I 1·9
GAME STATISTICS
LB
Flnt oowns 12
Rulhft-vardeot 73·213
Std ,.
311-2 11
147
6·9·1
3·31
2·0
6·1S
The Warriors' No. I singles player
Julie Willett had to defauft her first
game bc<:ause she showed up late for
the match, which began at 2 p.m. It
was onJy the second foss in 63 games
this year for the sophomore.
Corona del Mar 1 i , MJ11loo Viejo C:
Freshman Kristi Phebus sparked the
Sea J(jngs to the victory at home fro m
her No. I singles slot, swecpmg b)
scores of 6-2. 6-1. 6-0.
Newport girls set to 1nake run at title
Pan lno verd•oe 104
P1u1nv 10-n-o P\inls 2·?7
Fumblea·fvmb!H 1011 4·3 ~t11H·vero1 -lllld •·t1 INDIVIDUAL lllUSHING
La-Line, 9· 16', Todd. 10-42, ()fiver. 2· 1,
KlmotM, l ·tor·mlnu1 1' ~n'\Oo.41, IS·1S1, Haddix, 12·S9. N
Senta Cru1. 3-14, Pr\rnou\, 6-7, 8utle<, 2·tof·
minus 10
INOIVIOUAL "ASSfNG L8-l{tm11aM, 10-n-o. 104
S.o-8utle< S·7·1, 13, N Senti Cru1, 0-1·0.
C1m~11. l·l·O. ~
INOIVlOUAL 11t•C•IVING
LB-<ummtnoa. t·•. Lana, 1· 16.
S.d--Ontlv.,01. •·t7. ON•. 1·4t; Cemotletl,
1-1
In doubles action, Liz Ivey and
Tonya Van Hee took 6-0. 6-2, 6-1
decisions. and No. 2 Launc Brown
and Kara Spivey won. 6-0, 6-0, 6-2
Jenny Adcock and Lisa Wang
prevailed, 6-2, 6-0, 6-1 at No. 3.
Woodbridge plays Laguna Hills 1n
second-round competition Saturday.
Newport Harbor U, Beverly HUia
4: In a rematch of an earlier contest
The Sea Km~ claimed seven of
nine possible potnts in doubles, paced
by the play ofGlona Rowbotham and
Nicole Caprctz in the No. l position.
They won convincingly, 6-1 , 6-2. 6-1 .
The other two Sea J(jngs' double!.
teams each won two of three.
CdM will now faci Riverside Pol)'
next.
By JOSEPH OUDEVOIR
Delly .... C.t ¢I .. ,,.
W'\LNUT -The Newpon
Harbor gJrls cross countr) team "'111
be ou t to defend its 4-A Clf lltle
Saturda) mommg when the Tars.
along wtlh four other Orange Coast
area teams. vie fo r honors at Mt. ~n
Antonio College m the CIF finals.
The Sea View League champs wtll
be )Otned b)' Sunset League kingpin
Edison and Eountatn Valley.
Marinovich jJulls out
27-25 win over Friars
Two 1nd1vtduals. Tracy Wnght of
Marlu 17, Lakewood I: The V1k-Irvine and Woodbridge·s Shem
mgs breezed past the Lancers at Smith. will also be on h.and to try the ir
Marina. hand on the tough three-mile co11rsc
Marina's singles pla yers dropped afterquahfying in last week's prehms.
only four games along the way to The Tars will ha ve their top five of
straight-set victories. Carrie Cnsell at Maggie Henson, Buffy Rabbitt. Sand-
No. I swept to 6-0, 6-1, 6-0 wins. ra Ruffini. Tiffany Anderson and
Mater Dea H1gh's Monarchs came
from behind on the arm of
sophomore quarterback Todd
Marinov1ch. who went to hi s fa vonte
target, Paul Cardenas, with four
touchdown passes as they pulled ou,t a
27-25 Angelus t.eaaue footbaU v1c·
toryovcrnval Servite Thursday night
before 10,088 at the Santa Ana Bowl.
The victory assures the Monarchs
of the No. 2 bcnh from the league
cntenna the Clf Bia Five playofS with
still a shot at the co-championship of
1fSt. Paul should defeat B11hop Amat
Rams put Harris
on injured list
Oefensi ve back Eric Hanis of the
Rams llas been placed on th~ iajured
reserve list because of an 1nO~med.
disc in his lower baclc, the National
Ft>otbell Lea,ue team announced
Thursday.
The Rams siaJled free aaent ~e
fensive beck Tim Fox to t.ak.e Hams'
place on their 4S·man roster. .
Fo•. 32, was cut by t.be San ~eao Cba,,en wt summer. He previously
olayed with tbe Ow"trn and New ~naland Patriots. The S-10, I 86-
po1,1oder wjll be pla)'lftl lft bis lOlh
NFL teat0n si nee he wau first-round
draft choice of~ Patriou 1n 1976.
Meanwhile. q~ Dielef
8'ock continued to make aood pro-.,.na ln hi• ftClOVetY &om SUIJft'Y to
remove a ludney none on Nov. 4.
Brock, who miued l.hc Ra.ms' 24-19
loss to the Ntw Yortt 01anu tut
Sonday. is expcesed to 1t1.n at Atlanta
ttus unday.
while No. 2 Eileen Robertson won. Vickie Krasel.
tonight. 6-0. 6-1, 6-1 , and third singles Janet Newport 1s the favonte going into
Servite's Friars held an 18-7 lead in Po was a 6-0, 6-0, 6-1 victor. the fi nals. but they ha ve only lost once
the third quarter after Jeff Fieldhouse r.=====;;;;:;=============;;;;;;;;;::===::;i had hooked up with quarterback Tim
Rosenkranz on touchdown passes of
Sand 3 yards, in addition to a 28-yard
run by Fieldhouse.
But Marinovicb's 64-yard touch-
down pass to Cardenas in the third
quarter was just the start of thmas to
come as Marinovich went on to find
Cardenas for TD pe.ssei of 29, JS and
J 6 yards to ajve the Monarchs a 27 -18
lead with S:S3 left in the pme.
Brian Booker scored for Servite on
a I-yard bunt with time runnina out,
but an onsidcs kickoff attempt failed
LINEADED
Guaranteed protect ion for
our truck bed-No
scratches, nicks, dents,
rust, corrosion.
trom S 2 5 900 lnst•ll~d
and Mater Dei ran out the clock. .,. 12 2 _ 7660 Marinovich, under duress from a
Scrvite defense which sacked him ''-1;1=•••••••========!!!!!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ seven times, still completed 16 of 29 H
for 2S8 yards and no interceptions -
with Cardenas ~ponsible for 171 of
those yafds on eiabt receptions..
* --a.. 21 • ......,... 21 ac-"~ Strvli. 6 6 ' 1-15
/Mier Del 0 0 '° 1-f7 ___,,......._ j,,.,.. from ..... ,."' (klucA
llllM) s.-4 .......... "'" fkldl 1911M) MO-<ar-. .. .... lrtm Mar111ovkfl
(CCKIGfl klc'tl) '9r-f'......,.. J .... ~ ...... ,.~. <'AT,.._)
MO-CerOINS '9 -ll"tm INWIMvldl
f(Olhlfl klO) ~ u .... ""' Ml/Jllfto\lletl fklCtl ...... , .
~ " -..._ Mlwlnovtdl (CO.left klcll)
1t1 ...... • NII (Wllltl IUOJ ·--llCllG ,.. l•flf'NWt IMDMDUAI.~ ~~~':r-1~~D
MD MW'•tt•ldl. .,.... .. ~At.He8'Wte
Mo-<ar-..a, 1·1711 O'.,.lell, .. 11, Alllell,
H IJllOCCt, l •I.
~1~141"!!!"!!!s2"!"'"'!3_7~25~0 _ Jid, MERCEDES
213/921 -8588 213 • 714 6 3 7 • 2 3 3 3
714/750-7201 . @ ... _______ _
House of 11npo1•ta INC.
C· O·M·P·A · R·E
1 ~
2YEARS
·: ···.!)' . -. • f
lO AC I
LEASE & OWNERSHIP PLANS
this suson. to Palos \ erdes. wh o 1\
also m the finals It should make for
an interesting matchup :'-le.,..bu~
Park 1s also tough
For the Chargers. "'ho plan on
making some noise them~lves. ifs
:"11cole R11chot. Donna Feser and
Milch Nadon who shollld ltad the
way for Edison.
The Barons of Fountam Valle'
have a nucleus of Tonya Petnna
Nicole Milts and Michelle Conla>
In the boys' 4-A race. Estancia and
Hunllllgton Beach will tr) to make
their wa} through a loaded field
Look for a very powerful S1m1
Valley SQuad in this race. along w11h
\·ilia Park to ne for the utle.
But the Eagles. who have had aver)
good season up to date. plan on
sendmg thctr all..-sen1or team out in
St) le an their last race. For Estancia., 11
v.as Todd PeIT) who led the Eaal~ to
a third-place finish m theu quafifytng
heat. Jake Knight and Chns Bubc
should give needed suppon to the
Eagles c.ausc
i he Oilers. "'ho won the Sunset
uague crown. wtll be led once more
b) John Soto. who pact'd Hunt1naton
Beach to a fourth-place firush last
week. to advance to the finals. He will
bC' J01ned by John Gallup and Enc
..\ndcrson in the Oilers· utle quesL
Quarter Horse
Racing
at Los Alan1itos
"Remember,
all Exactas are
stlll just 'S 2 ."
Doc ~ruen
• S20allyDouble *NEW 11.00
• Super Pick Six PICK NIN•
e N~ Post Time 7:30 P.M .
•Quarter Horse Racing thru Jan. 14, 1986
•Nightly-Monday thru Saturday
e Early Bird ~ttlng 7:30 A .M. to 5 P.M .
• Call for Dinner Reservations-AH N~ Menu
%1 f l(At('(la ~ uu AUlmleoi. Clli1oMi.t '°720
kit 11'fom\lttef' C.tll (2111 4)1-1)61 Of ('11•1 '9S.12~
A~ o1 au.rt" HQrv I inc;3 Inc
J
0ninoe COMt DAI.LY PILOT/ Fttday, NO¥embet 15, 1985
M~L
NATIC*AL ('.OWffaNCtl ....
W LT I 2 0 s s 0
l 7 I
1 t I ~
10 0 0 s $ • s s 0
• • 0
I t 0 ...
~HI ll'A
•no u1 •t .....
.JOO 11• HJ 100 1• .,
I 000 27'
500100 50011)
G)ltl
100 200
lf1 1
207
l20 m · m
O•• 7 l o 100 no 1S3
NV Olellh 7 l 0 100 U1 170
.... , 'j Illa s s 0 JOO lff ,.,
Wetlllnetot1 S S 0 ,500 16S ltl
St Lout& • • 0 -I.. 232
AMIE•K AN '°"l'DUKI'.
0.-,..,. .......
s.ri Oleeo
K-ftCllv ,
C~ll
Plttt.burtfl
~· l'teullOfl
....
7 l 0 • • 0
• • 0 s s 0 3 , 0 c.... s s 0 s 5 0
• ' 0 • • 0 .... 500211 -.500 2lt Ill
.00 160 Uf 400 1'2 20S
New E1191encl
H'V Jtf•
Mleml
lndlenaoollt lklffllo
' 3 0 JOO 207 171 , l 0 100 ?2.5 15'
6 • 0 MO 141 211
3 1 0 ,JOO 111 lJI
2 I 0 .JOO 141 216 ... .-.o-
--II Atlenll (CPleN!ej 2 I I 10 l m I
ClnclMltl e t ....... .,,,. •• c~
CfllQeo •• Delle~
T-.. y at New York Jell
Miami ll lncllenaPOll•
lffW Or1Mn1 ~ GrMn Bey a t Mii· ••utt.f Pllllbw9" el Hou1lon
~11St louh
S.11 DleDo e t Oetlv.,
MW-t1 11 o.trolt
New E"'INnCI a t S..ttle
J(•nu• City el Seo Fr1nclKO
1 ~.-.~
New 'l'ork Glenta el W1U1lngton ICP16n·
1Mt4 7 11 6 p.m I
COMMUNITY COLLEGE ~ac-t C•...,w. Cc: ... _
W L T
Fullerton S I 0
Teti S I. 1
Clrrttw • 2 l
Blktrtfltld 3 l 0
GolcMn Wnt 3 l 0
PlMOlne l l 0
El C.mlno 2 • o
Lono 8Mcll I • I Ml San Alllonlo 0 5 l
S.IUNllY'& Gamel ( 7:.>0)
GOIOan w .. 1 el Et C.mlno
Pe .. dene at Bektrafltld, 1.30
Mt. San Al\lonlo al Fulltrlon
Long 8Mct> 11 Cerr1to1
MIUflfl-C. .... w.
W L T ~ , 00
Soutllwnttl'n 6 I O
RIYerllOt • 2 0
ll1ncno S.nlleoo J l o
Pa4omer 2 • O Sen Oltoo AMH 2 • 0
Citrus 2 O O<l t\Oe Coett I 0
Sen Oleoo City I S 0
s.iwcl9Y'l Gen'9t (7:.>0) <>"•not Coell al Cllru•
S.OdleOldl et llencno Santl•oo
Rlvtrtlat at Pe lomlr. I :30
OWr9I W LT
• 2 0
' l l 6 2 1 s J 0
3 • I l s 0
3 s 0
1 6 1 , s 1
0...-..
W LT
' 0 0 I I 0 s 3 0 s 3 0
• • 0
3 s 0
2 6 0
I ' l I 7 0
Sen Di.o«I Mell el Sen OleoO Cltv s.. VleW L-.ue
~DOr1 Harllor
SlOdleOec:I< Wooot>r!Ovl
Lleuna hlCll
C:O.tl MeM
Ellende
1.....-w L T
' 0 0 6 I 0 • 2 0 l • 0
2 • 0 , • 0
2 • 0 <:Mone de! Mer University 0 ' 0 niun.v-1 "*9
C>wrll
W LT I I 0
9 I 0
' 3 0 3 1 0
3 6 0 • s 0
l 6 0
I I 0
S.odelDedl '2. Ll9unl 8eK1I 70
T__,.1 0-(7:l0) H _ _., Herbor -.a. («ON dt! Mer •I
O<enot Coe~I Colleee
Coal9 Mell ~ Eatencle •I HtwPO'I
Herbor
Woodtlt'1611t v• University e t lrvloe Hlofl
S4MMt LMwe
L.-.w
W LT
Eoltot1 • I 0 Merlna 4 1 O
Wn 1mlnsttr 2 2 O
Fountlln V1l1tv I 3 0
Huntlno1on 8ffcfl I l O
Oc.Mn View l l 0
'TllwMlla't'l Scet'I
EdlMlll 51. Merine 1•
O¥erll
W LT • , 0
6 l I s • 0
l • 0
3 ' 0 , 1 0
T ........ 1 0-(7:.>01
Fountain V1ltev •I Huntll'IOlon Beecn Ocean View et Wntmln1ttr
Seu1tl C-at LM9Ue
~ W LT
EI Toro • 1 0
C1Pl1t'9no V1Atv • I I Min ion Vleio • I I
Oene Hlt11 ) 2 0
INlnt 1 • 0
San Clem.nte l • o
Ll11une Hlll1 0 S 0
TlMlndt't'• kart
Min ion lllelO H. lrvlnt 13 T......,.., ~ C7:lOJ
San Clement• "' Et Toro et Vlt lO
Llouna Hiit• el 01ne Hltl1
o...rll
W LT
• l 0
1 I I I I I s • 0
• • 0
I 6 I
0 ' 0
MIU IOn
Et Camino RHI ., CePl1tr1no
inon·teeou.J
Vlltev
AneltU• L .. ..,.
Bl•llOP Ame l
Mettt Ot• Strvll1
SI Peul
Bl1noo Mol'ltoomerv
Plus X
LM9UI
W LT
• 0 0
• 1 0 3 , 0
, 2 0
0 • 0
0 • 0
TiwnellY'• kM'9
Meter Oal 27, Slrvttt 2S
T ...... l~(7:JOJ
BllllOO Arnet et SI P1UI
Bl1110P Montoomerv 11 Plu• x
0¥lrll
W LT t 0 0
, l 0 • , 0
1 2 0
l 5 0 • s 0
OTHIR OllANGI COUNTY 'ICOllU
ClfllUrY ~
Foo1n1n JS. Orenoa 1• .,,,..,. LMtue
ll•t•lll 19, c ... or ... ll
E1Pe<1nia 23, Loera O
TOttlGHT'S OAMIES 11:l0}
C4'ltwV LMtut
El Modene vs C•f\Von (11 El Model\Cll
VIiia Perk v\ S.nt• All• I e l 'Stnle Al'le
Bowll
S.1'11• Alie \/allev at Tu1lln ·"*"~ lltll..OV "' Peclflu (•t BOIU Grenotl
LO\ AlemltO\ "' El OOfeOO lat lleltn Cla) ,-.... ~
Buena Pe ril "' Trov '" Futtertonl Futllrlon "'' Sonor• lat Le HaO<•l
Ll Hlllf"I VI S\;My Hlll1 Ill & ...... Perk)
o.rcl9ft Gr..,. LaetlW
Loa Arn~ "' \lntll9o •at C:..r11eo1 Grove)
Onnee i.-
V • lln< 1• vi Anellelm lat l a Palm• Perk l
trM·Ollncll 11 Wetltfll
IATU.DAY'S GAMAS (7:ll)
~~L-.ue
lolM G<ellde ~ lltol!ICN> AlemnOi t•t
lolM Grendel
Ll Quinta •I Gerdtll (iro..,.1
~"-S.venl\l VI Nlffnoll• (.. LI P•lma ,..,., ...........
El ~ •..i et Cllllttrano Valit"f
.... ,....,...
tMUUDAM aUULTS , .......................... ,
NIT u ca. l50 vwn. Fer..-(er....,) U0 1AO U0 Qi-'! ce...,., uo ,..,
AINPfl IQttll (Al\Mr) u o
Tll-. ....
• , •JtACTA (Ml Nici ·~,
SSCC*O llACa. "° Y•d\. Minnie lAWfti ~I UO 4AO UG Hot TOWtl Net!ft CCWCIDte) UO ).20
o..ic. .. aid\ (H. c;a,e1e1 210
1'"'9 11.10.
U •XACTA Cf.?> ,,.Id Ill 00
TIMID llACL -Yercb. Ce..OV S... ("4erll .UO lAO 2.20
C.,i•• v ••von 1atoo11.11 uo t '° Ml1ot'I Imp (ECIWerdsl l to
Time 20.AO. n IX.ACTA !H ) M id I ll 60
~Tt4 llAC .. GI .,..,.._
COdYt Jei LJnt (ClfdOlll l'".O I IO 6.20
O.vtloflt " ..... (Pilkenton) '"" uo Wiii "ff Pen4'1'1'1 IE Gerdel 4.20
Time lOA2
l'lll'T'M a ACll. l iO Yeta.' ~t Kt\etl (FrvdlV) 900 U0 S.00
Tr\Mlood IE Ge rcla) ll.20 U O ~ Pu s 1CrW1WI 3.IO
Time. 11.01 '1 Ix.ACTA <2·tl M id •ln.IO •
MXTH llAC•. 170 vtrdl
MlrHti Ont (Mlafleldl 7.20 UO l 00
Sc:oolln Scottv !OIOlrlckMnl U O U O
E-.11 Cr .... (Peullnel :uo
Time· 4'.t•
S2 aXACTA 12·ll Plld '3120.
YVUfTH RACll. UO vwch
Helo Fr.ii <c:r.w> s.JO 4.00 2 .0
Miu ~ N JI,,. (Hlr1J 3 60 l.IO
AJWtta FM tur• (Ulc:k..,I )..IO
Time. 177'.
12 •XACTA 19·11 PllO Sl7.IO,
llGHTH llACa . 400 yerch
(H ll ltelt (Udey) l 00 U0 2 10
Ca•lleatl (Brooul 3 • .0 2, 10
C.M Cl*> (NlcoOernln) 2,10
Time-20 0..
NINTH aACa. 350 Va<dL
T rkllt SNft ( llf'oo«tl ' 20 3.tO 2.40
Oolv Oolv (Cunnlnvfleml 3.00 UO
Evervtlll119 Nice IOIOerlckMnl 4.00
Time 11.36,
S2 aXACTA l•·SI PllO snoo n DAIL y oouaL• !'·., Plld suo.
S2 l'tC.K MX (S-2-2-9 or 7 or 3·•-•> peld
12.2'0.JO to tour wll'MllM llc:kt ll (Ma
not'") $l Plcll Sia cort\Olllloll Plkl Sts..0
to N wlMklo 11ck1t1 1n.-. llonft),
ll l"KK NINE (l·•·l·S-2·2-9 « 7 °'
3-•·., Plld ls.4. 10 lo tllr" winning tlckttl
(1'9111 hOr'") Carryover POOi M6,S33.91
Alltlldl"'t · l,Ml
HlhwMd ~n
TMUllSOAY'S a HUL TS ,~ ......... ., .... .-~,
l'llllT llACE. 6 furlont•, Our CPOYettl (Vlnlll 4.10 l 00 UO
S«ntoodv'I Girt (Slblllel l .00 2.60
El>l>v'• JadtPOI (C.•l•l'ICWI) 6.00
Tl"" l 13 215
SSGOND llACE. Ont milt
Menevante (Hemlncltzl JUG lUG S 40 Pl POOM Vemoow l5oll1) • :tO l.IO
Nie.k's Pr~ (Sll>llltl l.00 Time l:ACI l/S.
IJ DAILY DOU8LE 11 ·31 11t1IO S\39.60
THaD llA(ll, 6 lurton91
ScMendlCltv Lucky (Bllcll I .. 0 3,.0 2 60
PublldlY Doi (Slt>lltl '.., 640 Prlncfl1 Llrk (Werdl •.OO
Time M2 215. s.s l!XACTA 11·61 oelo Sl'7 50.
l'OYttTH llACE. 6 turtonv1
Etec1rlc HMr1 (HrtWUI 9 '° 6 20 l.20 StanltY L (Sollal 9 to S.'°
Ont Bolo Movt (0omlll9utt) 2.IO
Time 112
S.S l!XACTA 11·31 Plld l lM SO
""™ llACE. l~ ml!H Flu lly Flore (SI Mlr1h1) U O S.00 l.00
Slllouml (Oomlnouezl 11.IO • '° Fre1no Ce t1von (Velttltuelll ) . ..,
Tlme 1.S.C
U aXACTA !1-•I Plld SIS5.00.
SIXTH llACI(, Ont mllt
Slltnl Fox IPlnclvl l 40
VulnefebltllY (V•ltntutll)
Dr. llMlllY (Htrnanclttl
Time. 1:37
U aXACTA (3-SI oelO M7 00
HVllNTH llACE. 6 tvrton9L
uo 240
) . .0 uo
l 70
Ll11• MellUu (Htrne!IOtrl 7 00 J.40 UO
Mv11erv l..lnt I Pince vi • '° 2.IO FIYll'lll Gib (MlU ) l.40
Time. l.12 315.
U aXACTA 12·4! Plld $59.00.
12 l"tCK SIX (3-1 or •·6·7·3 or I Of" 2 or
6·21 Plld w,•s.c . .a 10 nine wlMloo 1iot11\ (ala notMI) 12 Pick Six conwlllloll 11t1ld
J202 40 to 217 wlnl'll119 tickets CflYI "°''"'
llGHTH llACE. 6 turlon9•
l(IOnCllk• l(u11e (Olll1y) • ..., 2.40 2.20
Clllrmlng S..Mn (McCerronl 2 • .., l.20
Nuclte r Wlnttr (Plncevl 2 40
Tlnw· 1-1 I II S.
S.S Ix.ACTA 15·3) Plld '30 00
NINTH llACa, I 'It ml!H
Ptr1ta (CH tl nonl lt,00 ?2 40 1) '°
Tt<I 1-Deln !Bled<) 7 40 •.IO
Tio Nino (OllYe rn l UO
TI!M I SO •IS.
IS IXACTA 12-91 Plld SI, 193 00
Atttndlna· 10,Gt.
• • ~
Ski Cl .....
SOVTMlfllN CAUf'OltNIA ~ -ll-11 21.'» feet of netural
'1\0w with men·mede snow eddlnt -Iner 3 !"t DY lllt w .... end. 0oen Wldnetdly
wttll lour Cllllrs -•lino. Full"'CMY Pit
11e11111 are oric.d et 121 tor eou111 lncS 110
IO< lu11lor1
Knltla llid91 -R_,, 2 twt Of neturll
1now Ooet'ld TUMdlY, ltll ~t fft "'9 mourt••"''' 20-y..,. lllttorv, on 1 llmlted t11al1 Al·~ .,.. t XPK!ec:I to 1111 _.. bV
IOdlY Litt lldlei or1cet ert I 1' tor ldUltl
•nd If for ctlltdren. ,., 9*" -lltoom 2 tett of lllOW bul
wit not -until ThlnheMno lleceuae Of
construction Of new llllM tecltltv encl
resteurent
Ml. ·----lleoortl ' .... of neturet snow ,1\1 rum ootf*S ThundeY Litt ticll ft l ert UO tor ~ (Chlldrlln unoer 12 ~lec:I bY en ldUlt eno
Mnlor citlttnl over 6S \Al fr•).
M9unl9111 Hlllll -•eciona 15 to '°*'* Of natural snow with OltM 10 .unit ,.,,,
"'"" men·medt snow ""'*'' ~. ~1 runt ooen tor oev Miine. Nlllflt .--
DeOl11s tonloillt Oev Mn tic:a.ta w. stt tor ldulla. 'I• for dlldrtn, ltld ftllN UlllN
ti(loeit ere •17 lnd Sit
k l 5-'IM -ll-1• 11 lndwl Of
netun l '"°"'' Wiii -bteltlnlne encl 111termeol11e runs lodel' or S.turdev. Afr
va~ run• ~ mort ,tllOW, Mid Mwtl
Wero, • WIOlll-tOtt ~ $11.1 SunrlM. Utt
llelltt1 ere I II for edUll1, '10 tor Clllldrlllll
lOICI 6 IO 12 YM~I 4*I .... l'-9 -,__,, 2 IO • leet of
l\llutl l -Al runa wll °"" lodeY Lift tlcllt h .,, "7 tor ldult•. '1J tor c:Hldr9f\.
SMw ~ -•eoon• t 10 , 1ee1 Of
lll!Ufel ~-~led Oy metl•mede
•now ~"•Hlno ••""-' condltloM todll'Y
l nd Sllurdly w• °'*MIN lht numMr oil runt ttlll wll Cle -*' l.lfl lldl.ett WI
1n SO for ICIVl!t. 'IS tor ~ M6dwwll beel"'-' I let! th Ml 115 IOI' ldullt , It 2S for
Cl'llldfctn
...,. v.a.v -•-i• > ,... °' "'°""' Pllnl 10 OHn IOd4tY Of S.turcley wl!l't • ,,...,
trlOlt CfllJr 111$1 .. ICI tl'ttl oo.n. uo mor1
•rM to ~· el'ld ffttermldlelft. Utt llctl t h ert U2 ,., lOU!h, SIJ 1W cNldlrtll
Clwnt.AL UUf'att•A lllM -----~IOOMf!Nft ll
Nt&:: z•• ...... -• ...,,, t to •
*I of llefllt" .. MOW OMned MoflOey end ~ 111"1 II er.In OMrllfflt 11111 ..... end. Ml. ... -NOi tH11 .,.,
~._..-Hot_,...
Ultl TAH09
Al9MI ....... -• ..,, ) 10 • fwt Of
Mt\il'll -· flllMi to OMfl a h r~ on $elU!'M Y
Idle ......... -OMll NoY '1
KJrtweM -lttclOtfl S *' et Ml\ll'al ~ '°" rt.N •II oe _,.. Se r"•" ..,...._Wlll _Nolr "
• ..... v .... -ll'"'11 s '"' Of -Wll IMtl II n"""Ofl S.lurdev
Flyera •Y goodbye
Parmer Pbll•4elpbla 1oaUe and carreut wlatant
coach Berllle Parent deli'ftn ealoCJ' for late P'lyera
&oalle Pelle Llnclber10a at the Spectlam prior to Tban-
uy•e 1ame between Mmonton and Phlladelpbla.
....
Wl!STallM GON,a .INCa l"Ktk OM.-
L.elran
Ponllncl ~ Goldefl Ste It
Seettle
Ptloltllx
w L l"ct. Ga
I I 119
1 3 m
S • SS6
S 6 •SS • • .400
0 9 000
MMtwfft otYISlerl
Hou\ton I 2 .IOO
I
l • •I'>
I
Denver 7 2 .m 'I>
Sll'I A111onlo S S 500 3
Utell • 6 .00 • OallH l 6 333 •11>
s.cTl "*'IO 3 6 ,ll3 •"'1
EASTl•N GOMFa lll NCll
Boston
~le
N-.JtrllY Wes/ll119ton
N-Yori<
MllWl ull"
O.troll
Atllnle
Clllcffo
Clevtllno lncllene
A ...... c DMSlerl
7 1 s • • s
1 6
I I c.mr9I OMSlerl • • 7 •
1 s • 6
• 6 , .
TllurMIY'• SC...
.u s
SS6
S4S
.2SO
111
L..Men 114. Portllnd 102
Clt-.tllnd 112, lnclle ne HM
Houlton 112, New JtrWv 107
o.nver 112, S.n Al'llonlo 109
S.cre men10 112. GOiden Stele 103
T ........ a ~
'"""" •I °"'"" Weil\lngton el B<Kton
o.lrolt " Alll11t1
ClllClOO 11 Mllwl ullM
New Jeri.ev 11 D•lll•
Ponlencl l I UI ell
S.•1111 11 Phoenix
Lallen 114, IMazan 102
Vt ,
3
3 •
~TLANO (192) -TllOmoaon •·7 1-1
9, Vel'ICleweent 5't S·S IS, Bowle I· 12 2·• II, Of•ll1lr 6·1' 7-1 lt, Yelenllne 3·6 0-0 6.
Cerr 2·• •·4 I , Colter •-11 2·2 10, Peuon
S-10 1-2 11, ,_CH 0-0 0, l(eri.ev 2·• I· I
s. I(. JoMtOn 0-0 0-0 o. Pwlll' 0-2 1-2 I. Totela: 3'·14 24· 2t 102..
LAKl as (114) -11em01, 2·3 •·• 1. WOf"lhV 12-n S·6 2', Abdul·J•bOer 7·22 6-7
70, C009lr 2·5 7·9 12, E. JohnM>l'I 12· It S·7
30, l(UPCflek 2·• 0-0 •, Luce• 1·7 3·• S,
McGee 0-l 0-0 0, GrMn 1·2 •·• 6 Totet•:
3'·17 3'·'1 114
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Portland 25 )0 v 20-102
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Ol Yld 111111 67-67-13'
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5'ndV LYM 6'·~13'
John Mllllftev 67·6~13'
Men. O'MMn 67·1(>-137
len Wooanem 6'·6'-137
Mluv l<u'9moto '9·6'-137
Oen HlllO«wn 67·11-131
Howwd Clll'k 11 ·'7-131
Nldt Flldo 69-7(>-1)9
Llnnv W.oklns '7·7?-13'
~y Sindelar n ·6f-140
Scott Simoson 70-7<>-140
Grelllm Merill 70-71-141
NelJ Flndl n ·7<>-1't
O.A. WtlfKlno 73·6t-1'2 s.m Torrence 71·71-1'2
Wevne Gf'adY 6t-7t-142
e.ncrenw• 73-70-143
Gery Hl._11 6'·7t-143
,....,. Jecoown 71 • n-143
Wevna Lt YI 71·7;-16'
Jlrrv Pelt 7•·7<>-14'
George Burn• 70-7t-14' LM Trevino 71·7)-14'
AndV Norlll 70-7t-14'
Jim Thorpe 70-7t-14'
Oenl1 Watson 71·1t-IO
Llrrv Miu 70-7~10
llooer Mellt>le 7 Mt-1'5
Woody Blackburn n ·1,_1'6
BIH Gll1aon n ·7,_I ..
Warren Clllnuttor 7'· n-146
Helt lrwln 73-7>-1'•
Tom Kite 7'·7>-1'7
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Ol \tld Ven Varllotl 71-7t-IS2
Gordon Brenes Jr 7'·~152 lrld a r-er 73·11>-153
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Larry Bowe, u , New V«k Mell
Tom Broolltm, le>, O.trolt
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Rod c.r-. lb. Angell CIMr ClOtno, of, SI. Louis
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lllctt 01uer, lb, Belll~•
I'll.II DIJnut, .a, St. Louil
Mlouel Ollont. Inf, S.1'1 Oi.oc>
Jim Owver, of. teltl~•
Je mie Ellltrlv. P, Cle\telll'ld
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Berl Jolln\Oll, Chieffo Whitt So•
Lvnn Jones, of, Kemes City
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•
Losing
.no joke
to Suns
Win less Phoen ix
of to worst start
in club's h Jstory
PHOENIX (AP) -The>'. quickly
are becomina the new ltuaJuna stock
of the National Basketbll.1 Associ.a-
tion but the Pboeniit Suns aren't
laughina about being the leaaue's only
winless team. "We're going to get out of this
mess," said Coach Jobn Macleod,
whose club is off to the worst stan of
its 18-year history at 0-9. "Once we
learn a little pattenoc and bener-
judarnent, we'll bC OK. lf·wc'retoing
to be ina slump, l'dratlu:f bavc it now
and then come on strong in the end,
But we have put ourselves in this
position. It is up to us to get out ofit"
The Suns, who last season had tbeir
first losing record in ei&ht ycan at
36-46, have swi tched from a finesse
style to a run-and.gun offense with
hopes of catching the world cbam-
pio~ I;.os Angeles Lakers in the Pacific
Div1s1on.
fnstead, Phoenu leads the league in
turnovers and points allowed.
"To say that we're playing poorly is
an understatement," Macleod said,
"We'renotplayingmuchdefense. We
get ahead and then we're not able tO
sustain it because we start kicking the
ball around or show poor judgment in
our shot selection."
Macl..eod said he has thought about
junking the new offense and going
back to calling set plays and slowing
down the temp, "but I don't want to
do it. Tbe co nversion to this style of
ball will be better for us ID the end.
Too many teams in the la.st couple of
years have been whipping us down
tbe floor. This is the way we want to
play in the futu17. I'm convinc.ed this
as the way to go. '
However, three more losses would
tic tbe club record of 12 -set ID
Phoenix's first year of NBA ex.istencx
in 1968. The Suns neitt play tonight
when they host Seattle.
.. I've never been through anything
lik.e this and I'm tired of it." said Suns
guard Walter Davis, "It's frustrating
to me because nothing like this bas
ever happened to me -not in grade
school, not in high school, not in
college, not in the pros, Not until now .
I don't want to get used to losing.
Teams can kind of get in the habit of
l~sinf: Confidence comes from win-
nmg.
Clippers'
top scorer
sldellned
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Guard
Derek Smith, the Los Angeles Oip-
pers' leading scorer, was to undergo
arthroscopic SUflCry today to de-
scrmine the seven ty of a knee inj ury
he suffered Wednesday night, a
spokesman for the National Basket-
ball Association team said.
Dr. Tony Daly, the O ippers' team
physician, was to perform the surgery
at Daniel Freeman Marina Hospital
in Marina Del Rey, accordjng to Scott
Carmichael, the club's director of
public relations.
Smith, 24, was hospitalized after
suffering the injury and X -rays re-
vealed no fractures. Smith was re-
eumined Thursday morning by Dr.
Eufr.ne Osher, an associate of Daly's.
' What the examination showed
this morning is that it is necessary
that this procecure (the anhroscopic
surgery) be done to determine the
extent of the injury," Osher said.
Osher also said he suspected that
there was cartilage damqc rather
than ligament damaae in Smith's left
knee, but stressed that there was no
way to be certain until the
arthrosoopic surgery was performed.
Mo~ often than not, cartilqc
damage can be repaired throuah
arthroscopic surgery, according to
Osher.
Llpment damage is always much
more serious than cartilqe damqc.
Should the injury be involve onl y
cartilaae Smith probably wouldn't be
sidelined for· much more than a
month, if that long..
But af it is a lipment tear, the ~
guard could be lost for the entire
season, or longer.
Daly was out of town but will be
back to perform the surgery,
Carmichael said.
Smith brouabt a 27.3-point scoring
averqe into Wednesday ni&ht's p mc
apinst Seattle and bad scored 26 befo~ 1uffcrina the injury with 3:0S
~mainina.
Candelarta's son
dies in Pittsburgh
The son oflcf\-handcd patcher John
Candelaria of the Anaels hat died at
Children's Hospital in PittsbWJh, Pa., the American leque team
announced Wednesday.
Tbeclilld, John Robert C.ndelaria,
Jr., wu 2YJ. He bad been in a coma
since a 1wimmina pool eocident lasl °'ri•tmu Day .
Tbe youncater is survived by hia
parent11 John •nd Donna, and a Ii.leer, Amber. Memorial ltr\'iQes wilr
be held ei ther today or Saturday in
Rou TownlhJE:!:·· the Aftlds aid. In heu of • n. tbe family ,ha.a
~ues1ed donauont be tent to tbt
Children's Hospital of Pittlbu.r&b 11
One Cbildrtn's Place, 3705 l=if\h Ave., Pittlburp, Pa.. 15213, the
Aqiel1aaid.
. '
Nixon signs sheet with Sonlcs
C ippers ave 15 -
ays to match off er
or will ose guard -
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Nonn
Nixon, who bas been unable 10 reach
a contract aarecmcnt with the Los
AnseJes .CUPpcl'li has sisned an offer
sheet with the Seattle SupcrSon1cs
that w~u~d pay the free &gent guard Sl. 7 milhoo· over four years, it was
reported Thutaday.
Both Nixon and Seattle ~neral
Manqer Lenny Wµkcns b.ave signed
the qreement that includes an option
year in wh.ich Nixon wiU paid
Sl00,000 if the Sonics want h im to
pla_y.
The agreement, however, will not
be made official untjl lawyers for the
SuperSonics have read and approved
the contract.
lbe offer &heel will be delivered to
Qipper officials today. Once the offer
sheet i1 filed, the Clippers will have IS
days to minch it or lose Nixon.
Nixon's represcntati ves a nd
Wilkens agreed to terms Thursday
morning after the sides negotiated
lhrouah most of Wednesday nijht.
"It's all signed and it'll be delivered
(totheOi{>pcrs) in the morning," said
iom Colbns, one of Nixon's agents.
"We spent a lot of time trying to make
the contract as simple and standard as
NormNbon
possible, and Norm is very happ)
wi th it."
Collins said be read Oippcfl G en·
cral Manager Carl Scheer lhe terms of
the Seattle conlract over the phone
Thursday afternoon.
If there are no..leaal problems, the
official, sjgncd offer sheet will be
delivered to tbe Q ippcrs offices at the
Sports Arena today.
