HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-04-04 - Orange Coast Pilot~ECO\Sf •
*
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1986
NB faces_police brutality claim
Balboa doctor seeking $1 million, says
he was injured by officer kicking in door
child custody.
· Bradley and Los Angeles police
officer Danny Rodriauez arrived at
Ocnon'1 Balboa Boulevard home
and identified themselves u .. the
police," Utter said ..
then kicked it open into Gerson's face
when he answered it.
Bradley said, .. I'm here to execute a
court order;• and .. I will arrest
anyone who comes in my way," Utter
claimed. BJ VSAN BOWLETJ' °' ... .., ........
A S l million claim has been filed
apinlt Newport Beach by a Balboa
Peninsula doctor who contends a city
police officer injured hjm by kicking
the front dootof his home open into
bis face. ..
Knee ln]iiry-
~er ala&er Pedro
Guerrero la alClellned for
at leut 3 montba wltb a
bee lDjary. lleanwblle,
the Freeway S e rie•
opena ton1Cht. B l
Callfomla
A Placentla family miss-
ing since last weekend
walked out of the desert
unharmed Thursday, but
refused to reveal what
had happened./ AS
World
Ponce are hunting for a
woman suspected of con-
ceaJlng under her plane
seat the bomb that later
ripped open a TWA jet
and klUed four Ameri-
cana./ AS
Date book
Deep Sea flshlng Is a
relaxing hobby, and
coast residents have a
variety of boat excursions
avallable./Pag• 3
The claim was filed Monday by
attorney Jack Utter on behalf of
physician JelT)' Gerson. It stems from
a Dec. 26 incident when Newport
Beach police officer Rick BradJey
allcgcdJy harmed Gerson whiJe assist-
inJ an _off--duty Los Angeles police
officer 10 serving a court order for
Genon•s wife Debbie is ·divorced
from lq>driguez and they have j~int
custod>'of tbeir dauahter, Sara, Utter
said.
But the officers inever showed any
court documents 10 Genon or his
wife, Utter contended, and Bradley
"continued to threaten, in a hostile manner, to arrest Mr. Genon." AocordinJ. to Utter, Bradley and
Rodripez 'bepn loudly and con-
tinuously bangin~n the front door,•• In the claim, Gerson alleges he
suffered "1evere mental anguish.
Abo•e, ln•eattcaton eumtne the accident
11eene. At rt.cht. Coeta lleu n,ettcbter Jim
.............. Lee .....
SoWclay evmtnea a baby ,UI who wu .
aprayed with wlnclahleld ,iue.
Man dies, 2 hurt in 2-carcrash
By PAUL ARCmPLEY
Of .. .., ........
A Santa Ana man was k.JIJed and two othen were
seriously injured Thursday when two vehicles collided in
Costa Mesa.
Alfonso Valencia Mendoza, 30, was ,pronounced
· dead at 3:33 p.m. at Fountain Valley Trauma Center
fo llowing the accident about an hour earlier on Bristol
Street at the San Diego Freeway, police said.
A county coroner's office spokesman said Mendoza
suffered head injuries. An autopsy was scheduled today.
Also inj~ were Lourds Maria Nuno, 25. of
Newport
1
Beacti and Gutllermina Roman, 28, of Santa
Ana. .
According to Costa Mesa Sgt. AJan Kent, Mendoza
was a passenger in the backseat of a 197 5 Chevy Ca.maro
being driven by Francisco Roman Favela, 28, of Santa
Ana.
Fa vela's wife Guillermina was in the front seat. Th.cir
two infant children also were in the car.
Favela, driving northbound on Bristol, entered the
left turn pocket at the freeway for the southbound on-
ramp when be turned in front of Nuno's Chevy Love
pickup truck as she drove south on Bristol.
(Pleue 8ee DltATB/ A2)
fhysical pram and bruilea." He says he
couJd not perform his function u a
medical docior properly" and bad to
seek treatment for ~ and ap-
prehension by (his) family."
"We're not a_pinst the Newport
Beach Police Department," Utter
said, .. We are qainst the penon who
works for the Police E>epertment who
gives it a bad name.••
Newport Beach police spokesman
Trent Harris said police reports and
preliminary investiption tell a dif-
ferent story.
Harris said the incident bepn
w~ Bradley wu asked to belp a
anz.en serve a coun order. He aid
Bradley was not a~ that llodriauez was an off-duty police officer wbe1l
the req~est for uaiJtance wu made.
Bradley .. looked at the court d<>N-
ment, and it tps>eared to be in ordet"
before lmoc~ on Genon's door,
Harris said. Police deny tbat Oenon
WU irtjured du.rin& the incident & ,r,
(PlaM ... DOCTOll/ Aa)
Harvest
-Festival
dates
altered
Day added to provide
for attendance before
Jews' High Holy Days
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' ... .., .......
Irvine Harvest Festival d.ircct.on,
facing heated criticiam for ICbedulina
their event at the time of the Jewis6
holy days, reportedly b.&vc raolved
the conflict by add.in& another day to
the fall festival and aarecin& to avoid
future confticu with the Jewiab
calendar.
Sources familiar with the aarce-
men t said it also calls for festival
officials to issue a public apolOI)' to
the Jewish community for any in-
sensitivity or misundenll.ndina.
Steve Edelman, Oraqe COunty
rqjonal director of the Anti-Defa..
mation Leaaue, said today, -rbeR
was a lot of diuemion brewifta from
many memben of the community -
not JUlt Irvine -who thOQ&bt the
fesu val directon would be inllexible
on this. ObvioUlly, they were not. -
He added. .. It ii a very bin.er~ to
swallow to bear that your relisjout
aroup doesn't count. But it appean
the festival directon really do care
and arc coooemcd about the whole
community.-
The agreement was reportedly
reached Thursday niJbt at a mectina
of the festival's executive board.
(Pleue ... llAJlVUT I A2)
._.
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Claaslfled
89
A3
87-8
84-6
810
Terrorism up;
tourism down Sex-in-park complaints remain
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Televlslon
Weather
C4
Date book
A6
Oatebook
A3
C3-5
81-4
Date book
A2
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of .. .,..,,... .....
The magic of the Mediterranean
has turned into menace and Orange:
Coast travelers are beading in the:
opposite direction. locaJ travel agent!
said this week.
The threat of terrorism in Europe
and the Mediterranean bas killed
bookings to such popular desti·
nations as Italy and Greece. althou~
some northern countries a.re still
(Pleue eee TltllllORIST8/ A2)
By LAURA MERI. °' ... .., .......
Laguna Beach Mayor Martha Col-
lison said she was discouraged to
learn residents are still unhappy with
the city's response to homosexual acts
in Clty parks in the wake of promising
taJk:s with homeowners last week.
Collison said she felt optimistic
followinJ a recent meeting with the
North Laguna Homeowner's As-
sociation about the issue and was
disappointed when she received a
letter from the group outlining its
concerns once again.
The members complained that
constant sexual activity in HeisJer
Park makes it impossible to enjoy the
area during the day and especially at
night. They also complained that the
city was drauing its heels on finding
solutions to The problem.
Collison said she left the mecung
feelinf "communications were
open.'
But at Tuesday ni$}lt's council
meeting. three association members
said they want the Clty to move faster
on the problem. To help officials, they
have fonned a comminee to forward
suggesuons they believe will help
deter the activity in the parks.
Gannel Baker said the group 1s
looking at increased hghuna. poltcc
foot patrols and stronger locks on the
bathrooms.
The restrooms at Riddle Field,
where Little league games take place.
arc also freq_uented by some of the
offenden, wd Bill BuckJey l..egaUy.
sex in public 1s a misdemeanor
BuckJey sa1d Little league coaches
no longer allow any of the children to
use the bathrooms unless they are
accompanied by an aduJL
As for Heisler Park, Baker said,
"There is qwte a lot of flirtatious
actJvity lD the day and then all the
men go into the bathrooms.. There is
so much going on that people cannot
take a le1suTCly strolJ throuah the park
without seeing it. There an often 25
men in the bathroom."
The council asked the group to
make 1ts recommendations before
budget study sessions bqin .
!\ppeal to be heard in
sheriff's race dispute
Alf!DHIO/' Brutality lawsuit settled in
By USA MARONEY
Of ..............
millions of dollars to remedy jail
overcrowding.
.:: · case of retarded Irvine teen
The 4th District Coun of Appeal
will settle a disqrcement between
Orange County Sheriff-Coroner Brad
Oat.et and h11 political opponent
Linda Lea Callipn over her right to
attack him in an official candidate's
statement.
The three-judge panel Thursday
stayed Oranae Coµnty Superi9r
Court Judae Judith Ryan's order to
strike portions of Calliaan's state-
ment that claim Gates bas committed
illep.1 acts and cost the wpaycrs
Ryan, whose order was to take
effect at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, based
her decision on a 3-year-old section of
the Election Code that permits w
judge to delete portions of a can-
didate's statement determined 10 be
falle or mislea<lina..
Candidates' statements are sent to
more than I million county vo\Crs,
according to Al Olson. county Reais-
trar of Voters.
The appeaJ court's order prevents
the registrar's office from printing
(Pleue ... APP&AL8/ A2) I
Tum to Pege C1 for the
l•t•t eutomotlve new• .
Rock 'n 'roll lives on in OC
despite battles with cities
Cubs' closures only temporary setback
or rock ans as new clubs plan to open
In Oranp: County, reports of rock
'n' roll'• death arc arcatly exaa-
aerated.
The demi1e laat January of the
historic Golden &e.r niahtclub in
HuntiJ\f\OD Beach was a bean felt lou
for mu11c fans, martina lhc late1t 1n a
Iona line of roclt-club closurh and promotina many to bemoan the
l
dearth of Oranae County outlets for
or111naJ rock muaac.
But Rick Babiracki, who manaaec:S
the Golden Bear, said he is ready 10
open a new niahtclub tba( wdl
1howca1c local acts 11 weU 11 na-
tionally known enlcr\&Jnen.
And Jack JUclwds. who ran Hunt·
in1ton Beach'' pau niahtdub unttl
1t closed last January, said be too 111et
to reopen a club in Oranae County,
caterina to the "new music" bands he
used to book.
Both Babi~k.i and Richards de-
clined to provide details of their new
club plam untiJ aveement.1 are
reached a_nd leues aped. but said
announcemtnt.1 could• be mlde
within two wceb.
In addition, ihe Coach Houtt
SaJoon In San Juan C.apistnno bu
been ~ju~oaced 10 the past teveraJ
weeks, boot:i"I tOP-1\ame ICU and
'
By USA MARONEY °' ... ...., .......
The city of lrvme has reached an
out-of-court settlement with the
parents of a retarded, autistic teen-
ager who suffered the loss of a kidney
a ~ go after strugghng with a
police officer.
Assistant City Manaaer Paul Brady
confirmed Thursday that the famtJy
of Guido Rodriaucz Jr. ac:ccpted a
settlement offer from the city's in-
surance carrier about 30 days aao. At
the same time. the fanuly droooed a
ROBERT
' "'PIJMKR
Foc us ON THl N £~s
pickina up much of the slack left by
the Oolden Bear.
With the continued sucuss of
Safan Sam's an Hununaton Beach. Oranac County rock clubl couJd be
bouncina beet in timt' to provl<k 1
cure for the 1ummenJmc blues.
So roll over Bcicthoven and tell City
fathen the news.
"We intend to pick up JUSt whctt
(Pl_.. ... aOCK/ A.2,
$10 milhon brutality sull against the
city and three of 1ts pohcc officers.
Brady refused to disclose how
much the famJl y wtll receive. saying
that au parties have ar,rccd not to
discuss terms of the scttfement.
Unnamed sources have placed the
settlement figure betw~n $200.000
and $400,000.
"I can't tell you what the number
was or ifit's close (to $1 0 m1lhon).''
Brady said.
Ml)'or Dave Baker aJso declined to
rcveaJ details of the settlement He
would say only that sctthng the case
"was in· the best interest of all
parties."
Richard Peterson. attorney for the
family. said the Rodnguez family is
happy with the settJement. Since the
incident, the Rodnguezcs have
moved from lrvine to Corona. he
said.
Peterson said c-0ndlt.1ons of the
monetary award preclude him from
discussing the ca~. The case fik.
including details of the settlement.
was sealed at the Clty'~ request. he
said
(Pleue eee UT ARD&D/ A2)
New York City Ballet
will bring its show..-,
to Mesa Arts Center
Heather Watts. pnncipaJ dancer
for the New York City Ballet, was 1n
Costa Mesa this mom•"f to an-
noun°' the dance company s cnp&r·
meat at the new Oranat County
Pcl'f'onn1ng Ans Center
Performance dates were an·
nounoed at a press conference fcatur-
"" Watts, troupe mana(l~nf director
Charin Raymond. and off1<'11I\ of th~
new arts °'nter
The enpacment at the center's
3,000.tcat the.ter near South ea.st
Plaza will mark the New Y oft Qty
Ballet's first Southern Ca.lrfonua ap.
pc&r'IOOl lft 12 yeen.
Ncanna complelion, the S70. 7
m1lhon auditorium 1.1 ICheduJed to
opt"n Sept.. 29 YOth a snm;ere eeuoo
fca1unna world-class tod local pcr-
fomuna arts compant~
. ·'
$ < 2
A.I * Orange Coat OAILV PILOT/ F'Jday, Aprtl 4, 1988
/
~ •
!f~DIRVINE TEEN CASE SETTLED •.•
Break out the umbrellas tonight Pe1en00 noted th.at the settlement
offer came just prior to a Phil
Oooahue television show on pohc:e
brutality in which the Rodrigue?.CS
bad been invited to participate.
.. It wu •hortJy before and durina
that l1me that we settled." be i&id.
The ramily did not appear on the
~and Guido Rodri.uez Sr. filed
•uit qainst Irvine followrng the Apnl
21 , 1985. arrest of their son, who was
t 8 at tbe time.
The teen-tier, who is both retarded
and autistic-a condition that causes
a person to cut himself off from the
real world -has a mental aae of
about 4. He was chased and thrown to
the pound by poltoc offious, who
fa.iJcd lO rccoaniu hts hand.Leaps and
thouaht be was under the ioOuencc of
dru15.
Two days later. surgeo ns had to
remove one of the tcen-aa,cr's
kidneys.
Fara and G uido Rodnaua Sr.
blamed the three Irvine police of-
ficers.
They admitted the oraan was
congcrutaJJy deformed and m.aJu
have required removal eventuaflr.
But the parents claimed their son s
rouah treatment at the hands of Sat.
James Lowder caused the kidney to
hemorrhage. forcing tts ha~ty rt·
mo val.
A revtcw of the &tTCSt by the Oranac
County dutrict attorney's office
cleared Lowder and officers Shan
Lohman and Dave Stoermer of any wron~doina and ooncludcd there was
no cvtdencc that Rodriauez' kidney was 1Jijund durina the incident
City offiCJ.aJs and tbe district at-
torney's office tned to kee~ details of
the review from I.be public and the
Ro¥1uci family.
An Orange Coun1y Supenor Court
commissioner ordered most of the
review relcucd to the family's at-
torney. Commissioner Greer Stroud
said 1t was unfair for the district
attorney's office to give I.be document
to only one pany in a legal dispute.
A atorm b.Uftdlng_ oft the~ Cellfomll ooeet w• due
to mow uhote tonight, ending a blW epel of ctMt weetti.r wtth ram In the lowtenda Md 1nOW on the mountalnt~ n.. wlll be a .a percent Ohanoe of lhower9 tonight,
.ocordlng to the Natlonlll W..thw SeMo.. The storm coukS
dump between o.3 end o.e of"' Inch of rem on the OOMtll plain.
Thunderrlhowwa .... poeel~ Sunday.
Along the Orenge CoMt h ~ be moetty cloudy tonight end
Saturday with ~ of etM>WWS Saturday. Lowa tonight « to
54. Cooler Saturday with tMghe 58 to ee.
From Point Conception to the Mexican Border -Inner
wtit_..: Wlndt tonight and 89tufday eouth to eoutheUt 12 to 18
knota. Wind~ 2 to 3 feet. Weetefiy ewell 2 to 3 fMt. Moetty
Ck>udy tonight Md S.t1.KdaJ.:1h chance of lhowef'I saturday. Ou1w W8t.-.: Wlnds .... ng and t>ecomlng eouth to
~ a to 15 knot• tonight. Wind• on Saturday aouth to
eoutheUt 12 to 22 ltnota. Combtned .... 4 to 8 feet.
'"°"":
HARVEST FESTIVAL RUN EXTENDED •.• ·-~~ U.S . Tempe W11m -COid..,.
Sl'IOwtfl Alln '""'•• Snow Occludfd ._. StaliOIWy ~
From Al
Doug Bodkin. president of the
fesuval, acknowledged that the
scheduling d1spute had ~n re-
solved. But Bodkin and other festival
directors declined to discuss details of
the settlement this morning, saying a
prepared statement would be released
later in the day.
Edelman, as leader of a local group
DEATH •••
Jl'romAl
The pickup plowed into the ng.ht
side of the Camaro.
Nuno. who suffered a collap~d
lung and laccrauons, was 1n fair
condition at Fountain Vall$.)' toda}, a
hospital spokeswoman sard
Roman, who suffered broken nb'>.
lacerations and internal bleeding. wa ..
in serious but stable cond1t1on at the
hospital's intens1 ve care unit
Favela and lhe two children wen•
not injured.
Kent said the accident 1-. under
invcst1gat1on.
'
that combats prejudice agamst Jew~.
was a key figure in drawing attenuon
to the scheduling of the Irvine
Harvest Festival, a fund-raising event
that features a carnival, food booths
and'entertainment
In I 984. the festival coincided w11h
Yorn K.Jppur, the Jewish Day of
Alonement. This year's festival,
scheduled Oct. 3-5, will faJI on the
Jewish New Year. Rosh Hashana
Rosh Hashana and Yom K.ippur
arc called the High Holy Days, and
observant Jews would refrain from
attending the festival orpart1ciparing
in fund-ramng at the event dunng
these days.
Edelman said he wrote to area
lawmakers. protesting the sched·
uling.
The strongest response came from
state Sen. Paul Carpenter, D-C'yprcss.
who accused the festival directors of
"blatant preju~ and bigotry" and
described the organization as anti·
Scm111c. He u"cd Irvine officials to
severe all 11es Wlth the festival, which
takes place at the city's Heritage Park
Festival directors and city offiC'laJs
·denied the allegation of anti-Scmi-
usm. But earlier this week, Bodkin
said rescheduling this year's event
~ould be difficult because a contract
had already been signed with carnival
operators, and o ther arrangements
were in place.
Edelman of the Anti-Defamation
League said the revised agreement
cans for opening the event on Oct. 2
-a day earlier than scheduled. He
said this would allow Jewish residents
to attend or work at the festival prior
to Rosh Hashana, which begins at
sundown on Oct. 3.
Edelman said be was pleased with
the rcsoluuon. He credited noo-
JeWlsh clergymen and other com-
munity members with helping local
Jews press festival directors to ad-
dress the scheduling conflict.
"The non-Jewish community ~
sponded very positively to this situ-
ation and was in large part respon-
sible for convincing the board that
accommodations had to be made on
both sides," he said.
.. Le ~ 641 •l ~ ao ,.
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BP-.. 45 ~ 26 -01 = .. 45 ~ .. ao OfW'CI--57 42
He6IN '3 2.4
HonoUli e& 71
MolMton 7• .. lndlanapolll • 34 ,,..__ .... ... .,
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..._..,p ... 41 40 Nttonll w .. ,... llMC• HOM US OI04 of eoi-ce ........ 13 .. ..... ~ ,. ..
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MttlrOPOlllM LOI Angeilrl 42-t7 .. _..vi,. ., 31 l'06 p.m
TERRORISTS KILLING EUROPE TRAVEL ••.
7 4 7 nearly lands at tiny field From A l
attracting vacationer...
Orange Coast travel agents repon
bookings down anywhere from 20
percent to I 00 percent.
"It's quite true terronst attacks
have all but shut down the Middle
East market," said Elmer Brown.
#owner of Laguna T ra' el Service 1 n
Laguna Beach ... Greece 1s hke a desen
as far as Amencan tourists are
concerned "
"Zilch.'' said Jack Davis of Can.
nery Village Travel in Newpon
Beach. "There aren't any bookings to
the Mediterranean unless thev have
relattvcs there
"We usually ha\e a cabinet lull uf
.Europe boollings Thi" vear there
aren't any.'·
Davis, who has been in the business
45 years. said, "I've seen good days
and bad days. This is the worst ever
"Last year was the best ever in
Europe This year will be the worst.
Ifs a p1t1ful thing." he said.
Agents said people openly admit
they fear beinga terronst target 1fthcy
go to Europe. despite the odds against
that happening
"It's a knee-Jerk reaction," Brown
said. "We have lo constant!) reassure
them In a typical intemattonal
airport a plane leaves every five
minutes. What are the chances they'll
be in one hit by terronsts?''
Nevertheless, travelers aren't wtll·
1ng to play the odds.
Instead. the Pacific has become this
>ear's vacation desttnat1on
"Thcre·s so much else go ing on."
said Bre nda McQueen. owner of
Travel Travel in Fountain Valley
Altho4gh she 1s book.ing half as
many European tnps as last year.
McQuctn said there's big demand for
the World's Fair Expo in Vancou,er
and cruises to Alaska. the Orient,
Australia. New Zealand and the
Caribbean
Rae Crutchfield at Huntington
Beach Travel Service has been book·
ing trips to Mexico and Hawau. while
tnps to Europe arc down 20 percent.
"It's more the Mediterranean and
the Middle East ... she said. "'They're
still not afraid 10 go to London and
Pans."
Bui Tom Lochde, manager of
Bristol Village Travel 1n Costa Mesa.
1sn'1 booking anybody for Mediter-
ranean trips.
"I kmd of refuse to sell them a
uckct," he said. "I don't need that
lund of aggravation."
Instead, he's sending clients on
safaris m Kenya and cruises to Tahiti
and the·on ent.
"People have the money. They're
not afraid to spend 1t," he said.
MaJor cruise lines gambled on that
being true and brought their ships to
the Pacific while canceling this sum-
mer's Mediterranean packages.
Brown said.
For example, Royal Cruise Lines,
headquanered in San Francisco.
moved their Oeet to the Pacific.
They're nearly 90 percent booked,
Brown said
Tounsm officials in the Mediter-
ranean arc desperately trying to
reverse the shutdown.
''They'll f)y travel agents over to
Greece for $99." Lochde said. "But
who need s to go over there to get shot
at?
"Of course, they don't charge you
extra for that."
HAWTHORNE (t\P) -A U nitcd
Airlines Boeing 747 almost landed at
a municipal airport with a nlnway far
too short for a jumbo jct before
pulling up and landing at Los Angeles
International Airport. federal of·
ficials said.
The FAA is investigating the inci-
dent, and has found fault with the
actions of both the pilot and air traffic
controllers, spokesman Russel Park
said Thursday.
The 5,000-foot runway at
Hawthorne Municipal Airpon is
DOCTOR FILES CLAIM ...
From A l
"Our preliminary invesugation in-
dicates that what Mr. Gerson said
occurred did not oc.cur," Harris said.
He declined to comment further
because of the pending ht1gat1on.
Utter said the Ger5ons never tned
to prevent Rodriguez from picking up
the child, who tearfully begged the
two officers "not to take my daddy to
Jail." They left the home without
taking the girl, he added.
"He (Rodriguez) just went over
th.ere to play macho,' Utter said.
The claim against the city seeks $1
rtiillion in general damages and
$5,000 in other relief, Utter said.
Separate lawsuits have been filed in
Orange County Superior Court
against both Bradley and Rodriguez.
seeking the same amount, he added.
intended for use by propeller planes
and smaJI jets. The runways used by
747s at the international airport arc
more than 8,000 feet long.
"It would not have been pretty,"
Park said of a 747 trying to land at the
small airport.
United A1ght 812 was on a flight
from Honolulu when it made the
mistaken approach about 6 p.m .
March 27. Park said. Visibility was
about I 1h miles at Hawthorne Air·
port,· about 21h miles from Los
Angeles International.
Joseph Hopkins. a spokesman for
UAL Inc .• the parent company of
United Airlines, would not comment
on the incident beyond saying the jct
made a low pus over Hawthorne and
did not go below l , I 00 feet.
One apparent error by the pilot was
failing to switch radio tTequenaes to
that of the Los Angeles tower.
APPEAL COURT TO RULE ON DISPUTE •..
From A l
Calligan's statement and delays pr<r about two paragraphs of CaJ ligan's mislcadina. She said it required more
ROCK CLUBS THRIVING IN COUNTY ...
grcsson a Voters Pamphlet scheduled statement, said be was concerned space than is allowed in a 200-word
to go to press on Monday. about the appeal but added he has candidate's statement to clarify the ~artics to the appeal must file briefs confidence in his attorneys. claims.
with the court by noon Monday. The Yacobozzi. CaJHgan's attorney. Calligan stood by the wording in From Al
we left off at the Golden Hear:·
Bab1raclu said this week "I feel
there's undoubtedly an audience out
there for the quality of enterta1nmcn1
we offered at the Golden Bear "
Bab1raclu sa1d his new club. after
remodeling. Wlll feature two adJacenl
rooms-one offcnngaboul 450seat\
for big-name acts and another seating
from I 50 to 200 for local performer<;
"The plans arc acoustically nght
and logistically nght," he said "I'm
certatn 1t will work "
Bab1 rack1 would not <ipcc1f} what
location he"s negot1at1ng tor. but said
1t will be 1n the art'a 111 Newport
Beach. Huntington Be.ach and f.oun·
tain Valley
Richa~s ~1d he 1s looktn~ for a
replacement for his Spat1 nightclub.
which operated for I 111 year; at 1hc
Harbor Mall on Algom1uin at Warner
Street in Huntingto n Beach
The new location he has in mind -
planned to accommodate from 250 to
350 customers -Wlll he even llc1tc1
suited for the type ut cl ub he want!i to
run. "I really behcvt• we rnn dn well,
offenng the same type of new mu"i1c
we had at Spatz."' Richards said
Babiraclc1's and Richards' lateo,t
plans should tx welcome news 10
local rock fans frustrated by the la<:k
ofclubsoffenngonginal rock and pop
music.
Orange County ha~ rarely laid o ul
the welcome m at for rock club~ In
fact, rock venuc!i have been accu,<ied
of ltavtng muddy foolprints after
trampling the peace and qu1c1 ot
surrounding netghborhood"
In 1981, the Cuckoo's Nest in ( osta Mesa. which showcased punk bands,
lost its business <0Crm1t a fter city
°c~A~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
))O .N.,r !!Ar S• ( n\1• I.A~ ~ •
Me •'10'~\ A • VJ' r ~111 "4•u A • "'• t
officials "-ere angered by complaints
of excess1 vt' no1~ and raucous behav-
ior both 1n and out of the club.
Cuckoo's Ne<;I owner Je rry Roach
1s havtng "1m1lar problems keeping
h1~ current duh Radio City, open in
.\nahe1m
More recen1h < o~La Mesa resi-
dents have been complaining of the
noise Pacific '\mph1theatre concerts
have been crcattng since the fac1l1ty
opened 1n 1hc summer of 1983.
In Irvine. resident., and police are
becoming increastngl~ alarmed about
the cnmc the) bche"l' concen-goer
hnng to the area -whenever heav}·
met.Al bands perform at the Irv ine
Meadows Amph1tht·;Hcr
The Golden Hear and 'ipat1 had
other problems
The 60.year-old huildmgon fat1fic
( oas1 H1ghwa} that hou .. cd lhc
( ioldcn Bear was dedarcd '>lructural
ly unsound But rather than rebuild 11.
ctty o fficials want the s1t(' for rnn·
c;trucuon of a new h1~h·n\e holcl a~
pan of 1he city\' downtow11 re·
development efTon
Spatz was forced lo cloM: after tht•
shopping cen1er 1t was located in wao;
purchased and the new owners dl'-
cided a rock club d1dn·t fit in wl.'11
"There wa<; really nothing I could
do about 1t," Richards said
Both Bab1rack1 and Richard<. arc
aware of what they're up again!it, not
only in pitkmg new loc~t10M, hut in
operating clubs in Orangl" County
Richards espec ially 1 ~ placing
emphasis on a new loca11on that 1s not
1n a res1dent1al are~ where ne1ghbor1
might complain
At a reccnl forum d1scuss1on
hosted by the Orange County Enter·
ta1nment Wntcn Assoc1at1on. Hunt-
..
panel of ju<!Jcs may issue a decision already raised the constitutional the statement Thursday. She main-
ington Beach C.11y Counc1lman Jack after rev1ewing material presented to question with Ryan wilhout success. tains that Orange County voters arc
Kelly put 1t succinctly: "Orig.inal-them. A hearing is not required. Gates objects to Calligan using her familiar with the issues in the sheriff's
music clubs auract a portion of the Calligan attorney William candidate's statement to accuse him raccandarecapableof undcntanding
society that the more staid portion of Yacobozzi said his appeal of Ryan's of having been convicted of a federal the statement's contents.
society docs not understand. Our decision was based on his client's crime, owning a bar in violation of CamJ>a1P.1 manager Robin Rc-
problem (10 Huntington Beach) is First Amendment rightto free speech. state law, covering up a ~Y isdorf wd she feared Callipn's
that there are more staid homeowners YacoboZZl said voters should decide drunken dnvin~ 8JTCSl, housing viol-campaian bas been irTCparably harm·
and cittzens who live within prox1m-the truthfulness of her statement and cnt criminals in low-security tents ed by Ryan's decision because it
1ty to these cl ubs." that Ryan cxeTciscd pnor restraint in and costing taxpayers millions for allows Gates to attack tbe cnldibility
Kelly said that, while he has ordering portions of the statement those tents. of her claims when she1>elieves the
nothing against the clubs themselves. deleted. Ryan ruled that the offending judge took issue only with how they
finding a location where nearby Gates, who sought the deletion of statements as written were false and were presented.
residents do not object may be ,-------------------------------~-----------
d1ffic41t.
But Bab1rack1 said the club owners
themselves must start taking more
res{>On!>ib1ht y for the behavior of
their customers.
"We are responsible for our
patrons." he said. "At the Golden
Bear. we always took care of things in-
housc. At the same time. we didn't
rnfnnge on anyone who wanted to
have a good time."
Even so, the feeling among owncn
1s that running a rock club 1n Orang_c
( ounty is always an uphill balllc.
Jerry Roach said the community ts
inept at providing for the needs of
young people "Face it." be said.
"Orange County doesn't want their
kids o nce 1hey get out of Little
League."
But all the talk of rock clubs
opening and closing has little effect o n
bands who arc committed to per-
forming. said Joe Woods. singer-
guitarist of the band T .S.0 .L.
"There wtll always be rock 'n' roll
and there will always be people who
object to It If they closed every club in
O ranac County, there would still be
rock 'n' roll," Woods said.
"I used to ~lay in laundromats.
We'd just plug in and play. We did it
before and we can do it again"
D:ft Piiot 1•0UW~~
OUR 107th YEAR
BIRTHDAY SALE!
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the Oldest C&:rpet Company in
California, and continues to
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INSTALLATION WARRANTIES
On Carpet, Draperies, Vlnyl and Wood Floorlng.
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"OI "'~· 'I°"' P4IC>lll Dy ~ .!lO P m u• l>tl<"t I p If! •.ossn.C:.araTCo.
What do you hke about the Daily Pllot? What
don·t you ltke') Call tht number above and your
mtisaae will be recorded, tninscnbcd and de·
hvtred to the appropnatc edttor
The same 24-hour answcnna scrv1« may be
uStd to record letters 10 the editor on any to pic
Contnbutors to our Letten column must includt
their name and telephone number for vtnfic•tton
Tell\ u wha1·~ on your m ind
'"° yOUt c~y ...,. "" .,.._
.. ,., 11., •Nl ~\li'tdil, ,,
tW 00 "Of t<-y(lvf
t<(>) 0., 1 I "' C4tll ho>'•• •O • "' t "<l •()Ur .., .,...,_. .... ~
Clrcul•tlon
Telephonet
.... .,..
O.r-v-roun1, .... , .......
"Familv Owned Since 1879"
2927-§. Bri1tol Street, Co1ta Mesa
South of South Coast Plaza -751-2324
ALSO IN LOS ANGI• U LONG K ACH
..
Stott Knn.
Mo•Fri 9-6
Sat 10.5
•
Ice cream social
at health center
An old·fishioncd, family-style ice cream social
wiU be held Saturday to celebrate aroundbru.kina
for the new Women's Health Center at Saddlcback
Community Hospital.
. . County Supervisor Thomas Riley and other
e1v1c leaders and hospital officials wall ,J?:lrticipate m
the event. Musical entertainment wall be offered
durina the &U-day event.
Concert at Me.a church
. Huntington Beach folk sinaer and instrumcn-
\1..list Sonya Sandrachild will present a free concert
Sunday at the Orange Coast Unitarian Uni versa.list
Church, 1259 Victoria St., Costa Mesa.
The 10:30 a.m. program will consist of
traditional folk music of Euriope and the; United
States suna and pcrformcred on the Celtic haq>,
double-bowed psaltery, Appalachian Mountain
dulcimer, guitar and autoharp. Admission is free.
Ez-mUltary •pauses meet
EXPOSE (Ex-Partners of" Servicemen) will
meet Sunday at I p.m. in the CulverdaJc Clubhouse,
3754 Hamilton St., Irvine, to bear lawyers Boo
Guiffre and Jennifer King. both family law
practitioners.
The organization is a support group and
dissemination center of information for former
military spouses in the area. CaU chapter president Call Lou Willer at 786-3346 for information.
Folk danclng claSB slated
A beginning class in folk dancing will be offered
beginninaSunday by the Laguna Folk Dancers at the
Laguna Beach High School dance studio.
The studio is located on Manzanita behind the
west side tennis courts. Partners are not required and
further information may be obtained by calling
533-8667.
Kid printlng session set
The Westminster Mall, along with the West-
mintter Police Department, Encyclopedia Britan-
nica {and the Orange County Leaming Activity
Center, will sponsor a cbild-fingerpnnting program
Monday through Saturday.
A number of youth-oriented activities are
scheduled during Kids Safety Week at the mall, and
fingerprinting will be con on the upper level of
Center Court. There is no charge.
Breast eram• scheduled
Healthcare MedicaJ Center of Tustin will
spons.:>r two free breast exam clinic;, for women in
Irvine next week -Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. at 33
Creek Road, Building 3, Suite 380, and the other
Tuesday from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in Suite 202 of
Woodbridge Medical Center, 4950 Barranca
Parkway.
Reservations are required for the clinics and
may be obtained by calling Healthcare at 838-9600.
ext. 5838.
CASA v~lanteers sought
Coun Appointed SDCciaJ Advocates (CASA} of
Orange County will ofter free trammg classes for
people interested in becomini CASA volunteers to
serve as advocates for neg.lected or abandoned
children who are dependents of the county'sjuvenile
courts system.
The training program wiU start Monday and
run through Apnl 23. It will involve six three-hour
evening SC'5ions, and those interested should call
the project director at 634-7470.
LB's art college reglsterlng
Registration for the spnng quarter at the
Laguna College of Art is now under way. Classes will
begin Monday and run through June 14 with majors
otfered in ceramics, graphic and advertising design,
drawing and painting. photography and sculpture.
A complete list o the workshops offered and
further information about spring classes may be
obtained by calling the office of admissions at
497-3309.
Friday, Aprll 4
No meetings 1claedaled
PoucE Loe
•
State's
offshore J
oilmo~e
desirable
Less exploration money
heightens moves to drlll
where prospects are best
•1G\1XDABBT
I r • ..._...,
WASHINGTON -The U.S. oil LDduSc
try is still intaated in cxpk>rina off the
oout of California even after husecleclines
in both crude oil prices and company
exploration bud&ets, fOvcmmcnt and
industry spokesnien ~ Thursday.
"Industry bas told me they would be
willing to drill today. I don't know how
many bidSj I don't know bow hi&b," said
Steven Oriles, ass1stant secre1ary of the
interior for land And minerals, at a mectina
• with rcporten.
Dlllr ......... ~ ....... "-'-Students take over city ball
About 70 etadenta puttetpated tn the Youth tn
Oo•enunent Day In llantfnaton Beac' on Thu.
day. tald"& oYer ma~ement and city comicil
Jobe for e day. ft•e hlO .choola lD
llandncton Beach were repreeenl.ecl lD the day-
lon& noent. 8tudenta Tamara Hlnee from ltdlaon
lltah School and llanball Altm&ll from lllarlDa
~ School •hare a laap wt.th City Coancllman
Jack Kelly darinf an~ mid-afternoon coancil
meettna. Stadenta takJ..nC ner coa.ncil po.ttiona
d1ecueecl nch thin,. u teen anon and clty
puttclpation lD a youth employment Protnm·
Governor may ask e:x:clusiOn ·
of more coast from Oil leases
By DOUG WILUS
& 11111..._ ....
SACRAMENTO -Gov. George Dcu-
kmejian may urge Interior Secrc~
Donald Hodel to exclude more of Cali-
fornia's coastal waters from pending
federal leases for offshore oil drilling, local
officials said after a private m~ting with
the governor.
But two county supervisors who were
excluded from the closed-door session
Thursday between the Republican gov-
ernor and a dozen officials from Call-
fornia 's coastal cities and counties charged
the meeting was a sham to allow Dcu-
kmcjian "to sort of pretend that he cares"
about the coastal environment.
"This is just one more dishonest attempt
by the governor to appear to be listening to
local concerns. He pretends to be con-
cerned, but he's really not," said Santa
Cruz County Supervisor Gary Patton, who
complained he was refused admission to
the session m DcubneJ1an's office.
"11is re-election prospects have ob-
viously made him want to appear to be
willing to listen, but he's not even willing
to have someone from the affected area
show up and give him tbrcc minutes (of
explanation). All I asked was three
mmutes," Patton told reporters outside
Deukmejian's office.
"We feel it's a stacked deck," added
Humboldt County Supervisor Wesley
Chesbro, who claimed voters in bis area
were 4-1 against offshore drilling, but that
Dcukmcjian invited only pro-drilling
supervisors from his area to the meeting
and excluded him.
Three officials who attended the one-
hour session, Marin County Supervisor
Albert Armbura. Monterey County Super-
visor Barbara Sbipnuck and Pacific Grove
Vice Mayor Jim Hughes, all said Dcu-
kmejian hinted that the formal recommen-
dations he will send to Hodel next month
will seek exclusion of additional offshore
areas from f edera.J oil leases.
"He said be would not be surprised to
recommend additional deletions based on
environmental review." Armbura said.
.. He reaUy rccogniz.ed the imponaoce of
tourism and the general business
climate, ... and that some coastal com-
munities already have a very strong
economic climate, 'and could very well be
hurt more than helped by oiL"
Sh1pnuck said Dcukmejian's comments
about excluding additional offshore areas
·from new leases were in response to a
question about Southern California. "but
be didn't iimit bis response just to
Southern California."
Hughes said be stressed to DeukmeJUlO
the air pollution hazard from offshore
drilling on ~culture, and that be thou~t
the session • went very weu~· for those with-
concerns abo1tt offshore drilling..
Dornan announces re-election
bid,_ pledges support of Reagan
By LISA MAHONEY
Ofho.111 ...........
U.S. Rep. Robert K. Doman, R·Garden
Grove. returned to Orange County Thurs-
day to fonnaJly announce his bid for re-
election to the House of Representatives.
Amid the theatrics of locaJ supporters
and a huge welcoming calce. Doman
pledged to continue providing the 38th
Congres51onal District with true con-
servative leadership. He urged voters to
return him to Washington, D.C., so he can
continue to take part in the "Reagan
Renaissance."
Doman, who has earned the ntckname
·· B-1 Bob" for his support of the B-1
bomber. said he remains "resolute m m y
determination to sec America's defenses
second to none."
If re~lccted, Dornan said he )"Ould
continue to try to increase production of
the 8-1 bomber. support the MX "Pcace-
keeper" m1ss1le and President Reagan's
Strategic Defense lnit1auve.
He vowed to vote against any new taxes,
support a constitutional amendment to
balance the budget and encourage the
president to veto costly spending bills.
The 38th District aJso can expect its
incumbent to continue his active support
for what he caJls the world's "freedom
fighters." Claiming that Americans have
"at long last abandoned our restless
indecisiveness of the post-Vietnam era,"
Dornan said he stands with President
Reagan m helping the "anti-communist
freedom-fighting forces" in Nicaragua.
Angola. Cambodia and Afghanistan.
"To those who say that support for those
brave freedom fighters is not the role of a
U.S. congressman, 1 suucst they take their
heads out of the sand and remember why
we call ourselves Americans," be said.
Doman, who is unot>posed for the
Republican nomination m the pnmary,
faces two Democratic challengers for the
seat he wrested away from Democrat Jerry
Patterson m 1984.
State Assemblyman Richard Robinson
and David 0. Carter. an Orange County
Superior Court judge, arc vying for the
chance to cfl.allenge Doman in ~ovcmber.
Lee Connelly, a Buena Park liberal and
self-described sclf-aovcmmcnt advocate.
aJso is running for Doman's scat.
Robinson: who has spent 12 years in the
Assembly, criticizes Doman for bis actJve
role in foreign affairs. Although Robmson
said he and Dornan share similar foreign
policy philosophies, be believes voters 1n
the 38th District want a congressman who
will work on federal solutions to local
problems such as flooding and traffic
congestion instead of Contra aid.
Carter, a law~nd-order Democrat,
questions Dornan's credibility as a leader.
Pointing to Dornan's claims to military
service and a well-publicized tie-puJJing
episode with another congressman, Caner
bas said Dornan is not worthy of holding
office.
• • •
Paradoxically, less cxplorauoo money
heightens interest m Caltfomia waten
because that's where the best pros~ are,
said Phil Oarlc, spokesman for the Na-
t~onal Ocean Industries Association. "We
want to take the more limited momes and
concentrate them on those highest and best
prospects," he said.
Griles used the occas1on of a rouunc
announcement of solicitations of interest
in offshore tracts in the western Gulf of
Mexico to hold a news conference on the
controvcny over drilling 10 federal waters
off California.
The department 1s in the early stages ofa
second round of negotiations with mem-
bers of COfllTCSS on bow much federal
offshore acreage should be open to drillin&.
A preliminary agreement last summer
broke down after the tndustry said thctt
was little oil in the 1 SO nin~mile-square
tracts selected off California.
Grilcs said industry interest was
founded on the assumption of a price of at
least SI 5 a barrel m the year 2000,
expressed in terms of dollan with today's
buying power. Clark confirmed this fi&un:
both as a planning floor and a muumum
forecast for the year 2000, sayina it applied
to "shallow, close-in" areas. "Most people
say you need somethin$ in the late teens"
for deeper wat.en, be wd.
Prices for key domestic l18des now run
around S 11 a batTcl after a slide from about
S26at the start of the year. Industry leaders
believe prices are bound to rise in the long
run because major produci~ areas such as
the North Sea and Alaska will be running
out of oil in the 1990s, increastng the
market ~wcr of Persian Gulf prodUCICT'S,
Clark said.
Griles said California waters were rising
in importance because Ala.ska offshore
waten bad produced no commerciaJ
discoveries. Cart put it this way in a
separate interview: .. If there are any
elephant fields. that's wbe1e they are_··
As it stands, production from exiJt.ula
federal leases off' California will more than
quadruple by 199S to about 3SO,OOO
barrels a day from just 3 J or 32 production
platforms. about double the current
number of platforms, S&ld William Bet-
tenbcrg, director of the department's
Minerals Management Service.
GriJes said he did not "want to say I'm a
pessimist" in the negotiations. despite the
previous failure. An agreement could take
any one of several forms, such as limiting
acreage, production platforms. or pro-
duction itself, be said.
But some forms arc more likcl).' than
others. "If l spend $12 milJion drilli~ a
hole and you tell me I can't take evcryttung
ou~ thafs oot much of ao incentive to
drill," said Grilcs.
Similarly. the department wilJ not agree
to open the area to e~ploratory drilling but
keep it closed to production. Grilcs said.
"Industry is not going to enter agreements
for exploration ... without the opportunity
for production." he said.
As for the western Gulf of Mexico
offenng of 27 million acres sometime m
August, Gnlcs said the department expects
"fewer bids. fewer leases, and fewer bids on
d~pwatcr tracts,'" 1n part because the area
has been picked over so often 1n previous
!~sales.
Worker held in stabbin~
at Irvine construction site
about 10 a.m • • • A 1982 Toyota Tercel was stolen
from the 14000 block of Linden
Avenue Wednesday about 5 a.m. • • • A Powcon welder. valued at about
SI , 500, was reported stolen from the
4100 block of Campus Dnve.
A resident oft.he 16100 block of Mt
Olancha rcponed Thursda) that
someone forced open a roof vent and
pulled up a screen to burglanze his
1977 Dodge motor home The loss
included two men's down parkas
valued at S 150 • • •
Baywood returned home Thursday
and discovered someone had
smashed a rear wmdow. entered and
ransacked her home The loss in-
cluded jewelry worth $8, 700 and a
camera worth $500. • • • A resident of the 16200 block of
Content reported Thu~y that
someone stoic car stereo equipment
worth S 125 from her blue 1978
Oldsmobile Cutlass.
A dispute on a construction ~ite 1n
Irvine landed one man m the hospital
and another in jail Thul'5day. an
Irvine police officer said.
James Eichman. 22, of Anaheim
was booked into Orange County Jail
for assault with a deadly weapon afttr
he allegcdJy stabbed Theodore Smith.
24, of C.apistrano Beach, Irvine Lt.
Coetalleea
Stereo equipment worth $228 was
reported stolen from the bedroom of a
home in the 1600 block of Palau Place
between I p.m. and 3 p.m. Wednc:\-
day. • • • Cash totaling $53 was reported
stolen from Lori's Copy Center, 845
W. 191h St., between 6:10 p.m .
Wednesday and 8:40 a.m. Thursday.
Entry was by made prying the front
door. • • • Power tools wortb $565 were
reported 1tolen from a woodworking
business at 2955 Randolph St., ~
tween J:4S p.m. and 5 p.m. Tuesday.
E~try was made by breaking a front
window
Newport Beach
A would-be buraJar cau~ SSOO in
damqc while attcmpttna to pry open
a shd•DJ flus door fb Inter·
communu::atloos. 359 San Mt1uel
The intruder was unable to enter the
bu11ness.
Mike White said.
Smith was taken to Western Medi-
cal Center in Santa Ana with numer-
ous puncture wounds to the IJ'Om and
multiple lacerations of the neck.
shoulder and ann, White said.
Smith was treated and released, a
hospiJ.alJ,p<>kesman said.
• • • A $200 stereo was stolen from a
Volkswagen Bug parked at 4545
MacArthur Blvd. The thief used a pry
tool to force open a window. • • • SQmeone caused S2 t 0 in damaae
by breaking out a window at Rec-
reations Inc., 200 Newpon Cen1er
Onve. Police said nolhing was taken
from the busines . • • • A 2S·year-old woman reported th.at
~man tried toaet her to snort cocaine.
She IA.id the man aPJ>n>achcd her as
she walked alooa the beach near 52Jld
Street and told her the drua would
"mike her foel real good." • • • A wallet was rcponcd stolen from 1
purse in a restaurant on Bayside
Dnve. The owner rcproncd S60
mltslf\g. • • • A buralar who entered a a.u• in
the I 00 block of 3 lrd Street took
S48S in-dash radio • • • A buratar1natched $6, 170 wonh of
J'l(menlOO.~ rmm a ~1dtnce OD the
The fight allegedly erupted when
the two disagreed about tearing down
some lath at the Irvine Pacific
construction site m the city's North·
wood development. White said.
Eichman allegcdJy grabbed a ut1hty
knife and repeatedly struck Smith
with It, White said.·
200 block of Momini C1'nyon. The
stolen items included jewelry, a radio
and an electric shaver.
Richard William Jackson, 2~ •. of
Costa Mesa was arre~ on suspicion
of possession of cocaine for sale,
according to police. He was booked
and held on $25.000 ball at the city
j11l.
Irrine
A home on the 4900 block of
Bark wood A venue wa.s reported
broken into Thursday about 8 p.m. A
Vld~ ~ucttC' recorder was missing. • • • A color television set was reported
stolen from an o pen garage on
W1llowgrove Thursday about 7 p m • • • A burslar reported entered a home
on the l 4000 block of Doncas1er
Road Thursday about ~ p..m. and
took a camera and video cas~ttc
reoordcr • • • A computenzed field spnnkler was
reported stolen from the 2000 block
of8u,ine ,('entcr.Dn~e Wcdnctday
• • • Three bicycles were reported stolen
Wednesday. One bicycle was taken
from Sunflower about 8 p.m.. a
second bicycle was stolen _from
Southwmdjust after noon and4'fh1rd
gray. JO-speed Huffy Scout was
reported stolen from the 3700 block
of Parkv1cw Lane about noon. • • • A vinyl car cover, worth about $75,
was reported stolen from an unlocked
vehicle parked on the 4300 block of
WalnurAvenue Thursday ablSut 10
a.m. . . . ~ About 10 cassette tapes, a car jack
and one credit card were reported
stolen from a car parked on the .f 7000
block of Sky Park Boulevard Thurs-
day about 9:30 a .m. • • • Someone reportedly smashed the
passcnaer window on a car parked on
the 17000 block of Slcy Park
Boulevard Thursday about I a.m
and took a camena cate. • • • The rear window on a 198S Mazda
on the 17000 block of Sky Park
Boulevard was smashed Thursday
and an AM/FM stertO wns reported
stolen
Fountaln Valley
Po 1bly entcnna lhrouah an un-
locked front door, someone bur-
&Janltd a home Wednesday on the 9000 block of Heron, talon& property
from two bedroOms The lo , 1nclud-
ina .tewdry and 1 htnd&Un. wa
c,umattd at more than $700.