Nixon, 30, bas been a oontract hold
out since trairung camp as contract
negotiations with the Oippcrs show-
ed lJ t tie Pf'Oll'e$1 towards • Jetllc-
men l
The Clippers reportedly offered
Nixon a thteo.yearcontract valued at
Sl.-nillion. Nixon, however, who
wu,,_id a S41 l,OOO aaJary lut year,
wu oot utisfied wilb the otrcr.
£.atljcr this week, bowever. tbe
:;
. withdrew their offer. In a
tercd letter to Collins, the team
d it withdrew lhc off'er bccau.se
Collins bad been .. alobc.trottina
around the NBA tryina to fiod an
offer sheet."
Nixon, an ci&bl·ycar veteran who
came to the Oi~ from the Los
Aoaclts l..Aken 1n 1983. was lhc
team's second-leadin• scorer last
year, avcrqina 17.2 points perpmc.
He also ranked founh in lhc NBA io
assists Wlth an 8.8 averaie.
Mexico tied, 1-1
before 42,501
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Diego
Armando Maradona JCOred for Ar·
gcntina and Tomas Boy scorcd·for M~xico Thunday night as the two
teams ..hattled to a 1-1 tic in an
exhibition socc:cr match before a
record crowd of 42,SO l at lhe Col-
iseum.
Play was contained to the middle of
the field throughout most of the
tightly played contest as neither team was &ble to gain an upper band.
Mlller, Haley lead UCLA Blue to win
LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) -Forward Reggie Miller
5COred 25 points and ~ntcr Jack Haley added 23 to the
lead Blue team to a 95-89 victory over the Gold in the
UCLA's annual intersquad game Thursday night at
Pauley Pavilion.
The Gold squad was led by sophomore forward
Kelvin Butler who had a game-high 27 points. Junror
guard Dave l,mmel contnbuted 21 for tbe Gold.
Highly-touted freshman guard Jerome "Poob"
Richardson scored 14 points for the Blues and had six
a.ssists. Haley also grabbed a game-high nine rebounds.
The Bruins open their sea.son in an exhibition game
next Wednesday night at Pauley Pavilion against the
Australian national team.
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1lcal wtttt ui. coua..bab1 bdMliton ~ °' • e condttlOn of leeulflt e bulkffng permit fol the~ _.,. W ,.,-.. Mt ~
IN l'IMr1ng 'vow IPC>W· of defr~ the co.t of conttructlng ma)Or thor~w end bridgee; and .,. ~ _, ....
llll09 may b9 In s--or by WHEAEAS the City Cowd dea6r• to adopt euetl a fM progr.,,, In ordet ....,_, ..,.,._ .,. ~ ~~MlE A CREDITOR to lnaure th9t M\lfe ~t 9h.il pey • lhar• of •the GOlt9 . of :!':ti·.:= (IMM Ill
or 1 ~11ng9n1 et9d"or of eonstructlnQ tran.poftatlon ey9tema ~t• to ww that deYelQPment. 0.....-• .-11 ...
tlle O.Ceaeed. you muat 11.. NOW, THEREFORE, the City Coundl of ttle City of Newport 9eect'I hereby tr..-_.. ~ tii-
your ClelfTI with 1n. coun or Of'delna u follOWI: .-.. __. tt.M • ~
pr_,t " to the pereonal lectlon 1: Sectlona 15.42.010 through 15.42.100 we h«eby added to the • • DtU CAUNDANC>e
r_,,...,,tetlYI ll>POintld by City COde 10 reed In ha entirety M toloM; P • "Y' H • • t •' ",.. the ClOUft wttl'lln lour monthe .. a.ctlon 1IAl.010. ......, Thel-eyth ... e _... 9ltdge Fee ~ , 11; _.. ...,... 1 .. ~":.::..:pr~ (A l A bulldlng permit applteant, .. a condition of IMuane. of a building ~ ~ =-..._.
In S.Ctton 700 of tn. permft, lhelf pey e 1" In.,, wnount and m8IW'ler u P<ovtded In thlt CMi>ter 1111tanlca M .. ......,.
Prc>b91• Code of Ce11torn11. to defray the co.ta of constructing bridgee <YVf/11 wat..-ways. raltways, ,. ... c clrn. • 111; 0
TM UtM lor llllnQ claimt will frMW8Y9 8rld canyon•, « conetructlng ma)of thof'oughtar• ..cftta 1 ,...... ..._ ...
not 811P1r• prior 10 lour 8ectlon 11-410IO Deftultlof-. ov11tpllr oon 111 for·
month• from the d111 olth9 ( 1) The term ·conetNCtlon' u uMd In ttlls MCtlon lnciudee preliminary "'at Id 1 d • • Io t •I•• ~'l)I ~~E~~NE 1111 ttudlet, detlgn, ecqulaltlon of right-of-way, administration of oonstructlOn, ·~ ~
1119 k9'>1 by in. eou'1 11 you eontractt. 8rld ectuel conatructlon. ..-
.,. 1 s-eon lft••••9d .., (2) Tb.a t«m 'major thofoughfate' maena lhOee road• doe960nated as m:·__, .. ,........ ..
tho ..i111. you may -tranapcl(1atlon corrldOf'I and~. primaty, eecondaty Of commuter high-,..,....._ 1 ~ ,_.
ue>on the u«:u1or or ldmln-ways on the Orange County Muter Plan of Arterial Highways, the Ctrculallorl ,_., .. -· , .. .....,.
1etr1tor, or upon 11'19 at-Element of the General Ptan of the City of Newport Beactl The pnmary .,.._ .., ....,.., •...,..
lor'MY lor the ax«:ulor or purpoee of IUCh roe.de i. to catry through traffic 8rld P<OVlde a network r •lr1a ooaM .. M
edmlnl91r1tor . .,,d '"-wt1h connecting to the State tttgttways syatem. pup'I drd *' ...._ ...
tM coun wttn 1>'001 01 ..,. '3) ·erldc-fllcilltlea' mean thoee locations Identified In the transportation ._,,., perte • "..,... vlee. 1 written roqUMI at1t· l •-1 I!.._ otrw n • ' tt1 lnO lhal you dellr• apeclll Of flood control provlalont of the Clrculatlon Bement Of other e4ement o the ........ ,_. ... ...._.
notice 011111 nung of.,, 1n-General Plan u requiring a bridge to epan a watrway, •railway, freeway. 0< ....,_..,_ ••....,..
Y9nlory I nd 1P91'1iWMnl of canyon. lllfflalM...,_1 ... 81 "° ...
•1111 aaa.ta or of ttio 1)9tl-(4) 'Area of beneftt' meant a specified ., .. wherein It nu been detwmlned OOI • ..,. .....-. ,_...
Ilona or eccoun11 rMntlonad that the rMI P<opetty located thetefn wlll benefit from the conttruetion of a ._., • "" ~ • ,.._
In Soctlon 1200 end 1200 5 of ma~=ougtdera Of bfldoe ?roject. wende clle '1e1 •11 o 1 ---------11111 Cellfornla Prot>et• Code. 11.Al.OIO Condklolie. -oftcMe clle ..... :T!
Nil.IC fl>TIC[ NUC M>TICl P\aJC fl>TlCE Nit.JC NOT)C( Nil.JC NOTlCE I -~,!·~ ,::; (A) The Pf'Ovtalona herein f0< payment or a tee shell appty only If ltl9 ma)Of ~~ c1nct.no
NOTlCI CW 011.0: N<>Y9rnbor 9, 1985 Purauanl lo s.ctlOn •590 (condltlonllly llC>P'oved by 8tvd ) Santa An1 W1Wllr9 111\0d., 1111111. '1er1t1 thOroughfera Of bf1dge fllcillty hu bMr'I Included In an element Of the City' a c .. No. l'2'WI ~·1 IAU TAC Ml1 of 1n. GoY9rntMnt Code of 1119 Planning Commlaalon on ProPoui· Cn1ng41 of zon. ....._,CA I040I General Plan Of an element of the General Plan or the County of Orange Ttio ,,_ Ind eddr-of
LOM .... llOUNA T.D. ll"VICI COM· , ... 81111 of Celltomll. the OctoW 2•. 1995) on prop-CUI No'. zc 95-3 1 p Publlal'lecl Of1ng9 Cout which WU edopted st least tl'llrty (30) days P<lor to the application f()f a INI COUr1 IS (EJ nombr• 'I
T.._ No. C4ttll ,ANY, 11 .-INMoo, ly: contr1c1 w ltl conteln .rty loelt.S at •11 .no IJ'opoaod 10 ch1ng41 cartlln O.lly Piiot NOY91'nbor 15. 18. bulldlng permit. dlr~lon o. la cort• •I
UNrT COOi C ClndJ W-iover, ......_ 1><0Ylalon1 !*milling tM 413"-30th StrMt. "-qUMt to P'Ol*tY rrom lhe Sino .. 22, 1965 (B) Payment of , ... shall not be required unleu the Pfopoled major Mu N 1C1 P A L CO u RT
T D. SERVICE COMPANY ~. I01 louttl •ucc .. •ful bldd•r to P«rnlt ..... conrtructlon of I Flmlly Rol60enoe (Slgn A.-FSa-534 thoroughlar• .,. In eddltlon to. Of • widening O< reoonttructlOn of, any HARBOR JUDICIAL DIS-
.. duty ~led t nnt• h•I• It., Or1n1•. CA llJbltJtut• IOCUfttlM fof llf'f thr ... 11ory comm•rclll· rtrlctlon) District to 1n. Pro-xJ-I ai-thor""'"'hfaree aervlng the area at the time of the adoption 0 1 TRICT County ot OrM09. under 1119 following d.. I (11') ......,._ rnoMyS wttl'IMl<I by the CXS-rH ld.nt111 condominium '-k>nll and AdmlnlatrltlW e •• ng m ,..,. -. Stat• of Cellfornia. 4401
1Crib9d deed ol IN81 WILL PublilMd Of1ng41 Cout TRICT to •n1ur• per· ltructurejn tho C-1 C*trlct Ofb(Mulmum H91ght . 45 the boundarlet Of the area of benefit. . Jemt>orM 8l\ld Sul\9 101 SELL AT PU8UC AUCTION Ollty Piiot No~bor 11, 18, formanc. un09r IN eon-Wf!IQl'I ,xc.dt tho bM1c ,_.1 (Sign Restl1ctlon) Oii-(C) Payment Of teee ahall not be required unleaa the P<oPOMd bridge ~ 8Mct1 Ce111omla
TO THE HIGHEST BtOOER 25, 1985 tract. Might 1lm1t 1n the 2e/35 Foot triet. •mt C NOTICE facility la a new bridge aervtng the area or an addition to an existing bridge t2&eO
FOR CASH AND/OR THE F·!133 A prebid welk·tl'lrOUQh wtH Helgtll Um11a11on Olrtrlc1 .t.pptoval of 1n. .ubjlct r~J I taclllty aervtng the aree at the time of the adoption of the boundarleS of the Th9 namo. tddr .... eno
CASHIERS OR CERtlFIEO ci. Mid on lho KOCE-TV The pr®OMI llaO lnclu<M9 I I.OM c:tlang9 wlll pwmlt ,,.. "'9LJC HEAIUMQI WILL area of ~It I~ n<.imb9r of pleln-
CHECl<S SPECIFIED IN lrlntmltter Ill• on Nov.Tl-modlflc:1tlon to lhe Zoning con~ Qf IM projlct -HlLD IY THI COITA' lec:flon 1s4o.o Notte. of HNring. 1111'• l ll<>mey. or pllaintlft
CIVIL CODE SECTION f't81JC NOTICE bclr 19, 1985 • 10AM:on1n. Code eo 11 to allow tn. UM alt• to 1 noo-roaiOerltlll UM. •IA '1..ANNtNG COM-I (A) Action to eat~bllsh an area 0 1 benefit may be Initiated by the City w11h0u1 111 lllorn9'J, i.: (El 292•n (payabluttll9 lime of Orenoe Collrt ~ tit• of a tubatlndard pwttlng TM ~t u1t1ma1.ay -MllllON AT ,,. CITY Ion .. _ mend tlorl f the p bile nombre I• dlreoaon Y • nu-..,. In iewf\.11 money ol IM NOTICa TO Nowmbor 20. 1985, 10 ~M. 111• width with wl<* tnan vlak>rll the conltructlon Of I HALL T1 fAI" O"IYI Council upon ht own mot Of upon , .... recom • 0 u mero d• t•l•lono d•I
Unlt9d S11t•) ... right, 11119 C~CTa..I Go......... lloef4, •1: '1t1nd11d patlllng IPICM two-llory, 13,SOO lqUll• c 0 I T A Ml! I A c Al I~ Wont• Direct«. The City Council shall M1a publk: heertng IOf eech Pfopoeed •.boQIOO 0.. deman68nte 0
and Int• ... conYO'J'l(I to s;n~i:i:,~~ut l/Clt1fto.tror Oevld A. ,Ind the~ of compect .a. foot (Of091) omc. bullOlng fOMllA. AT -=-'PM. a.., area benefited. Notice of the time and pt.oe of said heenng lnc:ludlng <Ml o.mancSWtt• cau-no
Ind now held by 11 II"<* lfowMI ,PlfltlnO ~ tOf 1 ponlon Compllenc9 w1111 the Clll-Al IOOM Al POaa.LI P<ellmlnary Information related to the ~an.. of the area of beneftt. uonc:e lboQado. •t JOHN
MIO Deed of Trurt In the ~0:11~ ~: Publllhed Or1ng41 Collt ol 1119 rqulr.S off·ltrMt lornla EnWonmentll Ouallty TMIMA~" OM MON· 1 eetlmated costs 8rld the method ot tee apportionment shall be given In the CLARK BROwN. JR 10880
prop.rty tl« .. n.ttlf d•· Diiiy PllOt NoYMlbor 8. 15. parlllnQ. All algnltlell11 ... Act: DAY NOW.Mal" .. , .. following manner: Wlltltllr• BouHrlWd. • 1900
ac:rlbed: p M. of the 3rd dlY of 0.-tt85 I Yir<>nn*1lal COl\C*l1I tor tho Fina! EnvlforuMnlll Im-MGAMMNO TMI FOLLOW· (8) Notice lhall be given at lealt ten ( 10) calendat dav-befOte the hearing Loa A~. CA 9002412131
tRUSTOR. FRED H ~bor. 1985 F-515 prOJ>OMd project~~ peel ~ (EJR) No 608 ING ~ATIOMI ' f 1 474-lJM
MOLINA, JR. PllOI of Bid Rac91pt. 01· eddr....O In • proYIOUaly pr.vlOullly cenm.o on F~ IF ANY OF THE FO.LLOW-• by the ol owtng: f Ion DATE (F«:rl•I JUN 2• 8 E N E F I C I A R y : tic. of Purcllulng Olr9C1or, P\lltJC fl)TIC[ c.,tlfl•d •nvlronm•nlll NatY 2&. 1985 wlh ba con-IN 0 ACT I 0 NS A RE I (1) Notice published at leaS1 once In I newspaper 0 oen«al clrcvlat 1985
DOUOLAS G. WEBBER Ms. a.tty l<Allln. Cout Com-documetlt (cop!M .,. l'IWl· aid«~ by Ill• PlannlnQ CHALLENGED IN COURT wtthln the Pfopoeed area of benefit. J. ,....,_ Clortl, ., r~ord~ J1nuuy 28. mvnlty~11r1ct. 1370 IUWOM9 able tor public r•· Comml.Mlon P'lor 10 or eon-THE CHALLENGE MAY BE (2) Notleee posted throughout the Pf090Md area o1 benefit wtth at least ~ -...,_, o.putr
1tl518 lnltr. No. 95-0308e8 ~· AY9, I Mela. CA (CfTACtON NIMCW.) vlow/lnapoctlon 11 tho Pt~ curr~l wltl'I the aYbt-cl LIMITED TO ONL y THOSE three (3) notlcel posted at artenal tllgtlw1Y lnterMCttons within the Pfopoeed Put>IWl9d OrWIQl9 eo.:1
of Ofllelal R«:orda In Ille of. """"'" NOTICE TO DEFENDANT nlng D•putm•nt (1 1") ZOM ct\lng9. TM EJR la ISSUES SOMEONE RAISES ar .. of ~1 Delly PllOt ~ 1
Ilea of tho AlrcorO. of Or· ProJ•ct ld•nt lflcallon (Avtao I Acu..00) PAUl 644-3200) IYllll~ tor pubic ~ AT THE PUBLIC HEARING (3) Notio.. eent by "~~ ... mall addr....ed to eactl Pf()pefty owner within 15 22 1965 _f
.. County: Nam« ~To ce;-'~~ ~Ct<ART. Ind~ DOES NOTICE IS HEREBY '*-'' ,,,. l'iOUf of 11-00 OESCRIBED IN THIS NO-tl'le boundary of the pr()90Md area ot beneftt
MIO 099d of INrt ci. ••g• ~., B ............ (~~-) 1 ~o'OUOhu ·R1EO. BEING SUED FURTHER GIVEN lhet Mid U (I. and 4:30 p.m It ,,,. TICE OR IN WRITTEN COR· (4) Notloee sent by flrst-<:IUS mall to all kn~ Homeowners' Assoc1a11ons lst tht Oa1h Pilot ac:rlti. lhe followtng P<GP-ctllor1nat ,.....,.~ ' "' publlc Miring .ill b9 held II Envlronm•ntll An1lyala RES p ONO ENC E 0 E •1 fa~I Rt-Sult H 'f\l('t'
-1y; Pr:•. Bid. 1279 . BY PLAINTIFF· (A Ud ....... 1119 hOur of 7!)0 p.111 •• on tho DlvlllOn, Room 238, "°° LIVERED TO THE PLAN~ within lhe propoeed area of benefit. dtrttton Your ~ARCEl 1 LOT 2e OF lloa f p~ or;, lt~u,~ demlndlndo) MONARCH ... day of ............ ,. CMc c.nt., OflYI W•I. NINO COMMISSION AT OR (5) Nollce by flrst-<:laas mall lo any person who has Hied a written reQuest
TRACT NO 5508, IN THE 0 ' .. ,....... 0:, B BANK. I Cllltornl• eo<p<>r· In Ille City Hiii Council Santa Ane. Cll"oml1. The PRIOR TO. THE PUBLIC therefor with the Director of Publk: WO<kS Such request thall •PP'Y for the 'l('fVl('t' IS w r
CITY OF COSTA MESA, P11nnl~lor • etlon Ctlambora, 3300 ~ EIR, tho r.ac>onM to pybllc HEARING calendar year In which It Is flied sp«1all\
COUNTY Of: ORANGE, Cout ~ Colloge You"-" JO C:AUNDAA Boule¥1<d, ~ BMch. commwita on the EJR. Ind t PLANNING ACTION 9ect1ott 15-42 010 Public HMring/ArM of 9eneftt..
STATE Of CALIFORNIA, AS g-•r1ct. J370 T=hA .... DAVI ...., ... -;· CA 92ee3. II wtllctl lllM Ind IN a1aff r9P()(t on .,,. EIR p A • 8 5 • 1 9 • F 0 R (A) At the public heating the CUy Counc:ll will con~ ,,,. testimony C'all 64.2 ~iB tll 322
PER MAP RECOA0£0 IN (7~:t,• ... 2~7 c.~: .. _,,.."',.... 't plael, lnl.,..,., P*'(90nl """ 119 k19t on Ille II lhe DANI ELSO N DESIGNj wnnenrvotee1a and other evidence At the conciusk>nof the publlclleannO BOOK258,PAGES IAND2. ""'. • .......--· tHllftOO 1 mly ~ er\d 119 llMrd lbOYelocatlon. GROUP AUTHORIZED .... ' fl and MISCELLANEOUS MAPS, Ham..onctor ~-oowt. thoreon. Allperton .. lth9rllYOtlng AGENT FOR MARTHA the City Counc:ll may, unless. majority wrfl1en Pf'OI.., Is led not IN THE OFACE OF THE NOTICE IS HEREBY A.....,.,,.__. .. WANDAl!.MGGK>,Cfrf or oppollng lhla l)(opoaal BENVENUTI FOR A CON-l wlthdrawnasspeclfled ln s.ctlon 1S •2.060 (A)determlne to ..,abl1Shan
COUNTY RECORDER OF GIVEN ll'lll th• ibov•-not """°' Jou; ,_ typO-CLaM, CITY cw ..... Ill Invited 10 1)4'8Nl'il tholr OITIONAL USE PERMIT I area Of benefit. If establlSlled, the City Council Shall adopt a resotutlon
SAID COUNTY nltMd ScllOOI District for ""'"°" ru;onao ""'* ... "°""MACH YIOwl bofor• the Plennlng FOR SHARED ACCESS I de8crlblng the boUndarleS Of the area of benefit, setting fOf the cost. whet her CROWLEY
PARCEL 2: AN EASE-Orin09 County. CelllOfnla, "' .,,....,. ..... *"' " ,... PublllMd Onlng9 Cout Commlallon. ANO PARKING IN CON· 1 actual or estlma1ed and the method ot fee apportionment. A certified oopy of Reuben H CrO\.l.'}ev
MENT FOR INGRESS. :'Ing lby ·~:r~ .. 11~ ..... .._._.to....,,_ Diiiy Piiot No\19mb9r 15. Any wrlttltl materlll• lo JUNCTION WITH A CON· such reeolutlon sh~ll be recorded by the City Clerlt with the Orange County passt-d away Novem
EGRESSANDPUBLICUTIL· ovemng • .. n oaM. 1985 bltubmltt9dto thePlannlng OITtONAL USE PERMITIR d • Offl .. 985 A d '6Y PURPOSES OVER A •ft• rot.rT.S IO .. DIS. If ,... do not .. ,_ F-537 CommlHlon•,. mual be FOR THE CONSTRUCTION ecor er . ce. ber I I resi en t
STRIPOFLAND20FEEl lN TRICT". wl" ,--.... up to. r1111•--"'-·'"""" tubmlttld 10 ,,.. proj9ct OFARESTAURANT WITHIN (8 )Suchapportlonedfeeashall beappllcable to all property wlthlnthe area o f Costa M esa
WIDTH LYING WltHIN t>utnot lllt•ttlantho•tiov.-lio. IM -· and row Nit.JC NOTICE planMr 11 !Mat 2• riour1 200 FEET OF A RESIDEN·l ot benent and shall be payable as a condition of Issuing a building permit Survwed by h ls 10\>·
LOTS 2• 25 2e AND 27 AS alat«I INM, -*' blOa lor ...... IMMJ and ,,... prior 10 Ille ,,..,.ng ( 10 TIAL ZONE LOCATED AT euth0<1zlng certain construction on such proeprty ()( portlOns thereof Where f p
SA ID EASEMENT IS ,,.. ew1td of 1 contrlCI tor I°"'_, 1M t.llllft *"'*" NOTIC• cop1e1 wer9QU!reell 488 ANO 474EAST t7lH tl'le area of benefit Includes lands not subject to the payment otfees pursyant mg "'1 e a\S)' sons.
SHOWN ON A MAP OF 1119 aboW pro)lic1. ltwtMr • .,,.. "-IM INYmMO..,. II you Chall9r\o9 Zon• STREET IN A c 1 ONE EN-to this Mellon. the City Council shall make P<Ov1Slona fOf payment ot the Robert Crow ley o f
TRACT NO. 115011. RE· it!': ""'~1~ rio! ~ ....., .._ Notlcel1ner.t>ygl-..n t1111 Ch1ng9 zc 95-31ffln oou,,. v1 A ON M E N T A l D E-snare of lmPfovement cos1 apportioned to such lands from other sources O r ego n R 1cha rd
CORDED IN BOOK 259. nd .:Ti 119 ~and qyll '::v ..:; th9BoerdofTrua1 ... oftn. youm1y ci.Nmlt10torllt1ng TERMINATION NEGATIVE 8ectlon 1S.A2.0I Proteeta. I C r o w le' of Cos\.41 ~~~c;>NE6uAsNoM;Ps MlrN :Ubllcly rMCI 1loud at the ~to :ai': .::::: rteM g:~~ c;no;:: = ~ .. ~~ 1.: o~c~~~~l~G ACTION (A) Written prote~ts shall be received by the City Clerk at any time Priof to M esa. step-daughU?rs.
THE OFFICE OF .THE 1bov•-1t1l•d time 1nd 1-IJ· ",...do .... kftOWft California. will r90llY9 ~ publlc hMrfng dMctlbed In PA·8S-199 ANOTENTATIVE the CIOM of the public hearing. It written P<Otesta are tiled by the owner. of Suzan Landreth o f
COUNTY RECORO£R OF plOOI. I 0 00 ci. ,.,.....,,..,,,......., ..... 9d bid• up to ~ no ill• tl'll• notice, or wrtttlfl cor-TRACT MAP T-12607 FOR more than ~half o f the area Of the f)(operty to be benefited by the San Oemen te. Sher ·
SAID COUNTY. "-•will M. 1 . ,........., ,....,.,., ...... Of tnan 10:00 1.m .• Monday, ~ oeti-eo to MARSHALL DUFF IELD. Improvement. and sufficient P<Otests are not withdrawn so as to reduce the D A h f Idah
YOU ARE IN 0£FAUl T c:' ~ '':' Mdl ~: I ..... .w ~ ~ 1111 o.c.m«>er 2, 1965 II the tho project plll\Mr prior 10 AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR ., .. repreeented by the protests to lest than on.half of the area to be ~ ecve: b { o.
UN0£R A 0£ED OF TAUST • 0 gu&rlll .......... _,. Purc:tlallng Dlpir1JMflt of Ile publlc: '-1ng. DUFFIELD COMMUNITY benefited then the propoeed prOC*tdlnga shall be abandoned, and the City SW"Vl y our
DATED 11281t5. UNLESS ::!'111 ~um( ~or=. c:,;::: ~ ...:-.::.:. ;: MIO colf90I Otetnct IOcated For further lnfonnltlon, TRUST. FOR A TENT A tlVE Council Stlall not rOf one year from the filing Of said wrttten prot•t•. SlSters Ln Mass • and
YOU TAKE ACTION TO bid~ d•t• !:C"' --..... ., 1370 Adlfl'I• A-..nue, OU .,. lnvlt.S to cell TRACT MAP FOR A S-LOT commence Of carry on any prOC*tdlngt f()f the same lmP<Ovem«ll under the five grandchil dren ~:W~~1A~0.,Ut 8cfLio:r Each bid mull conform do• OtAI c~&: = ,~-:a,d~ i: p1.,..,rng F~~ 1~ ~ .. ~ g~T~g'~ls~o~~~TH /e~~7T provltlona -of this section. Any proteets may be withdrawn by the owner I He was a member of
A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU Ind .,. 1"99POflllY• lo ,,,. .,.,.~HUIAllf 11111 pybllcly OC*l9d 11\d rMd 834-53e0. °' COl\'l9 lnlo ,,.. FOR SHARED PARKING maxing the aame. In writing, at any time prlOf to the cloae of the public the M asonic Lodge
NEED AN EXPLANATION eonlrlCt docutMnt•. I'll"._.. MOltla I -for: otnoe locallO It "°° Civic: ANO ACCESS. LOCATED meeting. M c•morial St>T'Vlces to
Of THE NATURE Of THE ~ r'w::.:i::~1.,.,..:.="~..... PURCHA.SEOFRECOAO-,., Drive w..i. Room AT870WEST 17lH STREET (8) If any mafQ(lty protest Is dlrec1ed against only a p()(tlon of tl'le be held Sund ay
PAOCEEDING AGAINST ~ 1°'.: do!.met1 .. I .... ~.. 0 -:----ING CONSOLE; GOLDEN 243. Santi Ana. Cllltomll IN AN MG ZONE EN-Improvement, then all further prOC*tdlngs under the provisions or lhlS ... PM Harbor Lawn
YOU YOU SHOULD CON· con r • ., M WEST COLLEGE 2702~. PIMM r ... to v I R 0 N M EN t A L 0 E • section to construct that portion Of the lmf)(C>Yement so f)(Otested aga1ntt .. .
TAcT A LAWYER "''of tile pr~~ ,, ••• aal•lll Ml Ill$ di ltl All bid• .,.. 10 119 In IC> c No 9$-31P. TERMINATION NEO-'Tl\IE shall be bared fO<. per10d of one YM' but the City Council stlall not be M emon aJ Chapel ln·
1H TM Mut•• Clrc.19. traclort on 1 pr,,,_.. 11 ...tea•......,....,_. ... cordenc.wttntn.BldDocu-PublllMd OrwlQ9 Cou1 DECLARATION r ' ......... 1 t ..._ ler menl privet~ eo.t• MeN. CA 92t2t ~ by tho Sublonlng Hlftf"' 001' ... ,.,. INf\tl wNctl .,.. now In ,.. Piiot Novwnb9r 15, 3 ZONE EXCEPTION barred from commencing new P<OC*tdlngs not 1'"""" ng any pae1 ° t.... • "(" 1 atrwt lddr .. or 1nd Subeontrac11ng F1lr 11111 dldH l•t•IH Md m-v ci. a«:ured In 1119 t"6 PERMIT ZE-80-2SA5 FOR lmf)(ovement so proteeted against Sucil P<ooeedlngs shall be commenced H arbor Lat,A,n Mt
common d .. lgnlllOn of PrlCtlOll Ac1. G<M CocM ·····•n ........ ...,. off\c9 of lhe Olr9Ctor of F-535 TOREN SEGERSTROM. by. new notice and public hearing .. Mt forth In Section 15 42.CMO (A) O l 1ve M o r i uary
property II~ lb<M, no Ste. • 100 .. aeq, ..... oerM ...... w Purc:Nalng of Nkl ~ AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR above. Dln.-ctm g 540-8554
wwrlnty le gl\'erl II lo It• r ..:,Ide:,"::!,:! ca:-....... .. dlatrlct rta.IC ll>TICE . c J . SEGERSTROM AND (C) Nothing In this section lhall pr Ohlblt the City Council. within such on• CRALEGO
comp6919n001 or corr.ct· euhllf' cliecll PIY•bll 10 ~ ~,...: Each bldo.r muat aYbmll NOTICI M SONS. FOR AN AMEND-year period from commencing and carrying on fWIW prOC*tdlngs fOf the
n•H).". Tl'I• b1netlclery the OIS;RICT °' 1 bid bond ;.:.,~::..., 1 ,...... wttll hit bid • CMllllf'• "'9lJC .. AWO MENT TO THE HARBOA conatructloo of an Improvement or portion of the Improvements so protested Lola M residen t of ~:.':!=:'c!~ In IN torm 111 for11'1 In tho .,.._Ml ....... Ml ...... =··~lf*:trNICMcMc*. or NOTICE IS HEREBY ~:~~.:;,;'tc,N~:~LA~E against lflt finds. by the affirmative votaottour-flttl'laot ltsmemben. thalthe Laguna Hills Pas.<!ed
In IN ~ MCUted contrec1 ctocument• In en , .,,.. H HI • "' to 1119 OfO. of IN~ GIVEN lhll Ille City Councll 3 PROPOSED 8UILOINOS. owners Of mOte than one-half of Iha.,.. of the prC>PertY to be benefited are away November 12
th•r•by. ~rllOfOr• ••• llTIOunl not .... ttlan 1~ of ,,., ............. CornrnuMy Colloge C*trlct Of IM City ol ~ 8-ctl TOTALING 80.000 SQUARE In faYOJ of going IOl'Ward with such lmf)(ovemetll Of portlorl lhereOf 1Y85 Som Apnl 15 ~Ind delllered lo tho tho maximum amount ot bid •.:.c:,.,.••~ &owd Of T,..... In en wttt llold 1 publlc ,_~ FEEt WITH OHE. 50,000 8ectlon 1IA2.070. UM of F.... 1898 m Cordova, ILL 111-...cs I wrtt19'1 Dec-• I guaflnlM tftll the bid-..... fl" .1•1 I wnount nol .... "*' n..,. purauanl IO tho Celltor SQUARE FOOT BUILDING, Feee paid pur.uant to tttl• Mellon tnall be ~led In • planned bridge larltton of o.tlUlt er\d 0.-d., wlll 9nllf Into th• ...... ,... ......... P«OWll (5%) of tile IUITI bid Wet•r Cod•. to ,._ t l OCAT ED AT 3500 ..._._, IA. t .. ~ .. , tund A fund stlall be eetabOthed tor eaetl Surv1ved by grand-P<oe>OMCI oontrllCt " 1119 ...,....._,........ t o.a he bid view/approve tho tlnll dr1ft 1 COST A ,....,,,,,. or ma,.,. ,..,.oug,, are !IOn Barrv Ward SlS-mand tor Sate. Ind Wflt1WI ..,,,. .. awerdoO to Midi IMltllllSIMf ............ Mlguafet'IM1 ... tl . OftheUJbanW1terMenage-HYLAND AVENUE. plannedbrldgef.cllltyf)(OjectOf&eCh planned majortflOtoughfateproject II . . • •
notlc» of bfMCtl Ind of etec-...... ..._ In the ~I oft~ A. II ' • ::= "-' Wiii .ntw Into ..... t Pllfl tor Ille City of MESA, IN A POI ZONE. EN· t-.... of benaftl Is one In which mOfe then one brld~ or ma1or ters. clad ys Elhs and ''°" to causo tile """9r· .......... ' . ... I 1111 I • •• propc)90d ContrlGI It tho "*' . v I A 0 N M ENT A L DE . .... -M Id d G 10 ... allO oper1y to .,,,., Into Mid contract ...... I ......... ,... MIM .. awanMd 10 l'llm. In ~ 8Mctl by tile City TERMINATION NEGATIVE tho(oughtare I• required to be constructed .• ~·t• l\ln<l may be I re re~g. • :r=lefy Mid :J;:1ona Midi recur1ty wfll bl for· ....... • •'•11011 o •IN.....,.., ot '*"'" 10 .,,1• rtafl. DECLARATION •tabllahed COV8(1ng ell of the bridge projects Of major th«ougl'lfares In the I brother. Boy d Filbert
end tMIMft« IN ""°": ltlltM. ..... ............. ::T! Into IUOl'I contreot. ..... NOTICE IS HEAEBY 4 AN ORDINANCf arM of benefit. II the area of~ enoompasw one or more bridges and I She was p~ed tn
...,_ ca111ct Mid no11co of ~ oon~ ~ t':,.~ .,....,._ er=• of tho en.ca• ti. =~W,: ~~ ~ AMENDMENT FOR THE one or m0te thofoughfaret and all lands within the area ot beneflt are subteet death bv her h usband
bf..c:f1 Ind of -.ctton 10 ci. ~ ..,.«' tt~ r ..iw lf'f'f Ir· C:... ..._ ,,_ . Of In tN ~ of • tile l'IOut ot * ~"'"· on tr. CITY COUNCIL OF THE to the same proportionate tee tor all brldgel and thoroughfare. a single l\lnd I J~ph • C'raJego f'u
'900fdod August 1, 1N4 .. ~·In lfty blOI or In Tho narn. Md lddr-of bond. tho IU1I IUl'i\ thet90f .. OayefMl:eunll••· ... CITY Of COSTA MESA. may be estabflshed 10 account tor ,... peld Moneys In IUCh fund shell be I
lnlitr. No. 15-295217 °' Of· the blctctlnO. 1119 court •: (£1 nomOr9 Y ti. fortllt9d to MIO ()OI.. In tM City .... Council POST OfflCf eox 1200. upended '°'81)' f0< the conatructlon or relmbut"Mmeflt tor construction ot I nera services werf'
llolal Aocot~ In Ille~°' ~to tho p<0Ylt60nl dltecdOn ct. ta COf1• •r. i:o ~ may .+ttl<kew Cl'IM'lt>ata. 3300 ~ ~~~f0N1~L:N5 ~E~~ the 1m ~t• llWVlnQ the ar• to ~benefited and lfom which the tees held Frid~y N~~<* Of ... of Section 117'3 °'.,.Labor MUNICIPAL COURT OF Of'. his bid tor . pottod tor~ 8ouleovwd. NeWpoft laac:tl. COSTA MESA MUNICIPAL c~ the IUnd were Coflected. or IO relmburM Iha City for the oottl of ber I ~. 11 30 AM at ..::!.~.~=-=.~~~~~.;:t ~E ~.iJ:: ~ :.' 1~5l,_d8Y9 .._. :::,:.~ ~~i~~ ~-= ~~ ~LA~~'11~ i~ con.!'cr':."11t~=~t Coost•ua•sca. ~.:/"j,.~~~~;:;;
Qflmplod,ro-llllnod~ ~:=,.:: i~l~Crowrl~~ ~ ... 1:~ .... ,. =IP'*' Ind ba llMrd NANCE. ENVIRONMENTAL The City Council may~ the ~tanQe ot consldetallon In lieu of Bf.arh. C...ltf Paoftc
gar pc1 all>C\, OI ~"!11t1on1~1'1• g•n•ral 92t71 , • • tNprtvtleglofr-toct· wA:DALMOQIO.CITY DETERMINATION EX-the payment of feee eet~ herein V1f vw1 M ortuary Di-
to pay tho ... ...._ lfty Md .. btdl or to ~ cw ... EMPT -----11--...... '1 ()'9Mw '"'*' . ~sum of pr9Vllllng rei."' per,,_,. Tho l\llM, eddl'9al. Ind 11ty~or~ CUM, ""''' • 5 PLANNING ACTION ----...,.,. Ill nMll rf!CtOM 644-2700
) eecured by Mid ..... lftd tl'le ......... ·~~Of~ fonnalhlM In Ill)' bid Of In PCMITlbCH PA-85-1114 FOA c a H OE· The City Councll may ~ the ~ICemenl of mon.y rrom tPMI -
dead of ·Nil. wlltl.,.,.... j)l...itlng , ... tor ~ ttfl"• Mt0tn9Y. or p491r!ttfl b6dctlft9· PutllllNd Orln09 COM' V!lOPMENT COMPANY. General Fund. the c;llpltel lmpt~lta fund()( the contrlbutlona fund to pay
•Ill Mid"* pro-Med .,.. and oYet1trnl wont In tM IC>-wtttlout If\ att0tn9Y, la: (EJ Lee A. ....... v ... Olly Plot NcMmlMt I S, AVTHOAIZ.ED AOENT FOA the oosta of oonatrvctJng the ~· cowred ,,.,..n and ma~
vencae. If tlft, uMlr' IN uJlt'f In.....,, ..... woric .. to nombre, le ctlracc6on y el"""' Chll I Ir ' I I ... .... ,. BACO LIMITED. FOR VAR ... relmbutM thw fund• '°' Mid\ advencl9 l\'om plenned bridge faclUty Of HA"~ LAWN-
t«1'N Of~ Deed Of trwt, 119 partofmecl fof Wiii cnft m•ro dt t•l•fOllO d•I , C:.Wt C.-Mtty ,.63f ANCES FROM STRUT -)of thetOughfara tundl a.tablllhed purwuant 10 thll ctl.pter MT. OLIVE
,.. ofwOee, er\d..,.,... or type Of woric• nteded '0 •t>ovedO cM1~em..0 .,....... "8JC MmCl SET8ACI< "NO INTfiR~ ~ ....... 1&.AI. .... •111 .... Mortuarv • Cemeiery
of the TNllMe end Of ... :::. ": ':'~.;.. '"': ~cMmenden·:. er:.~ Publllflect Oretioe Colet LANDSCAPE REOUlfU. " the buldlng -~ • condition of Iha lauanca of the Crema1ory
tNllla oreMect by_, Deed T"tCT omoa loeat.S ., uc .. ·~H~AD o. , Plot~ t5, 22. ..cnnoue ..., ... ,.. ~~~ri~ALw10~E AP"'i~r =c:"t. It ~ or .,. to conatn.ict • br'4Qe °' mat<x 162$ G1s1er A.,. of;;: ........ M '*"on: COMt ~ ~ FA AUE. ao ta, Tow11 ,...,. ~ ~1::.,.. FOR Off.srrl -'CCfSS IN ' the Ctty Coundl mey enter Into • relmburwnent llQiMmenl c~::,~s~
MoMey Oaoam4Mt •• , .... Olllr'lct. Ptly. fee PlatWllinO c.itar DrM. lulM ~ ctolrlQ ~ .. Ernaro-COHJUNCTIOH WITH TH! wttfl the appkaint. $udl agieernent may ptcMde '°' peymert11 10 the .. uo. p.m In ... lotlby =: "': ~=-...: (~=· CA t2t PWlJC MJTIC( _,,Conti~~ 2t'8 CONSTRUCttON 0' A ~ erom the brtdQe t9CMy or "'*'thoroughfare fund coYer1ng that ~ IOCeMd ., to\ .,;.. ... poeMd .. ... DA F«N FU 2 1 s Onlnd A~ Senti AM. 6.000 90UAM ,.DOT COM-apeclftc ~ to .......nburM the ~( tor oo.ts ~ tnocated 10 the 14MM\i.-til~,Or.,._ ;:-.... , ... TE,; I 1 " llOnmO. CAH106 ' M!ACIAl I UILOINO. liC)pllcent'tptopertfln theNIOtu1'<l!n t9Ulblthingtha ..... OfbeMflt lf the
Caltfomle Ntll. 11.Mt Ila inanctatOfY upon Mme a. ~ CllMtl PUl&JC ..,.,.., I O.vid ,. L..cn. II 11 lOCA tfO At 3001 NOA™ ~ ot fMjOf ~,.,. fund ~ mor'8 than one protect. relmbul'M-~ "": o:,.IN = the CONTAAOl'Ofl to wtlonl "1 D. "'"I,.,,~ 01~~~1ci:_, ·~ ... "= = ~-~1' '· LllGU"I ~~:~ ~T~1'~~~~ ~.,,.. be mede on • ptO rst• *"'~Ing the actual or •ttmated
\tie 10U1 ~ al fie urto IN~ ':u':i=ic-= ~Oot0r:2,cc:: unt1 Plennrng Com· oacW.1 A L..cft .. 11 V I A 0 HM ENT AL D l • ~ of the~~ by tt'le IUnd. ..-.,,_, peld ....... °' .. Giii-vpon :Ji ...... . MllltOft .. .....,. Pl'f*1cwc Hwy 1211 .'-"OUM T!At.elNATlON HCQATIVl ......... TNll~anoelNllbepubilMdonoe lnthe "''-l'l~•"'lil!IJllCIPtlp191DI .. ., e ..... ~ tfla fllbOife • $:r ..:"~~ 1• 1• 15• ,... ,~ to.,...., iWllftlllO lteGll. CA tlM, DfC~AATO. of the City, and t:l'9 a.nt Wiii be enec1IYI "*1y (30) deys after the date of 111
·---lla.111111-ld ... of nit ft ,._to al wortlart • _.. ,.,_ Of ....0 TMI ~ la con f'Ofl FVRTl4£A IN"OR ~· '°' _, a' 11 -. ..,.-. .,_.,..""..,.. 111 .,.. •· ..UC llD1lCl .._......, 1n .. ....,. ......., ltJ¥: 1 .,._... '*' "'ATIOH OH ll1E ~ TNe ordll1e11ioe WM Introduced et a ~ meeclnQ ol the City Council Of ... ··-.. ...... ...,.. °' .. COfttrecit. .co,,_.,., .... ,. An• ..... A PPLICA Tt ONS, 1Tllf . the Ctty °' .... ., °" •wt"-'d on the 16ttl CSey °' October' 1085 and ...
• II ,_..... ..... lN NO ~!My wMIClr9W 110nm 0/1 .._...,... ~' l aec:tl flt.oNf 7144245 <>" CAl.l ...---the 12'1'1-. o1 ~ber 1MS...br the loloMng ~ to Wft
..... Of ..... ....-e bid flllll fOr 1 ~Of lfllty ~NII •II 0. Of ...... ~ lllll ......... -Mid \At ™I Offl<:i ~ THE ---Of\ _,. • St tMlf De .... "*' M total l{a-,. sft8' ...... _., NOTIC~ 11 HlflllY ._ .... ,_ wflll .. CcruMyc.nd Or· ~ DePARTMll'iT. A~Cow~Aoee,Cox. Heii...... reuea
...... 11 ... .. ........ .,..,. GIVINtflilt °"°"~ l1IM ........... : 110 .... Goumy on MCMMblt AOOM:I00, 71'Al9'DfWI.. AMMl,Cou11c111..-.. .......... ~
If a ti Ut .. &4111111 A .......... '*Id..,,. 1 l oftti.Olty0f~fiaaaflfft», or•'°°'!'._...,.._, 1t.1tl6 COSfA MH A. CALI· _,... W "'8f Ila W-......,.. ... Wtd ... -.. MN .,_...._...,..,........ '9tl1' ,()flM.t. ....., ...... = ... ..., .............. ~ swtor to__., ~ 0...... ,... 11 11 1"1 ' ~ "-':; "3Uate0 °""It 0... ,.......... Or-. COl9f A"9111: ._. L CllJ ~
=··111r••c-.... ·~·.:=-~ $F'=e-::,::::1 ~"~NO~~F~~~ ~-:-.::t ~~· = "°' Nofll'lller ,, NlllNd<>r-. o.trP!O'NCMl'nt* 15. tMS
7er11tit111 doCll ~ '°" Ull PfMitfT NO a t'll'I • _,,, .. _. ..... Ma I , ......
I --·~ I "
F-'42
• \
Pl!.-CE NOTHE"a
U!ll •OAOWAY
llORTUA.RY
1 10 Bro.dWwy
Cotta M-.
64~·9150
I
Atrium Court stores open
Thirty-one new stores in Fashion Island· s
Atrium Court off er a tol:lch of European style
bvine Co. officiils reoentJy marked
~ openina of 31 new shops at
Fuhfon Island's Atrium Coun.
At ribbon-cuuioa cercmorues,
Irvine Co. President Tom Nielsen
said the onaoina development of the
three-story mall Wlll make the Atnum
Cowt "'the jewel of the enlJrc shop-
Pina center.•
The afternoon opeoina pany fea-
tured a Renaissance theme witb
1trollina musiaans aodentertainert.
Later, the Irvine Co. hosted nearly
1,000 store operators, COl'Qmunity
leaders and other guests for dinner, a
fashion show and entertalnment.
1be $33 million Atrium Court
opened six months aao with the
Irvine Ranch Farmer's Market and
bas since boosted saJes and ped-
estrian traffic throughout Fashion
Island, Irvine Co. officiaJs said.
About 20 more stores will be added
to the Atrium Court next spring.
Ricbud Scimeider1 the Irvine Co. 's
dittetor of retail lcas1n~ said
.. This is the ideal time to hold a
pnd opening," Schneider said. ··we
hope tb.Jtwith the opening of these
shops, l.te'U set the pace for the
opening of the entire Atrium Court."
Schneider said 38 leases have been
siancd, but only 31 of those tenants
were able to finish interior construc-
tion and set up their mercbandise in
time.
Of the 31 new stores. five arc based
in Europe and I 3 more ars locating in
California for tho,_mst time.
Schneider said.
"We actively went after businesses
we felt should be in here," he said.
"The first thing I did was look at what
wasn't yet available in the area. Our
customers arc looking for quality
merchandise and that's whai we went
after." ,,.
.
and aif\ stores. The 31 new stores:
Alan Austin -European-des.ia;ncd
coats, suits, dresses, spon.swear and
leathers; mall level.
Angels & Cherubim -infant.s.
childrens and maternity fashions;
man level.
Antoojo Buttaro -women's 1'-1-
ian fashions and accessories; mall
level.
Benetton -com_plete oolJection
includina children'S fasruons and the
Sisley line; upper level.
Bip -l*11es and men's casual sportsw~r from France; mall level.
A Brustle ...... sportswear ~ted in
uermnay· mall level.
Caswe1'·Mutcy -more than
1.000 (oreian and domes1ic penonal
care producu for men and women·
mall level. '
Cuzzens -Italian mciuwcar. f~
tured labels include Brioni, shirts f>y
Burini and Pcpso, neckwcar and
sport shirts by Stefano Ricci and
Panca.Jdi and ttes by Mila; mall level.
Crysta) Fire Mist -desianer
cry1tal. jewelry, 1eulptures and Euro-
pean stemware; upper level.
.......... The shops include dcslil\er-clothes
and upscale sportswear boutiques,
shoe stores, jewelry stores, a sta-
tionery store, children's clothes stores
Mediterranean architecture met. tbe tone for tbe touch of
Europe found throqhout the Atrta.m Court in Fuhlon
laland. ·
-it:W l\Jil:liJifu:t1,..-----Q------------
NEW YORK (AP) -The folowlng 1111
ll!OWI the N.w Vont Sloctl EaCNinoe Jtockl a nd warrant1 that nave oone up the most and down the mot! b9Md on w~t of dlenge res11rdle11 of volume tor Thursday. i~rltlts trading below 12 1r1 In(;!-• . Net and ciercent1ge cha"9ft •r• the d ·~ between the i>revlou1 clOllng
l>f' 1nc1 todev'• blsm. Price.
•me LHI Chg Peli
low I 6~ ~ UP 8·6 ~ ~=· ~~ :1· ~ f.l
.. ,:: ~ ~~ H
Having Trouble Selecting a Gift
for Your Special Someone?
Watch for gilt •uKKe•tion 1 lor th i1
holiday •e1 .. on in the Daily Pilot'•
"Chri•tma• Gilt Guide"
appearlr11 Sunday,
November 24th.
OtVarcte -llahan shoes, hand· baas and accessories; mall level.
Donavan & Seamans -dCliaQcr
jcwclty, 1.ilver, Lalique and imported
porcelains; upper level.
· Ellcsse -Italian /rivate label
couture sportswear an Ferrari For-m~ leather aooda desi,ned by
Cartier; mall level.
Forever Children -children's
apparel and toys incudi~ Mia Barn·
bmi Gianfr&nco Ruffini Sport,
Delfino, Monalisa, in addition to
Corgi toys and Lenci and Briaittc
Deval dolls; upper level.
Gallery Miya -custom-dcsi&ned
hand-knit sweaters made in Cali-
fornia: upper level.
~l:Z:..... Japaneie sportswear col-
lecuon for men and hiab-tecb ac-
cessories; upper level. Maya -more
than SOO lcgwear desians Lo addition
~o leotards, ti&hts and accessory
uems; mall lever.
Mondi -sportswear desianed in
Germany· mall level.
Pierre fkux -sianature look of
the French country Provence in
lifestyle collections of antique
furniture, men's and women's ready
to wear, linens, accessories and gifts;
oo~le.Ym. . -
Paul Mayer at Serena O' ltalia's -
bri&htJy colored. floral and aeometric
patterned shoes with sculptured heels
are the store's sianature; mall level.
Splash N' Aash of Newport -
dcsianer swimwear, sportswear and
couture cvenina wear; upper level.
Stephane Kelian -women's high
fashion shoes imported from France;
upper level.
Tahari -first sportswear store in
the West, known as a manufacturer of
better designer label suits and sporu...
wear; mall level.
Tango Oub -contemporary
European and California ready to
wear for women; upper level.
Tripos -women's apparel store
and leather by Erez, designs by Flora
Kung, Betsy Johnson, Harve
Bernard; mall level.
Theodore and Theodore Man -
lifestyle sportswear for men and
women includes desirers Claude
Montana, Sonia Ryk:ic , Byblos and
John Charles Castelbjacx; mall level.
Ultimate Invitation -custom-
designed stationery, invitations and
announcements, imported ceramic
aiftware and fine china; mall level.
Wyndham Leigh -known for
personally-designed fine jewelry and
the Lambert Collection; mall level.
Ylang Ylang -fine and costume
jewelry designed in Italy and France;
mall level.
Business Referral
Assoclatlon to meet
The Bu .... 1 Referral A110Clatloa meets each Monda~ at 12: IS
p.m. at the Seventh floor Rettaurant. Home Savings Building. El
Toro ROid at the San Dieao Freeway.
Profesaion.ala.t businessmen, manaiers and $Illes people can learn
more by caWna Sel-1106. • • • Blnba11111 Altedatet' n e Stratepc Plu.aU.1 Worlltlaop wtll
broadcast on the AMCEE/NTU satellite TV oetworlc from 8 a.m. to
10 a.m. Dec. 9-11.
Conducted for executives, the workshop will permit v1cwcn to
talk by phone with workshop leader William Birnbaum. •
For information onoost and reception, ca1ft404) 894-7 418. For
more oo the workshop, caJ1 (714) S49-2990. • • • • An introch,1ctory sentinar aimed at helpina entrepreneurs will be
sponsored by the Ba11Dess Retoarce Center on Nov. 23~ atthe
Anaheim Convention Center.
The all-day seminar will include discussions on sales develop-
ment and motivation, stratcJies for arowth and profit, and
telecommunications. For more infonnation, call 898-2464. • • • Wrley Orec•wa will discuss effective writing at tbc neitt
monthly meetina of the Oru1e Couty <::.apter of IM Amerlcu
Society of Womn Accoututt on Nov. 21, at the Newport Sheraton,
4S4S MacA.rtbur Blvd., Newport Beach.
Cost is $20 per person for the 6 p.m. meeting. For reservations,
call SS3-0440. • • • "Sapervlsia1 People: Lean Maaa1erlal Sk.1111.'' a one-dAy
workshop offered by Orange Coast Colleae on Nov. H. wtll focuson
communication atyfc-and establishlna aood worlUng relationships.
The S2S workshop will be held from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in room
119 of the Fine Arts Build.in&. For more infonnalJon, call 432-5880. • • • A Real Estate Tu ud lavettmeat Coafereace presented by the
Southern California Chapter XII of ~rtified Commercial Invest-
ment Members will be held Dec. 4. at the Airporter Inn, 18700
MacArthur Blvd., Irvine.
Newpon Beach attorney N. Brooke Gabrtel1oa and Oakland
attorney Marvin 8 . Starr will conduct the day-long conference
bcginruna at 9 a.m . For more information, call 854-86 70. • • • Jacll LJ.Uletter, eldest son of Art and Lots Li nkJetter, will be lhe
featured auest at the monthly meeting of the Parcuslag
MU;&1emnt ~Hoclatloa of ~e Couty on Thursday.Linldettcr,
president of Linldetter Enterpnscs and manager of the diversified
family inv~tmcnts, will join the purchasinf ,nanagers when the
mcctmg begins at 6 p.m . at the Registry Hote in Irvine. • • • ''T•e Female Eucatlve: A Coa.fereace for Women ln
Mau1~mnt'' will f~t~ seminars on executive leadership, sales.
budgeuni, communicauon, law and personal power on Nov.23.
Sponsored by the Scnatlacoast Assoclatioa for Female Ex-
ectiUvet, the conference from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. will be held at the Inn
at the Park Hotel in Anaheim. Cost is S65 for members. $85 for
nonmembefs.
For more infonnation and reservations, call (7 14) 857-9499 or
(818) 710.981S • • • "Usla1 Retinmeat Plus for ltU Tu Savla11,11 a seminar on
oplJons open to the self~mployed and entrepreneurs. will be
~nsorcd by the Pension Group, Inc. and Prudential-Bache
Securities on Tuesday and Nov.2 1.
The first meeting begins at 4:20 p.m. at the lrvlae Hllioa, I 7900
Jamboree Road. The second meeting at the same time will be held at
The Ritz, -880 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach.
For reservations, call 9S5-l 995 between 1-5 p.m . • • •
"
•
•
Orange Cout DAJL Y PILOTIF~. ~ 18, 1 ... *<:'7
Stock market retreats
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
posted some scattered losses today. retreating after
Thursday's nsc to new highs.
Analysts satd demand for stocks faded a btt
after mt.crest rates turned upward in the credit
markets on Thursday.
WHAT AM£x Orn WHAT NYSE Oio
AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADER S
GoLo QuorEs
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
METALS QuorEs
fam005 la b~l.s ...
j
I
Cl OfMQe eo.t DAILY PILOT/ Fl'idfy, NcMwnber 15, 1915
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
THE BIG GEORGE FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
-~---.............
"I'll be Rodney Dangerfield and you
be Joan Rivers."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
.-ff -.]•••WI• .~ ...
"Thanks for staying home with me while
I'm sick. Marmaduke ... ! know how much
you like school!"
DRABBLE
°"O, l.l!>TEN To 11 r<
1\41!> PA~£.
~ROM NO·NEGKO'!> ~K P ..
~
~ ~~
GARFIELD
"RAL.~ ~~el£'!>
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6ARFl£LP, THE WORLP fAMOU5 t
TOMAiO !><>UP PIVER' e,cooR'!> THE MOR.-,1.,> DEPTHS IH ~(ARCM OF
THE £.LO~l\/E ~~~ TOMAfO vUPPY
MOON MULLINS
PLANE TRUTH ... ~,YEH .. ~ow
COULD /T HAVE
SUPPED
MY MIND?
HoME·
WORK.'
JUDGE PARKER
"Helen, get aome pe•nut1 out here on the double!" -
DE1'NIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
• ARE~fr YOU ALLOWEU lO ORIVE A CAR E t™ER ? '·
by Kevin Fagan
t 1-4~\J~ A ~m1NG
11 W..~ 'i llllCE
by Jim Davis
FOR TJ.4E flR5T TIME
IN Hl~TORY THE ~PAWNING HA6rf5
OJ: THE TOMATO GUPPY
A RE CAPTOREP
ON FILM
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
11M H.ALFW.AY
IHROUGH MY
PUTTING IT OFF.
by Harold Le Ooux
A:H:.. YOUR °"'D IF
HE WANTS ME TO
Slo\OVEL YOUR WALK ..
I-IE SAID WHV SHOULD
ME PAV YOU Wl-IEN ~E
CAN DO IT MIMSELF?
BECAUSE IF 1-lE DOES IT
HIMSELF. HE'S LIABLE
TO l-IAVE A l-IEART
ATTACK AND NEED
8VPA55 SU~6ER'f ...
BLOOM COUNTY
PrJl('fN(f( ..
Pf P )QI HEM ftfJ.
THE LlffEM' l4Wlr !
North-South vulne rable . South
deals.
NORTH
•&
<;)AJ1084
<>K S
•Q 9803
WEST
•AQ10743
<:> K &
EAST
• J 92
<;)753
0 83
• 1042
SOUTH
• K 85 <;) QU
<>J1070 ••us
O A Q942
•A7
T he bidding:
.. ~ WHt N..-tli f:ut
I NT 2 • I <:> P ...
I NT Put Pa.. Pau
Opening lead: Four of •.
'Tis Lhe HHon lo begin look1nir
for tt.ocltlng alutrer for family and
friend.I. If ~ey ll"« bridge playera.
you couhJ ao a lol wone lhan 1•t
Frank. Stewart'• delightful new
book. ("A Chrlttmas Stoc'klnr,"
pubUlhed by the author. Pa~rback,
6' pp.. '8.00. Avatlabl by mail
order only, po•l free. from: Stock
lor. P.O. Box 18099, Memphla.
Tenn. 38181-0099.1
L by Berke Breathed
,
11£ (JJ ~ HlfS ~ THllr 'M 6Ml'fl/C PmCnOIV ~ ~ CQSN(I(,
6WY 51Mf€K'/, l..lf(E OIJXellE
R'fXI< /tffM,, CM POU.I/ff
1?MMPJ/ ll#r
MN/PS '*tj IJ/1111 ~. !::,(
I ~.-r 11/t itWi'5 ~ ~ ~
AW t.iAP 1rJ lttPt6/'R£NJ
~d/i/j/tl IWP JtCIMR
IUflW/5M. 1}1(/,.11fE
~-c~.
l r:i.
~
l4f" """' KeT1lflJ{ 1(J 10 11£ Hlt.MIOVS CMtlC AL KtlfflY IN l'ft:06({ES5 ...
by Lynn Johnston
by Tom K. Ryan
CHRISTMAS FOLLIES
In it you will meet the members
of the author'• imaginary bridge
club. Ir you think you recognize
some of them. perhaps they were
members.or your club at one time or
another. Certainly. we found some
or our acquaintances among t he m.
When three men from t he East
•
OMAR
SHARIFF
arrived at Lite club ahortly before
Chrf1t mas. they became involved ln
a challengf match. The viaiLora did
not fare well on this board.
"At one table, Kelly and Sadie
ruched four heart.I on lhe North
outh cards and Look 11 tricks
without difficulty. In th• replay.
Balthazar o~ned 1 NT H South,
Henrietta overe&lltd two apadea.
frump forced with thr e heart• and
South tr1ed three no trump bee&UN
he wanted to protect th~ 1pade
king.
"Unwilling to (OMHt • apac:M
trick. Henrie tta at.&.ri.ed wltb the
four of clubt. Dedarer played low
from dummy. ainc. there w11 no
hurry to try winnanfr a lrick with
the queen. Mannie. third to play.
calmly produced the 111ck , .. or so
s he thought. It was really the kang
of cl ubs, or course.
"Declarer happily won hi3 ace and
returned a club toward dummy. He
expected to win Lhree club tricks, or
CHARLES
GoRErt
even four if Weat 1pllt hi• J ·10. and
then if the d iamond auit came In he
could makt" hi• contract without
resorting to the unappetizing heart
flnelse. When Henr ietta followed
with the Lwo, that only reinforced
SouLh'a fixation• ...
"It was a dazed South who aw
dummy'a eight. of clubs gobbled up
by Minnie'• king ... er. I mean Jack.
Then the J&ck of 1pade1 was put
t hrough and the contract rinl1hed
three down ... "
Near·•lrht.ednt11 rewarded. A
charmln« bookl t
•• r=;;===
(. J\I II ( IHNIJ\ I Hll1A 1 Ni 1vf Mfll 11 '" l'H!' ;·, C t N I•,
--=----=r-=--,.. .
om·eowners seek $53M.for cracks
wners of damaged homes seek relief
rom city, agencies over shifting earth
fre¥ said sbe would most bkely
adVJse City. Council memben to
reject the claims Monday, settina lhe
st.qe for the bomeownen to Ille
lawsuits.
shifts were first nottced 1n early
September.
Mo94'>fthe crackinaand crumblina
has been in the Green brook and Mesa
Woods ~,iahllorh.®s closest to 11¥0.
city-approved construction projects
blamed by residents for the ground
movement.
plexes have been built.
Accordinatotheclalm, flied Nov. 8
at the Costa Mesa city clerk's offic:ie,
aovemrnent qendes oventtina d~
Y.Cl.o.mneJl t of the...area did. not t.a.k.c
enough precautions apinst potential
land movement.
ways, water systems, dramap can.alt.
s1dewalu and other public flCilitiet
in the nei&hborboods did not take
adequate steps to pretttve the "t.er
table ..a.nd j)t'Cvent "landsidea, .at.ip.
peie and su2s1dcnce," the claim 1 T6HY9AA VEDRA
W!'-Dlilr,.......,
OWnen of jJ honies ~~rtcdly
damqcd by land roov•ment an Costa
M esa a~ seekin4 a total of SS3
million from tbe city, as well as from
14 other state and local government
apncies accused by the residents of
nqlisenc:ie. .
A grou~ claim was delivered last
Peace groups conduct
newa conference to plead
for success of Geneva
aummlt./A3
California
UC Regents say Cal State ·
University' a plan to offer
doctoral degrees should
be blocked by Legls-
latureJ M
Callfornla T ransportatlon
Commission has adopted
a two-tiered funding sys-
tem./ A3
Na don
Fifty percenl of Ameri-
cana feel next week's
summit at Geneva will
Improve U.S.-Russian re-
lations./ A5
World
HeUcoptera ferried
survivors from Col-
ombian volcano.devas-
tation that may have
killed u many as 20,000
persona./ A7
Miu Iceland Is crowned
the new Mlaa World./ A7
Sporta
Edison High shocks
Marina, 51-14 In Sunset
Leaaue football show-
down./C1
Newport Harbor wins
white Fountain Valley and
Laguna Beach fall In CIF
volleyball semlflnals./C1
Date book
Bubbles, a Balboa Penin-
sula nlghtclub, wllropen
Monday with a 1930's
theme./Peg• 3.
Bualneu
Thirty-one new stores
open In Atrium Court./CI
INDEX
Auto Piiot
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Buatneae
Ctuatfled
Com lea
Croaaword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoecope
Ann Landera
Opinion ·
Paparazzi
Police Log
Pubtk: Notices
Aeltaurante
Sport a
TMYtaton
W•ther
81-12
C8
A3
C6
89-11
C8
811
C5
DateboOk
810
Datebook
A6
DateboOk
A3
C4-5
Oatebook
C1_..
OateboOk
A2
Tum to Pege 11 for the
bMteutOftlolil•bup
week to the various agencies by the
San Francisco law firm of Patrick E.
Catalano, a specialist in litiption
involvina ground rnovemehL
Four other claims -for SI S0,000,
SSS,000, SS2,000, and S l ,000-were
also filed in recent weeks against
Costa Mesa. bringing the total against
the city to S1.
Assistant City Attorney Eleanor
OVschool
contract
·talks hit
impasse
By ROBERT BARI.ER
Ot .. Dlilr ........
An impasse has been declared in
the Ocean View School District in
Huntington Beach in 'an effort to
settle contract negotiations that have
been deadlocked since last spring.
Contract demands by the teachers
would cost the financially strugling
district about $3.S million, S"uper-
intendent Dale Coogan said Thurs.-
day.
The district, hit hard by declining
enrollment and skyrocketing in·
surancc costs, faces a $700,000 deficit
even without a pay increase, Coogan
said.
And before closing four schools in
June, Ocean View bas been spending
about SI million per year more than it
has received in state funding.
Ocean View Tcachen Association
President Bertha Moser Hollister
said, however, that extra revenue
expected from the California Lottery
could finance an extra math and
science remedial teacher at each of the
district's 19 schools.
The extra teacher also would allow
fourth. fifth and sixth-crade teachers
a class preparation period each day
without additional cost, she said.
Teachers arc asking for an 8 pe~nt
pay increase while the district is
offering a 2 percent increase.
Teacher demands and costs as
estimated by district officials include:
salary increases, SI million: remcdjaJ
staff, $720,000: teacher preparatjon
time. $720,000; health benefits,
$635.000: and additional physical
education teacher positio ns,
$270,000.
Teacben president Hollister, who
said about SS perc.ent of Ocean View's
400 teachers belong to the union. also
said Thursday that her group is
striving to win contract approval fo r
agency fees (all teachers, including
non-members would be required to
(Pleue eee SCHOOL/ A.2)
Damage has been rel>orted it 141
homes in north Coste Mesa, where
unstable soil is apparently causing
concrete Ooor slabs to crumbJe and
houses to sink. ·
ScorC$ of buclding walkways and
crackina walls have been found in
neiJbborboods between South Coast
Drive, Bear Street. Fairview Road
and Sunflower A venue since the land
However, Catalano also poants an
accusatory finier toward state, coun·
ty and· City agencies that-be says
should have been more mindful of the
"&eOJl'llphical instabilities" of the
oneume farmland where homes.
shopping centers and busmess com-
A bird of a different feather
The ground is said to consist of sod
that tends to n~d apd contract. It
also bas pockets of'' perched" v.ound
water, a sponge-like layer of silt that
expends when water as added and
settles when it is taken away. geo l-
ogists say.
Agencies responsible for the road-
Joan lllro'• mcalpture, ••oteeaa," a bird of
an a.northodoa order. la admired by Chue
llcLaUCbHn (left) of Center Tower A.9-
eoclatee (left) and Jo.quln llanos, conaul-
aeneral of Spain. wbo repre.ented the
country of the arltat'• birthplace at the
an.elliDC Tbanday of the aculpture ln
Coeta lleea '• Center Tower lobby.
S~tcs. '
Named 1n ihe sroup cla.tm are the
Ctty of Costa Mesa, its redevelopment
agency, pailung distnct as weU u its
parks and recrcauon dastnct..
Co-defendants are the county
Board of Supervtsors, as well u the
county Oood control district. the
~-188A/A2)
Cleanup
of bay
praised
Progress reported
in lengthy.battle
over sanitation
By SUSAN BOWLETl'
Of .. Dlilr ........
Local and state officials expressed
optimism Thursday over efforts to
unprove water quality in Newport
Bay following a tentative report
relcucd by the Regional Water
Quality Control Board.
The ongoina water quality efforts
were discussed in the Newpon Beacb
City Council Chambers dunng a
public briefing sponsored by Sen
Marian Bergeson.
Assemblyman Gil Ferguson, New-
pon Beach Mayor Philip Maurer.
envuonmental spcc1ahst Joanne
Schneider and Jim Bennet. e~ccut1ve
offi cer of the Santa An.a Rcg;ional
Water Ouahty Control Board. were
among those m attendance
"I have a posauve feeling about
this:· &rg~n said. ··1 think we're
ma.king pr~ss.··
Maurer sa1d he was encouraged by
the public interest 1n keeping a high
level of water quali t) in lhe popular
bay.
>\hho~ there has been some
success in the cit) 's educational
efforts to stop boaters from Oushmg
human waste anto Newpon Bay. the
battle for clear water remains an
uphill one.
The three problems contnbutang to
higher than average levels of bacteria
and toxms are s1ltat1on. bactenaJ
conamanauon and toxic substantt
contamination . according to
Schneider.
The repon includes the rccommen-
dat1on that the city should make sure
there are enough pump-<>ut restroom
(Plea.e eee BAT/ A.2)
Lawsuit freezes cash
of NB lottery winner
Keenan's order marked the first
time in California a court has placed
restrictions on lottery winnings.
.. Marines to divert
El ·Toro landings
By STEVE MARBLE °' ....... "" ....
The fortunes of a Newport Beach
woman who prayed over the only
lottery ticket she ever purchased
turned on her Thursday when she was
ordered to keep her hands off nearly
all of her SI 00,000 lottery prize.
Sharon Nunn said she dreamed of
a new house and lucrative invest-
ments after winnina the money this
week on the cali.fomia Lottery s Bia
Spin.
But Oranac County Superior Coun
Commissioner Thomas Keenan
dashed her dreams when he told her
to refrain temporarily from spendina
all but $4,000 of her lottery winninp
bccaUte of a pendins lawsuit apinst
her hulbe.nd.
The woman's husband, Raul
Nunez., who is a restaurant operator.
is being sued by the Perry Morris Co.
The company d aims the restaurateur
owes S2SO,OOO in unpaid equipment
leases.
Nunn owns Kaplan's Restaurant
in South Coast P1aza and did own
Kaplan's Restaurants in West Covina
and Brea. Both of those are now
clOled.
Christopher Blank. an attorney ~ntlng the Perry Moms Co.,
wd Mn. Nunez' winninas are com-
munity property and asked the court
to prevent the woman from spending
the money.
"She can cash the check.. seend the
money and then it's gone.' Blank
said. "Then there's no way for us to
act at it."
Paul Mast. an attorney ~
racntina the Nunez family1 wd any
restriction on the lottCf}' pnze would
• interfere with Mn . Nunez' ri&ht "to
Sba.roo l'fanea
do what she wants Wlth her hfe or her
property."
He said the lottery Wlnnmgs may
not actually be community property
Keenan exprnscd rcservat1ons
about meddling with the lottery and
lotlery winners. He said 1t could have
(Pl ....... WJJtMER/ A2)
Newport's affluent iniage
drqws barrage of lawsuits
vwuna inlanden ece Newpon
Beech U & COllUIUUUty dolted with
expensive bayftont homes and atreeu lined with fAncy can -a community
driDDinl with -.ltb. • N~ 8e8ch cify officials •Y tbe
pm:epcJOG bu kid to • bamlle or
.liability claima filed by people with
dollar lips in tbeir eyes -oeoole
Wbo wut to mab it b6a with a ·multi.
ml.Woe dollar judpteftt.
But tbe ii a mi,._ ICCOfd-lnt IO city • ID aptftliYe
mlf'lee t.bat i1 ca ftl claim after
i• ..
match its &mtllC of unhm1lcd funds.
be said.
From the cyclis.t who contends a ~ liehvxt 1ntcncc:tion led to his
il\iury ec:ddeft1 to the swimmer who
~va into a andbar on tbe ocean
Door the city bu beard t.bem all ~n.cy come in all faabio~.. eo-
cordlnt tdCity Cert Wanda bllio-WMtbu tcrawted OD I ibecl of 'eea1 peptt or profeaioully 6\ed by a
dvil ~ts attorney, all the dllims ft.net \bcir way to RlllDo. .
The claims ruee IR>m the replace-• I
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. 0.-, ..........
The Manne Corps will shut do~n
the longest runway at its El Toro ba~
for about three wtcks beginning
Montiay. but Manne officials said
today revised flight patterns should
not create noise problems for In me
residents
Manne offic1als said the change
could create occasional noise prot>-
lems for neighbonni Lake Forest
~1dcnts. but they vowed to keep
these mtrusaons to "a bare mini·
mum."
Col. Jerry L. Shelton. communat)'
planning and liaison officer for the El
Toro air bax. said runway 34R will
be closed for about thrtt Wttks for
maJor rep&Jr work He said dctcnora·
uon of the runway's con~te has
hampered the use of "arrestina gear"
used to slow Jets as they land.
s1mulaunian au"Craft earner landing
Shelton said NaY) cn11neers de--
certified tbe UK ofthe arrnung gear.
nccessitatina the rcp.ur work.,
Susa1
HollETT
P tH \l'llll ~I
mmt oh $7 ~can aqu.ubed b
a oty truh truck to a multi-m1lhon
dollar alkpnon IPJDlt tbt police
dq>artmcnt. ahc akS
And the claims have been increa.a-. '°' by 1aP1 and boubds Ovtf \ht put fi~ years, Riiiie> said .. w,·~ larsr amounts of
claims for latter dOUar amou.n ..
(,......_N&WfOMT/A2)
'
At 10.000 feet. 34R 1s the longest of
El Toro's runways. On the average.
100 planes use the runwa) datl). they
said
Shelton s.a1d that dunng the repair
penod. planes wtll be diverted to
runways 7R and 71... which run
perpcnd.Jcular to 34 The change will
require Manne Jets to uK a nev. route
when approaching for the base for a
landm~ or .. touch and go .. exercises.
Dunng the construction period.
Shelton said. Manne aircraft will
approach over Lion Country and
open country north of leisure World
an Laguna Hills.
1 n the late 1970s. the la.st tune
runwa) 34R was closed for an
extended penod. El Toro fll&hts were
d1vcned northWC$l of the buc. tna-
genni numerous notsc complaints
from lrvine·s El Camino Real com-
muni·y, Sl\elton S&Jd.
Anyone who needs to repon air-
craft noHc problems dunng the
runway repalr period can call the
Marines at 6S 1-3702 or 6S 1-3830.
Crash hurts
Laguna cop;
drlVerheld
A Lquna Beach police officer.
suffered neck and brdr 1n,junes early
tlus morruna wbc:n an alac.ed cln.mk-
en d.nver slammed Into the bid ot btccd pit.rot car on South Ca. K way.
oune Manclch 1..acotl, 40. of S..
Juan Captstruo, wu ana&ed oa
~aon of fdony drunm ~viill
by the ·romia ~ Patrol
after aM ~f rw-e3 tato tbt beck of Brian Kello'• poticr
car Ke a 1,_)9M)ld M_. Villjo Cft-• -cm•8"AIJ
M Or.nge COMt O.A!LY PILOT/ Friday, November 15, 1985
Media unwelcome at hostage talks
., ... A.111 des.I Pteu
Tbo news media bu beco uked not
to interfere in tbe neaotiatioo for
rdeue or ai.t Americans bcld host.aae
by Lebuete 1errorists.
Eric J~ 291 t0n of one of the
he# ~aid fainilies otthc boatqes 0 wW very •DFY.•• if the media
diwusm the Dea<>tiat.ions. JICOblen made the comments
Tbunday after a special envoy of the
Ardabilbop of Cantetbury pleaded
with reponen in Beirut to stay away
so I.bey woJl•t endanaer hia life or thoee of tbe bostaaes while he ncgo-
tiaiet with the captors.
••1 thillk common sense d1c1.ates
that you put the lives of the bOS1ages
above llettin& a story first." Jacobsen,
wbo lives m Hunt1naton Beach, said in a telephone interview from his
office at a medical testina and
1up9lies firm in Anaheim.
He added. "I feel that other families
of bostqes also believe such in-
consideration on the pa.rt of the
me4ja will disrupt n~otjations. We
wdl be very &hlJ'Y irth1s happens."
Jacobsen's S4·year-old father,
David, is director of American Hos-
pital in Beirut and was kidnapped
M~28,
On Thu~y •. the archbishop's
envoy, Terry WaiteJ. held an im-
promptu news oonrercnce in the
lobby of a ')!lest Beirut hotel used as a
co mmand reenter by the media.
Waite's decision to talk to the
media apparently came after he
spotted reponcrs and photographers
near where he was 1tayin1 and feared
they would Jtopardiie bis mission.
"l'd bke to malte a particular plea
that 1 am not to ~ followed by
anybody because if that happens,
then it wdl jcopardj:ie my own safety
and the safety of other people," Waite
said.
Waite satd he had made contact
with the kidnappel'1, addio&. "Pro-
gress is beina made, .and we're
movina forward."
Eric Jacobsen said he was en-
couraged by Waite's report of pro-
gress.
But he added, "We arc tempering
our optimism to protect ourtClves in
case things do not work out."
Autopsy inconclusiv~e'~
hivestigation contiQues
_strike
talks , .. · All.aulopsy on the body of a woman
found this wetk in a Costa Mesa
dumpster failed Thursday to reveal
any sips of violence, forcing
homicide detectives to wait several
weeks for a toxicol~cal rcpon.
anything else like tha~" Lazar said.
The toxicological tests will· show
whether there were any drugs, alcohol
or other substances in Rodriguez's
body.