Someone broke a lock to burglanze
the Fountain Valley School Distnct
headquarters building at 17210 Oak
• St. over the weekend. The los~.
esttmated at $375. included bicycles
and sterro equipment. Damage to the
door was estimated at $375 • • • A resident of the 9100 block of
Gardenia reported Tuesday that
someone. had stolen her five-speed
Clipper Cnuser bicycle from her
garage. The loss was esllmated at $70
• • •• A drafter reported Tuesday that a
steel-belted radial ti~ and wheel were
stolen from her silver 1985 Toyota
van. which was parked behind her
business on the 18400 block of Mt
Lang.Icy The loss was csttmatcd at
$1 20
•>. resident of block of
Honcysuckk rcp<>rtcd TucS<Uy that
someone stoic the blue car cover from
the 1986 Volkswagen C'abnolet
parked 10 her dm·cway • • • A ~•dent of the 9400 block of
Flicker reported Thur~ay that Klme-
onc dented the left rcar door of h1'
beiae 1984 Toyotn .c rt'81da The
damqe was estimated at S 700 • • • A ~ident ot the 9 00 block of
Rhea told poltce Thunda} that
someone stoic h15 rt'd AMC l.1Jhtfoot
b1cyclc, wha<'h he had kf\ 1n his fron1
yard. The lo s was csttmatcd at ~40
Hantincton Beadl
~ m1dtnt of the 8900 hl<X'k of
• • • A resident of the 1300 block of
Ohve reported Thursday that '°me-
onc stole tools worth S 1.066 from has
company truck. a 1980 Volkswagen • • • A black Murray boys 12-speed
bicycle was stolen near a n vetbed
bicycle trail near Atlanta A venue and
Brookhurst Strttt • • • For the sixth time m a week. a
window was broken It a model
fourplex model home 1n the 16000
block of Moody • • • Burglars broke a wmdow tn th<'
2000 block of Cohma and stole
telcvu1on SCl$.. a Stereo. camera
equipment. com d jew-
elry. • • • A rcs1dcn1 of the 6000 block of
Hardwick reported that h1'1 black
1980 Yam aha moton:-yclc was stolen
from the side of h11 home wt than the
pa<;t 10 day\. The !OS<; WU Nhmated
at St .500. • • •
A dark gray 1984 Toyota Supra wu
reported bu~ 1n the V10n1ty of
9th Street and Pacific Coa~t HIJhway
The los..' included ucrco equipment
worth $700. • • •
A rcs1d('nt of the 6700 block of
(\hannon repe>rtcd that h.Js black I~
.,Pttd Cheetah bteytle was stolen
from his Jlnat Tht los:s wu ~
mattd at S 140.
f'
A• * ~ eo.t DAILY PILOT I Frtday, Apnl 4, 108e
Female terrorist sought in bombing aboar~ TW Ajet
ATHENS (AP) _ Polioc bunted condition of anonymity, identified scat I Of' duriq a CaiJ'o.t()-Athena told authorities the woman in 1eat fli&hta. But Mitj. Oen. Hosoi farq. the:
today for a womu suspected of the woman aouaht in the a1gck on fliabt about eiabt houn before lbc IOF bad kept her tray table down An airpon teeurity offieW to Catto faypb.an Interi~r Ministry 1.t111tant
CIODc:ealina u.nder her plane seat the Wednesday's Trans World Ajr!incs Bodna 721 returnina to Athen1 from throuahout the fliabt. and that in-was quoted aa tellln& the aovcmment· for the Cairo &Jrport. was quoted u
bomb that law ripped open a TWA Fh&ht 840 as May Elias Mansur. Rome as ttiabt 840, was tom by the vcstipton believed thi1 was done to run newspapeT A1·Ahram that a aarina:
killed four Americans. An Earlier, officials had 1denufied the blast. . conocal her actiont. Lebanese woman usina the name The woman completed boardma
nan official was quoted as sayina suspe<:t as a man. In Rome, the ltahan news aaency The TWA jet's pilot later told Mansur1 about 30 yean old , had procedures later ~ the other pa.u-
becn scarebed before boa.rd-The sources said they believe the ANSA reeorted that pusenaers f"CP.Ot'lCra the crew docs not custom-boardea the Athen~bou.nd TWA enaen, and both 11rport ao~ TWA
in&_ in Cairo. woman may have coocealed plastic aboard the Cairo-to-Athens fliahl bad anly check all life prexrvcrs between fliabt in the f.&yptian capital. aec:urit1 inspected her bqs.
__ Greek~ ao ex losives in the life rver under
PROPOSAL
WHAT'S
AVAILAB LE
WHERE YOU
COME IN
CONTACT
PUBLIC NOTICE
Study Results Available
Do you want a Public Hearing for ttie proposed
constrvcllon of an interchange on lhe Route 133 lreeway
(Laguna} at Barranca Parkway 1n the City of Irvine?
proposed interchange
.C "··~ '°''r'
CAL TRANS Cal~om.a Otpanmt11 OI T r1nspona1i0n1 .. no IM Cn) OI
'""'" are planru"'il to constl\ICt an •ntercl'lar>ge on 11oe Rou•t 13:! JI
Barranca Pan.way in me City ol lrvone Tnt P'OJec1 would cons.st ot
1"41 cons1ructi0n cl 1 new overcrosa.no and on and oft ramc>J Tne
P<01ect propeseJ 10 provide acce'5 10 deve10pmen1s curren11y unoer
conS1ruC110n and tuture planned c:tevelOpment
A Negat••e Oec11ra110n Env.ronmen111 Assessment •NOE'-nu
oeen prepa•eo 1na1 '"o.cates 1na1 tne pro,ect ""'' l'IOt llave a
S>Q"~Cll'll a!ltel on 1¥ e"v1ronment T11"' NO EA is a•a ab r tor yo.i•
re.1ew 11 me tollOw•"O .ou•.ons
CAL TRANS 12~ Soutn Sprong Stree1 Los Anoe es
Irvine Cit,Y Hiii I 'ZOO Jambor&1< BoulevarO lnnne
Do you navt any ouest•ors aboul pro,ess•no tn1s pro1e 1 ,.,,,, a
N@~ll••t Oec11111o0n' Do 1:>u o.sagree w :n tne l•rc r;is ol OJ'
s1ucty? WoulCI '°"cart 10 ~• anr OU>e• commotlllS on 1n s pro,ed?
H so pi.He ;,l>m, .,,u, comm'ln" no lalt• tnan Apt.t 1• 11186 10
W B Ballantine CAL TRANS, Enmonmenial PlanM'Q Branch 120
South Spt1ng StrHI LO& Angeles CA 90012 It there 11e no otner
comments or requHll tor I pubhc Ml!lflQ CAL TRANS illd the C11y
ol IMnt w1U proceed w1111 ltle proieCI Cles'9n and reouest approval
tl:lm ll>t l"t<leral Hoghwly """111'14slrll()"
Ron l<os1ns1<1
CAL TRANS
(2131 620·3755
OeM1S W dberQ
City of IM!i"
171'1 660 3694
Eel Moore
c~ v ot '''"ne ,.,. 6603764
U.S. denies
pressuring
Honduras
SANT A BARBARA (AP) -The
Reapn admmistration is pressina the
aovernment of Honduras to clarify '
statements by a Honduran official
that minimized the dangers of the
recent border raid by Nica.raauan
troops.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said Thursday that the
statements by an unidentified senior
official of the Honduran government
were not true. ·
The Honduran official, quoted by
reporters from the New York Times
and the Miami Herald, contended
that the United States pressured
Honduras to accept emergency U.S.
military aid and exaggerated the
numbers of Nicaraguan troops who
crossed into the neighboring Central
Amencan country.
"Those statements arc a surpnsc to
us," said Speakes "We have asked
the government of Honduras for a
cl arification.
"We note that the government of
Honduras inittated at its highest
levels the first dtSCUSSJOOS o( this
serious threat of impending
Nicaraguan attack on Honduras and
of a possible Honduran need for
emergency U.S. assistance."
Nicaragua has described its cross-
border raid as a punitive action
agaansL anu-government rebels
known as Contras.
The Honduran official whose state-
ments sparked the demand for clari-
fication from the White House said
the the Nicaraguan raid was similar to
many cross-border 1ncurs1ons of
Sand1n1sta troops pursuing the U S.-
backed Contras.
The official estimated the
Nicaraguan troop strength at about
800 men while the White House has
Congressmen meet Gorbachey
By ~ A1toclated PTua what a drua a,1ent S&Jd wu the laraest COC&Jne aeazun: io
. . . West Cout h11tory. The oocaine bad an eitimated s~\ ~OSCOW -Soviet l~d~r Mikh~I S. Gorbachev value of$331 million. U.S. Drua Enforcement Admirus-~e~nilcly wants a full 1umm1t with Prnident Reagan. but. tration spokesman Ron D'Ulisse said Mexican fedc~
1t 1s ~nclear what qrcements he .expects to reach at the judicial police confiscated 2,4SS pounds of the droa in
mceuna. two U.S. COJ!~smen wd today. Reps. Dante B. Tijuana Thursday. The seizure came two days after U.S.
FasceU, ch~~an of the House F.o~ign Affairs Commit-Customs agents found~ po~ds of cocail;\C hidden in a car
tee, and William Broomfield, a Michipn Republican who tryifti to cross from TtJuana into the Urut.ed StatC$ at the
1s a minority member of the committee, met for nearly San Ysidro Port of Entry. The Tuesday n.igbt bust was the
three hours with Gorbachev in the Kremlin. "He said that largest cocaine bust in the history of the border checkpoint.
he's still interested, he still wants to go, that he feels
confident we can act then: and that he would Ukc
somcthina substantive out of1t," Fa.sccll told reporters at a
news cooferenoc. Cohn tar debt $7 mHUon
Crash vlcdm• rmJdentJBable
MEXICO CITY -Some of the 166 people Jcjlled in
the worst air crash in Mexico's history may never be
identified because their remains arc too badly mutilated, a
medical service spokesman said. Soldiers, Red Cross
workers and others continued Thursday to search the site
where the Mexicana airlines Boeing 727 crashed Monday,
killina all aboard. Workers were looJcjng for n:mains and
passengers' personal effects to a.id in identifying the
victims. The U.S. Embassy bas said nine Americans were
among the victims of the crash, but embassy spokesman
Vince Hovanec said the remains of only one had been
identified by Thursday afternoon -Peter Rivaud. 5.
Belfast plot detaUed
BELFAST -The police chief says he has evidtnce of
a P"rotestant plot to spread violence in Nonhern Ireland,
. and the Irish Republic has indicated it may slow down
negotiations on its rdle in the province to avoid further
unrest. Sir John Hcrihon. Chief Constable of the Roya!
Ulster Constabulary, said in a Briush Broadcasting Corp.
television interview Thursday that the plot included plans
to infiltrate a banned Protestant parade in Port.adown 25
miles southwest of Belfast Monday. Irish government
officials in Dublin indicated willingness to see a slow-
down of British-Irish negotiations to try to avoid further
inflaming Protestant anger against an agreement the two
countnes signed Nov IS.
Record coke bust In Tljuana
NEW YORK -Roy M. Cohn, the lawyer who rose to
fame at the side of the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, owes
nearly $7 million in back taxes, interest and penalties, the
federal government charged Thursday. The Justice
Department, at the request of the Internal Revenue
Servioc, filed cavil suits against Cohn in New York City
and in Bridgeport, Conn., to satisfy part of the debt by
seizing a New York townhouse and a Greenwich home
that Coho allegedly owns throuah dummy companies.
Cohn has acknowledged owing l1.7S million in taxes
dating back to l 9S9, according to the aovcmment's coun
papen, but despite a series of qreements with the IRS
smcc 1978 he bas paid little of the debt He has not
conceded any liability for the interest and penalties.
Study: 'S.f e • sei a voids AIDS
~~~~~~~~==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~=~lsa~1d~l .500 Sand1n1st.1 <,vlc1
TIJUANA -More than 1.1 tons of cocaine were
confi~ted and eight Mexican nationals were arrested in
CHICAGO -The rate of possible AJDS infection
was about the same for homosexuals who enpied in sex
without intercourse and those who abstained from all
sexual contact, supporting evidence the disease is difficult
to transmit, California researcben say. "You can't act this
infection easily," said one of the researc:ben, Dr. David
Lyman of the Univenity of California School of Public
Health at Berkeley. "It isn't somethina the averqe person
needs lo be afraid of." Lyman and his colleagues surveyed
821 homosexual and bisexual men involved in a
continuing study 10 San Francisco and reported their
findings 10 a letter in today's Journal of the American
Medical Association. Fifty-six subjects said they had
engaJed an oral·gcmtal sex but no rectal intercourse for the
previous two years, while IS said they bad abstained from
sexual contact entirely and the n:maining 7SO said they
had continued rectal intercourse, the researchers said.
.
LAKE MIRAGE
.! •• ,.·~ .--·~ .... 5 7 ·NEW ----. '"··-·· ·· ..
WATERF RONT
DESERT
HOMES
ABSOLUTE AUCTION
NO · MINIMUM· BIDS
NO· R ESERVE
p1onsh1p tennis couni., All 1n
a beautifully tandso1pf.>d .ind
maintained guard qatrv1 .c1n
munrty w tth 25 acres ) OPf:>n lakes
Lake M1ragP is a~ 80 cirrr.
master ple:trincd community
compr15f»rJ r 11 owr ?00 lnkl•51de
res1denu''> otfr•rn ~the perfect
pr rnary r(1<;1(lence {)r '><'fl)nd
home TI 1t> whnle f;:irrnly w1ll en1dy
the unsrJ01lecl desert aimosphere
1n the~ 2 3 bedroom. 2 3 bath
homes off P.ring approximately
Origlnalty priced from 2,304 to 3,038 square feet of hv1ng
$276,500 to $359,500. space Whether sailing on the
You oould save thousands of takes, sunning or swimming m
dollars on a new home at lakP one of the prtv<1te pools. relaxing
Mirage, one of the most exc1t1nq 1n the ClubhrnJ'-P working out
new develOpments 1n the Palm 1n thf" qym ptriy1ng racquetball or
Springs area. Located m pres-tenrus <Jn the championship
tigtOUs Rancho Mtrage. Lake courts. you'll find Lake Mirage
Mirage features 5 7 spacious offers the finest desert lifestyle.
lakeside homes, 1ncludtn~5: • .,.._ On Sunday.April 13. at 100
beautrfulty decorated models PM D1v1dend will host the most
on fee simple land, a spectacular spectacular auction Southern
clubhouse wrth gymnasium. 4 California has ever seen. when
racquetball courts and 10 cham each luxurious Lake Mirage res1-
-4 lntersta1e 10 to Los
• l~1kP M;raqc
~ t-t.vy 111 to Im lfl9S
Ranmo M1raQ(>
Dividend Development
Lake Mirage 1s offered through
D1v1dend Development Cor ·
porallon. a leading developer
of fine homes 1n Northern
Cnlrforn1a. Southern California
and Phoenix, Anzona Currently.
01v1dend has over 100 pro1ects
1n various phases of develop•
ment Their understanding of
fam1hes' needs, coupled wrth their
reputation for quality. has made
them one of the most suecess-
tut builders 1n the 'Nest.
Special Auction Rnandng.
Below market rate financing ..,
win be available. Ask our sales
representatrve for details.
Vlatt Lake Mlf899.
Pre-auction property 1nspec1Jon
tours from 10 AM !ti 6 PM daily.
Please oome and inspect the
homes and models and discuss
the special f 1nancing The sates
offtee ts located at 72727 Country
Club Drive. R~ncho Mirage,
CA 92270. e dt
s.i. conduct9d.by:
Nat1onw1de Auction Company
Auqoneer Melvtn A Giller
For a free auction brochure · cal~ TOLL F~E. w1thtn Cahf orrna,
(800) 253-4554 or (619) 340-3555.
SUNDAY
APRI L-13lli
l:OOEM • 1986
§QQ253 ·4554
BY D I V 1· D E N D
\
\ ~· \"
DOCTOR IN TOWNI
MEET THE NEW
Hi, l'rn
Dr. Karl
Svvope,
D.C.
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
Did you know that becomin9 certified aa a chiropractor
requires a minimum of aix years of hi9hJy apeciallied
colleqe, tr aininQ?
Today's Doctor of Chiropractic must complete 4,485
hours of clasaroom instruction and paaa a riqid
chiropractic board ezamination before earnin9a1.icenae.
In moat states, continuin9 educational seminars must be
completed for annual license renewal.
In addition, I have completed courae1 in work 1ite
injurie1 and nutrition. In 1985 I wu honored to be
named Vice Pre1ident of the Clinic lntem1 Action
A11ociation. To further my continuinq education, I have
received 1peciaJ trainiqn aince colleqe in Phyaiotherepy
from Dr. Ric ha.rd Ackerman and Orthopedic• from Dr.
Rory Pierce. I have aJao visited a number of chiropractic
clinica to atudy their method.a and procedure• in San
Dieqo, Hacienda Heiqhta, El Toro and Ca.ta Meta,
California.
Additionally, I devote three days every month attendinq
a nationwide seminar in San Francisco or Loa Anqele1, to
stay current on the latest chriopractic advances.
Thia is the kind of traininq and profeaaionalinn I offer
you. If you have ~eaitated viaitin9 a chiropractor, per-
haps you didn't know that chiropracton qo to 1uch qreat
lenqtha to continue their education and prov.ide you with
the latert technique• and the moat p>;alilied aervice. So,
you aee, what you don't know, cant help you . Call me
today and let me help you.
Did you know that the symptoms moat commonly treated
by chiropractou are:
Back Pain HeadachH
Keck Pain Arthritu
Sti.ffnHe Bunitil
Numl>~ Hip Pain
Painful Jointa
Shoulder Pain
A.rm/Leg Pain
Cold Hancla/Feet
To introduce you to the healin9 world of chiropractic,
plea1e accept my apeciaJ offer:
FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION
FREE THIS MONTH ONLY FREE
Thia examination normally 001t1 $35.00 or more. It wUJ
include an orthopedic t•rt, a neutoloqicaJ tert, a blood
preaure tut, a 1pinaJ aliqnment check, a.n examination
for rertrlct.d or esce..1 motion in the aplne, a muecle
rt:renqthneaa tert, and a private couultation to di1eu11
the reau.lt1.
(714) 432-1135
Dr. Karl Swope
Swope Chiropractic Office
2880 Meta Verde Dr. E., Suit• S
Co.ta Met., CA 92626
Houri 10-1 and 3-7 Mon-Fri
For Acclc:t.n .. or PenoD.&1 lnjV,
•
Shuttleeomml•lonllasdata Missing family returns, Dut mysJ eryl ngers
it neecla, may end heating LONE PINE (AP) -Compulet "Tiiey -tired tad blllll'Y but tbeir lbfto dllJdra. ...... ill ... blsb•Y ~ ,;,. llOll u • al
8 ... AIWla ... PNu coosuJwn Floyd Braun ..nd hit a~ to be Ane. 't)ey're i.o aood from 3 moathl to ., yan. eateftd a exPerieGce. He dedi-.t to dwalliio 1 . family walked out of the detcrt 1pirit1,"...adLL WilliamLuuePf'tbe coovenieDce hon at l p.m, and tbeexpaience.. --~ W ~~2.,TP~ -Havma endoned an appeal by utrooauta for new unbanned. but refuted to reveal what Inyo 0>"1tty Sberi.fr• .DeD9rtment tdepboDed the SheriJf 1 Oepanment • ·
91ety -·--..Wide NASA, the Pftlidenti&l Cba.lleftter commiuioo bu bad happened, other than to uy they Alked Where they bad beeo and to ~uest UliJtance, Lutze laJd. Tbe Bra~ wbo live aa P*-dl.
much of the data ttneodund will aoon wind down iu ublic hearin "Much badn .. t been lost. ' what th9 bad been doiq, Lutze said: They M'l'e taken to tbe tberifr• ..en ._ bwd &om ~, n1a
of the doc:umenta~o.n a.i;td the reporu from NASA ~ already in. P.~ IOUrte 'J1le five-member ~ County ~They didn't say and we didn't delve t}'bltation and quatioood l:Jy depu· they ta.id they .ae l1l Palm ~
clote to the COl1Ullllllon anvestiptina the •huttle disuter said Thunday ru•r..t. family wu reported nuwna over the tnto that. They *Ue unaware &hey tlet before beina II.ken to SOuthem ocarty lOO 111.ilee l'Om Loac Pbie.
AJthouah the National Aeronau.tict and Spece Adminiltration ,1 wk fo~ weekend. But they reappeared Tbu.ra.-were repor1ed l'IUlaina. Tl)cy told ua ln8Hospital for medical evaluation. They WCR ~ to bave kept have u.ntil April 18 to relay tbeitinfo u .... _ . . f day wbeu they w&lk:ed into thi• deten they wanted to Ft away frOm home ' ood by l'q)Oc1etl. Bnua ee\'Cl1I coaunitmcall owr die £Mia'
conunillion•a four--"'-rma on to""' commi~on, one. 0 the .community 17S milea north of Loa for a while.'' Iii only, .. We came up for die weeRDd. ~ a reu.ioD witb
......... tbe-...... ~ -.. ·.~P'O~_PI already bas 7s percent ofita material and lea B.raun 41 biJ wife Unda. 4 and weeUod. We came u hen: on die relativa. ex_..-..... """'ore U1Q wteu::nd, the tource said. · ' ...
U.S. aJJemplorme.nt rate droJM to 7.2
WASHINth10T<?N.-Tbe na~on's unemployment rate, on the heels ofitt larJett moo Y PlD m nearly~ m yean, slipped 1 no~b 10 7.2 percent last
month u tbe economy created 227,000 jobt, the aovemment reported today. J~~eu dropped 0.1 percentqe pointa from February's 1.3 percent as
civilian empl~yment ~ to 108.8 million jobs in March. the Labor
Department 111d. The decline bad been widely anticipated by economists, who bad viewed the 0.6 ~ntaae point jump in unemployment from January to February u an aberrauon.
Appeal vowed.In McDonald'• death •alt
~ DI~ "7 Attorneys represent.in& plaintiffs in two wrongful death add 10JU1Y sum api11;1t McDo~d'a Corp. say they'll appeal a judae'• rulina
that the fut-.food chain wu not liable for a 1984 &hooting that left 21 people
dead. The 1wt1-filed on behalf of26 survivors and victims-were d.i1mi1sed
Tbunday by Su~or Coun J~dge Mack Lovett, who ruled that busincu o~en.are no~ o&lipted to provtde special security even if the business is in a
hiah-cnme ne1&hborhood. • ' •
Baell Boy'• drug •tatement conte9ted
. LOSANGELES-~co~panythatwon'tpeyalifeinsµranocpolicytothe
Wldow and ton ofDenrus Wilson contended in court that the late Beach Boys
drummer lied on ~s aPt>lication by claiming he badn 't used drugs in IO yean.
"The company tS enutled to rely on the truthfulnm of the insured " Tranaam~ca pccide~tal Life lnsuranc.e Co. attorney Kimler Ca1teel said
Tb';lnday m ¥s operu.na. statement at ~ trial to delerJDine if the SI million poli~ wu valid when Wilson drowned 10 1983. Shawn Love Wilson, 21, and
SOD Gqc, 31 Wint $20. 9 million from the insuraoc.e company, which refused to
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Rl•l.ng Ra level• may upa.nd SF Bay
SAJ:J ~CISCO -The San Francisco Bay could irow 50 percent
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leadina hydrologist expert. Philip Williams, a consultant to the Bay
q<>naervallon and Dev~lopment Commission, said Thursday that the sea will
!'lse between two and eight feet over the next c.entury, up from the current six
inches per century.
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Orange Ooa1 DAJLY PILOT/ Fnc:s.y, Aprtl 4, 1918
Mudslipgirig
candidate has
hurt campaign
The campaign for Orange County sheriff/coroner
moved into the constitutional arena Wednesday when a
Su~rior Court ordered .. false and misleading" claims
stncken from a challenger's official campaign statement.
In her bid to strip incumbent Brad Gates of his
badge and scalpel, candidate Linda Lea Calligan has
publicly charged th.at Gates:
• Has been convicted of a federal crime;
• Cost taxpayers $100,000 in fines;
• Owned a bar in violation of state law; and
• Covered up a felony drunken-driving arrest.
When the judge determined that these allegations
were misleading at best and lies at worst, Calligan's
lawyer invoked the First Amendment. Vowing to
appeal. the attorney claimed that his client's right to
publish false and damaging information is constitu-
tionally protected.
It'sa novel interpretation, and one the appeals coun
should reject. The law has long held that there are several
varieties of speech that can be prohibited. Clearly,
speech that presents a cenain hazard -like yelling
"fire" in a crowded theater-is not protected. Neither is
libelous norslanderous speech.
Constitutionally valid laws prohibit those and
provide penalties for them. Lying under oath in coun -
perjury -is yet al}other example of speech that can be
limited without violating the Constitution.
Calligan's lawyer may be grasping at straws, just as
the candidate herself may have been when sne slung her
muddy la st of accusations at Gates. If she didn't know
that the district attorney's office investigated the
allegation that Gates covered up the drunken-driving
arrests of two deputies and found no evidence to support
that contention, she should have known. If she didn't
know that Gates sold his interest in an Irvine singles bar
before it got a liquor license, she should have ~nown.
And if she didn't know that Gates· federal crime was a
contempt citation -not a conviction -imposed upon
him and the supervisors for failing to meet county jail
population reduction goals, well, she can't read.
Clearly. Calligan worded those statements to make
ll appear that Gates was culpable of something more
nefarious.
Whether the appeals coun defends Calligan's nght
to make these statements or upholds the judge, we, as
voters and citizens. have feason to question the
character of the candidate who would choose to bend the
truth in her quest to win an election. '
Opinions expressed tn this space are those of the Dally Piiot Other views
expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader
comment istnvlted The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa, 92626. Phone
642-6086
SegerstroDJ & Sons worth
11Jore than cold shoulder
To the Editor·
On March 17. 1986 thc ( osta Mc:.a
l 11y Council unanimously rejected
the proposal of the C J Scgerstrom
( o. 10 develop a large parcel of
property to the north of the San Diego
Freeway and bounded by Harbor and
l-a1rv1ew.
I attended that meeting and wa-;
appalled b) thl' natu re of the argu·
ments made 1n oppoo,1t1on to 1he
.. One South Coast Place .. project
Tentauvel). I ha .. e concluded 1ha1
(. osta Mesa 1s 1n Jeopard .. of hccom-
1ng the next Berkeley or People'<;
Republic of Santa Monica
Most of the argument-; oppm1ng
the project were grounded in cnv)
and a nu-business rhetonc For c\am-
ple: "Segerstrom alread~ has enough
mone~ this prOJCLI '" JUSt a monu-ment to Mr Seger;trom. l)eger<;trom
I\ onl y doing th1" to make more
money.·· The fact that tJle project
plans call for 75 percent open 5pace. a
day care center. a museum and an
gallery was even the basis for attac k It
was a~ued that 5egerstrom ~hould
JUSI build those amenities and forego
the office bu1ld1ng that make<; the
plan econom1ca lly feasible
I was especially offended by the
prevalent a111tude that ( osta Me<;J 1\
threatened hy people who might
come to work or live he re (a\
contrasted to those hard) pioneer<;
who arrived 3 yrar or 1wo before)
This no-growth. anti-people atlltude
1s the son of thing that leads to 'iCnouc;
v1olat10M of personal liberties and
economll decline Oregoman'i arc
now sufTcnng the consequenccc; of
that att11ude wnh .. eT) high un-
employment and little prospect of
a11racttng new hu~1ncss becaur.e of a
long-standmg :inti-business repu-
tation
A good man) c1t1zens seem to be
operating on th1.· pnnc1ple of "I ve
got mine. now pull up the draw.
bndge ·· Maybe the} really believe 11.
Maybe they are JUSt being led down
the Berkeley/Santa Monica path by
collecti vist pied piper... It will be
interesting 10 sec 1f the opponents of
One South Coast Place will c;uppon
an} scaled down version of the
Pf.OJCCI.
It Just may be the) want lo fo rce the
5egerstro ms 10 abandon an) hope of
developing the property.
I hope that most Costa Mesa
residents c;t1ll hcl1evc in the Amencan
trad1t1on of respect for ixople who
have worked hard and honestly
earned their success I hope that being
successful docs not means your nghts
can be trampled wtth impunity b)'.
your neighbor<; and a City Council
whose analys" of the issues consists
only of prospectively counung the
vote\ at 1hc neJ1t election.
, HARON A. AYRF.S < osta Mesa
No-growth hasn't gotten far
To th<.' Editor
Two thousand ancient manners.
notabl) of San Manno. Arcadia and
1>asadena hentage succeeded in oll-
ta1n1 ng a mere 12 l)('rcenl respon\t' to
a mailing of 60 percent of their
membership
The')(' no-growth troglodytes rer>-
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
J
rc!lt'nt a meager J percent of the total
Newport Beach populatlon. or, fig.
ured in hou~hold units. a paltry 6
pcrC<'nt
W ith fac t<; likt these why all the
fuc;~.,
,ffMI Zlfll
E°'too
T-Telt
M•nOQ'f'IO [dtlOt Deft,....,
Ctly Ecs110t
T•CteftM Newt E0rt0t
C.W.INff
$c>Ortl [<S•IO!
REG JONCS
Corona del Mar
.........,c..-.w
(;onlf()llllt
~Le.mr..
PrOOuc.llOtl MANQ9f T.-,.,IC_..
CtrculallOO M•NQ9f ............. ..,
Marllef'"O Orec!Ot
Cl~~:;'Of
' .
·'. ... the perturbed pa.rents of Da vts IntermedJste can relax. Their
children have a brlght opportunity just ahead.··
U.S.~,~~
IN PERSPECTIVE
Parents can relax kids
will do OK at high school
More opportunity
awaits children at
combined schools
As the Orange Coast ~rea begins 10
mature, demographics follow 1h~
patterns taken by matunng com·
munities throughout Southcm Cah·
fornja, and that means change. One
such change is a dedining number of
school children.
Jhc pattern 1s a familiar one to
those who have followed such change
elsewhere. A new commdn1ty is
developed and young families move
in with small children. As the popu-
lation increases. the number of chil-
dren increases and the schools are
strained to keep up with demand.
Then. something interesting hap-
pens. The children grow older and
graduate, but their parents tend to
remain 1n the community. 1f it 1s an
especially nice community such as
those on the Orange Coast. As a
result. school population falls and
schools become surplus property.
To manage a shnnking school-age
population. the school distnct has to
close some schools and combine
others. After all, taxpayers have been
shouting that taxes are too high and
efficiencies are required.
But parents with a child in a nearby
school do not hke their child's schQol
closed. And parents greatly dislike
combining schools. especially 1f this
means that their children will have to
associate with children of a lower
economic bracket or of a different age
group.
MARTIN
BROWER
That 1s understandable. We all hke
people ex.actly hke we are best of all.
And we certainly want only the best
for our children.
Dun ng the 1972-73 school year. as
population 1n the area soared. the
Newpon -Mcsa Unified School Dis-
trict had 26.000 students. This school
year. there are 16.000 students. o
schools have been closed,~th under-
standable loud protests from parents.
and schools have been combined
The type of combination that
seems to get lhe most excitement
from parents (with the possible
exception of 1he combining of New-
port B'each and Costa Mesa school
distncts som.e years -ago) is unifying
an intermediate school with a high
school.
This type of combination means
that a s1 ngle school WI II care for grades
seven and eight from an mlt rmed1ate
school and grades nine through 12
from a high school We mean. that 1s
grounds (or true prottStt
In 1984, Lincoln Intermed iate
School 1n Newport Beach was com-
bined with Corona del Mar H 1gh
School. Loud protests. Now. the
dec1s1on has been made that in
September 1987 Davis Intermediate
School in Costa Mesa will be com-
bined with Costa Mesa Hlgh School.
Really loud protests. Signatures were
gathered. Vehement opposition was
heard.
Again~ understandable. Seventh
graders arc best off with other seventh
graders. Eighth graders arc better off
with other eighth graders. And the
picture of a 12-ycar-old girl on the
same campus with a 17-year-old boy
1s downright scary to many parents.
But you know -it works.
Having grown up in an area of Los
Angeles with a small student popu-
lation, lhis wntcr attended a com-
bined Junior and senior b1g,h school.
grades seven th rough 12. While this
was certa1nl; another era. lhe result
w~ that the seventh graders hung
around with other seventh graders
and tho.12th graders bung around
with other12th graders. Where there
was a disturbance, it was usually the
seventh and eighth graders -always
a difficult group -botherina the
upper classes
From my standpoint, the op-
portunities outweighed any prob-
lems. From the seventh grade on I
was able to attend real football and
basketball games. go to assemblies
with more s1gn1ficant speaJcers .• have
a Wider range of classes and a far
stronger faculty. and work on a
relatively b1g-t1me school newspaper.
As the results at Corona dcl Mar
High School have shown, the
perturbed parents of Davis Inter-
mediate can rclu. Their children
have a bnght opportunity just ahead.
Martin Brower pablJ1bes tbe
montbly newsletter "Martin
Brower's Orange Couty Report."
-17i&iilh6t.Ul~i;;J;ijtt.!;f.!IJ:i·i·-------------
U. S. seen as unconcerned
about events in Honduras
Hondurans could help us with Contras .
but we·ve ignored whatthey can offer
WASHINGTON -The United officials in T egucigalpa re~nth
States is clearly not suited to the role Hcre·s what one of them said·
ofan imperial power along the lines of "We have the impression that the
the Soviet Union or the old British United States doesn't know what to
Empire. do in Nicaragua. It 1s takm_g acu ons
When Moscow lays down the that don't hurt the Sandin1stas. but
official hne, there arc no deviations which hurt its allies a lot -for
from the satellites. U.S. client states example, Honduras and Costa Rica.
exercise thetr right to dissent as The U.S. policy on the Contras is very
vociferously as if they were at a confusing: the Reagan adm1nis-~mocratic National Convention tral1on calls for covert aid, which 1s then discussed o penly. Then 1t calls Last week's dust-up over the re-for humamtanan aid and assistance.
ported Nicaraguan an va1aon of Hon-but they 11ve the Contras not o nly
duras was an embarrassing case m food,.clothmg and medicine. but also
point. The m1t1al react10n of Hon-.,. boots for marching m the Jungle."
duran leaders was that the invar.1on The Hondurans have no affection
was mostly Reagan admsn1strat1on for the fand1nista troublcmaken in
propaganda to Wln congressional Managua. But above all they want to
support for the Contras. .. avoid 1he long-term presence of
Only after President Reagan an· Nicaraguan Contras on their terri-
nounccd emergency aid to Honduras torv.
-a move that look.cd susp1c1ously ·'The ideal lhmg would be to llCCk
hke a S20 milhon inducement -did the exit of these people from our
Honduran officials get lhcir stones country," said 8 Honduran foreign
straight and agree with the White ministry official. "They att hurting
House version of events. Then they us. and tha1 damage 1s not being
belied their newfound concern over compensated by what they are ac-
Nicaraiuan agrcssaon by aoina off comeljshina. I don't think it's money
for their Eutcr vacation. Manana. the (Honduran) government wants.
and all lbat. But 1t would hke to be allowed to take
The momentary embarrassment, more of an an1t1at1ve. The m1t1a11vc,
unfortunately, was only a reflection of for example. to sar, whether it wants
a more scnous problem: an appallina the contras or not. •
bn::alcdown in communications be· A Honduran pohticaJ analyst said:
tween the U.S. and Hondurin aov· "It's a bad s11uat1on for us We know
cmments, caused in la.rae pan by U.S. 'the RCllln administration isn't 101na
inscns1t1vity toward a supP<>'Cdly to at..odo n the Contras, but a\ 1hr
valuable alfy. same time then: 1s no poss1b1luy of
Even though a high State Depart· the \ontras throwina out the Sand·
ment offiC1al wu on the sttne, thr inistu. For us. it's hke beina 1n the
U.S. government d1dn'1 take Hon· middle of-croufire. We arc happy
duran officials into its confidenoe. that the \ontru ao and fiibt the
The Hondurans were ap~ntJy $(ndin1stai-but 1.oside Nu:arqua.\, ~peeled to parrot the US. line A wetl-connccted U.S. offiCJal w1d
without even ltnowma wh•t the bl I "Th C r h bee
Uni.led S•·t-11 1rv1n1 '"" ach1•\I"" tn unt Y' e ontra po icy " n .... " -1 "' .. .. one disaster after the other, and the
Central Amenca. Our reponer Jon Hondurans know 1t They would lake
Ltt Andenon talked with Honduran to have a role They feel they have
JACK
ANDERSON
and DALE VAN A TT A
enough knowledge and experience to
help out. but we've never taken them
into account."
As last week's fiasco demonstrated,
we don't even share our inteJli.scncc
information on what's h.appenmg in
their own country. "The problem."
said the diplomat, "is that we don't
care about Honduras."
THE OTHER DAUGHTER:
President Reagan's less controversial
daughter. Maureen -the one who's
in politics, not hardback fiction ._
acknowledges that her Republican
women's poht1cal action committee
is a David among the Goliaths of
Republican fund-nus1ng groups. But
she told us her PAC has raised more
than SI 00,000 to dole out to women
Republican candidates. She hopes to
be able to Jive chosen candidates for
local office SSOO apicec. and more to
women seek.ins House or Senate
scats Most of rhe women who worlc
for her committee arc volunteers. she
u1d.
CONFJDF.NTIAL BLE: The ht· ~ont9Pllt ~oroccoand
Libyan-backed Polisano rebels over
the former S~nish territory of West·
cm Sahara suit spuucn aJong after I 0 )'ears. with no end in sight. But the
Rcaaan admin1strat1on's oncc-
cnthustastJc suppoT1 for Moroccan
Kma Hanan has cooled lik~ the ~n sands, and U.S. {>Olicy i-now
m ore evenhanded. Twna our pla.cc
as Morocco·s stea.di~t backer i'
France, its one-time colonial over-
lord French aid to Huu.o reportedly
runs to more thao SI miJhoo a day
J•ct A.INHl'Nll &N DaH Va Ana
•rt ,.)'Ollleatf/111 colru:uUU..
Free ride
for top
state
lawman
By Wll..UAM ENDI~ Moe......, ...........
SACRAMENTO -lo recent Cali-
fornia ~litical history, the attorney
generals office has been a pretty good
stepping stone. The current governor,
George Deukmejian, was attorney
general. as were former Govs. Earl
Warren and Edmund G. "Pat"
Brown. And that's what makes so
curious the fact that incumbent
Attorney General John Van de Kamp
is virtually getting a free ride in his bid
for a second term this year.
It was only at the tut minute, as the
March 7 deadline for filing dcclat·
ations of candidacy drew near, that
ultraconservative llepublican state
Sen. H.L Richardson of Glendon
was able to persuade Ukiah attorney
Duncan James, a former Mendocino
County prosecutor. to enter the race.
James will be. at best, a token
candidate, but Richardson said he
was determined that Van de Kamp
not enjoy an uncontested clcctio~.
Strangely enough, no one m a
position of authority in the state
Republican Party seems to know why
the pany was unable to aenerate any
interest an a race against Van de
Kamp. State GOP Chairman Oair
Burgener said it was a "mystery to me
.•. f don't have any sage comments."
Others said potential candidates were
discouraged from running because of
the amount of money it wouJd take to
defeat an entrenched incumbent. And
some blame Gov. George Dcu-
kmcjian.
There was never any signal from
the govern.or that he would _get behind
anybody or that he cons1dcfr:d ~he
attorney general's race a top pnonty,
according to several Republican
sources. "There didn't seem to be any
interest ... or any recognition of the
significance oftlftjob," said one GOP
state offictaJ. The same could be said
for at least two other constitutional
offices now held by Democrats -
treasurer and secretary of state.
But Deukmejian acocpts none of
the rcsponsibihty. He told reporters
at the state Republican coovention in
Santa Oara last weekend that be was
following the same policy that
Ronald Reagan followed when Re-
a~n was governor: not involving
himself in pnmary election contests.
"I think tt works well in the lonJ run,"
he said. "The people in Cahfom.ia
don't like lc.ingmalccrs. They don't
like a slate of candidates chosen in
some back room.··
The governor also said it would be a
"very, very difficult task" to unseat
Van~~ Kamp and added that he did
not think it would have been ap-
propriate for him to urge someone to
run without being able to promise $2
million or S3 million for a campaign.
which be was not prepared to do.
At one time or another, at least
thrtt names were mentioned as
possible Republican opponents for
Van de Kamp-former Los Angeles
County District Attorney Robert
Philibosian, state Sen. Ken Maddy
and David Stirling. general counsel of
the A&ricultural Labor Relations
Boa.rd. "But for one reason or another
all three changed lhcir minds.
"He will be difficult, very difficult
to defeat," Maddy told a reporter two
weeks ago. "It would take a ¥,C•t deal
of money and campaigninJ. •
Is Van de Kamp that m vmetble?
Certainly. he and his staff would like
to thank he bas done such an
out.standm&Job that he hu sea.red off
opponents. They like to point to the
fact he has brought crimc-flJhting in
California into the 21st century with
hi&h-tcch advances and has no major
oppositfon from law enforcement
In a California Poll last December.
seven in I 0 of those surveyed Sfid be
was doing a fair to exoellcnt JOb, a
pcrfonnancc rating_ that surpaucd all
other statewide officeholden eitcept
Dcukmej ian. Six in I 0 said they were
inclined to vote for bis re-election.
more even than Deukme~ian. And he
has hiJh name identificauon, particu-
lary in voter-rich Southern Cali-
fomia, because of his two terms u
lo$ Angeles County district attorney.
But if the anti-Rose Bird, pro.death
penalty pu"1 by Republicans this year
1s half as cffcct1ve as they think it will
be. Van de Kamp could have turned
out to be one of their most vuJnerable
ta.tacts.
The attorney aeneral is personally
opposed to capital punishment and
has ducxed the .Bird question by
sayina be believ" he should remain
neutral because his ·office freauently
arpcs cases before the coun. k c did
ten The Sacramento Bee in an
interview last fall , however. that "l
would not vote apinst a conscrvauve
justice Just because he 1s a con-
servauvc justice, and I would hope
that Californians wouJd not vot
apJnst a liberal just because she may
bave a different philosoP.hical t..se
than thein." Asked s~fically how
he would vote on 811d. be rcptied,
"Pnvately."
In the Iona nan. Republicans,
1nclud1na Dcukmejian. may be sorry
they didn't devote more attention to
lininaupa tou&h oppooent for Van de
Kamp. Without sianificant opposi-
tion. he is oertaio to emerge from the
electJon unlCalT'ed and immediately
become a m~or contender for aov-
emor m 1990
LA gets
point(s)
across
rNOLEWOOD (AP)-School was
in session and the Los Angeles Laken
bad a lesson they wanted to impart on
the Sacramento Kings.
The Lakers' 135-105 NBA victory
Thursday night over the Kings ap-
parently got the message across.
''We didn't ncc:cssarily want to
blow the team out," La.keT forward
Maurice Lucas said. "However, we
did want to leave an impression on
the Kings in case we meet them in the
playoffs. We wanted to leave them
with the knowledge that we are ·
capable of blowing ll\em out."
The Lakers, with a 37-35 lcad in the
second quarter, ran off a 21-8 spun
over the next six minutes to open a
58-43 with 3: I 0 left in the first half.
"There's no doubt about it, we have
to go out with the effon for the entire
game, instead of costing to a five-or
six-point win.... said Laker ~
Byron Scott. who led the way wtth 24
points. "We've had so many games
where we've had a I ()...point lead and
let it fall back."
James Wonhy, who added 22
points, said the Laken never relaxed
after buildtn• their big lead.
"We 1ustamed our running game
and the bench came in and there was
no letup," Wonh}'. said. -
The takers' effon pleased. Coach
Pat Riley.
''This ii our best game in a week or
so. I think we're about on top of our
game."
The K.tngs have lost 30 straight
games to the l..akers at the Forum
since Oct. 20, 1974.
..
I
FRIDAY, APRIL, 4, 198e •
' Indecision co~tly f of Guerrero
Surgery scheduled;
Freeway Series begins
From ataff ud wire repora.
A moment's indecision by Pedro Guerrero
bas cost the Dodaen to lose their cleanup bitter
for at least three months.
Guerrero, wbo hit .320 and 33 borne runs
last season, suffered a aevere knee injury
Tbunday when be caught hia spikes in the din
attem,PtioJ to slide. He was tryl~ to steal third
base m the bo1tom of the fint annina of the Dod&en' exhibition game apiost the Atlinta
Braves in Vero Beach, Fla.
"I was aoina to slide, then at the end, I
decided not to, .. Guerrero said. "I nevcT
reacbed the baa.•·
Guerrero rolled on the sround, cJutchin&
bis mete Ul obvious pa.in afteT the mishap.
"I knew he wu hurt ri&bt away," Atlanta
third baseman Keo OberkfcU said. "He was
al.most in tears. He was screaming. That was
real scary. You could see he was in a lot of pain."
Guerrero, 29, suffered a ruptured patella
tendon below his left knee. Suraery could be
performed as early as today by team physician I>r. Frank Jobe.
"It's somethiDJ that can be fixed," Jobe
said. "And when it lS fixed it ahould be a better
knee than if it were a ligament tear.
"We're ao~ to try to repair the tendon,
reanacb the tendon to the bone, get it aU back in
place as best we can."
Guemr~ won:t make any predictions
about retununa until after the operation.
"I just~o f can oome t.clt.'' Guerrero
sa!d. 'Tm Ill not !<> put aoythlna in my
nund before e opention. Why'°. crazy?"
for Los Anaeles in 1979, 7Hi 1980 an498 in
1981 -when be was 1 tti-MVP o(tbe WotSd
Series with Ron c.ey and Steve Yaieer.
The Dominican aluger bloaomed ia
1982, bittina .304 with 32 home rum and 100
runt bet1ed in that teUOn and .291 with Jl
homen and I 03 RBI in 1983.
The Dodgers wound up fosina to the
Braves 8-5 in 11 inn.inp.in thetr flnaJ ellhibition
pme in Florida and left for California &ft~ard. '.fhey open the tb.ree-pme Freeway
Series =t the A.Dael.a toni&bt (7:30) at ~It' tadi~b· I 'bl · s a tern e, tem e thinL" Maoqer
Tom La.sorda of the Dod&ers uid. "Pedro means. so much for our ballclub. It'• a ttqjc
loss, but we still have a seat0n to play. We'U
fi&ht and do the best we can without him."
After wba1 was con.sideftld an oft'-teatOD in
198', when he hi1 .303 with 16 bomen and 72
RBI, Guenm> bad a brilliant I 98S campeip.
Althouah he milled 23 sames with beet lpPIDI
and a sprained wrist. bis 33 bomen tied the Loe
An&eles Dodaen' record set by Steve Garvey in
19'77.
. G~rt'ero, the Dodgers' left fielder, made
bis ma.io.r league debut in 1978, playing five
aames wtth the Dod&ers. He played 2S omes
In toniabt's opener of the Freeway Saia.
the ~· Bob Welch will face John
Candelaria. Another pme is ICbeduled Satur-
day nisbt at 7 with the third pme let for Suoda)'
(I p.m.) at Anaheim Stadium.
Heavyweights
pu't foes a way __J
League showdown
set as Estancia,
Sea Kings tune up
Corona del Mar and Estancia high
schools tuned up for their Sea View
~e track and field showdown
next week with easy victories Thurs.-
day.
Both stayed unbeaten in league
play and will collide next Thursday at
CdM for the dual meet crown.
Here's what took place Thursday:
Corou del Mu ltl~. Ualverstty
U~: ·Uni dropped many of its best
athletes top the frosb-sopb level and
was without sprinter Craig Belle
because of an injury. As a result it
wasn't much of a contest for the Sea
Kings, who upped their Sea View
record to J..-0.
Andy Feingold of University turn-
ed in a sharp 22.9 in the 220 and Tod
Bearbower, despite marks far below
normal, tripled with efforu of 2()...10
and 41-10 in the Iona and triple
jumps, alona with a 43-2 in the j30
intermediate hurdles.
cu continued to breeze in Sea View
competition, also uppina iu record to ~S--0 overall) with a win at eback.
Eric Dorn, the Eqles' ICllior stand-
out, coasted to victories in the 120
high and the 330 imtennediate hur-
dles and took top honors in the hiab
jump with a 6-<' effon. _
Ne_wprt BarMr tl, c.ta Meu '-"
The Sailors bad three double winnen
in trouncing the Mustanp at New-
port.
Newport's Jim Gcerlino won the
880(2: 13.3)and the mile(i:39)l while
Ryan Todd captured both Durdlc
events for the Tan..
Newport's Will Fisher won the hiab
Jump ( 6--0) and triple jump (37-10).
WMArtqe N, Lac-Beadl tt:
Kurt Depfyffcr swept the dislaoce
races for Lacuna. aoiila 4:43.S and
10:03.5 in the mile and two-mik, but
W oodbrid&e bad too much fn the
sprints, led by Rieb Brooks' triple
(I 0.1, 23.2 and 53. 9).
' ln1H 111, Sa Oemeate ti: The
Vaqueros upped their South CoU1 ~e record to J.-0 (S-0 overall).
behind solid performances from Greg
Oeratdi. Scott Tamura. Bill Perlcios
and Jim Olton..
llaCic Johnaoo of the IA.ken la determlned
not to let Sacramento defender llark 01~ nop b1m from. ecort.nc darlnC
Thanday otcht'• KBA 1ame at the Foram.
"We didn't have a penooal best the
whole day," said Corona del Mar
Coach Jim Tomlin. "But mark.a at
Univenity a.re tough to come by. We
just wanted to get!»'· We worked hard
Easter week and this week. Hopefully
we can rest a little for Estancia and
have some arcat ma..rtcs. ..
Eatuda 11, S.ddlefwct H: Estan-
Oerardi, wbo will play football at
the Universi of Ore8on in the &ll,
bad 1 peno:f best of 50-3 in the sbot
put, and Tamura doubled in the Jons
and triple ;umps with efforts of I 9·l'h
and 39-9'h.
(Pl-..e ... BJOB acBOOL/112)
James, August power Orange Coast again Houston -
teamleads
regatta Bucs down Cypress, 6-5
for 14th straight victory
High standout Sam August on the mound, add
a home run or two from Newport Harbor High
product Joey James in the right situations and
presto -victory.
Roumimperlast year(14 HR and 68 R.BI). Add
to that the fact that be is hitting over .500. .
"Joey is so strong. He was a football pffier
in high school (a tight end) and he lifted wei ts
strenuously," said Mayne. "He stills ifts
weights three times a week."
off by OCC's Robbie Gibbs. Gibbs beat out a
high chopper to second to keep the innillJ alive.
Catcher Paul Ellison then walked. setung the
stage for J amcs.
By CHRIS MONAHAN
D9IJ "'4 Cent I I .....
Last week when his team was nppmg
through two non.conference foes, Orange Coast
College baseball ooach. Mike Mayne warned
that winning could get "boring" and that his
team was due for a fall.
The combination worked for the seventh
time Thursday as August (7--0) battled back
from early troubles, James bit two home runs,
including the game-winner in the eighth inning.
and the visiting Pirates squeaked by Cypress,
6-5, in South Coast Conference play.
The win keeps the Pirates undefeated in
the sec (9--0) and runs their winning streak to
14, two shon of the team record of 16, set by
Mayne's 1980 state championship team.
James demonstrated that strength 1n the
eighth. With two on. two out and a 1-2 count on
him, be was thrown a pitch down-and-away. All
the left-banded swinger did was wrist the ball.
ala Reggie Jackson, over the left-field fence to
gjve the Pirates a 6-4 lead.
It ts James that August will have to thank
for keeping bis perfect record intact. August
gave up two runs in the first, single runs m the
sulh and eighth, as well as an unearned run in
the third. tfe bad only given up three earned
runs all season, prior to Thursday.
"This is a tough park to pitch in and Sam
was tryma to be a little bit too fine," said
Mayne ... We emphasize (to him) keeping the
bail down and when he was wallc.ing those guys.
he was missing down. I told him to come up in
the strike zone and sec if they could bandle it ..
Newport Harbor
sailors in second
at Challenge Cup
8'! ALMON LOCLUEY ...., ..............
WeU, while Mayne is considered a blue-
chip baseball coach1 he isn't much ofa prophet
-so far. Winning nas not become bonng. but
rather routine. And the Pirates even have the
perfect routme by which to win.
They simply put former Fountain Valley
The two round-trippers and five RBI gjve
the freshman JamC1 totals of 11 and 54.
respectively in those two categoncs. He 1s
rapidly moving closer to the OCC season
marks. bot.JS of which were bv Gene
"We wanted to throw him one away. lfhc
was goin• to beat us, be was going to beat us
thert," wd Cypress Coach Scott Pickler, whose
club falls to 6-4 in conference. "The pitch was
nght where we wanted it to be."
But the key play in the inning was pulled
The plan worked. AfteT gJV1ng up three
runs and walking four through the first three
innings, August walked only one the rest of the
way.