. .
"We're in a holding pattern now.
You·reaJJy need that cause of death
befotc you can start talking to
people,.. Ll Tom Lazar said this
morn.iq. "But we're J.Oi~ to play it
as a homicide until it s proven
otherwise."
Examinen reported that 24-ycar-
old Linda Gomez Rodriguez of Santa
Ana was .. not shot. stabbed, beaten or
. Patience ls the key
The woman was found Wednesday
morning by a man rummaging
through a dumpster behind an indus-
trial com~lex a 3199 Airpon Loop. She was la identified through her
fingerpri • Lazar said.
He added that police were unsure
of the time of her death. Gomez was
last seen· by relatives about 1 p.m.
Monday at her grandmother's home
in Santa ~· Lazar said.
WaltlDC for flab to bite take. an eztraordl.na.ry amoant of
patience at the public pier on Balboa near the Newport
Barbor entrance. lllchael Manball, 4, and hJa brother
Da.td, 20 montha, .eem to ha•e the technique down.
collapse
LOS ANGELES (AP) -lnfonnal
talks called to break an impasse in the
bitter 11-day-old supermarket strike
and lockout in Southern California
collapsed, with a union spokesman
predicting a lengthy dispute.
Talks between small bigb-1evel
teams for management and tfie meat
cutters' union, the United Food and
Commercial Workers, broke off
Thursday night after the Food Em-
ployers Council re~cctcd a major
union concession. wd union spokes-
man Dan Swinton.
1 In the latest violent incident in the
work stoppage, a truck driv~deliver
ing goods to a Safeway store in
suburban Lakewood was Jailed today
after a shot was fired at a union picket.
No one was injured but Michael
Grabowski, 27, of Inglewood was
booked for investigation of. assault
with a deadJy weapon, said shcriff s
Deputy Bob Stoneman.
.. It looks like they (management)
~t a Iona s~ where they can
re<tuce the aglJ'ement to the 1940
level," Swinton said.
Officials for the Teamsters union,
the other unit striking against the
supermarkets, did not particiP.1te in
the meeting at the Anaheim Hilton in
Oransc County.·
Swmton said the meat cutters
offered to give in to the employers'
demand for a lower-wage scale for
new employees in return for job
security provisions for current em-
ployees. After a 30-minute meeting.
management refused, he. said.
.. They were arrogant," be said.
"They left no room for compromise."
-Management rcprtsentat1vcs could
not immediately be reached for
comment A call to the management
room at the ho~ent unanswered.
"They can't repliee 10,000 meat
cutters and 12,000 Teamsters," Swin-
ton said.
BAY CLEANUP EFFORTS APPL4UDED .••
Jl'romAl · ·
facilities. It also recommends marina
operaton include conditions in their
lease agreements specifyi ng that ves--
sels-moored in the marina must have
holding tanks. The repon f unher
recommends lease agreements be
revoked if boat operators are seen
dumping waste into the bay.
The report was prepared ai the
request of the state Legislature under
the direction of a resolution sponsor-
ed by Bergeson. The legislation, SCR
38, required the preparation of the
report on the water quality in the bay
and required the board to make
recommendations on how to im-
prove the situation.
Although preliminary mformauon Ofb the water quality of the bay
indicates "higher levels than de-
sirable of bacteria and toxics,"
Bergeson said the levels are ''well
below crisis proponions."
Schneider said the monitonng of
sediment transported into the bay has
been conducted since the early 1980s
under a cooperative agreement w11h
the U.S. Geological Survey, the cities
of Newport Beach and Irvine, and the
Irvine Co.
Also being monitored 1s the
bacterial contamination of Newport
Ba y whicb can directly affect rec-
reation and shellfish harvesting. Thir-
ty stations at selected locations in the
upper and lower portions of the bay
and the bay's maJor tributaries are
measured weekJv. Schneider said.
Schneider said the cities of Tustin,
Costa Mesa and Santa Ana should
adopt a policy similar to those in the
cities of Newport Beach and Irvine,
which requires that landscape plans
for new projects address the control of
fertilizers, pesticides and irrigation
runoff. She said the policies help to
control toxic substance contamina-
tion.
Maurer said the water quality
problem is far from solved, but
progress is being made through
educatio n.·
"Some of you have been here on
this issue for a long lime," Maurer
said. "We are not there yet, but we're
getting there."
NEWPORT HURT BY 'RICH' IMAGE .••
From Al
Sunlhlne and mlld dey11me tempereturet thr~
Southern CeANomll S.turday wtlt glw way to ctoudt befor9I the
..-end doNe, the tint~ of enother Pectftc atorm tylMm,
·~Mid.
An upper~i.vei rldQ9 of htgh pneeure 0vtr ld.tlo end
nprthern NIVICI• thet his kept ll<lae 06Mr '°' the ... t cou~ of dlys and wtlt continue to do ao ttwouoti a.tur~ night, the
Netlonll w .. ther s.rvtce Mid. TI-. high wtlt Wteken and~
wtll b.aln to drift In Sundey u herblng4wt of the next 1t0tm front
du. to nit Mondey.
Along the Orenge Cout ,,,.,. wt• be lncrMeing oloudlMN
and not u cool=t Some fog and IOw ~·new the QOett lll'ty Slturdly • otherwtM part!y . Hlgha Seturdey
In the mid eo. to lower OI. Lowt tonight I~ Ind l<>Wer 50e.
U.S. Tempe
10 114
11 u II 7A ... 14 aa 22
..
SllOwtrs
" eo 11 17 eo 43 n 11
47 37
N 11 .. 17
Calif. Temps a..,
43 02 II 17
.i ao 2~ ~ 16 43
47 12
45 15
54 41 71 M ao oe 2t 07
IO H
60 42
17 13 3e ,,
., 71
13 73
41 >7-
79 .. 21 11
44 32
39 35
61 35
60 43 n 53 41 35 57 )7
Conelde<elll• olovdlneH, wlH1
"-Y per1ocl• Colder Moodey Ind T~ Hl9flt-IMUA* 508 lllld mid eoe o-NgM io-42 to 52
WINNER •••
From Al
a "chilling effect" on the state games 1f
a person "gained nothing" by win-
ning.
Further, he said i\ was the woman's
appearance on television that led to
her identity by the company suing her
husband. Keenan suggested the
woman could have requested
anonymity and avoided the whole
problem.
"'It's of some benefit to the lottery
to have winners on TV," Keenan
said. "It's an advertisement, a benefit
SCHOOL TALKS .•.
Jl'romAl
pay union dues) and binding arbi-
tration (a neutral party would make
decisions in tcacber~istrict dis-
putes.)
Binding arbitration is especially
important, she said, because of so-
called "Victorian Clause" proposed
by .the administration.
District officials couJd suspend
teachers without due process for
reasons of immorality, insubordina-
tion and dishonesty, she said. Binding
arbitration is required, she said, to
protect teacher rights.
As a result of the impasse declar-
ation, the State Public Employment
Relations Board will be asked to step
in and certify that no more progress
can be made without an outside
mediator.
to the state and to education."
He said it would be wrong if every
person being sued refused to go on
television to spin the money wheel.
Saying he didn't want to leave Mn.
Nuntz without a penny, Keenan
granted her permission to spend up to
$4,000 of her prize money.
"She may have made promises
after winning." Keenan conceded.
The commissioner denied a re-
quest for a writ of attachment, which
would have allowed the court to seize
the winnings outright. Instead he
asked that all but S4,000 of the prize
be protected until a full bearing Dec.
19.
Neither Nunez or her husband
were in court Thursday but Raul
Nunez Sr., the father of the restaurant
owner, said the family is tired ofbeing
"hounded" by the media.
MESA FACING $53 MILLION CLAIMS •.•
From Al -
county sanitation district and the hnle more than gJbbensh. She added
Costa Mesa Sanitary District. that goverment agencies were being
Damages arc also beiOf sought threatened with suits because the 10-
from the Coastal, Municipal and year statute of limitations had ex-
Mesa Consolidated water districts, as r>ired for any legal action against the
well as the state of California, and the homebuilders.
state transportation, bousmg and "That is why, I believe, they're
planning dtpartments. gotng after us," she said. "But I don't
The claim all~ed the agencies sec any basis for city liability."
should have rcqUtred more careful Catalano's finn has launched its
"construction plans and techniques." own geological study to determine
Moreover, state and local govern-what caused the soil in the fashion-
ment should have better inspected able neighborhoods to expand or give
building projects and pubhc utilities way.
to make sure they were constructed A separate $35,000 stucfY con-
propcrly. the document said. tracted by the city is expected to be
The claim alleges seven counts of presented to the council in mid-
inversc condemnation, nuisance and December.
negligence as well as allowing a Residents suspect the slippage is
dangerous condition to persist, fail-linked to an underiround parking lot
ure to perfonn mandatory duties, and being constructed for the South Coast
causing homeowners emotional dis-Plaza annex on Bear Street, just nonh
tress. of the San Dicto Freeway. They say
Catalano, in a Thursday telephone water drain.in& mto the large pit there
anterview from his San Francisco i~ coming from beneath the adjacent
office, said the SI million-per-house-ncigbhorboods, causing the land to
hold figure sought by the claim may settle.
be raised or lowered after his office Additionally, homeowners say vi-
have said the companies arc also
conducting their own geological sC.Ud-
ies.
CRASH ..•
From Al
resident, was reported in satisfactory
condition tbjs morning at Mission
Community Hospital in Mission
Viejo.
Both Lacoss and Kelso were treated
(or injuries ·at the scene. Kelso wu
then transported by the hospital's
Life Flight helicopter.
Before being booked, Lacoss was
transported to South Coast Medical
Center in South La&una for treatment
and later released into the CHP"s
custod¥, ac.cordina to Hilda Madrid
of the Laguna Beach Police Depart-
ment. She was being held at the
Orange County jail.
Rapio said. The yearly totals of
chums have more than doubled since
l980-81 when there were about 150
claims fi'Jed against the c11y, she said.
coverage tor Newport Beach has
increased 900 percent, Brown said.
More than S60 million in excessive
force claims are pending against the
Newport Beach Pohcc Department.
takes inventory of the damages. bra lions from construction on an
William Bunon Judd, 26, seelung $5 He added that he expects to add adjacent 296-unit apartment com-
million after he reportedly broke bis several more clients in the nonhside plex by Amel Development Co. is
neck after diving into the surf in neighborhoods. aggravating the problem.
Lacoss, driving a 1979 Volkswagen
Dasher, was southbound when she
rear-ended officer Kelso's black and
white police car at about I a.m., police
said.
Kelso was on duty monitoring
traffic near 2475 South Coast High·
way. August 1984. A law.suit allegjng F"rcy said the arguments in the Officials for Amel, as well as for
Both cars received major damage. Brown said the odds get better for
the plantiffs and worse for the city
with each new claim.
And, the latest count shows a t least
35 claims arinst the city in the
af\ennath o the Aug. 2 ol l well
explosion and fire that caused oi l to
JUSh over neighborhood streets and
into the bay near 44th Street.
similar damages was filed by at-claim were vague and amounted to mall owner C.J. Sc&erstrom &. Sons,
torneys for Edward Tessier, 17. who ,-----------------------------------------
"We're not exactly bankrupt,"
Brown said, "Still in all, the constant
plummeung of these claims isn't
good."
Brown said the unpred1ct.ab1lity of
the courts presents another problem
for the city. Many claims thought to
be settled will be defended. and vice
versa, be said.
"The lack of predictab1hty m the
court system affects the insurance,"
Brown said.
Since March 1985. when an in-
surance company canceled the city's
liability policy, the cost of insurance
Just Call
642-6086
The city was hard hit by a S6
million Orange County Supenor
Court j ury judgment to a 23-ycar-<>ld
swimmer who was paralyzed after a
beach-related accident. The city is
appealing the award to John Taylor of
O aremont after the Jury found the
city hable for not properly warning
sw1mmers of sandbars and ocean
dangers.
A claim was fikd m Jlinuary hy
was paralyzed afte~ a .diving accident I m Balboa. Just this month, another
claim by a man who broke his neck in
the ocean was tiled.
..If we continue to get beach-related
chums like the Taylor case, we may
6.nd ourselves uninsured or even self.
insured," Brown said.
Ncwpoh Beach's high-rise build-
ings and business centers radiate a
sense of wealth that could really hun
the local government. Brown said.
"We mar be financially st.able at
this point.' Brown said, "But there
may come a point in ttme when there
isn't enough money."
Wb•t do you lib about tbe Dally Pilot? Wlaat doa't you llke? Call tht
number 11 left aad your message 11rlll be r~orded, traaacrlbed ud delivered
to Uie 1pproprlate f'dltor.
Tbe same U -boor ao1werlog service may be ased to record lttlers to the
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column maal lacl•de their
name aad telephoot number for vtrlflcatlon. No clrcolatloo calla. please.
Tell us what's on vour mlod.
K •ren W1ttm.r
Pubffsher
Clrcul•tlon 714/la~
Clualfted ed¥erttelng 714/M2-1171
All other det*tfMntt M2..a21
MAIN OFFICE
no w"' "-• c;1 C:O.•• Mesa C.•
M•• --8' • 1"410 Go.le....._ Co\ 9?e.?6
Frank Z1nl RoMmary Churchman
.,,,,., IQ9J ()1 .... C-~ ~ No -''°"-•1t1re•oon1 ~Ololl -•t• 01 ~, .. _,, ......... ,"""""~~~lllfl
• ~ l'l<Cl{r'~•-
. •
..... --
F dtlCW C onlr ""'
Robert L. Cantrell Donetd L. William•
P•oducl '"' C11c.ut1tl1t>n
'.48081,ler MIM04t1
Howard MuHenaty P99gy Blevtne
Marllflt1ng °'"'e'"' <'.:li!Htflf'd C1trf"C10<
(
... 1 1 \ r-.. ,._.. P8"1 ., '"°"" ... ,.... (All!omq ~ •• 1 Sut.fcop1q1 "1 cer•.,. n 15 """"""'r ' • ,7 ""C,,,!Np
VOL. 71, NO. 111
t
@hf~~~
Celeb~1ty <Jicee
Roger'• Guden1 Invite. you and youH to ettend
the unvelllng and llghtlng of The Flrtt Annuel
Celebrity TREE. Friday, November 15 et 6:00 p.m.
The WCelebrlty Tree" on dlaplay here from
No~ber 15. I• the ncwat hlghllght of the Roter'•
Guden1 "Chrl1tm .. Fentaay."
w .. 1ntrodur r rh• C "IPt'lrllv T"·.,·· to ~ntf11 lht N~11m111l l.,mm1t11>v 1,,, Prt'Y4'n1Kln nf Chtld
At>u"' whu h " wr,rk1nq In r#Juc I' child buw 1n llw lJ c;;
( .,i..h11tu•• ~"'' -1\kl'tl lit r1ut1All' 11n nrnam•nl """" "" 11u1 .. q1aphl'd 11'19 ltu ~"~ fMy ~4'rl'
"'""mfly tnlhuto<Uh• fwrn P .. ul Mti artn"v 1n Su""• f rl<Jl"nd to .Jim I IPn~·n •nd Mm Piggy
'" N....., Y-.rk C11v '>111" '11<h '"Mary Tyl#o Mootr Roi> Hn l>'I' ~n..tm Pttt W1hon ~tee.
.. , .. ~. c .. ar~"V I An" rvrnff Johnny C11r~on C"hA•k>~ Schuh/ 11nrl t111111y OIMr\ h111t eo~lff
•II 111 thl' n.amC' of 1 hlldrr n
(umt•r•>u• c•klbfll~' 11"111' m.,J., th" ""' 11 1e111i1y Vtou can h+•lp mttkt II molt mtlning{ul -
11nd Wv>IN ~u1 uWTI •1)1111 bv purchM1ng "''" nf th.• rlf'Mn\ .. nh This purch.tw II ~..,.11y 1
donet1<•n w11h 4IH ll•f><Hdl gn1119 t•l th• Net1<•nal C.om.n•tt .. 11 fUf Prtw nhOn of Child AbllM
Tn11nk you for l<'tnu'lg Roget"• Gardens in making 1hi5 Christmas
an l'\JX'C'•'llV happy omr
............................... _______________________________ ~___.__:·---
'VEMBER 15, ~ ~ PILOf ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE \OL.1 /N0.'6 ·
·' -~ .
A see-wort.fly
'Dames' in NB
'
The fun of watching yet another production of "Dames at
Sea," wlµch bas been around the local block a few times, lies in
enjoying the invariable new wrinkles cac.b succeeding cast and
director come up with to sell their version of this rollicking spoof of
1930s showbiz movies.
At the Newport Theater Arts Center, where musicals are
prodoocd with more frequency than at any other community
playhouse in Orange County, director Eileen Fishbach and her
meptalentedcastare having an all-stops-out ball with this familiar
yet vastly enjoyable commodity. Imagination and energy, the two
paramount tngrcdients in a show of this type, arc present in
abundance on the Newport stage.
"Dames at Sea,"written in themid-l 960sasasendupofthose _, ~-L! .. 42nd Street" ('Babes on Broad-..__ ________ ~ way" types o(musicals from the
'30s, is deceptively simple in its
construction. Pink-cheeked gjrl
from Utah steps off the bus in TDIYI New York, wins a spot in the T'IT\JB, cboru.i of a Broadway show and
displaces the arrogant star in the ----------finale. Or, showbiz folks lotc their theater and relocate the show to the deck of a Nary vessel to
save their jobs and the director's career. You've seen it all before,
without the' tongues so firmly embedded in the cheeks.
The Newpo)rensemble tackles the music, the dancing and the
comedy of "Dames" with admirable gusto, with a cast of
predominantly new faces spiced by two old favorites, Beth Hansen
(who doubles as musical·director) as the Broadway queen and
Michael Grcnie, doubling as the harried director and the besieged
sea captain. Hansen, Orange County's answer to Ethel Merman,
and Grenie, an excellent physical comic, bring down the house
when they begin "The Beguine," a broadly comic torch duct.
Suzanne Michaels is winsomely effec;tive as the chirpy
blossom who bits town with just a pair of tap shoes and a dream.
Eddie Keener plays her sailor /songwriter beau with unabashed
innocence and unbridled energy.
The traditional comic sidekicks arc a mixed lot. Jennifer Peck
displays a bushel of talent and a junior belter's vocal cords, whjle
Timm Bettridge lacb the pi.zzaz and the timing to make his
contribution more memorable. The gum-<: hewing comedy of Lisa
Bishop and the brassy blondeness of Jeannie Domen fiJI in the
background roles nicely.
The £t::n1po choreography of Jeffrey Holland is balanced
well by · e Enaland's bright costuminp and Bob Cady's
splendid liabtin& eff"ects to compliment one o the most enjoyable
community theater productions of the year. Anticipatu>a the
show's probable success, NT AC bas added extra performances at 7
p.m. on tbc next two Sundays.
Other playina dates for "Dames at Sea" arc Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m . throuah Dec. 7 at the Newport Theater Arts
Center, 2S01 OifTDrive, Newport Beach. C.all 631-0288 for ticket
information.
Publisher. Karen A. Wittmer
E.dltor. Frank Zini
An DireclOr. Steven Houab
Circulation Manqer. Donald L Williams
Production Marver, Robcn L Cantrell
Dltcbook ia pUblithed every fnd8y by 111e <>nuwr C.oat Publttluna Co.
P.O. Boa 1560, 3l0 W. lrY Sl, COila MeM. CA 9262'. Tclci>h<>nc (714) 642-4321 . Rep1-buli ... hour. are a a.m. tO $ p.m., Monday thf'OUlh
Friday. De.dJinc b' mleedlr of eveot:t ilcmt and ktten is ' p.m. Monday. The entire contenll or 0.tebook •~ copyrlaflted by the Orante Coat Publilbi1t1 Co. All rifht1 arc ~
I DeteboOk/ Frldey, NOYembef 15, 1985
-~ j
JAllES·.TAYLOR BRINGS PIRE AND .RAIN
TO COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 11
By TONY SAAVEDRA -James Taylor really looks like he's seen
fire and rain -and blizzatds and hurricanes and earthquakes and
every other act ofGod'that ever devastated Man. But boy, can he
sing. He sings so weU that 9,320 fans stayed glued to their seats as ram pelled the Pacific Amphitheatre Sunday. And wouldn't you
know it? The short downpour came while Taylor was singing
.. Shower the People."
llR. AM> llRS. COUNTRY MUSIC •••••••••••••• 4
Joe and Rose Lee Maphis, nominated for a Grammy in 1983, will be
appearing at the Crazy Horse Saloon in Santa Ana Monday for two
shows. They will be appearing with Paul Bowman's Super Country
Band from 8 p.m. to midnight Admission is $5 at the door.
Information can be obtained by calling (213) 518-5487.
.
BIG BAM>'BASB FOR CITY OF HOPE •••••• 13
By EVE C. LASH-Almost all of the 3SO supporters attending the
Glenn Miller Memorial Chapter City ofHope Ball were there for one
reason -to dance, .. Dance for Hope" that is. Guests pthered
Slturday at the Hilton Inn at the Park, Anaheim, to hear famed w
Brown and his band pla_y tunes from days gone bye-bye. Chapter
Praident Margaret Gaffey (with husband John) said the group
telccted Les Brown and his band, .. BecaUJC, ne big t.nd, barring
none, apannina the fabled Swing Era of the 30s and 40s up to the
imsent, has been more popular and enduring than Les Brown.
CUT UN THE
TABLE S&llVIClt AT CURTAIN CALL DIN-
OR TllltA TSR....................................... 21
BJ BEVERLY BU8B SMITH -Dinner theater has always appealed
to me u an euy, rela•ina. one-stop evening on the town. I visited
Elizabeth Howard'• Curtain Call Dinner Theater, and from time to
time in weeb to come, ru report on olher dinner thcaten in our
area. I particularly like the ease of the experience at Curtain Call,
wbicb ia the only clinntr theater to offer table service, rather than a
buffet.
'?OPBD.,LllfG •••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4
~ LAKDBRS ........................................ 17
" •
'
.-
E S C A P E
TO THE
FDR was in the White House, jazz was in hotels and nightclubs rhor hove retained the art
the swing and the economy was in the dumps. deco look.
The 1930s sow people looking for Closer 10 home, the Q ueen Mory, th e
esopes from the frustrations and the dreariness Union Srotion in Los Angeles and the Breakers
of the Great ~ession . And those who could Hotel in long Beach were inspirations.
afford to foun eir escapes in the ballrooms, \\Visually, there's o feeling of magic, but
nightclubs and dance halls where the Big Bonds we also tried to get a feeling of fun behind it,
and jazz combos would help them forget the which I think people pick up on," Cavanaugh
harsh realities waiting outside. soys .
In Newport Beach, the Balboa Pavilion, The interior and exterior of Bubbles ore
later joined by the Rendezvous Ballroom, drew do minated by two colors -pink and a pole
partygoers and fun seekers from throughout green. Bubbles ore 1ncorporo1ed 1n10 the
Southern California with the lure of design of the dining room corpe11ng
ritzy night life. and the etched windows. In the
Benny Goodmon, the Dorsey center of the room, a large plastic
Brothers, Count Basie and others ployed pillar filled w11h water hos air bubbles
the Pavilion on weekends while Phil running lhrough 11 OS colored lights
Horris and his bond took over the dance on the effervescent display.
upstairs ballroom overlooking the Lorge decorative mart1n1 glosses
harbor on weeknights. adorn the walls The champagne ice
But Big Bonds gave way to bebop, buckets ore shaped like top hots
the Pavilion changed with the times and A long, curving block bar adorned
the Rendezvous hos since burned down. w ith glodioluses separates the
The look, the sounds and the feel .__,.,..,.. dining room from the lounge, whose
of the '30s ore captured only in the ••••••••••••••••••••••• floor 1s Polished chrome and 1nd1rect
memories of those who were there. 8 Y R o 8 E R T H y N o M A N light ing accent the furnishings, pointed
But that wasn't good enough for 0 high-gloss black.
Doug Cavanaugh and his partner, Rolph
Kosmides.
And now, half a century later, they' re
trying to recapture the magic of the '30s with a
new nightclub located on Balboa Boulevard
w ithin earshot of the Pavilion and the former
site of the Rendezvous Ballroom.
When it opens Monday, Bubbles will be
the first of several developments under way on
the Balboa Peninsula that attempt to recreate
the ambiance of nostalgic times.
The Balboa Inn, constructed in 1929, is
nearing completion of its million-dollar facelift.
The Fun Zone, which drew teen -agers to its
arcades for decodes, is being rebuilt and is
slated to reopen next month. Newport landing ,
the former site of old fuel docks and sportfishing
shops, also is being rebuilt with on Old Balboa
look.
"But we' re the first to actually open,"
Cavanaugh soys. "We were interested in
bringing so mething nice to Balboa and felt 1t
was important to moke it look spectacular.''
Capturing the look of a bygone era in a
new business is becoming easier the second
time around for Cavanaugh and Kosmides.
They' re the ones responsible for replacing a
decrepit boil house at the end of the Balboa
Pier with Ruby's -a diner fashioned ofter
those of the 19 40s.
Built in 1982, the red-and-white res-
taurant bas becotne a huge success for the pair L---who hove since opened another RubV:s 1n
M ission Viejo and ore planning to open two
others elsewhere in Orange County next year.
Before that, Cavanaugh worked w ith his
f omily' s business developing various real estate
properties.
"Bubbles follows the Ruby's concept. But
while Ruby's hos o '40s diner theme, we' re
going bock to the '30s with Bubbles," soys the
29-yeor-old Balboa Island resident.
"It's o very simple concept, very positive.
In my mind, the '30s was o time when there was
o lot of camaraderie. It ~eemed to be a much
simpler time bock then when people tr ied lo
forget thei r troubfes."
Cavanaugh soys he hos long felt on
affinity for the '30s and is a student of the
architecture and design themes used during that
era.
The attention to every aspect of Bubbles'
design-Cavanaugh calls it "a symphony of
details" -gives the restaurant on authent ic
look and feel.
Everything inside the $ 1 million pro1ec1 is
treated to the sweeping lines and polished
finish of the art deco style. More specif icolly,
the architectural theme is ~nown as "streamline
modern'' and 11tropicol deco," Cavanaugh
soys.
To recreate the look, C avanaugh
searched through countless books for inf or·
motion on the architectural styles of the '30s. In
late 1983, he went to Miami Beach and shot
hundreds of pho tos of the grand old beach
An outdoor polio, wormed by heat
lamps, will be ser with.wooden deck choirs for
brunches. An antique c1gorelle machine sits
near the restroo ms. Inside, even the sinks,
mirrors and flush valves h, .... o:ve:.._.,..,..,..-'J
on authentic look. -
In the hallway,
original paintings from
the '30sadorn the
wall, depicting women
named for popular
cock101ls -Singapore
Sling, Mo1 T 01, Mint
Julep, etc.
A bandstand
(~see BUBBLES ...
page 8)
I
I
.L,r_c r_, --; ---
On the cover: Doug Cavanaugh and Rolph Kosmides • Art Direction by Steve Hough • Cover Photo by i ichord Koehler
Oa1ebook/ Friday, November 15. 1985
j
NDV
SMTWTF •
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3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 2 1 2223
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Frlclay
GUITAR VIRTUOSO RONNIE
MONTROSE performs tonight a1 the
Golden Bear, 306PacificCoa.st Hwy ..
Hunungton Beach. 960-5436.
DA VE MASON appears with guest
an.st J .D. Sou~r at 8 p.m .• San Juan
Creek Saloon. 331S7 Camino
Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano.
S 13.50 admission. 496-8927.
CONFREY PlllLLIPS appcan
with his Tno for dancing at the O ub
Copa de Oro. Tues.-Tburs. 8:30
p.m.-12:30 a.m., Fri.-Sat. 9 p.m.-1
a.m. 633 Anton Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
662-0798.
IRE.NE CASTLE performs Fn.·
Sat. from 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. at the
Sheraton Newpon Hotel, 4545
MacAnhur Blvd.. Ncwpon Beach.
833-0570.
'J:l:IE BOP presents hvc 50's dance
music on Sunday nights; wide screen
Monday Niaht Football on Mon.
from 6-9 p.m. and at 10 p.m: a "Live
Oldies VocaJ Contest" with cash
prizes; with .... Rock Around The
Oock." a history of rock and roll
featuring Jason Chase. Tues. al 8
p.m.; Crazy Contests. includjng up
Sync. Limbo and Ba.ske1baJI Shoot on
Thurs.: and dancing Wlth M.C. Fchx
Lane Fn.-Sat. 18774 Brookhurst,
,, FountaJn Valley. 963-2366.
Satarday
CONFREY PHILLIPS, Stt Fnday
listin&-
TRE BOP, sec Friday listing.
THE l'RENE CA.Sn.£ TRlO, sec
Friday listing.
Sanday
THE HOP, sec Fnday listing.
llollday
THE DYNAMITE
GANGBUSTERS, see Monday's
Country listing.
THE BOP, sec Fnday listina.
Tue9day
CONJl"REY PIULLIPS. 1tt Friday
rlstina.
THE BOP, sec Fnday li1tm1-
WedDeeda7
CONFREY P10LUPS. sec Friday
listiD1-
Tlaanday
TllE HOP, tee Friday list1na. OONP'REY PRIUJPS, tee Friday
Ustmi.
·~ ...... -------=------~~..--,.-----
DIXIEl..AND JAZZ is performed
from 9 _p.nt-1:30 a.m. at Zubie's
Gilded Cqt, 1714 Placentia. C-osla
Mesa. 645-8091.
CAFE LIDO presents Judi Lee
Tluanday _ _ __ _
CAPE UDO, see Friday listing.
NIGHT COUllT, see Fnday lisbog.
playing the piano and singing Mon.-
-------Fri. 5-8 p.m.; lhe Li~o Jazz AU-Stars
Thurs.-Sat 9 p.m.-1.30 a.m. ~Sun. Friday
from 3:30-8 p.m. featuring Wayne --~------
Wayne; "lntcnecllon" and "Frtt-THE UC IRVINE CHAMBER Or-
way" perform Sun. 9 p.m.7 1:30 a.m.; cbettra performs with Stephe!l
the Martin Bros. Sextet appcan Mon. Erdody as conductor. The procram u
from 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m.; the Alex .. Symphony No.Sin D M~or" and
Taylor Quartet Tues. from 9 "Symphony No. I in 8-Aat ~or"
p.m.-1:30 a.m.i and the New York by William Boyoc ... Simple Sym-
Jazz ConncctJon Wed. from 9 phony" by Benjamin Britt.en, and
p.m.-1:30 a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd., "Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K.
Newport Beach. 675-2968. 550" by Wolfpng Amadeus Mourt.
NIGBT COU'RT performs main-8 p.m., UCJ's Fine Arts Concert HaJI.
stream jazz from 8 p.m.-midnight at ~ S4 admission. 856-6616. ·
the Old Amenca.n Counhousc. 2 Satarday ~4u~ir;76~ntre Dr.. Santa Ana. ROBERT CHEN, young ~olin
CARMELO'S RDTAUllANT fca-vinuoso, is featured in the Oran~
tures Rowanne Mart.jazz singer, and County Paclfic Symphony's second
Marshall Otwell,~iano player, Wed.· concert of the Masterpiece Series.
S 830 520 E C t H Chen --"orms Sibelius' "Concerto un. at p.m. . oas wy., .,..... n-.. d E d Corona dcl Mar. 675-1922. for Violin and vn.bestnl an n re
- -----Grana performs violin solos in Sa~J Strauss' "Ein Heldcnleben" with the
GUITARIST ALEX 4eGRA.881, orchestra. Musicdirector~cithClarit
Windham Hill recordmg artist, and I~. 8 p.m .• Santa Ana Hi&h School
·a1 luest MAll EGAN bass Audi1onum, 520 W. Walnut St,
::funn1oaneven1ng ofJazz.Sat.at8 • m~~a. Sl 6.~8.50 admiuion.
p.m. and Sun. at 7 p.m., Saddleback .,PF.&Tiv AL OF CHOIRS " oon-
CoUqe's. McKinney ~trc •. ~8000 ducted by Josq>h Huszti. Ronald
Marguente Pkwy., M1ss1on V1eJO. S8 eo_:_: d Bruce Bales of the UC advance, SI 0 at the door. 582-4656. ~o an . ~ h raJ NIGHT COURT 1« Friday listing. lrvine music facuhy, 1eatures c ~
D J• a.., F ·da masterworks from four cenlunes. . ~IDELAN -...., sec n Y Praeftted b UCJ's Concert Choir, list.Ing. .Y ..... , s· BRENT PIERCE'S VOCAL JAZZ Chamber S1nacn. ~.... in~
presents contemporary stylings of ai:id Ownber Choir. 8 p.m., UCl'4ss
newandsta.ndatdvocaJjanat8p.m., Ftoe.A!U Conoen Hall. SS and S
Full Cou-.• ,.._ Theatre adm1u1on. 856-6616. erton ..... .,.. s '-«mpus • • • M E R V Y N 'S P A M I L Y
321 E. Cba{>~an Ave., FuUerton. S4 MATINEES" features an hour-long
and $3 admm1on. 871 -80001 e~L 253. ~onnancc of the entire Oran&e
CAFE LIDO, see Fnday hsung. County Pacific Symphony, and Rob-
Sa.Dday en Chen, violin vinuot0, at 2:30 p.m.
Santa Ana Hi&b School Auditonum NEW YORI JAD. CONNEC 520 W. Walnut SL, Santa Ana. S6
TION appears indefinitely at 8:30 adults and S3 children. 973-1300.
p.m. atOub 17, 1670Ncwpon Blvd.. SO p RAN O JACALYN
Newpon Beach. 645-5448. WEllMJIOFP oft.be Seattle Opera
THE D.C. CONNF£TION, featured and KAREN BENDRICUON, fac-
Buck Oarlce, percussion, Mike How-uJty member and accoms-nist at
ard. guitar. Jeff' Littleton. bass. and lrvioc Valley CoUqe, appear in a
Tom Fabre, reeds, performs main· dual recital al 8 p.m. The program
st.ream jazz from 7-I I p. m. a I the Old features vocaJ music from a wide
American Courthouse, 2 Hutton variety of styles and includes works
Centre Dr .. Santa Ana. 545-1776. 'by Handel, Waper, lbvel and
THE BIG BAND of Orange Coast Copland. JVCs Forum, 5500 Irvine
CoUqe performs classics by jazz Center Dr., Irvine. S5 and S3 ad-
grcats, as well as contemporary Jatt miMion. SS9-9300.
pieces. Directed by Dr. Ow1es TBE lllVINJL! SYMPllONY OR-
Rutherford. and featured 1uest artists C.11ESIAA. with the California
Bill Watrous on trombone and Anne Chamber Chorale, praeots "The
Young, vocalist. 2 p.m., OCCs Miabt Cuey: A Bueball ()pen in
Robert 8. Moore Theltre, 2701 Three Soenea" by William Schuman.
Fairview Rd., Costa Meu. S4 ad· 8 p.m., South Coat Community
vancc, SS at the door. 432-5880. Church, 5 J 20 Bonita Canyon Dr.,
CAPE LIDO, see Friday listing. Irvine. 261.0231.
lloDday __ ,
~--:.----~---CAR UD(), see Fnday listina. TBlt AMEIUCAN MUSIC Pl!&-
19lt D.C. CONNECTION, 1ce Surt-JPORM.ANCE Euemb&e and --'al da li . ......... ~~YOUJAZZCONNF.C-Q_~:...aR~utic~
TION, ICC Sunday listio1-John CMe. .. 5ul)ject Cues'' by Ellfs
...____._._ Khos ... C~ony I and II" by Paul a-,,. Chih&ra, and "~" by Eric
CAPE UDO, tee Friday liatin&-Wri&ht. Wrilht also direct&. 8 p.m .,
THE D.C. CONNECTION, sec Sun· UC lrvine'a Fi one Aru Coocet1 Hall.
day li.ttina. SS and SA admillion. 8~16.
ING
Mr. and lln. Country llaalc
Joe and aoee Lee MapM8, aomlaated for a On.m.my In
1983, .W be a~ at tlae ens, Bone l&looa ha Santa
ADa Moaday for two el.ow.. TlaeJ .w be appeutac with
Paal Bcnnnan'• Saper Coa.at:ry a.ad &om 8 p.m. to
mJ4D1Cbt. Adatl..toa 19 $5 at tlledoor. lnformadoa can be
obtained by callla& (213) IUS-5487.
THE ORANGE COUNTY YOUTH
SYMPHONY 01\C.11aTRA presents
a concert with works by Dvorak,
Strauss, and KalinikofT featured, as
well as variation• on a Shaker Melody
from Aaron Copland'• "Appalachian
Sprina." Erica Kim i1 featured piano
soloist in a rendition of "Piano
Concerto No. 3 in C Minor" by
Beethoven. 4 p.m.. Olapman Col-
l•'• Memorial Auditorium. 333 N.
Glanell, 0ranac. S4 and S2 ad·
mission. 997--6812.
THE SADDLEBACK CONCERT
CHORALE, under the direction o f
Alvin Briahtbill, fcatum a ulute to
Johann Sebutian Bach. The~
includes "Mqnificat in D M~or,"
"Komm Jesu Komm " and "Or-
chealna Suite No. 3." Soioista include
Da.rilyn MelUU, soprano: Berni~ Bf'iahtbU~ mezzo IOPf'ID,Z Paul
Karm1, tenor, and Man: \..iemenl,
bu$. 7:30 p.m .. Santiaao de Com-
poltcla Church, 21682 l..Ue Forest
Dr., El Toro. $7 and S6 Mtmi111on.
582-4656.
Wedaeeday
.. A CONCERT or ITALIAN
BAROQUE MlJSIC." This s,naduat.e
project is. performed by M&rickc
Schuurs, .oprano. Prop'am includes
cantatas aid oboe concvto and
works by Albinoni, Rossi, Chcsti and
others. 8 p.m .• UC Irvine's Fine Arts
Concert Rall. Free admission.
Tlnanday
!IJ.JOTr llliaP, of New York\
Lower East Side, pttSCnu solo 1m-
provtsatioos for ~ and gujw al
the final I 98S Contemp0rary CUiture
Serict oerfonn.aocc at Newport
Harbor Art Mu.cum. 8 p.m .• 850 San
Clementi Dr .. Newport Beach. $5.50
and $7 .50 admi11ion. 759-I 122.
RAYMOND JONES, Cypress Col-leac music instructor, it fe.tured in a
solo recital at 8 p.m. Works by
Men.art. Chopin Dcbuny and Liszt
an pracnted. CCa Fine Aril Recital
Hau. 9200 Valle}' View St .. Cypress. S3 admillion. a26-'Sl I.
hidaJ
"llP'ORI! I OOT MY EYE PUT
OUT" on I.he main "* of South
Cout 'epenory. 6SS Town C.Cnter
Drive, C0tta Mesa (957-'033).
Oatebook/ Frfday, Nowmber 15, 1985
:Al
D N
Tuesdays throuah Fridays at 8 p.m.,
Saturdays at 2:.lO. and 8. Sundays at
2:30 and 7:30 untJI Nov. 24.
"BEYOND THERAPY" by the
Stop-Gap theater company at the
Forum Theater on the Fcsti val of Arts
grounds, Laguna Beach (838-5344).
Final performanc:es tonight and Sat-
urday at 8 p.m.
"CAROUSEL" at the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse. 606 Laguna
Canyon Road. Laguna Beach
(494-0743), Tueadays through Satur-
days at 8. Sundays at 2:30 until Nov.
24.
"CHJCAGO" at UC Irvine's Fine
Arts Village Theater (856-661 7).
Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m. until Nov. 23.
"A CHORUS UNE" at the Grand
Dinner Theater, I Hotel Way.
Anaheim (772-77 l 0), nightly exc:ept
Mondays at varying cunain times
through the end of the year.
"TllE COURTSHIP OF M~
ST ANDISB" in the Actors Playbox
Theater at Golden West College,
Huntington Beach (89S-8378). to-
night, Saturday and Nov. 21-23 at 8
p.m., Sunday and Nov. 24 at 3 p.m.
"THE CRUCIBLE" at· Southern
CaJifomia College. 55 Fair Drive.
Costa Mesa (556-3610). final per-
fonnanccs tonight and Saturday at 8
p.m.
"DAMF.S AT SEA" at the Newpon
Theater Arts Center, 2501 Qiff
Drive, Newpon Beach (63 1-0288).
Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
throuah Dec. 7, Sunday performanc.es
Nov. IO, 17 and 24 at 7 p.m.
"DRACULA" at tbe Harlequin
Dinner P1aybou5e, 3503 S. Harbor
Blvd., Santa Alia (979-55 l I), final
perfonnances tonight throu&h Sun-
daX at varying cunain times.
HENRY IV" in the Drama Lab
Theater at Orans Coast College,
Costa Mesa (432-5527). tonight. Sat·
urday and Nov. 22-23 at 8 p.m., Nov.
24 atl _p.m. •'111£ ~· at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Ave.
Pico, San Oemente (492-9950),
Wednetdays throuah Saturdays at 8
p.m., Sundays at l and 7 p.m. tttrough
Dec. I. ~MY PAIR LADY" at the Curtain
Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino
Real, Tustin (83&-l 540), nightly ex-
cept Monday~ at varying cunian
times throuab Jan. t 9.
"ON GOLDEN POND" at the
Westminster Community Theater,
7272 Maple St., Westminster
(995.,..113), Fridays and Saturdays at
8:30 thro\&lb Dec. 7, with a matjnce
Sunday, Nov. 24, at 2 p.m.
"PAINTING CHURCHES" on the
Second Sa.ae of SOuth Coast Reper-
tory, 655 Town Center Drive. Costa
Mesa (957..-033), Tuesdays through
Fridays at 8:30. Saturdays at 3 and
8:30. Sundays at 3 and 8 p.m. until
Dec. I .
"SOME l!!NCHANTED EVE-
NING" at the Oem Theater. 12852
Main St.1 Garden Grove (636-7213),
Wedneaaays tbrouah Saturdays at 8
p.m., Nov. 17 and Dec. 15 at ~ p.m.,
Nov. 24 and Dec. 8 at 7:30. untll Dec.
21.
'11QVABBUt8" at the Huntinaton
Beach Playboutc. Maio Street at
Yorktown Avenue, Huntinato n
8e8cll (832.~ 1405). Frida)'1 a.nd Sat~r
days at 8:30 throuah Nov. 30 w1t.h
madnoesat 2:30Sunda) and Nov. 17.
,..AGE traVCK at the Sao ~" Community Theater, 202
Ave. Cabrillo, San Clemente
(492-046'). Tbundays tbrouah Sat·
wdays at a p.m. until Nov. lf.
"WATal ON TllB amNr at the
Q.ia Mela Civic PlayboUIC, 611
H1mJhoa St.. Costa Meu
(650-5269), Thursdays through Sat-
urdays at 8:30 until Nov. 23.
Saturday
"BEFORE I GOT MY EYE PUT
OUT" at South Coast Repcnory. See
Friday listing.
"BEYOND THERAPY" by 1he
Stop-Gap theater company. See Fn-
day listing.
"CAROUSEL" at the Laguna
Moulto n Playhouse. See Friday list-
inf.. 'CHICAGO" at UC Irvine. Stt
Friday listint
"CAROUSEL" at the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse. See Friday Jjst-
ing.
"A CHORUS LINE" at the Grand
Dinner Theater. Sec Friday listtng.
"MY FAIR LADY" at the Curtain
Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday
listing.
"PAINTING CHURCHES" on th<'.
Second Stage of South Coast Reper-
,
tory. Sec Fnday hsl1ng.
Wedne8day
"BtFORE f GOT MY EYE PUT
OUT" at South Coast Repertory Sec
Friday listing.
"CARNIVAL',. at the Harlequin
Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor
Blvd., Santa Ana (978-5511 ). nightly
17-f,,f' ~
except Mondays at varying curtain
times through Feb. 9.
"CBJCAGO" at UC Irvine Sec
Fnday listing.
"SOME ENCHANTED EVE·
NING" at the Gc:m Theater Sec
Fnday listing.
Thunday
"BEFORE I GOT MY EYE PUT
, .
ANN 0 u N c NG
THI BROADWAY'S SUNDAY
BRUNCH "A CHOR S LINE" at the Grand
Dinner Theater. Sec Friday listing.
''THE COURTSHIP OF MILES
ST ANDISB" at Golden West College.
Sec Friday listing. .
"THE CRUCIBLE" at Southern
California College. Sec Friday list~ng. Starting November 17th
"DAMES AT SEA" at tbc Ne~n
Theater Arts Center. Sec Fnday
listini.
"DRACULA'' at lhe Harlequin
Dinner Playhouse. See Friday listing.
"HENRY IV" at Orange Coast
College. See. Friday listing.
..THE MlllAOO" al Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. See Friday
listing.
0 MY FAIR LADY" at the Cun.am
CaJI Dinner Theater. See Friday
listing.
"ON GOLDEN POND" at the
Westminster Community Theater.
See Friday listing.
"PAINTING CBUBCllES" on lhe
Second S~ of South Coast Reper-
to~So5:i"~~~;~TED EVE-
NING" at the Gem Tbeater. Sec Frida ljs . !.84'uAB~" at the HuotinJton
Beach Playhouse. See Friday lisbng.
The Broadway will be featuring a Sunday Brunch.
buffet style, at our restaurant between
I 1 AM and 3:30 PM.
We will be presenting a variety of hot item s. selected
salads and your choice of £hampagne or sparkling cider.
Reservations Acct'pted
(714) 89].J)JJ
e.tl. 176 or JI .5
M r. 0.vc McO~. Mgr
Make up a party and join us
for a delicious brunch at the
unbelievable low price of
s 795 per person
Broodw/J 1 C hargc &
A mcncan EAprn5
.\ettptt'd
One morr proof that the
Bn.>ndwa~ u qu11J.11
"STAGE STRtJa" at the San Qemente Community Theater. See ~~~~:=:!:~:::::::=:::::::=~~=======::::::=::::=:::::::::::::=::::::==::::=====-=-==:........:...--=-
Friday listina.
"WATCH ON THE RHINE" at the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. See
Friday listina.
"THE WIZARD OF OZ" at St. Mark
Presbyterian Church, 2100 Mar
Vista, Newpon Beach (644-1341 ),
tonight at 7 p.m .. Sunday at 5 p.m.
only.
Sanday _ ___ _
"Bl!!f'ORE I GOT MY EYE PUT
OUT" at South Coast Repertory. Sec
Friday listina.
"CAJ\OUSEL" at the Laguna
Moulto n Playhouse. See Friday list-
int, A CHORUS LINE" at the Grand
Dinner Theater. See Friday listing.
"THE COURTSHIP OF MILES
STANDISH" at Golden West College.
Sec Friday listing.
"DAMES AT SEA" at the Ne~n
Theater Arts Center. Sec Fnday
listing.
"DRACULA" at the Harlcq_uin
Dinner Playhouse. See Friday listmf-
"TRE MIL\00" at Sebastian s
West Dinner Playhouse. Sec Friday
listina.
"MY FAIR LADY" at the Curtain
Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday
listina. .. "P AINTINO CllURCllES" on the
Second S~ of South Coast Reper-t<>ry8o5:i"~~~;r~TED EVE-
NING" at the Oem Theater. Sec
Frida listi . ~~DOFOZ"atSt. Marie
Presbyterian Church, Newport
Beech. See S.turday listina. ,......
"BSPORB I GOT MY EYE PUT
OtJT" at South Coat Repenory. See
Friday U1dns.
... I.
WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY
ADVERTISED PRICE
of 1986 Panasonic video equipment In stock with purchase of membership
lfEW l'Alfida#IC
VHS·llOVIE CAllCOllDEa
1f0fl A ti All.AIU.£
•. UMa re9ular VHS-Tl20 taSM
• 6a uiom with macro
• 10 lu l19ht Mnaltlvlty
• Auto focua
• 2 hour recordltt9 on a banery
• Serve• .. uimera or • VCR which le11 vou playbactl
pre-record•d movk• on 11ovr TV.
l'ANAMJNIC ~1" DIA&O#AL
COLOa raOJECWON TV
------------------~ 'Purch••• thb TV
• IAirt-3T" dlaeoul aoeryltc ecrnn
wlth2 l0 ft. laf'llbefl bri9htHU
NEW PANA80/lllC
"'-''•' TV ••ti NEW T .,.,.., O.cofl•r
• Picture within Picture
• Double ChanMI Vt.wine
• Sur.,.mance atMI Babytllllne
• C'o11tputer •ltd Tet.tHI Ready
• WHlth of Practical h1formaOon •nd
Ltar•lftt MatarMll
and •t•y In L/\Kf
TAHOE on u•f"
(3 daye. 2 nlfhlll
WE OFFEa YOV:
• LC>WH I MOllM , ••••• ,.,.
• s.-ci.1 -"'"-""• .... • E.pert ••chnlca.I advtu
~.
• '>r.reo emplllt•• and
• ·~•k•r 11111•m
• 12~ c:hann•I ubl•·COft'lpatlbl•
• Unlfl•d wlr•lnt r<•mol• COftlrol
• Vld•o audio Input /ou1p111 )acb
• V( R H rvk• •Ml r•pelt
• Vld•o ac'C-•&"Orln •"" biaak tap.•
• T .... 10 t~ lflm 10 , • .,. 1ra1,.i.n
Oatebook/ Friday, November 15. 1N5 I
I
I
I
I
I .
m
----------~----------------.,._----------------~----------~~
OUT" at South Cow Repertory. Sec
Friday listiQI.
.. CAROUSEL" at the Laguna
Moulton Playboute. Sec Friday list-
int,
Frida listing. ~AGE STRUCK" at the San
O emeote Commuruty Theater. See
f rida y listin&.
"WATCH ON THE RHINE" at the
Cort.a Mesa Civic Playhouse. See
Friday listing.
THE "SALlJTE TO COUNTRY MUSIC"' Review i.a presented bqin-oin& at 1 p.m. at the Crazy Hone
Saloon. Doors open at 5 p.m. Fea-
tured is Bob Gulley and the Best io the
West Review. 1580 BrookboUow, Sant.a Ana. s-49-1512. CARNIVAL" at the Harlequin
Dinner Playhouse. See Wednesday
listing. lloaday
"CRJCAGO'' at UC Irvine. See
Friday listing.
"A CHORUS LINE" at the Grand
Dinner Theater. See Friday listing. NIHY
htday
"THE COURTSHIP OF MILES
STANDISH" at Golden West CoUeet.
See Friday listioi.
"THE MD.ADO" at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. Sec Friday tis . ~ FAIR LADY" at the Cun.a.in
Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday ti .
THE WP.STERN UNION BAND
oerforms from 8 p.m.-1:30 Lm .• with Bill Erickson appcarins from 5-7:30
p.m. Crazy Hone SaJoon. 1580
Brookbollow, Sant.a Ana. S.9-1512.
~:tME ENCHANTED EVE-
NING" at the Gem Theater. Sec
Chety1 Kvt-J, WhO gets teaaed about hef"
last name but doesn t mind, moved to Southern
Calitom1a ltom Houston. Texas nine years ago. Cheryl
was a teacher bv profession, and wanted to teach klndef·
garten '" a pvbhc 9Choo4 1n the Fountain Valley area
There were no such opportuntbet. 90 she 8C08Pt*' a
poslt>On as a Pf&-acnool leacher '" a pnvale school. sne
loved lh8 ,00. but lo support herself IWicl hef two
daughters, WhO al the hme were ten and two, she needed
to supplement her income The questl()(I became, how? A· lnend !Old me about the Ofange County Fair-
grounds Swap Meet : Cherly! sa,id, ".m anottler fl1end woo was in the art business supplied me with quality pmts
and frames on consignment. I was In buslness ... although
n wasn't easy atttie beg1mlng, eight years 9g0. We dkM't
have reserved spaces then, ao my oldest daughter. who
was ten at the tme. and I waited In tine out5'de the
grounds ell nlohl long. Then, at the end of the day on
Saturday, we'd pack up and get r~ bedl in lin& all nig'll
10nQ to 1811 on Sunday tt was all wor1h it." Today. Chetyt hat two r9MMKS tpaCeS every Satur·
• Dateboc*/ Friday, Nowmw 1s. 1985
Md Sunday. "Our pnces range from framed glassed
prints that ltart et $25.00 to Oftginal art for S300.00. we offer paper 9CUlpture wt11d'I 11 popular row, IWicl we do
cusiom fr8l'Tlff"lg and mattJng to customer specified OOI· ors.··
So what haippeoed to the teact11ng cateer? "I still leach
lrve days a week, ... I art on weekends. and I'm home With
my d~ers eve<y day b'( 3:00 p.m I 90fOY bott'I my
ptOfesslons, and I'm happier than l'Ye 9Y9f been in my life
This Swap Meet has been a great oppot\Unlty IWicl eXJ*i·
ence lor me and my glr11 •
The Ofange County Fairgrounds Swap Meet la ~
to have Cheryl u part of our vendor tamHy., . can \llSlt
her every Seturd.y lf1d Sunday at
spaces K-168 & K-170.
lt'•.U there •••
-E~ •••
....... the 8Unl
screcnsat 7:00and 9:45 p.m. Fri., and
at 7:15 p.m. along with "Annie Hall"
at 9:45 p.m. on Sal UC Irvine's
Science Lecture Hall. S2.50 and $2
admilaion. 856-5547.
s.ta.rdar --
Tlaanday
"PURPLE ROSE OP CAIRO'' and
"Annie Hall." sec Friday ltsung.
THE WDTERN UNION BAND,
see Friday listin&. Also tonight only is
a Two-Step Dance Contest with a
crui.e for two to the Caribbean
offered.
SING' ES
Prlday
FILM
ADVANCED DEGRE~ LTD, a
sinaJcs group of s)rofcssionals with
advanced degrees in various areas.
bostsadancefrom9p.m.-miclnightat
the Costa Mesa Country Oub, 170 I
Golf Course Dr., Costa Mesa. $8.50
admission. (818) 990-0736.
AN OPEN D~CE . for sin&les I\
hosted by the Hunungton ~ch
chapter of Parents Without Partners
from 9 p.m.-1 Lm. Orient.atiQn is held
from 8-9 p.m. Huntington Beach Inn.
21112 Pacific Cout Hwy .. Hunt-
iqton Beach. 898-7975.
THE STARLIGllTERS, a aroup of
moral, ethical, sinaJe people seckmg
truth and ~t waysoflivi~ features
social actlvities, stimulauna das-
cussioo and refreshments every Fn
ni&hL 1929 Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa
721-7199.
SOUTHER N WHEEL OF
.• ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
Robert B. Moore Theatre
Fair\/iew & Arlington, Co•ta MeH
IRELAND
ArmchBlf Adventure Ser1es
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21 -8 P.M.
Adn11ss1on $4 Advance SS at Door
CINDERELLA
Ballet Pacifica
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 -4 P.M.
IJ,,,,,,,,,,, '' AJ'""'' ''' .11 f>,.,,,
PAOJIC SYMPHONY
Featuring Robert Ch~n. \1olln
7:JO P.M. -SUNDAY. NOV. l~
Reserved Seats: SIO Adults:
S 7 00 Under 18
Ill/ NUTCRACKER
Ch·ic IJal!t'f f1/ So. Calif.
FRIDAY. NOVEM BER 29
2 l'.\I •nd 7:.111 I'. \t.l'rrform11nt,.,
1 .. 111 11tl AJ1111101••11 '' 1d1.11111 ''' ·'' JJ,,,,,
A MAHL
& the Night Viaitors
Five Penny Opera
11 •·•· -Wetl. -Fri. Dec. ~. 5, 6
7:30 p.m. -lla•n. • Fri., Dec. 5, 6
2 P·•· Dec. 7
General AdmlSSlOll S5 Adults, SJ Urider 18
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
TICKET INFO
(714) 432-5527
ASK FOR OP!RATOR 0
Coll for 1985 86 Schedu/CJ1
Q'Tf.Ll·TNJN. \81 (nJ}4U)··IOW
1714)$)41*
V1sa/Mast1rc1rd Accftptj\(j For Advance l 1cktt Salos
• Otacountt 1v111t11bfo for Children Gold C.rda (Sen1ort1
:Al
D N U E
woman's hfe. Steve Winer, Ph.D .. a cl ubs an AuckJand, Rotorua. Wcll-a.m .·8 pm with fn -~c open unlll 11
communications consultant speetal-1ngton, Queenstown and Dunec;!in . pm S22-I I SS
121ng in relationships at the Self S2,687perperson,doubleoccupancy, OLD WORLD VILLAGE, 7561
Center in Tustin, leads the partic1-includes round-trip airfare, first class Center Avc . Huntington Beach
pants. 7-10 p.m., Central Savings and hotels, a home-stay. special SP.CC1alty shops arc located 1n thJS
Loan. El Toro. S 10 fee. S59-3333 astronomy-related mcetln$S and lee-Vllltgc that features the charm 01
lures. ground transportatio n, trans-4ua1nt European v1llaJtS with <:o~ Tbunda_l fen. port«agc. daily s1ght<;ee1ng and bled streets. lantern hghts. and 70
FRIENDSHIP, for smJJcs over 4.S, Pac1fic Cout Highway.Corona del "PETER PAN, SUPERMAN AND more. 960-2300. murals of European "ICCnes painted
meets for Happy Hour from .S-7 p.m. Mar. 544-280.S. TODAY'S MAN." A program for men on cxtcnor waJls by Euro pean an1m
at Maxwell's Restaurant. 317 Pacific and women who want to k.now more Oncoln& E•enta 894-0747
Coast H wy., Huntington Beach. Taeeday about men and having better rcla-BALBOA PAVILION, 400 Main QUEEN MARY, Long Beath
544-2805. WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, for t1onships. 7-10 p.m., Golden West St., Balboa. The pavilion 1s a Cah-Harbor at the end of the Long Beach
"UVING SINGLE IN OR.ANGE singles over 4S, meets at 6:30 p.m. for Collcae's Fine Arts 211 , I S744 Gold· fom1a and nationaJ historic landmark Freeway b:h1b1ts include \pcctaJ
COUNTY." McGraw-Hill author dinner at Salt &. Pepper in Garden en West St., Huntington Beach. $8 and manne recreation center which effect sound and light shows in the
Alan Gamer discusses where to go in Grove. 828-5215 or 774-3024. f~. 891 -3991. features da1l) narrated cru1S<'s of Eng.inc Room and W het'lhouSt' rc-
Orangc County 10 me-cl the lond of "IT SHOULDN'T HURT TO BE N ewpo rt Harbor. deep sea enacting a near<olhsion at ~a and
people you want 10 get to kno w. He sponfishing tnps daily, -dnvc and an elllens1ve Wor1d War 11 d1~p1 .. , also offers ideas on how to meet them. SINGLE." Dr. David H. Coombs. charter boats. 673-524.S dep1cung the "()ucen s" active role as
6:30-9:30 p.m ., Rancho Santiago 0 -BRIGGS CUNN GHAM A 0 -a troops 1p 1 Y a m -Professional mama-and family ACJ\A~ IN UT h Da 1 lfl 6 pm
College, Rm. Rll4, 17th at Bristol therapist and seminar leader w.ho MOTlVEMUSEUM,2.SOE.BakerSt , (~11)415-3511
Sts .. SantaAna.SlOfoe 667-3096. conducts workshops in behavior CostaMesa.Anuquecarsc1rca19L~-SAN J UAN CAPJST RANO
modification, emphasizes "happi-TUE MADRIGAL DINNER ltlS, present 9 am -5 pm Wed -Sun MISSION . 118!1:' c amtntt WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, for nm is not always dependent upon UC Irvine's re-creation of 16th ccn-S46-7660 c api~.trano San Juan ( ar'tMran11 sin&les over 4S, meets at S:30 p.m. for having someone constantly at your tury banquet with costume singers. DISNEYLAND, I 1 I) Harbor Features '><'rra (hapcl c .alilomi.1 ,
a T.G.I.F. at the Cask ·n Cle.aver inn side. He helps participants gam court JCSter, trumpeters and tra-Bl vd .. Anaheim ... MouS<"kctecr Reu-oldti.t building.. the ruin' ot the (H('<ll
Orange. 828-5215 or 774-3024. valuable insight into singles who live dmonaJ Yuletide fClUt, 1s presented mon" 15 held each weekend through <i ionc <nun:h !>Oldirrc, b.trr.11 h
Saturday alone, but who want to avoid feehng Nov. 29-30. Dec. 1-2, 7, and 13-1 7. Nov 24 wtth 11 o rilinal hcauuful gardens. and 1"'u"mu<;Cum
lonely. 7:30-9:30 p.m .. Turtle Rock Sunday banquets begin at S p.m ·all Mouscketeers. includ1n$ Bobby r0<1mc, '41th anifaC'tc, from Na11,c
A SINGLES DANCE 1s presented Community Park, lrvme. S 15 fee. others at 7 p.m f26 . .SO and S24 Burgess. Darlene Gillespie, ShrlT) .\mcncan a nd earl)' !)pani)h culture
each Sat. and features Big Band Latin .S.S9-3333. admission. 856-661 1 Albcroni and Cubby O'Bnen. fea-Datl} 1 )() a.m -5 pm 441-1424
and Swing music from 8:30-11:30 A NEWCOMERS' ORIENTATION A HOLIDAY DINNER DANCE lured in nostalgic stage shows and SANTA'S VILLAGE, H 1ghwa~ 1!1.
p.m. Londancc Dance Studio, 362.S is held each Tuesday with the New-featunng Hill.h Society, "Southern fesuve parades. Fall )CQSOn conunucs 20 miles from San Bernardino fea-
W. MacArthur Blvd., #307, Santa port-Irvine Chapter of Parents Cahforma·s foremost big band," is with the 30th Anniversary Parade turcd art 12 ndes including hve
Ana. S.S includes refreshments. Without Partners. 8-9· I 5 pm. Coffee held Dec. 7 from 6:30 p.m.-12:30a.m. featured at 1 :30and .s p.m Wttkends animal nd~. a puppet show ixmng
85(}-0676. and conversation follow$. Call at Turtle Rock Commumty Park. The MllJ!C Kingdom celebrate) 11s 100, and man) colorful ~hops. along
THE TEMPLE BETH EMET 549-1135. Included is a soetal hour, buffet 30th anniversary w11h the "(Jtfi Giver with Santa and his rcindttr Dail) I 0
Singles ancnd the Los Alamitos Race dinner, danetng and surpnscs for all. Excraordmaire Machine:· Sun -Fn. a m -.S pm. No\ 9-Jan .S C'loscd
Track. Foragcs 30and~. Meet in the Wedn~y $22 admission, call before Nov. 2.S. tO a.m .-6 p.m .. Sat. 10 a.m.-7 p.m \hnstmas Dav 337-2481
shopping center of bcruon's at THE WINNER S C IRC LE 660-3881. 999-4S65. SEA WORLD, 1720 S Shores
Euclid and K.atella, naheim, near SINGLES Toastmasters meets each "F UN, SUN AND TUE COMET'' 1s MOVIELAND WAX MUSEUM, Road, M1ss1on Ba)'. San Diego Sea
the Baskin Robbim loc Cream parlor Wed. at 7 p.m. at the Oubhousc. the title of a 20-day tour of New 7711 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Elvira hons explore a " · pook> Kook)
at 6 p.m . Group leaves at 6:4S p.m . for 16700 Saybrook. Huntington Beach. Zealand for outdoor lovers and 1s the newest featured replica among a\lle" in tht' seal and oner ~hov.
the race track. 772-4720. 840-1745. amateur astronomers mtcrested in the already elaborate collcctJon of Also offered is "Dolphin D1S(ovef) ...
"THE CINDERELLA/WEND\' studymg Halley's Comet. Held Mar. movie and tclcv1s1on memorab1ha the ARCO Penguin En<.ounter, a $7
Sanday CONFLICT." Discover the dynamaic 31-Apr. 19, highlights include meet-1nciudmg hfe-hke rcphcas of more m1lhon exh1b11 that houses 400
Tll£ CATHOLIC ALUMNI CLUB forces behind the type of man in a 1ngs and parties with local astronomy than 200 renowned stars. Dail:, I 0 penguins. and killer "'hale ~ha mu
ofOrangc County host.s the~gcneraJ .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
meeting at 7:30 p.m., followed by
dancina at 9 p.m . Anaheim Hyatt
Hotel, l 700 S. Harbor Bl vd.,
Anabetm. for sinaJe college gradu-
ates, aaes 2S-40. 957-0125.
THE SINGLETARJANS evening
"Discovery" discussion group of the
Oranac Coast Unitarian UniversaJist
Church bas a special reorpnizatio n
and plannin& meeting at 7 p.m .
following a 5:30 p.m. potluck. Dr.
Chris Schriner, the church minister of
counseling. facilitate1 the discussion.
1259 Vietoria St., Costa Mesa
646-4652.
WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, fot
sinaJcs over 45, meets for brunch al
I I :30 a.m. at Allison's in Santa Ana.
828-521.S or 774-3024.
SOUTHERN WHEEL OF
FRIENDSBIP, for sinaJes over 4.S,
meets for a soctal session at 8 p.m. at
the five Crowns Rcsuurant Lounge,
• floor Mott • "'Cor co .... n
• Uceme PkM Fro~
• Bros
SHEEPSKIN SLIPPERS
DOthboord Co.,.,,
S'"""'9 Wheel C~
mvdt MUCH ,...,.1
1tt7 ..... c:..N Mew
631 -7189
Now South Coast Plaza
has 1404 convenient
new parking spaces.
Our new North parking. trucrure,s nni. hcJ!
1404 additional parking spaces o ffer you more
convenient access to Bullock's~ Nordstrom
and Scar . (fur I. Magnin, Saks anJ May Co.,
use South structure.) Valet parkings also
available in the nt.w structure. Present thi~ ad
for a day of complimentary valet parking (gcxx.J
o nly t hrough N ov. 27 at tht: new structure).
To valet park,_ enter on the 2nd level from the
Sunflower side.
=
r-w
::r:
f
::i: ,,. .... :c
ii. SOUTH COAST PLAZA
'9n 0 1f&0 h•v· a1 )})) 8rn1ol "'··(..,.,1 \,tcu, t"." O!tolfl.17H t l4 1 I :11'.'
Valet f"arlurla-~•r Scrtt1 cnir~n• r tn M.tl ti I ~b1n1n
-8rottol ~""' «n1nncc "' MAii al P\rc•'•
-Sun0own cmiranl'• In rarl11n1 "ruc1un
\tall Hour--W.-l'kJ.n, •~'·~1 .,.>1urJ .. , h' 7' ~1mJr, I!~
\\ t:-.L 1
.... '
L
.., .....
::i: -,
-;;--
!..
~
Ill' II I~
0.Cebook/ Fr1day, N<>Yember 15, 1985 1
•
>
856-6616. l
A M~CU: Aim
EXPO, sec fnday listing.
ATV
------
MOVIE :Al ·l-1\DAl·-
D NT INJE
. ... Da1Jy 9 a.m.~ p.m. (619) 224-3562.
Smaday
A MOTORCYCLE AND
EXPO, see Friday listing.
ATV
---~
Tuellday
SHERMAN LIBRARY AND GA.I\. DENS, 2647 Pacific Coast Hiahway MICHALE C. FORD, Freeway Rc-r
Corona del Mar. Roses, cact~ cords artist, and author of "The
'White Nights'
successful film
annu&.I gardens, an orchid con-World ls A Suburb of Los An&cles, is
servatory, koi ponds and a gift show. Friday presented by the Bowers Museum
Dally 10:30 a.m..4 p.m. LAGUNA POETS meet each Fri. at and Medina foundation along with
8 p.m. for scheduled and open contemporary music by The fringe
By BOB THOMAS ........,,....._
M~ ~~Stai~~~~U~~ff ~at the Lquna Beach Public GToup. Refreshments served. 8 p.m., In this era of high concept fiJms
lntentat.c 5, Valencia. More than 100 library. Featured toniaht is David Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main SL, from Hollywood, -whale Nights"
d h Del Bourgo and Dennis Hall. Santa Ana. $3 donation. 962-1900. offers this nifty tale: n cs,s owsandanractions including 494-9550. THE BARBOR SINGERS, com-Mikhail Baryshnikov, a Soviet
the Sarajevo Bobslod an 1800s stvle A -.OTO:nCYCLE • pri·-of 2• ""n 1~-1 ~ o -•· ball h d ii'. crafts. village, and a Roaring Raprds ,.,., 'n AND ATV '~ ~JV V'-&I w men, mcc... ct sw w o e1ects to tbe West, whatt' water adventure art offered. EXPO is featured honoring the l OOth ~c~ Tuesday evening for choral finds himself imprisoned in his
CaJI for hours. (8 I 8) 992-0884. anniversary of the motorcycle. smpng, some choreography and native land when the jet he's on
Focuses on the history o f the motor· camaraderie. The group perfonns aJI crashes io Siberia. Gregory Hines, an
SPR UCE GQOSf:, Lo11& Beach cycle, s~te-of-the-art equipment, and ~of music for civic groups, clubs, American who defccu to the Soviet
Harbor at the end of the. Long Beach the vanous people of the motorcycle hospitals and many other-orpniu-Union, is assigned to-help convince
Freeway. Howard Hughes' all-wood, world. Fri. S-10 p.m., Sal noon-10 tions. Anyone is welcome. 6:»9:30 Baryshnikov to resume bis c:a.rccr 2~ton Oyi !l& boat. majestically p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Anaheim p.m., Presbyterian Church of the there.
berths for v151tors to view the inside Convention Center, 800 W. K.atella Covenant, Fairview Rd., Costa Mesa. The plot is a long stretch, but tt
of ~e world's largest . clear-span Ave., Anaheim. $6 and $4 admission. 494-8119 or554-3226. suoceeds .most of the way, largely
aluminum dome. A vanety of dis-999-8900. Wedllmday ----because of the soarina talents of the
plays including modules that show Sata.rda two stars and the swe--banded dircc-
closc-up details offucinating areas of Y A BOLIDA Y BOtmQUE AlJC. tion by Taylor Hackford ("An Officer
the plane such as the cockpit, flight STUART JACOBSEN, author -of TION is hosted by the Southern and a Gentleman," ••Apinst All
declc and wing interior are featured. "OnJyTbe Best: A Celebration ofGift Orange County Alpha Omicron i>i Odds"). ~the Queen Mary listing for more Giving in Arneriqa." makes a per· Alumnae Chapter. Unique band· "White Nights" refers to the end-
mfonnauon. IO a.m . ..O p.m. (2 13) sonal appearance to answer questions made craft items and gourmet food less days of northern Russia, where 435-35 11. and au\ograph his book from noon-4 arcfcaturcd. Refreshments an: served most of the act.ion takes place.
p.m. at Nordstrom, South Coast beainnina at 6 p.m., the auction starts Baryshnikov. flying between appear-
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS, 100 Uni-Plaza. at ~ p.m. Great American federal ances in London and Tokyo, survi ves
venal City Pt, Unjvenal City. A TENOR GRANT FIUZEll and Savinp Bank, 23688 El Toro Rd., El the 747 c::rub and u quietly claimed
guided tram tour of Univcrsal's champion accordionist STUART Toro. 731-54'9. 'by the KGB as a propqanda prize.
famed 420.acrc back lot and the ANDERSON present an evening of l(BG aaent Jmy SkoliinOwsti enlists
EnterUirunent Center, whjcb fca. ~ttish SO"J ~ music. 8 p.m., UC Tlaanday Hines, who bas fallen out of favor and
turcs five live sho ws, is offered. (81 8) Irvine's Uruvenaty Center HeritaF AN Oil 6 aa.us PBOllOTIONS is.touri~ ~Siberian provioca, with i508~-9~600~.~~~iiii~i,iiiiiiRiooiimi.iSi8i, iSi7i aindiiiSi6iadiimiisuii'oin.il Antique Show and SaJe featuring his SoV1Ct wife, Isabella Roucllini.
•
antique ftamiture, unuN.al lamps, 11te two dancers arc transported. to
••A f II 1 collectable photos, vintacc .1 .. u 4ni~ where each becomes. tn· mu°"' or a occas ons... primitives, &lass repair and :;b tn~ with the o~s sty~. Hanes
more, is presented brajonina today at rul.~ the error of bis ~1on, and
Huntington Center, l ocated oft' the be JO•ns the ballet sw 1.n a plot to
~5 freeway at 8cach Blvd., Huot-cteape. dale wood's
REPRISE
Available as a trio, quartet, six-piece combo or seven-
teen-piece big band.
References and demo tapes available, reasonable
rates.
easy llstenlng, danceable rhythms, !?'\ classic entertaining songs
~ from the 20's -80's
~ <> <a1 a>191-1s19
It's afl here ...
everything under the sun
Discover great bargains
Unlimited variety of new, used & handcraft Items
Golden West College
Golden West & Edinger Streets
Huntington Beach
Free Parking • Free Admission
For 8ddltfoMI lnfonnetton c.tl 113-2319
angton Beach. lburs.-Nov. 15 I 0
a.m.-9 p.m., Nov. 16.17 10 a.m.-6
p.m. (213) 46S-0049.
HUNGRY?
SEE DATEBOOK'S
DINING GUIDE
BUBBLES •••
Frompace3
in the comer of the bar will be used by
cntert.aincn, includinc the Lok Spots,
whose roots reach back to the heyday
of ni&btclub jazz.
And the restaurant staff' wiU don
authentic uniforms to complete the
look.
"We did a lot of research with Doug
CRoi.tpaa~ 1? JLUKd CJLUiSe
CRUISE s8'ENIC NEWPORT HARBOR
10 AM SUNDAY
Buffet Brunch. Entertainment. Prizes
Adults-$18 Chffdren 10 & Under-$10
RESERVATIONS
673-3014
~ Balboa Pavilion
400 Main Street
Balboa, CA 9266 t
673-3014 IUll~ .. ~"'!'°""~~-.... :-..----
More a drama wtth dances than a
musical, "White Nights" places a
heavy responsibility on the acting of
the two stars. Baryshnikov has 1hc
easier wk. rcflectinJ his real-life
diswtc for the repress1on of artists by
the Soviet regime. Hines must deal
with a lCSHiefined character; the
reasons for his defection during the
Vietnam War remain unclear.
Both have romantic conflict~
Barysbnikov with the baJlenna
(Helen Mirrin) he left behind: Hane'
with a wife tom between love for her
husband and her country.
Perhaps because Hackford did not
want "White Niabts" to seem like a
musical; the dances bave been
subordinated. fans of Baryshniko'
and Hines may be disappointed, but
they can savor those moments when
the two stars perform their special·
tics. And when the pair combines in a
daz:z.lio& duct of ballet and jazz.
viewers are likely to cheer.
A oatuMbom actor, Mikhail
Batyshnikov is totaUy convincing in a
role paraJ.lclina bis own history.
lmpres.sive in "The Cotton O ub,"
Hiocs ap.in displays emotional
depth. Isabella Rossellini, a haunting
replica of the young Ingrid Bcraman.
ICCms capable of folJowina her
mother's profession. Tbe always re·
liable Geraldine Pqe is wasted an the
role of Baryshnikov's manqer.
Rated l>G-13, apparently for 1anauaac.
Hines' career restructured
from dancingtodramatics
By BOB THOMAS
• 111• .......... "It's hard working w11 h Billy,
~use everything he says 1s funny."
LOS ANGELES -Gregory Hines said Hines. ··1 laugh so hard 11's
··Running Scared" he went on night
patrols w11h undercover Chicagb
police.
stroUed down the oceanfront Venice paLnful. II gets so bad in a scene I have
walkway, pauStng 10 admire the well-lo walk away.from him. He could do Linle re mains of Hine·s bohemian
dressed man playing a Strauss wal11 15 minutes of jokes on 1h1s." He held pcnod. except for thrtt uny gold rings
by rubbing his fio.ger on an as-up aketchupboule. 1nh1sleflearandaflock ofmemories.
scmblage of brandy glasses. Hines. 39, prepared himself for He came to Venice during a period of
Theo be nodded 10 1he bearded both films. Before ·'White Nights." he upset; not only had he severed his
man who wore a towel as a turban and and Isabella Rossellini spent five days family ties, he was also undergoing a 1,.
sang and played guitar while roll-in the Soviet Union to experience divorce. He threw away bis tap shoes, u ~
erskating through the beach crowd. what living there would be like. For let bis hair grow. dabbled in drugs. Gre&ory Blnee, laabella RoeeellbU ln "White Ntahta. ••
"'He used to carry a loudspeaker on .---------------------------:.::======================-===================:..==. his back, but lbe cops made· him
stop," Hines explained. He led his
visitor to a table at a sidewalk cafe and
ordered fruitjuioe and soup.
"1 love Venice," said the dancer-
actor as be studied the passing parade
of muscle men, bathing beauties,
tourists and bums. ~This as where I
was a hippie.··
That was in 197 3-78, when Gregory
Hines dropped out of a dancing caretr
that had occupied virtually bis entire
life.
"'I was 27 years old," said Hines. ··1
don't remember when I wasn't in
show business. fiBt I worked with
my brother, Maurice. as the Hines
l(jds. Theo our father joined us and
we toured as Hines, Hanes and Dad.
Finally my brother aod I worked
t<>1tthcr, but we didn't get along.
Nothin& as violent as we played in
'The Couon Oub'; we JUSt couldn'1
agn:e. So we split up.
"It was a real eyc-.opener when I
became a hippie. All ml life. someone
always took care o me -my
manager, my mother, my agent. my
father. Suddenly, J was on my own. I
wasa scary pcnod in my life."