A Houston Yacht Oubsailing team
sk.ippeTed by Oark Thompson Jr.
showed a lilcing for the li&ht &11'1 off
Newport Beach Thursday and scored
two bullets to take a commandtng
lead 10 the U.S. Yacht Cub Challenge
Cup Regatta.
Bradley
assumes
slim lead
Inkster one behind
after first round
of Shore tourney
RANCHO MlRAGE (AP) -Pat
Bradley, who's come extnmely olose
but never won the Dinah Shott
Invitational, said she hopes she bas a
running st.an toward the LPOA's
richest prize this time.
"This is a JJUt start." Bradley said
Tbunday after shooting an openi~
68 to take 1 one-shot lead over Jul.i
lnbtcr.
"In view of how 1 usually play on
Saturday and Sunday (with better
IOOret), l ~uld be off and runnina,. ..
Bradley, who's finished no worse
than sixth in the Dinah Shore in 6'e
l.ut six years, seemed to Mve 1
victory clinched here two years ago as
she held a two-stroke lead with three
boles to play.
But ihe lost her lead and wound up
reaulatJon play tied with Inkster, 1
tour rookie. r nluter tbel'I beat Bradley
on the first playoff bole.
Both Bradley and ln.kster, bow·
ever, downplay the 1984 showdown
as they compete for the S7S 000
winner t priu this year, the LPOA't
t<>p~· history." ~d the 3S-vur-
old Bradley, who owns 16 tour-
nament WlDS an her career. "Th.ere are
a bunch of us out here who've led a
tournament and had that happen.
"This is 1986; all that happened a
Iona time aao."
Inkster, 2S, said: "I beat Pat in
1984, but it's a new year. We have 54
holes to ao and there a.re great p&ayers
on the leader board.
"I'm aoina to worry about Juli
Inkster and not about 11t'hat every-
body else is doing."
Bradley, who has the lowest scon OJ
IVCfllC on the tour this year (71.26)
but is l1i1J seetiq ber first win ~
year, carded a 33-3S, 4-under-par
over the Mission HUis Country Club
oounc.
Inkster, winner of lbe women's
tournament on Kauai rcoently, 1h.ot
34-JS on the openina day of the
Dinah Shore. She bcld lbe lead briefly
at S-under. but boteYed two of the
final three boles to drop I SU'Oke
bebfod.
Five aolfcra.. indudina Penny Pulz
and Mary Beth Zimmerman, had
first-round 70.. Putt. from Australia. 1s romioa off
1 victory in the most recent LPGA
rvent, in TUCtOn
Bowlers begin competition
Eleven clubs are compe1ina an tbe
best 6ve-of"'lix race regatta to claim
the title of the "Best yacht club in the
U.S." The regatta is being satled m
New York-36 sloops.
Winds for the _opening two races
never exceeded eiaht knots and the
second raoc was shortened to allow 1t
to be fanisbed befo~ dark. Women's tournament attracts
51,261 to Orange County lanes
The Women's International Bowling Congress
Championship tournament began a three-month Orange
County competition Thursday that will eventually
involve more than 50,000 bowlers. 1
The competition bclan Thursday at Tusun Lanes.
Besjdes the WIBC tournament. the Women's National
lnteroollegiate Championshtps begin Monday, and the
26th annual Queens Tournament from May 13-1 7 will be
held at the New Kona Lanes in Costa Mesa, where most of
the f'Clllltr tournament play will take place.
Competition will be held in sinaJes, doubles and fi ve-
women teams. The prize money in each d1v1s1on 1s based
on the number of entries.
Singles and doubles play ~n t~1s mominJ at New
Kona Lanes, but the team event beg.an at Tusun La~s
Thursday.
The 67th annual event has attracted a field of 51.261
bowlen. They will roll 41 7,276 pmes 10 a 90-<Say sxnod
until July I, while oompetina for a pnz~ fund 1n excns of
SI m1lhon. ~ -·
The number mpetitors Will be second onl y to the
1983 WIBC tournament at Las Yeps where 7S.OOO
competitors took part.
:The bowlers will oome1Jc some s-..nna •tatiSllC$
Just dunna their oompetttion1 the bowlers will walk
18,873 miles to the foul line while delivcnng their balls.
That's rouahly the distance of three round tnps from
Anaheim to New York. The balls themselves will travel
some 99,000 miles of lanes durina the tournament -
almott four times the distance around the world 11 the
equator.
Thoee same bells wdl knock down ~3.828,00 pins
blsed on 1 median avctqe of I SS and the actual number
of p1nJ knocked down in a pme with that score.
Tbe field for the 26th U\nual 1986 WlBC Queens
ToUtnAmcnt in Costa Mesa will have a field wtth top
women's rwhng tal~nt
..
Prominent among the entraolS 1s defending cham-
pion and 1985 Bowler of the Year Aleta Sill. Sill, a left-
hander from Detroit, won the event last year and 1n 1983,
and finished runner-up in 1984. Her $61.390 1n eaminp
tops the Queens' money-wtnners hst by a wtde margin.
As the defending champion. Sill will sit out the
tournament's qualifying rounds. She will watch the 480-
bowlcr staruna field bowl two four-game blocks. The top
63 scorers wtll then Join her in double-elunioatJon match
play comsxution.
Other foun\ameot favontes include: 1984 Queens
champion K.azue lnahashi, Japanese countrywoman
Katsulco SUJimoto. a two-time wiMer of the event:
Cheryl Daniels, Detroit; Cindy Coburn, Tonawanda.
'N.Y .. Patty Costello, Scranton. Pa.; Dua M11lcT,
Albuquerque; Lisa Wagner. Palmetto, Aa.; Lome
Nichols. AJgonqwn. Ill .. Leila Waaner, Bedford, Texas;
and Cahfom1ans Donna Adamek.. 1979 and 1980
champion: Pat Costello. Robin Romeo and Anne Marie
Pike.
Second in the standings is the host
Newpon Harbor Yacht Oub with
skipper Soon Mason. finishing fifth
and third for cia,ht points. Third is
Southern Yacht C1ub. New Orleans.
slcippered by Tom Merick. with
firushcs of third and seventh for I 0
points.
Order of finish of Race I: Houston
Yacht Oub (Oark Thompson Jr.);
-Chicago Yacht Club (Gene
McCarthy); Southern Yacht Oub
(Tom Mcrick); St. Petersbur& Yacht
Club (John Jenmnp); Newpon
Harbor Yacht Oub (Scott Muon);
San Diego Yacht C1ub (Bruce
Nelson); Larchmont, N.Y. Yacht
Oub (Charles Ulmer); Seawanhili
Corinthian Yacht C1ub, Oyster Bay.
N Y. (Steve Betv•min); Eastern
Yacht Oub, Marblehead. Maa.
Cyclists race to,et~~t_,:1:5:;.~·~)'<~!~
Week two of the Costa Mesa speedway motorcycle {Kevin Keoth).
raetng season 11 set toniJht at the Oran~ County Race n: I lf<;>uston YC; l. Eastern
F11rpounds With a full ,card of 20 raocs. YC; 3. Newport Hatbor YC: 4
Hununaton Beach s Alan Chnstlan, cum:nt Unrted Amencan YC S. Scawanhab Conn·
States nauonal speedway cMmp1on, took the cbcckeft!d thian YC: 6. l.&Jce Geneva YC; 7
flq in last week's ~•son opener and hopes to continue his Soutbem 'y 0, 8. San Dieeo YC~ 9_
suoocss at the Co•ta Mesa oval: . Larchmont YC; 10. St. Petenb\q
Other notablo involved 1n toniaht's prosnm Wlll YC-11 Cbicaao YC
include Brad Oxley !'f San C1emente. Mike Fana of Stancbnp, 2 o(6 r8CCI: I. auc..o.
Colton and R1ven1dc s Steve Lucero. 1-1 I 'h pta· 2 Newpon ~. S.l
. Adm1ss1on ~ocs ~m11n It S6 for adulu. $2 for 8. j Southe·m: ). 7, 1~'4.Wtcrn'.9-i
ch1ldt'Cn ~-12 wtt~ ch1k!ren under 5 admitted free 11. s. Chicqo. 2-1 t, I); 6. Sea. Pro&rtO'l~ and partcina ~re also ftcc . wanhaU.. 8-S. t 3, 7 San Dicao. 6-1,
The speedway nK't~ season which 1s 1n 1l 18th 14. g St. Ptlersbura. 4-10, 14~ 9.
consttut1vc year at tht fairaroun~. Will oonunuc every Amcnan.11_., tS; 10. LakcOeneva,
Fnda 1hmugh <X\ l 1(}.6, 16. 11 Larchmont, 1.9, 16.
College t~ halts
long losing streak,
but there's a catch
LEXINGTON. Ky. -Four Iona yean
and 7S games after Asbury College fielded
its first baseball team, the rccord~settina
Eag)es came out a winner -at least
unofficially.
It happened Monday when they swept a
doubleheader from Lee's Junior CollCJC of Jackson. On
Wednesday. Asbury lost twice and with the first-game
defeat, set an NAIA record of 49 consecutive losses.
"The players were excited," Asbury Coach Cecil
Zweifel said of the victories.
But, according to the National Association for
hl(.ercollegiate Athle,ics office in Kansas City, they
won't count because th~y didn't come against a four.
year school.
"We came back lo the world of reality," Zweifel
said with a laugh perfcc.ed by all the losing he's known
in tus four-year stretch as coach. "I laughed because I
knew crying wouldn't help."
Asbury's unofficial victories over Lee's were
followed by two official losses to Georgetown (Ky.)
College, 2 1-0 and 15-0, on Wednesday, extendins the
official losin~ streak lo 50 games. minus 27 unofficial
losses to junior colleges.
NAIA spokesman Charlie Eppler s~ud York
College of Nebraska held' the previous mark of 48
·consecutive losses from I 977-80.
The Eagles worked under a severe handicap the
first three seasons. They didn't have a field to practice
on.
Quote of the day
Dan Splllaer, retiring from the C hicago
White SOx to enter the construction and
landscaping business in the Seattle area, o n bow
he will miss baseball after spending 12 years in
the major leagues: 'TIJ be at the park when the
Sox play in Seattle. I'll be the guy near the bullpen
yelling, 'You overpaid bums.'" . ,
U.S. tops France in volleyball
BUTTE, Mont. -Team USA de-m
fcat:cd France on Thursday for a second
straight night m an exhibition volleyball
match before a crowd of 2,300.
France was one point away from wi nning the first
game against the 1984 Olympic champs after a block by
team captain Alain Fabiana and a kill oy Stephane
Faure gave the French a 14-13 le.ad.
But the U.S. rallied for a 17-I 5 victory as Steve
Salmons served seven of the winning points 1n the
game.
In the next two games. the U.S showed its power at
the net, crunch mg out 15-2. 15-4 wins lo take the best-
of-five match 3-0.
On Wednesday. m Bilhngs. Mont .. the U.S. won
3-I.
Ex-Tar Moffet leads Stanford.
INDIANAPOLIS -It's one down 13 and two to go for Amenca·s top freestyle
spnnter. Matt Biondi. m the 63rd NCAA
men's swimming and diving cham-
p1onsh1ps.
The 6-6 Biondi -the first swtmmer to break the
49-second bamer when he set a world record in the 1 ()().
meter freestyle last year -claimed the American, U.S.
Open and NCAA record in the 50-yard free Thursday at
Indiana University. His time was 19.22.
Defending champion Stanford has l 05 points and
takes a four-point lead into tonight's finals. Florida,
seeking its third team title in four years, is second at IO I
with UCLA third at 98. A victory in Thursday's final
t'vcnt, the 400 medley relay gave Stanford its lead. Se~n
Mt1rphy, fom'lcr Newport Harbor High standout John
Moffet. Pablo Morales and Dave Lundberg combined
to wtn the event m 3: 12.47.
Earlier. Morales claimed his sixth ind1v1dual
NCAA title with a 1:45.43 time in the 200 individual
medJey.
Senior Mau Ccthnsk1 of Flonda, who set an
American record m the prehms of the 500 free at last
year's NCAA meet and lost 11 in the finals while placing
third. recorded an easy victory m the event this year
wnh a time of 4: 15.19.
Doug Shaffer of UCLA, the runner-up last year m
the I -meter di\1in11.. too k too honor!i this year wi th
560.20 points.
..
Bulla rally to trim lndl•na N • k t Cl I ... d J-e?:ii~=..J:::.~~71 m -1e ro c:.l . eve an
~undayina~Apme. OUcqo~ Indians claim hurler I~ exhibltJOn acuon Thunday: Ttten 7, Royall I: Larry Hcrnd~n
most of the p.me and was behind 96-86 Wlth 9·09 left · RatlUes U, Carda 7: Juan Samuel had a home run amona his three hill
before Jordan, who had Is points in the final quarter, on waivers: Andujar homered &!'Id drove jo four ~DJ as and drove in four ~111 to lead Detto~I
tiedthcpme l02-102withalay·ue_aube3:1Smark.. i d d Philadetphiahad21 b1tsmbeatingSt. over Kanau City,. ~ac.ik Moma
. Elsewhere in the NBA. .Ueem u..J••• scored 2S SUSpens 00 re UCe Louia. worked> Just four tru1i.ftll for ':be
poinl_'1 grabbed nine reboundund blocked fiveshou to Reda 17, Meu 4.: Eric Davis Titers. 11vina up both K.U1&1 City
pea:.lfoustou to a l 36-11 O victory over San Antonio. It From AP clJipatdiea homered forthe sixth time this spring ruo.s. before minor lequer Bryan
, ~the ~pun' founb straiJbt loss Phil Niekro, the 300.prne winner to spearhead a 22-hit Cincinnat1 Kelly finished ue.
• 1n 20th 10 their last 23 ouungs . . . waived last week by tbe New York attack as the Reds overwhelmed the BIM Jay1 It, WMt.e S.,a It: Uoyd
Ga1 Wl.Wam1 scored 16 of bis y ankees, has been awarded 10 the Mets. Moseby bit two home runs, and Cecil
pmo-biab 33 poinu in the first Oeveland Indians on a waiver claim , Gluts 10, C.bs 7: Chris Brown hit Fi~lder and Kelly Gruber bad o~c
quarter as Washinaton raocd to an the Indians said Thursday, and two home runs, the second driving in api~ t~ lead Toronto over the White
18-j)Oint lead and coasted to a Niekro said he is excited with his new three runs to break a 7-7 tie in the Sox. Chacqo Starter Joe C.Owley pve
120-108 victory over New Je~y. challenge. ninth inning, and San Francisco beat up ~igh~ hit& an~ sevc:n ea.med runs in
· · Cbrles Davia scored 21 points The Indians will assume the con-o split-squad Chie8$0 Cubs team. 311> mnmgs as h15 spnna ERAjwnpod an~ AUoa IJ1ter added 20 t~ lead tract Nickro bad with the Yankees, Mike Krukow, who 1s scheduled to to 1.S7. .
Milwaukee to a I 14-93 Vlctory said lndians vice president Joe Klein. pitch the Giants opener Tucday at Orl~tu I, Y~ees t: Sto~ DaYls
over Oeve~nd fo.r the Bucks' Niekro, who turned 47 earlier this Houston, left after three innings with and Tl{>PY Martmez ~mbmed on •
J onlu fourth straight tnumpb · · · week. has a career 300.250 record. He a twinac in his lower back. ~hrce~hittcr,. and Batumo~ notched
. . Ro~ Blackmu scored th~ won his 300th game on the final day Caba '7' A'• 4: Rick Sutcliffe pitched its third straight shutout victory over
ofb1s 2S pomuon a ~v1nglay·upand free ~ow Wlth of the 1985 season and siP.>ed a one-1 seven innings in his final tune-up New York. .
fo ur seconds .left to give ~Uas a 11~·1.14 Vlctory over year, $3SO,OOO contract ·with the before opening day. Sutcliffe allowed . Bre~en ~. ~ f: ~le Man-,
Denver, pulling the Mav~ncks to ~thin I'~ pmcs of Yankees in January but was wai ved four runs on eight bits, walked two ~I ~pl~ in Milwaukee• four-z:un
the second-place Nuggets JD the Midwest Div1s1on. last week. and struck out two. He left the game eighth anrung, ~d the Brewers rallied
,... "We.'re look.ng for short-term help after seven innings because of a sore from a 6-4 deficit to beat Ocvcland.
Thom nan 1 d b h t and we got it." Klein said. on his riaht big toe. Rusen s. Expos t: Bobby Jones r--n ea 9 Y 01\~ 9 O In other news: Altros 11, Twba1 1: .Tony Wal~er hit a tie·brcakin~ si~gle in the ei&bth
G REENSBORO, N.C. _ Veteran !I Joaquin Andujar and the Oakland led Houston ove~ Minnesota with inning and rookie nght-bander lose
Leonard Thompson one-putted half the A's tick.ct department got good news three RBI on two smglcs and a homer. Ouzmarl pitched six stro6' inninas to
holes be played, shot a 6-under-par 66 and when Commissioner Peter Ucberroth Walker singled home a run in a two-lead the Rangers to the victory over
took the first round lead Tb~y in the cut in half the suspension which wa~ ~n ~nd innin& had another RBI the Expos.
Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournament. to keep the pitcher out of action the suigle 10 a ~OUM'Uf! fourth and hit a Padre• 8, Saa Diego State t: Eric
It was two strokes lower than the previous low first l 0 days of the baseball season. solo homer m the nxth. Show allowed two hits in'five innings
round of the year for the 39-year..old Thompson, now in "We are very happy the com-Pintea C, Red Sox S: Sammy and struck out ci,,.,t to lead the Padres his 16th season on the PGA Tour. missioner saw fit to reduce the Khalifa doubled with one out in the · · .,.
Da Ed d . ..__th fro · suspension," .... ;d Sandy Alderson, 11th innin• lo drive in Joe Orsulalc to the wtn. ve war s n.,)l"Y e nt SJde OD the Forest .-. 'th th~ . Pi b M--'--.& U-' I f w-~ ..
Oa1csr--.. a b ·th 3l d-.. ~ · fi the A's general manager. He added,. wt e wmruna run as tts urgh aiun:n 1 .. , Ulven t)', o -~ntry u course wt a an ,_.,_, 10 or a "It was done essentially on his own defeated Boston. Orsulak tripled and ID,ioa l : ~ Boqncll hit a pand 67· HisoldcrbrotherOanny,atwo-timewinnerofthis initiative persuant to Joaquin's ai>-scored on Johnnie LeMaster's sinaJe slam as the ariners capitalized on
title, was one stroke back at 68. peal. We did not participate in the in the ninth to sen~ the game into I 2 walks and two errors-to bury the
Also at that figure, 4 under par and only two back,
were British Open champion Sandy Lyle of Scotland,
. Tom Punzer, Jim Simons and Andy Bean, a former
Greensboro champion and a winner at Dorat earlier
this year.
Defending champion Joey Sindelar had a 71 in the
mild, hazy weather. Fuzzy Zoeller had the same.
49era interested in Jackson
REDWOOD CITY -The San Fran-[il
cisco 49ers, with their sights on Hcism.an c II•
Trophy winner Bo Jackson of Auburn, arc
among the National Football League teams
which have approached the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
with a trade offer. .
Tampa Bay now bolds righu to the first pick in the
NFL draft scheduled April 29. Jackson, who averaged
162 yards per game rushing last season, is considered
one of the best running backs to come out of college
football in several years.
"Weare very serious about that and we've made an
offer," 49ers' G~nerat Manager John Mc Vay said. "The
Buccaneers arc in a very nice, enviable position of
sitting back and taking offers. But they'd get a lot of grief
if they made that trade, don't you thmk"r"
Capitals pull even with F lyer s
LoaFruce1cllettt'1goalat 1:12ofthe Ei.1
third period triggered Washington to a 4-2 '
victory over ·Hartford in an NHL game
Thursday night. and moved the Capitals
into a first-place tie with Phiradelphia in the Patrick
Division with two games remaining. The Capitals play
the New York Rangers and the Ayers visit Pittsburgh in
Saturday games before the two contenders face each
other in Philadelphia on Sunday. Should the two teams
finish in a tie, the Ayers would win the di vision because
they would have the most victories ... In the only other
NHL game Thursday, Chartle Simmer scored two
goals, giving him 36 for the se.ason, and Keltb Crowder
got his 35th as Boston recorded a 4-2 victory over
Toronto.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
No events scheduled.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at
Dodgers, KMPC (710), KABC (790).
Process." extra innings. Huskies.
UCI: Home sweet home
Anteaters b reak four-match
lostngstr eakwit h 7 -2 victory
It took a little bit of home cooking for the UC Irvine
tennis team to get back on track. as the Anteaters notched
a victory over Brigham Y ouog Thursday.
On the high school level, Edison took over first place
in the Sunset League with a win over Marina.
Here's how it went:
UC Irvine 7, BYU i: The Anteaters shook off the
effects of a four-game losing streak -all in the recent
Blue-Gray Classic -to stop the Cougars.
Bruce Man Son Hing. Julian Barham and Michael
Downs all posted straight-set victoricsio singles to spark
the Anteaters.
"This one was for Coach (Bill) Mulligan," said UCI
Coach Greg Patton referring to the Anteaters' basketball
loss to BYU in the National Invitation ToumamcnL
'° UCJ, now 13-8 overaJI, will play UC Santa Barbara at
noon Sunday.
On the high school level:
EdJ10D 1 •, Marilla •: The CbaIJers handed the host
Vikings their first Sunset seiback in moving to 4-0 in
league matches.
David Moore and Bob Dye recorded sweeps in
singles to spark the Chargers, while Scott Bivens and
Wayne Kozuki had the top efforts tor Marina. winning
two of three in No. 3 doubles.
Foa.dtaia Valley 11, Hut~n D Beacll 7: Senior Jeff
Capuano, the Barons' No. I sin es player, swe this three
singles matches at Fountain alley to even ~e Barons'
Sunset league mark at 2-2 (7-4 overall).
The No. 2 doubles tandem of Ryan Hasagawa, a
freshman, and Russel Yee, a sophomore, also won all
three of their matches for the hosts.
In community college men's competition:
Oraqe Coa•t 8, Cerritos l: Dean Olson kept his
South Coast Conference singles record perfect to lead the
Pirates (9-l, 11-2 overall) at Cerritos.
Olsen who bas been the No. 2 singles man for the
Pirates, played No. I for the second straight match filling
in for the injured Chris Gaftz.
Olsen also teamed with John Studebaker to t.alce the
No. I doubles match 6-1, 6-2.
Saddleback t, FaUertoa 0: Dana Bozeman lost bis '
first set in South Coast Conference play, but rebounded to
win his match in No. I singles as the Gauchos stayed
unbeaten at 9...() in the sec.
In women's community college action: ·
Oraqe Coaat 8, Cerritos l: The Pirates upped their
South Coast Conference record to 8-2 behind the play of
Lisa Newman and Jill Quartararo in doubles on a day in
which could best be described as six against one.
Coast returns to conference play on Tuesday with a
match at Golden West College.
Horse racing results
LOI Atamltos
THUllSOAY'S Rl:SUl TS
(llltl ef SS·nleM lie"'"' !Mdnll
"AST uc•. One mile oace
Mega SPlrll (Pierce) 5.00 310 2.90
Merk It !hen ($1eetl'I) 3.90 3.40 Ferrouk Henovw (Aclr.ermen> 1010
FOU8tTH RACI!. One ml .. Nee EIGHTH "ACE. One mite oace.
Primo (Aut>lnJ 10.60 4.90 3.60 HNll'le< " (8ellerl 12.00 S.20 uo ~enoark CtlarlH (Pier~) UO 3.00 8erOCM1 <O.somerl ,,00 uo MallOll ( K ueDlef I 3.00 "-fey (Vllllendlnoflam) 2.20
Time; 1:51 3/S. Time: 2!00 11 S
"lf'TH RAC•. One mile PKe. $J EXACT.A (7·6) oald sn .30
Genllen (Lonoc>) ,,20 3.60 2.60 NINTH llACE. One mile oace.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~~~~. Tlme.2:022/S = $2 •XACTA (1-6) 1>elcl S2S.IO
Ruff ELL'S SECOND It.AC•. One mile pace
Nvevo ZIP (Medtend) 3.60 2 40
Hevtln Snow (Sherren! 3 60
Time: 1:59 4/S.
., •XACTA (6-1) P•kl 122.90.
CallfOfnla Slul9f <Todd Ill 6.IO UO l.40
Money On SP4rll (IC IJllCller) :uo UO
Commender Eeo (Hitt) t ,00
Time: 2!00 2/'S.
Cl'lattwlno (LonooJ UO SIXTH RACE. One mlle Na. $J •XACTA (3·•> Pllld S2S.20.
SHOCKED! ... ·. ~ . . .
• ""' •~•I I ... ,
'? Ii' IAlllTI llH WIC(
t rt:' ,,,~ .& ... Est 1957
11. 631-n40
Urgently needs and will pay
for PHOTOS TAKEN OF ACCI-
DENT, CORfO OF LARKSPtlt
Ii PCH, CORONA DEl MAR ON
NOV. 12 APPROX. 3 pm.
Miu Rodeo Drive (Tremblavl UPHOLSTERY INC. 8 ~l~~~~.Dnanflsl
-· Yu Dlllf Coten Mire!
\2 liXACTA (3·1) oalcl Ml.20
1922 IWllOR avo .. COSTA 1EA-541-1156 THIAO RAC•. One mite PK•. .,=====-ii;;:;=====:;,~ SPffd 0 Cl'lerMr <Perlter) 6 00 II WlncOfP !&aYIHl)
Pierce Bro th e rs Loven Levity (Longo)
TltN; 2:01 l/S.
5.10 4.10
S.60 4.20 HO
2.90 2 10
7.90 2.10
2.10
Bradbury Bret (Maler) 6.00 4.20 2.tO
GYPtY Oulcell (o.-r) t 20 UO
Wllcl Jollw (SIMlhl 6.00
Time: 1 :51 31 S. '2 IEXACTA (2·S) oald l~.30
Sf!V•NTM "AC•. One mlle ~. W1tct1 The &yrdlt (Longo) 1s.20 uo 3.20
Cenon Drive (ICOC>lr.e) 5.20 3.20
Miu Vlel'lover (Tremblay) S.00
Time: 2:0S.
U f'KK SIX (3·6 Of 3+S-7-3l Pllld S7,13UO
to one wlnnlno tldtet (llx l'IOflft). S2 Pk* Six
conM>le tlon oald l>SUO to n •llllllno tlCltett
'""' l'lorset). TENTH llAC•. One mlle trot.
Peach Jamb <Bekwl UO 2.60 2.40
RowdY Sl'laron <Pierce> UO 2.20 Sycamof'e Nallie (Richmond) UO
Tlme: 2:03 2/S.
U UlACT A (4·6l oald I 14.20.
441 Old ... wpon INYd.
NewPott BNdl, Ce. (714) 675-2690 Bell Broadway Mortuary
110 Broadway c.4 9 C~Meu 9 -
Linen
Silk
Cot t on
T he Essence of •
Nat ur al F abrics
The Spring Collection
at Gary's
'
119 Fuhion l1Jand • Newport Beach• 759-1622 • Bulloek'1 Wil hire Wing
'3 •XACTA (4·1) oald $22.20 u EX.ACTA cs-•> oald SH..00
HIGH SCHOOL TRACK •..
From Bl
Perk.ins went 11 .3 and 23.3 in the
100 and 200 meters, while Olson
puJlcd Chris Black to a personal best
of 4:34.0 in the 1,600. O lson's
winning time was a routine 4:29.0.
Edlaoa •s. Weatmillater CS: The
Sunset League meet continued today
at Westminster With longjump, triple
jump and pole vault still to be
contested because the pits have not
been completely finished at Edison.
Freshman Doug Nichols put on the
best show for Edison Thursday, going
53.5 in the 400 meters.
Foaataha Valley tl, Oceu View 45:
Fountain Valley's Dennis Arey swept
the sprints and tt.ammate Dan
Webster won the shot put and discus.
Arey posted an impressive 22.9 fn
the 220 to go with his I 1.3 clockinl m
the I 00. Haissam Sabra won \}le 80
and the 1,600 for Ocean View . ._
Mal'l.Da 71, Butlnstoo Beaclt U :
Steve Jennings captured both sprints
1nd took the low hurdles, and
oombincd with Matt Malone'~double
in the high JUmJ> and IOnf jump, it
proved enou&h for the Vik.inas to act
put vlshin1 Huntin1ton Beach.
In prls' competition:
FontaJa ValleyH Ocleu View ti:
It came down to the (asl event -the
mile relay -before the Barons could
claim the Sunset victory at Ocean
View.
Akemi Royer of Ocean View out-
dueled Nicole Mitts in both the I ,600
and 3,200 and twin sisters Shannen
and Kathy .Karpel were both under
the Seahawks' 1ehool records io the
800.
For the Baron~ Tanya Buchanan
swept the hurdles and Dawn Boeke
1ook the sprints
Marina 100, HntlDitc>D Beacl 17:
The Vilcings were led by the twin
victories of juniors Tricia Klempke,
Karla McNabb and Karen Rish.
KJempke took the 100 and 200 in
12.8 and 27.0: McNabb went 6:04.5
and 13:03.4 io the distance races; and
Rish doubled in the hurdles, going
16. land 49.7. ·
Ecll1on l 15, WestmlD1ter U :
Edison won every event to rout the
host Lions.
The Chargers' double victors in-
cluded: Nicole Richot (800, 3,200
meterS)i Karen Aaronson (110, 330-
meter low hurdfcs) an~ Stacey John-
son (hiah jump, tnpl~ 1u'mp}.t •
Newport BarlM>r lH, Cotta M ...
i t: The Sailors remained undefeated
(3-0. 5...() overall} as Sharon AttJesey
won the l 00 ( 13.0). and took both
hurdle races.
Eatucla ••. Seddleback 5t: K.athy
Grant sparked EstanciaJ winnina the
I 00 (I I .5) aod 200 (26.o). .
WoodbrlQe ltt, Lqaa Bead ti:
Sherri Smith turned in a 200.800
double with clockinas of 27.82 and
2:23.S and.teammate Sandy Straup
won the t,600 (5:32) and 330 low
hurdles (S 1.2) to pace the Wanion.
lrviae in. Su Clemeate U : Tracy
Wriaht nan 2:2S. I in the 800 and
turned ln her Ont 3,lOO of the year
with a time of 11 :42.9 10 ~ the
Va~ueros(3-0)inSouthC9&Jt ~e action.
Mary Coleman clocked a penonal
belt of S8. 7 in tbe '400 and Erica Lee
was a doublo winner in the sprints,
goin& 13.2 and 27 8
El•V•NTH RACE. One mt.le Pllee.
HMventy 8rMH (lon90) UO 3.20 2M
Golden "-tcl'I (Crool\en) UO 4.ot
Suen 1meo1ne11on (Crt1wf0f'dl 11.20
nme: 2:00 21 s.
12 IX.ACTA (3·9> oald \20,60. Attendance: 3,6'6 ,.
...... Aftlfa
THU.IOAY'S ... suL.n
(7Sltl ef tt·deV ... IUllNNM ,,_.....)
"IAST llAC•. 1 1116 miles.
Follr.'s Vlclort (Si.ck)
Anlonlne <Crowwl
Jello (Vallnzuele l
Time: 1:45 115.
uo S.40 uo
S.40 uo 2AO
12 aXACTA ($-7) Pllld $.'JUO.
S•CONO llACL • furtono1. Green COieen ISt...,ensl 13.00 UO UO
Roni Tl'lrM<ts (Hawley) 4.00 UO
Am«a J. (04Nha\J1uvel 3.40
Time: 1:11 1/$.
TH-.o RAC•. 1 1116 mllft
HONNI G•I (So4l1) 14.20 tAO ~1 Oramallc ei.o.nce (Valentuele) UO
lrlah Pels.9e (Bladt)
Tlrnt; 1)4],
n DAILY oouaL• (6·6) oal<I ,.,,,.,,;
DAILY DOUaL• CONSOLATION (M2)
$14.00.
,OUttnc RACI. ' furtono1 lank~ <lleck) MY Only '(Mer-z) Khel 'N' .. (Velenzvele)
Tlrnt! 1:1t 415.
"""RAC•. 1\.ft m.lln on turf.
Ftuctuel• <McCerronl n.oo 11.20 ?. TrlpOll Shorn (V•lenzuele) 1UO
AIVdad (MerQUel)
Tltn9: 1:50 1/S
SS lllC.ACTA (7·tl i>eld MO'l.00.
S.XTH RAC•. •'h Mlonn
Ondllrtv (Mela) 1.._,60 JLOO 1 ~ ccroww > tt.10 1
Mfmelert (Marll!UUI
T1mr. 1:11 llS.
MYINT .. llAC11. • furtonos,
IMV'• L..-(Vetlnruete) 4-IO .,'1.__)
Time To'""*• <Soll•> '""" Iron l!ves <K...i)
Tin-. IM 3/5. U 8XACTA (Ml Pllld 111250.
IMM4TM ltACll. ·~ l\lrlOnOI Oii tur1. Tundr• GOOM (llOl'lell'll n.eo IUO
Media Olfl C~vl 6.IO PMrl llue (~er)
Time: l:t6.
Women's golf results
g...,. .......... Hollt ltecy 11·1'-1' ~Me...v ,._.._n c .. ..-... ..... , ..,_ tuMIOWlkv 17'41--74 .-. .. lentdl --~11 Pallf..., . J>.U.-. Ne!KvltuMll J7·»--74 ,,.,. llelOc* ... 11 iu....,.. •M-74 A. ......... •JJ-71 JIJll ll!Uler U·~ httvSNetwi •»-74 JoAMWaenem )6-4t-n ,,_,., ll'ulJ H·U -70 CaltlVMent 11·11-1' ••lit. McCer1IW .... ,. IMllY~ fM>-70 Sandt'• s.i1.lctl 17•»-7' JoMll .... ~ .,._11 lattY Kine a.-u-10 CIWlt JollMon 17·37-74 0...1..-, '7·0-11 M. I. Zlmr/Wmtn M-U-10 Oll•Httl(11 J7·11-J4 SW.attavnle ..... ,. MltWt; MotWe U•»-10 JMtO.... •»-• e=-::iiWI ..... ,. Jan S ......... lllOll •i>-11 CtttlyMotM •>1-75 ~11 Allc>l ltllitnM U-»-71 ~K .... u-.... 75 ..,,..,.. MoJCMtt .... 11 l.AH.r .. ltlnktr •u-.11 """-c.an. JS-.... 75 c. Mel•lltfNI ., ..._,. Kallw ...,_....,, ... 17•,....71 l.ewr90.YIM ,._,,_,5 GOMle CHleml 4J·11-n ValklnMr 17·U-71 KalflV.._ J7·»-75 Kim .,.,,._ ,, ....... ,, a.thOanlel 3~»-71 K•lflV WNtworth lf-»-75 MwtlMHMM 41·»-7' L.aUI'• hu9h •»-n a.th Solotnon •»-75 s ....... , ..... •·41-7' Colleen Walker »-»-n s. lartolecclnl . ,. ..... 75 DOMtwtllte . .... ,, lac;kyPearton U ·17-72 Do(llle GaPQlll •»-75 0..-LAMler .,....,, JerlMI lrlll JMS-72 M. SHncw·Oevtln 3'-Jf-75 Merttle,._ •41-7' Sandra Palmer 3'-U-72 Janet Andanon •·>7-75 ..,..,. . ..,,_ M-6-7' Amv AICOll 35·37-72 Vlckl ANwN •»-75 Vicki '•ton •o-«i SharrlTwmar U-37-72 Arnv lent ll-31-75 LknnHow9 ....... Ito.la Jone$ .. ,._,, K-PwmeHt 37·»-75 OaNMStreble .... Janet Colet 3'-»-72 SMiiey Hemln •·»-1' a·ltobln MMatt 41 .. --.1 Ja,,. Ct.n.t U-»-12 Sharon larrall Jf-31-7' KaltlyHlte •o-tl Mvraatedc....,., 35-17-12 Anne-Men.Pall ....... ,. LAAMC.uaclev 41·0-42 P9MYHtmmat 3'-~72 ~•Muraoka 37·Jf-7' Det11>1e Auallfl 40-0-C Marci lo1arttl u--n Alllton Finney 40-»-7' Sa1V Little :Jt-o-t2 Cethv ltevnoicb 37·»-73 LYMAdemt 37.,,._7, Marv ... Pwter #:~ a·O. AmmeeeaNne 37•3t-73 Pat Mevers Jf-37-7' a·Lt. O. loutln lonnla Lauer lS·»-73 Cathy Krahart •·»-1' Judv ··'*'" 41·.,...... a·K. Wllllamt 3'-»-74 J~l.odl •n--n Slllrlrll!~ ., .. ..,..... Patti IUuo 3'·Jt-74 Lori Garbeca •»-n L..oulMSuett '4·41-45 JU(h Olddnson 3'·»-74 Clndv H• •»-n l(ayl(__,., WO Avaito.<>umoto ll-3'-74 SalVQulnlan •»-n M.. Flouaru·Ootll 37-37-74 P9ttv Hava Jt-»-n .--ioi .. amateur.
Me1:1 's golf results
o. ........ °'*' Maf'K McCumoar ,._,._n lo«IOY Wadkins Jf·l6-7S Leonard TllOmoton 33·33--66 Mar1I Lye 37·lS-72 Lanfty Wadkins •·37-75 David Edwards 3'-3i-.7 Ronnie IMadl 34-»-n ltOMr Maltbia •·37-7$ JlmSlnwM 33·3s--.I David P9olMas 31-n-n WavneGractv •37-75 Arwtt ... n 34-,...... Charles lollne 31-u-n kr(Jaeckal u-.-15 OaMv Edwards 31·37-M Miile L.awrenca 37·15-72 TomPwnlce •11-7S Tom Pvrtzar 3S-~ MlkaW•t 35-37-72 Harry Tavtcw 37·»-75 -: Sarwty LYia 34 .. ,...... Lortn ltobeft• lS-37-n Mike ltald 37·»-75 Howard Twlltv 34·3~ Mhta~ a.-»-n Wavnelav1 n -»-75 David Frost 37.,,__., lra4Fa 3Ms-n GeorM Arehar 3'•3'-75 Cralo Sla41et' 34·35-tt Vance Heefner JS-31-72 GMMMMll 3'·36-75 David Thora 33·»--ff JohnAdems J.4-»-n Dennlt Tflldar ,. .. ,....75
G.wS.utrl 34-3~ Mike McCllllouell 35-37-72 s1-1owman 3'-3'-75 lretlU-33··»--ff John COOll )6.-36-72 ltoMri Wrenn 3'-Jt-75 It ldlerd ZollOI JS-~ Matti Wlelle U-»-n Mika Mies 37·»-75 Lou Graham 3S-,...... l.alTY...._ JS-17-72 lllc:ll DelPot a-37-7S Ja<*lt-34-H-'9 OtdlMnt JS-37-n Dave ltumrnells 41·,._75 Arwtt Diiiard 3S-~ GarvMcC«d 3'-37-73 Tommv va1en11,,. Jt-37-7' Mark Haves :M·»-70 Glaranc:. ltosa JS-»-73 Ired &ryaftf •·»-1' AndvMaOM 34·3'-70 Peter Ooslerllula 36-37-73 Maril Chevltun Jl-»-7' Jim Thorpe 35-35-70 ltexC.ldwelt Jl-35-73 ltk:lt Hartman 37-Jf-7' Pav,,. Stewart 37-3)-70 Fred COUPies 17·3'-73 Klkuo Aral •·»-76 Peter Jacoown ,..,._10 Dan Forsman 37·3'-73 Jay Delalno 41-lS-7' ltod Curt JS-JS-70 IMOAokl 3'·37-73 WO«tv lleckbuf'n ....... ,.
Tim Norris 35·35-10 Pat McGowan 37·»-73 COl'rt P9vln •·»-76 Lennie Clemenls 31·32-70 John McComllh 3'-37-73 Krl1Moa 37·3'-7' 8uddY Garonar 31·3'-70 Mike Nicolette 37-M-73 Cart Zoller 49-37-H OanPoN 36-35-71 8lelne McCa•lster 3'·37-73 J.C.SnMd •»-n WllllaWOOd 3'·35-71 JlmGala9har 3'-31-73 Tony Siiis 35-o-n Sieve Pate U-37-71 Frank Conner )4-Jf-73 Rocco Mediate v.--n ~Slndelar 35-36-71 Ired Faoet 36-31-13 E,.,. 0on .. 1a1 43-~n
F1111v zoenar lS-36-71 8o0Glldar 3S-»-73 P9t Undwv •31-n &obbv Pancntt 35·»-71 John Inman 35·»-73 T.M.Cllen 31-:=n 8obOY Clampett Gl·»-71 Brian Claar 3S-»-73 I ll lv"'1on • n Gree Ladahoff U-36-71 ltk:lt Fehr 3'·37-73 Joatrwnan •»-71 Pl'IN Hancodt 37-~71 ltk:ltCramar 3'-37-73 loOby Mltehlll 3'·.,._71
Eduerdoltomaro 37.,._71 Chris Per1Y 3'-Jt-74 8oO Groff J7·41-71 Miile Huibert 36-35-71 Tom Sl.ckmaM 37·37-74 lton Sir.ck •»-71 Ooue Johnton 3'·35-71 lrlanMoH 3'-»-74 TomGIMton 42-36-71 OaMY lrloos 34·37-71 David Lundstrom 37·17-74 GreeTwtoos 41>-»-71
TrevorOodds " 3'·35-71 &•Sander Jf-35-74 Davis Love Ill ·---71
llAlll.• Su•"'•" 15-37-12 Jeff Sluman 3'-Jt-74 Denny ....,. .,....,,
Chle> lack 3'·3'-12 loOL.ohr •·36-74 Tomevrum •41-1' Jim o.n1 3'-M-n Nlek Faldo 3'·»-74 Adrian Stlh 41>-Jf-7' T.C.Chan 3'-~n Dave ElchetbartMr 37-37-74 GeorM Burns 41·3'-tO
David Oorln 34.. n llllv Plarol 37·37-74 Siu lnoraham \ 41·3'-tO e1u Krauen u -a.-n Maril BroOlr.• 37·3'7-74 Jim Holt •1·41-«I Maril O'MHra 35·37-12 Kelltl Ferout 37·»-75 wa•er Tavtor C2·42-t4
Golden West, SoCal College breeze
Golden West College evened its
South Coast Conference baseball
mark with a romp over Compton in
comm. unity collese action, while
Southern California College had no
trouble with Christ College Irvine in a
non-conference matchup.
The details:
Golden West U, Compton 4: A
number of Rustlers beefed up their
offensive statistics against the
Tartars, with Keith Kaub leading the
way.
Kaub weot 3 for 5, with two
homen, seven RBI and four runs
soored. Kaub cracked a two-run
homer in the first and a three-run
blast in the seventh, his eighth and
ninth of the season.
George Lazalde also homered, a
two-run shot in the fourth, while Gary
Renko tied a pair of school records
with at-bats (7) and runs scored (5).
Renko had four bits in the game.
SoCaJ CoUe,e I , C'ul1t Collete 1:
The Vanguards upped their record to
19-9 with the non-conference victory,
keyed by the hitting of Kevin Kasper ~ for S with 2 doubles), Dean Harvey
3 for S with a double) and Ron
elson (a bases-loaded triple in the
first inning.
Brian Otten (nine strikeouts in six
innings) and Robert Mansfield (six
strikeouts in three innings) combined
to limit the hosts to seven safeties.
LIMITED TIME ONLY
T-BONE STEAK
DINNEB Served with a
SHRIMP COCKTAii.!
Includes
s4.49
• A Shrimp Coci<tall
• Flame.Broiled T-Bone Steak
• Soup of the Day
• Crisp Green Salad
• Choice of Potato
(Baked Pol3IO dumg Oinnet Hours)
~ . . '. ............. ,. ..........
Attenta I • .,....,. S U1 .,._.,
Toronto 12. ChlQeo Wt'"9 1ox· 10
TtQt),~1
CIM*Ntf 17, New Yar1l Meli 4
Phlll dllJttle \), St. lAIUll 1
PltttlMlfl 4, '"'°" > ( 11 llwllnel) Detroit 7, K-CltV 1 Holltton 11 MlnnlMI• 1 laltlmore S, New Yottt YtMIMI 0
Clllc:e9o Cubs fttl 7, C>ekland 4
Sall Fralldtco 10, Ollceeo CW. (Ml 1
~-l.a-.nd6
San OlellO I, San Ole9o Stale 0
S..11ta 14, Unlvenltv of Waatllne!On 2
T•Y"•O-.,._at~. 7:JS un.
laltlmora "" Mlnnetota at Dnando Taus YI. Allant• at W•t Palm leech
St. Louis Vt. Cincinnati at Tempe Detroit vs, Chieffo White Soll II
Sar..ota
PlllM>uroh VI. KanMI Cllv at Fort Mver•
Boston vs. Houston at Klulmt'Me Oevelend n . Chieffo Cut. at Mala
Toronto vs. Mew vor11 Y.,._ at
Oanvar 11'1119dl~ VI. Hew Vork Mets al SI
Petentlurll. " SMttle vs. Montreal al Vancouver, n
~
NON·COMfl•R•NC• sec.. c-.. '· aww c-.. 1 Soc.I Colleoe 400 130 Olo-9 10 2 Clllrtt Colleoe 000 010 000-1 7 1
Otten, MaMflelcl (7) and Nellon; HMtula
and Wllllarns. ~ten. L-Hantule. Hl-«•1PW (SCC) 2, Harwv ISCCI.
Wenoel (CCI), Hantula (CCI). 39-Wendlar
ISCCI. Nelson ISCCI.
Cemrrwnlty c.leee
sount COAST CONfl•UNCa on.a C..lt ,, ~ s
Oranee co .. t 200 100 --. 7 2 Cvpr•s 201 001 011>-5 10 0
A41ou$t and Elllson; Stewan and Lonoo.
W-Aueu•t. 7·0. L-Stewart, 3·2.
21 P9t• • IOCCI. Hit-James (OCCl 2, Jackie (Cl.
~w ... 11.c.....4
Comoton 000 201 I~ 4 S 6 Go60ell w... M3 600 llbt-21 17 1
McO.de, J. larnatt CJ), T-..int (4),
P. a.matt (5), ~· (7) and IAlean, White CSl; Douty, Takltlnen (6), Taub (I),
Hunt Cf) Ind Sftlr1ey, T ometldl ( 5).
W-OOUtv, 2·1 L-Mc:Oede. ~
(GW).,llenlto IGW), Olfllty (C), WNte IC).
,. "*""' IOW) Hlt-ttewD IGW) I, L.aUldll (G_W ).
...._ c.tt C111ft1.ct
NaA
W L M • I
' a > • • Jl'I
' s 41'1 ' s 4"" ' 5 4\'J
5 ' 4\'J
, 1 ·~ I 10 f\'J
W•STa•M CCNtfl•R•NCa "9dk.,....... w L ~ Ge 1-Lalran " 11 ·'" •·Portland • Jf .... 21 ~· 30 45 .400 21 ~ JO 47 .390 2' Saallla 2' ., m JOl,'J Golden State 21 fO .359 31"'2
Mlftwlt DNtlllll
•·Howton .. 2' .m •·Oenvw ... 13 .571 • •·Dallas 42 34 .SSJ SY> x·Utafl Jt Jt .500 ,....,
s.cramento 34 G Ml ,. san Antonio 33 .. .411 " •ASTaaN GONfllltlNCI
AtllllltlCOMIMll
1·8olton '3 ll .129
II• Ptllladelllflla 50 27 .649 13'h
•·NawJar'Mv 37 41 .474 27
x·Wa&llMoton J6 41 ... 11'h
New Von 22 S5 .216 411h c:..er..~
v-Mllwauk• S4 23 701
a·Attanta 47 JO .410 1
•·Detroit 43 34 .551 II c~ 21 .. .3'I 2S'h
Ollceeo 11 50 .351 11 lndleN 25 S2 .:ns 2' x-dlfldled Playoff llar1h. v-cJlnc:hed dlvlllon lltle and 11111\'off berltl. 1-dloctled
eo1lf9l•a title
.... ~-IUMl8T LllAeUla ,.._.,._,.v...,.•
( ........... ~ ...... ,
I Sdlraedlr CFV), 11; 1. Gllftoll CEI, •. 3 ..,.,_ (El, Jf; 4. Ctlel ,.,.... CFVI,
Wa1er1 (E)-, ElcHar CE), &
o...-...... DAVWY"I LOCKft ( ....... 9-dl) -n ...-n. 12 1111rr.am. llS ~. > rodl cod, 76 Qllco .... 11 Miid ...... 215
rnacMrtll, 7 ~ • .-tl-."'-d, 35 wtllte
11111. N•Wll'OltT LA .... -2' 411'1119rL I 11\HDINed, JO ICUIPln, 4 roc:lt fhh, 1 . ...,., 200 mecklttl.
NllllUL,..,. m. •••• Americft .......... ...._ u.121h b;ola
Grand PriK of Long Bwh,. oomi.a
Aprt 11-12-ns. 200 mph Indy en na
1hrough the • ...._ See c1t1bt** duel it out in
f'9 newhotc.lca GT-& aJth-your
b;ola de 1l 1r tor a To,da SUpertk:Ut.
T9NMS TEAM TENHl$-Mtlounced S.U-·
to as a ~ In !tie """9.
c:ou.aoa IAIUtV UNIVEltSfTY~ Nlek er.. men'a .._ lltMI coectl. KANS~ ll'aul lulAlrk edmln-lstrattve _,...,.. Ill c:tww of ac.dlmlQ..
ST. IONAVENTUltl~ Ron DaGatt ,... ............ coedl. .
TENNHSEI Wl!SLEVA,._..amed
Oafwld Ood9lll "*"' '*keltlel ~
a
-.
•
TltACK H.-ldle9
IOYS
"'"S8T LaAGU8 MllrN ,,, "~ ltMdl .. IOl>-1 nnnlnet (M), 106. 2 Stalford
IMI. 1019, 3 Puroru (H8), 112't ?Ol>-1 Jenni no~ CM), 22 ), ? Ctll>Ot
IH8), tt ... ) Stafford (M), 22 S.S «»-1 NaUOWI (H9), SI I, 1 Cribb•
(Ht), SU, ) Simm• (M), S4 I
I00-1. GallOC> (HBl. ?;CMS, 2 Turn''•'
OHi), 2'0S.0, 3 W•ldrll9 (Ml, 1-07 I
1,600-1 Solo tH8), 4:31 t, 1 A~'°"
(H8J, 02 •· 3 Wlr>lllamen IMl. •·)6 ~ 3,~I Wlr>lllamen tMI 10"04 I . no ..cono or llllrd
llOHl+-1 KaUk'k (Ml 15 •. 2 Mueller
(M), IH, l lt•~I IM) 17 0
JJOl.H-1 Jannlno• IMI. .0 21, 2 GallOC>
(HB). .O.•, 3 Ille) Mueller (M) •l\d
lt•lc~rl (Ml, •2 S 400 r ... ,-1 Marina , '3 I 2 Hunllnoton
••ecl'I, ~s I,'°° ralav-1 Hunllnoton 8MCl'I, 3393
HJ-I Malone (Ml. 6-1 1 Cr•nt (Ml.
S-1, 3 ltO<lnav (Ml S-6
U-1 Malont (Ml. 20-0''>. 1 Fru 1.,
lHB). 19-10. 3 K•lllCll (Ml. 1. 10
T J-1 Fra,ler IHBI. •2·•'"1. 2 Kalllclo.