That ume seems long ago. Hines
has since become a Broadway star
("Eubie," "Sophisticated Lady"), a Las Yeps headliner and now is
eltjo)'ina a growinf film career.
Praised for last year s ''The Cotton
O ub," he c~stars with Mikhail
Barysbnilcov in Columbia Pictures'
''White Nights" and is currently
filminf MGMUA's ··Running
~· with Billy Crystal.
"White Nights" provides Hines'
greatest opportunity, both as danccr
and actor. He portrays an American
dancer who has defected to lbe Soviet
Union because of disillusionment
with the Vietnam War. He has potent
scenes with Baryshnikov and with
Isabella Rossemni, who plays Hines'
Russian wife.
"The movie changed my work
habits." the dancer remarked. "All
my life I have tapped only when I had
to; I never trained. But then f saw
Mike pncticins ballet every day
when we were in London. Twyla
(Tharp. who choreosraphed the film)
told me. 'Put on your tap shoes every
day: and I followed her advice. Now I
&et up every morning and do some
tappina."
Hines, who said be was ejected
Crom a btilet class after one lesson
when he was 9 years old. was
fucinatcd by Barysflniko•'• te<:h·
nique. Before film101 started. the pair
spent lhtee weeks together in a dance
studio. "We danced. improvised.
jumped, pushed. joked and lauabed,
and we videotaped it all." Aines
rccaUed. "By the cod of the thK"t
weeks we bad tbc be.sis for a precision
dance.
"I tauaht him to do a little tap, and
be IH&ht me how to drink vodka." .. Runnina Sea.Rd" i.s a different
ldndof1a.1nins. Heand Billy Crystal,
a former comic from ''Saturday Niaht
U ve " play Cbicaao cops who SCI inv~vcd in the dru& seen~ in Key
West. Fla.
S ome nwn ri'e lo i.tn·atne"
hccall\t> or their uphrin~in~.
Jo .. lrna did in :-.pi It• or hi~.
EXCLUSIVE EIU&EIEIT
edwards TOWN CENTER Fii 6:10
1:30. 10:45 '" •••.• l •~· "'751 4184 • • .. .. l .... f •
CO\TA MISA
SAT/Slit 1:15, 3:45
6:10, 1:30, 10:30
(SAT 10:45 P .M.)
STARTS
TOMORROW
-l&WI
-.Uf\All
--t1Ml41 -~CIJITll ..... -.ut ... l• .-.-.-.m
-551..tm __ ,.
LA -(11J) ftl.-JJ ., .......
LA-W.1111
NCIAC •wt-.Y
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SCHWARZENEGGER TAKES COMMAND!
THE #1 MOVIE IN AMERICA!
1111111 63'-&n o lllTA .U 646-5025 IUm U7.0340
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Oatebook/ Friday. November 15. 1985 I
r
-. (
MACARONI: Jack Lemmon and
Marcello Mastroianni star in this
Ettore Scola directed film about the
reunion of two aquaintances in
Naples, Italy, 40 years after their last
mectioi durina World War ll.
Mastroianni, an Italian with a great
joy for living despite family and
financiaJ problems, inspires Lem-
mon, an ulcer-ridden American ex-
ecutive with something fundementaJ-
ly missing from his life, to rediscover
a sense of eternal o ptimism.
Screenplay by Ettore Scola, Ruggero
Maccari and Furio Scarpelli. Rated
PG.
TO LIVE AND DIE IN LA.: A
drama of murder, passion and be-
trayal that accclera~ throuJ!I ll')e
heat and dust ofa Southern California
summer. Directed by Academy
Award-winner William Fncdk.in
( .. The French Connection"), the film
E
was shot on 47 locations in the Los
Angeles area. Starrina William
Peterson, William Dafoe, John Pan-
kow, Debra Feuer, John Tunurro,
Darlanne Fluegel, and Dean Stock-
well Based on a novel by Gerald
Petievich. Rated R.
ELENI: A Peter Yates film based
on the best selling book by New York
Times reporter Nicholas Gage. Gage,
after being smualed out of Com-
munist-<X>ntrolcxr-Greece in 1948,
returns as A thens bureau chief almost
for:t)' years la~r to solve the mystery
behind his swift departure-his
mother's murder. SWTing Kate
Nelligan, John Malkovich .and Linda
Hunt. Rated PG.
SR.VER BULLET: Someone or
somethinf is terrorizing the citizens
of Tarker s Mills, but no one is sure
who or what it is. All theyk:nowis that
people are being killed. Adapted from
the Stephen King book "Cycle of the
Werewolf." the film is the story about
the courage of a I ~year-old boy
confined to a wheelchair. He, along
with his rcsourccfuJ confidants, un-
ravels the mystery and puts an el\d to
the paranoia in the town. A Dino De
Laurenliis film, starring Gary Busey,
Everett McGill, Corey Haim.
Directed by Daniel Attias.'-Scrccnplay
by Stephen King, Rated R.
MABIE: Sissy Spacek stars in the
true story of a Tennessee mother of
three who, as the first woman to head
the state Board of Pardons and
Paroles, risks everything to expose a
scandal in the corrections svstcm that
leads to the imprisonment of the
Tennessee governor. A Dino De
Laurentiis film also starring Jeff
Daniels ("Terms of Endearment").
Directed by Roger Donaldson. Based
on the Peter Maas book .. Marie ...
Rated PG-13. r==============:m-~r:::W~iiiiiii!iiiiiil BE'ITEll OFF DEAD: A comedy
about tecn-qe love mixillJ action
and off-the-wall humor stamng John
Cusack, David Ogden Stien, Diane
Frank.Jin, Kim Darby, and Amanda
Wyss. When Lane Myer (John
Cusack) aicts dumped by his girl mend
.
..
for Roy Stalin, a conceited, tnsut:
fcrable ski jock, he feels be is better off
dead than dumped and spends much
of the movie trying. aJways uo-
succssfully, to kill himself. However
!tis fortune turns when he befriends
the French excha~ student (Diane
Franklin) staying with the family next
d60r. She helps him get out of his rut
and beat StaJin at his own game.
Written and directed by Savage Steve
Holland in his writing and directing
debut. Rated PG.
THAT WAS THEN THIS IS NOW:
Emilio Estevez stars in tltis contem-
poray drama about the friendship of
two boys who are like brothers as kids
but grow apart as they help each other
survive the tough realities of adult
life. Estevez aJso wrote the screenplay
which is based on a novel by S.E.
Hinton. The film also stars Crai&
Sheffer and Kim Delaney. Directed
by Olristopber Cain. Rated R.
I.RUSH GROOVE: A musicaJ
about the endeavon of street singer
RusscU Wri&ht who's goal is to
recrute the best street t&Jc:nt available
to form Krush Groove, an indepen-
dent record company caterina to the
interests of street musicians. Featur-
in& the music of Sheila E . Run-
0 .M.C, the rat Boys, Kunis Blow.
and the New Edition and introducing
BJair Underwood as Russell Wng.h1
Directed by Michael Schultz and
written by RaJpb Farquhar. Rated R
TARGET: Gene Hackman and
Matt' Dillon star in this film abou1 a
mystery in Walter Ll oyd's
(Haclanan's) past that lures the
family away from their Texas home.
marks be and bis son, Chris, (D111on)
as targets for murder, and aquaints
Chris with his father's special talents.
It also helps to form a lifelong bond
between the two. Directed by Anhur
Peno. Produced by Richard D.
Zanuck and David Brown. Rated R.
B.AINBOW BRITE AND THE
STAR STEALER: The first an1ma1cd
feature based on. the popular chil-
dren's collection of Rainbow Bnte
cb.anlctcn. Th.is story is about an evil
daQICf that threat.ens to steal every
ttac:c of li&bt and color from the
universe. nus will plunge the canh
and Rainbow Land into eternal
doom. DiTCCUd by Bernard Dcyncs
and Kimio Yabuki. 8ucd on charac-
ters developed by Hallmark
Properties.
Mu~ical fun for the whole~family
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GEAR UP FOR FAbl. ...
MusicaJ fun for the family begins
Nov. l6at2.30 p.m. in the Santa Ana
Hiah School Auditorium as
"Mervyn's Family Matinees" bcgjns
its second season.
The hour-long performance will
featun: the entire SS·picoc Orange
County Pacific Symphony, and teen-
age violinist Robert Chen, led by
Music Dcrcctor Keith Clark. The 16-
ycar-old Chen will perform Sibileus'
Sperry lop-Sider" with registered onl1 slip SOie
Put thPm with our greot sl31ectK>n of octiveweor ponls and shirts
8~~~.
56 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH · ( 714) 644-5070
ae 0.1ebook/ Friday, November 15, 1985
"Concerto for Violin and Orchestra."
Other works included in the program
arc exoerpu from Strauss' "Ein
Hcldcnlebcn," (A Hero's Life), and
Copland's "El Salon Mexico."
Tickets for the "Mervyn's Family
Matinees" are available at the Pacific
Symphony Ticket Office, E. 11 S
Santa Ana Blvd., Santa Ana. Prices arc SJ for children and S6 for aduJts.
For those who arc intetatcd in
attending all four of the "Mervyn's
F':~bt Matinees,·· subscriptions arc
av · e for S 12 for children and $24
for aduJts.
The subscription includes three
different matinees plus a Saturday
aft.cmoon performanoc of the .. Nut·
cracker" balleL For further infor·
mation on aO the Pacific Symphony's
performanocs, caJJ the Symphony
'ticket Office al 973-1300.
u..-•1-1111 --.caas1....-
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' -
Sweet Baby James can sing
but years have taken a toll
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. Olllr ........
James Taylor really looks like he'~
seen fire and rain -and blizzards
and hurricanes and earthquakes and
every other act of God that ever
devastated Man.
acoustical solos of his early tunes monologue on an overweight pct pig
"Close Your Eyes," "Something in who died from eating rat poison. It
the Way ·She Moves" and .. Sweet was t.bosc homey touches that made
Baby James." "An Evening with James Taylor" feel
Tbe rcan have definitely taken
their tol on Sweet Baby James, whose
childlike face stared innocently from
an early album that launched "JT' as
the song.st.tr of the. seventies.
More than a decade lat.tr, Taylor as
a punt scarecrow-like figure, has
thinning hair creeping back from has
forehead, his clothes loose and 111-
fitting. All strangely out of place for a
man ofonly 37.
Taylor sang. played guitar, danced hke. wet~ an evening with James
and even told jokes in a laad-back Taylor. ~
manner more refreshing than the His latest album 1s merely more of
over-rehearsed. impersonal shows by the same "Taylorized" remakes, in-
other "mainstream" performers. Yet eluding Buddy Holly's "Everyday."
his back-up band. including veteran sprinkled with a few new cuts that
studio musicians Russ Kunkel o n sound much like his other song.s. But
drums, Leland Sklar on bass and considenng bis repertoire, redundan-
Roscmary Butler o n vocals. was cy never sounded so good. Jama Tayor •iDClDC ~ but
tight.tr than the backstage sccunty. ,-----------------------------=---
But boy, can he sing.
He sings so well that 9,320 fans
stayed alued to their seats as raan
pelted the Pacific Amprutheatrc Sun-
day. And wouldn't you know it? The
short downpour came while Tarlor was singing "Shower the People.·
Audience members pulled Jackets
over their beads and turned their
collars up as an oblivious Taylor sang
.. make it raaaaayyyn." ·
It's clear that a failed mamage and
a former drug habit that Lasted 20
ycan haven't dampened Taylor's
ability to charm an audience. His
warmth more than made up for the
cold.
He started the two-hour set with
In the utJe song on has latest album
"That's Why I'm Here." Taylor sangs
about playing '"fire and rain' again,
and again and again."
He didn't play 11 Sunday But he
played nearly everything else, anclud-
1ng rousing versions of "Up on the
Roof." "Mexico" and .. Steamroller
Blues." Taylor also ran through has
standards "Handyman," "Don't Let
Me Be Lonely Tonight," and "You've
Got a Fnend."
Every middle-of-the-road song was
performed an-low-key middle-of-the·
road fashion, yet so melodic and clear
that at beat the hell of the high~nergy,
high-decibel fanfare that has come to
characterize roclc'n' roll.
Not everyone can perform in
bedroom slippers and keep an au-
dience entertalned wt th a five-minute
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DALLAS. toDICJat at 9 p.m.
II Oatebook/ Friday, NO¥ember 15, 1985
-1:30-
ITHAEE THREE 0 c::c...JY TOMQHT
JUNA CAIN IA.I.Bl
MOYIE u ''FIMI Eum" ( 1981 I Cecll Bio-
ct.di. Jot! s. Aloi.
(%)MOYIE
•• • "Fon Apldle. The Bronx" ( 1981) PIUI Newman, Ed Awt.
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• MOYIE •• ''Shldow On The Lind" (1968)
Jackll Cooper. John F«aythe.
-~ l lL~ ~~y * "$plot RaiOers" (1983) Vince Ed·
wtfds. DrAd Mendenhall.
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MOYlf * * "Cl.flllnS" ( 1983) John Vernon,
Slmlnllll Eww
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1= • • • "The Canttll'Vllle GhOat"
(19441 Ch.nes Laughton. Robert Young
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PIMMnce, Jamie Lee Curll$
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* • ·~ "Sllollle" (1981) DIMy Ktye. JoM Rublr\sleln
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MOYIE * * "Alpflabll Clly" ( 19641 VlllC*11
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llU8EUll8
BOWERS MUSEUM. 2002 N.
Main St, Sant.a Ana. Featured is .. De
Colores: Folk Costumes of Mexico." These costumes arc native clothing
which rcplCICols specific areas and
lifestyles of Mexico. Also presented is
a notable display ofbaskeu woven by
the Indians of lbe Panamint moun-
W.ns in the Dcalb Valley area. Both
throuab Jan. 6. Tues.-Sat 10 a.m.-5
p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. 972-1900.
LAGUNA BEACH MUSEUM OF
ART, South Coast Plaza Site,
Carousel Court. SpecialJy-aeated
artworks arc on display in an exhibit
entitled "Yard Art. .. An auction is
• held on Sunday. Cocktail hour begins
at 6 p.m., a buffet dinner begins at 7
p.m. and the bidding starts at 8 p.m.
S35 admission. Exhibit closes Sun.
Opening Thurs. is "California Con-
temporary Artists: la!.')'. Cohen, Can-
dice Gawne, and Gifford Myers.
Continues thtouah Jan. 5. Mon.-Fri.
noon-8 p.m .• Sat-Sun. noon-5 p.m.
662-3366.
NEWPORT llA.RBOR ART MU-
SEUM. 850 San Oemente Drive,
Newport Beach. "The Third
Dimension: Sculpture of the New
York School" is an exhibit which
reconsiders lbe dramatic period of
sculptural activity between 1945 and
19611 during which lhe medium
acquired an unpruedented Oexibility
and range. Continues through Jan. 5.
Tucs.-Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 759-1122.
GALLEJUltS
THE AFTERNOON GALLERY,
503 Park Ave., Balboa Island. Fea-
tured is a conteptporary showing of
Julie Medwedeff, Jonathan Martin,
and Jan Sanchez. Also presented arc
wate1'COlon by Rulb Hynds, Nancy
Pbel~ and Eve Thompson, welded
steel 5C'Ulpturc by Richard Hall, and
ceramics by Susan Cash. Wed.-Fri.
2-6 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-5 p.m.
675-8079.
ART-A-FAIR GALLERY, 664 S.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Bcacb. Phyllis
Archbold's oils and Barbara Guyer's
wate1'COlon and oils arc showcased
tbrou&b Dec. l. Wcd.-Sun. 11 a.m.-5
p.m. 494-4514.
ART INVDTORS GALLERY,
South Coast Design Center, 2915F
Redhill Ave., Ste. 103, Costa Mesa. A
mixed media exhibit featurina John
Creech, Lilsa Oildea. Sue Krau1e,
Nora Sharpe and ' Victor Villareal
opens Saa with an artist's n:.ctptioo
from~· 432-1686 . All I GAU.EllY, 17300
Seventeenth St, Tustin. Works bl
contemporary anists Patrick Naac•.··
Mihail Cbemiakin and Michel De-
lacroix are ~nted throuab Nov.
22. Mon.-Fn. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat 10
a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
731-5432.
BC SPACE GALLERY, 235 Forest
Ave., Laauna Beach. New work by
Frances Munay and David Levinthal
is exhibited throuab Nov. 27. Tues.-
Sat 11:30a.m.-S:lO_~tn· 497-1880.
llOW'Elll MVIEVM GAU.BIU.A,
2036 Main St, Sant.a Ana. Works by
painter Ume Siroia and jewelry artist
V Clll Ward are featu.red throU&b Jan.
5. Wed..S.t 11 a.m.-4 p.m .. Sun. noo:ir~·m. 972-1900. C OIUPRJC ARTS, 2219
Main St.1 #37, Huntington React~.
Prctentea is the Manha Brady Sbow
wit.b c:aWanpbic pieces and hand-
written boob. Alto shown.is wot\ of
tome ofber student.a. C1oeca Sunday.
Mo n..S.t 1-S p.m. ~S11$ .
CYPIUtSI oou.EGE Fine Aru
Gallery, 9200 Valley View, Cypress.
Leslie Oabrieltc praenu contem-
prary Dutch tapestries and terianph•
throuab Dec. 4. This is a prmuere
U.S. exhibit An artist lecture iJ held
Wed. from S.-9 p.m. in rme Arts room
112. Mon .• fri. 11 1-m.·l p.m. or by
Al
appt 826-2220.
DESIGNS RECYCLED GAL-
LEAY, 619 N. "-1'bor Blvd., Full-
erton. Individualistic, contemporary
art glass, includina one-of-a-kind
vases, and figurative and 5CU1ptural
forms csated by 16 American artists.
are prt!scl)tcd throuab Dec. 24. Mon.-
Sat IOa.m.-6 p.m.179-1391.
THE EDGE, 212 N. Harbor Bl vd ..
Fullerton ... Recent Works" by Ray
Jacob and Efram Wolff arc presented
tbrouab Dec. 24. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-4
p.m. 871-5862.
ETnNGER GAU.EBY, 2222
Laauna Canyon Road, Lquoa ~ch.
Shown arc ~nt.inp by Barry BerJ.
and mooolithic sculpture by Craig
Cree Stone. Continues throuih Nov.
25. Mon.-Tburs. 9a.m.-10 p.m .. Fri. 9
a.m.-5 . p.m .. Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
497-3309.
FANTASY FAIR GALLERY,
31681 Camino Capistrino, Ste. I 00,
San Juan Capistrano. The original
watercolors and photography of F. W.
Anderson arc presented, as well a.s
scenes of lbe MiMioo and an ex-
tensive collection of American land-
scapes which include the Paci.fie coast
and numerous liablhouse and barn
scenes. Daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
493-1408.
GOLDEN WF.ST COUZGE Fine
Aru Gallery, 15744 Golden West St,
Huntinaton Beach. An invitational
exhibit of documentary photography
and clay is offered through Nov. 23.
Mon.-Tburs. 9 a.m.-2 p.m ., Mon.-
Wed. 6-9 p.m. 895-8361 .
HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY BALL. 7111 Talbert Ave., Hunt-
inaton Beach ... Openi~ The West
Gate," an exhibit of Olioese Brush
paint.in& by members ~f Ja Yu Kuan.
ts featured throuab Nov. 27.
84!._~!b_~t 33. nurull'llGTON CEN'l'BR MALL,
Huntincton Beach. Ozz Franca pres-
ents JS oriainal oil naiot:inas of American Indians beai'M· w Wed.
and continua tbrouab "Nov1i...
DONQUIST GALLERY, ~84 N.
Coast Hwy., Lquna Beach. A poup
show con1istina of wate1'COlors by
various arti1u continues through
Nov. Wed.-Sun. JO a.m.·S p.m.
LOS ANGELES PEDEIUL SAV·
INOS, 3201 Newpon Blvd., Newport
Belch . .,.,. Gantner. local artist
and pbocopapber, presenu her work.
She makes a penonal appearance
Wed. front 10 a.m.-2~~ Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Fri. 9 Lm.-6
p.m. 675-4500.
MJCllABL JD11'REY GALLERY,
2S2S N. Grand Ave., Sant.a Ana.
Works by California art.iau 1.R. Reed
and Gerrit Greve are offered throuih
Wedneaday. Tucs.-Tb'"1-9 Lm.·5
p.m ., Fri. I 0 Lm . .S p.m., Sat. 11
a.m.-4:30p.m. 972-8810.
NEWPORT BEACH City Hall Gal-
lery, 3300 Newpon Blvd., N~rt Bea ch. Pretented arc oils by Marjorie
Millen and pbototnphs by Caroline
Randolph. Coououes tbrouab Dec.
18. 640-2110.
Oil.ANOE COAST COLLEGE
Pboco Gallery, 2701 Fairview Rd.,
Cotta M~ ~=· Wed. are larF urlJanlca~ ~ )lf'a]»hed by
SbannOft Go~ ID • bOkf tbapcs
and subtle coeon Laite center staee.
Thro\JO Dec. 17. Mon.·Fri. 81.m.-1() p.m. 4ll·SS24.
OllANODIS GAU.DY, 480
Ooeen Ave., l.aauna 8e8ch. c.en..mic
sculptures by OoQI Andenoo. and
nouveau cloi10nnc and btad=· I b Lilli Heart are otr,:rect ~ov. Deily 10 a.r:r.,,SJ;.m. 494-!6 6. QVOllUM Q Y, 374 N.
Coast Hiahway t..cuna Beach.
Water<lOlon by £uco Roberts and acrylics by Murielc Burch are fea·
tored throuah Nov. Tucs.-Suo. 10
un.-5 p.m. ~94-4422.
Dancing for City Of Hope
By EVE C. LASH
OellJ ,... Ccau J ' 1
Almost all of the 350 supponers
attending the Glenn Miller Memorial
Chapter City of Hope Ball were there
for one reason -to dance. "Dance
for Hope" that is.
Guests pthen:d Saturday ~t the
Hilton Inn at the Park, Anaheun, to
hear famed Les Brown and his band
play tunes from daysaone bye-bye.
Chapter President Marpnt Gaf·
fey (with husband J•> said the
group selected Les Brown and his
band, .. BecaU9C, no bi& band, barring
none, spannina the fabled Swing Era
of the 30s and 40s up to the present.
ha.s been more popular and enduring
than Les Brown. No band has
recorded more hjt records and
backed-up more outstandfog cel·
ebrity vocalists (Doris Day, Bing
Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Johnny
Mercer, Bob Hope) as his. It makes
our tribute to MilJcr all the more
meaningful and auspicious."
And everyone seemed to agn::c with
Gaffey's selection -there were no
wall flowers at thjs one. People spent
more time on the dance floor than in
their seats.
One dancing duo was Lou and
Did.Me SUler of Corona del Mar.
tak.ing a breather (after dancing to
"Moon River"). She wd her table
was the best one. ••And did you notice
all the men at our table are weanng
tuxedos (to the black-tie optional
event)?"
She said they au llad been d1scuss.-
ing the old concert Under the Stars at
Fashion Island. when Beary Budoe
was conducting the concerts.
Brandon (wtth his wife Lee, wear-
ing a glitzy blue and silver sequinned
dress) received a rousing ovation
when he was honored by the group
with the annual Glenn Miller Mem-
orial Award for his contributions to
"the perpetuation of big band music
and his development of young mu-
sicians in Oranie County and
throughout the nauon."
Brandon said, "I'm very pleased
and it's very gratifying to have fne~ds
and neighbors bQDor you for doing
something you enjoy do mg."
Dinner for the $50-a-person benefit
consisted of corrush hen and cherries
jubilee for dessert.
Enjoying the dinner were Lllllu
and Larry Bra .. ey of Newport Beach
with Bob and Doua Sd1oller. The
Schollers (who say they're world
travelers) were talungabout thcirtrip
to Africa where they met actor
Richard Chamberlain at the ex-
clusive Mount Kenya Safari Club ~d
their upcoming trip to South Amen ca
to sec Halley's Comet.
Bradley was chatting about rus
business. "I build clean air rooms for
hospitals and I built the set for the
movie E.T . and an upcoming Disney
production."
Mrs. Brandon said after dinner,
"We're ready to dance like mad. W~
do the romantic danc10s-.. when
people got dose and dancing was
romantic."
Gaffey said, "I just love all this
music and dancinJ: It's a feeling I
can't explain, it's hlce going back in
time."
Master of Ceremonies and past
president James Altieri said. ~Glenn
Miller's memory and his music even
today continues to inspire and give
hope. That is why the City of Hope
bas named this chapter in his honor.
because when Miller's und of music
is being played. it lifts people out of
depression and misery and h~s the
S(>lrit. This is hand and hand with the
kind of hope and medicine that the
City of Hope National Medical
Center an Duarte provtdes without
charge for patients regardless of race,
creed, color or means."
Also enjoying the nostalgia were
Allee Alldenoa, with Doe ltalluo,
Re~ Mott with S~ BoryUJ,
Dori Qamben, Vlrslala Zalta, Bell
Hill with Jeyce llqer and Jou and
J.Ue Lealck.
Paparaul 11 edl&M by DallJ Pilot
Style editor Vida Deu.
Jim Alteri and Fraacee Ramecten.
•
llarpnt Odfey. Carolya llooDeJ a.ad Jolua ~·
Oetebook/ Ft1d•y. N<Mwnber 15. 1~ II . ..
L.
I
-------------·-
'Twice in a Lifetime' filled with understanding
By BOB THOMAS
-lll'lllitM• ,,_....,
York.in's "Twice in a Lifetime."
Middle-agt.d man leaves wife for
younarr woman. The plot has been
emr.toyed from David and Bathsheba
to 'Citizen IUne.'' but rarely with
more understanding than in Bud
Steelworker Gene Hackman turns
SO and rcalius that he bas terVed 30
years of a life tentencc in a boringly
co:nfinina marriage to Ellen Buntyn,
'mother of their arown children.
Hackman stops by a nei&hborbood
bar to booze with cronies and Pow!
~ ''lllQHTON
TABQBT FOB 7'111U£U •
• .,,, .. witll ,. .....
A lenilie mone. ''
'""~r lyon!I SNEAK PREVIEWS INN .
''Ad.1'111' Peaa'• ialrieale
aerve-po1UJdia• lluill•,;. ia die
baU' ... ye leogae.''
Guy Fldtl11y COSMOPOI ITAN
-
''A dielc odioa•JH6elred lluillu. n. moft'e Ill,,.,., ...
••ledaiailt•lp. ,,
W1/lldm Woll v ANNETT NEWS SERVICE
·-1w ~I• A ZA.NU<"IVBROWN Prodlat'toon AN AR n tUR PENN f'11tn
CEHE HAC1<MAH • MATT 00..LON
"TARCET GAYLE HUNNICt.rrT · jOSE.f SOMMER Oroci""I Sootr by MK'HAEL SMALL
Stc:wy by.LEONARD STERN 9'-rt"'np!Aly by HOWARD BERK 11nd DON PETERSEN
Pf'odllttd by RICHARD D ZANUCK Nld DAVID BROWN
~R --Dtrt!t1cd by ARTHUR PENN '••Tia Tit .......... ........ ----. __ ,..__........__~ .. .,... -. . ,_ .. l--·-·-. ,_, .. __..,.,....._. ---· ··-........ -m.-NCR -•• ------_,_., .... J ....
--·1'Ml41 ~mm cma
,
,Ulfl•Mt-7444 --nil ~.nr.···--t-.cll --------.......... --·· -··---•at• u -(11J) 111..W . , ......
U-W.1111 ~ .... , -.. ........ ._tlJDtm --Ziil ~ •••1•••·•> NCR-Ya .. -· ...... •talW IUmt
Jje meeu Ann-Margret.
"Twice in a Lifetime" deals with
the Mackenzie family's reaction to
the cataclysm. The wtfe is unbelicv· in.a. then cawonic. No. I dauahter.
Amy Madigan, already upset because
her husband is laid off at the steel
~ill, raacs qainst her father. Tbe
younaer dau&hter. Ally Sheedy, is
bewildered and plunges into a wed·
dini. The out-of-town son. Darrell
Larson. is bemused and sympathetic
with ltis father.
"Twice in a Lifetime" is a series of
vianettes, each delineating the
character of the participants. Ellen
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Burstyn prov1des magical moments
as she resians herself to the truth: "I
guess sometbing in our m~ just
died. 1 didn't know it. lie did.
Hack.man 1s perfectly cast u Harry
Mackenzie. dismayed by the grief he
has caulled, yet de1ermined to renew
his life. Amy Madjgan is brilliant.
pouring out her sorrow in venemous
outbunu. Ally Sheedy is the best new
actress in town. as proven io a
profoundly moving pre-wedding
scent with Hackman.
Ann-Mararet underplays the other
woman role admirably, sublimating
her s.cllincss, but she can't overcome
the truth that ahe is the villain. When
Hackman protcsU~"I'm notjustaguy
in a bar," she snaps. "Oh. yeah. Prove it. ..
Colin Welland ("Chariots of fire")
originally set his script in the cold
mine country of his na\Jve En&land.
He . switched to depressed l>enn·
sylvania. then middle-dass Seattle.
where the story fits pcrfectly. llJe city
never looked so ravishinf-
"Twice in a Lifetime' 1s • do-1t-
yoursclffilm by Bud York.in. who not
only produced and directed the
movie but is djstributing it. This is the
somber side of bis 1967 comedy.
"Divorce American Style.'' and he
reveals himself as an actor's director.
The accomplished cast responds in
Academy Award style. .
Rated R. adult scenes and ex-
pletives.
Hackman
is terrific
in 'Target'
By BOB THOMAS
A-.llll•tM• ,._....,
Just when you thought aJI the spy
plots had been expended by James
Bond, Gcorae Smit~ and associates.
alona comes "T ll'ICt • with a new and
intriauina premise.
Gene Hackman runs a lumberyard
in Oallu, livina a qujet, comfortable
life with bi• sensuous wife, Gayle
Huonicutt..Thei.r_JOn.-MattDUJon.js
somethina of a l)f'C)blem, a aelf-
admitted underacruevcr who bas
dropped out of 1ehool witb ambitions
o( becomi~ a race car mechanic.
Hunnicutt lava alone on a Euro-
pea.o tou.r, and disappears in PariL
father and ton Oy to PariJ to hunt
for her and suddenly they ~ lnvol~ in abootina tcrapes. The
son, who considers his Cather u hip as
Lawrmce Welk. ditc0ven that the
old man aui spc:ak fluent Frach and
b&Gdle a p ut
.. A tona time 110. I worked for the
CIA;' Hackman coofesaes. In f8ct, he
bid been clUef ~ in ~ oft.be miuwned Operation CleaD s"'.'9.
One of the enemy*"" acaped the
dnpet.. and he bas. kidnapped Hackman'• wife, intent oo ~veqe.
"Tartet" it the work of n~
baDde: producm Richard D. Zanuck
lftd David Brown ("Jaws," "'The
Stina"); dim:tor Arthur~ ("'The Miracle Woster," "Bonnie and
Oyde"). The movie hu a rich,
authentic look. and Penn haodles the cbue tcena rnuiafully.
The ICript, by Howard eat and
Don Pt1eneft, is ineenJoua if untidy .
Cbanctm and l\lDI ~ mflP&lced and never fouod apin. The most affectins ICeOCI are between flthet and 10n.
Rated R for lanauaac and violence
'Angel': 8-movie hit
EDTTOR 'S NOTE -An meets
business in the rnWJ11 of a low-
bud,ct movie. It's a risky ende.evor
where tastc ,oes to the mat with
commerce and no holds a.re barred.
Such a movie Wiii "Angel," one of the
"B" movies Wt became a hit.
maki111 millions for the producers
who put c:om,,.nt.ively little up front.
By JOHN BARBOUR
,, .. 2 .....
CENTURY CITY -A couple of
years ago, the two faces of a brunette
tecn-lgcr stared back at you, one
elfin, one suhry, from the pro mo
poster which said as quietly as 11
could, "Hi&h School Honor Student
by day. Ho0ywood Hooker by night."
Sandy Howard, a Hollywood
producer noted for the acclaimed "A
Man Called Hone," bad come acro~s
a rather unusual story idea for a
movie. He liked it. An insomniac
workaholic, be couJdn't wait to get
out of the bathroom to caJJ a colleague
at the cdlC of dawn.
The coUea,iue was Donald P.
Borchers, now 28, then climbing the
ranks in Hollywood as a low-budget
film producer. He rcmembcn:
It was called .. Hollywood Starr."
with two "r's," and it was abOut this
youna firl whOIC daddy had left her
and she became a prostitute and it's
Christmu time and there is a mad
Santa Claus runnin& up and down
Holl¥wood BouJevard killina prosti-
tutes, and -sueu who Santa Claus
as?
Daddy.
"I won't do this picture," Borchers
told Howard. "It's vile. Santa Oaus
can't be a killer. I won't ma.kc that
movie."
Borchers says Howard told him he
didn't like evcrythina in the story
either. "but I love the idea of th ts teen-
age girl living on Hollywood
Boulevard."
That is how the moVle "Angel"
bc&an. It was produced for about S 1.3
mil lion, chicken feed apjnst the S60
million dollar budaets of major films.
A lot of ideas fCU by the wayside,
including Santa Oaus. What emerged
was the story of a bright 15-ycar-old
girl comi na of aac. usina her 1exuality
10 wait futilely for the return of her
father; she faces ridicule in the btgh
school where abe is an honor student
anada er on the street where she is
res and understood. nael offe.n in retrospect a look at
the world of "B" mov~ produced
oo a shocslrina with aspirina actors
and actreues and known older stan
who have nothina else to do, and ,
story lines laced with 1ex and violence
and anythina clte \hat will titillate
young audiences.
It also helps ex.plain why theater
marquees1\ave overflowed in the last
IS ycan with "Teus Chainsaw
Massacres" and "Porlty'a" and
"Tourist Trap" and "Motcr Hell'' and
"MusicrcatCentral Hiah" and "The
Howlina." and "Halloween" and
"Tuffl\arf'and '1"be Foe" and "The
Wild Anaiels" and "Oncula's Dog."
Variety, the theatrical ncws1>9pcr,
estimates about 2SO of these low-
budact movies arc released cacl\.ycar.
Protiebly hundreds arc abandoned
bccaUJC they are too awful.
This then is a notebook 1>10SBPh y
or such a film and the risky businCS$ of
making It in Hollywood w1thou1
punlna a lot of c.ash up front. This 1s
where an meets business, where taste
goes to the mat with commcTCC and
no holds arc baJTcd.
Borchcn remembers moettnJ with
Howard and writer Robcn Vincent
O'Neil. Howard is enthusiastic
There ia thi1 "one weird chancier in
the piece who ia deliverina pb:u on a
skateboard." Howard says. "'I love
that. I love that. That remands me of
Damon Runyon. That's what we
need. Lose everything. Keep the girl.
Owe her a whole new set of friends.
Gave her the same problem and make
at Damon Runyon .. The street people
should love hcr ... She should come
home and show her rcpon card. And
the Jewish couple who own the comer
deli should kjss her."
Borchers says that out of the
rambling be got a clear sense of what
Howard wanted. He d1dn 't agree w11h
everything.
"I was more interested in the whole
side of her life when she was in hilh
school. I didn't want to play up the
pomography ... and that's when we got
into one of our classic fi~ts. Should
she have a scene with a JOhn? That's
where I put my fool down ... and he
went wuh me, thank God."
Howard, Borchers says, left them
with ground rules. A teen-age hooker
who goes to high school, who 1s
loveable, huggable. "He kept 5aytng,
if Damon Runyon were aJivc today,
he should be wnting this scnpt. He
wanted it to be as wonderful as
'Miracle On 34th StrecL' But he
wanted 1t to be about prostituuon
because that sells."
Money. Sandy Howard had been
loolong for something for Borchers to
do. When he came across the " Angel"
script he told Borchers I.his could be
your"Man Called Hone," which had
made him nch and famous. "You're
going to produce it, get behind it and
you're gomg to do it for a m1lhon
bucks," he said. Borchers recalls
proteslmg that Howard bad much
more to make "Horse" and that was
(PleueeMAJltOEL/S-Ce 18)
flt 7:15, 9:20 &-m~•·=jl (714) 549-1512
Nltil'Oll1 llWIWAT I '----------------1 ii1i i ':iI I
SAT /Slle 1:00
. 3:00, 5:90, 7:15, 9:20
Oetebook/ Friday, Novem~ 15. 1985 11
•
..
... ..
ANGEL •••
Frompaeel5
IO yean before when the dollar was
dearer. He didn't win.
The name. Borchcn bad this
girlfriend who said if she bad a son
she'd caU him Anael. .. Not ifbc's my
son," 5ays Borchers. "That sounds
hkethe name of a hooker." But Sandy
Howard needs a lJtJe for a movie
before anything elsc."He says it's the
hook. It's the sales. It's the concept."
Borchers doesn't like "Hollywood
Starr," and when it comes to finding a
new title, he blurts out "Angel."
Howard says, ''I love it."
The story. Left to their own
devices. Borchers and writer O'Neil
worlc on the story. They sl&rl with the
characters and the senac of familf
they create for the &irl One character
will be a transvestite prostitute with a
heart of gold. One will be an old
cowboy who lives oo the street,
cowboy bat, western moustache. the
worlcs. A detective to move the plot
A concerned teacher.
The background story takes shape.
Angel's father was a terrazzo worker.
He f,ut those stars in the sidewalk of
Hol ywood Boulevard. "We knew
early on that her father would have
left her, just up and gone, no one
knows why. We also would have
known she idolizes her father. Now
the mother sttuj&les and sttua)cs
and one day she JU.St gets an offer she
can't refuse. She meets this guy who
wants. to lak.c her to New York. So she
leaves Angel a note and a hundred
dollar bill. And Angel still thinks that
one day her daddy will come home ...
Neither mother nor father appear
10 the film .. They are~ of the back
story which unfolds 1n the diaJoaue.
Borchers and O'Neil research the
lives of runaway gjrls, many of whom
become prostitutes to support a drug
habit They visit a program for
runaways in Hollywood called "Chil-
dren of the Night,~ to get the flavor of
s t.reet life.
''What we were tryina to do is a
fantasy of a girl wbo is better than
that, who was using prostitution to
become a hi&h school honor student
to go to coUqe and ·become an
attorney. And she's aot to pey the rent
on that apartment because it's the
only way her father will ever find
her ... It's that dream tha l's walking
her into this."
After four weeks, they have the sto~Act One -Introduce the girl.
the · school, the street characters
and conflict: There's someone
killing prostitutes, her friends. on the
street. Act Two -A couple of
prostitutes are k:illed. She secs the guy
who did it Her life is in danger. Act
Three -He's out to gct her.
Complications: Out of the blue.
Borchers rccei vcs an offer he can't
refuse. New World Pictures which
R r Connan. the father of low~
16lms("I Never Promised You
A osc Garden .. and .. The Wild
Angels.") had sold, wanted him to
come in as bead of production.
Besides ''Anacl.'' which be brought
with rum, Borchers would produce at
the same time "Crimes of Passion"
with KathJeen Turner and Anthony
Perkins, a Stephco King discard
called "Children of the Com," and a new-kid~-thc-block story called
"Tuff Turf." Not bad for a 26-ycar-
old with a bachelors~ in finance
from Notre Dame, self-taught fo film
arts.
But not too good for .. Angel." It
was now the end of March. They
wanted "Angel" to come out in
January. That left them four weeks to
prepare the film for production, a job
that should rake four months. There
would be only four weeks to shoot,
then from July to September for all
the post-production chores. edit it,
put musk tO it, preview it,~nge it
Besides that, Borchers bad to suidc
the other psycho-thriller, .. Crimes of
Passion." But there be was blcseed by
a top-flight director. Ken Russell,
who was able to lift it from its basic
plot, which was cs.!entially high
fashion designer by day, Hollywood
hooker by nigh I. He was also blessed
with Turner. who as China Blue
makes a game out of satisfyi'ng male
sexual fantasies. and Perkins, who
has the part of a psycho-kJller down
pat.
Bui Borchers could not be every-
where at once. He was in an Iowa
cornfield with a bunch of kids
shooting the Spielberg film while they
were putting the rock music score 10
"Angel," almost a fatal mistake.
The cast. They called Cliff
Gonnan, a veteran, versatile actor
who had played "Lenny" on Broad-
way and made movies like "Cops and
Robbers." He would play the detec-
tive. They got Dick Shawn to play the
transvest.Jk, Mac, who becomes
Angel's proxy mother in a way. They
got John Diehl to play the killer (bis
only lines come at the end when be is
shot. "It hurts.") and they got an old
staple, Rory Calhoun, to play the
cowboy.
For Angel, Howard wanted a sexy
blonde, but again Borchers objected.
The girl had to be convmcmg in both
roles, a bright I 5-year-0ld high school
student and a street-wise pro. He
picked Donna Wilkes, 25, who man-lfed to look huggable as a little girl in
ptgtails and provocative wtthout
them.
The shoot. The film was photo-
..
p-a(>hed from June I 10 June .28.
bqlnnina Wlth the on-locatlon action
on Hollywood Boulevard. at an
aver.lfe cost of S 15,000 a day. The
crew 1s largely non-union. They art
told at the start that the food will be
louty, the hours long and hard, the
turn-around ume between sh1~s
sometimes only su hours. Pay is
poor.
On some films the highest paid
person on a set, besides. the c;am -
eraman, is a T camsters U ruon dn vcr.
Sometimes when work rules have to
be broken, Borchers passes out SI 00
bills to soothe tempers.
Most of the top peo ple arc on salary
or defer payment until the film begins
to make money. The actors arc
covered by Screen Actors Guild rules.
Gorman, for instance, makes $A62,SOO
for "Angel." They finish shooting
with indoor shots to guarantee the
weather will not stymie them.
The financing. With script in hand,
New World's salespeople go 10
Cannes for the film festival, and sell
ri&hts to show "Angel" in Europe.
Howard is right. Prostitution sells.
They come back with handfuls of
contracts, which arc taken to a bank
as collateral for loans to help pay for
production.
Other contracts arc si&ned wtth
Home Box Office and video cassette
-::;iiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiil~=~~~~~~E~iiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiii~~Ti=========================11 firms, more fodder for the banlcs. tuxu•r rHfArus Some low-budget producers say that
WALK-INS * 'f1l: .. U'd~: r.~0~',c:11V:::~t~~~· DRIVE-INS :~:~~ 50to60percentofthcirrcvenucsnow
001 a. Holld•Y• "eu ... ot•d "LEMMON IS WONDERFUL. come from video cassettes. Other
CrTYCEnTER 0 IJ4 ZSSJ I ltOI J ORAllC( I •1repot110
"""'° Oii nc ..-.T .,...ua SHOWS AT 1:40 ):40 .. 1 :40
AGICS CW 000 PD4• SHOWS AT '00 1:00. 10:00
TA91SCT .. ) SHOWS AT 1 :OS J!20 s lS 1 so .. 10 10
T OUVE 6 DIE ... l...A.fll) 11!0 3. IS 5:25 7·4$ 10:~
aACllTOTHI!
f'UTU•I'. Cf'G) I 10
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TRAlffSYLYAlllA ...._.,_,SHOWS AT
S:J07:JO lo 1 :30
TMEeODS....,._
CtlAZY reJ S:40 1 :10 6 10:00
ntAT WAS ntDI.
THIS • llOW pt) I t.2S 3:40 S:t5 l:GS 10: IS
MOGEi> a.-Ot) t :OS J :JS S:4S
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540-74'4 SSI 06SS
STADIUm ~
ill 111q "''""' !!u• St.f•..,'"
"{MAT WAS THUl-TI9 ts NOW pt) ,110
aeverly Hllh Cop (Ill)
,...Matn' ••NT (It)
"'"'Co-Hit T Hn Wolf (..0 I
DCATHWISHltt(lt) Ptu1 Tll• Company
01 Wolves (ltl
llJtUSM .... oovc (It, "1ul C0-+411 .... Wee'1 aot Adwenture l"CI
CCI I *•OO C"J ..iusCo-+411 fhml>o ,.Int a1ood II (Ill)
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1e OatebOOk/ Friday, November 15, 1985
s
\
· MASTROIANNI IS GR&\T. funds come from Howard and a
YOU WIU LAUGH, YOU WILL CR Y. group of Chicago investors. Adams
'MACARONI! IS DELICIOUS." Apple Films.
_,,,.., Wtgrt, G'CX>IJ .1t()R \'JN<i <4.\fERICA The money 1s fed in as needed.
Borchers writes every check.
November. They have a film,
finished. scored, ready for preview. It
will not be released until the preview
phase is complete. This 1s where you
find out what people like. Then you
go back and fine-tune the ftlm.
embellish what worked, cut out wha1
d idn't
They will release the film regJonally
to cut down on the number of pnnts.
A major studio might make as many
as 1,200 prints for oauonal distnbu·
tion. A print can run S2.000 on the
average. Two thousand prinu would
cost $4 million.
Exctusive Enpgement 1Newport"c1nemaj ~.:~-~~,..
--"""--u .......
Borchers and Howard have one last
di~ment The endina, The trans-
vcsute bas been killed by the killer.
Angel has boui,ht a gun and is stalking
the kilJcr on the boulevard. Howard
wants Angel to shoot the lcilJer dead in
the alley. Her defenders, the detective
and the cowboy have faJlen before the
madman's attack. She is next.
Borchers objects. With seoonds tO go
in the film, he wants the camera to cut
to the cowboy, standing at the end of
the alley, bleeding, and blam, he
blows the killer away.
-11M711 IT_ ... _,_Rt..,. _ .. ..
_ .. 952 ... J •.-s•
--•rm -IO.CGllTPUD ·-··--· .... ---1 --n &l-(DJ) •1.eu> -·---
------_..,'9 _w..,..
.... mu -••n •anC11911
WI t••l·•JIS -~IET
Borchers wins. But Howard will
not let him milk the ~ne, with Rory
Calhouf\.. twirling l\is siiguns back
into their holsters.
The preview. New York City, one
of the action houses tn midtown.
Andy Warhol is in the audience.
Angel flickers on. Rock l'l'lustc blares.
The audience hisses. booes. p:>ea to
the bathroom, &OC' 10 set popcom,
demands its money back. Disaskr .
.. Ansel" runs 17 weeks in-Los
Anaeles, probably an avenp or acven
weeks elle'Where uound tfie country
in January and February of 1984.
They bad planned only )$0 prints,
cndod 1.1,p with 700 when there WCR
not enou,h to IQ around due to the
unexpected loq nins. "Antcl" makes
a lot of money.
The low~bud&et formula works
aaain.
-
uide .for the 80s
o wedded bliss
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I laughed
hen I read that old column you ran
n wedded bliss to sbow how times
ave changed 1 humbly submit a
ersioo for the 1980s. I'd love to sec it
print.
I. If ,YOU arcn 't going to be home for
1nnertelephone and let him know.
2. If you come in late, throw your
nefcasc in f111t. If it comc:1 back to
ou, go to your mother's.
3. Make him keep bis clothes in hts
wn closet.
.i. Keep rum in working condition.
The male is really the weaker sex.)
S Tell the kids to ask their father.
ti. Be undentanding when he has a
eadache.
7 Ask him what's for dinner -or
re we fastinJ? 8. If you happen to buy identical
u1ts. don't wear them when you're
ut together. It looks tacky. -WITH
T lN MICHIGAN.
DEAR MJCRIGAN: TlauU for a
reay remiDllu el llew Umet lulve
ed. • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I spoke
o my psychiatrist and told hi m I
anted to write to Y~.U: He said, "Go head. Can't hurt. Might help."
I am 28 years old. Seven years ago I
evelopcd chronic depression. After
our years of agony, I was given
ed.ication and bepo to pull out ofit.
Dunng my depression I tried suicide
three times in ooe month and was
om mined to a Slate mental hospital.
(They let me out after four wcck.s.) I
am no longer suicidal, according to
my psychiatrist, and am doing quite
well.
My psychiatrist advised me not to
return to my former occupation. It
pays two and a halftimes as much as I
am now eamins. He claims that if I
take on too much responsibility I will fall apan.
I am extremely shy, have an
mtenorit) complex and hate the JOb I
have I have never felt loved by
anyone except one girl. and that was
several years ago. (I'm female and
straight) My mother. father. sisters
and brothers deserted me when I was
111. My cousins and fnends snubbed
me. In addition to f~ling alone and
abandoned. I went through hell being
depressed. I asked my psychiatrist to tell me
the truth about my mental illness. He
said ifl avoid pressure situations and
conunue to take my medication
faithfully. I may lead a fauly normal
life.
Should I believe him, Ann?! Mean-
while, is 11 worth it to stay in a JOb I
despise? Please let me hear from yo u.
1 ·read you every day. -CUM81NG
OUT OF THE DARKNESS IN
NEWA RK.
DEAR CLIMBING: ll soddt a1 lf
yoe are t. ~e lwaclt of a ktpty
competeal doctor. Please U1tet1 to
ktm. .
, Reac• Ht for frteadtktp. I'm ••re
yM u ve a lol lO give ud ~re are te
maay folkt wlo, like Y"· are loedy.
Look lD ~ ~ boelr for Recovery,
be. (l&'t free.) Attad ~ m~ttap.
Recovery'• memben .Utt preblem•
tlmllar to yoan. TM emotlou.I
Hpport lky give oae uolkr it
pff8omeul
Y oer Ille cu be bener bat yo• mut
make u effort to 91elp yHrself.
Otlten uve made It, ud yoa cu, too.
Good lack ud Goel bleu.
Million dollar feet
coming to 9oun ty
It's not every day that world class
dancers Martine Van Hamel and
Kevin McKenzie of American Ballet f~eatc.r, New York (directed by M.1~1 Baryshnikov) point their
mllhon dollar feet in the direction of
Orange County.
V But. oo Nov. 22 and 23 at 8 p.m.
an Hamel and McKenzie will
pc:rfo'rm at the ~ aeuon premiett
with Ballet Unlimited at the Scrvite
Theater in Anaheim.
To oclebrate the 198S-86 opening
the Oraqe bued dance troupe, Van
Hamel and McKemic, principal
dancers with ABT, will perform Black
Swan P~ de~ and Tanao. Alto included I.ft the prosram will
be an oriaioal work cb~Dhed by
Ballet llnlimi1ed'1 An.iatac C>irector Kristen Olten Pott.a and Bijou featur-
sing guest choreoarapher Eve
tabolepuy.
Van Hamel is the recipientof•aold
medal won at &be International Ba.llet
competition held i.n . 8ullaria whCfC
she wu also awarded tbc Prb de Yama for beat utist.ic inletl)f'Ctation '" au c:ate1ories: Van Hamel then became t.be Pfi nc1· ~I dancer wh.b lhe National kl.let of
.... nada wbcft lhe performed most of
the major belleriu rolca with that
C'Ompany. International Ballet Compe11t 1on
silver medalist McKenzie was for·
merl y a leading dancer for both the
National Ballet of Washington and
Jaffrey Ba.llet before quickly becom-
ing one of the leading male dancers for ABT under the direction of
Baryshnikov.
Artisuc Director Pons proudly
states, "There bas never been a couple
of this stature to pcrfonn in Orange
County. In the past people have had
to drive to Los Angeles to sec dancers
of this caliber." Ballet Unlimited, 1014 West Col-
lins, Orange, was founded by Pom in
1980. .
Io addition to the premiere on Nov.
22 and 23 with Van Hamel and
McKenzie future performances will
include Dec. 7 and 8 at Dominquez
Hills St.ate C.ollege. Jan. 10 and 11 at
Cypress Colleac. March I at the
Curtis Theater in Brea and June 20
and 21 at tbe Scrvite Thea~r.
Ticket prices are S 16 and $ I ~ with rcterVcd 1e1ting available. Tickets
may be putchucd at all Ticket Master
ticket centen including May Com·
s»ny. Music Plus and SPortamal1
stores. To clwJe by phone call
740-2000 or (2 13) 4~3232.
edwards NEWPORT 644·0760
l;lwPCµ' :E ... 't" 8E'wlE" .AllB'.1f<H ~ Y.•.A><'~u"
-llmll "TllTWll1B. ........ ..........
edwards LIDO 673·8350
O,ft.P:;A' ~.;:; A' •'DC. 00
edwards TOWN CENTER 751 ·4184
BR1S'OL &A"''O°' ACAC;S',<>l:lol S :GAST PL AZA . , ' .. , '•' ' . lllOYIES ......... . ._•r'lll "'" ... .......a, .. ,-.im
...... (1) ............
edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711
BR1SlOl & S,,..f,:)111[~ ,OS'AlolESA
I , r ,,, r' • • , .........
'Wiii .... r·• 1111 "lfla _.. ... ......
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edwaros MESA 646·5025
~EWPQAT BC>.. [ • IU:' 1 • •." • • :.'~'A lol(SA
.. _ .. ~ ........ ............. ... ._ ......
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edwards NESTBROOt< 530·"'401
"'' 'V.. . • I l' t' . • .• . .. .. f '• L. .(
eawaros uN1 JERS"" v 854·8811 -""'~-s :If:.'-£~ .. :,.r : .. ~·t,-; ,.__::.. ... ~ ;:._" ,_
"mlllTTBI"
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.. ( ... II)
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edwards SADDLE BACK
mtlnm9
''ftBllY'' Ill , ....
581·5880
E. TQRQRQACJ A' AQCM~·ELD E. 'ORO .. .... .,._,.
"llm'n.I ... um...-,.. ......,", .... , ...... -. ....... , ... ... ll ........ -
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.... ~'(Pl-111 .,.Liil_ ....... ••lJ"• 'CI ••••• lttl, .. ... .. ~
edwards EL TORO 581 ·9500
! .... ... ••• ,:.* -.--
.,.-~ ·--.... •cuzr"' 4m,_ ............... 111 , ..... ... ......
'"ml ''Tiii .... .,..
llJTBl''.1N·II1 ~.c~ .. ,_, ........... EIF Ill
\... MHll•"lPll .... ........ ~
edwards VIEJO TWI N 830·6990
SA1;01EGQrw• '0.APAZ'C"A.SAlj"A \j SS,,' LC
"Tl Ulf I•. lJ ..
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''lfJJl-1"111
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edwards MISSION VIEJO MALL 495·6220 s 0 "V<• 'O CRON"' .A1,.E • BE""'H"' AOe:i;so"'s ~'"'"co
"TUT WU u.11•-t• t• -.. ..... .. -.... . .. ...
1111, ., .. "" 11'1, ...... . ,..... ... ... -''ml llTIBr~tll
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edwards SOUT11COAST~AGv~A 497.1111
SOL· .. ~~·5· ... .,.. •·BP\:•:"'' AJ,,.,A&EAi..H ........ ..........
lift. ..
"IH11-rlll ......
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"TMT-18. .......... ......... -
OatebOok/ Friday, NoYember 15, 1985 ll
..
at 2:30 p.m. until Nov. 24. "BEFORE I GOT MY EYE
PUT OUT,'' the world premiere of
a new drama, is being presented ''CBJCAGO," a musical set in
on the main stage of South Coast the Roaring 20s, is being pres-
R 655 T Ce coted in the Fine Arts Villaac epenory, own nter Theater at UC Irvine (856-66I1t). Drive, Costa Mesa (957-4033).
-
about the Salem witch trials,
completes its run at Southern
California College, 53 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa (556-3610). Final
performances are tonight and
Saturday at 8 p.m. Performances will be given Performances will be given to-
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 night, Saturday and Nov. 2~23 at ''DAMES AT .SEA." a musical
p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8 and 8 p.m. satire on shows from the 19305. is
Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 until "A CHORUS LINE ,. .cal being presented at ·the Newport
No'! . .l!_ ' a must . Theater Arts Center. 2501 Cliff --trtl>tt~<> the datlce-co~ 01' i-v e' N-ew (){} r Bea.c.,h
·"BEYOND THERAPY," a runrung at the Grand Di~er (631-0288). Performances are
satirical comedy about psy-Theter, 1 Hotel Way, Anaheim given Fridays and Saturdays at 8
choanaJysis, completes its run for <?72-77.1 O). Performances are p.m. througbJ)ec. 7 with Sunday
the Stop-Gap theater company in give~ mghtly_ ex~pt Mondays at performances Nov. 10, I 1 and 24
the Forum Theater on the Festi-varymgcurtam umes through the at 7 p.m.
val of Arts grounds in Laguna end of the year.
Beach (838-6344). FinaJ per-
formances arc tonight and Satur-
day at 8 p.m.
LAKEWOOD c .. nlt-1
.P1t1J1•J1 Mellf,~C.....'f iOUT
fOlM .. Dll•LA.1111 , ____ , ....
--·~---. ..........
CMMUJ MOllttON
DUTM WISH 2 Ill .• ,,.._ ,,.._ llM ....,_
IACK fO f'lll PUTUlt lf'GI
11: .• ,,,. ''" ,..,,_
"THE COURTSHIP OF MILES
ST ANDISB," an original histori-
cal play, opens tonight in the
Actors Playbox Theater at Gold-
en West College in Huntington
Beach (895-8378). Performances
will be given tonight, Saturday
and Nov. 21-23 at 8 p.m., Sunday
and Nov. 24 at 3 p.m.
DOU'flTIBO 1M1uo unvu
1*1 WAS,_, .. I -Ill .... -s=-.... ~
IOUT llllllO
COMMANDO 111 .... .,, ...
AMHICAN NINJA Ill ,,,.'961 ,_
JAM --IMlAMC90f'l ANGIS Of GOO ,,._.,,
ONCI a1mN .,.,,,
, ,,,,. 1,.U -WJ-11:.,.
IOllY lmtlO
TO lM ANI M .. LA. Ill ., .. ~ .. , .. ,
""'-
"DRACULA," a li vely venion
of the vampire classic, is ap-
proaching the sunrise at the
Harlequin Dinner Playhouse,
3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana
(979-5511). Final performances
are to night through Sunday at
varying curtain times.
"BENR Y IV," a Shakespearean
adventure drama, is in its opening
weekend in the Drama Lab
Theater at Orange c.oast College
in Costa Mesa (432-5-527). Per-
formances will be given tonight,
Saturday and Nov. 22-23 at 8 p.m.
and Nov. 24 at 2 p.m.
''THE MlliDO." a Gilbert and
SuJJjvan OpeRtta set in Japan, is
the fare at Sebastian's Wm Din-
ner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San
1 Clemente (492-9950). Per-
formances arc Wednesdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m.,
Sundays at 1 and 7 p.m., through
Dec. 1.
(838-1540). Perfonnances arc
given nightly except Monday at
varying curtain umes through
Jan. 19.
"ON GOLDEN POND," a com-
edy-drama about an elderl y cou-
ple, is being offered at the West-
minster Community Theater,
7272 Maple St..z Westminster
(995-4113). Penormances arc
givc.n -Eridays and-5a1U.rda)'l at
8:30 through Dec. 7 with a
matinee at 2 p.m. Nov. 24.
"PAINTING CHURCllES,., a
new play about human rela-
tionships, is being presented on
the Second Stage of South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa (957-4033).
Performances are given Tuesdays
through Fridays at 8:30, Satur-
days at 3 and 8:30, Sundays at 3
and 8 p,m. until Dec. I.
"SOME ENCHANTED EVE-
NING," a tribute.to Rodgers and
Hammerstein, opens tonight at
the Gem Theater, 12852 Main Sl,
Garden Grove (636-7213). Per-
formances will be given Wednes-
days through Saturdays at 8 p.m.
until Dec. 21 with Sunday stag-
ingiat 3 p.m. Nov. 17 and Dec. 15
and at 7:30 Nov. 24 and Dec. 8.
"SQUABBLES ., a new dom~c comedy, is on stage at
the Huntington Beach Playhouse,
Main Street at Yorktown Avenue,
Huntington Beach (832-1405).
Performancu are given Fridays
and Saturdays at 8:30 through
Nov. 30 with Sunday matinees at
2:30Nov.10and 17.
"STAGE STRUCK," a mystery
comedy...abouubc ~t~ is bcin
presented at the San Clemente
Community Theater, 202 Ave.
Cabrillo , San C lemente
(492-0465). Performances are
g.iven Thursdays through Satur-
days at 8 p.m. until Nov. 23.
"WATCH ON THE RHINE," a
Lillian Hellman drama, is on
stage at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse, 661 Hanlilton St.,
Costa Mesa (65~5269). Per-
formances are given Thursdays
through Saturdays at 8:30 until
Nov. 23.
"THE WIZARD OF OZ," a
family musical favorite, will be
p~nted for two performances
only at St Mark Presbyterian
Church, 2100 Mar Vista, New-
port Beach ( 644-1341). Curtain
times are Saturday at 1 p.m. and
Sunday at 5 p.m.
Programs offered for
young musicians
WAU DI-T'S
Ill .,._, Of "'1Tf CoiNN INI ... ,.. ,, .. l):Jl 1;U •:JJ
.-.JJ .,.. I 1:4J • • ..,. · Edmundo Diaz del Campo. the musicians in Orange County . "MY F~ ~v:• the mu~•-Oransc County Pacific Symphony's The "All-County Honor Groups" -·-LAKEWO 0
c.~n•e• So'"''~
!J1Jlt>4 tlllff-J • 1141 A-
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lh)t h)t •:» _,,,. ,.,.
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It:» Jl)J t!4t .,,. _ llitll
WAU DllHU't
M .IOUIMY Of NAm MM! "'°' n.•s ~ .. , ,,,, ,,., ,.,.,
IACK TO M nnu11 tNt " .....
THI GOONllS tNI 1-11l;M1-
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'""" .. ,., •n f_, s......, .... loo--, ft-IMll te ... •• , .. _ C.-11141111 ..
ANAHEIM
'"""'MW\""• ftWr 'm ,.TIANITlVANIA .. MOO ,..fl,
INTO THI NIGHT Ill
snv:N ~lll.811lG HINNTS
UCK TO ,..., fUNH fN !
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i. -°" Wl l1WIT ·~™· ("'! /U _, 'C!lp9M
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THIS II NOW ta1
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II DatebOOk/ Fftday, Nowembet 15, 1985
ca I v ~r s Io'? of Sh aw s assistant conductor and director of program will provide an opportuniry
"Pygmalion," is the fare at the .1cducational activities bas announced for young people between the ages of Curtain~ Dinner Theater, 6?0 the bqinnina of the organization's 16 and 22 to perform challenging
El C amino R eal, Tustin first educational program for young music under the guidance of the 1--------------....--------------. Pacific Symphony's principal players and conductors.
"PASSIONATE"
-~ ~. Wl"CW-lV
"VERY s rccIAL"
-~ ~. l'!EWro!U( P'OST
"TRIUMPH"
-Wllllem llolf <lA/'W'lf;TT ~Af"l:AS
l'IONNULA rt.ANMAN •
~.::rMK~~ fll 1:15, 1:15, ,0:00
SAT/Siil 12:15, 2:15
4:15, 1:15, 1:15, 10:00
edwards UDO CINEMA ~ft&-:-&7U350
AMERICA'S #1 MOVE!
"A MOVIE FOR
All AGES."
C..... W.t I>!( TODAY 9Cif ~8C 1, * * * * 1111Gt*SI R.&lllOI "A JEWEL OF AN
ENTERTAINMENT."
Auditions for the HonoT Group
progJam will be held in December
and January, said OW del Campo.
Once selected. the youna musicians
will participaie in rqular ensemble
rtbcanals under symphony coaches,
master classes in solo and ensemble
performance. audition preparation
and moclc auditions for the Sym-phony audition commitl«, chamber
mu.sic perfonnanccs. and the op-
portunity to pcrfonn as gu~t mem·
bcrs of the Pacific Symphony. The
formation of four chamber ensembles
is projected as pan of the procram:
the Honor Stnng Quartet., Honor
Wmd Quintet, Honor Brass Quintet,
and the New Music Grol!J>·
Scholarships wi ll be offered by the
Pacific Symphony Association to all
Ptrtlcipants which will cover the cosl
o( coaching. instruct.ion, and music
purcbue. There will be no fees to
active panicipants. StudenU who arc
cumntly part of IChool or youth
orchestras must obtain pemuaion from their directon before becoming
a part of the Honor Group propam.
Information paclteu are available
throua;h the Pacific Symphony tld·
minlstrativc office by callina
973-1322 or by mail.
~
YOUR KEY TO
ENTERTAINMENT
-
TON THE TO\l\IN
---lauranL>
FTHEWEEK
cxpcncnce with both Japanese and French food." Kcita
JOtned Nagisa one year ago and bas introduced some
French dcssens to the menu. I
Ueno himself selects the restaurant's fish ... , go to
the fish market and pick nice fresh fi~ every day that
arc flown in from around the world, mostly from the East Coast. Taiwan, Norway, and Australia."
Open Tuesday through Fnday for lunch ( 11 :30
a.m. to 2 p.m.) and Tuesday through Sunday for dJnncr
Born and educated in Ja"""n Ray Ueno has Li ed ( 5-tOp.m.), ~agJsa specializes in tempura and tcriyak:.i · Co .,....., v as well as sushi. d worked an 0ranae unty for 20 years, but Nag.isa
panesc RC$tautant. lus most recent venture, rep-. The .lun~heon mc!lu featu~ various combina-
HOLIDAY
PARTIES
Ashore or Afloat
Christmos Parade Of Lighh
Dec. 17-23
Dine a nd Cruise leMtVations 67S-57n
nts hiJ i!'itiaJ entry in~ the restaurant bustness. llOnS which include l'UISO SOUr, ncc1 and sunomono
He decided to open bis own eati!lB._esajllasbmtAt..-_____.Jp1ckled cucu.mbcr). A s~aa s~sh1 -!l';t.u....._n~h~~.~~'-+-~l--a.:.
·d:; because ""So:shtls myfavontc l'Ood. And not ofTCrs a sampling o(tuna. yCllowtail, sbnmp, whitefish,
ty is it good, it iJ a1Jo very good for you. It has not octopus.Jumbo clam, and tun~ roll. The mid-day.menu olcsterol." also offers a number of appctiurs. Alt of these items.
Ueno chose Corona det Mar for bis restaurant, rangmg in pncc from $2.20 to $6.50, ~ av~lablc for
use I love this town," he said. After selecting his take-out as welt, wath a half-hour noucc given, says
tc, at 38.0 E. C.oast ff.i&hway, then the work began to Ueno.
ak.e his dream come true, be said. With the help of a pinncr offcnng.s begin with the Early Bird Dinner
rpcntcr friend, Ueno spent two months convening Spcc!als, 5 to 7 p.m. ihcsc enttecs include Shrimp
'sbuilding(previouslythcsiteofa fumiturestore) into Tempura, Bttf Tempura, Chlclcen Teriyaki, Cb.iclccn
small but skillfully decorated restaurant Karraage (deep fried). and U..tifomia Roll. These $7.50
First operung its door four years ago. Nagisa specials tncludc sunomono, soup, salad, and rice, says
tur-esa few boo~ a few tables., and a long attracuve Ueno.
sh1 bar, all within a modem Japao~-mspired Other dinner po5Slb1litics ioclude various com-
tting. b1nauons of tempura, sashimi. sushi, and chefs
In cbarJeofthe sushi bar is ma.stCT sushi chefYasu, specials. t---------------------
ho bas been with N~almostsmcc its operung. "He Accompaniments for the dashes include sides of
s fifteen years' expenence, ten of them tn Japan." says rice, soup, and salad, flus fruit desserts and ice c:ream. -~===================== cno. "You don't often find a sushi chef with at least Be. veragcs consist 0 soft drinlcs. salce, wine, and I •• -
n years' experience in Jas-n.'' imported Japanese beer.
Working alongJ'idc Yasu ts assistant sushi chef "If customers call one hour ahead, most of the
uj1, with two yean' experience at Nagisa. dJnner items arc also available for take-out," says
l(jtcben chef Keita, says Ueno, "has five years' Ueno. Catering as aJso available.
'1 Ueno, OWlier' ilft ..... rataarant iD corona clel Kar.
OF= THE WEEK
NBWPOllTBR SUNDOWN
I -.eeo.nem1
Season prawns with salt and pepper; lightly dust
with flour. Pre-heat saute pan with clarified butter to
medium. Saute prawns on one side, then tum over
with tongs. Add 2 to 3 teaspoons of frtsb minced
garlic. Dcglaze pan (do not remove prawns) with 4 to
5 ounces of white wine, and the juice of one lemon.
Squeeze in cherry tomatoes and black olives. and
gently stir. Remove from heat; add four tablespoons
of soft unsalted butter to prawn mixture. Adjust. if
necessary, to des.ired consistency and season to
wte. Make a wclJ on the plate with Anaet Hair pasta
cooked al dcntc. Spoon prawns and aucc into well.
Garnish with chopped olives and serve with stir-
fried Chinese vegetables. Serves two.
This recipe was submitted by Chef Ted Gray of
La Palme, at the Newport.er Rcson. Ncwpon Beach.
~...ce .....
'.4 eace c.tlltrea•
'1'1.-ceSnetAS....
1 .-ce a.en, Jllke •
Blend ingredients and strain into a 6 ounce
ooclctail &lass filled with ice. Serves one.
This recipe was submined by Pat Riley.
beverqc manqer, the Newpor1er RelOl't, Newport
Beach.
====-MYAn1~/15 -
Elegant Thanksgiving Day Brunch
10 A.M. to t :30 P.N.
Entertain~! by t~ Ncwpon Chamber Pia~~
•at.so to 121.00
lion d'O.V..res
Salad of s..-\1!1 Let~ l> H~u.
Eotren ..• Roest 1q o1 u.mb wtth ~
.._ ul Tln~y •/'lVfllnc & ~ ~~
Salmon Ill pull PMttY and bune. w~ T~ of beff w/borw INI"'°"' In • port wine ..UC~
a.bcw•t~ bultrt ol ~"" lot ~
• 1fie ~)}J~[~
~
18800 MacArthur Blvd
Irvine
752-8777
Deteboolc/ Frid•y, November 15, 1985 19
·.
I I IT ON THE TOWN
Some. 'best buy' wines are still expensive
By JERRY D. MEAD
MOSTEXPENSIVEBF.STBUY-
Most of the wines I pick as .. best
buys" tend to be priced in the $5
range, lhou&h I've always insisted
I hat a ••t>est buy" was about relative
value and not actual prjce. By this
reasoning. I have often said. a $50
-------~11+· ne--eoutd-bc-a "best buy"Jf-all
comparable wines were priced at
SIOO.
AU of the above is to lead into the
most expensive wine that I have ever
ailed a "best buy." The wine has a
suggested retail price of $35, yet I
truly believe it 1s one of the best
values in red wine (produced any-
where in the world) on the market
3050 E. CANi•t Hwy •• Corona del Mar 640-1573
6 Nighta A Week
rn..a.t. t-1:30 lout.h ,....._ ,_ a.nc1
Bun. 3'30-7:301e1 .. t&en •• ,,,. llu"1ll
Tu..·Thun. 7:.I0-12:00 W1'19ht'• a.,u-t.ion
DANCING
1714 Placentia, Co.ta MM&
Call 648-8091
tor information
fi Pr~ll !tom ui.-llwrman'a I ~'" llw flm7 f'ellclln fHf'a In 1~
to u lmlll fllll •lft't-daily
from •l'OUftd llll' world °'°°"' from la~ Ilk~ ffftll Alli from
..
»•••II tK 11.ttmon trom "'°"'•x rt yow llM fl'f'lll -food, yov 11
loYe -Ml ,_."
Rusn PEOCAN ,,,,_ ... ,...u .. .......,_ ,..,,.,,,,,,....,_C.11
lrdM('714}UMJM
~ IM<ti (TH ) .. Mm
..
a.,.r .......... , ......
671-47H
-
I
r
}
..
..... -....•TON THE i« .... •WN ·. " . '
:
Fine dining at Curtain Call
..
.
GRAND By BEYERLY BUSBSMITH
Dinner theater has always appeal~
10 me as ao easy, relaxing. o ne-stop
evening on the town. My colleague
Tom Titus does a splendid job o f
reviewing the theater segment of the
evening. But what about the dining?
Is Liu: play the chef d'oeuvre, with the
food assuming a secondary role, or
arc the dinnen a.lso of not.e? To help
gu1 e you, 1h1Cwe&I viSile<S Eliza-
beth Howard's CurtAin Call Dinner
Theatre, and from time to lime m
weeks to come, l'U repon on other
dmQCr tbcaten in our area.
I particularly like the ease of the
experience at C\lrtain CalJ, Which IS
the only dmncr theater to offer table
service. rather than a buffeL
of ordenng desscn. which 1s not
included m your ticket pncc.1 mmed1-
ately after your meal or at the lir\t
mtcnmss1on. Tbe "homemade" of-
fcnngs listed on the menu arc made 1n
someone else's "home." and I'm told
the New York ch~sccake and frozen
strawberry pie arc fine. M:r panner's
"English custard" was tiny but good.
once he reached 11 through the
profimon of whipi;x:d ..ruam, Th~
chocolate ecstasy cake. though not an
ecstatic expencnce. "'.a~ cenaanl~
adequate.
The menu 1s the same Wednesdav
through Sunday evenings at Elizabeth
Howard's Curiam C.aJI. However. on
Tuesday naghts, this dinner theater
offers a spec1aJ low pnce, S 15. 95. for
the show and a dinner of a baked half
fresh Foster Farms chicken. potato.
vegetable. salad and rolls. It's an
evenmg 1.a1lored for families. accord-
ing to Elizabeth Howard
You enter an attractive, softly-
hghted room with tables tiering from
the back down to the sta,e. Bia.ck
walls fade into the beckground and
wine tablecloths and napkins lend Pnces for dinner and show.
warmth. while the cha.in' chromc Wednesda). Thursda) and Sunda)s
tnm sparkles in the lamptiahL You're are S 17.95. Fnday. S20.95. Saturda)'
OPENING
S23.95. The Suoda)' mattnee. rnced
at S 16. 95. includes a lunch o New
England-style po! roast, baked ham. 1
or the chefs special of the day with
salad and tnmm1ngs. (Pnccs of I
course do not include cockta1ls. w10c
or gratuity 10 ~rvers.) Jati···it;~~· •it,~ f\:J~ ''f\tt_ I first v1S1ted this dinner theater for •
the oecning performance. "Hello
Dolly. ' in Apnl~ 1980. We had a fine
u~hen. but wMt-it ofeasuTM:o-siee-r l t---
how producer Eh.zabeth Howard and fl CHORUS Lll1E director John Ferola have continued ' _
to upgrade theu offering. I _
The current production 1s "My Fair 1 Lad:r." "The King and ltt opens
January 23. and, Chnstmas shoppers
take note. gift certificates arc avail-
able at the box office.
ELIZABETH HOWARD'S CUR-
T"IN CALL DINNER THEATRE.
690 El Camano Real. Tustin:
838-1540. Tue-Thu .. 6:30 p.m. din-
ner. 8·30 show. Fn .. SaL, 7 p.m.
dinner. 9 p.m. show; Sun. matinee.
11 30 1unch.1:30show;Sun.evening.
5· 30 dtnner. 7:30 show.
• Lonqesl Running Sho--"" Broaoway
• New YOf1t Orama Cr11ic 11. .. ara
• Wenner ot 7 Tonv it.warm
• O<at'ge County Pre-m•ere
ANAHEIM
escorted to your table. and 10 a ---=-::-::-,.::;;:::;;;;;:;;;;;:.:-:....-::=========~======ftr~~~~~~:;;:::;;~~=;;;~;;~;;~~7,;;~;=:~l
moment, your tuxedoed waiter ar-r HAPPY THANKSGIVING n ves to takcdrinkordcrs. There's foll c / .1-?. ::> ~
bar service, u well as 13 wines by the I ~ • lI
bottle, 1nclud1na such popular ,..,. r 0 l-tl ~ 0 u a:. " fa vorites as Callaway· dry Chenan \LJ,, W ~ ~
Blanc, Sauv1gnon Blanc and Fume I R b m
Blanc. as well as "Beau Tour" eu e Beaulieu Cabernet and Fetzer Zin-I
fandel. TheTC's also a house wine b)' I
the glass or carafe. Newport Beach
Dinner includes both soup and
an excelJent lentil soup enhanced salad, and on the evening o f our v1s1t. 15 tb
wnh tomato bepn the meat. The
salad, with a pleasant creamy Sherry
dressing was not quite so successful. A .1..d
both because the lettuce leaves still ~IJl)je9ers•~..,
dnppcd with water and because 1t was ..,
not well chilled. Through November 26
Rolls were warm when presented.
but would have held their
temperatutt bettCT if cloth, rather
than paper napkins, hoed the bread
baskets.
There are three eotrec choices.. plus
pnme rib at SS extra. l 1elected the
New York roast beef, which was
nicely cooked to still-pinkness, ser-
ved with a bit of beanWsc sauce.
Accompaniments were a baked
potato with sour CTCam and butter,
plus seasoned com.
My panoer ordered the chicken
Italiano. half expectin1 a pungent
tomato sauce. To his delight, the ~neless breast, cooked to tenderness
in wine and bcrbsl arrived with a light
sauce with the de icate touch of f~h
tomatoes.
The other entn:e on the menu was
baled ha,m, served wilh pineapplc
and Madeira sauce, and the prime rib
at the next table looked juicy and
generous.
The food. under the 1upcrv151on of
chef James ·Papedalds., as. in shon,
really quite aood, and the ataff' does an
~~~~job of IUVina.. After all, 1~ s a bit lite manaaina a banquet.
since CVCf)'Ofte arrives at approx-
imately the aame time. But 1t'1 even
harder than a bel'M}uet becaute there
are tbc entrtt Chotces and tables for
two. four and ai1 to be tcrved.