IMI. d I, l MllOM IMl, •1·3"l
PV-1 S Ma11ula CM). 12·0, 2 McHU9h
(M l 11 ·6, l I( Mallula (M l II 0
SP-I F>a1111aMtll (HBI 4' S ..,, 1 Porter
IM I 44 t, 3 Neoi.l (Ml 44 1 1
Ol-1 MoOertv IH81, 132·7 1 Haiti'\
(H8). 130-11, 3 Flores (M), 119 S
f<oum.ln v ... ., '*• Oc:Mn View JI 100-1 ArtY (FV). It), 2 Meoe lFVI.
11 •. 3 eeruno <OV>. 11 1 20C>-I •rev CFVI 72 9 2 Gulterrlez
(0Vl 23 I l Flowers tOVl 24 4
40C>-I Mall• IFV). S4 4 1 Gullerrltz
COV), SS 4 3 Flower' IOVl SH
800--1 Se D<• tOVl 2 00 • 1 Bono (FVI
1011, 3 Hunn (FV). 2096
1600-1 Set>ra IOVI 4 4S 4, 1 LeMon
IFVI, 4 4S 7, ) Kut~n (OVJ, 4 4' ~
3200-1 KnOl (FV). 10 19 2. 1 Kultl'I
(OV). 10111 3 LO~I (FV) II 10
llOHH-1 Bowen (OVI. IS 9 2 Maf\1'1•11
lFVl 16 I l Le m IFVI 161
JOOIM-1 Mk:llaeOen 1FVI 419 1
Mersnell FVI '3 S, 3 Bowen 10v 1 '3 7
400 r•lev-1 Fountain Valley 44 1
1600 relev-1 Fountain Vellev. 3 S3 I
HJ-I Fox (FV) 6·0. 2 Wolf (0Vt.
S 10. l Durrell tFV). S· 10
LJ-1 Sanlo• IOV). 20· 1 7 Gullerrltz
10V1 19·1. J Potts IFVI 17 I•
T J-1 Wrl11n1 IFVI 39·S'• 7 Wino
OVI. 31·0. l Poll\ (FVJ, 37·10
F'V-1 Sorl• IFVJ 11·6. 1 Oelln COVI
11-0, 3 Petcak (FYI. 11·0
SP-I Wel>sl ... (FVI. .U·IV., 2 SluODV
1011). 47·21h, 3 Lendlno (FV), 40·3''1
OT-I Wel>lle< IFVI, 1~ 11, 7 Lau
(FV) llS· I, 3 \..endlno CFVl 114 1
Edllln n. Westwnlns~
(EdlMn ... dJ, ~-Ul
100-1 L.M (El, II 7, 2 Oh1on (W). II,,
Wolf CE), II•
20C>-1 Olxon IWI, 113;~ L .. CEI 231
l Wolf IEI, 7'0
.&oo-1 Svol>O<ln rw 1, SI 1. 1 Nlc"<>ls
!El. S3 S, J Wtiltmore IE >. S4 1
900-1 lt1m1rt1 CEI. 1"04 7. 2 KuOlCl'I
(El, 2'0SO. 3 Nowotnv !El 10S 7
1,600-1 Ku ti WI 4390. 1 Kalen IE I
• 44 0, 3 F'•lrn.r •Et, 4 460 ~
3.20C>-1 8enllt IW) 10 14 7 7 Par me<
(E l 10106 l Kol> IWI 102Sl9
llOHH-1 Olson IWI, 160 1 Aul!ln
IWI. 16 1 3 Hooten IE 1 16 S
JOOIH-1 Sullev IW I 47 I 2 Austin !WI
"3 no 1111ro
400 relav-1 EO•wn •SO
1600 relev-1 Wttlm1Mltr ) )S4
HJ-1 Foster l t 6·4 Hoottn E 1 6·0.
3 Henion IE I 5 10
SP-I Carter IEI S7 1 1 8lenc1>ero
IE 1 52·0 l'I 3 Fa lrmaf\ IE I, SO 4
OT-1 Fairman IE J 133 6 • 1 (,ere la
IE1. 124-2.l Shanor <El 113 l '
!Note Pol~ vault ,,,.,.. 1umo •no tong
1umo wert comoce1eo 1ooev
t•A Vt•W L8AOUI
C-... ~ Ml\"I, .,.... • ..., ~
100-1, IJ:tlntOld IUl, 10.S; t. Warner
<COM), 10.6; J. Hwtton CCdNU, 10.7
no-I ,tllnoold (U), tU; 2 HUftlon
!COM), tt.O; 3. WoetMv CCOMJ, 2U &t0--1 FaW<lltl (CCIM), AA, 2 Krum
lCdMI, SU, 3 SIMn'lall (CdM) li.6.
M0-1. ltoOtllnt (COM), l:Sf l 1 MMtyt1
tCdMl, 2:0U, ). ltlllmlfte lUl, 2:07.S.
Ml.-1. Oetu.n. (CdMI, 09 4, J
Martyn (CdMI. 4~.); ). lllllmlnt (U),
4.Sl.4. •
2·ml~I ~ tCdM), IHi.); J
Brown (CdM), 10-101. 2. AleaJI tCdMI ~ttl '
120HH-1 W11ton tCclM), IU , 1 Muuv
(CdM), IU , >. Liu (CdM). 11 I
llOtt+-1. ... rtlOw., ((dMI, 43.2, 2
Muuv (CdMJ, 4U, 3. From. CUI, 4U.
440 rtlaY-1. Unlvtf'611y1 .4'.5.
Mlle ra1a-1. Corona"' Mar, l.l4J, HJ-1 CallOOtlnO (U), S•10; 2. Goodwin
tU), $· 10, 3. L.Atltftore (Ul, ~ 10.
LJ-1 ""'110wtf' CCCIMI, 20 10, 2
Gonowllll (UJ, 19 1, 3 Noroultl tCCIMl. It·• T >-1 S.arOO-tCdM), 41·10, 2 Ma4
(U). lt· 11'>, 3. Shin (U), J7·6.
F>V-1 F>a lnttf' (CdM), 17·0; 2. JIHlOOt
CCdM), 11·6, J. Carter CCdM), 10 6.
SP-1 Halln (CdM), ..... 10; 2. Ha tfleld
(COM), 43·1; l. HOii (CdM), 41-11
OT-1 h ln (CdM), IS1·7, >. Holt
<COM). 110-7; 3. <:Tait (CclM), 109· 11~
..... ..,, H...-.r ti, C..tll Meu ~
IOC>-1 ltllty (CM), 10 I; 2. Cl'llU (NHI.
10 I, 3 ltldtlt (CMI. 10.f.
100-1. ltlleV CCMJ, 24.1. 2. Clllu CNtt),
243, 3.,,ltl.s.11 (CMl. 20
~I Wl'ltlen tNH), S3.S, 2. CH lal\lla
INHI, S6 S, 3 Vltfllo ICM), 57 I
MC>-1 (lleJ Geerllnot (NH), J 13 3, &oo.
INHI 2 13.J, CulanN (NH), 2 13.3
MJi.-1 GMrll1191 (NH), 4:39.0, 2 800. (NH) UO.O, 3 HOOM>n (CM), N4
1 ml~l.Hot>ton (CM), t-56.0; 2. KIOllef
(NH!. 10:06.3; 3. $lll119111Mtuar (NHI. 10:24.6.
l?OHH-1. Todd (NH), 17.0, 2. Maxwtll
tNHI, 17 S, 3. Lee (NH). 114
llOIM-1. TodO CNHI, 431, 2 LH fNH),
44 ) 3 Mallwell (NH), 0 0
440 retav-1. Coll• ~. '6.a
Mlle r ... v-1. N-oor1 HarbOt 3 ~ 2
HJ-I Flllltf (NH). 6-0; 1 ltllcl'lle
tCM). S· 10, J. HantOll (NH), S·I.
LJ-1. hml>lyn (Nl1), 19·3; 2, M.orencv
(NHI. ll· 11, 3. lt14t!I (CM). ll·S.
TJ-1 Fl•ller (NHI, 37·10, 2 Morency
fNH) 37·6'"" 3 Wildman (NH), 37·1''>
F'V-1 Moeck tNHl, 12·6, J Henson
•NHI n-o. no tlllrd
SP-1 Vooel (CM), 0 ·10, 1. SIYO.f\kl
ICM). 4S·6; 3. Corbo (NH), 4S·l.
Ol-1 Sryoenkl (CM >. 144·7. 1 Vooel
ICM), 122· II; 3. GllD4n tNHI, 10S·•
Woodbf1d91 M, Lt.--... di 4f
100-1 8r<>o'I• <WI, 10 I; 7 8ruueo CL8 ), IOI, 3 Smllll (W), IOI.
no-1 8r00k• CW), 23 2; 1 Bru•Mlll
IL8 ), 73 S, 3 Hughft (WI. 24 7
440-1 BrOOlls (W), s.J.9. 2 Newman
(WI, S4 7, 3 Porl (L9 1. SS.•
Ml>-1 Porl (LBJ, 2:05.2, 2. Ntwmen
(W), 2'0S.2; 3. tox (L8). 120. l
Ml~I Oeofvfftr (L8 ), •:~.5; 2. H•o
l>ef\Sfl l (WI, 4:56.0, l Celdaron (WI, s." 0
2·mli.-I. Oe9fVffll' (L81, 10:03.S, 1
H.-slll (W), 10.327, 3 lt108Dauotl
(LBJ, 10 417.
120HH-1. Ronbocll (W), 17.1, 2 Run
(W), 113, 3 WrlGlll (LSI, 11.J
J301H-I. Ruu (W), ~·. 2. Wllllam' tWJ, 431, 3. Wrlon1 (LBJ, •U.
440 rttay-1 Woocn>rl~. •S.3.
Mlt. relav-1 Le11una aucll, 3 40 I
HJ-I Ellll (W) 6·2 2 Port (L SI. 6·0.
3 Guymon (WI S·I
LJ-1 Cl'ler>11 IWl 10-1, 1 Wong CWI
19.7•..,, 3 Lena (LSI. 19·3~
TJ-1 Cna119 (WI .0·11. 7 Guvmon
<WI, 37·11'" 3 Sell (Wl. 36·9 .....
F'V-1 Turi (W), 9·6, no MJCono or tl'llro
SP-I !Ml'IOnev (LSI. 45·2, ?: Grlf11n
tLB). 42·6~. 3 Tor.c.eno (WI. '1·1'1•
OT-I TOdd (L8 ), 127-J, 1. Ne.Jll•OI
(WI. 12l·4'h, J Griffin (L8 1. 117·4''>
lh tandl 11, S.dcllebl<:ll SS
100-1 Malcom!> ISi, 10 0, 2 s,,..r1ro
IEI 101, 3 Conle CE>. 107
220-1 Thurmon (SJ, 22 7. 2 Malcomb
CS). 231. J McOonalO (E ), 23 3
4M>-l Thurmon (SI, SI I , 2 McOonalO
IE I, S39, 3 Devil ISi, 564
llt0-1 Knl11111 tEI 7'00, 2 ~ry CE!.
2-01', 3 Maxwel (SI, 2090 Mli.-t PtrrY lE), UO.t , 2 Duane !SI
4:J0.31 J. Stewart IEI. Ot.O. 2-m1i.-1 Duarte ($), 10:1) 2; 2 ouo.
Ill. 1040.7; J. Siewert IE), I~_,, 2
120HH-I Dorn IEI. 15 I, J Sherrard (El. Ill, 3 McC ... 111v IEI. 15.f
»OIM-1 Dorn IEI 429, 2. 8¥ro• (SI
" I; J 0.vl• (SI, 43 2 .WO relll-1. E'tancla, 4'-3
Mlle rE-'· ~. cn1 HJ-I. Dorn (E l. 6 4, 7 Tl'luNl'lon ($),
6·21 3. 8 CE), S·I.
LJ-1 Nor\1111 IE), 19-JV., 2 Swenr.on
CE lf 1'·9; ) M4M ($), 17-11
.>-1 Mantt(S), Jf-11'>, 2 Norvlll !E l
JU, ) l.a"Mnt ($), Jl·1'4
PV-1 Huerta ($), 12-0, 2 O'NMJ (El
11·6, 1 ChtMOro (El, 11·0
SP-I Yamaa (E), 44·4, 2 Swan'°"
(E), U ·>"-1 ), CatNtllero (E), •1-7\o\
OT-I. W•lbl.woer (El. 10·7; 2 Ae>uflero
tSJ, 121·2, 3. Corrloan (E), IU·'·
SOUTH COAST L8AOU8 ntne lOI. SM a.m.ta a
IOl>-1 PWltlN If), IU; 2 Morgan CSCJ
11', l Mltlt (I), 11 4
20!>-I Peritlns (I), 2U, 2 Mlttt <ti n '· l. Mor111n (SCI, 23 t.
400-1 Jennlnoa Cll SI 7, t. w1111a <ti.
S2.0, >. Kelutoo tSCl, SU.
eoc>-1. ltol>erh (I), 2:01.5, 2 Car1tn1111
ISC), 2:03.J; ). Halt ISC), 2~.6. ·~· Olton (I), • ,, o. 2 llleek II) 4:3'.0. 3 HaM (SCI, •.40 t.
3,100-1 MHl\an (I), us.a. 2 H•N (SCI, IG:02 S, 3 WMVW (I), 11:390
llOHH-1 Fleweotr fl), 160, 1
Nuvlanla II). 16.0; ), Brennan tn, 17 I
:JOOIH-1. Peck (I), 40.e, 2. 8 ro1n1n (I),
41.2, l Jenntnos (I), 41 t
400 ratav-1 lrvlne, '4 S I,* r ... v-1 tnlne. 3.JJ I HJ-I WIOO ($CJ, S·IO, 2 Tlrnure (I)
S· 10, 3 8arllell (SC), ~I
LJ-1 Ternure (I), 19·3\l'J, 1 Flnl1rd Ill
19·1, 3 Woltt (SCI, 1'·0.
T J-1 hmure (I), lt·t l'>; 1 Flew-
ll), 39· I; 3 Wolf• CSCI, Jt•2
PV-1 McCanne (SC), ll·O, 2 Jttnnll10$
(I), 12·0, 3 ~ (SC), 11·0
SP-I Gera rdi (I), ~3. 1 8 r1nllev (II,
•1·1. 3 Sllanll (I), •5-ll'l'J
OT-I Sl\ank (IJ, 141·7. 2 Oden (II
121-1, 3 Macllna CSCJ, 111·10
GlltLS
SUNSIT LIAOUI
'Mlfltaln Vain 6$, 0-View '1
IOl>-1 eo.111 CFVI, 14 25, 2 Toetson (FV), 14.3', 3 Steak• CFV), 14 n
20!>-I lloell• (FV), 21 en. 2 Simek
(OV I. 1' 94, 3 Your>11 (FV), 29 27
coo-1 Creln (OV), 1 01 9, 2 Cocnr•ne
(FV). 1:04 2, no lhlrd
800-1 S. Keri>el IOVJ, 1:27.9; 1. K
K•r1>81 (OV), 1:28,4; 3. Wllllller (OV), 2:37 3
1,600-1 Rover IOVI, 5-41 4; 1 Mill• (FV). S·O S, 3 IC. Karoet (OV!. S.SO. I
l,20!>-1 ltover COVI, 11oCJl.9, 2 Mith
(FV), 17 10 I, 3 0 '8rleft lOVI. 12-27 9
lOOLH-1 8UCl'lanen (FV), IS.II, 7 Orr
COVI. 1'.0, 3 Workman tFVl, 17 3,
JOOLH-1 8uc11anan (F\I), 4'.•; 2 s
Ka rl>el (OV), SO.J; 3. Mock (FV), S3 2.
400 retav-1. Founlaln Veltev, 5109.
I,'°° rala-1. Founlaln Vallev. 4:70.9 HJ-I Orr IOV), S·2, 2 AnOertOll (OV),
S-0. 3 Youno (FV), 4.,
U-1 Orr (OV), 17-01/•, 2 51M ke (FV)
15·111.'l, J. Ma~ !OVt, ~
T .J-1 Orr (OVl. 37·S, 2 811CM11an
CFV), 34·11'>; 3. Zanelll (OV). 32-9'1•.
SP-1 Pfeiff« IFV), 29·3'1•, 1 Farias
(OV), 27·101*; 3. Lefebvre tFVl, 27·~.
OT-I Pfeiffer (IOV), 94· IO'">, 2 F11rln
IOVI, 91·1, 3 8unnev tFV), 61· lO''J
ldlwn llS, WtftmlMter 12
lOC>-1 Andre tE l, 13 17, 7 Tocl'lklk (WI
13..S, 3 Corv IE), 13.42
20C>-I Davidson IEI. 276. 1 Toucl'llut
tWI. 27.7, 3 F>ugh IE >. 27.11
<IOC>-1 Lund (El. 1'03.1, 2 Morris tE 1.
1'(13.96, l MOrata CEI, l.10.2S •
I00-1 ltlcl'lol (El, 2.2.,9, 7 81elel0 (El
1301, l Kocll IE I, 233.22
1,600-1 Neoon fE). S3'02, 2 FeMtr
IE ), s.o, 3 •noerson CEI. HI 64
J,100--1 ltlcl'lol IE), 11.333, 1 Nadon
IE ), 12 19 6, J JOhnr.on (Wl, 12 36 6
110LH-I Aa ronr.on (EJ, 17 31, 2
Kuun•r <El. 11.34, 3. Mant•Plil (W). II 11
lOOLH-1 A1ronl0fl (El, !IQ I, 2
Kunner IE). SO S, 3, !Mnlaoeci (W) SJ 73
400 relay-! Edlr.on, SI 7
1,600 rtlav-1 EdlM>n, • 19 I
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
(;t.ASStFIEO O<FICE HOURS
r~a Satv!U M F !OOAM ~30 PM
'iotu•dar II 00 AM t l IO "'-'
Bu-. Coun1., M f
CHECK YOUR AO
TH~ P:IRIT DAY • ,..., o • .,, ,tto' ,., "*' •()" ..,...,. •
• •"'Cl eU vt •«1 HO•••t' "'
., f)Plt •Y •UOf"\ 00 Ol'(V' ~'f' ,, •. .,,,.,. •f'l'u' ad l t t ea o.r• ~ 00 ""'·~ 00 ""' OUOllNU . . ' ... "'' ... .,
•"" (f\e4'• t OV' ·~ 0. '" ftMM)(1 •"~' ~,..M .,.,. IQ .. , 5'11
TPrf' (J9 ,1-1 P1tt1t •'"CtO'' ""O t1at>IM¥ 10, •11, '" D' ,. .,. .a.,.,,,,.,,,.I\,
lt\1 Mr\ j, I /'t'l.t .. ()It I t\tlf:>"\lt)tf
•.•t eD1 'O' U I r "1\I 1)f lftt U:~•ft
., ..
Y '"'C PW
•on \Clfl"'llrl
<lilt ..... ~""' ..... \ \GC' ltY fl ! ·• '9 (l,t •O•~t) bY It._. •"I)'
fT· 'y ('. ,~ t t. IY' • 0-" .... ,. ' '"•
... ..,, '"' ~\# '""
........ ft ....... .
.
• 1"1 •• ,.,.., .... IW')' l.lt I) ""', ... ~ lO
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<ot" l\ ••d •' ,, f "• .,no•·IS
O•l•l"lt• ,.. ....(JI,,. • '"' ~'' "~ <;\I\ 4' !I 4"'• •f!e\f•~•rt•#t 41 . , ..... .. , .... _ ......... -... , .... '"'' •
f.
~ Cla111f led'• a great place
to advertl1e your
home bu1lne11.
let u. ""' y ..
Sell y •• ,,.,.,.,,
Cel ClulllW,
642-5671
for Information
& surprlsf ngly
low cost.
UCUIU IEACll $335,000
Tuciced away for prlvllCY yet a
drama11c coaatllne & ntte light
view! 3 BR, 3 BA, large kitchen,
1011 of brick, cuatom w.t bar a
ape.
H.>-1 Johnloft <•l. 4·t;°t ~-(El.
4 I ; J. OdtaO U! I, 6·6.
LJ-1. Octloe (I), 14••1 t .JOflm1on 1£),
1•·6, 3 St¥1tla (Wl. 14· 1
T .J-1 JoMtOtl IE), )1•4; I. Tvltr If),
>0--1,) Odloa t•>. 2'-1. SP-1 ., .... ((), i2·2, 2 Galole (WI
7t l, l l{raut (El, 26· 10.
OT-I Oomtnlc fEI. '7·•. 2 Hunntt !El. to I, ) Ocilloa IE>, 7S·4.
MllrlN leo, M~ ... di V
100-1 KltmOkt (Ml, 12 I, 2. GOid CH8),
13 1, ) Klu l""r (M), IU
20C>-l Klem4*e (Ml. 210, l Rish (Ml.
27 6, ) Flllll (Ma), ttJ
40C>-1 L"k'° tM), I 06 S, 2 Smlftl (H8), l-OS 3,) Meoneu CM), 106 I
900--1 •o0ertMH"1 (M), UH, 2 8onel
lHll, 2:3U, J Torrtt (H8), 2:4$J
1,600-1. McNabb (M), 6'04 5. i. Alva re1
IHBl. 6!0S.f, 3. JacobMlll (M), '12.•
J,20C>-I MeNebb CM), 13 03 4. 2
Alverer' (HI), 13 lS.2, ,_ Jacoor.on (M )
13 21.
IOOLH-1 ltllll (Ml, 16 I. 2 Slml IM I
IU , l Kln\llffr IMl.'lU
lOOLH-1 ltlsh (Ml, .. 1, 1 Bonnet IM I,
S.H,) MaYMW (H8). St I
.00 re1av-1 Marina, S? 3
1,600 ralav-1 Marina , •·ta 9
~J-1 Cola IMl. 4-t . 2 Greoantc <M l.
4·6, 3 Pert1 IMI, 4·4
U-1 K1wano (M), lS-4, 1 Greoanlc
!Ml. IS·Oll'J, 3 Collman (M ), 1'·•
T J-1 Coleman (M), ll· 1, 2 Gr191n1C
IM), 31· 11, 3 Kewano (Ml. 31·1
SP-1 Neumalller (H8), 19·1, 2 Giii
(Ml. 1t·41,j,; l $1ml (M). 26·3''-
0T-I Giii (Ml. f0·3, 2. Ntumelsltt
(H8>. 7S-IO, 3 Pith (H8 l. 64·9
SIA Vl•W LEAOUI
NewpWt Hirt.er IDS, Ceslll MeM It
100-1 •1tteM V (NH), 1)0, 1 LOllll
ICM), 13 0, 3 JC>Ml (NH), U 1
no-1 HanM>n (NHJ, 2t I. 2 Ev•M
(NH ), 1t6; l . lt10l>Cll'(NH I, 29.4
44(>-I Henson (NH), 1.01 7, 1 ltal>Olll
(NH ), 1·01,9, 3 F>andO (NH), I~ a
*-1 ltt•nev (NH). 2 . .0.0, 2 Aneltrton
CNH), 2:A1.0
Mlle-I (lie) AllOll'tOll (NH) end Dudtev
INHI, 6 00 3. 3 Kr Hal (NH), 6'00 3
• 2·mlt.-I (lit I ltt'nev CNH I a no KrHaJ
<NH), 1U7 •, J Oudltv tNH). 12.32
llOLl+-1 Allltlav (NH), 16.0, 7 Ptten
(NH). 17.2; 3 ElllOI (CM), 17 6
llOLH-1. AllleHv (NH), •9.61 7 Ell101
ICM), SI 7, Sullivan (NH), S10
440 retev-1 N•woort Harbor. S4 •
Mlle reiav-1 Newoorl H1r1>0r . '22 6 HJ-1 H1riten CNHI 4·10, 2 WHl'lburn
(NH ) 4·10
LJ-1 lteoo (CM), 14·9 -,, 2 Evan\
(NH I, 14·9, J Hunttt (NHI, l•·I ....
T J-1. F>rk:e (NH). JO 11., 1 Hunter
CNHI. 29· 101'1; 3 F'ettrl tNH). 11 11 SF'-1 HllH (CM). 21·10, 2 Even• (NII)
27-11/'J; 3. YW tNH). 26•10
OT-I v .. (NH), 90-7, 1 Prk1 (NH).
66· I 3 WllllemMH'I CCM ), 62·9
8•t1Mda ... Slldclebldr St
100-1. Grant (E), 11.S, 2 •~In' ISi 11 7
3 Wetotn (El. 11 8
110-t. Gonl IE >. 26.6, 2 O'Dell <SI.
279, 3 Walden <El, 29.7
440-1. O'Oall (S), I-OS, 1 Tnch IE I
t.09.7. 3 Rann (E), t·OU.
llC>-1 ltemoa !SI. 2:39 2, 1 Mlcl'lelr.on
IEI, HU, 3. COOll (E ), U9.9
~1. ·-m. ~ 3, l ~vklf• CE) S.S6.0, 3 WHver CE ). 6..200
?·mlle-1 •-vldel (El. 12 7S 7. 2
~evna (SI, 13:446, l. Ortl1 (El. 13561.
llOLH-1. Holland (S), 16.3; 1. Hert CE!.
16 I, 3 Convl (El, 11 S
llOLH-1 Te.ell CE). SU , 2 Hart IE1
SS 3, l Heelllv <SI. ~ 7
440 ra1av-1 E•••ncl•. S6 4 Mite retav-1 SadelltOacll 4-?9 I
HJ-I. S.roufllr (E), S-1, 1 Mites IEI.
S·O. 3 Gre~m ( E), S·O
LJ-1 Holleno IS). 15·6'1'J. 2. 0 '0•11 (S),
IS·4, 3. Fell lE I. 14· 11
T J-1 HoM1nd !SI. 36 7, 1 Feil IE I
J1·1 >. 3 0111 ISi JO-J
SP-I Goooman IEI 30--5-, 1 lt'a ISi
17·4 3 Laira IS) ?S 10
OT-1 Wooo ISi 127·3. 2 Gooomen
IEI 90-4, 3 Llnoner <SJ. 69· 10
WICldl>41dlle I 01, LatlUNI llMdl 2S
100-1 Grllltn (WI. 12 19, 1 Bro...,n
t L8). 11 •S, J Ouono (WI, 11 S6
20C>-I Smltl'I (WI 1712, 7 Wll~en' CWI
18 96, 3 Horon (W) 2t 97
400-1 S~tzer <WI 1-<M.3, 2 Wlltlam\
IW), 1-0. 43, ) HanMll (LBI. 1:04 47
tc»-1 Smltll (W), n.U, 2. .. rnell
(La l, U• 4; ) I( ~tfMfl !L1 )1 2.42 IMO-I. Slrew (W), UZ. 1. 8arne11
11.111_!'33; l W Pet~ ILBI. NO. ).~1 W "'-terMll (Lal. 12 20, 1 K
Ptltrten (Lal ll 11. 3 Weltet .. rd IWI,
IU• llOLH-1 Grlllen (W), I ... 2 Duont
IW), 17.S, 3 HanMn (WI, 171
l:JOLH-1. Slreuo (W), SI 2, 1 OUOllO
lW), SI I, 3, Shlrl1er (WI, S2 4.
400 rll•V--1 WoodQrld98, SH.
I,'°° rlltv-1 Woodbl'ldlle 07.0 HJ-I HanWI (W), 4·t , 2 KrouM IWJ. •• LJ-1 HanMn (W), 1'•S''> 2 Wll.on
IW), 1'·5'·•· ) Lene IL.I), U·•
T J-1 Crene (WI. 30--6. 2 Wit'°" (WI
7' 0, l MahOMY lW), 11·9. SP-I. Zllko tWl, 21·~, 2 lllOmPwn
(WI, 25·4'Jo. 3. Han.an (LI), 74·21'>
OT-I 8orblrll (W), 13-9112, 2
0 Ca tlaoh•n (Liil, 7'-10, 3 Zllko IW), 7' I
SOVTH CO.ST Ll•GU•
1"""9 IQ. illft Oen*"" 24
100-1 LH (ti 13 2. 2 0wtfl• tSCJ, 13 4
WHver (ti, 13 6
200-1 LM (ti, 111, 2 Holll Ill 1• 1 l
Gar>11Ml (SC), 19 7 <IOC>-1 COlamAn (t), SI 7, 2 Horrw <SCI
1 03 7, l Brock (I) 1'06 S
800--1 Wrlolll (I), 12S 1, 2 Romero
CSCI, 2.JU, J F>racl100 Ct) 1Je9
1,~1 Franko! (I), S 42 6, 2 AndtfM>n
CSCl. •-01 6. 3 Larll8f' tSCJ, 6 11 6
3,200-1 Wrl9111 Ill. 11 42 9, 2 Scl'luiltr
411, 12230. 3 Anderton ISC), IBIO
1001..H-I Tl Orl•llA Cl), ISi. 2 Johnlon
(I). 14 / 3 Martin (SC), II 9
JOOLH-1 Horner (SC) 41 S. 7 HOl'I Ill so 6. J Owen• (SCI s Is 400 rllav-1 lrvlna, S7 0
1,600 , ... .,_..., 1r ... 1r1e 4 1't
HJ-I Ptollllarl (I) •·• 1 WrlOl'lt (II. 4 6
Ferrell CSCI, • •
lJ-1 Were Cit. 14 7, 1 Tl Orlaoe 111
14·S, 3 Oden (I), 13·9
T J-1 l l Orlega fll, 31·S 2 JOl'lnlOn
111 l1·2, l . ware (I), 19 s'..,
SP-1 00en (I), 32·4 '>, 1 lt Orl8118 Ill
1t 3. 3 81u.-ISCJ, 26·1
OT-I Tt Ortega (IJ, 113·4. 2 Koeller
Ill 111·2, l OOan 111. 96·3
Min'' '°"""'"*" <•t Allentel
S.Cand .. ~ Slntlla• MlkHI Pttnlor• (Sweotn) .,., •nc1re1
Clle•nokov lltun te), 7·S, 7·6, Tim Wl1• wn us I def Glenn MKnll>all ICenaOt) 6 I
6 2. OevlO Pelt (US I O.f Peut Anneco"• cu s ), 7 ' 6·• Brien THcner IVs I .,..
Tim Mayotte IU S ) 6·3, 6·1. 6-3. Kevin
Curren < U S I del John SeOrl tu S I. 1 6
1 6
WorMn's tourNment
tit Marca IW.fld, !<la.)
0u•"9f11M! Mntles
Chril Ev.,l LIOvd tU SI O«f K•lllv
ltlnelOI IU S.J 6· 1, 6-3 Ctevdla KOllM
Kllsc11 (West Germ•nv) Oef Gat>rlele
S1 t>allnl I Arlltflllne l 6·3. 6-2
UC lrvlne 7, a,......m Youne l
SlnllM
Men Son H1n11 <UCll O«f Blerens, 6·4.
6 3, GerDall I 8 YIJI Oef Kaotan 6·3, 6 l
Yetes <UCI Oel Hevwerel 3·6 6·3 7·6,
Derr IUCll oef Ch1no11 3-6 6·•, 6·0
llarllam 1 UCll Oef Murrev 6·2. 6·3
Downs tUCt1 Oel Bickmore, 6·1. 6·3
~
Yetes·Men Son Hfng (\JCll Oei Belrtns
Hevwero 4·6. 6· I, 1 S, Hernande1·Cedlo1n
IUCll O«f 81\Jt v Gerbell 6·1 6-3 6 0
Murrev·8tekrno<e C&YUI Clef Jantcln
Mver' 6·3 6·2
Orenee Coast 1, c~ 1
Slntlfl
Olson (OCC) Clef Vu, 6·0. 6 1. Alexender
IC I Clef Huueo. 6·3. 6 2. Slucitbaktr IOCCI
d•I Arnold 8111 6 0. 6 1, Berrie !OCCJ Oef
Merceoo 6 I 6 2 Lot1ef1er IOCCI Oei
L•O" 6 1 6 I LOCkwOOO COCCI Oef
F1t1n 6 1 6 o
0.-..
Olton Stvdtbet.er (OCCI def. \lu•AleJI·
1ndaf. 6 I • J; Hu•t9d·L.otttfltt <OCCI _, ~atdO·ir11,r1, •·1. 6·1; IUIM(...., (OCCI
o.t L.eon· o·GorlNll. H • .,." 111•• a di t, ,..,_ • ........
aoatl'Mn CU Oef. 'r"°'°, 6"'7, H ... ).
ltuUI <SI def *Ink ... 6· 1, 6·0, Motrl. (S) o.f. Mafllntl, 6·1, 6•2; HtAI\ (I) dtl
HHMll, 6 0, M , aok:. Il l 094. ,llher, 6•2,
'
•t SCllloell'\eM CS) dllf. Vu, 6-J, .. 2. ' o.utlet
IOJtman•H•ln t•t 41.t F,.._.
SOrlni>le, •-2. ' 1, 1t1 • .a·Morrtt ts> ...
Fl.r. VU, 6-2, 6* 1; ~M-00008 (S)
def Martlne1·H••Mft, "''· •·O SUNSCT UIAOU• ,_,.. ... v .... 11, " ......... a..c:tt 1 ........
C1ouano (fV) Off Arman4, t-J, def.
K1tlev, 6· 1, o.f $tewart, 6 4, MlllA (FV)
IOSI, l ·•. I·•· won, , ••• AkllOY CFV) lo•t.
I 6, 4 6, S·7 ~
M HHt11•w1·Klm tFVI def. Crlndall-
Qulnn, 6 l , IOll lo B"811·Cllant, J-t, Gii
01moman·Ho 6·l, It H•MMwa·Evw
IFV) won. 6·4, 6-l , 6-0, Nouven-L. .. (Fii)
won, 6·4, IO•t. 6·1, won, t·I
ldlMfl 14, M9r1M.
~ Mv.,t lM) IOll IO 0 flltool•, 2·6, Iott 10
Coon • •· '°'' to DYi. 1·6, Low. (M ) '°''· J·6 won. 6·3 toll 2·6, Cate• CMI Iott, 0-t,
, 6 3.
Olll*M
Alberlt Garrell (Ml def. Pfeff·Holmti,
6·2. Iott 10 Arno11-IC1mall, 1·6, lo•t lo G.
Moort·Oh ull ,-6, EmM-ltlctlarclton (-¥1
toll 4 6, 2·6. 3·6, 81vlf'l·Ko,uld (M) won,
• I IOst, , .•. won, 6-0
cemmunttv ule9e •emen
SOUTH co•ST ec>N,IHNC•
OraMt GMrt t. c;w,,... I
SlnlMI
H•mmon <Cl de'!. N-man, 6•4, 6-0,
Brodie COCCI def Laootn, 6·0, 6·0; Harri•
(OCCl def Mir"· 6·0, 6-0, Ouarteraro
(OCCl o.t Scnoo41"11. 6•0, •·h a.rmore
(OCC) de'I V1r1111, 6· 1, H. GOOdbodv
tOCCI dtf Ctttelo. 6·0. 6·0 ~
N•wrnen Quarterero COCC) dtf Ham·
mon·M.-''· 6·7, 6-0, 8rodl•·H1rrl• COCC)
def L1l>Ptfl·Scl'IOOll119, rO, ro. earmort
GoodbOOV IOCC) o.f Varoas·CutalO, ' 1,
6·2
NHL
C"'1N"B•LLCON,8•1NCI
Sftl'tWle OMMeft w I. T "" Of< GA
v·E'drnonton SS 16 7 117 C20 ,,,
•·CalOarv 3' )I 9 IS ,,. 30I
•·Winnipeg 26 '6 7 5' 2'1 ~
i Vancouver 12 '3 13 !7 vs 327 l(Ns 73 .. • S4 111 ..
NarmOMtten
.t ClllCallO 3' )2 • .. l'3 ).U
.t·Mln....011 37 33 9 13 m >02
.<·SI Louls l6 lJ ' " 2'• 213
•·Toronto 2S " 7 S7 -J25
Detroit 16 S6 6 Ja 15' -WALES C0N'•lt8NCI
~•lrl<lt OMUeft
• Ptollacittonle SI ~ 4 10. J26 ns
• Wlllunglon so 6 104 )QI 263
• NY lllandll's 3' ,. 11 .. JU 12• NY lttnotfl )6 37 s n m 267
Plm1>ur1111 )J 37 • ,, >05 m
N•w Jerltv 'l7 " J S1 191 3'0 Aclaml OM'*1
v·Ovtl>tC 0 ll s 91 321 1'1
.c-Mol'lrtal 3' J2 7 IS l'l• 114
~ Bo•lon 37 JO 11 IS J06 m
Herttoro 31 l6 ' '° m ,..
8utfel0 36 )6 • ,. 290 2'$
·~•·ncnael c>lavott bef'tn
v~llnclleO Olvillon title Thur'Mllo .,., Scent
8 0•1on 4 Toronto 2
Wesl'llngton '· Herttord 7
T1111tflt'1 G-
MonlrH I •I 8uffl l0
EOmonlon at Calllery
IT'S HARD TO IEUEVE LR
WAS OllCE SO DREARY UllTl I
FOUND MY DREAM .._JUST
BY loonll •THE DAI Y
PILOT'S CLASSHOS.
..
· 11 Ce!.. •at ._. lt1t1l1 tt lhrt Crsu9'11 fl9llltr a..e 1,._. .. ~ M! Cl!~~
T• ~ ,,oo,mo 1~Wlll.~nw,.,.. ~Ano .... ~= TO pit 1111 MWAN>tl<IO L.-afNI Wihif-. iii
091l1M4t•Ha. • n~ .. ~~ ~;:.:....,'.lt.w.'1 e-•~211e ' ~rmnenow.,..,.. ._ .. n.111a blrm111otw{.,~ HUtNn~OJoflM • o.. 111 OliGt '-Gnf oo.t tit; conaC> eon. M PIM. 11¥ to pOOI fM.i ITAHI01HG lunftow CM. 14' 4uw WI 001rMa for ph -* l'fWI Ctl • HI .. I .. *-'°'*·.,. 2IA. M .. ,.. '100'('1'-· IW IO .. • ..... tunny MW llbd oondo In Ws.+tJ&.., Ma..e.&M l'9 .... "°°""'()Moll MWAMS co; MSoCic:e; ~In ...... ~ a~ ... t
cr-..._t1M1tno.Dws tl70°/mo.1M.~U. e/o !/tide 1M 11A •I,_, ::":4~o:;"'PGOI• hiN ilinr ...,,....,..,, j¥i CorNtolW...&lrMa TlnW mbt. blc, 111'-. NII...-• bit plul. Al>-iltJ .. _. MllO, ._ a1..-1 na;m 11 , °"*'_,,,,In.,,,. oom-· • fN9. '"'" ~:O _,,. llon ..-eYI°" w..._ "'° occ. c.M. a Mon ~ ~· tltl'9 a ... .,...
1Xou111n .. "'•'o'' 'IWdA"'='~ :r~ .... 11-4 •11m~ l4101mo. 1 • ....111 ,. =1.:moc::z =:::--=7":",-r. hOtfte w/llaml deob, t.o t ·1 --Lrg tlA 2\WA~wT*w, I Miii 16+ room w/.-t:L:a::r.t 1111 o o k • • W 11•.,1 'a ,._,. 1a. potentlal N-_c-~, • ._ + v..... ~arbor· "Ida-r.arn 1._ .. ,v •UN~ COM~• c.-pr, pool, a.nni., '""· nr :OOC, .,._. ,;;.; === , .. h.talend park ttt ,,;'w19w 117-7470-t · ....... _ ' '•a19 · ......, oomm. Avail June ... ~._ ... w/lotil of'* 1IOAM WM dbl -... doM to bdl. t 1f00/mo. "'*' air.:-e...ou1 1M11211t1144CI t/f, S7n 11 ..... Loma • • 1eooimo. fn..u:t7 ~
l ,IUOO, 71M017 =· ~ Comotea 21A1 .. w/frplO,g9rteM TILMOMT '42·1I03 M7' ~ iiV 2iA Up. Ht 00 ~ lmf IO-!!C'!!~-. ,,FF!!!F_!
HUGI dOllnii*ii NoP*ll0-2t'10 OUf~,pool.-. .... _... l'M>e ......... oondO Oto.. ..... IS2 ... 1IO f/1111 I PB ··--·-.._ .. ,.,._ if...-·---*". lclm\ a bao: St 1 ... CiAtiH APT. NO I s..1447 21drm 1 ......... ;Oo. PooUJ~tennl• w 10 : ...... '"'HU UN¥H'TI.'f' Ned ' ... • ...., :.-=-~-= " ... ""'"°" .r::r1~
":••c•. i1eoo1mo. ~· =i.. no pet•. UTIUTlli ,AIO. P06: laundry, w..-i o.i '400+12utll 2AMOM PAYflC>f'fl'HOfoe...... ............. z.~1:%'911111. ?t;",_:~~11. :_ ~ :..=_ 20• Ctl 1371 ~:'~2~ 1 peld. ti211mo.11M213 N ... wllii to QI, ~ be. i ONffi . Xi WWW of llOdcMnt. eornw of PIW'tt wok1no oon----------, __ ;..._ _______ _
Oel ~ 2'°· 11A· 1211 ~. • Newport Hit. aft 1bA. ClbhM, Hun•. furn, P'1tM Ilda on EMla6de Lntpw & lllCH, Corona d ltlone. profaHlonel WTllY ..
8'111-1114 :w=o'iea:,ulet • .,.,_ ·pool, no pee.. M71/mo, '380+ utfl, 722-ea2. C.M. ~"bOO Pf'.ic:llpllll o.1MwonNov.12th.llP-orowttl Potltloft. com-F/T11 .... fl't11.., A ,.. '°" w Md
LIDO ..•• : ... D 3 No~-· Ml-....... mo. Weint • HllOtlon of oreet 731 Tuetlft Aw M2-7861 ..... ,. ..,,, to ... " onty. ll(r 1eo-te12 p, 0. 3 "M . c •I I puw fwnlllettty ~ .... ... ...... I 11 '!"•. 8"'ft
""" : IA 28a, .....,.., IMng? We CM offlw any-1 2BA ' COM IPt '340 l21!t)I07-1111 M-ft or ant, -~ P"1 Md llten=-t, ~+ot ~ _ ~ ~· ~d'' airy, .21drm, pool.1_ cerport thlna from a M\ell llPt to ~ ~ ~ ~:;; + 11t'i:iaeo 171-412 ~ • IWPT -(114)815-HIO baMfltl. m-tOM. lll•lll Ot~ .,_ -·-T ~·T• . •vall MOO/mo. 22eo Cenyon • 4 bdtm houM. If Jock. · • (l..,.•Hlml1 ----••-~M~mo. Cell Dr. No pelt 133 IH3 Ina In CM, Ha, ot HI '°"'• "° peta, a.g. ~. tmte needed lo etv 114 41t! It. t.221100iJ ,,.,_ .......... IM:BiHAii5WW •~ think Of ue first tot that QUiii 1M 1 bll to bclh, nloe HA In M.-V•de fn..62t1 .. ...,.., ·=•/ '1m-f'ITC°""91r..._lrl ...... ~uoo:r"'lil:r:Ll.~aa~A =2--av.11-1.._,_ 2 a aldtm Cot· ohotce ot ~ IMnQ. CM peUo. ~,,, Udo. hie. ae yra1up 13so1mo -., ·., ...,.,..,_ --. WWllN
511. "° "*' t 1IOO/mo taM 14H·t7.tl/mo. TSLMGMT "42-1803 M25/morr,7to:: A~nowa.~54 lulw I ftu..YI NW Can Hll 1111.1111, ~pct pflof!e 1 ...,,.. ..... ...,..flt ~ own/bllt • w t\lut~.:rs !>den, Weetttde ii2e 21it 1'Ale.. 1M2 Of 7f(M)IOI "'mtg mr etv • IA conCiO h ' ~raonell 1y, e ttlcle nt. Wiii ,. .... Aod1 ..... CM.
L.ot8 tot._ iii() 4Jabr Apt"· 19 1200 elf, petto. No peel. SPACIOUS 31DftM 21A ~~CM.1375/mo;t Ill~ o:6bi!t<~:~~~~IT1~ 142072~~ Ught l*kpg. eicp, PHrd. 111.DfBJll ~trpAc dltlWlfW geio &
2!~d~~~,:,-=:: !wA~Ml~SO& :'·Y~t':"' ::u · 122•7142 Orpr!Wln ltllllllatlt ~c:':t&..~2-ec;,m ornceMAtupply , •• F~".':1~234 WholH•I• ,roduoe.
A.gent ;'9 at 13M191 '850/moS004 Fiiimore Dua hlat UM no~. '1111• Rental• Ill IHI f&DI ~rlencecl. energetic, SEC oamm.+ ....,... a ..
u-Condo NR HO""' 543-5478 °' ee1-osse .-... an 87M912 Of' 754-1792 en-io.... ~-• .-.i... 01101 II FIT DAYCARE MON-FRI. i.cter tor fMIW ecore. a. Q A!TAA'f' .,.,... ........... . ._ ""' 2 •--T _.. tor 1 yr old In my E/llde Coeet Ptu.a--. -.,Y rowtng !ngirl=wlna Fltm """''--ow, 117-tlM
Hoap 2ba 2'M>a on....... BR 1ba. .iry, lil*llOUI, Upetan Hr· 1 ea. encl IP.-a IPT •MOre • •aat• .,,,, CM hOme t o /i.,. to • 1600/mo • tien ..-. exper1i IOfd" ho--Tiiiiiiiliiiil-culdeHci pool/t-p•' clun, yard/petto. ;ar. No pett 1700/mo. 1,,.tobaeoh."42·2357 eA1lcllent•1101•1ed hllHtm,.,,...111 IH-"824~~;8..!~· EOE.752-o411. ·• retary/Computer Opet· mTIJB ... l1000,1tt '-~97e.7 .... • '615/mo.fl7&-41N 33421ChettamWf11, #C. 11~1ffT1•"'"'1t1 lnyournetQhbOmood ' ... ~. etor In 8uiwytng Dept, ....... • ~ .. =--::---'.:'""opn-z---,.-,.....,~ 21R 2ba t/het. Window Open Wkndt or by appt VERSAILLES CONDOS Mutt ba ba 2"1, bondet>le MOther with YOUllQ child, ..... AW'Tllf l!.xcellent typltt, llMIJi'C ~=!I!..
T1Abe, °':: .• ~':J?rno2bd :,oi~·~~ ~,/::· 2~89~ '::2:.m i:.'rm ............. F~!= (114)141 ... 11 11 ~~II :'~~ •: ~ ~ A!:n115 C:"':.~ ~~ailed~ =.:::.='er=
722-M40 Of IM0-7033 nu drPatoP1 Mt6 n pet celllnCie Mdoeed • VILLA BALBOA· Ne Shr 2br 1'~ba Cdn on lctl W•tern r 9en1t Olde In my Laguna NIQYel ,,. end WOtttlng condfUoM. bonut ~ CM Mm
Oowl front S8r 28e un-Ole 860-3d73, 549-4433. l725!m0. A1k fore:::. ~ 28R 2be, a~ Met-aet7e~ ~ut' llptef21P!~ (114) 1...... h<lf!le, M·F M pm. Must hnd Aetume to: ... tot twd __..... fUm l 1100/ 1 •-......... 13 ..._ 1111447 2&89 _,, "4 u ,. ' -.-. .... Mr. l'homM A. "'*'* GuuMteed tvty. C.M 1t!, ... + eec~2!:2::· 28R DVPL!X. cn.t...... ..,,. . 53M730 IT msge un .... , Person WlllnO to 6aem. Robert Beln, w-.m ,roat Getden Grol4. .... ,.. "="'...,.,.,....,.....,,~...,,._---New oarpeil, pelnt, dfepea, STUDIO APT. W/full llhc a , ..... IT 8hr 2tld condO on bCfl Nst'I co ..... ldW. In-Typing helpful. Stat11ng a Astoe. 1401 Quell It. aft 3 pm. EQ£.
OHT'H!MAcH4bd,2+gerageM&O.u..roo1 be."'" pd. 1450/mo, GATED VILLAGE COM-te0.gete,poo1,pr«.prot'. .....,Uon., fMIW product•. Ab08eiitt1Ad iv Ml.SA-Ntv.N7...ao73 N8.C&.92NO. a•,.--...,·
be, IWwfy unit, St250, ···--... M1"*3aftepm, MUNJTY. 2~ a 38r, 2 fern "478 mo + "'"· (71 4)6U-1 H4. FH TAMARAI Ooo•. cell, ,,._ -t .. m ,,.... , ___ ..., eva1104-01, 64&-1846. Ul9• .... I t a:::c rm ....... 1w~ 1w ...... ot .... ,.730 ...... r......... b...-fish blfd• etc W111comecS1 -·-·-ltM 1 + 1 +patio, *PC)f1, V'Ne u . --..... PURE wxuAY. Q;," ...,_ ............ -T· -· Ref1 end reu. rat•. ~t tYS*t • WOid """ '1'!'!'11~1'!'~11!'!~~~ U~~ flat get• lnol, otheru vU500. FM ;su;;:; 2£ 2L @nd onR SPA In meeter -..=:· 8hr lmmec. hom9Y 3br CM laftltant CdM r•. 780-9148 ptOC. •11&> ::· "WOid * iid/-~· now S:C:O
provided oth::': ~~ TILDDT 111-UM Bele, eer t7U wane to Dining room. wood~ hM,nu~·~g;1i.wn OnertultJ 2HI p .... •--• · g:·~,. ~~ Nwpt F::' .. ":::.~ ~~ apply In
53M191 Agt ,_ *EM!ltde 1er ,,.. CtJ)1 bCh 957-111eneo-1113 t>umlllQ flreplaoe, micro-MN. ............. ~ r 1-'./ · Ing. for exi>erd ~eat· peteOnonty.
Upetaltl lndpbc3BR2ba. 1 Adult 1535. Credli mTIUll'INllT =~·~=P~'t :~wg,,,:rohn~&-27r.' v::JT~~E18;.::ITAL UalalttradM 1111 PHOTOCOPY/COUNTER ter. Type 50-40 wpfft. Won-Thurt-.tpm.
frplo. 112 bllc to bdl. ;,r. cMctt req'd. 831·2242 QUl!T R. ESOAT LIVING 15 mlnut• to 8o. c;:. ..... l N'I;: ..._.. ........... comptiny, ~ MW ............. s!:!C:.ods~~· pt9f, Hra. &-5, .... bene. Po.-AEU8EH'I ~ 11200/ .,..1111 ....... .._.__,....,= ..... eg 1 ....,.,.....,..,.., •~-t1on ,,, _ __..__t ..,_,filaza ltloncouldgopeimeuent. 1&41W.8Ynftower,S.A. . mo . *'*"' rw II .._ .. _.., ·-·.... Plaza, JU91 wt Of Nt!w-'"* "47 /mo. 28A 2be. --. .,,,.,__, growth, Needed. Unhei>9Y'? Qt.. .,.. .., to 11000/mo+ Con Met 5&l-83IO 83, 64&-7171 .. 1.1111 ...-Court yWd *'-d ~~ & SOU1h of San 784-o241 7arn te1.011SO great potentlel, CHh U1 a call at· bene EOE 762-0481 tect 00 ---.~.=l::::i~--
V1Ll.A IAL.80A-Lg 2/bd+ EASTSIOE ~Apt. :::=:·d~n=yrd W3~EAVE ShrM/~~hOme pvlbA, ~1t!:5ar~ 142-1111 Pn 11i1111P11 lllllllHT "T a PIT 11em-7pm.
den, 3rd fl Condo OOMr1 01ntng dlhw9hr pool .. -. , yd .-.., ' t CM · FU l TM · Min • Y"f ~ Own 14/Hr to ttwt. Comer of vu, S131SO/mo, 5*1749. carport. Quiet a' MCUre :;-s;b,.Ai>ertmenll 831-6439 By~ only. f:·_,50:;M'1~-;5 ...., Tt ll!li)!H Jun 1eu~~=i= M~u~~11nd •II tooll, own-~· mMt warner&FelNW,S.A.3 ·eaR. 2ba, WESTCLIFF, ~~ ~ 1f::; f:, E. ...-you'l'9ownpt1vtltepetlo La Cit9fttt lifl The ~ hM~W°ror ;Th• Orsnge County Wt101enl• Pr~• & lethet. 557 ::0, ~~=-
large yWd, flrepfeoe,,,.. · • ...-aourm.. IUtcMl'I XCttYe mr Qy WWW TO.t 10K/up, nocredlW Aegfater 21m-11em, l 557-1358 lll8Tlllm Ill ·
cwpet, frld9 , 11275, •Oulet&Speolou9• "'NtlwdoYetanc.rpet torentnMtOCMl'llnSan FIH!'_F!!!.!.!~•~ DenleonAuoc!873-7311 wkdya&wlcendt,16/hr + Clerk T~ Mu.t ba FIT aorne eicp. pretd 1n °"Y PG8lt well.,,,,.,... 752-1983or144-t!>.14 2Br 1ba, bale 9# d N. no "'LMge wallt-l{l ~ ~ Clem 981--0341 or ........................ you,.. gee allowance. ()ppty. tor n-···· ~ AP,,, Mtllntenenoe M hr ..-Ytothoneet, out1D01nG -wMiiMNiiMww-pett MOO/m0 &4&.2832 ...-Qated eowt.ct prllllQ · looklng For-Sel«:ted -...~.I.I. Dll advancement. Xlnt ben-curate, mature, ~om· TSL MGMT 142•1803 tndMdutiAaec .-Wotta "' ..... IT with ltorage .... ~ e.... • .. ,. your need• • meuured AXVn!iMilUON iifu s eflt•. N.ed depend car, pWl<>nate, 5 dfl/ 2211./l'lr femout bHoh , ...
GATED VILLAGE COM-•FREECA8LE TV. Lg 1Br ... oompatlblllty. 281·5m TREASURY BONDS . Int, good drMllQ reoord. wk, perm poe, 64&-1831 t.IC c tllUfent. Counter. prep'
MUNITY. 2 l 3 Bdrma. 2 & 28r Grdn Apta. Pool All UTILITIES INCLUDED ltat:r. ...... ..,_ WILL TRADE FOR REAL 751-4155 before 11em P/T ..... ... HANI .-. ,,_,..,, 4N-MIO 'A8a. 1fS00..1IOO eq ft Of 1625-M25. 710 W 18th 3BR 2BA VIiiage Cf_. 9U ••.. S 7 ~M LUXURY G 1 & 2 8edr0001 condo edJ to pool new tn;;n;;nt prOf :thQIC E TATE. eo-1 108 LIU AIUTI Mutt haYe good penon• Tune up«nog a btllk• ,.._,~ FIT *1 or
SPA"',,,....;, :.i-:: 3SR. Hibl., frptc, 2 '*. FurnlfhlngilAvellable ~11100/mo.'Bob, c:leen,angllF:iOemotcer'. illUt.MMnb Tired Of R.E. e.oom.. lty/~¥0lce.An.moo.t experience. IUS'Ylflop, ~~ "'J:;·
Dining room, wood-r.,. ~~ ~::!; 80"Y· No pet• 556-1200/W 432-9511/H Need~ to IM, tong loan Rep. R.E. uc. f9Cl'd. ~~ ='1a~ue goOd ~ l oood NB pr.; ~·
bumlnQ flrec>lece. micro-IM&-2252 d ' LA QUINTA HERMOSA term. uftlmate find. ~ti lt2I IBM Set-up for you In the WI' · • pay, 0 Vil I • ·
W8\le tM#t, Prtm• pa11o. aye 18211 Partilkle Ln, HB II.lac........ 1br/1be .,. ... Balboa ne.d • TralnlllQ. LA PA2. .... 11 •• ns TUNE 1550 o.d Ntiwpor1 -... _,EN8__,,....,..l....,OCK~=Dt,,....,..AneHO""""~
ELEGANT LIVING only 38R28AX4gw/patlonr Ml·M41 Pen. beet. 848....,181/D ........ ,. MORTGAGE, Chuck fOt comm'I window end 81,CMfl31-l14e •:i:.~m, 2.pm-10pm.
15 mlnut• to So. Co. SC Ptzaladufta Pff'd M75 h txn 27M Grace, 875-e133 aft 7. Per90nlllb:ed Reeumet & (714)77o-eoe7 floor oover1nQ contreictot LJtl 1111 •· conteet Torn
Plue, )ult Htt of mo. M0-2635, &45-1812 NR HU,NT. HARBOUR: . t. x-Young ExecutJYe couple, letlett. 8eme dey ..-V1oe Plfel.lll ..alJll In N.B Light ~al or Rllc:f\, 752.oMS. ~ ~h of 1475 1Br Moblle hOme. = ~ ~ qu:75°'; decorated, 1500/mo In ...,oh Of 2tld, houae In avail. RESUME WORKS State 0ua1tne'd. exp. pt9f. lkllll. heavy phonel, 16 Poett~~ ......,. .. I DllH 24~RANGE AVE BftlM, no pete. Mature c1ep,' No peta. 536-sos1 Open Sat 10-3pm, 309'A N. L.aQuna, NB, or COM, 111·19" (714) e&&-7859 I*' hr. Jeselc:e 873-0780 10 Join MM. a ~ A nsturat food,.....,_
831•5439 By ei>Pt only Adlt•blv~~~ Ntlw-1r11, IMM only, COM, e7M'78/850-43N. Mal I ftUl BIS wtt~ ~ ~ the now eccepllnl 8"4I·
LataAaa llii port IUWlllYIWll LHl1 HR 1111111 ftr Int •"1t1l/Dnt1l SlM U•llllllT/1.1. NEWSUZUKlmotorcar. ~'°": :n! ~ lllll 111 IPTI 1 l 28r luxury Ap1• In 14 2741 --·· n·-Entry leY9I rront office... Expar. In Milo .... Of .... • CONDO 2Gdnn 26ath 1Br & 28r trig range Plant. Poole tennl• CDM-F/n-amkr , P rv -·--• ~.no9 Ltte t pin ...,..bec*grOUncl. p/tlme ....,..., Al/If/If'/ et McArthur v'111age 18Undry,po0t,ca(por,. "lo waterfelle pond•IGMfM Jm/be, w/lcllc prlv, 1425 2114 ca;;. c.U. 8"9' FOlll> ADS With expended dullel. ~ wtcltrJ.· Cormier &m.1111. 28"3 226 ! 17th It. C.M .
MIO/mo. 854-9475 ' pett f660 & 'seso1m0 cooldng l heating peld. Incl utll, 873-5332· garage for rent. MO/mo, N.B . .,. ... Par1 time. SO mo t~ ttert . Roc:kfteld. Lake Forest. Mil llT IHI• =~~ ldJ~ 931w.19th St. Ml--0492 From &an Diego Frwy, Muter BR/be, pvt entr. In 566-2144 lfl 6pm. AR£ fRE£ E Wt:"daye, IM2..e&a7 Mr. Stuart. 4&1-1100 Call tor apl)Offttl'Mftt. ---· _ _ __ north on Beech to n!Qe CdM hm. Khch prlv. w . Storage Only. Single Ye •endl. 873-3403 77()..7001. -...
N Vi : IL"' arr W/YllW McFadden. wHt on Chriltlan ptef. $400+ 12 garage. ott 17th St. CM. c I ...... ..,. ___ A_V_OH ____ 18 NOW HtNNG kw ..
cer geio, yard, S1650/mo. , ...... 11ll1p,,nt Mcfadden. 1"65 f1unt-utlNtlee. 844 80e6 646-5137 call aft 11sm 3 : CltduJ/Offlff S4t1 For bWyofftoe. Must be HAS SALES OPENINGS poeltlont • !epeiotally E¥91497~5123 ~lllllJ re•11•r•• lngton Vllleige Ln. MMter BR/be. pvt entr. In lM 1 car gar . E'C.M. Ml .... 11 l /P Ml IPl ILDI depend~•,.;./!::,•.~ •NOW• ==t'!w.:::!:
AiU'tllftb .... t111 Pllfflt Hl-1111 c~;:'M h':4 K~2 SE I*' mo. Tve11 now. lmmed. ()penlng. Exper In =· ~ '**"'· 4&1-1531 lotet ........ 2100 w .
l ••1-t111 lnlat 2144 an P' · -+ Storage only 640-4111 A.IP, ftllng. typfng, 10 key, Ce11 KJm 71 .... /••• -OoMll1front, Ne. 4/1.A/4, Iii••• "-,. tr uUlltlee. W..eos5 FOUND: Black leather date entry on computer. 8uppty _,. 4/5 from 12 to 5 pm . ... ,.W; '" .......... NOWlEASINQ N/CMlgfum,ref.lllt,lndry ....... }742 ::.-:J. C':-ro =.,~fy Non-amk~mfg.oo.Appty lllUTll•ITl11NT· Mutt =-·5~=~ 81&-1702 uu • • •UUAll llllT* pMQ, empfoyed adult. D STHiii 875-9188 John :tA~~'F.t ?Jar;( AY9, Aesponeib4e lndlvldual tor ••Pr (Crulalng /r90lng DPITiT", "iF:rnfipiftoatt;;;Mi;;~:;;;:·-;·;;~;jii:
••Yrty 18r 1Ba unfum. 4 All UTIL TIES PAID 1275 lnct.utll. M5-0248 Storage Spacea A"911able · 1 Mew d.} fut <fllOed N.S. PR agen-Prevloue ..... expet. able 1ft our T_,.,, and
'*"to lelboa Fun Zone Compare befOf'9 you,..,,, Brand new spertment1 Na ru nllhed CM room De Anu 8ay91d• vu1aoe FOUND F/Sh•P mix llafTUW. r:y ood with phonel. 15 helpful. Exctt opport, pct eo.teMeM81orea..~
on bay. View. Clean,.... H9wty deccw•ted GU9tom l<Mally located In lrvlne. .,poo[ 1325/mo. Call 300 E. COMt Hwy, N.I . puc>py, brn, Rocheeter, Property Mgmt Co look-WPM+. Word ptCCIHlllQ oo. bene. Cell 8ill Heier In petlOn .. Tummy thu(.
1&26/mo 173-1e43. deelgn f~tur.. pool, 1 a 2 Bedroom noor plane. after 5pm 548-3823 873-1331 Mon.-Frf. Mpm IMM519, CM. Ing for bright ~le w/IBM a plus. 72CM'>M 1 •t3-4455. W• M•lne ,_, 270 I!. 8rtleci, CM.
•ITIPI" .. * bbq, 00\ll' d getege, IUf• POOi & Sp&. Pvt BR/be In ruxury moblle ceaMtW LOST Obi yelOW headed penon to lwn & grow. UllPllllllT Produeta. TU4MI
Studio + ful kltc:fl, u1.. rounded with pluth lend-hm In H 9 pane IJCl'OM · Parrot, wry tame, Hatt>« Start M FfT reoeptronlst Pt1one WOttt. data entty, NURSERY SALES RIJQM f /T Incl~· ltO¥e. Yrty or acaplng. No pell. Wellctng dlltance to trom beech 'Mature LI. Salt/lat a Hemllton fS60.0282 and rental paraon. Room venetyot dutlee. Send,. Need energetic paraon ..2L.... ..... ~ ' / F 1Bdtm i 28dnn Fumlltled for edvencernent. aume to· The WOf1tout w/..t 00. "*' 1 'I',.._ ,_ ............ ..., __,....,..., mo. • 315 WES'T WILSON *Shopping tmplyd gentleman lulw Pl•tJ/laJt LOST SIAMESE CAT TSL MGMT IM2-1803 Cent PO lo 9037 9lCP. FrT ttarttnG~ NI a.rt 711 ml& TILIMllT 11...... • .... _1111 * Theetree prefrd. Lii• cooking. 2717 3rd & Oft.. HB, Fr1dfll, ............ Bcti C. 92~ · 11200/mo, pd ~~ ... -* Retteurentl 1 335/mo . + dep. 989-21~. _ .. _-.... __ . ____ _ 8:::-:~ !:;..~ llfl 1• l /W. * PartiafTennle Courte ~584" ev/wkndt. lllll&L llfTI loel youllQ fleet, 0'9Y & S=g~l~hA: Buyer me.ta ...... -with WI ~tr;'~::::=. ' For Country Out). Top
pell, IHmkre. e7~25e3 Pool. beem oelfliY:e. new Se I e 0 t e d Un It t A4lepon ptof M lhr Shor• Nwpt 8c:h M Hoag Hoepl-white, l'lMr 45th St NB, 11 a el~ matter . . •ffec:llve CIHtlfled ad 7441 w a~ e t C a I I c.ltu ... LI BB =·,:.-'.:·pet• .,.81:_ w/Cethedrel c.lllllQI. ~~1~ :;'1•~J5/mo + '" !!n 1~r '!;!~rent Sat, IM2-1898. )uat call 2-M71. IM2-N71 LLOYD'S NUASERY (71.t ~
113. W:lltln rn. b:re. 64&-5137/M0-<>130 . NOW TAKING Rm w/l)eth + l'rouN u.. Tom l ... agt IM2•1803 If.
MWc:.tpt,t750,r9',avall Euttlde 28r ,,.. crpt• RESERVATIONS FOR Bchtrnt hm Ill Capo bet\ ••Ian•/ ct Int now, 831-5092. garage 17s0. No pate MAY OCCUPANCY. S500 • MC. Pr.t prof 2'1H
28A 1BA c1oee to beech. 850-5143or e..t5-MM llf •ta .. ..,.,. n/1mkr1tra1t. Reflr~'d. ;13Ul528squareF-.t l!!!!!!!!•~lliiiii
AefrlO. laundry, frplc E11t1lde TwnhH 2Br LllW.... 1141 117"-7885 EYe 493-59 2 1817 WESTCllFF · -.n..1 ,.__ p=-P-'-~ teoo!mo. 875-8599 1~8e. frplc, S775. 1M5 -Room In H.B. hOme 1295/ Nwpt Bch 541-5032 Agt M!!l'!ld!t lites .,..,. .,..,, ~ -
28f 1b& front 9')t SIOO lrvlne AV9, H 72().9422 •JUI,.. Wlftl• mo, Ind. utll. Conven. to BAYFRONT B 00 Babwttter tor wonilng FE ~r. u;: I Old 'l.aWMUe l~-·x"rlflllio!~N-EEDS ..... _WORK __ I
yT1y, tr-Pie. D/W. 433 Int.. E/llde 1BR cott , frplc, 1Br 1Be wlrull kltch, merkat/bNCh. "3-9925 EXECUTIVE sJrrES $2,40 Mr day moth.a Mature woman Wood, chain 1~uo·1. Tm..... Int/Ext, cellnga. Nfln ceb.
S. Sat. Only. 10:00-12:00 «'Cl patlO, ~llC, no m;n.t"' ~;:.;;. Room to rent nr Npt Hgtl, 1 1.35' & UP IM2-48"". t'vt kWM lnfen11 & toddlers. ""•I Greg, 118 (2e) Y"f exp.,~
21A 2bA, patio, dbl ger. pell 1650+NC &45-723<4 1285+'.-wt I 100 NC. pvt Brighi NB otc Appr fS.43 That'• All you P•Y for 642-9488 u ,. ~ -v:;s: ~~: Devts P81intlng 7
1950/mo,nu cpt cfrpa FURN. Bachefor., 1395. I rt.... 2111 patlO, kite ptlv. "42-7978 i ll. lhWI'. Nw PCH & 3 llnee, 30 day minimum Cl'llldear• my E/llde C.M Jibs GUNS. 1t28U 0\'9f' l.wn Mein & Aototllltng, QUALITY at rw. prtoea.
paln'1•VluU40-7189 New cpl• & pslnl. lftl! Wak•Up&S..Theao..,.n Poetotftc..fS.4&-2947 SERlnvthelCE home.LOVINQQRAN[). COii. For eppt ce ll Sprlnlllerlnttall,Repelr.lntlext.RMl&tat•·deen
Qu/etec pd. 2195 Miner 111drm:° 3 blkl lo baec:h, Room tor rent $300. MA CARE. IM5-fS.407 MeGUNS or 831-0858 Fr .. &tlmat• 54&-eoea up,carpet1. ~ .. c ·~Ill• #2 no pet1. &4&-5282 Utlll pd. MGS/mo. Pert 982-0289. Hunt. Be.en CdM dlx SultH. A.IC, FIT DAYCARE MON-FRI EXPERT JAPANESE Ref'e. Fr .. Ila!. HT-Oel1 ler~ Studio w/tull · futnlehed. 175-8522 am~ pkg, utllt & Janitor. tor 1 yr Old In my E/llde lad~
lllt . Brtt• & c:tletry. *111mlll ... * I I / .. It 2711 211 5ECetHwy875-G900 DIRECTORY CMhometr111ep/reflreq. tlllfflll'IACMMU.,""t•t"'§'ll'f,~ .. ~trt~m l•~:':i.M~r,:C-· lle~~!!'--Utllelnd 1625· ,.. 1Neatfleld ... • tt DESK SPACE 1150/mo ........ 2 •. • ... 2-73"'" en 5. Ou c M /NB ......... ·--. .. _ --11•1M1 Refrlg dlehwather & t1cwe .....,._., -'" mp"'"' · · M-ett _,...__ "2-4101 •-• r p•-y llllTilllTI Incl. NO PETS 5-.tMe55 Ullll llAll Garden o'9 41 patio.bey CALL TOOAYll area. Jim Whyte, 542-72C>e ,.. ... 17 -·T-·-
3/bd 2/bA. gar w/d new -91111 • vu Gd pettclng. "42-5010 &II Fii Liii SPRl~JPECIAL. ~"-•GEN HOME REPAIRS iiUOdt w;J" bf1d(wori(, TEACHERS PAID ctec«. etKm9r., 714'A s~:,i:e~i:~ :~ 280RM &~~7~~ Wkly rent .... low rat• E.xctuet.. Corp Pwt In Y04Jf ~traoor~1Comm Paint Drywall Car try concrete Comp patloe. CONTRACTOR It~
C>rc:Nd, n.-p9ti, 11125, c:tlltdren. Netf, pane. Heet ~o P9tt 54Mlss I 135 & Up/Wiiiy. Colof 1rv1ne. Brend new omo. Service onctory e>.ycere 240-2572 .ic G.ry M5-527r;TL 15 Y"' °'* ~ Fr" ..ttrnet• 8'&-4519
546-2525· Open paid No pett TV. m8'd ..-Vloe, ,,,.. Bldg In prettlgloul omo. Repreeentett.. **HANDYMAN** BRICKWORK. Smell lobt PaJlfhil
Sundmy 11em-4pm. 38drm 2 beth . 1795 1BR CONDO. 40ft on BAY oorr ... heated pool & Peri 2000-7SOO Sq. Ft. 142-Ull elt. IOI Newport, Cotti M.a. FXRTRIUO INTtAiOAS
31R/21A fplc,andecll. 28dnn 2 beth 1730 1450 eq ft. Ba~ Or. 1tep1 to OOMn. Kitch'• Avail May 15th. Corner Of Irvine. Ref"I 876-3175 HANGING/STRIPPING
Indy 2 cw gar, refrg nr 2Bdrm 1'1< beth 1710 S2000/mo yrty. 9151 avall. 9115 N. Cout Hwy, Murphy & Corporate BLOCK, BRICK a CON· VISA-MC 173-1612
bct1 l 127517M5" 398 W. WlllOn 831-5583 -• 1U .at. 1111 Laguna BMcfl, 494-5294 Perk. Bldg t60nage avail. ltM ·~ "-II,.....!• • Hendeome allowance for CRETE. Vf!fY oompetltlve AHOYS WALLCOVERING llllU Ml.111 LRG 1 BDRM, leundry, 2421 E. 18tl\ St., Nwp1 IUUll llTIL ten111t 1mpnnt1. Contact EXqUi911e XCOUttlCa & llcencecl. 45-1804 lnltallatlon a Aemov91
2er 1a. ... lftttMl. View of pool, no pete 1625/Me + Hg11. (TrQPIO Apt't). Wkly rental• now avall. Ter ... et MS..3115 epreyed or remo.,.. Ory· Conclret P tloe & Ortwe Int PalntlllQ. 548--4013 beectl l ~-Refl req S300 dep IM2-1401 Cetl 9arn-Spm. &42-7842 1129.50 wk a up. 2274 wall Reptilre. fS.47-7901 Irena Pine 145-98M Dell• IHil•J GI ~ i.
Shown by appt 1 1050 mO Lrg 1bf 7~ Shallrnat, •WI IATI* Nwpt Blvd. CM 64&-7445 ~~Of~~~ ::.';y': c:~ REBLOWN OR PAINTED .... u UI. -Lt AXOLINd . UOVINd 0::.11 P~l~~'l DEP=8~ 'o'itlTY
....., • .,. no pell U 15/mo. 8t~to~l1350Yrty. SU I Ill LINE rm, Zero•. tree pat1clng, Alto Int/Ext PelntlllQ we apecletln In Spring & Garage & Yard Clnupe STUCCO MASONRY-TILE WOflcmeNhiP 1o42..ea13 N1·1141 543-1837 or fS.42-3307 .. , Ml-Hll 3028 w. Peclftc Coeet Hwy S 1000/mo. Judy 780-15N UCl283597 831-9295 Detelled cteenlnO Calllor Jon IM&-81112 No Jot) to email All typee ·
""... N9wport !Jw:h. Retrlg rv •••• ,RMI Anllaact MNIOe now 548--0757 Heull!'Q_ MOYtllQ Clean-Fr .. •t lie 831-2345 ~·~ .. w,::.~i:=
H25/mo. E/t lde 2 BR
3:!':;. :~~epe~o • 125+ n agl, "° d41poe!t. Full 9ervtce Bultdlng. "fuaJtart 11( ._ ... llf o~ ~Deya Lr;;-~;~• J1!!iq cruy 830..0730
1BA. patio. pool. lndry bMch. Ywty 1 1100/mo. Comet Of W•tcll11 a lrvlne WhetPOOI ;;:: ;;;;;;: I Fr .... ref• 552-7729 Barry, -=== --------
room. Cloee lo ell. VlllaRentM17M9t2 ltatah tt lbrt 588SqFt.VIEWSUITE dryerS220·VlklnQMWing Cf8i Lld111Jlat •l-1M.... !lfl::-=M:l81~----
1•9 E. Bal.. 1714 Wiii Redecof•t• mach. 84-eO. "'36: Mc: atracttn ........ " CLEAN & EXPERT H ...... Tll-=
1Jp9ar, unfum a .. 1ba, TSL MGMT 2-1803 NR 9Mct'I & Udo ShOpa SBR 28X hie to lhr In Mi-1111 ~., S125. Pentex BI w1lsoN' SONS VICE Over 25)'W'IPoMenoe ~Ah .... -""-, que.tn-«nOklngnopett. 3/8R2bthdectldlw..,.. E.J CM S400 t 100:"41 99311v Rm Add Remodel Kite K.CTREESER LlcT-1 111.•28 730-1353 __ .....-_ .. _ ..... _.., __ _,__
S8501atl1Mt +S200NC. Nft1y remodeled xtre lg GeregellkeMWS11H lthl6de0f ,_·a~a_ .. l 7"f + llW'Pllfll&ll ' . .mag. Beth Tl~. #36f4871n1. Top.Trim "41movel Oual u ABCMOVJNQee ~INSClEARFromi15 A~ 4/20, lhown by 2bf 1be. 1845. 38r 1'A8e 614 ClubhouM 9"-68M r utl ... ..._...... 2M to 1300 1/ft. Prime An ttftart 30 yr1 exp. IMfS.1140 S«v lie/Int. fr .. Ml Oulelc & C.'9ful T13804t Fauc.tt, Dllpoeel, Heeter,
eippt, 71t-0240 1745 c.rpona w/llMage M/35-46. 4BR 2BA Hou•. N.8 toe. on Cout Hwy.. XMCR RENbiRINds. ROLLS Gen Cont llC10t'I 989--8283 or 53&-ee98 LO RA TES. 552-0410 fS.41-o907 P&R 122-eoee Ctltl 1111 814 pool, no pet1. IM2·5210 C.M. Pool, ape. 1325 • PutclllQ •rM. 756-0339 HOMES, COMMERCIAL Klt~tlen r~lllQ ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE ~-·
utll & Maid. 850-8311 OCEAN VIEWS full ..-Vloe call l<avtn, 873-2515/E spec1.i1et 552-0•28 Sod CIMn·upa Melnt IT&IYm llUJll
1111 lff "'=-tfl'-'-" Batboe Perlin"" 38r 2Ba. tutte. Newpoft Center. --Sprlnkler1, ate 880-410 lTllllfi ... •• PROP-MOV! IN COST wwc-~ ltepe to bct1. N/emkr 110 Newpoft Center Of At~t ttrlftita °' Co Original ERTY MGMT. 3~ Bkr tr. eon..,. fWe. 2BR IPllNllHI t300 • um. 813-1121 St• 200. &44-4492 J:;a;; Ar• Rl;);ire l ' IUW.L TIEii s1U: MoYwt Tntured AMERILAND 117-0M 1 :.r:.:187~~:~· htutlfulty taftdtc:epM, CdM 2 bdrnl hae. fplc, lllftt OFFIC£ tot rent ei>C>fO~ ~-:1.;~f~ RTC SmerCLll artWtl!J T=~51~e Uc r12~ 141-1427
TIL MGMT 842·1803 •P•GIOUI All utlllu.. IOC, prof M/F. ao.. to 180 lq. " Herb« end Spac:laltzlog In Comm I NEWWateflOueeStorage l-r=9:11C:C:S::z:r
patd. POOi, gar, no pet.. •· 11 .... ...... bet\ $450/mo. 171-UM 8eker, Cott• Meta. 1250 end Aeekf'I P::ree est Clean Upe•Tree Toppt:i;f lllYll-11111 1 ....... .,. 28drm 18eth MH SIM ., ti -COM Prof t'Mle n/rmltr momtl. Debbie, SM-3900 XdWft""9 x;; I logo 54Mt23 1383924 Sh~~Heu c.retul-Court~
MH/mo 1IA 18A, tll 301 Avocado IM2·9850 Oft ........ 111.... lhf 28r 2Ba uPeue· Lg .... .... ~n Serv. Brocf'lurea: IUll llllTlllTlll ~1 E 850-32 By hf./or ~ 148 3M6
tMAlt IM. lndf'Y nn, "' Apt, w/d & catp0f1, No 500 SQ, ,t on PCH TypeMttlftQ. GRAPHICS All typea of remodellng TreefTrlm/Cleenup oomp4 lull == bWJh' eflooe. IP.-S • Mon1h·to-month pet .. Nr ooeen. h25'+ 'A HAAeOR fW · N£WPORT. 720--9191 11c1<t&7899 l40-1598 g.,dening COf'l\Petlttw !!!!!!I.! 7S&-741 w. 18th It. 1175/mo. SIR 28A utile. A.vi 4111. Dy• H VI . pf1cet Chucle fl.42-2873 com;;:nio;;;x:a;; for jl\I; •LA
Tal MGMT &42·1803 townhouM. encl gar, '''o •v•ll•bl• 540--2880 EY9S 97548M N1.... ..I LIUI ROLLS CONSTRUCTION Owcten'nQ Ull hMot In care a lite hlkpg fOr Qo-Kwt1, 8tncJle C)t. MIC
11drm Apt wf belcony, lndry room. yard. • furmahtdl CM nr occ nd/Fem to lhf ..... I leen OrNt time to reflnence c:nfrsctli"g for Qu•l:ty Mow~n upe-tree the ekW1y (714lM3·20<f =--=--::--
pool HO peta "4Hlmo. 783 W. 191,, 81 unfumiahtd hN w/pool/JllC $3M+~ 2 Adtotnlna ..._NO eq CALL NOW. 142-4449 ~~prov:sr;~:a WOftc iet-2718/E Iv mtg Pala~ P/ll/fl9 :Dr , 0.-... ·4..._ 1187 '*'3111 TSL MGMT "42· 1803 • fitntU ctnttrl, ut 752-0713 Kwyn/Bev tt ... 301}' 3019 Harbor OLIS FlNN LANDSCAPE •~.,...--------
...... CONDO-Nice Ptlvle room 8MI 9' Baker ~o: --.. Plant~~ FINE NTIHG lly Rich· ilt MM C..t1 ... --t1nni1, tw1mm1ng · rrorn Fedoo) c .,. ~ 1ewn Hortlcult meJ fun ard Sinor l.l..m of hal>PY i!XPiRt ~ l~iiiii~Eiifiiil~r ......... NP•" de.a..,'.. ...,.,,_~d ,.,...,,." _!; ~· • t .. 7S I mo Ag t ~"9mod'MddtttoM EnG; I Pilat m ma.Int ,.... ""'~27 cuaf~-OC-2~ A~ ""·= Ill" " "'' v spa. w •" o .., ••. '27&. (119)728 tt85 or aoor..te &4 .. 4NO By NonN1n The 0oonnan T'hanll·YOUI 913-<t 114 . '
Sotrv. no pet.I 554-7277 aft 8pm, John (714)llO-SsM BUILD. ()A R!ftAJA 0. a "' 8'7·000R CH LAWN ilRVICf RAINBOW PAINTINO llltcNn Call 722..e113
Newpor1 8each No Fem to "" 28A N.8 *· 8tw ofo _,,.. 225 '" w• ltalrl docn. lodls, ~ Twtoe • month Ouallty II our polcy
l80 lrvtne Avenue ~tMll;e•''i:,ci:';.~ .~.lnCI pvt ofo, rcpt ra11nga.•' ~ l trim. lledrltal . S17 50to125 541-5722 S50 M4t JU' LIO .... ~L°rrftilrliAmD31'1i;-
C......' ... , "' .... styll lllb 0-. COlll'°'1111111 MJllll (9' llthl a..1i ·~ .utll. 19 .,..,00//I"/ "*"'· HartlOr #47 1oe Don M4-&t49 , .... B.111111 EXPERIENCt:D Gerctener A.A.A. PAINT lnV!Jtt 9unahlne ~ deenlnCI
dole .. htwtys. So. Coast "'11 ... Ofttr lllifttltes to tflt ... '*. ' Adtm9. CM S$44/mo bpert Cerpw;ter. "9ald'I au.tit WOrit ,,...., 10 yr'f N 8 .. CdM .,.. LOWEST pot91b4e prlot ltd Cell (714) ... e HIO ~.Gar..-a...-. NO P£TS rlt.ASC '!Mmll/no pets. CM 4bt Don DeVf9 &41-0290 Comm'I, 8mall/lalge tot>ti #42$$1~ ' "8·7.to 1 Quellty yard care Aon'• 10 Stec> kW>e. M2-3Ha Pi~Wir;da;;Qim*'iil" Newpor1811cll So h•. WIO., i-cuut. '310 tor 531-3226 John 77S-ti082 Qerdenlng 142-84M PM W1"dow ·
W • ..... • I' 1 •IT I I I., 1100 19th SttHI lit/let. Mary 540-7M8 ,_.t !Mt 17~ FUii AESIDICOMM'LllND H MTY'S landecape/&awrl DAN SAL YEA ,AINTNQ We alee>~ 72CM 101 ...... '" OCMtl Cell tMlfOf'e 1 pm. ...vto.. Qroea ..... A.-~:':'::·Ait.t'attonf yr'f. Do my own WOttt lie Melnt 9erv Wkly/mo'/ UC 1•25824 ........, ....
-.1 ... -..i1m11111 IQ.STD "tmmt ,,....,., to 111t iiW tot .. 141 3Mt C.b1Mt9-llMl-L~c #27to41 Al 14M121 1 tlfM. he ..t 241·1&40 Cati Anytime "'6-2017
2be l/lkte C.M. CM entr H yra ~ Jerr, "4i-OM7 -ELECTAICIA_N__ GL.ASO " letboa WlrldcM W'wf••
..... .,,....., be."'·ueo· ..... ,,::::.:~ -.~ UC •Wlot ~'foe,~~~ lnl/EJtt 30 yr'f 91116*. t7W1M .. W,mATametWAftl... "' _.1A4 fQ;m'_1"9'31: ~&,.._.. 546-526"3 .,.. Tony 1M~2~ r.ri &41-&21A ... ••• • I ;.\oertrnerts Fltoetww/Fmwnt,lmmed l'!&IB'•ac;:~J!t ... l"•·••wwwP!i~1ti>. requlre~Nenny~ NEWIAEPAIA Quell~ Ho HOMEOWH "EXPf.RTS ~ ..... _..caled
..... , ", ...... .a.' Ml~,..,"" ~"~:a:;e:t300/ ~-:.::.=Hwy :x~~1r c:.r:."~ '~=a:,:·~d· L:1:~~ ~ ~.:::..'="~=· 1::.:::;;~;;;~~~~~~~~;;~~~~ -----7 .. .... ....
/'
88 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT I Frtday, Apfll 4, 1986
OUlf FHll l Othe< duties, male college
Student, P/T, non-smkr
Dark SYll req'd 640-5335
CIACULA TE a PETITION
$50-S 100 a day, pd dally
646-0515/875-3389
ClmOLIFC. fleet /Mech Assemb
Entry IVt po1111on Call
661 -2774 tor app1
.tllnOlllAL PHHI
tOPM to 8AM Stanlng
salary $4 50 hr • bell
eflts 5 day wk Ott Sun-
day & Monday 496-5767
IHlfllELP Hard dirty work
PIT AMs 557-6020
LIHEIUE IOIELS
jAactioa1 6012
UIH lllT llCTlll Good t19ure, $25/hr
Call Lenny·s Studio Salon
675-0823 Corona del Mar
llHHll
For t9 new Delu>Ce C. M
CMdos Pref u p d cple
Salary $600/mo Rent s 1150 642-9666
Kesler An Galleries -In
historic Old Town 4062
Hamey St San Diego CA
1619)291 01 19 Auction
Preview Ap11 I 5 .
10 30am-4 OOpm Auc-
11on April 6 1986 1 pm
Presenting origlnel
graphic paintings lrom
•••
llHIH TlllflH :~~~:rn ar~~~~em~~~!~y~ SPECIAL GARAGE SAU IATE
colloctor·s art bronzes ONLY ~ /llne. CALL 642-5678. Career minded lndlvldual
needed tor entry level
position wtMarkeflng
Firm Learn the business
& grow with the company
Front office appearance
required W ill 1ra1n
S 1000tmo to st an Mr
Combs 171'4>458 I 10"'
an11ques oooks lnd11n
1ewe1ry plates & numer-Gueral 6102!Foaataia ous r111ated art & cr11tt ob-
1ect• TM ffJllow1ng ar1-E s 1 a t e s a I e Vall~ 6134
151 s ps1ny1ng<l & olners 1ao1es sl erea ant1Ques ENTIREHOUSEHOLO. •
w•ll bf'! presented Ted 8 a m 4 P m S a I & your ravorne treasures,
LARGE SELECTION OF 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~1
NEW & USED BMW'S• PORSCHE '74 914 2.0
LOii IUGI... new valvH & tires:
VOLUME SALES 22mpg, $5200 873-6785
Mecnanic1 11elper own
t00l1 MacGregor facr11s
1631 Placentia CM
PLlllH
EXPERIENCED ONL v
Call Monday lhru Friday
631 2345
P /T .llllTOlllll WOlll
Own transp 5 telephon"'
Sr Citizen accfltplatilA
Lag Bch area '495 5000
llnlll IURSUY
Needs CASHIER FIT "•P
pref. call tor appt
6•6-744 1
LL YOD'S NURSERY
RETAIL
Of>Graz1a Charles Fries Sun, 1640 Minorca Or . 88'45 cardinal, 968--7472
Ac Gorman Gerry Metz. CMesa Verde e •••. ltacL -1140 Maqorll' Reed Red Slrel-.a l M & 22 •
ion Robert Wagoner oroaa .e Ir 1 FOR Sa' Rr Size Wat8f'-
A S200 deposn s reQu•red MOVING SALE S111 Only bed Color ~e. Price
& •l'tundable or appoed 9-2 Cash only pleMe 300 Area HB. 2135923 183
''-' purchase Cash Visa 2331 2nd Avenue --
MC or c.hecl<s w/proper I For safe Sanyo Remote
1 Dis acceptable Cnecks Ct1t1 MtH 6124 Cori1rol Color TV Price
rAQuire guaranteed runds 3 FAMIL y S TORAGE 400 City HB 2135923183
trom bank Sale con-SA LE· SBI April 5 fniat 6144
•Jrted by Borders Aue-9am-2pm turn tools, ---!"--!"!""'~-----
ttOn C"nter San Diego misc. 660 W t 71h St CM I ESTATE SALE
SERVICE & LEASING
3670 N Chefry Ave
LONG BEACH
(No Cherry exlt-•05)
(71 4)131-lltO
Trade-Ina Welcome
OPEN SEVEN DAYS
'44 (fl 19)279-2070 Ouadse1 Hut 23
Faraihue 6014 3 flMILY YARD SALE.
SIMPLY THE BEST
Sales -Service -Leasing King bed. tw1n bed1, 2 din EUROPEAN DELIVERY
tables. 4 chairs ea . Glass 1S•O JAMBOREE AD
I Buy FUR.'TURE Sal Sun 911m 4pm Elec;
dryer. turn 5 lots ot ml~
95 7 8 I 33 964 Vtctorle 646 4961 LES
4 piece llv1ng room set. ANNUAL NEIGHBOR
never ''~· with wood HOOD SALES No of
\ 150 8 IA 962 .C254 Baller-Harbor to F111r
coffee t11ble, naugahyde NEWPORT BEACH
Vibrator chair, 2 velvet Adjacent to Faltlloo latand
c11nebactc chairs. Sim-Open 7 Oayt a Week
mons queen sleepe< sofa. 6-40-6-4«
misc lamps & house-----------
wants, ·79 OLDS Omega, IEPWTI llllPUI
orig ownr, low mlles DELIVERY DEPARTMENT
fl pr. L1v1ng rm Mii S250
r.nh• chair '>ltr>man 3
11t1lft<; S48 07 I I Na!lon{ll Lumber 5 Supply
,.. Inc IS g1owtng by leaP"i AMl>fl(,. 'lffltAr• rere1v•r
and bOvnds' To conllnuP w t 11n1 b f,. A J6L
WE'RE #l view Bar stools 11ereo.
ham gear. English Bullet,
din '81. SAT 9-5
ParkwOOd Apt 17612 l IREN'S BMW JORDAN AVE APT 3-A Mc " SAT /$UN 9-4 8~-0 196
to t>e tt I in customer ser Sl'"'llrAr~ H'I riend,ome vice ~ need energellc t11tlr.k c.ab•nel $100
ambitious peoplflt. Ill<• Srwnds Qreat a 1ea1
yov to jOin ovr tfltam steal 67S-85f>2
Consider th-
Oppor1un1tle<1
SAUi •8 noura pe< ~
OHlllHI
'40 h011r1 ~ wt1111k
PART TIME
ITOCI
llTIOIAL
LUllER
I SUPPLY CO.
f\1''1 '10"'1 Cht!fry WIOO•
sp,,ngs & m111tr•'1 $400
7f,() 138•
C.ha1r black ll'ather S 75
760 1384
Oftslr whits Black wrought
11on trim with bencri $60
160 1.)8.C
Poreche """"912'68, 111/blk,
mags, rbtt, MUST SELLI
$5900tobo '458-9312 PM
WE LUSE
ILLIUIES
llOIELS
larMrle~ar1 13861 Harb« Blvd, G G
&14-2800
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
or fa1e model. low mllea09 Cadlll~ In Or1n99
County1 S.. us today!
140-1100
2900 Harb«~.
COSTA MESA
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
JOt>O HAllllOR Ill VO
(0\TA M l\A 1,.s} 0010
M uru~l F u ~o s
e
n·our
uget
ona 1ne e
IR
a ln~t Household Bank
you can open an
Individual
Retirement Account fa st. .. by phone. No
driving, no waiting. Jt1st one phone call and
as little as $100 will start your IRA earning
IS-Mo. Account~ high, fully ~sured interest.
1
Cal 1 anytrme between
· 8.80% 9.33% 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. week-
""""'' R•" 11"""01 Yl#•J j days pl US Saturday.
lrn•h• "" ••• i. w11Mrowol You 've waited until
now to open your IRA ... you can't afford to wait .
any longe r in line. Call (800) 447 BANK .[FSCIQ ~
~r-dx>ld. Qaok -
n.11m t11a1 ••,.. mi11a.
Anaheim 1 2-7 • u1 Wc,tmtn,tcr ~9 ,_2 NI M1,o;,1on V1c10 .... ~6-RQ(l> Ploccntta 99 '·-l "Xl j
Nt-wp('lrt fkoch fO ,_Cl \67 Santa An:i C:tn\.im 'NR-~282 Jfuntm~~ Rc:ich %1 6 UQ _
AMERICAN AIRPORT
TRANSPORTATION
& LIMOUSINE
SERVICE, INC.
Buaet/Mlnlbua/ llmoutlnea
Stotlonwogona/Vont/ rN •
Door to Door S.l\llce
Prtvot• Ctiort•r• and roura
1-800-524-1 300
Aclvertiaing Art
Semce•
.I 8roc.h""ea/Cc.tolo9"• 0.•IVD
.I "°9.,./C....Ormt• L D Padroo ..
./ T,,._ .. tt1o9
GBAPlllCI NEWPORT
(714) 720-9191
OUR ANNUAL
Executive for Rent
Run a 8mall electronlca
firm and find there eten't
enough hour• In the d.yl
I am an lntetflgent, hand•
on, 8mall compeny ex-
ecutive wtth a bull~.
engtneerl"9 and oper-
ations background. Cen I
help on a part-time b .. ?
(114) 7111411
I COllClllTS I
"flO OV1 WHO'S IN 10WN
ll'OU 1rs roo &A 111
1 CENT SALE ·
PETUNIAS AND TOMA TOES
Pony Pak
Buy 1 at '-sf· pric• 99c ea.
and get 1 pok for
LANDSCAPE PLANTS
S'ICJAL
J GAL. l'LANTS
JuniJMf otd Gold
Italian Cypr.u
JuniJMf "ostrota
Pittospwum
Tobria
luy 1 at , ... pric• get 1 for
Flea
&
Brown
Dog
Tick
Control
SHlfUBS
All 1 AND
· S GALLON PLANTS
Mix and Match
Buy 2 at ,., prtc.
get 3rd plant of 1 ~
equal ot S..s "
vcdue for
spray for U !IOl/1 &
'1m I' 1nu~ls -
..
COLOR POT
1()'' Peot Pot
tuy 2 at reg
prQ $9.9. , c
.apt .... *' third one for
hcetlentSvmmw
Colon -4" ......
$1. 19 and get C luy 2 at , ... price'
third one for
IULIS 11 Auorted ·Mix & Match
/ Tub.oua "-9onioa -
Gladiolus • Dohilo -
Tigerllty -Conncn.
Buy 1 at reg. prK.. 1 Get one of equal or C
l.ss value for
HOUSE PLANTS
All GREEN PLANTS
All SIZES
• Buy 2 at , .. price
get 3rd plont of 1 equal °' lets C
value fot
·7tceut
Special
8uy 6 '°"9 -:::.:.of equal 1 C
value for
1 ·~ . ·~
HOURS: Mon-Fri 7 to 6
Sat 8:30 to 6. Sun 8:30 to 5
• Mtln'enanoe • ,,... Control
' Sale prices effec11ve through '4 -10-86.
All ltem1 tub)Kt to atodt on "1tcro ••••l•Y 6 LA•DICAPI CO.
2028 Newport Blvd 1•1 Bay S1 > Cos11 M ..... CA 6 ... 7Mt
...
..
"
-N-LAll'Oll
Market drops again
NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market took
another steep drop Friday ma carryover of selling
from the stormy last hour of Thursday's session.
WHAT AMEX Dio WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW VORK (AP) Apr-,•
AMEX LEADER S
GoLD Quon s
METAL S Quorr s
NEW YORK !APl A&K. • 7:"· Prw m 1,~ Tl ~fa ~ ~=i" ~
NYSE LEADE RS
Ta I OOtt tuz.s
from t.hz. Roblrt. Tolbcttdcz.~tSf'
&Lud\O in mrrml vc\lq the
world 9 f\nrz9t. hei~ t.1~
olwey~ thl pz,rfq.ci, 91n..
ond ol~ U'le2 lorgcist
91ilectu:n
-
Satw.IUJ t A,nJ I
ARJES (~ 2l·April 19): Bein& alone may be ncccuary for medi~lion, en~tenment Protect Pri\'.acy delve into teercta. define
mcarunas and a.ti nd of t uperfluous matenal. You're due to receive unusual offer. Be receptive. '
TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Scenario highliahts $pcctacular per·
fonnance. You c:ould win co.n~t and al~ hit fi~ciafjackpot. Emphasis on
love relationship, responsibility, deadhnes, unique achievement under pressure.
9EMINI (M•y 2 l·J~ne 20): Sta~dina in community is elevated, you pin presuae and could rue1vc promouon.
You'll be rid of burden, you'll pin
wider audience, many people will be
drawn to you with their problems. Libra
figuttt prominently. SYDNEY CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good
lunar aspect coincides with truel, o
education, dissemination of special MARR
aoformation. Green liatu is nasbed for···········-publishing project. ~ou'll learn by
teaebina. you'll make new stan and could fall madly in love.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): You'll be ultra-scnsihve to desires of others,
includin& family membera. Focus on intuition, pulse of public, populanty.
mystery and glamour. You'll be invited to gourmet dinner and could receive
unique honor.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept 22): Define terms, diversify, give attention to
public relations, locate necessary legal papen. Scenario also centers around
partnenhip, clash of ideas, permanent relationship, marriage. Geminj plays
role.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Details command attention, including fine
print. Be aware ofleue and license requirements. Spotlight on employment,
basic issues. health, diet, nutrition. Be ready to revise, review and remodel.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Emphasis on physical attraction, variety of
cxperienoes, change, travel, sensuality. Young person figures prominently,
asks questions which stimulate and challenge. Gemini. Virgo, Sagittarius dominate scenario.
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis on borne. family,
residence, lifestyle, unique conference which could result in profitable
enterprise. Be receptive, diplomatic, aware, alert, and know value of your
possessions. Taurus figures prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Relative who recently made m1sta~c
concerning basic values will now acknowledge error and make amends. Be
gracious, avoid sayina. .. , told you so." Many answers arc found behind scenes. Shon trip involves "mission."
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Focus on power, authority. correct timing
and j udgment and money. Relationship grows stronger, responsibilities
increase and you could hat financial jackpot. Cancer, Capncom figure
prominently.
P~ (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): You no longer arc "trapped." Cycle moves
up, judgment and intuition strike home. You aura.ct f~vorable attention,
command more money, reach wider audience. Love plays paramount role.
Aries, Libra are featured.
IF APRD.. 518 YOUR BIRTH.DAV you arc dynamic, inquisiti ve. capable
of ex pressing thoughts, ideas. feelings in articulate, cntcrtairung manner. You
arc creative, independent, an original thinker, an innovator, sensual,
romantic and stubborn. Gemini , Virgo, Sagittarius play important roles in
your life. Major domestic adjustment takes place this year -could include
actual change of residence or marital status. September and November will
prove memorable for you in l 986. You make important contact during April.
More hig h s chool boys
'innocent' than girls
Among high school seniors. more
boys than girls are innocent as yet of
the complete expenencc in the sex
department, according to University
of Colorado studies. Among students
surveyed, 3S percent of the girls and
5 7 percent of the boys were listed in
the virginity column.
That Strauss named Leva made
1cans for 24 ycan before he saw fit to
put rivets in them.
Q. Did we have ball point pens in
World War 11? .
A. Just then. One Lasalo Biro got
the patent in 1943.
Q. Wasn't Charlotte Bronte. who
wrote "Jane Eyre," a midget?
A. Too tall for midget status. She
was 4-foot-9.
Q. What's a "ha-ha"?
A. A fence built in a djtch so as not
to block the view.
Q. Has there ever been a "Junior''
an show business who attained the
fame as bis show business father.
A. Douglas Fairbanks Jr., maybe.
None other comes to mind.
Come Christmas, think of the
printing press when you hear "Hark!
Tbp. Herald Anaels Sing." The tune
was taken from a Mendelssohn
cantata in praise of the printina press.
PEOPLE
L.M .
Boin
No, sir, when I said there were I 0
million bricks io the Empire St.ate
Building, I didn't mean exactly, just
pretty close to.
Q. Belief in ghosts was common a
century ago. Does anybody stall
beljcve in them?
A. Many, many. But pollsters say
thcrc's a difference now. Ghosts of
yesteryear were frightful. Today's are
mostly friendly.
If the early naval students aboard
ship hadn't been assigned sleeping
quarters on the lower deck halfway
between the bow and the stem,
today's naval students wouldn't be
known as ''midshipmen "
The Las Vegas Hilton has three
times as many hotel rooms as has the
whole country of Burma.
L .M. Boyd 11 a 1yedlc•lfll
col•mlll1t.
Paths of glory still
lead to t he grave-
Reflectin' on some of the unut-
terably stupid things people will do to
try to let UllO the Guinness Book of
Records, my bartb thouP,its were
softened by the recosrution that
almost everyone yearns lo be nor
membered an one war, or another.
· "Fame is the spur, • wrote Milton.
ccboin1 Tacitus nearly two millenia
earlier. .. The desire of glory clings to
even the best men longer than any
other passion."
Men desire to leave their footprints
on the sands of time. not willing to
recognize that the tide comes itt,
sooner or later, and sweeps these
footsteps clear away.
A thousand yean from now. or ten
thousand -but a second in the
computations of eternity -even a
Newton or a Darwin will be recalled
dimly, if at all, assuming this fraaile
planet stiJJ contains sentient beings
with the gift of memory.
Far better, it Seems to me, to be
remembered for only a few ycan by
the living people one bu left behind,
as a loving ~nt, a aood neighbor,
an upright Cltizen.
There arc ~ficent buildings
with their donors name etched into
them, but these names become in-
creasi nily meaningless to the
thousands who walk in and out of
them in future generations.
If these men left behind them also
widows who wen: relieved that they
were gone, children who relished
their legacies above their loss, neigh-
bors and associates who sneered at
public eminence concealing private
S111n
Hanis
rapecity, or duplici1)', or coLd~
these monuments remain more of a mockery than a memorial
The love of fame may be "the last
infinnityof noble minds," but it iun
infirmity nonetheless. And it may be
a treacherous Soll u well; u Sit
Thomas Browne reminds us. history
recalls the name of the villain who
burned the Temple of Diana, but not
the one who built it
Some men, like Nero, would rather
live in infamy than be wholly for-
1otten -the most perverse ambition
of all. He is rtealled for murdering his
mother, among others, and for the
penecution of the Christians that
ended in the deaths of both St. Peter
and St. Paul.
Oettina into the record books, or
the history books, is the most mean-
inaless fate of all, where a Hitler or a
Stalin resides cheek to jowl with a
Uncoln or a Gandhi, and a St.