The waiters and bua boys manaae
•II this with toOd bumor and u much
enCl'IY .. the OO•fUle cut. How eJse
could they terVe alm0tt JOO people by
the 9 p.m, curtain time-puticular1y
when sevctal partia arrived as late as 8:30?
A nice to~: you have the option
Come celebrate with us
and join in the fun .
Honoring all long time employees.
Custom designed specials by each server.
Grand Finale November 26th. Complimentary
hors d 'oeuvres. Dinner Specials • Drawings for
prizes. David Rakes at the piano bar
251 E+oest Hwy. Newport Buch 673-l505
Thanksgiving Day Buffet
11:30 AM -6:00 PM
'11 .95 per perlOn
'5.95 Childten 12 years & U ndu
• Tradition.I Turlrey with
all th• trimmlnqa
• Rout Ham & Roast Baron of e..f
• Soup & &lad S.r
• A..ortment of f..-h Veveta.bl•
•Traditional 0.-.rta
We will be open this year
for a lovely Chriltmu Buffet.
OPEN 12 00 NOON
MENU
Assorted Rehsh Tray Turkey Mulugatawney Soup
Mued Green Salad with 1000 Island Dress1.0g
or Jello Fruit Salad
ROAST TOM TURKEY
Fresh Cranbemes • Savory Dressmg • G1blel Gravy
Candied Sweet Potatoes or Whipped Potatoes
Stnng Beans Amandlo
Hot Mloce Pie or Pumpkin Pie Whipped Cream
Coffee • Tea • M..ilk
OTHER s 'GGESTIONS IC ...... 0-.-
Baked Raom • Cnsp Roa.sled ~u l.DQC lslaed D•d
Pnnw Rib of Bttl "" J• • ~ Vsti Stuk
8rotkd A11Wah&11 l.otlMtt T"&!l
32802 South Coaat Hirhwa y
(At Crow n Valley Pky) South l.quna
ReMr·ntion~ ~2'2'
· LUIGI'S PIZZA.
lunch Specials Daily
11 -3 PM
lmogno '3.25 • Three VarietMK Sub Sandwich "2.65
Spaghetti "2.75 • Manicotri or Cannelloni 13.25
lndividuol Pizzo 13 .25
Dinner Specials
Served with salad and garlic brea d
from 4 PM
TUtft. Boked Rigatoni '1.65
Wed. lmogno '3.65
Thurs. Spoghetti '2.65
Other pasta also available
S..r & W ine Serwd
1862 Plocentio Ave.
Costa Meta
Date~/ Fr\d•y. November 15. 1985 II
------------..--~--.... ----_..mll!IJI .. ~---~
I I IT ON THE TOWN
CBDJ'S B.AM.8UllGER GRILL 6
BAR -To 0,-la BaU.C-Bead!
N ... 11
Chili's Hambufaer Grill &. Bar, a
popular resiaurant known for its
casual, rcLued atmosphere and
quick, friendly terVice, wiU open in
ffununston Beach on Monday, Nov.
18. The new rUiaurant is located in
Chatter Centre at Beach Blvd. and
Warner St.
Chili's sipat~ half-pound bam-bwJtrs and home-style fries arc two
popular mainstays oftbe menu. The
resiaurant also· ~rves a variety of
ti&bter en trees. iocludina a marinated
chicken sandwich, soft tacos, crup
salads and charbroiled chicken and
beef f~itas.
"We pride ounclves on orig-
inality;" said Mike Smith, general
rnanqer of t.bC Huntinatoo Be.ach
unit. "Chili's menu, atmosphere,
service -even the decor -is one of a kind."
OvCTJll, emphasis is placed on
servina customers subsiantial por-
tioiu of hi&b.qual.ity food and
bcverqes at moderate prices. full bar
servcicc is available, and froien
marpritas arc offered as a .specialty
drink. Draft and bottled beer is served
......... ,Nala ... , ...
... OpterBu
'-:::::=__...i91mllfliraif~::.;_.:::::::-....!!!h...t Dlaan 8.-clale
&.. $5.t5
Jloa.-Frt.5-7 •• a. 0c-.v....,..-.
..... , Bnu1c•
19119-J aH
.,... ......... 9Cll
Ea ............ ..._
l.uce te d lJpetelre -.\bo.,.. N•'6' monl~lpal
•b• 'o"" Roe•• •• l&I I 4 00 ~o . l o••t Hwy. Lag una Ii••< h par
1
°9 o t -
1 494-3358 •mp• room ..
uBob Burns: S1ill
Creal ... "
Jk., .. rlr Bu1h Sruilh
O•ily Pilot
loclud1n~ Koull(I ol l:Jtt(, Leg of umb, Ham, EM• Ben~ICI, Ome~lleJi, ()uorh,., l:lt-l~u·n
\\'1ff1,.., P1>1r hed Salmon, ~lads,~. f rnh Breads. De--ru 111d Murh \lor"''.
'13° ("8'" d1I...,._)
Suved Suod.y JO •m-2:30 pm
37 fathion lllaad Newport Buda 644-2030
CW"t .....,.., Gnl & 8ar, A popu< ltntlurant Know for •• , Caul, ...... MMo91111w1 Md
Q.IQ, f,_ S.wc.. Wi1 0.-1111"'~°" IMdl 0. ....,, NDw. ll L.,... Ill ClwW
C.. At "9dl lht And Wwnet St
II OetebOOk/ Friday, November 15. 1985
•
in frosted mugs.
Characterized by tile-topped tables
and cozy booth seats, Chili's at-
mosphere is invitinaJy warm and casual. Hanging plants accentuate
wood and brick walls that are covered
with pbot<>sraphs and other interest-=iiiiiiiiiiiim.iiiiiiiiillim _____________ lllllli ____ _
in& memorabilia. ~ •
Chili's . Huntinaton Bc:ach res-"Tm very pleased to be joinina
iAUr&J?t wtll serve lu~ch, dinner ~d Morrel's at the Irvine Hilton and l~te-n.i&ht meals conunuousJy ~n-Towers," said Knips .. "It's very good
01na l'ilov. 18. Happy hour wilf be 10 be posted once apin in the United
featured Mo~)'., l;hrou&b Fn~y States, after so many yean abroad.
from 4-6 p.m. Chili s 1s also located in I'm also very pleased to be working
Newport Beach at 3300 w. Coast with such a distinguished young
Hwy. executive chefa.s Michael Watrcn."
1.RVJNE HILTON MOREIJ..'S K.nips, who relocated here from
-Weleemet b &enadeul Ret&aen-Munich, Germany to accept the post, aeer u Muqer has served more than 18 years with
Peter K.n.ips, rccentJr named man-the Hilton chain as a rcstauntcur in
a,er and nwue d'bote at the elegant many of the world's great cities -
Mom:trs restaurant in The Irvine Berhn. Hona Kon&. Baghdad, Singa-
Hilton and Towers, brings a wealth of pore, Berlin, New York and many
international restaurant expenencc others. His most recent position was
to Oranac County's great new restaurant director for the Munich
aourmet restaurant. Hilton, in charge of four restaurants
GULLIVER'S
Make yo11r
Reserva1io11J now.'
Thanksgiving Dinner
Roast Turkey or
Prime Ribs of Bt>ef
RF.SERVl\flONS ESSENTll\L'
H:J:i H4 I I
IH4H~ MAC' AHTHtJH
IRVINE
at the hotel. Previously. he served two
years as restaurant director of the
Dusscldorf Hilton.
At Morcll's. Kn1ps 1s responsible
for supervising a staff of 25 ID all
phases of food and beverage service
and restaurant operations.
Knips. 46. was born 1n Germany
and became an American Cltuen 1n
1964. pnor to his first post with the
Hilton chain at the Statler Hilton in
New York City.
A graduate of the mterna11onally
famed Hotel/Restaurant Busmess
Schools in Heidelberg and Zun ch.
K.nips is also fluent 1n seven
hm&uages; German. Enghsh, French.
ltafian. Ponuguesc. Dutch and
Spanish.
CllEP ALAN GREELEY
NAMED TO CRAINE DES
ROTISll!!lJRS
Alan \Qreeley, co-owner/chef of
Tl¥: Golden Truffle, bu been named
to membership in the prestigious
OWoe des Rotisteurs, an cxclus" e
society dedicated to the J>Ursuit of the
hiabest levels of the culinary ans
Greeley is a native of Orange
County who has studied and honed
his skills both locally and 1n thr
restaurants and vineyards of Franre -
His unique cuisine has been known 10
include such fare u duck salad ..-11h
raspberry vinaigrette, Maui pota10
pancakes with three kinds of ca\ tar
and creme fraicbe, oysters Bien' 1lle
and fresh aUiptor.
The winner of I 98Ys Prom1'1ng
Newcomer award from the Southern
California Restaurant Wnters 1n lhl'
"Contemporary" category, I he
Golden Truffle possesses an 1mpo'
mg wine cellar. Many vintage reJ
wines date back to the 19th centun
Domestic and French wines .ir~
reasonably pnced; menu items arc: 111
the SJ.SO to S 11. 75 range.
Chame des Rot1sseurs was fountkll
ID Pans m the year 1248, and modem
day members include many of thl'
crowned beads of Europe as well a'
other persons of outstanding u lcnt
and distinction.
Much of the Cbaioe's membership
consists of world-renowned lecturer~
authors and critics in addition to
professionals involved in the prep-
aration of fine cuisine. .
The ori.ainaJ auild was concei vcd a\
a tcactuna orpnization. and Chame
des Rotisseurs eooourqes d iverse
functions of an educational nature
Members pthcr toeethcr to share
experience and to honor the restaura-
teurs, chefs and service personnel
whose collective talents inspire the
pleasures of the iable.
Membership in the Cbaine 1s by
inviiatioo only.
The Golden Truffle ii located at
1767 Newport Boulevard in Costa
Mesa. Lunch and di.D.oer arc aervcd
Tuaday:s..-lhroUlh Saturdays in the
casual bistro/c:ak, the romantic din-
ina room or the ouldoor bistro-
prden patio. For rcter'Vltions. tele-
phone 64S-98n.
Now Serving
COUNTRY STYLE
SlllAY $199
llllCI
Includes Beverage
Well Drlnlc or a.er
1:11 .. te l:tt,.
141-D1
1712 Plecentla Coeu M•••
TONTHET
THE BARN
Have the prime ol your lite cOOo.iog
from the utenaive 26 item menu.
Steab, ...tood. l&1ada. Italian and
Meiican diabel. and more. Weetem
charm aod country ambienee.
Lunch M-P, Dinner M-S, Happy
hour M·F 4:30-7 p.m. Satellite diah.
Live entertainmant and dancinc.
Sun. Champecm Buffet Brunch
10-2:30. Banquet CacilitJ•. 14982
Redhill. Tl»tin. 730-0115.
THE ORIGINAL BARN
FARMER STBAXBOUSE
Yee! 't'hey are the on,inal. FamO\a
for their oue-and·•·hall pound
Port.erhoule etMb and leatwin&
diapla~. Proudly eervinc for
24 yeen. LAinch Mon.·Fri 11 ·2. Din·
ner oichtly Moo.·Fri. from 6 p.m.
Sat. cl Sun. fTOID 4 p.m. 2001 Herbor
Blvd., Cotta M.._ 642-9777.
BENNI GAN'S
Freeh food Mrved with a aide of fun.
Menu featurea unique appetizers,
aalada. ...rood. croiau.nt l&Jld.
wichea, butfen, Muican diabee,
and an e:a:citina brunch menu.
Lunch and dinner from 11 a.m.
weekd~. Brunch 9·3 on weekenrl..
Full bu with apecialty drinu.
Happy hour 4· 7 weekd~. In Colt.a
Meaa, South Co.t Plaa puking lot
by Sak'a Fifth Avenue 241-3938. In
Weetminater, 546 Weatminater
Mall 891-4522. Dancinc eveninp in
Weetmi.nater location.
808 BURNS
Superb ia the word t.o de9Ctibe thil
fine dininc eetebliahmenL Servin<
Newport for 18 yee.ra, apeciali&ing in
Aogua ralroed beef, the ftneet. you
can 1eL A1ao f•turinc fr.h flab,
veal and chicken. The linen covered
Uiblea, c:andJM and free.h nowen
add to the elepnc., with boot.ha and hifh beck ebain ror privacy.
Flickerlnc lant.erm and cluaical
muak ·•ptwe the charming and
warm •Lmoepbere. Open for lunch.
dinner and their aplendileroua Sun·
day brunch. &t.eoaive wine liat. 37
Fuhlon lal&nd. 644-2030.
BRISTOL
BAR6GRILL ·
At Bollda1 TndhJonalJy an all
American favorite p&ac:. t.o •l end
priced f<W lually cibUnt· Ewryt.hinc
from juicy Nedi and chope to •P9Cial chicun dJahea and lteah
...Cood. Bount.eoue MJad bar.
Swnpiuoua deily luncbeo«i bu.net.
Open dally '°' dlalnc and cock1alla. 3131 8riMol St., Coate Meu.. 667-3000. • .
CRAZYBOU•
8TKA&ROU8S
Autbeot.ic OOU.Dt.ry dinlns. t .. turi.ni ?.Mt.rn CCllD Ped a..f.l>rime RJb,
fr.h ...tood and ~ in °*r famou. pu-Med ta.b, and
d....nt. Lund. Moa.-Pri. 11-3. DlruMr Moa.-8ua. & p.a. (l)f.Mer ~•tMa...,_t.eed). Aut.t.nUc
W-.n. declor, dudns and Uvt
llluMc le ta. .... 0,., Rd. ~ r., .. Sama Ana. &49-1512.
DlLLMAl'C'S
Tiiie om-re.Uy II famow f<W
their traditional warm hospiuihty
and flne food. Finest prime rib in
Balboa and fresh fish daily. Com
plet.e dinner apeciala 'daily Fnendly
aervioe and a fun. delightful at·
ma.phere. Open daily for lunch and
dinner. Brunch Sat. and Sun. 801 E.
Balboa. 673· 7726.
GARF"S
A perfect place to br1nr the whole
family. Garre featurH at.ea.Its and
eeafood. but apecializ.es in ltaluUl
dilhee alao. Manicotti, luagna. spe
ghetti; all homemade. The at
ma.phere ii friendly and the aervice
ii fut. Serving break.fut, lunch and
dinner. Weeknight epeciala. Phone
orden accep~. 1550 Superior
Ave., Ca.ta Mesa. 650-3136.
THE HIDE-AWAY
Tired of eating out at placee with no
privecy? Search no more! The Hide·
away providea privacy with ita
boot.ha and partition&. perfect for
buain... luncbeorui and romantic
dining. All newly decora~ uffering
a relaxing atmoephere. The special-
ties are aeafood and ateah. Af·
fordable dining for the whole fam·
ily. Variety of daiJy speciah. Home-
made soups and sauces. ~r & wine
aerved alao. 5874 Edinger at Spring-
dale in Merina Shopping Village.
Huntington Beach. 840-6518.
THE HOP
Step into the 50's "diner style .. for
hamburgeni and Cr1ea, chili dogs.
cherry cokes and onion rings made
from acrau:h. Live entertamment on
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday
niihta; featuring the best of the 50's
mUJic. 50's "Record Hop"' Wednes·
day thr00&h Saturday evenings. live
D.J . Club noun: 6 p.m. to 2 a.m.
seven days a week. 18774
Btookhuret, Fountain Valley.
963-2366.
JOLLY ROGER
Great American food and at the best
pricea. The Jolly Roger bu aJwaya
been known as a 1ood family vaJue
te1teurant:"-1'be -menu fattrrn
breaklut,.lunch and dinner wit.h •
large veriety o( diahea to cbooee
from. From egg dishes, griddle
cakea, burgers, sandwiches, salada
to complete dinners of seafood.
ateab, chicken arid delicioua dee-
aerta. Family owned for 36 yea.rt
with the (riendlint service in t.own.
400 S. Gout Hwy .. IAgUna Buch.
•94-3137.
1c:A:• FDRNIAl.\I
BBMINGWArS
In the atyle of the man himtelf.
Hemingway'• ia a ~lebretion of
adventure, of romance and the ut
of llvi.nc. An award winninc ree-
teurant offering Europeu c:uialne
with a California acceDt. and an
eat.tnaive wine liaL OinMr nishlly.
Lu.nch M·F. The etmoepbtrt ii warm and friendly and fio.ct with
enlhueieam. &tebliahed ainct 1972,
t.hla ,..teurut/cal• la located ln
Cor<>Nt del Mar at Pacific Co.at.
Hwy. at MacArthur Blvd. 673-0120.
LI'S RB8TAUliNT U you low Chu-t food, you•re aure
to en)Oy dinin1 here, aa Ll's prom·
1aet truJy authentic Chineae food.
The menu offers a wide variety of
exotic ditM8, from a la ~ to
C(lmbinat.Jona. Breathta.lting decor
m a supremely beautiful at-
m<>iphe re. TropicaJ drinks to
quench your thirst. Open aeven dayi1
• week for lunch and dinner. 8961
Adama, Huntington Beach
962-9115. 314 N. Beach Blvd ..
Anaheim. 827·1210.
MANDARIN GOURMET
A truly special place t-0 dine, the
Manderin Gourmet h.u been a cold
award winner and owner. Michael
Chiang WU voted Reat.eurateur or
the Year. SpecitlWog in Pekine.
Sbanaha.i, Sz.echwan and Hunan
cuwinee. they offer an lllT&Y of deli-
cadea includin1 Peking Duck,
dumplill(a, ... bole fwh and more
aumptiou.e dilhes. Elegant at-
moephere, impeccable aervic:e ud
ntenaive wine lilt. 1500 Adam1.
Coate M .... 54()..1937
PAVILION
Laree P&1oda building beautilully
decorated restaurant. Fineet and
freshest ingredienta, no MSG. Tan·
talwng cuiaine that n ciie. the
pa.late. Fine aervice. Four larie
rooma, ample banquet fecilitiee.
Champq:ne luncbea and ea.dy bird
dinnen. Special holiday feuta. We
welcome company Chriatmaa
parties and ladiee' club meetings.
"You won't be hungry an hour later
at the Pavilion." Man ·
darin/Siecbuan cuieine. 14110 Cul·
ver Drive, lrvine. 551-1688. Lunch
& Dinner Daily, Bar. Casual dresa,
reservations auggea~-Lunch from
I 1:30, dinner from 5:00 p.m.
CONTINENTAL
a.m.·10 p.m .. Fn &: Sat. ull 11 p.m.
3050 E. Cout Hwy .. Corona del
Mar. 640-1573
RIVIERA
Relu to gncioua aef'V\Ct lD an
elegant, intimate at.ma.phere. Ex·
pertly P"'P4lted coat.inent&l diahes
by Chef Richard Bergner. ainc.
1970. Thia award wio.ru.na rM-
taurant aJao off en an uterwve wine
lilt. and noels in tableeide prep-
arationa and flambM Open for
Lunch 11 :30-3 p.m .. Dinner from 5
p.m. Excellent banquet facilitiea. Cloaed Sun. and bo!Jdaya. 3333 S
Bnatol. COit.a Meaa. ~0-3MO.
THE THIRD FLOOR
Known for superior c:onunental
cuiaine. The Third Floor promilea
~capture it"• recognition u one of
the fmeat retlAuranta in Onnce
County. Specializing in tabletule
preparations and using only rreeh
fooda. Ambience uudee elec•nce
and aubtle quality. lnumete but oot
intimidating din1nc. Loe.led with.in
the Emerald of Ana.heun Hotel.
1717 S. Weet St ., ecrou from Dil·
neyland 10 Anahl'im. Call
71-4-999--0990. Emerald Hotelll a1ao
in Hawaii
FRENCH
CAFE FLEURI
Take a seat in Cale Fleuri for bruit
Cut, lunch or dinner. En)Oy an ex
quiaite environment influenced by a
French touch. Hot ja.u Monday
through Friday from 5:00 uU 9:00
p.m. and an outetanding white
glove brunch make t.tus Cafe the
place to mNL Open 7 days a wt"ek,
6:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m Moderately
priced. 4500 MacArthur Blvd ..
Newport Beach. 476-2001
LE BIARRITZ
Experience nquuite French prm
MEDITERRANEAN ROOM· incial cuainl' while dining LO thu1
Airponer Inn intimate French dateeu Specw
ConreniaJ and secluded from the ties include rack or lamb. veal
buay airport aurroundings. The Maniale and a beautiful aell'ction of
Mediterranean Room offen superb ftt!&h fish. Homemade a..,ard wm
continental cuiaine for lunch, din· "'"' deeeerta. EnJOy ~un brunch
ner and unday brunch Top enter· with unlimited chempaine. an
t.euunent nightly in the Cabaret ela~ate buffet. a bot enlltt and
Lounge. The Capt.a.in'• Table is deuert-all aerved in a cozy, nlu
open for dining 24 houn. Perfect for ed atmoaphe"'. Full bar wnh
wau:hlna California 1uneet1 w the dome.tic and imported wine lll'lec
Flight Deck Lounge. The.Airporter tiona. Lunch, Mon .. Fn.. Dinner,
Inn ia located at 18700 MacArthur aeven ni ht.. Sun<!~ btunch. -414 Blvd. in llWIT ~27'10. ----~.;..;:yec..w.:::.po""'rt IDvd .l'rewport BeaCh.
CAFE LIDO 645-6700.
Known u Newport'• Cannery Vil· LE CHARDONNAY
lqe jau apot. Enjoy gourmet food The fineet in clua1c French •nd
with gourmet jan in an intimate nouvelle cu.iaine in phah sWToond ·
_.ud---cxny atmoaphere. Serving inp. Escite your MnM!S with Su
Lunch Mon.-Fri. l t-3 and Dinner pl't!me of Duck with poached Cali·
nirhtly 6 p.m. to mid.nirht. Ent.er· fornia Fire or Lob.ter Cuaerole in 1
t.ainment. nightly 9-1:30. Sun. jan Chardonnay wine aauce with
11e11ion 4· l a.m. Happy jess hour 6-8 chentereUee. Ext~naive M"lectJOO of
Mon.·Fri. Ample puking. 29oo winee Crom a temperatul't!-con
Newport Blvd , Newport Beech. trolled eellat. Lunch Mon .fri
676-2968. 11:30-2:30. Dinner Mon.-S.t. from
6:30. Sun. brunch l 1·2:30 In Recil -
MARCEL'S tty Hotel. 18800 MacArthur Blvd .
Voila! MarC*l! O.ll1h\fully reJreah. Irvine. 752-8777
inc malu fMt.uri~ _tr.ah teafood LE MIDI and Louiaiane ~W) 1peciala. ward Gourmet oyster bar. Elec~nt yet S....t thinp make tJua a WUI·
caauel at.moepbert. Llve entert.aln· ninJ h.id .. way LNly tpeciel: W elur'
ment and dancing (Mturina oc·. t.hetr Swiaa che(, t.ra.lned ln M>me of
fin .. t ent.an.a.inment. Dencinr the beet now.; P.U.C. St. Morita. Place 0.taad. Baur au LK. Zurich under the atan! Lunch trom 11 t.m. A h t · Di.nner n'•ht.ly from 6 £m. Oyteer u t • n i c c u i 1 1 n ~ • s Pro~ ,ourmet r .. bar till 1:00 a.m.. 130 17th t.. t.ivat.-Sunct..y brunch ito uruque
Coate M ... 646-8866. it'• lilt eteppins beck in t.imt to an
PUJPFIN'S era •* u~U.nce o/ food ...
An aictv.nture in natural •Una· CNtdMcl by reneroue hoapit.ality, a
rrMh quallty lncredltnta pnpend hoel)itallty rarely found \htM day-a.
in a aiml)M yet e\epnt -.y. AW&rd Join Marica and Walt« in t..bar
wineinc redJ*i. Garden ..u.inl in • Frebch t'OW\try home. Lunch. dln· EUfOP&U Cat• ety&e at1no9pllere. ,,.., and $Qnda,y brund\.. B.nq_utt
CMUAl bnakfMt and hmch. rCJl'IUl fecllltl-. Ca.I ~ 3421 Vie
df•inl r~ dJnner. Sun..·Thun. 1 Lido. Newport 8-ch. 876-490C.
INDIAN
ROYAL KHYBER
Take an enchanted JOUllll!)' lD\.O
lndle wn.hout leavmc Orance Coun-
ty. Aulhentic Tandoori d11he1
e~antly preiented in the Mogbul
u.dition. Meat and fillh di.aha
p~ed and marina~ ID I blend
of herba and f~h gTound spiCH
lmpreMive design and de<:0r ta.lies
you back t-0 the 16th c-entury
Lunch, dinner, Sunday brunch
1000 Bristol St.. New.rpon Beach
752-5200
ITAUAN
OONATELLl"S
Famoua pi.ua Thl' onginal
f amity Italian restaurant. Servin&
our famoua pi.u.a .l pasta. Dine in or
take out. &>er and wme also 1erved
Family dllllog for an tnflauoo-ficht
1og budget. S.30 Warner Avt-. at
Buah.a.rd. behind ~ Stull'r in
Plavan PW... Founwn Valley
963-5965
MARCELLO'S
Thia award Winner offers an e:a
t.ena1 Vt' menu specializing LO paa t.eJi.
nal, c1oppino and t.be.ir famous
handmade ptU&. Eetabliahed smce
1973. th19 family ownl'd ~teurant
hae captured the hearu of Italian
food loveni. Lunch Mon.·Fn .. Dm·
ner -;. nighta a week. 17502 Beach at
Sliter, H untingto n Beach
8'12·5505,
\.ILLA NOVA
A beautiful bay view cre.atft th.-
roma.nuc ~tting that has madl' thf'
\'1lla Nova a ··spectal kind of plac-e'
for over fifty veara-Superb t·u1Sml"
frum Central and Northern lt&l\
aerved in Old World t"harm Es
teru11ve wine ll!lt 01nnt'r rughtJy
Piano bar Full menu till 1.00 a.m
:HJI West Coa.at H""' "lewport
Beach &42-';l!BO.
:'IJAG ISA RESTAURAST
Thit rme littll' J apanese reeteuran\
tpectaliui in su.ehi. tempura. and
t~nyaki. Thl' U$hi bar is prepared
b) their famo us Japanl'lf'
Ch~f-truly a f~hng of being m
J apen. Grut for soo.alwng, suah1
ban aH 1 lot of fun. Dmi.og room
a.lM> ava1lable. Open TuM. th.ru Su11
for lunch and dinner. 3840 E. Coul
Hwy Corona del Mer 673·3933
IVEXICAN
Ml CASA
Their food 1a like a trip \Al .Me11eo'
Hoapitality 1ues hand in band ..,,th
their motto, .. Mi <'ua e. Su Cua."
or my h~ 11 your h008e. Eat.ab
h1hed aince 1972. it's DO .ecttt
fmodt eDJOY dln1nc ~re. Open
daily from 11 a.m. for Lunch. OU\
ner and Cocktails. Entertainment
Wed.-S.t.. n11bta in the Burm
Room. 296 K 171.h SL, Co11A MeM
646·7626
IWU'URAL 't-EA.LTHV
FORTY CAllROTS
"Dalkiow faahion food," per Henry
$epntrQm. ~T that ,_, good
feel.inc of •tine r-t ta.tlnl mM.la
PffP!Nd d ally, natura1 and
bMl\.by. OriJlnal ~ Fr.h
juicea .queeeed daJJy. A s:r-t pl~
for Dinner i ~ from 11 a.m
UNUJ Cham.-cn-B'Nncll. St
twtieCI BWJocka and l. M.p1n. So.
CoMt P'-a. lowe1' i.v.1. 666-.~00
Dateboc*/ Friday, November 15, 19'5 U
....,.._ --~ -----
I • 11 ON YI-l•I ....
SEAS:OOO/S'TEAJ<S
ANTBONrS PIER 2
The $out.hem Calif. Restaurant
Writel"I voted this one the winner of
the beat value restaurant.a. Their
aeafood ia the talk of the town with
30-35 freah fa.ab daily. CBS Tele·
viaion claims they have the beat
happy hour in Orange County.
Menu bu calorie count for the
weight comcioua. Open nightly for
dinne1. Located on the beautiful Ne
wport Bay at 103 N. Bayside Dr.
6'0-5123.
CAFE LIDO
Known as Newport's Cannery Vil·
lage jau spot. EnJOY gourmet food
with gourmet jau in an intimate.
and coiy atmosphere. Dinner
nightly 6 p.m. to midnight. Enter·
tainmenl nightly 9· I :30. Sun. jazz
session 4-1 a.m. Happy jan hour !'>·8_
Mon.-Fri. Ample parking 2900
Newport Blvd.,
675-2968.
THE CANNERY
Thla historic waterfront landmark
in Newport's Cannery Village fea·
t.ur• fresh local ...rood and Eat-
em beef. ConmtentJy food aervice,
open for Lunch, Oinne1, Sun.
Champagne Brunch and Harbor
Cru.iMe. Entertainment nightJy and
Sun. aftemoooa. Enjoy the l000«e
food aalley__.uperb clam chowder!
3010 LaFayetu. 676-5777.
REUBEN'S OF NEWPORT
Thia is the original and has been
eerving Newport Beach for 25 years.
Theil apecialty ia eea!ood and
ateab. Chefs special aelectioiu daily
and ramoua for theiJ brouted
chicken, too! A beautiful waterfront
view of Newport Bay enhances the
atmoephere. Perfect for bU1ineaa
entertaining and romantic dining.
Located at 251 E. Coast Hwy., New·
port. Raervationa accepted. Phone
673-150.5
THE REX OF NEWPORT
Located on the oceanfront acr08I
from the Newport Beach pier, The
Rex ia I.be Orange Cout'a moet
excluaive aeafood restaurant. Well
known for freeh Hawaiian gourmet
fiab aelect.ioiu and specializing in
aweet. Channel laland abalone, ten-
der veal and prime meat.a. The
warm ambiaoce or the padded
boot.ha, sot.hie paintings and the
well atocked wine racb lend to
Re•'• convivial at.moephere. The
Rex of Newport ia the choioe of
locala u well u viaiton. Recipient
of the prMtigiooa Travel-Holiday
award. CaauaJ/ele1ant attire.
Lunch, dinner. Call 675-2566 for
reeervationa. Valet parking.
RUSTY PELICAN
Freeh aeafood and Iota of it! Come
dock younelf here and dine over·
lookinc the beautiful Newport Bay.
FeaturinJ 15 to 25 fniah f&ah aelec-
tiona daily from around the woYld.
No wait IM!ood b&r in the lounge.
Lunch, Dinner, Sun. Brunch in
Newport. 2735 W. Coast Hwy.,
642-3431. In lrvine-L-Lunch, Din·
ner, and Happy Hour. 1830 Main,
545-4774.
TALE OF THE WHALE
Experience a 11ep beck into time to
a place when you can dina at your
own leisure. Enjoy the romance of
old Newport with a panoramic bey
view. Excite your aen.aea with their
aentational seafood and traditional
favoriti11. Breakfut 7 a.m., Mon.-
Fri., Lunch 11-4 Mon.-Fri., Dinner
4·11 Mon.-Sat. Sat. and Sun.
Brunch 7-4, Oyater 8aJ Fri., Sat. &
Sun. Banquet facilities up to 600.
400 Main St., Balboa. 673-4633.
SAIL LOFT
Located above the Jolly Roger in Lacuna. this cozy restaurant fe•·
tur11 fine Cr11b aeafood with ocean
view dinin&. Enjoy the oyster b&r in
a •arm atm<>1phere and decor of
nautic.al motif. The aeafood menu
featuna awotdfiah, ahrimp, halibut,
acallopa and many other aeled.iona.
The oyster bar offers oyster
ahootera, clams, crab & ahrimp
cocktail and alao hot diahea. The
Sail Loft, a reetaurant that ia dedi·
cated to the tradition of comradery.
400 S. Cout Hwy., Lquna Beach.
494-3358
THE WAREHOUSE
Newport'• mOlt innovative water·
front dininr experience. Chef
Charles Kalarian featwea freah &ea·
food and international cuiaine.
Highly acclaimed, award winning
Sun. Brunch, a1ao featuring patio
dininr. Incredible oysier b&r, ex·
quiaite ambience, exceptional live
entertainment. Banqueta and cater·
ing available. Lido Village, Newport
Beach. 673-4700.
GRAND DINNER THEATER
Jmprtllive dining and profeeeional
production• are aure to pl .... each
time you viait. The utraordina.ry
buffet offel"I rout tiaron of beef,
gWed ham with a fruJt.aauoe, Geor-
ria chicken with~ and glau
and the Mahi Mahi ia aerved in a
peasant sauce. Tri-color fett.uccini
and cream Is a real favorite. Enjoy
dinner and a play tonight! Grand
Dinner Theater loe&ted wit.bin the
Grand Hotel in·Anaheim at 1 Hotel
Way. Call 772·7710.
HARLEQUIN DINN E R
THEATER
Every cuatomer can be expected to
be truted like a celebrity. The
theater offel"I acrumptioua meala
with top productiom in an elegant
atm<>1pbere. The aumptuoua buffet
incJudea roat baron ol beef,
chicken and fa.ab diabel, paataa.
aalad.a, vegetables, and sinful dea·
aerta. The Sat. and Sun. brunch
includ• a variety of ea dia.bea. The
Celebf\ty Tenace ia available for
private dini.na. The individually
decorated private. balcony rooma
overlook the 4M>-aeat horMehoe
11haped ma.in room. The Harlequin
ia located at 3503 S. Harbor in Sant.a
Ana. Call 979-7550.
GUIDE TO ORANGE CCJAST 111 M IAI IRANTS
~
~ :~ $
q,.. ~ ~ ~ t: ~ ·~ ~~ ·$ ~ :4' ·~ ~l! ~{§ ;: ~ <::' § ~ ~'$~ ~ ·~ ·~ .§' Rt'staurant d1 ~ ""'¥ ~ t$' ~~ ~· ~ 'Q3~,f ~~4.1
AIRPORTER INN C'nnt1nent11I $9Jl().S J 8.9!\ $4. 75-$8.95 Ii :.II ~111.:.11 frcom ,;1 oo ur.ou MMAnhur Kl ""Rf' i\U .r-11 1: * * * 111 iOO * ANTHONY'S PIER 2 St-aftNod from ~I' !+r1 ·I' :lO 6::111 • lip to
10.1 N Ba~ Or N••P'"' ~•<II"'!'• •.i >.1 9::10-l 1 ;;lO • ,l()(l
T HE BARN Amtr1r11n Imm .i !l'l fr,.m "I 9'> SI 1.9n frt1m $".!.';f> I :10 i * * up 1u
1•1181 R.dh•ll T ... ~ •• no 011 '> * f',(I()
BLACK BEARD'S Star •• .n $R 'lr• ~I:! !frt ~.I !1:1 Sx !I.'> 4.7 * up tn
42llO Marhnplt. N..1>Q11 K .. <h "-11 Ollttil 80
RRISTI>t 84R It C.Rll I.· llolid•> Inn Amtmcan S6.95-$ l 2.9n $:1.95 Si .00 ~.9!\ $.2.00-S5.00 4.7 * * * Up ld 't1 'I ft..tHf'f I-··,, __ Vt .. 'WYWl 41Yl
THE CANNERY Se•fc~ld $11.9!\ ~199!\ S4 -;~, SR9!\ . 6 'lit Si! !ill "s::m * • up In * 11110 t.aFoy.1i. N..-port ~ ... i. 676 •.m i5
CRAZYHORSESTEAKHOUSE Slnk~ $99;,.g16 9; S .1 9!'1 u 9~. llulidsv• 5.; * • Up lo
;WJ Rroolhollow S.n\e AM M9 1M2 St-.ru .. c:1 • 200
DILLMAN'S Ameriu1n $i.9fl $21 9,r, s 1.!lr. $14 9.'> $:1.:U1 ,4.95 * 15·45 • 801 g Bati-. &Ibo. 671 77'26
JADE DRAGON Chinese from"' r10 rrum $'l -;;, Biii l !Irle Beer & up lu
121()'1 BHth 81...l SUntnn 11!!11 8!1"1.1 $4 C~I Wine '.?50
LE BIARRIT'l French s11.9fl s 11rn:. f..c, flel S9 9;, $14 9;, 4 -; * • :!ll 7'1 * 414 N Ne>wp(Jft Fll....t N~..,,.,,. 8"etll "4~• fl70lt .
LE MIDI French from ~r,o From Sf1 50 Fr<rm $1 2 :.0 Bffr Ir 10 60 3-t21 V,. L..d<t. Nrwpotl R<-Mh 8~\ 4ftlM Wine
LI'S Chint'Ae $7 00 $1 2.00 S2 75-$5.50 * up to
115111 Adam•. Hunttnctoft ~"'h 9111 lll I'. 150
MANDAKI I'll uvURMET ChinMe from $10.00 from $4.flO • up to -
I~ Ada-. r .. 1a M ... \40 ttr SI! Ml 80
MARCELLO'S from $:12.'> Beer & up to -.. llJlh•n from $4.fi."l Wine 17Wl 8-h Bh-d . Hunt l\o•h 842 '>.'oOI -6,1,
MARCEL'S C'untint'ntal $6.011 SI[, 1111 $4.00 s11 no Sli.00 4:;l(I 6::1() * * * up to ..
130 It 17111 St. Coot.t M-"46 88.'>I> so I
MARRIOTT HOTEL C'ahf11rn11n from I J;I <JO from S:\.ll(I $14 9fl from s:100 4::l0 8 * * * up to -
IOO N__, l"nu 0. ~ e...,11 ti.a 400tl iOO •
Ml CASA Meucan ala rarte & combo •la carte It. combo * • -£. 11'11 St.. 4 ..... M.. 646 7UI
R EUBEN'S OF NEWPORT Seafood from $8.95 (mm $4.2fl from $6.9" •M e c,,.., u-Ne ........ flM<tt 5 7 * * up to
:ir. * ROY AL KHYBER Tnd111n from 11295 from S..95. 1000 Bn•tol 1>1 , No Newpon 8"<11 1~1 MOO $9.9fl 57 * up l.O
166
8UMMBATREE-E•erald Hotel Cahrorm•n $!1.9!\ SH 00 S.'l9a S8 95 ··~!10 • up to Validtd i; ll S W.c S. AMJ.,,. "9 019C1 150
THl1lDPLOOR-Eaerald Hote l Conunent&I from 115 00 • • up IA) * 1717" w .... Sl AMl!ei .. -.oao 130
THE WAREHOUSE Su food from '8.91\ s.us sat 112.9.~ 4.7 * • lfl 400 V•lidtd !WM VII °"°"8. ~ 8-<h t?.t 47t'ln
WONG'S SEAFOOD ChmHf' from $7.95 from $3.75 $8.96 llllW ~ H,...t._,. 8--tl'r.JI tr.1
4.7 • • up to
80 . -
1• OttebOOk/ Friday, November 15, 1985