Bernard oestJes next to a Bluebeard.
It is only those whom we live
among that we rcaUy affect as a
penon, and our personal mflucnce
continues tbroue them. If we fail
them. all the buddings and mscrip-
tions in the world will not make up fOT
blemishes on our living presence.
Old buddies' 'fun'
turned to tragedy
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I
read the letter in your column about
fraternity hazing, I knew I had to
write. Hazing is a terrible thing. but it
is not confined strictly to fraternities.
Not long ago in our t;own, a.ft.er a
wild bachelor party for a young man
who was about to be married, the
buddies of the groom-to-be took him
to a bar for more drinks. They got
awfully drunk and decided to put the
groom m the trunk of a car and leave
him there for a whiJe. They parked the
car in a wooded area and drove off.
Nothing was said about who was
going to take him out or when. They
were all too cockeyed to think
rationally.
At about S a.m. one of the guys
remembered that his pal was in the
trunk so he.went to get him. When be
opened the trunk be found his buddy
~dead.
No one was prosecuted for this
murder because they were all great
friends. but the guy is just as dead
whether they meant to kill him or not
I hope you will find room for this in
your column. It may give other
pranksters something to think about
-SANT A MONICA, CALIF.
DEAR S. MONICk Wbt a lleart-
break.1•1 1&.ry. Tlllere are more to
matcll It, I am nre. '111e re.I trasedy
l1 dlat a ~ of py1 dJda't bow
wlllea to 1eop drtaklq. Moat of tllem,
I'm 1ue, aever ...._.. bve 1tartei.
Wlla I fla11lled read.lq yov letter
my flnt dloepu were .l tile bride. I
wOIHler ~" tbt J01Ull womaa coeJd
flacl It la Iller lleart to fof'llve Iller
sweedaurt's pals for wbt ~ dJcl.
Wbt a price lo pay for aomebody'1
Idea of a 1ood time. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 just
mo'(ed to town and have joined a
church that has "get-ac.quainted"
meetings for folks who arc new-
comcrsJ. as 1 am, or just plain lonely.
At my nrst meeting we were asked to
tum to the person next to us, say "I
A11
LAIDEIS
love you" and give him or her a long
embrace. This group was almost
equally divided between men and
women.
"Love," to me, is an important
word. It means deep devotion. How is
It possible to have such fceUn~ for a
stranier'? I believe, used m this
context, the word "love" loses all
meaning.
Furthermore, I don't wish to be
buged by someone I don't know. At
that get-together, a man with a beard
kissed me on the mouth. At first I was
shocked. Then I was furious. With all
the talk about AJDS it seems to me
this is a pretty risky practice.
Ma~ I hear from you, Ann? -NO
NAME IN PALO ALTO.
DEAR N.N.: I'm 1ettta1 a lot of
mall oa mu 1abjed -prtated a
11.milar letter reeatly. No a•dlority
wt .. wltom I dtecke4 11141 It 11 eve11
remotely pos1lble to set AIDS from
tluJq. Na laelll4et 1traqen . la dauci or people yoe now latima~
)y.
U yoe are ucomfor1able wt .. tile
"I love J"" bit,_., ,.,Udpat.e. I'm
certata. ltowever, Get~ prete11t
bat.erpret tile word .. Mn" ta tile
alvenal aaM &M aot tile penoul
ud latlmat.e mauer , .. pettelve.
1'ere'1 a flffermce becweea lovtq
oee'1 fellow llwm.au U41 betas la love.
• ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: My son
James says be is afraid to write to the
Phobia Society. What should I do? -
W.T .R. In Detroit
DEAR DETROIT: Find yoeneU a
llobby. I'm too btl1y to botlter wt ..
bUljOket. .
Music composers honor Bob Dylan
By dte A,.odate4 Preti
BEYERL Y HILLS -Singer
Bob Dylu received the Founders
Aw.rd from the American So-
ciety of Composers. Authors and
Publishers at a celebrity party that
blended a modem generatio~ of
entertainen with the cttabhsh-
mcnt.
The normally reclusive Dylan.
who arrived Wlth and sat beside Ellube._ Taylor throu&h much
of the evenina, played suitar a~d
.. aana for more than an hour wtth
l\ldie llavea1.
Dylan an ASCAP member
since 1963. was only the second to reoe1~e the Foundcn Award.
Stevie Wonder wa.• the first. in
1984.
Baby Frtqe
CHICAGO . 1c:qo Bean
player WlWam ""l"IM RefttPr-
ater" PcrTJ is a &thcr lfo-r a
ICQ>nd time. . .
Norie Shanta Perry, wei&h1n1
about 305 pounds less than her
defmaive taekk father, was born
e\abt weeks prematurely at
Evanston Hospital this wee~
J>cn'y, a 3()8..pound rooki~ l-?t
tcUOn. capt~ the nahon s
lrnqinall<>n whh has short )ard· ~touchdown rons for the Su~r
8oWt champions. They have
another dau,htc:r, Lall Vll, 3.
Bob O,laJI -=:..
BenefttalDC
PHILADELPHIA -Opera
sW lAdaM PHaNttJ bas
mier'Cd final rcbcanals for a
concert 11 the etty'1 sports arena
to benefit stucknts and hlah~t
winqcn ofh1s vo.ce compctiuon
for youna &infCB
'"II 1s Luciano's tntenubn to
brina youna people into our world
and he •• do•na that lhts Satur-
day," aid Lertll Mau.et. ..rho wd)
conduct ''The Verd1 Requtcm ..
Wllllam PaTJ
fcaturina Pavarotti and the com·
~t1tion wtnncn
The l&ahan tenor, wbo drew
I 8,000 lO the Spectrum a year l&O·
1s donauna bis time for the pcrfonn.n~ .. A Pavarom Sa.lute
to Youth." 1 nc Opera Compeny o~bestra and a @.votce chorus
wtll ftll out the cast
Teletbon eet
NASHVTLLE -Enienainm
•
MJclley OWey and Bill Altclenoa
will be hosu of the fifth annual
Anb.ritis Foundation Telethon
AP.ril 27, head mg a broadcast that
will include country, TV and
sports Stan..
Country stars Gary Morris,
LMiM Ma.altttU. lrlne Mu· mu. Marse SmJ.. and LaJTy
Gatlla and the Gatlm Bro,ben
will appear on the c1Jht-hour
telethon to be broadcast hve from
NuhviUe's Grand Ole ()pry
House.
Actor 8.-.ce Wdh of the TY
a.bow "Hill Street Blues" and
Dallas Cowboys quanerback DuaJ WMt.e also are scheduled
to appear.
Sinatra lauded
'"LOS~Sla
atn'• tint apptl! .... -11.,..h
syndicated television show
"Solid Oold" alJO indudes a
spoof of .. Old Blue Eyes" by
comic Joe Pl•ee••· a spokeswoman for the show ta)'I
Sinatra received a two-minute
sWMhtfa ovation durina tapina
with bolliaHiqer 0.... wa~
... Sinatra. who .., co-hOS1
with Wa.rwtck ant a duct with
ha of hit l\jt i978 releate, "You
and Me_" and perfonncd "Mack
the Knife'• u a IOlo.
COLLEcr WBA T'S DUE
Both vulnerable. South deal
NOrrB
+Q76
Q AK5
¢ K864 •J 104
WEST &\BT
• 1054
Q 106 4 2
¢QJ 5
•AQ7
••8 QJ987 3
¢A 7 8 •1a2
SOUTH
•AICJ 32 QQ
0 109!
•Kt88
The bidding:
South We.t North Ea.at
1 • P... 2 NT ru•
3 . PaH 3. Pu•
4 • Pua Pue Pu•
Opening lead: Queen of 0
On every hand there are a cer·
tain number of tricks that are due
declarer and the defenders. It is up
to each side to see that they get
their quota
North had a classic, aJthough
minimum, two no trump response
to his partner's one spade opening
bid. When South showed an unbal·
anced hand by introducing a new
s uit. North gave preference to his
partner's first suit and left the
final deci111on to his panner.
Against four spades West led the
queen of diamonds. When declarer
played low and the lady won the
trick, West could reckon on two d1·
amond tricks and a club The set·
t ing trick would have to be the
queen of clubs, for simple arlthme·
tic showed that East was unlikely
to have any high card except for
his marked ace of diamond~. Hqw
could West force his partner to
s hift to a club instead of trying for
a third diamond trick?
West realized that if he contin-
ued with the Jack of diamonds, d~
•'---.al .... '°"' otro...Oled -di b..
low ... ....... ...... ..t'OOie -·
I UHBISM
I I I I 12 I
CHAI LES
Go1E1
OIU
SHUIFF
clarer could cover with Lht king"';...
and East would not know he had io:-
sh1 ft to a club aft.er winning the ace. ~ or d1amond.<t. So declarer continued •
with 1t low diamond at trick two.
When Eut won the ace, the hanct:=·
was an open book Dedarer would.~
not have played a low diamond ,
from dummy at the fanst trl~k if he
held the Jack in the itult, so West
had to have that card. And if Wesl'w;
held the te n of diamonds as well, he.:·
would have continued with that ..
card at trick two. •
The only reason why West would:.
continue with a low diamond at th~ :
second trn:k because he wanted a. ...
!Shift With the ace·kmg of heatt.s in:
full vatw on the table. the only suit .•
West could want led was a club.' ..
East obliged. and West took both ... •
his club honors to sink the
ton tract .
Have you ~D nnnln• btto-i:
double trouble? Let Cllarl•·
Goren lleli> 700 find ~~ _ ••.r
throach the ma.a of DOUBLES.~
for l)f'naltle. aad for t.akeou~
For a copy of hi• "DOUBLES .. •
booklet. .end 11.85 to:
.. Gore11·Doablea," care of thl•
newepaper, P.O. Box 4426 Orlan-
do, Fla. 3280~26. Make cheelut
payable to "Newspaperboob."
• ~·
. .
I POCEH \· . I I r I .
I Z 0 R E f J ~! n • no .-nllll llWKtt dlpmn· . I I' I l J ~s.:;;:_,on:..:::!:
c.n-c:r..n pie '°' """* lil'ICI
I
OUVTOE lnocgeiningen -
~---,,-,.-.-,.-....., ....... ,-0 ~°'t,.':.'; ~~.:!:.. "::~
..... _.... _ ___, __ ..__ ...-. -----,..,.. ~ ,,_ -No l ........
• Pt 1NT NUM6(t£0 lllTU S IN
THESE }QyAt(S I' r. r r r 1
.. UNSCIAMll[ "eovr ll TIUS ~ TO GEi ANSW!t I I I I I I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROll
1 Gauer
S Moth« pigs
9 Actions
14 Hue ts Satanism
t6 C1rcumYenl
17 Time - -
haff
18 1492 vessel
19 Spltt apart
20 Freeze
21 NY resort
23 Reb\llld
25 Blue shade
26 MltceUany
27 Marquis. e.g.
29 Sort of· suff
32 Shed light
35 Bang
36 Par11y pref
37 Nickname 101
Henry
38 School group
39 Genuine
40 Samovars
41 BandOf'e's kin
42 Parliaments
43 Recent pref
44 01hello's foe
45 Spasm
46 Nasty ones
48 Longs
52 Rash
56 Authorize
57 Slow· muSfC
58 Nldus
59 Rio's bMCh
60 100 proof
6 1 "Kiss Me -
82 Nat as - -
63 f>9rmealOI
64 Timetabl9·
slang
65 Darn
DOWN
1 Slile
2 -de Leon
3 Peru peaks
' Caddy s
contents
5 Spanish lady
6 Sheeplike
7 Beverage
8 Put to deall'I
9 Less wordy
10 Spanisn city
11 Necklau
t2 Arcadia
13 Forward
2 1 Pine lru11
...
22 Commodities
24 Clste<ns
27 Greek
phUC*>pl'ler
28 Olm1nlah
30 Obsc.nlty
31 ~mp«s
32 Dodge
33 Swift animal
34 Purity
35 Garden peat
36 Fagot untl
38 Embr908
•2 Feast
44 .. -Detlgtlt"
45 Mede laoe
47 ~vebo<Sty
48 Hurrledneas
49 Marry without
content
50 Fasten egain
51 Endure
52 Extra thing
S3 Fr Can9dWt
name
54 Signs
SS Wood
59 Engine P&r1
/
,_.......-..-----
810 Or~ Cout DAILY PILOT/ Friday, Apt11 '4. 1988
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"looks like winter's gone into extra
innings."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"I can't accept a dog as a reference•"
PEANUTS
BUT U.'H" 5110L1LD I :
wH'r :AN'T I JUST
TAKE OFF WITHOLJT
SAYING ANVTHIN6 ~
GARFIELD
JON WILL KILL ME. IJ= HE FI NDS
OLJT { L£T RATS INTO TH£ HOLJ~E..
I LL LORf. THEM OUT WITH rnf
OLO"PIEO PIPER PLOY ~
._.,~ r-::-......... -~-~
TUMBLEWEEDS
__..
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
• •
• . ~
--~-1 -_, -i
z
"
"Don 't you recognize spring when you see
It, fathead?!"
DENNIS TliE MENACE
.
~· l
by Hank Ketcham
'ONE Of US IS 60NM AAVE TO LfARN HOW TO RfAD."
NO I AL..V,.\'r 5 ~EEL
GUil T'< ANr l
ALWAYS ASK
::> '
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
1 HIS MONlr< It-': CO/E:,...E~
~LACK FEA'fHEP GOES 1::,
TH&"ffil~E'S "ft)'( MAKERt
• H!:M YOUR INrJA/J CHIEF
POLL 15 VERY POPIJLAR!
QUIXO'flC QUAIL , I NAME YOU
IN171AN OF THE MONTH!
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
v
IT C..11.N l ~l)QT AN~H.11"'6
W.UV.. IT~ JV'J1 Pl,_.\~TIC. I
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
,
BLOOM COUNTY
MOON MULLINS
A~ 'NSl<SHT .Joe ...
WH~N r WA<; A YOUN<3 MAN
I HAD A Rf PtJT,A110N FOR HARD-
DRIVIN~ ,AMBITION. T":::-----.
by Ferd & T'Om Johnson
'THEY we~~ R/GH T·· l
SToPPEO ,AT NOTHING ...
.ANP IIM
STILL N~--
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
WHRf [)::)e8 &tE
WANT"· ~ LIPS 15
fALLOFF?'U
SHOE
™9<£'~ 50METMI~ ~OV ll'N'T SEE VER~ ~-~11 oFTEN-.A l..AW'<ER A0VB2ll~ING ON TV
JUDGE PARKER
"'5 I T0t..D 'IOU, I'M
EXPECT1N6 A PHONE CALL IW'f M INUTE
NOW FROM A MAN NAMED LARRY I
I'LL TALK TO HIM euT I'LL WANT MR
DRIVER TO LISTEN IN ON YOUR
Pt-40NE'
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY
I
CAN'T
J WA[OI.
HONtf
SAi()
THAT' ...
by Jeff MacNally
1
by Harold Le Dowe
SAM, HOW 00 YOU BY SOMElHNG VOUR WIFE TOLD ME,
KNOW "THAT I 'M TELLING HORACE' LYOIA SAID THAT SHE R:lU.OWEO
THE TRUTI-i,THAT I DIDN'T 'TOUR C,J!loR ANO WHEN Y0u GOT OJT,
FORCE MY WAY INTO DARLENE TOOK 'tOl.J eY THE HANO
DARLENE'S APARTMENT ANO LED 'tOl.J INlO THE 6UILOING!
AND ASSAULT HER? YOU WERE 06VIOUSLY SET UPI
\ '
by Tom Batiuk
~·5 £X){)R 04A~ 10
1EU. HER. ~A"f l.,W'Vt Bf£N
IHINKJNG . GO AHEAD ...
BREAK Ii 10 1-lER !
by Gary Trudeau
............................................. _.. ...... .._ ........... _. .......... __ ..-. __ .... __ '--"~------~~~-·-~~-
..
i 0r_,. CoMt OAJLV PILOT/frtdlil, Apft 4, 1MI Cl
BMW's 325 rema~rkable .for
~
smoother ride, eff icieiicy
~
For 1986 BMW's most compact
line, the 3-Serles, consists of three
slx-cytlnder models Instead of the
previous four-and six-cylinder
models.
Most slgnlflcantly, BMW's entry-
level model, the3181, has been
upgraded to a 325.
This means that Instead of the
former 1.8-llter four-cylinder en-
gine and front disc/rear drum
brakes, the least expensive BMW Is
now powered by the eta-concept
2. 7 liter, six-cylinder engine and
has disc brakes all around with an
antllock br aking system.
The new six-cylinder model wlll
be priced at very slightly more than
what the 3181 would have cost If
equipped with the 325's addltlonal
standard equipment: clearcoat ·
metalllc paint as a no-cost option,
BMW's new anti-theft stereo
radio/cassette player. a two-way
sunroof and the Active Check
Control vehlcle-monltorlng sys-
tem.
The change from four to six
cylinders transforms the entry-
levet BMW's performance from
peppy and efficient to brilliant,
turbine-smooth and almost as effi-
cient.
The 0-60 mph time, for Instance.
Is cut from 11.6 to just 8.9 seconds
(as reported by a leading au.to
magazine for the 1985 325e). And
yet the.325's EPA fuel-economy
ratings are only slightly less im-
pressive: 21 mpg city/ 28 mpg
highway with manual transmission,
down from 23/29 for the 318J.
This achievement is the result of
BMW's eta power concept, which
reduces engine friction and maxi-
mizes thermal efficiency In the
speed ranges where most driving is
done. The concept also gives high
torque at moderate engine speeds,
which means extra-quick response
to the accelerator -a i:iuallty often
missing In turbocharged engines.
Also new to the entry-level BM W
Is the advance Dlgltal Motor Elec-
tronics engln&-management sys-
tem. DME's computer system con-
trols the electronic multl-polnt fuel
Injection and full electronic Ignition
and Includes altitude compensa-
tion: the result is a perfect drlv-
eabllity under all conditions, maxi-
mum fuel efficiency and minimum
exhaust emissions.
Like all BMWs.~he new 325 has
four-wheel Independent
suspension. At the front,
Mac Pherson struts are combined
with unique sickle-shaped lower
arms; at the rear, semi-tralling
arms pivoted at 15 degrees provtde
predictable handling without the
compllcatlon of some rear
suspension systems. Where the
3181 had a front anti-roll bar. the
325 has antl-roff bars front and
rear.
Another chassis improvement is
the 325's four-wheel disc brakes,
which combine 10.2-inch ven-
tilated front discs with solid rear '
discs of the same diameter.
The 325's Interior continues
BMW's famlllar phllosophy: drtver-
oriented but practical and
(Pleue eee 825e KAllB/C2)
The 325ee la eqalDl)ed wttll all tbe ~tmatf for clrtYhlC eatlaaal..-.
The two-door 8llW lDcladee. 2. 7 lfter. m-eyllDcler .... e. 8"Cla.I
•P9rta napenalon, aporta aeata and 11-Teclmlc eteert.ac Wbeef.
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
-lllcpoW.
rodio~.
I 0 #2•9889
# •
C)
IN THE NATION
'86 VW GTI
' 'f'd '"'"'""'"'"''-w / 9r., clo!h -· and • .......
ditc ~oil ...
olloy .........
11'-
I 0 #0«909
'86 IMPULSE
looded. I 0
#0902960
'86 P'UP TRUCK
°""'~· rodiial-& -1.0 •1..-...
Factory Sticker
Your Price
You Save
$9465
$7999
$1466
Factory stic _er
Your Price
You Save
$9830
$8687
$1143
Factory
Your .Price
You Save
$12 ,001
10,499
$1502
Factory Sticker
Your Price
You Save
$6441
$4995
$1448
'12 D.teun 9210
U8ACK
11 tpd, *· AMlf'M etereo. -• orttr 21.000 1111. 014817 $3111
'MMazda QLC
Deluxe
4 epd, w. AM/FM 1'1-.
WlcaM. A ~ buy
'11JMT2t1 S3911-
THI c.r NI~ ln-
cludlftO 5 epd. AIC.
AM /FM 11ere o
w/cenette, 1pecl1I
wflMlt & more .O:SS71
110,111
'11 Honda
Clm1IOO
Auto, AM!n.e .-reo-.
• mud! mud! mote
•100K20ll
'3111
·eo Ptymouth
Chamf H/8
Au1o. A/C, AMlfM II-
-•S2UTT
'14 CheYJ
Corvette
AeO wl\Mther • ..,.o. AJC,
glMI IU/VOof, PM .-y... "*19 a CM11om .._..
Only D,000 ml I 1'8166
111,511
'11 CheYJ
Cltatton
Auto, 9lr oond, AM/FM
"9r'eq, gr'MI ITMIOOr·
i.tlol'I II 1CT'N54 1
13111
71 BMWl20I
• epd. AIC. AM/FM~ -. -oof. ou.IOftl ..._.. a '°"' mMM .. 73t7
\
I
Cl OtMge CoNt DAILY PILOT/ Friday, April•. 19"
325eNAME USERVEDFOR MOST LUXURIOUS COMPACT SEDAN •••
P'romCl
comfortable for famlly and Surwye In Europe have ahown some, durable Country Cloth or four-speed automatic tran~ deck 1pollef. sport• auepen9'on,
frlende. that the ayatem reduced routine leatherette upholatery 11 et an-mlaslon and tlmlted-allp dtfferen-llmlted-stlp differential, a sportier
Improves handling, backing up
the 325ee' aportler appearance
with llvefler on-!M-road behav-
ior. In part1co'1ar. the Servtce Inter-maintenance .0 percent on the dard. tlal. M-Technlc steering wheet and
aJ 1 dlcat typifies the average; yet If the car Is operat-This year the 325e name -The hlghllne, two-door 3-map reading llghta. All the VfltY extenaNe atandard
equipment of lut yMr't two-
door S25e oontlnuee too: alloy
wheels, etectrlc sunroof an,.d Win-
dows, central locklng On board
Computer, crulee contr°' and air
conditioning.
~M~ puts ':tectronlca to~ on Ing under unfavorable con-tormerty applied to both two-and Serles model -now called Under the akin of the 326ea, a
the owner's behalf. Ihe Sf ayatem dltlone, SI calla maintenance at four-door Mdana -la reteNed 325ee('s' for sport)-has been new M-Technlc au~alon
computer-tracks the way the car shorter Intervals. Either way, the "for a new luxury version of the made sportier, more atyllah and callbratlon by BM Motorsport
la ~ng used from day to day and owner benefits. four-door. yet even more luxurloua for 1986. Incorporates recalibrated
taUora the malntenanoe schedule Thl325 ls available as a two-Mec"anlcally, the 325e la ldent-New standard equipment In-springs, front and r-.r anti-roll
preclaefy to that use, lengthening door or four-door sedan. To lcal to the 325. But It adds a cludet a front apotler with lnte-bars and low-preuure ~as ahOCk
or shortening maintenance Inter-make entry Into the rear seat captivating array of luxury fea-grated fog lights, a discreet rear-absorbers. The new cal brat Ion
vala as appropriate. eqler, front seats automatically tu res tbat underscore the bullt-ln -------=-=-=-=-=-;;;;;;;-, move forward as the backrest Is luxury of this compact, high-
folded over. A choice of hand-performing BMW sedan. Some a magnon mlghtevenaeeltasa73511n
compact form.
' 1 Pl••• Its seats, for example, are
' upholstered In rich leather, avall-
t • out •f tM11• f able In four colors; the steering
P 0 n I a C • •·'·'· wheel and manual shift knob also 1' Ii 0\ are leather-covered. The rear
•• seat has adjustable head re-
straints and a fold-down center ~ armrest. The two-way sunroofls Solutions to your car problems from the Automobile Club of Southern California
• • ele<*lcally operated. Compiled by Anthony B. Barthel and Eleanor Yavaronc
V Optional In the 325e Is a new Q: I ha1·c• u 1976 Cht'''I' \(lltJ R1•11'11//1. I drt•w 1'11• tur 1hm11~1t u puddle• in u parAtnf( /111. and parAt•d the car 4 /1/1/e h11 la1er.
• ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE
FINANCING ON APPROVED
CREDIT AVAILABLE ON ALL
• FIEAOS
• SUNBIRDS
• FIREBIRDS
• GRAND PRIX
• BONNEVILLES
• PARISIENNE
• GRAND AM'S·
• 6000'5*
WE
SELL
EXCITEMENT!
a. magnon
PONTIAC
Fie1a
••1YL•Y
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa • Newport Beach
(714) 549-4300
NEW
1988
P'UP
#117024
premium sound system that In-I rmirnt!d 111 1he rur and drm·e 11 1h1· 1hor1 d""'"'' home u hen I upfl/wd tlw hrakes. I no11ud that 1he1 11ert' making
eludes a 4x20-watt power 1h11mpmx sound\. 111 I ha1·en •t dm·rn 1h1• "" 1u1u It hat cawe1 1h1s prob/11m unti Khat should he done·> -A.J . For C\as$lf\fd Ad
ACTION
Call
amplifier with equalizer custom-A: When your car went through the puddle. your brake linings evidently got wet. The rear brakes of your car arc drum
contoured to the car's acoustics, bra lo.es. which operate b) appl>m& pressure ~1a hralo.e
four high-frequency speakers ~hoes to a rommg drum. auacheJ tu the '-"heel. When A DAILY l'ILOT
AD·YISOl
642-5471 and four low-frequency speakers water got inside the drum(s). 1t caused the bralo.e linings to
arranged for optimal sound. The 325e also can be ordered with tha !>t"at incorrectl) against the drum v.alls. creaung a slipping
to nm diameter s11e there 1s also a nm width given. The
"'ldth of 1he tare rread should not be greater than that of
the rim as a rule Finally. there 1s an aspect ratio or tire
height. This d1mens1on 1s 81ven 1n a percentage, generally
75 Thi~ number 1nd1cates how high the sidewall of the tire
1<; 1n rela11on to the tread w1dlh. You should always
purt·ha~ 1he correct s11e and t) pc of mes for your car.
t--;:...::===========..!=====~=====:::;---I wh1(·h resulted 1n the sound you heard. By lightl) applying
lhe parking brake while dm mg after such .tn Ol.'.currence.
OUR AUTO
LOAN RATES
HAVE
SHRUNK.
We're uffcrm~ o,(1mc of our lowest rate-. 111 years. lo take
... Jdvantagc of them while they last. Come into any
conveniently located branch Or apply by phone and
we'll give you an an~wcr the next busmc-.-. day. Call
Mon.·Fn Ka m to 8 p.m., 1-(800) 551-3333.
m
#757022.
NEW
1988
I-MARK
•
you will find this sound will gti awa). Your car's problem
has probably al read) been allc' 1a1ed h~ the v.ater's evap-
orating while the car has been ~llllng If the prohlem per·
s1sts. take the car to a brake ~pec1dli\I w in~urc that ~ou r
brakes a re all right
Q: I ho11ght a cur /1\t1tlu11 uxu unti I am 11m1111n•d 1ltu1 I
cl11n '1 /1J..e the< olor I 111ult•n11111d 1hu11h,·r,• 11 u /u-. al/1m inx
ntl' IO n•111rn the c·ar •Hllun ..,] h111ir' 11 I c/i1111 /1J..1• II ( un '""" '
/(II'<' mt· 1he 1p('('1/1n 11/ 1m h lu"' -G S
A: The dealer 1~ not required h1 1:1" 10 take your car
bacl. as he will 1nrur a numher of C\penses in doing so
The dealer will ha"e 10 go through a lime comuming or·
deal to obtain a refund for h1\ tJ\l'~ Jnd licensing fees
Funhermore; he will hu<ve to sell }llur l'ar as a used model.
since 1t now has had a prev1ou' ov. ner Ir the dealer doe\.
in fact..1..dcc1de to take the car bJd he v.111 undoubtedl}
pass the expense of doing so on tu \llU 'iou ha~e s1gnt'd
several papers in the purchasing ot 11lur ca r 1n v. h1ch )OU
and the seller (dealer) agree 10 thi: term~ of the transac·
t1on . As long as the dealer II\ e' up to his legal end of the
contract, so m u\t \Ou
Q: I ha1·e the opp1•rt1111111 111 Jlllf< h1111· 11mw 14" ttr1•1f11r1111
Xj D1Klf(e Colt at a '''" r,•1111111<11>/1• pnu• 111111/d //11•1<' ttrt'1
lw all n!(ht for m1· rnr' -M .S
A: No. Your Coll h.ts 11· v.hcels v.h1r h are Jn inch
smaller than 1\ reQu1red for 14" 11re\ rhe commlml\ g1,en
.. inch .. measuremi:nt usi:d to dt'\l nhe lire~ rekr!> to the
height of the metal v.hecl the tire 1<; mounted on Thi~
measurement range\ from 12· 10 I fl normal!-.. In aJd1t1on
Q: I 11"1/... mr IW15 \111wn St•n1ru 111 ont' 11/ tlu 1e coin·
, •11<·mt1•d cur 11·111ft1•1. and 111ed a 1pru l'·on def(rea,i.. to dean
tilt' 1·11i.:11u• wmpurtmt•nJ E1•1•n thuuf(h I t.:o\'ered lht• 1gnit1on
11 111•111 und 'urh1m•tor "¢1 pla1111· the car K'Uultin ·1 Stan
aftc•r tlw 11·a1h I f?l'I a mtio. {al }purl... hetKeen the dwnbutor
unti //11' 1parJ.. p/11x 1, tre "hen the enf(tnt' tJ crankinl(.-and an
111 w11unul hcJ< J..f1re 11111 o/ 1h11 carh11re)11r Whal 1ho11/d I do
11m,·• • -J.F
.\: fhe sparlo. at the d1stnbu1or indicates t~at the ~r's
1gn111on system 1s producing high voltage. and the backfir·
mg 1nd1cates that the voltage 1s being delivered to the
\parlo. plugs. but in the wrong r:quence. causing a plug to
on:a"onally fire \lih1le its cylinder's intake valve is still
open Moisture has apparentl) made l\s wa)' into the en-
gine's d1stnbutor. where it's creating paths for the elcc·
1rtc1t) 10 tra,el to the wrong d1stnbutor post. and out to
the "'rong spari.. plug. Remove the distributor cap and
'-"lpc the in\1dc dn with a clean, lint-free cloth. or spray
the inside of tht' distributor and cap with a .. moisture
chasing" fluid
Q111•11111111 for 1/11\ t 11/11mn on a11111m11t1ve ma1111t•nance and
rcputr 1ho11/t1 h1• 11tidrt•ned to
f /If -tl fO Tl TOR
l11111m11htfe (/uh of S11111hern C ult/mmu
1 ,, 1/111 ne-.·lpupt•r
SUZUKI SAMURAI
8UZUKI
CORMIER
·'~
S.UZUKI
(714) 770-7001
23633 ROCKFIELD
LAKE FOREST
YOUR COMPLETE DEALER
PARTS • SERVICE • SALES
TM
)
-
8UZUKI
11 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK (714) 521-1110(213)121 ... 1
•
J
Orenge eo.t DAILY PILOTIFr'ldey,Aiwtl 4, 1tee CS
NI.IC ll)TIC(
NOTtc8 OP e.tJ ,.,:_4nd ••noeut 11'9 ..ClltiiOU9..,.... !!~ Coet1 t.MM. Celff. ckle1«1 by; en lndMdl* ,...,....... ULI IP..... tlfM of the.,__, OUbiOMlon ~ ITA~ .-an .IAMU WAU<D\
T. I NO. T·12111"°°' U.. ... -Of the NcMtoe ol TNltM't The to1owtng .,.,__.,. 1uMn 1.. Otlll'bfte. t668 Thie •a11 rnei1t w Ned
LOAN NO. MOeM lllOTtCI CW Ille It t101.201 II. dolr'll ~ea: MeM V•O. Of. , IUlt.e wtttt the County a.tll of Or· ~ bulllnem ... Thie bUillneM It oono-~ Onntl C... . (A ....... of -hfll
YOU AAI IN OUAUU .,...,.,...IALI Theb1011Q1ryunder'Nld TAAHSPAMHTOMAMS 11A, Colt• ...... Cellf. "199 County on '*'*Y NiiENOALltJtloeHOIH-~·QOtPOf'e&lon Delly Plat ..... n .. fQIC4toMt
UNOEA n~E Dl!!O 01' YOU AM 1H DUAULT DeedofTNlltMNlofcn ... OLAH STUDIO 10392 t2'2' 11, 1Ne l"ICTOAI 1401 Klno9 0evte Aptt4, 11, 1tM ....... NOl'ICI It Hl"UY TAUeT OAT&> 11/0llnt. UNDER A DUO Of TM>ll, eouted Ind ~ to the 8fW11om Dft¥e HUntlngton TIUI blntMM It oon· ,_,.. ...,.. ~ ~ CA TIW ~ ,... Mid ,......._ ~ -... ..._ .... UNt.a8 YOU TAKI NJ.DATEDAl'AIL17,1N1.lJN.undllltQMd 1 wrlhlnO.O-IMdl,CA92e'.4. dUCt«I by; HuebMd end ,,_. .. T.,..,,91 .._.,. wtttlthe~a.rtlofOr-._.....,...CM111 ·: TIOtil TO AAOTICT YOUR l.U8 YOU TAKE ACT'IOff ""8tton of °"'*'" end 0.. Marti Allefl Stine 10392 .... .... A..... .. ....... "'°"" .J c.aca. 1401 .,. County on MerGfl 1a, w llJl1C( ................ "' • ~. IT MAY H TO "AOTEOTYOURPW· mind'°' .... end awnnen 8helom Dft¥e HuMtngton ·--J. Delwt111e CA-Ktnot~ Heotll!Pof1lwlh ,... ...e.-1~ ....
IOU> AT A PUeUC IAll. lftTY, ~ ~y BE IOU> AT Notice of DlifUt Ind Ell> IMotl CA fti4e TNI It....,. WM Med Publllt'9d ~ Coell CA t2M3 ' ' Pw. HC •ITIOU991J11 •II HunUftt10ft INOft Ct* =.~~..r:Cr~ ~E~·~ ~':~l~ ::'~':ics~n ~:.'1~oon. :;.~°='!:~: =~ct1 4.21.21 • .=~~con· ~~.-2~ ~·," 11 ~~-= ':
0, THE PAOCHOINO Of' THE NATUAe °' THtl feult Ind £lectlon to ... to M:M ITM ,... F..e33x . AOef~ J ~ Aptt 4, 11, 1tM T1'e ~ ... _,.,.,,. ~-............
AGAINST YOU, YOU PROCEEDING AOAINIT be '900fded In the county Thie Ntemem w Ned ,._. fN1 et...,_,. ,... tied M74 ~p AUTO 9A0t<EA8 1lfl'9 rdaMld 11.eow to,._
SHOULD CONT ACT A LAW· YOU, YOU IHOUlD CON-~ tM ,_. PfOJ*tY It w11tl the County C1ertt of Of· PWlleMd Otenge eo.t "8JC flOTIC( wttn the COunty 01ett1 of Or· AHO l.IAltNO 1eM2 Mt 01twe .-Id~ WW ......
YEA TACT A lAWYfR. located. ... County on M•otl 4 DetlY Piiot Mlfctl 21. APfl 4, ... County on Mltetl 5 "8JC NOTICE -Cir ,~ V•ll•i ........ of ...... .... On FAIDAY, Al'RIL 25. On ~1118, ttee, at 8:15 DATI: FebNery 27. 1tee 1tM ' 11. 18, 1Ht f'ICnTIOUe IUlmM 1tee ' C".;i7nret ' ....,_to be ,_,d ....... to
1M41, It t:15 A.M. HOMf A.M. IHAPIAO & POU(.• Wl'WM)AP'CJU(•MN ,_... I'..... NAlmeTAW ,_, .. rtChhOUeMf••• .Jain. I..~ 1MG WW ..........," lflll 1b..i
FEDERAL 8AVIH08 AHO duly appointed Tru1tM TNetM, MTN ... llA· PuOlllhld Orenoe eo.t The tollowlne ,.non .. PubllMd Oninae COlllt MmeTA~ Mt.INll)'Ctr ,-..v .. .,.,.
LOAN ASSOCIATION, • undlt end~ to Deed .llRLI, INAPIRO AMO Diiiy Piiot M1rcti 14, 21. 28, rtllJC NOTICE OOlrlO bUINel •: Cely Piiot Mardi f4, 21. tt, The~ ....... ~ Cellf, mo. DATE/TIME: ... 11,
Cotooretlon fonnertv known of T""'· •eouted by AN-l'OLK , tMO or .. 11wto9' Aprlt 4 1988 IMAGE GRAPHtee. S440 Apttl 4 ,... 006na ~ • f.ftlfe bu9IMM le 1Mf. 7:00 l'M.
II HOME FEDERAL 8AV· DREW WALTER LUK Dme..._, .. ._Dleee. ' F·t31 f'ICTmOU9WH Vla0pono,N9wport8Mdl, ' F-922 TAOP1CAL8AY,Ne1MI d4Jt:Aedtlf';wi~O«t-~TIOH NtW11:
IN08 ANO LOAN A880CIA-PA8YK. • Mngle """ .. C1llferftla 12122, (lftj MAim ITATl*MT Cellf 92ee3 ...... eo.c. ...... Cellf. ,,.,,_ L. Aodl9 ?.one QIMaa,No. ... 7
TIOH °' SAN DIEGO, .. Trwton. reootded Ma7: 3, .......,, rtaJC NOT1CE The f~ penone -8te¥en J. Hunt, 14222 ~ rtaJC NOTIC( t2'27 Thie .....,,.,. .. Ned A p" L 1 c ANT : i t . ~~O:n:-' of ~~":.c:da~1tN7!.~ c:~~INO~ l'ICTmOU9~H ~v~"t.ACHINE ~40:'· VIII Nuyt. c ""ganll~....:-= wtththeCountya.ntofOr-Mood)'~~52 end
by MICKEY MUNOt°':: floe of tN Cowlty Alcorder PUBLISHING CO., P.O. &o. MAim ITATlllllNT REPAIR, 261 E. 18ttl, #140, Thie bullne11 It con· MAim ITAW = =County Of'I Merci\ 12. t~IOIM0No.t.-...
UNMARRIED WOMAN AHO of OrMge County. C•H· 791. PaNdena, Celltoml• The followlng per'IOM .,. Colt• ~. CA 12627 duc11d by; 11'1 lndMduel The J~ pereone .,. Curtte Howflrd, 11t Sum-,_ ll)prOJC1matety IOO , ...
81!ATAt2 LEYVA .JIMENEZ. fomll. 91102 (213) 881-454e doing 1M1NM 1111: Olborah E. Kennedy, 261 St..,.,, J. Hunt doing~ ea: mer St .• ~. NH. P\IOllahed or.,. COMl nor1t1 of w,,,_ A~
:, ~~~11~! tnen~n!t::'* " other ~~~"'S. ~ c=~ ~~~A~~ ~A1~: 140, Coeta ~ wttTh":. ~b:ot ~ ~~~ ~~ buelMM la eon. Olly •P*a4 Ma-di 21, al. ZOHE: =•'=
Document 18H7 80011 Will SELL AT PUBLiC 11, ltee N9wport8Mch,CA92ee0 Mere Wlddlcomb. 2'1 E "199 County on ~Cf\ 12, Vlll9ey.CA92708 ducted by;. generll l*t· .. '11• 1-F-t71 ~Commerdlf).
133t5 P11Qt 1102 of the Of. AUCTION TO HIGHEST 810. F·993 Gloria Forreet O.Fort, 18th, # 1'60, Colta Meea, CA 19M ,_ Sanford G. Aobblnt. t304 nanNp .,.. ~'CrJiSf: A ~ of
flolll AecOrdt of OAANOE OE R FOR CA 8 H 1442 WlllM. Tuttln, CA 12627 Publllhed Or1tige CoeM ~ A¥e., Fountlln C. How.rd PmtJC llJTU llDl1I frOfft (Q)C4 .-ICf C4 to
County. Cellfoma _.. ... at CA8t11ER'8 CHECK OR rtaJC NOTICE t2MO • Thie bualn•• I• con· Detty Piiot Mltdl 21. 2t. V1119ey, CA 12708 TNI ......_,t WM flled A2 <MedUn °"""Y ,__.
publlc auotion to the htahllt CERTIFlEO CHECK tpey-Thia butlnett It con· due11d by; co-pwtn1n Apf'll 4. 11, 1981 0.lkSIM M. RobtMne, wtth thl County a.ti of Or-..,..,,_
b6dder tor Cllltl In unttld etMI et Ume of Ille in ~ l'lCTITIOU9 IUI.... dUctld by; 11'1 lndMdual Deborah E. Kennedy F1'78 9304 Honeyluc91te Ave., lnGI County on Mllrdl 11, 11Mm ITAW EN VI .. ON MEHTA L
Stt• Oolllre. It tM FRONT moMy of the Unltld Stet•) ..,.. eTATIMINT GLORI.A FORREST OE Thia at1tlf'llef'lt ... nled "8.JC NOTICE Fountlln V"""1. CA 92708 ,. The folowtrie l*'IOlll.,. 8TAT\Jt: .......,.... Dedlir·
ENTRANCE TO THE OLD It the front witrenoe to the The followtng per.one 1te FORE wttl't Iha County Clefk of Or· Tiile bullMM 11 CGn· fl-. c1otng ouatMM ..: Ad· llllOfl N-10
ORANGE COUNTY old Orange County dolnas bullnellea: This etatemen1WMftlld'111ge County on Mardi 4, PlCTinOUeMlll• .. ductldby:~lndwtte PuOllehed Or-. COMl vaneed Mlorocomputer ON Fllf:. A copy of ttll
COURTHOUSE, LOCATED COYrthouH, 1oc1ted on SO LAN8CAPE CON· with the County C4eftl of Or· 19M MAim eTATW SAHF0R0 G. R0881N8 Diiiy Piiot Mardi 21, ta, ~inc., 151t4 Gold-PfCIC)Olld .,..,_.,. Of'l 111 In
OH 8ANTA AHA BLVD .• 86-8an11 Ana Blvd .• ~ STRUCTOAS. 11000 ,,.,... ... County on Match 4. ,_ Thi folowtng l*'IOll .. TNI ewwnent ... flled .. 4, 11, UNll 91\ w"' Cir$. W••t· the Depwtment of~
TWEEN SYCAMORE ST. & 8ycllln0r9 St. & Btoldwey, StrMI, Garden Grove, CA 19M Publlthld Ortnge Coet1 doing ~ea: wltl'I ttll County CMrtt of Or· F-N7 "*1eW, CA tff83 ment S.W.. 2000 M.in
BROADWAY In the City ol S1nt1 Ana. Cdfomla .. 92&40 ,_.. o,lly Piiot March 14, 21, 28, SANJAY INVESTMENTS, arige County on Fat>Nwy NJvll'<Oed Mlcfooomputar Street, HuntWlgton leedl.
SANTA ANA ORANGE right tltle end lnter•t con-Allen Jarvlt So, 11000 Publlthld Ortnge Cout April 4. 19MI 1029 Oemuoue C< Coat• 28. 1He rtllJC NOTICE Product• Inc. (c.llfomla Celllornla t2641. tor Npec>
Coun"' CeltfOtri. Ill ......,1 ..-_:.to Ind now held..., 11 P9rw'I St., Garden Grove, CA Deity Piiot M1rcti 14. 21, 28, F-932 u--"·'K .......... '• P-m ~· 151 .. Gokterl tton..., IN~·
,,, • '""'' • •'"')'-v1 92&40 A-A 4 1He -...., . ••"'"' Pvbllthed Or111ge COM! -..... " .,., ttue end lntwt conll9)'9CI unOlr Mid Deed of Trwt In Thi bu•' 1 ..," • F·"""'· •-.,. MftT1C£ Sunder Gl1nchand1nl, ..._.. P" ... M· ...... 14 21 28 W• Clrde. W•"*"-· AU INT PEl\-to end now held by It under the Pfoperly lttuatld In Mid ' .,,,... • con· ....,.. r~ nu 1029 OernllCU8 Cr Coeta .,_, ""' -"'' • • • NAiii ITA.,_.,. CA 92'83 SONS .,. lnvtted to lttend
the deed of tnllt, In the, ... County and State deecrlbld ducted by; WI lndMdutll --II' MftTIC( M .... Callf. 92626 .• Apt11 4, lMe F·921 The followtflg pereon .. Thie bu•IMM " oon-Mid heet1ng and ..,,,...
pl'operty, c:leecllbld M : u : ALLEN JARVIS SO r~ nu F1CT1'T10U9 ....... Ttllt buelneet It con-doing bullneel II: duc:tld by; 1 corporetlon oc>4n1one or eutNnlt ~
THE NORTH ONE-HALF PARCEL 1: Thie •tllement wu flied NAm ITAT'lmNT ducted by: Ill lndtvldual "8.JC NOTICE OMNt.-HOBBY, in ~-L.oule p Oigllotto. s.c.. lor or eoelr-* the liS)plcetb1 Of LOT 8 IN BLOCK E OF Ari undlv. 1/18UI lnt«Wt with the County CMrtt of Or· 1'1Cnnou9 llUIMU The lollowtflO 1>W90n1 -~ Glanc:f\andanl ... A¥e., N9wport a.ch, r9trf 11 outinld ~ 11 ttiere
HUMPHREY'S ADDITION In and to lot 1 of TrlCt No. "199 County on Mardi 4• NAiii eTA~ doing bulil,_ M : Thi• statemen1 -fllld l'lCTTTIOUI .,..... Cellf, 92983 Thlt et•temMt .... flled -tll"f bu. ~
TO SANTA ANA IN THE 11"83, 11 per m1P recorded 19M The folow4no penonf we PACIFIC PLANT REN-with the County Cleric of Or· MAim ITAT'lmNT Artdr-Nlleotl Camilr, wttn the County C1M1 of Or· ~eel Scott Heet. ..
CITY OF SANTA ANA. In boo6t 469, p1ge1 23 and P bll-.._.. Or ~ doing bUllMel •: TALS. 18831 M1rln1 Bay 111ge County on Maren 12, The lottowlng peraone we 1808 Wll'Wlck Ln .• Newpoft arige County on Mwctl 12, "9tant Plltw'9r It 636-5211. COUNTY OF ORANGE. 24ofMllClll1neOU1 M191,ln u .. ..., ll'VI ..._.t LOGOSUNLIMITEO,l555 Orlve.HuntlngtonBelc:tt.CA 19M dotnobual,_u: 8Mch,Callt.92ee0 1tee .-... W ....... ....
STATE OF CALIFORNIA, AS the oft1oe of thl County~ Diiiy Piiot Mileti 14, 21, 28, Meea Vf/fde Or E . Suite 926411 ,_ SHEAR' REE MOTOR Thie ~ It con-.,__,...,, Hiii ..... .......
SHOWN OH A MAP THERE· corder of Mid County. Apr11 4, 111ae 18A, Coat• M .... Cllll J•m•• Welker. 18831 Publtltlld Orenoe Coeet COMPANY. 23221 Perlita ducted by. an lndMdulll Publllhed OrMge Comt ~Cu . ?
OF AEOOftOEO IN 800t< EXCEPT THEREFROM F·935 9282' Marina Bay Or!Ye, Hunt· Diiiy Piiot Mileti 21, 28. Suite L. Laguna Hiiie. Cellf_ Andrew Cerniet a.My Piiot M1rcti 21. 28 •. PU~ Orenge COM!
11, PAGE 39. MIS· MCt1 end alt of the unltt .,._.,. Mnf lM' Stl'ten J, OeBarb<le. 1855 lnglon 8-cl'I, CA 92649 April 4, 11. 1988 92653 · Thie ltlt_,t WM fMld Apr\14, 1 t, 19" Delly Ptk>t Ap(M 4, ttee
CELLANEOUS MAPS, RE-lhown and defined on the r--..,. nu "'" MeM VerO. Or. E .. Suitt 'this butlneH It con-F-971 Am1rlc1n lntern1tlon1I with the County Clerlc ol Or· F•e49 F-435
CORDS OF SAID ORANGE Condominium Pl1n re· flC1TTIOU9 ., ......
COUNTY. corded Augult .20, 1981 In NAm eTATRmNT
The ltr .. t 1ddr ... or boOk 1418&, PIQ9I 143 to The 1o11ow1ng pereona .,.
other common deelgl11tton 870, ~ and r..,• doing bullMM ...
of the above rMI property la corded October 2. 198 t In COMMUNITY OtSCOUNT
known to ua u: 117 NORTH boOk 14243, Pao-378 to CLUB 17972 Baron Circle
HATHAWAY S TAEET, '605, lnc:tullve, of Otflclal ~ #3. Huntington Belch, CA
SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA cordl of Mid County. 112647
92701 PARCEL 2: L1wrence Alan Fitch.
,,Thia .... wtn be made, Unit 10. u lhOwn and «»-17972 Biron e+re11, .,3,
without ~ant or war· llnld on the ConOomlnlum Huntington Baich, CA
ranty, expreeeed or lmpllld. Piii! referred to lbove and 92647
regarding tltll. P<JlllHlon, In the Olcllt1tlonof A9ttr1o-Thi• bualn"• la eon-~t>tancee. to pay the tlon• recorded October 2, ducild by: 111 lndMduat
unpaid prlnolpll wm Of 1N1 In boOk 14243, PI09 L.AWR£NCE ALAN FlTCH
S43.2eo. 1e. p1ue lnt•Mt 11 4-0e ot Ott1c1a1 Aecofd• of Thia 1tst9ment wu lltld
proYldld In the not• MCUred Mid County. with the County Clerk of Or· by ttle deed of trvet, plue Ill The ltreet add,_ and "199 County on Mileti 4. addlll~n•f .. t1m1t1d ottier common deelgnatlon. 1tee
wnount of $2.281.00 K lflY, " any, of the rMI Pfopel'ty ,_
under the llrlN of the deed de I c r I bed a b 0 VI I I Publlahld Orlllge Cout
ol trult and f911. ohalrget purported to bl: 1872 9--2 Diiiy Piiot Mitch 14, 21, 28.
and upen•H of the Monrovl• AV'lflue. Cotti Aprll 4 1~
TNlt" MeM, Callfoml1 ~127. ' F-929
The Lend~/BeMfldery The underWgnld TN8t .. 1---------
und« the deed of trust ha dtlolllma MY llablllty fll" any Ml.IC NOTICE
rlgnld and dellverld of the lnc0frec:1MN of the ttreet --------
TNlt .. 1 Olcllt1tlon ol CS.. lddr ... and other common It a.1
fault of the Obllgltlont ... dellgn1tlon, If lily .. lhown 1'1CTIT10UI ........
cured by the deed of true!, herein. ..,._ ITATUmN'T
and 1 Notlcl of Oefallt Ind Said Mia will bl made, but The lotlowlng pereont are
Election to Seti. wtllctl r• without convenlnl or Wlr· doing t>u--. M : Dym«c
corded oo 11123/83 at r1nty,1xpr ... orlmpllld.r• lntarn1tlon1I, 302t·8
Documlnt 83-5393118 o1 Of, gardlng thle. ~. or H1rbor Blvd., Suitt 1t1,
11c1a1 Recotda. eneurnbrancee. to pay the Coat• Meea. CA 92626
Thll Ille wt11 bl QOno-unpaid blllnCI of the not• Frlderic::tl Auetln Hlf'per.
ducted by CALIFORNIA MCUrld by Mid Deed of 24481 Oeldanll St . MIUlon
POSTING AND PUBLISH· Trust, with Int.-thereon, Viel<>, CA 12891
ING MloM 1ddr"' and u prOllldld In Mid no1•, Thie butlneH I• con·
phone number I• 1028 adv111C81, If any, under thl dueled by: an Individual
NORTH LAKE AVENUE. terma of Nkl Deed of Truat, Frid A. Her-per
SUITE 201 , PASADENA. CA ,._, chlrgee Ind expenee9 TNI ltat-'t w• flied 91104 (213)681-4!>4e. FOR of the Trwt .. and of the with the County ClfJftl of Dr·
INQUIRIES: (619)891-3558. tNrta crMtld by Mid Deed ll1ge County on Mlrctt 12.
Oetld: 3/27/M ol Truat. 1988
HOME FEDERAL SAV, The tolll amount of Iha F'IOMIO
INGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIA· unpaid belance of the obit-Publiehld Orenoe Cout
TION. 1 Corpor1tlon, 11 g1tlon MCUrld by the P'CJP-Deity Piiot M1rctt 2t. 28.
Truttff, BY: LINDA R. arty to be told Ind reuon-Apr\14. 11, 1M41
WARN ER, M ANAO ER Ible •tlfl'llted coata, U · F-978
TRUSTEE DEPART ·
MENT/ARC
Publllhld Orwioe Coat = Piiot April 4, 11. 18,
F-032
PUil.JC NOTICE
FtCTITIOUI llU ... H
MAim ITAT'lmNT
The followlng per-tOM .,.
doing bullneM u :
EDWARD A. CONN & As-
SOCtATES, 481 Vitt• Rome.
N.wpor1 BMch, CA 92&eo
Edw1rd A. Conn, 468
Vitti Roma. Newpof1 Beectl.
CA 92680
Thi• bualn•H It con·
ducild by; an lndtvldual
EDWARD R CONN
Thlt ttatament WU fllld
with the County Clertt of Or-= County on M1rctl 4, ,....,
Publlthed Orange Cout
Diiiy Piiot Maren 14, 21. 28, A91'ft 4, 1988
F·ll27
P\BJC NOTICE
'1CT1'TIOUI llU_ ..
NAiii ITAT'lmlfT Thi foffowtng penone .,.
dotn(I bualMM M:
TROPICAL IMAGES, 180
E. Wiiton. Coltt M .... CA
92826
Dena Ander9on, 180 E-
Wllton. Coetr Meea. CA
92626 Thlr bueln1H I• con·
duct«! by· Ill Individual
DANA ANDERSON
Thlr rtltement wae fllld
with the County C*tt of Or· = County on Mllrctl 4, ,._,
Publllhld OrMge Cout
Diiiy Ptlot Mll'ctl 14. 21. 28,
Aprll 4. 1tee
F·928
NlJC NOTJC[
fllCTITIOUI 8UllNlll
NAiil ITAT'lmN'T Thi lollowtng per9on9 .,.
doing bullneta 11:
ALL IMPORT CARS SER-
VICE, 1809 Pomona, •B.
Coat• M--. CA t2'27
G1brlel Marlo Oroem,
2358 NorM. #8, Cott•
Mau. CA 112'27
Thi• bullMM la con-
d\lcied by; an lndMdual
GABRIEL DAOEM
Thie 1t1tlf'Mll'1t wu ftlld
with the County ClfJftl of Or· = County on Mardi 4, . ,_
Publlthed Ortnge Coul
Ot1ty Piiot Mlrctl 14. 21. 28.
Aptll 4, 1tee F-930
M l.IC NOTICE
~nnou•.,... .. MAim eTAT'lmNT
Thi foloW4ng per.on ..
d<*'O~ll AM ATTRACTIONS IM-
METTA'S TICKET SERVICE.
17tt ~ Blvd . Colt•
MeM. Celf 92'27
PW 8. V DeVta. 414 "'°9• ~~ Beedl, Celli
Ttll• t>utlll4HI• 11 con·
due*' by: .,, lndMdUel
PIUIS,V.~ TNt ......,,.,, -fll«I
...,.. tM County °""' of Of-= CMtty on Mltdl 1', ,_,, ...,..,., °" ... ~t Oe1y "°4 Mlf'Ctl 21, 28. ~4. 1t, 1tte F..ee:I
• a. magnon
subaru
SLASHES
•PRICES!•
01 ILL
1986
MODELS
UNDER ANY
CIRCUMSTANCES
WE WILL
NOT BE
UNDERSO LD
•
SUBARU
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
•
Newport Beach
(714) 549-4'300
~FROM
• 7 AT THIS PRICE .Jill ..., __, 1t nn •ettel ..,.. -..., ,.,,,. •••••••••••••••••• • • ~ • • • • • • .. ..
52
1986 TEMPOS
15 AT THIS PRtCE .. , . ,,, . , .. ,.. .,,,., ,,,.,..
... _ ,.1-.a ..... ,,,,., .. ,,., , .... ,,,,.. ,,,,,.. .,,,., 1•·W
47
1986 RANGERS
8 AT THIS PRtCE
.... .. ..., .... ., •·•"O
THUNDERBIRDS
THUNDERBIRDS
LTDS
MUSTANGS
TEMPOS
CROWN
VICTORIAS ..
RANGERS
f·150'S
BRONCOS
ESCORTS
,
•
. -.
' ' ,
C4 Ofllnge Cout DAILY PILOT I Fr1day, April 4, 1988
. COSTA MESA AUTO WASH
Pl&IC MJTIC( I 1-....:";.;:;·=IC..;.;MJ;;.;TIC(;.;.;..;;._ 1_..;.;;;;=-..-....----
.... 0. OCMm vetioni, t1gMa. "8ftt o4 ~. oonftml w. .... of,., prop. oourtt If If\.-., ti bt~ PIC11TIGU9 Ml I I_.
Ofl TM9 ITA111 Ofl 11111•111 of NOOrd. q to be hlld Oft~ 11. 10 enfOtOe ,...111111..._ In Ulm ITAW
CAUIWA POR THI Thi DrQPer1Y la '° be 101C1 1tM M t:OO A.M. lft Oepen• tWtton to llW4ronmental r• Thi ~ perlOM et• couwn °" ORUIM Oft Ill ~ ...... bMle, ...,. ment a of ltle Oninte County .... clecllllOf .. mMlnQ end dOlnQ bUllMM -
Ettate of "OHMA"Y • '° 1tae. ""*1or eourt 10c9t.ct at ec11on: and llllt fhMe C I N T I " ,. 0 I H T I
A Full Service Auto Wash and De tail Cente r ZOO 'AMAi'. ... ~ THI Tl .... ANO COM-TOOOMoc.rillro.MW•. IMiON!tiM• M¥t bt9l't '9YCHOLOOICAL II"·
MAfltt 'AMA" lka ~ DITIOHI 04' SALi AA!: 1Mta AM. CellfotnlL ...,._., Thi ..... tnilCC o4 l/tCU, 1t1TI MacArttlur
MARY auTTE#ILIO 'AA-Ce1t1 In WM ~ o4 '« ""1tw Information, the ~don Te tMt llPOfl 91¥\f .. 8'* JOI, IMna. CA ~ -. ..c>IEMAfltt z.reo tt1e United 1 .... of ~ oomact 1t1e oMoe of 1t1e 9'• 11a approwl IM~ of 'own-12116
IT'S SO NICE TO DRIVE
A
'
•NEARBY
• ALL SOFT CLOTH
• HANDW ASH AVAILABLE
• We Acc«;pt: (-..c-e } ~
American Express, Union
II
(714) 645-1039
2059 HARBOR BL VD .
COSTA MESA
(Across from Theo. Robins)
9UTTlRf!ELO, DI c I ... "· '° be pe6d Oft oonlll " .. don of torMYt '°' ..... f,uoutor. taln. Vt//Wt ,.,_ UM theuo f'oeale o. ~ M~. .... A,__ .... by the Court. Detect: March 27, 11H ltodl Grwlt fundl end H 1244 ~ "'~J. .'!""'". N011Ctl Oil MWTIOll ~of ...-ow.,.. to Meroaret Zet>o O'lflen, wlll llava Htlafled ltt tnaton teedt, CA Wn4W TO leU. MAL ,,....., 'f be divided ._...., ~ e:.outor. ,...onalblllt• uncMt ttle .,.ancy M. Horatmann.
AT PIWATI IAU end ...._ • 11 OUltomery: -· ..._.. I ...... NatlONI fnWontnenUll ~ Ptl.O., &o leealda Clrde, NOTICI! II Hl,.HY lltle lneuranoe..,..,... n AIWMp At Law, OM toy Act of 1M9. HUO wlll ao-NewpcM1 Beed\, CA t2tlS
OIVEN ttlat, MAAOARIT to be •t the ~ of the ............... -.. an objaotlon to ltt .... CallN Morrtaon Nellon. ZHO O'BRIEN• &ecutot Mtlar. ~ ....... CaM tmk proval of Ille ,..._. of MFCO. 2111 Mltal'l\ar Dt'lll9.
ol the f.llat• of AOeftlARY · An lnepectlon report ntfl Tete,llH• (7H ) fund9 and aooeptanoa of the lelbo&. CA t2M1 ZEIO 'ARRAR eaa A08E· made by a ltate llOanMd 711-1111 oertllloellon only If It la on Dewn ewtte Pa6cHICoff,
MARY P'ARRAR eaa ROSE· 1*t control oP«atot of ..:>-Publtahed On1noe COMt ona o1 the followtnO beaaa: MP'CC. 151 laywood °"""·
MARY BUTTERFIELD •• oeaelble.,... In tubtact Im-OallY PllOI Apr1I !. 4, 10. (a) That "" oartlflcatlon Newl)(>rt a.di. CA t2MO ROSEMARY UBO IUT· provementa 11 to be 1~. wu not In leot pecuted by Thia bUalnMI II oon·
TE"FIELD, decataed, wlll furnltllad by Hiier In TtlF.f 11 the oertlfylng ofllott ot other duc1ed by. '*'t lt\aMo et·
NII at prtvat• •· to the worow. C09t of wortc lo officer of appUoant as>· ranQll'llMI 11~ and beet bidder, ~any vlelbta, exi.tlng In.-•-.,. Mnftl'C Pf°* by HUO: Of (b) ltlat 'Dewn CWtt• Partohlkoff
under the terme and oon-teetatlon of tennlt•, other ,.~ ""'~ the llPPlloanl'• anvlronl'l*I-TNe ~1 wM fllad
dlllona Mf91nafler men· wood o.ttoylng peeta Of ot· N011Ctl TO 11\aJC tal r9Vlew r900rd lor !tie pt'O-with the County Cwtc of Or·
tloned, and aubject to oon-gan6eme, funoue end dry rot, °' MO llW'ICDn' ject lndleatee omtaalon of • WIQ9 County on lletlNafy
flrmatlon by the SuperiOt or csameg. C8'IMd ttw.oy ·-_ required decWon ftndlng or 21. 1Ne
Court on the 18th day of le to be pe6d by.....,, Al• '!'" ... CT OM ,,,_ atei> ~ble lo the pro-,..,_ N>rtl. 1tM, at II;()() A.M .. or ma1-1al coneidaretton for IMVIROIRIDfT AND ject In Ille envtronmental,. a I~.• II. D 11 11 11 •
t'*-ft• wtUlln the time af. the pur9CNM of the prop-=-aJ:~ vtew Pf'OOMI. Objec11ona Ct11totter c..~:..Wfeta, ...
lowed by law, .. "" omo. of erty, "" pute:Mw lflall ,. ....... °' "*°' mutt be ~ and .,.,. .....,.,. " .,,.... ,,o.
Miiier. Hodgea & lemle, at· ..... the Eucutor and the Oete: Apr'll 4 lllM City OI mltted In aooordenoe wtttt ... .,.... .....,.,. ......,
t0tnay9 fol Mid Execulor, at decedent'• ..,et• from a11 Founteln vait.y • 10200 the reqvlred proc:.dure (24 c A-. (114) ,.._
One Newport Plaoa, Suite !lablllty """ tl'lougtl It may Stater Avenue FMtaln v• CFA Pwt 58) end may be Publiatl9d Orange COMlt too. Newport Bead!. CllM-le• be dtaco¥ered that the I• CA 9hoa (714) addr.-.d to HUD •• 0. o.My Plot Mardi 14, 21, 2'. fomla.. all ot the right. tltle. EJteoutor lhoutd have known ~21 pertlMl'lt OI HoualnQ and A$Hil 4. 1Ne
lnlwt, and eetate of Mid of eny damaoe not cit. · Urben Oevllopment, Area F-t2tll deoMMd. In and to .. that CCW9r'ed by the purc:Naer'1 TO All INTERESTED Olfloa, 2500 Wllahlre, ________ _
oenaln reel ptopeny lltir lnap«tlon or r-"d by AGENCIES, GROUPS AND Bout.vard Loa A~ ,.
eted In the cttyof Coronadel eny "'°" atruc:tUfal peat P~ONS:at>Out 11 19 Cellfornla 9ooa1. ' P\BJC NOTg
Mar, County of Orange, oontrol lnapeotlon or ,.._ 1988 :. r.-of 1'ountak'i NOTlCE TO PUBLIC OF ACT1TIOU8 .,...._
State of Callfomle, common-YMled by any "'°" ltn.te> • -·1 NO SIGNIFICENT EFFECT ly deelgnaled at 2308 Flr9t tural 1*t oonlrol lnapectlon l/t/Jtay wttl ~ the U.S. ON THE ENVIRONMENT MAim ITATl.mlff AYenl.le Corona del Mat report Oepen.IMl'lt °' Houalng and AND NOTICE TO PUBLIC The fOlloWtnQ pertont we
Calttomle,andmorepertic...: Seliar to provld• a :::o:>~'F:s:.; OF REQUEST FOR RE-~L~:Pt9~ co 131 twty deeoflbed at fo41owt: Certlftcate of Compliance o1 • · LEASE OF FUND~ T " file Souttleuterty 40,... lnatalletlon of an operable funda under Title 1 of the April 4 1988 E. Alton, Santa An&, CA
of the Norttlweaterty ea fMt amotce detec1or epprowd Houalng and Community p i. · 92707
of Lota 2 and 4, 8lOok 429, by and lnatallad In ac· De\le!Q91T*'tt Ao1 of 1974 O~lon• to the r...... Jim L Wellt, 11092·8
Corona del Mar, u lhown oordanoa with the State Flre (PL 93-383) for City.wide of fund• on 1>U11 other than Linda Lane. Oar~ Orow.
on a Map recorded In Book Mat9hall'• regulation• lingte-famlly and mobll• tlloM elated at>ow Wiii not CA 9~ 3, Pagea 41 and 42 of Mi. Purohue price ~I In· home rellabllltatlon pro-be eonaldered by HUD. No Chrlatopher BlatcO. 832
oellaMOUI Mapa, In '"' of· cNcM all floor. wall and win-jeott. TheM ., ... wlll be ci. objection reoalved tfter May Steel Drive. BrN. CA 112121
floe of the County Recorder doW oovertnga. bultt·ln ap-termlned by the reaktenll 5, 1988• wtll be contldered Thi• b~11ne11 I• con·
of Qranga County, Call-pll-, el«:tflcal llxturea wno apply. by HUD. ducted by. • general par1·
lornle. and free 1tandlng wood 11 nu beerl determined JIMl'f L K....,, City Men-1'1«9hlp Thi• ...... .ub)ect 10 cur-cabinet In kltehen that auell r~ueet lor r...... ..., JIM L. WELLS
rent tu"· covenant•. con-Bid• or offera may be of lunda wtll not conttltute Publlthed Orange Cout Tiit. ltat_,t wu nlad
dltlon1 rMtrlctlon• reMr· made otally at the Mering 10 an action lignlflc:Mtly attec1· o.lly Piiot Aprtt 4 19N with the County Clettl of Of· -:::;:::;;:;;::;;:;;::;;:;;::;;:;;::;;:;;:=======================================· ====· =======:::i Ing the qualhy of human -' F:..0
19
enge County on Fat>ruetY r vlronmenl and aocordlngly 27. J98e
the •~named Clty of Ml.IC NOTlCE '102174
OVER THE
IN THE BEAUTIFUL
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
735i 528e
SELECT PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
~8MW933Cll
ci....11111/Pewt. s IPd. '°"" ....... tinted --. ete
(lf'YJ5"1
$22,450
._BMW 5351
Ill-on lll8Cltl. 6 epd. -. tom ~ L-mlMel c•oeae111
'13 BMW 521
Oolptlln greyfpeetl, 1 -5 IPd OU91om 0... 11ereo
l..,. ( 1H8M452)
S13,450
'148MW5331
Slle>fl bluelblue ,..,,_
Aulonwmc (9"&481
S17,450
'84 BMW 533
.._,"'911 •t11er Auto.
lo.i.o (1J4PIMI
Saddleback BMW
'14 Mude 129 LX
Touring 8dn.
Fvttty IOeded, IOw ...... s-
-•1eoee3'4 $1998
'84 BMW325E
WhllefbfOMI. 6 19d, pa.-
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380-1200•800-831-3377
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'85 BMW 52IE
81eci!fbledl, 5 ~·nice-. IOw P1tce •ti& M 1
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'13 D•t•un 2IOZX
Turbo
epd,
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111,998
'15 BMW 311 IA
Aulo, 11tteo, 11r 11771209
$14,998
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Fountain Vllliay 11u decided Hlc*:ey a NMlend, At·
not to prepare an an· '1CTnlOUt IUetMIU ..,,.,. at uw, Cefttral
Ylronmental lmpec1 atat• NAMm ITA.,...,.,. ............... MOt1 II
ment under the Natlonal En-The lolloWlng per.one .,. TON M. 8Wte -L..-.
wonrnental Polley Act of doing buelneaa u : ..., CA~ J9.7lllO
1989 (PL 91-100) The INSTA·TUNE 13e, 1802 Pu~ Orange Coul
reMOn1 for ·auon declelon Grand A119t1Ue, Sanl4; Ana. Daffy Piiot Maten 14, 2 t, 28. not lo ptepare euc:h atal• CA Ap<ll 4, 1988
ment are u follow9; The pro-Ro ti.rt p Etrl, 2344 F-925x
ject II located In a medium Cyn111l1 Ct. Coeta Meaa, CA
denelty rHldentlal arH 92827
where the .rfec1• on Ille Tiii• bu11n .. 1 la con·
natural and PhY*aJ en· dUC1ed by an tndhlldual 0 BIT UlRll Ii
Ylronment wttl be mlntmal ROBERT P. EARL
An EnYlronmental RevW Thia atatement wu llled THOMAS Record raapectlng Ille within with Ille County Clettl of Of· ptoJeot nu ~ made by ange County on Maren 4, LESLIE JQSEPH
the City of Fountain Valtrf 1988 THOMAS, 71, a resi-
wtllch dooumenll the -,_ d t f H ria f wonmental review of the Publllhed Orange Cout en o eape • or·
pt'Ojeot and rno<e IUlly NII Dally P"ot Marcil 14, 21 , 28, mer realdent of Hunt-
lorth the rauon• wny aucn Aptll •. 1988 lngton Beach. PUied
atat_,t 11 not r~ulred. F-924 away April 1 1986 in Thia Environmental Aevlew ' ' Recol'd 11 on n1e at the above PlBl.IC NOTICE Apple Valley, CA.
addr .. and 11 avallable for Mr. Thomas wu a re-
public e11amlnatlon and co-'ICTITIOUI .u ... 11 tired engineer with
pytng upon r~ueat., Ille NA•tTA.,._NT ••'---b H i•-• Planning e>ec>anmenl ri.. The foltowlng peraona .,. ruuam ra Ollp wu
tween 111e 110ur1 ot s·oo am doing bUaln ... u: Surviving are his
and 5·()() pm POSH ENTERPRISES, wife F.d.na Thomu
No funllet environmental 1432111A$>18.CoetaM .... daug' hter Sande~ review of IUCll Pf'Oteci II CA 92827 • P<C>POMd 10 be conducted Georg• Waygand, 143 Mom of New York
prior to the r~ueat for r• 2181, APt B. Coeta ...._,CA City; abo surviving
..... or federal fund• 92827 are one brother and
All tntereated ag«ldee. Thie 1>u11n .. 1 le con· •'--·•--G group• and peraona di. ducted by: an lndtvldu.I uu~ -... n . rave-
agrMlng wl111 thll <*:lelor'i OEOAOE WEYGAND side Services will be
are lnvtted to eubmlt wntten Thll 1tatemenl -llled ~ucted on Friday,
comment• for COl'\lld«atlon with the County Clerk of Of· A '-'' 4 1:00 p M by the City of Fountain Valiay ... County on Matcil 5, £U • at . .
to the Planning Dec>ertment. 1ile at Good Shepherd
Suell written comment• 1"102117 Cemetery. Pierce
anould ber~ at 10200 Put>lllhed Orange Cout Brotheu Smith
Slater Avenue on or before Dally PllOI Marcil 14, 21, 28, M rt n.:-to Aprll 18, 19N All audl com-Aprtt 4, 19U 0 uary, vu~ Ml
men11 ao rac:.l\ted wilt be F·823 536-6539
COM!dered anc:t the etty w111 •-te NOT c .-,,_.-.------not reQUM1 the r ...... of l"UUL I E .,,
federal fund• or take any ad-'IC1'1'TIOUI 9U9INlll mlnlstratlv. action on the ..._ ITATWMINT 'AC9'1C VllW
within pto)ect pt'1or to the The followlng peraoni at• 1 ~ ,.,.
data ipecitlad In the Pf~ doing bualneu u : San Juan Cemet• 'I • ~
lnO eentenoe. Management 8 Amt\«11 C~ • Cf'weory
The City ol Fountain Val-Laguna Ntgu9i, CA 92877 ' 3~ P-=-vi.W Drive
lay wtll und«take Ille project LOUIN ~ejlma, 8 Amlletat ~ rt ..___
deecfibed at>ow with Block Laguna NIQI* CA 92877 ' ~ -· Orant fund• from the U.8. f1111 bu11neta 11 con· '44-2700
Department of H~and d ed b . Urban Del~t UD) uct y. an lndtvldual • .._.. LOUIN Eejlma
under Tiiie 1 of the Houalng Thie ltatement WU lllad
and Comrminlt; Develop-with Ille County Clertl of Of· mentAo1of 197•. TheCltyot ange County on February
Fountain Va#ay la certifying 2"' 1"'•• to HUD that the City .and "'· • ..., f'I01111
Judy L Keleey, In her ofTlclal Publlehed Of9n09 Coast =z ~o Cl~c~~-o.lly Piiot Marcil 21, 28.
Jur*'lctlon of the leder al Apl'tl 4 • 11 • f 988
NEVER BEFORE!
NEVER AGAIN!
WE HIVE ACQUIRED THROUGH
PRIVATE PURCHASE:
1 11111 IEW 1114 T4111
Will.ML flllllY WWII
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#3089 1984 T-llRD
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82 LYNX WAGON #8318
78 CAPRICEWGN #9002
' 78 LTD CP. #9227 •
83 MUST. GL. #9181
83 CAPRI R/S #6273
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83 COUGAR #6304
84 T-BIRD #9281
84 MllST. G.T. #9271
85 1/2 TURBO IMPULSE #9073
' '
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' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \
NEW 1986
AEROSTAR VIII
~s
90.6M~. PAI E
31 PAYMENTS S80.12
$711.M DOWN
APA 20.57
$ 93.6M!. PRICE $3411 ·
41 PAYMENTS $83.11
$757.M .DOWN
APA 20.75
PAICES2111 $ 94.4M~. 31 PAYMENTS $94.40
$722.14 DOWN
APA 20.57
PAICESZlll $ 94.4M~. 31 PAYMENTS $94.40
1111.MDOWN
APA 20.57
$147.9M~. PRICE 15211
41 PAYMENTS 1147.11
'832.MDOWN
APA 20.27
S177.8M~. PRICE 18289
41 PAYMENTS s1n.as
S104l.M DOWN
AP~11.17
s199 54 . PAICElllll
41 PAYMENTS S1U.54
• MO. $1111.M DOWN
APA 17.20
_S1_!9.9M~. PAICES7•
IO PAYMENTS $111.11
-.GODOWN
APA 11.11
s21s _97 PRICE11511
eo PAYM•NTs '211.17
•"'MO. $1217.M DOWN
APA 11.92
$251.3!. PAICES10,lll
'1180.M DOWN
IO PAYMENTS '2S1.30
APR 15.71
Vehlcl11 .tlj1ot to prior ..... Prta11 good • hra. 8fter publlutlon.
6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA l'ARK (714)_521-3110 (213) 921-8681
..
'
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1986
Bomb suspect hunted
Ara woman on jet Iner between Cairo,
At ensmayhaveleftbombun erseat
Wednesday momina on the 8oe1oa
727 when it new from Cairo to
Athens, llid the sources, who spoke
on condition of anonymity. The jet
then Oew to Rome and the bomb went
off duriq ill return trip to Athens
that afternoon.
under teat lOF durina the flight from
Cairo, then made a connection to
Beirut at Athena, the Greek IOUroet
wd. The bomb went off under that
seat.
A THENS, Greece (AP)-Police in
11evera1 nations laid Thursday they
were hunti.na an Anb woman ter-
rorist 1uapected of planting under her
airline aeat a bomb that exploded
later, killina four Americana.
Police aouroea laid the explosives were planted under aeat IOF, which
Kneebijary
~er al!er Pedro o.enero la ellned for
atleutSm tll8wtth a
knee lDjary. lleanwblle,
tile J'r eeway Serie•
opena tontf.bt. Bl
Cout
Speclal leglalatlon could
allow the Navy to sell land
In Mlle Square Park. / A3
Callforn~.
Deukmejlan says he may
leek to get more coast
excluded from offshore
olld rllllng./ AA
Sporta
Orange Coast College's
bueball team stays un-
beaten In conference
play./81
Pat Bradley takes a one-
ahot lead at the Dinah
Shore lnvltatlonal golf
toumey./81
was blown out of the TWA jetliner
over southern Grccoe on Wcdnetday.
Italy'• interior mini1ter aaid that wu
the seat the woman had OC<lupied on
an earlier fli&ht, and Greek ~lice
sources said she ma~bave hid the
bomb in a life presuver.
May Elias Mansur wu a passenaer
An airport securit¥ official in Cairo
confirmed that a Lebanese woman
uaioa that name, about 30 yean old.
boarded in Cairo.
The woman may have loaded
plastic explosi vet into.a life preserver
The Italian news qcncy ANSA
q_uoted invettipton it did not ident-
ify u aayjna the woman was
Lebanese, but used a Jordanian
passport in the fiJse name of May
Elias Mansur. The qency did not
sjve her real name.
(Pleue ... WOllAJll/ A2)
..., ......................
AboYe, lnne_ttcaton nemloe the accident
acene. At rtcht. Coeta lleea flreflCbter Jlm
Solliday nemln• a baby &lrl who wu
•prayed wtth wlndab.leld &IUI·
Man dies in 2-car smash.up
By PAUL ARCBJPLEY
Of .. 0.-, .........
A Santa Ana man wu kiUed and
two others were seriously injured
Thursday when two vehicles collided
in Costa Mesa.
Alfonso Valencia Mendoza, 30.
was pronounced dead at 3:33 p.m. al
Fountain Valley Trauma Center fol-
lowina the ac:ctdent about an hour
earlier on Bristol Street at the San
Dieao Freeway.
Also injured were Lourds Maria
Nuno, 25. of ·Newport Beach and
Guillermina Roman, 28, of Santa
Ana.
Accordina to Costa Mesa police
Sst. Alan Kent. Mendoza was a
backseat putenger in the 1975 Chevy
Camaro being driven by Francisco
Roman Favela, 28, of Santa Ana.
Favela's wife Guillermina was in
the front seat. Their two infant
children also were in the car.
Favela, drivina northbound on
Bristol, entered the left tum pocket at
the freeway for the southbound on-
ramp when be turned in front of
Nuno's Chevy Love pickup truck as
she drove south oir Bristol.
The pickup plowed into the riaht
side of the Camero.
Nuno, who suffered a collapsed
luna and lacerations, was in serious
condition at Fountain Valley, a
hospital spokeswoman said.
Roman, who suffered broken nbs.
lacerations and internal bleeding.
also was in senous (:Ondition at the
hospital.
.:
Coast residents canceling
Mediterranean vacations ~
By PAUL ABCHJPLEY °' .. .,.., ........
The mqjc of the Mediterranean hu tu~ inso menace, and
Oranae Coast travelers ate bead.ioa i.n the oppolite di.rcctlon. local
travel qenu uld thia week.
The thlut or terroriam in Europe and the Mediterraoeaa bu
killed bookinp to formerly popular destination.a l\ICb u Italy IDd
Greece, atthouah 10me northern countriet ate still atb'11ic:titra
vacationers. ,.
Orange Coast travel agents repon booklnp down anywhere &om
20 percent to I 00 percent.
. (Pleue ... COA81'/~)
Doctor·
alleges
excess
force
Claf ms poltce kicked
fn door, seeks S 1 M
from Newport Beach
BJ SUSAN BOWLETI'
Of ..............
A SI million claim bu been filed
apinst Newport 8e8Cb by a local
doctor who contends one o( the cirv'1
police officen in 'Uftld him by~
the front door o~ bit home open inio
his face.
The claim WU fi1ed M=k by attorney J ac:k Utter on of
physician Jerry Genon. h S1Cml from
a Dec. 26 incideot ~ Nc.wpon
Beach police officer Rick lnidlcy
aUepdl harmed Genoa while .... in& an ~-duty Loi ~ DGlice
officler lD letVlDI a court Oldir for
child custody.
Bndley and Los ~ poliot
officer Danny R.odripa ll'rived at
Genon'• Balboa home ad identified
tbemaelvet u '"the police," Utter said -
GcrlOn 's we Debbie ii Rodripd
ex-wife, and they have joint CUllOdy
of their daupter, Sara, Utter IUd..
AcconliDf. to Uttcr, Bf'lldky and
Rodriauez •bt;Pn loudly and coo.-
tinuously baQ&JD& on the front door, ..
then kicked it open intoGenon'1 fac:e
when be answered il
Bradley said. ··rm here toexec:utea
court order," and "I will arrest
anyone who comes in my way." Utter
claimed.
INDEX
Advtoe and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Clauffied
82
A3
87-8
84-6
810
Court reinstates murder coaVictioa
But the officen never showed AD)'
court documeoll to GenoD or hil
wife, Utter contended, and Bradley
"conunued to threaten, in a boatiJe
manner. to arrest Mr. Genon."
"We're not ~nst the Newpor1
Beach Police Department." Utter
S&Jd, "We are ap.inst the penoo wbo
works for the Police ~t wbo
gives at a bad name .... Cornice
Death Notices
Entertatnment
OptnlOn
Paparazzi
PoUc:. Log
Public Notloea
Sport a
Tetevlalon
Weather
C4
Date book
A6
Datebook
A3
C3-5
81-4
Datebook
A2
Rules withheld evidence not Important
in trial of man who killed mail carrier-
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. 0.-, .........
A state court of appeal has ~
instated the 1984 murder convictJon
of a Huntington Beach man who
killed a mail earner, but a defense
attorney said he will ask the state
Supreme Court to intervene.
Gabriel Deluca, a former Edison
Hi&h School student who has been
confined at Orange County Jail for
more than two years, could be
sentenced to 25 years to hfe m state
prison for the murder of Ida Jean
Haxton.
Haxton, a mother of two, was
fatally clubbed and blud&eoned while
delivering mail to Defuca's Hunt-
maton Beach home.
Deluca's murder conviction was
overturned Oct. S. 1984, by Supenor
Court Judge Leonard McBride, who
ruled Deluca 's attorneys had not been
provided with evidence that might
have helped the defense.
McBnde said he was convinced
Deluca was guilty of murder but said
he bad no choice except to order a
new triaJ because defense lawyers had
not seen a Huntington Beach Jail
booking form that included observa-
tions on Deluca's mental state.
Deputy District Attorney Bryan
Brown asked the 4th Dlstnct Court of
AppeaJ to reinstate the murder con-
vict1on. The coun of appeal did thal
Tuesday. ruling that the Jatl boolung
form wiu not a s1gmficant piece of
eVldence.
The appeal court also ruled that
Brown did not try to hide the boolung
form from defense attorneys as had
been claimed
McBnde declined to comment on
the appeal court's ruling.
But John Dolan. the Newport
Beach auomey who represents ~
luca, said he will appeal the ruhng to
the state Supreme Court
Brown said he was .. elated" b" the (Pleue eee llURDltR/ A2)
Newpon 8eacb police spokesman
Trent Harris said police report:I and
preliminary investigation tell a dif-
ferent story ·
Hams said the incident bc:pn
when Bradley was asked to bdp a
citizen serve a court order. He aaid
Bradley was not aware that Rod.ripe%
was an ofT-duty police officer when
the request for usistanoe wu made.
Bradley "looked at the court docu-
(Pleue ... l>OCTCa/ A2)
App~al to be. heard in
sheriff't1 race dispute
Alf!D PIIOI' Sexually t r ansmitted infections
· .:~ ·· seeh as major health problem
BJ WA MAHONEY Ryan. whote order was to take °' .. .,..,,......., effect at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, based
The Fourth Di.Jtrict Court of Ap-berdcc1si~n on C!/eear-old aecti~n of
peal1 will settle a disqreement be-the Elections that permits a
tween Onnae County Sheriff-Cor-judsetodeleteportionsofcandidate's
oner Brad Oates and his political statements determined to be false or
opponent Linda Lea Calligan over mislead.ina. her riabt to attack him in an official The statements for county offices
candiC!atc'• 111tement are sent to more than I million voters,
The three-member p&nel Thursday said Al Olson, county Reaistrar of
atayed Oranae County Superior Voten.
Court Judp Judith Ryan's order to The~urtofappeaJaorderpreve!'ts
ltrite portion• of C.aJlipn'• atato-the .reaa~trar·s office. from prinuna
ment that claim Oates baa committed ~ Callipn •statement 10 any form and WeDI ICU and eott the taxpayers delays proareu on a Voten Pamphlet
milliooa to remedy jail overcrowdina. (PJwe Me Id f &AIAf1\2)
Tum J9 Pege C1 for the
18teet eutomotlY• newa
Rock 'n' roll lives on in OC
• despite battles with cities
ln OrantB County, reporu of rock
·a• roll'• death are putJy •ua-
emted.
Tbe demiee lu1 January of the
IU1toric Ootden Bear niahtclub in
Huntinsion 8eecb wu a bi.artfelt loN for music rans. martin& the latest in •
&oq Uno of rock·<lub closu~ and PtOml'tina many to bemoan the ..
dearth of Oranae County outlell for
of'iainaJ l"Oet·music.
But Rick 8a~1 who manqed
the Golden Bear, Kio be i1 ready to
open a new niahtclub that will
1howcue local acu u well u na-
tionally known eotcrtainen.
And Jack Richards. who ran Hunt-
1naton Beach'• pel7 nightclub unttl
•
at cl09Cd last January, wd he too 11 sct
to reopen a club 1n Ota~ County.
caterina to the "new muaic ·bands he
uled to book at Spatz.
Both 8abirack1 and Richards de-
clined to provide detail• on their new
club plan• wntil ~menu art
taebed and leua •tancd. but t.lld
announcements coufd be made
within two weeks
In addition. tbe Coach Houac
Saloon in S&n Juan Capistrano bu
been ~juvcnat.ed in the pall several
weeks. boottna tos>-nkme acu and
...
CHICAGO (AP)-Sellually trans·
milted infections that threaten
women's ferulity pose a littJe-known
but m~or health threat, with costs
totaling more than $2.6 b1lhon m
1984 and likely to exceed $3. S billion
in 1990, California re1C1rChcrs say.
"Pelvic inflammatory disease 1s
one of the most widespread and
deb1litatinJ du1cascs affecting women
today," said a study by researchers at
the University of C.alifom1a at San
Francisco.
Such infections can lead to chronic
pain, infertility or internal tears tha1
can cause a fert1bud ea to lodge
ROBERT
HYtl>MAN
Focus ON IHl Nlv.s
plekina up muc'h of the llack lef\ by
the cloture of the Golden Bear
Wtth the oontJnued aucceu of
Safari Saa:a'1 in Huntanaton Beach.
Otanee County f'O(.k cl ubs could bt
bounC1nt back 1n umc lo provide a
cu"' for the 1ummertime ~lu~
So roll over Beethoven and tell C1ly Athcrs the news
(PleaM ... ROCI/ .Ul
out~1dc the womb. rcquinng surgJcal
removal
At least I million l l S women get
the disease each year.l.. and at least
2SO.OOO of those suner long-term
consequences, said the rc~archc~.
whose cos1 analys1'1 of the d1'1Ca\C
appears 1n Fnday"s Journal of 1hc
Amencan Medical A~soc1at1on.
Tbe repon was wntten by Dr .\
Euaene Washington. a scientist from
the national Centers for D1seal§('
Control 1n Atlanta who as now on
ass1anment at U F Hts co-author'\
were Peter Amo, ofUCSF. and Mam·
Brooks. of the Morpn Bank 1n New
York
Non.economic consequcnoet -
psychol01Jcal trauma from los1na a
fetus that develops outside the womb
or from bccom101 infertile -"may
be a mlJOr life event With an
1ncaJculable impact on an md1vtduaJ
or fam il y." they wd.
The cost of treat1n1 pelvic mfla.m-
matC\ry d11e&se, known u PIO, is
probably less than that of treatina
many other r1'U'10r health problema,
-sucb u luna cancer or motor vehicle
1nJtme1, Wash1nston said.
But people are Jaraely unaware it
(Pleue ... 1Nf&CT101'/A2)
New York City Ballet
scheduled to pelform
at county Arts-center
Heather Watta, pnncal)I) dancer
for the New York City Balle~ will bc
m Costa Mete th11 mom1f\I to
announce the dancr compeny'• cn-
pacment at the new Oranac C'ounty
Pcrfomuna Arts Center
Performance dat" Wlll be an
nounced at • pttU confc~nce tod•y
featunna Wam, tmupt> manapna
d1rtttor Chane RaymQnd, and of
lic1als of the new arts ocnter.
The enaasemcnt at the oeoW'a
3,000-teat theater near Sou~ C.out
Plaza wall mart the New Yott Oty
8allct'1 first Soutbero ap-
pearance 1n 12 yan..
Nearina complcttoa,. 170. 7
milhon auditorium i1 ICboduled to
open Sept. 29 wi\b a pnmicn __,.
featunQI worid-dua and 1ocaJ per·
form i 1\1 aru oompa.nies.
~ ........ .-.................. ..-............ .------------------------------------~----~------__..---------~----
--..-,.-..----..,,.......--=-~-------------...... ~~--------•s .. -.s~a ... mlll! .......................... ~
Al Orengie Coat OAILV PILOT/ Fnday, Aptll •. 188e
WOMAN SOUGHT JN JETLINERB.OMBING •••
hem Al
~. ~ Homi Farq. the Eayp-
t.ian lnltrior Ministry U11Stant for the Cairo airport, pve this acicount ln
Friday's edition of the *°vemmeot·
Nn ocwss-per Al-Abram.
The woman completed pre-board· ina procedwes later than I.be other
peuenaim, and both airport and
TWA security uupected her bags. She
was a liven a thorolJlb body search
and the airline aceurity dm:ctor took
her to lhe plane in a company cat for = identification before she
Farag did not say why lbe woman
was delayed, subjected to a body
search or take rt to the plane by TWA's
secunty chief. The Al·Ahram report
did not mention whether EgyptLan
officials suspected her of bemg a
terrorist
A Cairo airport security official,
speaking anonymously, said earlier
Thursday: "We had no suspicion
about anyone on the (passenger) hsL
That plane Id\ here completely
clean."
An anonymous telephone caller an
Beirut, Lebanon said an obscure
organization called Arab Revolution-
ary C.ells was responsible for plantmg
the bomb Palestinian sources fam-
iliar with terronsl groups said it was a
new name being used by Abu N1dal.
who tbe Uruted States 61.amed for the
Dec. 27 airport massacres m Rome
and Vienna.
Althoush W11hlnatoo accuses
Libya o1 but>orina Abu Nidal. a
senior U.S. official said Thunday
that Reapn administration analysts
did not believe Libyan 1eadcT Moam-
mu Khadafy was involved in the
TWA bombtnJ.
lf the explosives were planted 1n a
life preserver, that could CJtplain why
they were not found durint secunty
checks conducted during stop()vers.
Capt. Richard F. Petersen, the
pilot, told reporters m Athens that the
~w inspected some hfe pre<Jervcts.,
but S&Jd, "We onl y spot-<:bcck ...
There arc 150 of them m the aircraft
so we don't have enough ground staff
to check all those ...
TWA chairman Carl Icahn said in
New York that he would urge the U .S.
government to "vigorously supp()rt"
the lllrhne's fllht to supplement host·
country screening with its own an
tugb-nsJt areas abroad. It docs not
have that riaht 1n Rome.
The TWA manager in Rome. the
only person there authonzed to speak
for the airhne, was not available
Thursday. but airport sources sa.id a
company called Aashpol did ground
checks for TWA.
A man who answered the
Aasb,P.Ol'S telephone, who would not
1deoufy tlimtelf, confirmed that a
sccunty check had been conducted
before Flilbt 84'0 flew beck to Athens,
but would say no more.
A Police source in Athens sau1: "We
have a launched a search around
Athens and other cities and also put
out a si,nal to tra~ this person (Miu
Mansur) throu..,ti Interpol," one
polioe souree said.
Earlier Thunday in Rome. Interior
Minister Oscar Luisi Scalfaro said,
"h is cenain that a suspect person,
who is on file as a terronst, got o n in
C&1ro and got o ff in Athens. occupy-
1na an the lllrplane the exact seat
wfiere the explosion occumd."
The blast tore a 9-by-J..foot hole in
the right cabin wall m front of the
wtng while the plane was at about
15,000 feet m its approach pattern to
Athens. A Colomb1ao-Arnerican man
and three Greek-Americans -a
woman, her daughter and 9-monlb-
old granddaughter -were sucked
out.
The plane landed safely about 25
minutes later.
Richard 0 . Pearson, president of
TWA, said in New York Wednesday
that the explosion took place on the
cabin floor an row I 0 or I I.
COAST RESIDENTS CANCEL TRIPS ...
From Al
"It's quite true terronsl attacks
bave all but shut down the Maddie
'Wt market," said Elmer Brown.
owner of Laguna Travel Service 10
Laguna Beach. "Greece as hke a desert
as far as American tounsts arc
concerned."
"Zilch," S&Jd Jack Davis of Can-
nery Village Travel in Newport
Beach. "There aren·1 an)' book10gs to
the Mediterranean unJess the)' have
rclauvcs there
··we usually have a cabinet-full of
Europe bookings. This year there
aren't any."
Davis. who has been in the business
45 years, ~•d. 'T ve seen good days
and bad day~ This as the worst ever
"Last year was the best ever 1n
Europe. This year will be the worst
It's a piuful thing," he said.
Agents said people openly admit
they fear being a terronst target 1fthey
go to Europe, despite the odds against
that happening
"It's a knee-Jerk reaction." Brown
~1d. "We have to constantly reassure
them. In a typical intemauonal
airport a plane leaves every five
minutes. What arc tbc obanocs they'll
be an one hat by terrorists?"
Nevertheless. travelers aren't wdl-
ing to play the odds.
Instead, the Pacific has become this
year's vacation destination.
"There's so much else going on."
said Brenda McQuecn, owner of
Travel Travel an Fountain Valley.
Although she as booking half as
many European tnps as last year,
McQuecn said there's big demand for
the World's Fair Expo in Vancouver.
and cruises to Alaska, the Orient,
Australia. New Zealand and the
Caribbean.
Rae Crutchs1cld at Huntington
Beach Travel Service bas been book-
ing tnps to Mexico and Hawa11, whale
tnps to Europe are down 20 percent.
"h's more the Mediterranean and
the Middle East,'" she said. "They're
still not afraid to go to London and
Paris."
But Tom Lochdc. manager of
Bnstol Village Travel m Costa Mc~.
isn't boolcmg anybody for Mcd1ter-
rancan tn ps.
"I kind of refuse to sell them a
t1clcct," be said. "I don't need that
kind of qaravation."
Instead, he's send.in$ clients on
safaris in Kenya and cruises to Tahiti
and the Orient.
"People bavc the money. Tbeyrc
not afraid to spend it," be said.
Major cruise hoes gambled on that
being true, and brought their ships to
the Pacdic while can~hng thtS sum-
mer's M editerranean packages,
Bro wn said.
For example, Royal Cruise Lines,
headquartered in San Francisco,
moved their fleet to the Pacific.
They're nearly 90 percent booked.
Brown said.
Tourism offiC1als in the Meditcr·
rancan arc desperately trying to
reverse.' the shutdown.
"They'll fly travel agents over to
Greece for $99," Loebdc said. "But
who needs to go over there to get shot
at?
"Of course, they don't charge you
extra for that "
MURDER CONVICTION REINSTATED ...
From Al
ruling and believes Deluca belong\ 1n
st.ate pnson "for the rest ofh1s hfe ..
Deluca. now 20. allegedl) dubbed
Haitton of C1arden Grove with a
baseball bat and stabbed her 19 11mes
with a buck knife as she deli vcrl·d
mail to his house Jan 3. 1984
Brown said Deluca probably in-
tended to rape the woman
Deluca alleged!> placed Ha~ton·~
bod) 10 the trunk of her postal car,
which he abandoned in a church
parking 101 an ( osta Mesa about a
male from his home He was arrco;ted
the foll01oA.10g day when a team of
bloodhounds led police toward De-
luca ·s residence
Dcluca's bloody fingerpnnts were
fou nd on several pieces of mail in the
trunk of the car and a broken baseball
bat was fol.tnd 1 n a garbage c~n outside
Deluca's home.
Dolan dcscnbcd his client as a
deeply troubled man with a history of
drug and alcohol abuse. He conceded
Deluca lc1llcd Haxton but said has
client was virtually unconc1ous at the
lime of the cnme after gulping 19
shots of tequila and smoking mari-
JUana.
He said Deluca had no memory of
lhe slaying. A psychologist suggested
Deluca suffered an alcoholic blackout
and went 1010 a "fit of rage" when
Haxton showed up on his front porch.
Jurors, though, rejected the defense
and said they felt Deluca "acted
crazy" as a covcrup for the killing.
Deluca re~rtcdly has tried to
commit su1c1dc several times since
has arrest. onc.c scrawling slogans on a
cell wall Wlth his own blood. Brown.
though, has suggested Dcluca's be-
havior may be aimed only at attract·
ing attenuon.
ROCK CLUBS THRIVING IN COUNTY ...
From Al
.. We intend to p1tk up JUSI where
we left off at the Ciolden Bear ··
Bab1rack1 stud th1c; week. "I feel
there's undoubtedly an audience out
there for the quaht) of entertainment
we offered at the Golden Bear "
Bab1rack1 said his new club, aflcr
remodeling. wall feature two adJatcnt
rooms -one ofTenng about 450 scat<.
for big-name acts and another seating
from 150 to 200 for local performers
"The plam arc acoustically right
and logist1call> nght." he ~1d "l"m
certain 11 "'ill work ··
Bab1rack1 1.1.<1uld not specif) what
loca11on he'<, negot1a11ng for. but \31d
at wall be 1n the area of Newpon
Beach. ll unt1ng1on Beach and Foun
tain Valley
Richard\ \a1d he l!i looking for a
replacement for has 4iipat7 nightclub.
which operated for I 'Ii year-. at the
Harbor Mall on Algonquin at Warner
Street 1n Huntington Beach
The new location he has in mind -
planned to accommodate from 2SO trJ
350 customer' -will he even tx:ll\:r
suited for the type of<.lub he want!l to
run.
"I reall> believe we can do well
offenng the same type of new mu'>it
we had at Spau " Richard<. ..aid
Bab1rack1 '<. and Richards' larcst
plans should rnmc as welcome new<>
to local rock fan\ frustrated hy the
lack of cluhi. nflcnng ong.inal re>< k
and pop music
Orange Count> has rarcl)' laid 0111
the welcome mat for rock club'i to
wipe then hoots on In fact, ro~ k
venues have been accused of leo:I\ 1ng
muddy footpnnt'i after trampltn[! on
the peace and quiet of surround1ni1
neighborhoods
In 1981 , the Cuckoo'<; Ne,11n ( oc;1a
Mesa. which o;howcaw:d punk hands.
~~~~~E. Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
130..W•\I IS•, .1 ' .•• , ......... [.A M111t e0c1,..,_, ,.,,, ,W> c, • .-, ~..,. 1 A u• ,,.
lost us business permit atler city
officials were angered by complaints
of excessive noise and raucous behav-
ior both 1n and out of the club.
Cuckoo'<; Nest owner Jerry Roach
1s having -;1milar problems keeping
has current club Radio C tty. open 1n
Anaheim.
More rctt•ntly, Costa Mesa resi-
dents have been complaining of the
noise Pacific Amphitheatre concert<;
have been creating since the facility
opened an the summer of 191S3
In lfvine. residents and police arc
becoming 1ncrcas1ng.ly alarmed about
the cnme they believe concert-goer<,
bnng to the area whenever hcavy-
metal band-; perform at the Irvine
Meadows Amph11heater.
The Golden Bear and Spat1 had
other problems
The 60-ycar-old building on Pacific
Coast Highway that housed the
C1olden Bear wac; declared structural-
ly unsound But rather than rebuild 1t.
t 1ty offiual'I want the site for con-
struction of a new h1gh-nsc hotel as
part of the city''> downtown re-
development effort
Spat7 was forced to close af\er the
shopping center 1t was located 1n was
purcha~d and the new owners de-
cided a rock club didn't fit an well
"There was really nothing I could
do about 11," Richards ~id ...
Both Babiracki and Richards are
well aware of what they're up against.
not only 1n picking new locations, but
in operating clubs an Orange County.
Richards especially 1s placing
emphasis on a new location that as not
an a rts1dcnt131 area where ne1ahho1'
might complain
At a recent forum d1scus'lion
hosted by the Orange County Enter-
tainment Wntcn Aswc1at1on, Hunt-
mgton Beach Caty Councilman Jack
Kelly put 11 succinctly: "Origjnal-
mus1c clubs attract a portion of the
society that the more staid portion of
society does not understand. Our
problem (in Huntington Beach) as
that there arc more staid homeowner;
and citizens who live within prox1m-
11y to these clubs."
Kelly said tha t, while he ha<1
nothing against the clubs themselves,
fi nding a location where nearby
residents do not object may be
difficult.
But Bab1rack1 said the club owne~
themselves must start taking more
responsibility for the behavior of
their customers.
"We arc responsible for our
patrons." he said. "At the Golden
Bear. we always took cue of things in-
house. At the same tame. we didn't
infringe on anyone who wanted to
have a good tame."
Even so, the feel mg among owners
1s that running a rock club an Orange
County is always an uphill battle.
Jerry Roach said the community 1s
inept at providing for the needs of
xoung people. "f ace it,'' he said.
'Orange County doesn't want their
kids once they get out of Little
League."
But all the talk of rock clubs
opening and closing has little effect on
bands who arc committed to per-
formini, sa1d Joe Woods, singer-
guitarist of the band T .S.O.L.
"There will always be rock 'n' roll
and tbcTC Wlll always be people who
object toJt. lftheycloscd every club 1n
Orar\gc County, there would still be
roclc 'n' roll." Woods said.
"J used to play in laondromats.
We'dju11/lua 1n and play. We did it
before an we can do 1t again."
Dell) Piiot
Deltwery
I• Guaranteed
C.~•Ot &A1 !>e79 ~ & .-Jo!O<·• ~·1 .i;
(.,.oc.,~-fT• •1~J ,_._ yit \ P,t .,.,,.~l'.,t)rPc 4 'W ~
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VOL 71, HO. M
~hat do you hke about the Daily pjlot'> What
don't y9u hlce., Call the number above and your
mcssaa~ wttl be recorded, transcnbcd and de-
h vcrcd to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answenn.a scrv'cc may be
used to record lettm to tbt editor on any topic
Contnbuto" to our Lcttert column must include
their name and telephone number for venfi~taon
Tells u~ what'~ on your mind
.. •• .,.,., •'"'11 ~, " ""'"°_._.,...,,
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t-tlonel w..u. a.w. Mkt.
HIQM tOday • ranoe from e6 at the~ to 73 tnflnd.
LOWI tontght wit be In the ~ 40e to m6d 509.
Cloudy and OOC>W lki. •• fcnceat Satutday, wttn • 30
perc9nt chance of rein late In the d~. Hlghe wt11 be In the eo..
Light, vartabte Wlnda wtll blow aouthwee1 to weet 8 to 1CI
knote llong the Inner OOMtal wet.,.. thla afternoon ovet" 1· to 3-
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Furttw out, nott.~ Wlnda wttt blow 6 to 15 knot., With 5-
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INFECTION SEEN AS MAJOR THREAT •••
From Al
poses a m~or health threat, "and
that's rea.lly the thrust of thiJ paper,"
be said in a telephone interview
Thursday from San Francisco.
Pelvic inflammatory disease docs
not always appear with the "classic"
symptoms of severe abdominal pain
and fe ver, he said.
There may be no symptoms or only
mild ones, such as a dull, abdominal
ache, sliabt vaainal disclwJe, burn-
ing on urination OT ~in on inter·
course, Washington sat~.
"It's unp()n.&nt to liftk signs and
symptoms with the risk factors," be
said.
Multiple sex partnen represent the
single most imPortant factor putting a
woman at risk for PIO, he said.
The infections are only called
pelvic inflammatory disease when
they invade the upper aen.ital tr8Ct:
the uterus, Fallopian tubes or ovaries,
Washington said.
APPEALS COURT TO RULE ON DISPUTE •.•
From Al
scheduled to go to press on Monday.
Partjcs to the appeal must file briefs
with the court by noon Monday. The
panel of )udjes may issue: a decision
after reviewing material presented to
them. A hearing is not required.
Calligan attorney William
Yacobozz1 said his appeal of Ryan's
dec1s1on was based on his chcnt's
First Amendment right to free speech.
He believes that the voters should
decide the truthfulness of her state-
ment and that Ryan exercised prior
restraint in ordering portio ns of the
statement deleted.
statement, said he was concerned
about the appeal but added he has
confidence in his attorneys.
Yacobozzi. Calligan's attorney,
already raised the constitutional
question with Ryan without success.
Gates objects to Calligan using bcr
candidate's statement to accuse bim
of having been convicted of a federal
crime, ownina a bar in violation of
state law, covering up a felonl
drunken driving arrest, housing vio •
cnt criminals in low security tents and
costing taxpayers millions for those
tents.
Gates. who sought the delellon of Ryan ruled that the offend.mg
about two paragraphs of Calhgan's .. statements as written were false and
.
misleadina. She said it rcqwrcd more
space than is allowed in a 200-word
candidate's statement to clarify the
claims.
Calligan Thursday stood by the
wording in the statemcnL She main-
tains that Oranac County voten arc
familiar with the issues in the sheriffs
race and arc capable of understanding
the statement's contents.
Campaipt manager Robin Re-
isdorf said she feared Caltigan's
campaign has been irreparably bann-
ed by Ryan's decision because it
allows Oatq to attack the credibility
of her claims when she believes the
judge took issue only Wlth how they
were presented.
DOCTOR FILES $1 MILLION CLAIM .•.
From Al
mcnt, and 11 appeared to be in order''
before lcnockinJ on Gerson's d oor,
Harris said. Pohcc deny that Gerson
was inJured during the incident.
··our preliminary investigation an·
d1catcs that what Mr. Gerson said
occurred did not occllr," Harris said.
He declined to comment further
because of the pending Ii Option.
Utter said lbe Gersons never tried
to prevent Rodriguez from picking up
the child, who tearfully beged the
two officcn "not to take my daddy to
jail." They left the home without
taking the girlt he added.
"He (Rodnguez) just went over
there to play macho," Utter wd.
The claim apinst lbc city seeks SI
million in general damqes and
$5,000 in otheT relief, Utter said.
Separate lawsuits have been filed in
Orange County Superior Court
against both Bradley and Rodrilucz.
seeking the same amount, be added.
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APRIL4, 1986 D\llX PILOf ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
r .
~-.--. .....
NI
Soap star shines
in local theater
Your average community theater actor probably would start
salivating at the prospect of landing a leading role in a television r-J soap opera -many such performers arc method1cally building
their credits toward just such an eventuality.
Imagine. then, the wonderment among the cast of "Murder
Among Friends" at the Newport Theater Arts Center when they
learned they were sharing the stage with an actor who had played a
central role on CBS' "Capitol" for the first three years of that
show's run.
David Mason Daniels, who portrays the murder-plotting
agent in the Newport mystery-
comedy. currently running week-
ends through April 19. was one of
the new. young faces introduced TOI
when "Capitol" made its debut
four years ago -sharing the T
limelight with the likes of Holly-ITU$
wood luminaries Richard Egan,•••••••••••• Constance Towers, Rory
Callwun. Ed Nelson, Julie Adams and Carolyn Jones (who died in
the first year of shooting and was replaced by Marj Dusay). Daniels
played the role of straight-shooting ex-Air Force captain Tyler
McCandJess, who carried on a Romeo and Juliet romance with the
daughter of a rival Washrngton family.
Daniels. 32. who moved to Fountain Valley two years ago,
bowed out of the cast last year to free rum self for a movie career.
Were it not for his "Capitol" commitment, he could have played
the leading role in the movie "Rustlers' Rhapsody," which went
instead to Tom Berenger.
"It was a calculated nsk," Daniels says of his decision to leave
the daytime drama, which had provided.steady and lucrative
work. ··1 haven't done much lately, but rm·free if the right project
c-0mes aJong ...
What. then. is he doing acting for the pure fun of it in
community theater? Just that. Acting for the pure fun ofit.
"I just felt the need to become a better actor," he explained. "I
wanted to get involved in a play. and when auditions for this one
were announced, I got the sen pt and saw a role I liked. and then just
went down to read for 1t."
Although he's a P.rofess1onal actor, Daniels' membership in
the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) doesn't preclude his pcrformm~ in
non-professional theater. Were he in Actors Equity, the thcatncal
union. it would be a different story, however.
Daniels, who had to cope with the status of instant celebrity
four years ago when "Capitol" hit the air, now relishes the feelfog
of being part of an ensemble where the majority of his audience
(those not familiar with "Capitol") views him with no more spcciaJ
attention than the other five members of the cast -except.for the
fact that he stands at least a head taller than the rest.
"h's a real welcome change," he says of his first stage
expenencc since high school. "I like people but I'm not all that
crazy about aJl the hype and glamor. and I want to keep on doing
plays no matter how my pro(cssionaJ career develops."
For David Mason Daniels, a career in front of the cameras was
not really something he had trained and studied for since
childhood. Born in New Jersey and raised on a Pennsylvania farm,
he attended Principia. a small Ill inois colJcge, married his colleJC
(Pleue eee DAJIOEL8/Paee 10)
Publisher· Karen A. Wittmer
Editor Frank Zm1
l>atcbook Editor: Dix.ic Lindsay
Art Director: Steven Housh
Circulat1on Manager: Terry K.andJe
Production Mah.,er. Robcr1 L. Cantrell
Oatebook 1s published every Fnday by the Oranac Coast Pubhduna Co
P 0 Box I S60. 330 W &ly SI .. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Telephone (714)
6"42-021 R~ular bu11ness hours an: 8 am. to 5 p.m .• Monday throuaJt Fnday Deadline for caJcndar ofhents item• and letters 11 5 p.m. Monday
The ent1n: oontcnli of Datebook an: C'Opynahted by tilt-Ontnac Coast
Pubh1h1na Co. All nahtt are retcrvcd.
S 08'1)\ Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, April 4, 1986
DEL LORDS MAK.ING IT AS AN OPENING~
ACT ••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11
By RANDY JAY MATIN Scott Kempner, the guitarist and main
composer of the Del Lords, who opened for Pat Benetar at Irvine
Meadows reocntly and also headlined at the Coach House -was
sitting in his New York apartmont watching a rerun of °Father
Knows Best" when interviewed by telephone. "You have to
overcome a lot of re1tlessness and apathy," said Kempner about
being in the open.ins slot .. The response we have had so far ranges
from very apathetic to very enthusiastic.
'THE MONEY PIT' ISN'T THE GREATEST
••••••••...••..•••.•.....•••••••••••.•..••••..................•. 12
Bf GEORGE WILLIAMS No one could wreck a house in a movie
with more eloquence than silent saeen stan like Chaplin, Keaton,
Laurel and Hardy or Harold Uoyd. There was always a fine logic, a
balletlike rhythm and meticulous timing running through their
soenes that made them supremely funny. These are the qualities
missing from "The Money Pit," directed by Richard Benjamin and
starring Tom Hanks and Shelley Long. With~ them. the movie
becomes just a series of aged gap ..
CERT ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••••••••••••••••• 13 By CBRISTOPRER PALMER There arc now nine protesSJonal and
semi-professional orchestras with their home base in Orange
County. In the past two months, two of them have cancelled
concerts and one has cancelled an entire season. What is happening?
When you hire a musician, you must pay him ... and it follows that
large groups Qf musicians must also be paid. Of course this is
expensive. When the hall is half em~~j or when °enliibtened"
orchestras lower ticket prices to fill the • the cost of a concert can
no longer be covered by ticket sales alone.
LOCAL RESTAURANTS WIN TOP AW ARDS
FROM RESTAURANT WRITERS •••••••••••••• 16
By FIFI CHAO Lists can be so listy (loosely translated into boring).
However, there are lists that pack a lot of useful information into'
small space. Perhaps you will find this .. reference file.. worth
clipping and putting into the comer of your walJet for further
reference. Each year members of the Southern California Restaurant .
Writers put on a black tie awards banquet and give out coveted
acknowledgments to deserving f'C1taurants from Santa Barbara to
the Mexican Border. There arc approximately 16,000 restaurants in
the southern half of our state.
TOPBll-LIKG •••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4
RESTAURAKT OF THE WEEK ••••••••••••••••• 15 , ..
RESTAURANT D\JlECTORY •••••••••••••••••••• 19
TV.L18TINOS ••••.•••••••••••• ~························· 11
' On che cover are Weldon
Smith and Weldon Smichjr.
Photog.raphy by
Richard K~hler
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
D ig.ht ;ohnson, a
Lutheran pastor, takes pride in
being a fisherman of men. But
on the day after Easter -his
busiest workd.y of the year-
he takes pride also in knowing
how to unwind. ·'It's nice to get out there on
"If you can't fish for m1t1, a boat, away from everything
you can at least fish for fish,·· and just relax," says Bob Gray,
Johnson said as he cast his line a salesman at Davey's Locker,
overboard. . which has been a Newport
The Glendale pastor was Beach institution since the
among two dozen fishermen early 19Ws. .
on board the "Western Pride," Every day, Dav~y·s Locker
trying their best to tempt the sends boatloads of fishermen
heaviest and tastiest fish out of from its landing at the Balboa
the cool waters off Newport Pavilion to drop their lines in
Beach. the deep waters off Newport
These· springtime days, as Beach, Huntington Beach and
the skies grow sunnier and the Laguna Beach. Other boats
fish grow more plentiful, leave during the night for a day
Dwight Johnson and~/.
sportf ishing boats are in
heavier demand. At Davey's
Locker and Newport Landing
in Newport &ach, and at
Dana Wharf Sportfishing in
Dana Point, sportfishing oper·
ators say some of the best .....
flshing is right around the
corner, with the season peak-
ing during the warm 'Summer
months when up to 100
fishermen arrive on the dock
to pack a 76·fOOt sportfishing
boat.
of fishing off Catalina Island.
Although sportfishing has
been around for decades, Gray
says it seems to be gaining in·
popularity µch year. "It seems
that every type of recreational
activity is getting more popu·
larand we're enjoying that,"he
says.
, At Davey's Locker, New-
port Landing and Dana Wharf
Sponfishing, an array of fish -
ing excursjons are offered. The
most popular are the half ·day
1
. .,.
and )4.day boats which carry
fishermen to local waters for
five to 11 hours off ishing.
Jody Tyson, general man-
ager of Dana Wharf
Sportfishlng, says those cruises
have a special appeal during
the warmer months. "You can
go fishing in the morning and
go to the beach later in the
afternoon," she says. "It's
ideal."
The half -day boats, with
tickets costing $17, can be a
perfect introduction to
sportfishing. But the die-hard
fisherman often prefers to
leave during the night for a full
day of fishing off Catalina and
San Clemente islands where
the fish are often more plen-
tiful.
At Newport Landing,
owner Lindsay Hesketh is
preparing a new service for
fishermen. Beginning April 19.
a limited-load boat will leave
from its BalbOall~.d~g at .
midnight or 2 a.m., depending
on whether the destination is
Catalina or San Clemente
Island.
"What's nice about the
limited-load boat is that for a
long time fishermen were tired
of crowded boats and said they
were willing to pay a little
more to avoid those elbow-to-
elbow crowds," Hesketh slid.
The boat, which can carry
up to 49 fishermen, will be
limited to 29 passengers for its
day-long fishing cruises and is
being equipped with bunks for
added comfort.
"We gonhe idea. from a
place in San Diego which tried ..
it last summer and found it to
be very successful," Hesketh
said.
But whether on a half.day,
)4-day or full -day boat, on a_ny
given day fishermen are apt to
'
hook an array of fish-calico
and sand.bass, bonito, halibut,
barracuda, mackerel and yel·
lowtail. On good days,
albacore and tuna may be
available.
But while the sport
fishing boats are equipped
withsoph-
isticated fish-finding equip·
ment, there are never any
guarantees you ·u come back
with your limit.
"We know where the fish
are, and the good spots to try;
but you never know," says Bob
Stephens, a boat-eaptain foe
Pavef s Locker.;
You ·can lead fishermen to
fish, apparently, but you can't
make 'em bite . But the captain
"-'ill usually give you a free pass
for another day if the~p has
been especially poor.
When the scopes, dials and
assorted electronic gadgetry
on board don '.t do the trick,
Stephens sometimes resorts to
his own notebook of hot
fishing spots.
"Sometimes it's wherever
there are rocks or even where a
plane crashed into the ocean -
really, those are some of the
best," he said.
One distinct advantage of
the sportfishing boats over
your own efforts on a pier or
jetty or in your own boat is the
service you receive from the
crew. Youcannaporworkon
your tan while the boat charges
out to or back from the fish ing
spots. You can rent all the
\
tackle you need. The ha.it is
usuaUy plentiful.
I
The crew will help you with
the equipment and give you
pointers. They'll even remove
the fish from the hook, fillet it
and wrap it in a plastic bag for
you. And if that weren't
enough, you can purchase
everything from hamburgers
to ca.ndy bars to beer
and coffee right
on board .
To add some fun to the
day's proceedings, the boat's
crew often starts up a contest
of sorts with participants chip--You can lead
fishermen to
fish, apparently,
but you can't
make 'em bite. -ping in S3 each. The fisherman
who catches the heaviest fish
wins to pot.
Of course, fishing-is only
one part of the appeal.
Weldon Smith, a Costa
Mesa jeweler, sees the fishing
cruises as a pcrf t>ct opportunity
to get away from his worries
ashore and relax .
"There· s one thing I really
·Like about it," he said. "There's
no phones out here. And even
if you don't catch any fish, it's
still a nice ocean cruise."
Here are th~details on the
Please s~ FISHIN' pg.11
Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday. April 4, 1986 I
---~-----~------------------------------..... ,--
APRIL
8: 15 p.m., Plummer Auditorium, 11271 Stanford Ave., Garden Grove.
Lemon and Chapman, FulJenon. $18 S 7 to $25 admission. 534-7271.
and $9 admission. 871-6632. ----
SM TW TFS
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 1617 1819
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 3.0
CLASSICAL
Friday
CELLIST PETER REJTO, accom-
pjn1cd b} pianist Francoise Rrgna1,
perform at 8 pm. at Orange Coast
Collc$r's Fine <\ns Rcclla1Hall.2701
Fa1rv1ew Rd . Costa Mesa. $5 ad-
\ anlc S6 at the door. 432-5880
THE F ULLERTON CHAMBER
PLAYERS perform Thurs -Sat. from
'-IO p m for dinner guests at 1he
Irvine Hi lton and Towers· Mor.ell's
rc'itauran1 The chamber lno features
Ka1hlcen Murphy and Brian Beshore
on violin, and Adnenne Bigg~ on
cello 17900 Jamboree Bl vd., Irvine
!!6"'\-3111. CELLIST GREG GOT-
TLIEB, who has appeared with Stan
Ge1z. Linda Ronstadt. the Orange
Count) Chamber Orchestra. the Long
Beach Symphony, and more. present~
a ~lo concen at 7.30 pm. He
includes a bnef introductory d1s-
cuss1on of the meaning of music m
modern hvmg, and the "healing"
effect it can have as 11 awakens the
electronic pathways within individ-
uals. Hcalix Center. 23732 Birtcher
Dr .. El Toro. S8 adm1ss1on. 859-7940.
PIANIST CONSTANTINE OR-
BELIAN performs the final concen of
the C-ommuntty Concert·., ~a~on.
Saturday
"AMERICAN MUSIC PER-
FORMANCE ENSEMBLE" presents
a program of works by Feldman, Ives.
Foss and Gershwin. Eric Wri$ht
conducts. 8 p.m .. U(' Irvine's Fme
Arts Concert Hall. $5. $4, and SJ
adm1ss1on. 856-6616.
A SENIOR RECITAL features
soprano Ga} le Thompson at 8 p.m. at
Salmon Recital Hall. Chapman Col-
lege. 333 N Glassel!, Orange. Free
adm1ss1on. 997-6813
HIGHLIGHTS FROM
"CARMEN," the opera. and
Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3,
are spotlighted as the Fullerton Col-
lege Symphony Orchestra performs
under the baton of David Lewis. 8
pm .. Yorba Landa Forum, 41 75
Fairmont Bl vd .. Yorba Linda. $4 and
SJ admission. 871-810 I
"AMERICAN MUSIC ANO
APPLE PIE" 1s the tttlc of a
performance by the Orange Count)
Paetfic Symphony. Keith Clark con-
ducts. and soloist 1s trumpeter
Anthony Plog. Works performed arc
Bemstem ·s symphontc dances from
"West Side Story," Schmidt's
"Trumpet Concerto," Nanes' ''Sym-
phony for Strings," and Schumai:in:s
"Third Symphony." Free apple pie 1s
~rved at mterm1ss1on for the au-
dience. 8 p.m.. Santa Ana High
School Aud1tonum, 520 W. Walnut.
Santa Ana. 97 3-1300.
THE FULLERTON CHAMBER
PLAYERS, sec Fnday hstmg.
THE GARDEN GROVE SYM-
PHONY features Sterling Holloway
as its guest artist in the narration of
Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf."
Also in the program by the Symphony
is Rim sk~-Kor sa ko v's
"Scheherazade;' Arban's "Carnival
of Venice" with Michael Margulies.
Israeli Tuba solo ist; and lppolitov-
1 vanov's "Procession of the Sardar"
8 p.m.. Don Wash Auditonum.
Harbor Area's
Original Wholesale Jeweler . Bu:v Smart & Compare!
1>1:.."C.-.:1~(; e i\f'l'R \l\l't. e RI I' \IRINC;
IM"' ~c•• pt•rl Hl vJ . e Ct"r.a M~'·'· l ·\ '.J.!h!.i • 4 7 l·H flCil\.1H 11
i Dally Pilot Datebook/ Frld(ly. April •. 1986
Sunday
PlANIST MICHAEL SANDERS of
Orange County performs works by
Bach , Liszt, Beethoven, Ravel and
Liap<!unofT in a conccn at 2 p.m .
Neighborhood Congregational
Church 340 St. Ann's Dr .• Laguna
Beach. SJ admission. 494-8061.
THE U.S. ARMY BAND, CHORUS
and Herald Trumpets, who regularly
assemble for the President and his
guests. perform a free concen at 3
p.m. at the Hollywood Bowl. (213)
209-7621.
CONCERT PIANIST ROSE ANN
WOOD and a guest ensemble, featur-
ing violinist Robin Johnson-Cecil
and cclhst Ben Brostrom. present "A
Gift of Music" scholarship benefit.
Works performed include
Beethoven's "Appassionata" Sonat.a,
McDowell's "Tragics" Sonat.a, and
the Sbostakovich Ptano Trio in E
Minor Op. 67. 3 p.m .. Golden West
College's theater, 15744 Golden West
St., Huntington Beach. S7 and $5
admission. 895-8367.
Ballet for Children
THE SADDLEBACK CONCERT
CHORALE performs Vaughn Wil-
liams' "Mass io G Minor," plus
music written by Spanish miss~on
priests in North and South Amenca.
Alvin Brightbill is conductor .. 4 p.m ..
Mission San Juan Capistrano
Church, Ortega Hwy. and Camino
Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano. S7
and $6 admission. 582-4656.
THE CHAPMAN SYMPHONY OR-
CHESTRA Concert. conducted by
John Koshak. presents "Overture to
the Barber o f Seville" by Rossini,
"Conccno For Bassoon and Or-
chestra" by Mozart, and "Firebird
Suite" by Stravinsky. 4 p .m., Chap-
man College's Memorial
Auditorium, 333 N. Glasscll.t Orange.
$5 and $3 admission. 997-6isl2.
Ballet Pactflca'a lead dancer , Krlati lloorhead, la featured
ln the title role of .. Clnde.rell&," when the compeny
praenta lta 'Ballet for Children' proanun at the P'-UY&l
Forum Theater, 850 Lapna Canyon Roa.ct. Lapna Beach
Saturday at S :SO p.m . and Sunday at 1:30 p.m . and 3 :30
p.m.Call 49'·7271 for further information.
Monday
THE PH.ll.JP JONES BRASS
ENSEMBLE, welJ-known British re-
cording anists, perform an eclectic
repertoire of orifinal works and
serious ttanscripuoos. 8: 15 p.m.,
Laguna Beach Hiab School
Auditoriurn..t. 625 Pan Ave., Laguna
Beach. 494-.t822.
Thanday
BARITONE MIGUEL ESTEBAN
aod PIANIST CllJU8TINDtBOMAS
are featured in a special duo recital as
part of the Collqe Hour Concerts
presented at Irvine Valley College .
The prosram features the cycle La
Boone Olanson by Gabriel Faure.
Noon, Room 311, 5.SOO Irvine Center
Dr., Irvine. Free admsision.
559-9300.
THE F ULLERTON CHAMBER
PLAYERS, sec Friday listing.
,IAZZ
a
P'rlday ----------THE BAR.LEM BLtlaAND JAZ'J.
BAND, made up of musicians from
the Golden Age of Swing in the
l 930'1, performs hits such as "Swing-i~ the Blues," MGeorgia on My
Mmd," "Honeysuclcle Rose," "Ain't
Misbehavin" and "Stomping at the
Savoy." 8 p.m., The Forum Theater,
417S Fairmont Blvd., Yorba Linda.
$8. 50 admission. n9-8S9 I.
THE GEORGE ORD'l'ITB TRIO
performs Tburs.-Fri. from 8 p.m.,
Sat. from 8:30 p.rn. and Sun. from 4
p.m. at Gladstone's 4 Fish's Jazz
Cellar, 900 Bayside Dr.. Newport
Beach. 760-0971. JAZZ PIANIST
La CZIMBE R, who previously play-
ed piano with vocalist Al Jarrcau's
trio. performs S>OouJar music in the
ARTS HIGH SC"'OOL &o.rdlng &. 0.y S1uc1tn1s
•
M.fors In Musk, Dance, Theater,
Musk.Al Theater and Vlsua.1 Arts.
Plus Coleae-r~r.atoiy Audtllks.
Of•ae Co. A1141dou Alf. 1 l . UI ot w.tk few lo<..adott l dmt
In &Hullfvl Sit1 lot<inlo Movn1.alns ~M Los Ang~~&. S.n !Mgo
Also Summt1 Worluhop\ for All "&ts
"'" (7 14) 6S9·2 I 7 I
IOYUWILD SCHooL 01 MUSIC ANO THl Al1J AJt.., Jfi · ,,.._., Mt1 .,,,_ K1iH1 ,,0. IN ..... """"11· CA JIU'
Irvine Hilton aod Towers Lobby
LouOJe Tues.-Sat. 9 p.m .-1 a.m .
17900 Jamboree Blvd.. Irvine.
86).3111. .
CAYE LIDO presents Judi Lee.
piano and voatls, Mon.-Fri. from S-8.
p.m.; the Lido Jazz AJJ St.an Sun
from 3:30-8 p.m. and Tbun.-Sat.
from 9 p.m.-1 :30 a.m.; "Freeway."
featuring Max Bennett, Sun. from 9
p,m.-1 a.m.; the Ma.rtJ Bros. Sextet
Mon. from 9 p.m.-1 :30 a.m.; ... Inter-
section," with Wayne Wayne, Tues.
from 9 p.m.-1 :~ a.m.; and the New
York Jazz Connection Wed. from 9
p.m.-1 :30 a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach. 675-2968.
Saturday
JAZz PIANI8T La CZIMBER.
see Friday listing.
Sunday
THE NEW ORLEANS JAZZ CLUB
of Southern California pthers at I :30
p.m. for their monthly meeting.
Featured arc Chet Jaeger and The
Night Blooming Jazz Men. Hunt-
inaton Beach Inn. 211 I 2 Pacific
Coast Hwy., Huntington Bcac~ $3
donation. 536-1421.
Monday
TRACY WELLS, His Vibes, Big
Swing Band. Vocalist Bcclci Morpn.
and Richard Cruz DWel•nd Group
play for dancing from 7:30-11 :30 p.m
AJp1ne Inn at Alpine Villaae, Tor-
ran~ Blvd. exit to Harbor Frwy. F~
Taeeday
J AZZ PIANIST LES CZIMBER. sec Friday listing.
JOHN ANEILO JR. and the Band
I
featured adl Moo. from 7·9-foat: until A.pr, 21. Ooidca West .
...
...... C • ty, City University o(t.e.doo_ ~
# unarro(~adC4mJlll*'
I l\Df\11 S2S.SO h. 891-3991. 'MY un LBCIVU. .. Grover SclmCe Disti aitbed Lec:hnSeriel. ~dean ofbioqjal ICieoca~ 7:30 p..m., ~ lrviec'1 UaifltlJlily
1'Wd*y Linda O~Hs aas.ociate Oub. Free edmblioe 1~7403. oroblot or · • ma compuative '"BOW TO ....... re 11 Ito A
""TllZ DJE..llYl'IDICA'ftON of litcrahm:, ~ ick Sew)U, IUH." Thia kc:tu:rc for womm tracb-~ .!"'-.~11. "'.~ .. ~! '°uL1: mstan1dr.an o(~ praeat a ways '° ead love ~ 1k a.uB for sinpea t.ben for ~ ... ,,.._..,. • u.w --~ their .. last.. kduft on a abject of re:petidoa of old patla'lll ud bow to
T I N U E D
pertorm Tues.-Sal io the Lobby Bar,
Hyatt Retency Hotel, 200S. Pine-St.;
Lona Bach. No oover ~ CAPE LIDO, see Friday listina.
Wecln-4ay
SWING VOCALIST BRUCE
LEONARD, formerly with the Owtie Spivak Orcbectra., performs
each Wed. at the El Conejo Re.
tau.rant, 1750 W. Lincoln, Anaheim.
991-0540. I
CAFE LIDO, 9CC Friday listing.
JOHN ANELLO JR.. see Tuesday li . s~az PIANJBT La cmtBEB.
see Friday listina.
Tllancla7
JAZZ PIANIST ~ CZJMBER,
see Friday listing.
CAFE LIDO, see Friday listing.
JOHN ANELLO JR., see Tuesday
listina.
P'rlday
HATORI appears Wed.-Fri. from 8
p.m.-12:30 a.m. at the Sheraton
Newport Hotel, 4S45 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach. 833-0570.
FRAN MARTIN performs easy
listcnina, contemporary music on the
piano. Oancina available. Tucs.-Fri.
7:30-10:30 p.m., Holiday Inn. Bristol
Ave., Costa Mesa.
THE BOP frescnts dancing music
by emcee Joe Steven Fri.-Sat.; "The
Authentics," a live S<)•s dance band,
Sun. at 8 p.m.; .. Rock 'N Roll
Heaven." a live show tribute to the
legends featuring Bob Gully, Mon.. at
8 p.m.; ''Rock Around the Oock. .. a
history or rock and roll featuring
Jason Chase, Tues.. at 8 p.m.; and
Crazy Contests. including Lip Sync,
Llmbo, and Basketball Shoot. Tbun.
A special featun:d this Wed. is a
"Hands Across America" stan-:up
party from 5 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Partic1-
pants wiU contribute a minimum of
SIO 10 joio the "Hands Across
America line on Memorial Day
weekend. 18774 Broolthurst, Foun-
tain Valley. 963-2366.
Saturday
THE BOP, sec Fnday listing.
Sunday _
THE BOP, sec Fnday list.Lng. ~ Monday
THE BOP, see Friday Hsting.
Tueeda, •
•
SNEil PREVIEW performs Jjvc
each Tuesday from 8 p.m.-12:30 a.m.
at the Sheraton Newport Hotel. 4S4S
MacArthur Blvd.. Newport Beach.
833-0S70.
THE HOP, sec Frida~ listing.
P'llAN MARTIN, see Friday lisllng.
Wed....s&J
RA TOIU, tee Friday listin.a.
THE BOP, ICC Friday listi.Q&.
PllAN MAllTIN, tee Friday listing.
Tllanda7
llA'IOIU, MIC Friday listiq.
P'llAN MAR~ eee Friday list1na.
THE BOP, ICC rriday 1.istina.
TllE CAJlTIEllS AND 1• &.AAA T
Wm. daDQCS, :rboua pata at 8 kcture ICfia praen1ed by·educ:atoc tbc:ir choice. 7:30 p.m., UC frvine's makeabcalthy~JueeaffabD.
p.m. each Fri. in Newport Beach. a.odart hil1oriaD KaleJobmon. Held Sciencel,.ec:tuftHall. Frccldm.itsion. Cunn~, a matri11uad &mlb
6-41-3987. · (r()m 9:30-1 1:30 a.m. each Tuea.. 8%-6379. tbenl)llt. leads the lecture. 7..t:lO
J"OCUS II, a IJ'OUP of si.Qlk:a qcs· thruab ~ 22. lapna Art Museum, "UGBT AND IP ACE .UT MOVE-p.m.,. 2900 S. Bristol, Bldl. 0 ., Suite
20-29, meet al 7:30 p.m. at t& South Soum Plaza ~pamion ~ KENT In California .. by Melinda lOS, Costa Mea S41-9071.
C.out Community Church. 5120 cation. Sl membcn, S4 non-man-Wortz. UC lrvi.ne JJtOfeuor and
BonitaCanyon0r.,lrvioe.8S4-7600. ~~SJ~ BUii.AN VE-Oa1Jery Direc1or. 7:30 p.m., Lquna 1'1111ftda7
WllE.itL or P'IUEND8BIP, for m-• " ..... :. ,.., ... : • .......__ Art Mmeum. South Coat Pla:za, PllOCEDVBES roa APPLYING sinales over 4S mceu at Mdody lnn ~ • u.aa ..---·~ 3333 N. Bristol Sl, Costa Mea. S4 FOil FINANCIAL AID as esplaincd
in F'ullertonatS:30p.m. fora T.G.LF. features Dr. John Flood-a · members, SS non-members. in a worbbop dcsisucd ror ltUden1a
524-Sl48. trainer Robert lla&land. AFC. 7:30 49~S3l. and ~ts. General infonnatioft ii ~.m., Saddleblck Collqie's Lib. IOI , SOFl'WABEREIJABD..ITYPJlE.. :..1.-... bo t .,._,._ r__. r-• Satarda• 8000 u .... .......; •• ~ Mi•-'on 01~." Dr. o-. Li .... __..... ... :_ provlUll;U a u ....,,....., '-""Ill'~ · , ...... -....... ·• -.... nn... ..,.,. • .-.. ........,.ui ieae'avariousfinancialaMS~
WHEEL OP PIUZNDSlllP, for Viejo. Free admission. ~ 2-4S71 . rector. Center for Soft-ft.re ReJiabili-California's student aM1 a tioo
lio&la over 4S, meeu for dinner at .---------------------------.:::::::::.::.;:.=::..:_;:.::::=:.:.....:=-..::z.Ji:.===
7:00 p.m. a.t Armen'• io Costa Mesa. S24-Sl48.
8aDdaJ
POCUS SI, a croup of sin&la ~
»39, meetat 11.30 a.m. at tbe South
Coast Community Cburcb, S 120
Bonita Canyon Dr., Irvine. 8S4-7600.
TB.E.. JEWISH COIUIUNITY
CENTER or South On.nae Counry
hosts .. Happeoinp for SiJllles." Fea-
tun:d today is a wort,lplaysbop that
will explore .. How and Who We ~
-Alone and With Each Otlier -Within the Seasons of Our Lives." 7
p.m., JCC, 298 Broadway, l...quoa
Beach. Sl .50 advance, SS at the door. 497-2070.
WBEEL OF · FRIENDSlllP, for sinaJes over 45, meets for a cham-
pqne brunch at 1 r.60 a.m. at Tbe
Buttery in Buen.a Park. S24-5148.
Tue9day
THE NEWPORT IRVINE
CllAPTllll of Parenti Without Pan-
oen presents their Newcomcn'
Orientation each TUC9day from
8-9: IS 1).m., followed by coffee and
conversation. call S49-l 13S for
further information.
CLA.sSIC PRIENDS, for ages 4S or
over, hosts a social bour and stqe act
at 8 p.m. at the Huntinatoo Beach loo
Restaurant, 21 12 Pacific Cout Hwy.,
Huntinaton Beach. S44-92S9.
WHEEL OP l'RIENDSlllP, for
sinales over 45, meets !or ~ ~t
6:30 p.m. at Sbalt.ey s Pizza m Anaheim at 6:30 p.m. S24-Sl48.
Wedneeday
THE SWING CLUB SING~
DANCE is ~nted with free basic
swing lessons, miAers, contests,
socials. and parties. ToajJhfs special
feat~ is the ··Andrew S1sten. .. 8-11
p.m., El Conejo Restaurut. 1750 W.
Linootn, Anaheim. $2 admission.
991-0540.
CLASSIC FRIENDS, for singles 45
or over, gather for Happy Hour from
S·1 p.Ql. at Pronto's Restaurant. 3333
Bristol, (South Coast Pt'az.a). Com
Mesa. 544-9259.
Satantay
SllA&TI OAWAIN, bestsellinf
author of "Creative Visualization,
the "Creative Vi1ualiution Work-
book," and "Uvina in the Li&bt,"
leads a "Creative EDe1JYWorb&op"
today.Sun...:. 10 a.m.-S p.m., HeaJU
Center, 23 r32 Birtcher Dr., El Toro.
St2Sadmission. 8S9-7940.
l!huaday ---
SBilTI GAW A.IN, ae Saturday
lutina.
lloacla7
'+u:ll' &i I Uill -TBZ &EV TO
P'KELING GOOD." ftlcilitated b,Y
Sonia Ganz. thiJ pnctjcal lellUDar ll
~ o~ ~~,~'$ l~ 1k Ah~
~v~~\.e~ Beach 6ucks Auction
CJ March 31st thru A ril 26th
Bid on thousands
of DOLLARS of
FREE merchandise.
f or every .dollar you spend
at Huntington Center bet·
ween March 31 and April
26 you'll receive FREE
Beach Buck~ to ust during
our Beach Bucks Auction
Saturday. April 26 at 6:00
pm in Huntington Center's
center court.
Here's how it works:
h ke your receipts and
purchases made from any
Huntington Center store
between March. 31 and
April 26 to the Beach Bucks
redemption booth near
center court during mall
hours. Our Beach Bucks
hostess will give you the
equivalent in Beach Bucks
for the amount you spent.
Save your Beach Bucks and
use them to bid on and buy
merchandise at our exciting
~ach Bucks Auction to be
held on Saturday. April 26
at 6:00pm
Montgomery Ward
..
A uction Rules:
I Mut I. 11 0< oldn.
1. "'~ -IM IN6e ho111 H1n•lnsto" C-r ttotti i..t-March )I ....i A,.-lf .U,
I ...
} lt.K.tptt w\11 oftly IN ....._..,. Oft llM -
4-y °' ~ "" ... ..i.... ,._, of putt"-.. ..--.
...... ~Oft CftlM!r rtWnlft ,,.. ..... 10 ....
...WV -:r pl.oy.r tr.. ttw auction el uy 1i-
d ...... ttw .....-1oe.
5. H1mth•ato" Cmlt• .ioro -,.ioy-&ftd thftr
1 ... ....tl.at• 111...UIW. an NOT .lipbW for 8nch
Bueti•
• A11y mw ...... nwtt......._ _.. M --· ........ by~· • .m,n ...............
7 No puod.aw ,__...,,to~· To "".:l..;' '-lucfl a..ke li.,ty ltop by tlw loft booth ,,.., ~ co.ft. Umll
SS.00 frw le.ch h<b pn ,..._,., .., clay.
I [)oyW. lktcu Oayt yoo1'U f'f<'riy• .._. .. IM __ ,,. o1,...ro.-.... ~Y'. T...._.y•
...... F rlday April lS.
t M.u.totinl111 ..--of Inell lu<b for ""Y
,,_.._ lo St.000. pn --'Pt. JI' Sl..000 °"
.AoubW hclo~ clayo IMo...tayt T...._Y' • Fri-
day A,.;1251
10 Mlnl-comM....d r«lllpl• of \2 30 will
rt'C'riv• S.S.00 ·~Ii lkoc:li•. All rttnph IU4&b
•011"'"4 to llw M&tftl S.S 00
JI ... ._..,_._...., ...... _._., ... •
....i oftly lor ~ el It. A.a-el A,.;I
.U.I ....
12. All .._., loidi.t -lot IN-Pl to doe
tt.Jldt,.iolll c ........... a..clit I 4 0*"'
llootll ~y. "'"' » INt-J ..... , .•.
felt ~ P\tytft may ---a..dr.• wtt)i l.-ily ............ M -4o IO .. 11w ,.......... __ c~ -:r ....,.
~....allJ p.•. °" AllC'dofl 0.y
u ...... ~ .... mdllty ,.,._ --~ fot ...... heh .._ ... us 00 .....
lld.t IOf ~ ct-•1,,. or ........ •· c--..
Jt. Alt crodk <AMI pure.._ are tfJciblt for
lucll llud•, howner pey-1'h .,.. ~
u u:r.....,.,. ,..~ ,.......,. ,._ ·-• ~~-
Auction night, Saturday.
April 26 at 6:00 p.m. in Hunt·
ington Center's center court,
bid thousands of dollars
worth of merchandise in-
cluding airline tickets, a
Honda Spree motor scooter.
home appliances. microwave
ovens. a VCR, fashions and
footwe.ar, gift certificates and
much. much more. Auction
merchandise will be on
display in crnter court March
31 thru April 26.
~ach Bucks 1$ spoNOmi by ttw Hunt
mgton Cmtt!r Mt!rchants Assoaation
JCPt!nM)', Southwnt Airlinn, Mont-
gomt!ry Wud Colu-and Amcoric.in
Exprn~
~SOUIMW$1
JC Pen hey
·-
Delly Ptk>t Da.teb<>QI(/ Frtday, April 4, 1986 I
...
,,,
------------------------------------------------------------...
I :Al
C 0 N
fo rm 1s also discussed. and a question
and answer St"ss1on will follow
6 30-8 30 p.m .. OC. C ·s r ech Bldg
Room 114. 2701 Fa1rv1t"w Rd .. (O~ta
Mesa 432-5508
WILL SINGER. profrss1onal
Laguna Beach realtor and founder of
tht' Laguna Bt'ach Psychic Institute.
d1scussc~ how to ethicall y and cfll'C·
lively use psychic ab1hty in husine~s
and rclauonsh1ps. 7·30 p m., Heall\
Center, 23732 B1ncher Dr . El foro
$5 adm1ss1on. 859-7940.
DANCE
Friday
A SPRING DANCE THEATER
Concen explores love. reflection and
the celebration of hfe. Six works by
faculty and student choreographeTS
rC<.'c1vc their world premiere per-
formances AccompanytnJ the
dance5 is a wide range of mus1(.' from
classical to Jan. including several
onginal compos11tons by faculty
mrmber Jannine Livingston To-
night-Sat at 8 pm .. also Sat. at 2 p.m ..
and Sun. 6 at 2 and 5 p m Cal State
Fullenon'\ Little Theater $4 SO and
S3 50 adm1s~1on with SI discount for
matin~s. 773-337 1
"DANCE '86 -An Evening of
l)ancc" features 42 collcgt' dance
students and choreography by the
Golden West College dance facull)
students and guest an.t!>IS in a pro-
gram of contemporary. J87l and
ballet. Nannette Brodie directs the
concen . 8 p.m., GWC"'s mainstage
theater. 1 <,744 Golden West SL.
HuntinJtOn Beach. $5. S4 and S'
alim1ss10n. 895-8378.
JOINT EFFORT, a s1x-p1cc.c dance
band. presents society band sounds
fcatunng mus1c from the 30's to the
80's. Their program prescntfonginal
music as well as contemporary hats by
jan greats. Mon.-Sat.. <> p.m.-1:30
a.m. The Ritz-Carlton's The C'lub,
33533 Sborehne Dr . Laguna Niguel
240-2000
THE AME RICAN INTER·
NATIONAL DANCE CO. presents a
swing class at 8 p.m. each Fnday
followed b) a dance ~oc1al from
9-10 30 p.m~ a Jttterbug class rach
Monday at 11 p.m .. and a ballroom
and Laun class each Vvedoesday at !<
pm $20 for seven lessons 650-3041!
Saturday
"WORLD ST AGE" and "Folk
Dances from Bulgana" feature in tcr-
nauonal folk dance performer and
instructor Thea Hu11c:m Also. a rare
glimpse 1nto the magic and mystery of
village dance trad1t1ons which have
remained unbroken for centuries.
7-11 pm .. D1edrich's International
Coffee Howe. 250 Ogle St.. Costa
In 1979 Jill Barbera was working fOf a ma)Of commodities company in New Yoril Her employer
asked her to move to ltlelr branch office in San Francisco
Jill agreed
One of her first San Francisco sights was a talented
man named Vietor Low Jill was his oow boss .. II was love
at first sight." Jill recalled, a~r a bnel romance. they were married Their commodities careers were on a roll
and the future IOoked great Their ltfestvle included 14
cars. a couple of boats and an alfplane lt also 1nclu00d
llletr new baby, Tiffany On the ddy she was born. the
silver marilet crashed. and the Low s l1nanc1al world went
with fl
why not? We've been so suocessfvl that VIC1or has quit
the oil business. and worn with me ·· ts Vietor Jill"s em·
ployee once agatn? Jill laughed and said. Not We wor11
together, but VictOf also has other business involve
men1s ··
The Low family soon moved to Santa Ana to pursue
an opportunity tn the olt buSWless that VICtOr had been
offered and Jill 981tled into being• mom However. two
years tater,J111 was bored. ''I'd bHfl ro the Ofanoe County
Fair§l"O\:H'lds Swap Meet. and I figured If would be a good
plaoe to sell a retail product. t had a friend 1n the tropicel
fan business whO oftered to supply me with fans. so I said
• Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, April 4, 1986
•
Jiii describes her products as being "cetllng fans IOf
home owners and commercial property developers Our prices range from $25 to S500 All of our products are new
quality unrts We back our sales with an excellent
guaranty, seMOe and replaoement parts ·
The Orange County Fairgrounds Swap Meet is prOUd
to have Jiii's f an Club as part of Oll' vendor family . You
t an v1s11 them every Saturday at space G-136 and Sunday at spaoe C-115
It's all there •••
Everything •.•
under the Sun!
Mesa. 646--0323. JOINT EFFORT, sec: Friday IJst-
inf; 'DANCE 'II -An Evening of
Dance," sec Fnday lisuna.
BOB ltEANE, HIS CLARINET
AND ORCHESTRA 'perform for your
dancing pleasure from 2-6 p.m. at
Osko'sClub Marina. 190 Manna Dr .•
Seapon V 11lage. Long Bt'ach. $3 cover
charge includes free appetizer buffet
(213)493-6444
"BALLET FOR CHILDREN ,"
presented by Ballet Pacifica. features
"C1nderc:lla." choreographed by Lila
Zali to music by Prokofiev. Dancing
the title role 1s K.nsti Moorhead, and
Douglas Reeve: narrates the: story as
the ballet progresses. Today at 3:30
pm .. Sun. at 1.30 and 3:30 p.m.
Festival Forum Theatre. 650 Laguna
Canyon Rd., Laguna Beach. $5 ad·
m1ss1on. 494-7271.
A SPRING DANCE THEATER
Concert, see Fnday lis11ng.
"LOS FREDDYS," "CHICO CHE,"
and "Los Pastelas Verdes" arc fea-
tured at the Empresa Frias Public
Danoe from 6 p.m.-1 a.m. at the
Anaheim Convention Center. 800 W.
Katella. Anaheim. 999-8900.
"SALUTE TO BENNY GOODMAN
and Anae Shaw" night IS featumi by
the Howard Reynolds' 15-picce or-
chestra dunng "Bal Night." 8:30
p.m.-1 2:30 a.m., Balboa Pavilion
Ballroom, 400 Mam St., Balboa
Beach. SIOadm1ss1on. 675-4488
Sunday
BOB KEANE, HIS CLARINET
AND ORCHESTRA perform for your
dancing plea.sure from 4:30-8:30 p.m.
at Osko'~ O ub Marina. 190 Marina
Dr., Seapon Village, Long Beach. SJ
cover charge includes free appetizer
buffet. (21 J) 49J...6444 .•
"BALLET FOR CHILDREN." sec
Saturday listing.
THE MARIA BENITEZ SPANISH
DANCE Company performs a vaned
repertoire including narrative dance
drama an classLcal Spanish ballet
style. regional Spanish dances, guitar
solo and a 1rad1tional "estampa
Oamenca" finale. 7 p.m . UC Irvine's
Fine Ans V1llafe The.atrc SS. $7 and
$6 adm1ss1 on. 56-661 6
A SPRING DANCE THEATER
Concert. sec Fnday hst1ng.
JOANIE LESNICK and the Costa
Mesa Country Club present a lunch
and dance from noon-5 p.m. featur·
1ng "Puttin' on the R1u" with the
"8oogJe Bros" 1701 GolfCoursc Dr .•
Costa Mesa S 15 advance. S 18 at the
door. 786-0174
Monday
TRACY WELLl, ')CC Monday's
Jazz lisung.
MARTIN fr TONI'S wing Dance
Club m«ts each Monday at the Hot
Spot, 7492 Edinger Ave .. Huntington
Beach. 7 p.m. feature\ Beginning
West Coast Swtng. 8 p m. ofTer'i
Intermediate Swing. and 9 pm
brings social dancing wi th a SI 00
swtng dan~ con1est S4 class lesson
includes cover charge of S.3
84(). 7442.
JOINT EFFORT. sec Fnday lt\t-ing. I
THE AMERICAN INT E R·
NATIONAL OANCE CO .. ~c Fnd:i~
1i,t1ng
Tueeclay
JOINT EFFORT, S« Friday list·
108
WEEKLY SENIOR DAN~ are
presented by the Costa Mesa Seniors
from 8-J I p.m. featured 1s ltvt' band
music and a large, wooden dance
floor. Co~ta Mesa Women's Club.
610 W 18th St .• Co$\a Mesa. $2
donation.
Wedneeday
i.f:• DANCERS of Laguna Beach
hosts their flrst meetina and get
acquainted dance. prcsentina relu-
ina dinner danc~ and Bia Band
sounds, at I p.m. at Great Amencan
Federal, 260 Ocean Ave., Laauna
Bcaeh 494-1305or497-1405.
JOINT EFFORT, see Friday Im-
mg.
THE AMERICAN INTER-
NATIONAL DANCE CO., sec Frida)
listing.
Tbunday
JOINT EFFORT. sec Fnday 11,1.
ing.
Friday
"STRANGER THAN PARADISE "
Jam Jannusch, director (USA 1984)
Presented as part of UC Irvine·~ Film
Society's spnng quarter series "Im
ages of America Throu&,h Open E)t''
Strangers tn a Strange Land... 7 '\O
and 9:30 p.m .. ua·s Social Sctentt'
Hall. $3l S2 . .50 and $2 at the door
856-637'1.
"MUDDY RIVER." This Japanese
film , directed by Kohei ()gun. detail'
the expcneo~ of a youn& bo)
growtn& up tn an Osaka backwater 1n
1956. suspended between postwar
disillusionment and economic boom
7:30 p.m .. Golden West College\
Forum ll. 15744 Golden West St .
Huntington Beach. $2 and SI 50
admission. 891 -3991
• Friday
"ALONE TOGETHER" at thl'
Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. 350'\ \
Harbor Blvd .• Santa Ana (979-5511 ).
r.:11htly except Mondays at varying
cura111 times through March 30
"A CHORUS UNE" at Coas1hnl'
Community Colle&e's Newport
Beach Center. 3101 Pacific Vic~
Onvc. Corona dcl Mar (241 -6 1tl6).
Fndays and Saturdays at 8 p.m
through April 12.
"GEORGE WASH I NGTON
SLEPT HERE" at the Westminster
Community Theater, 7272 Maple ~t
Westminster (995-411 J). Fridays and
Saturdays at 8:30 through Apnl 12
with a matinee April 6 at 2 p.m.
"HEU.O, DOLLY" at Sebas1tan\
Wtst Dinner Playhouse. 140 Avr
Pico. San Oemente (492-99.50). clo•.-
ing performances torught and Satur-
daz at 8 p.m., Sunday at I and 7 pm
'I DO, I DO" at the Grand DannC'r
Thrater. I Hotel Way. Anaheim
( 772-77 10). closing performances to
n1&,ht through Sunday at vaf) 1ntt
cunain tames.
"THE UNO AND I" at the Cuna 10
Call Dmner Theater. 690 El Camino
Re.al. Tustin (838-1540). nightl y <'\
cept Mondays al varying cun;un
llmrs throu&,h May 25.
"THE LAST LEAF" at the C1ardt'n
Grove Community Theater. Chap-
man· Avenue at St. Mark Strrt·I.
Garden Grove (897-5122). Fnda)\
and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through April
26 wtth Sunday matinees at 2:30 April
13 and 20.
"LU ANN HAMPTON LAVERTY
OBERLANDER" at the Irvine Com
munity Theater, Turtle Rock C om
mun11y Park, Sunnyhill Road on
Turtle Roc k Drive. In int·
(857-5496), Fndays and Saturday' at
8 p.m. throu~ Apnl 26 with a Sunda\
mat1n('C Apnl 20 at 2 p.m.
"THE MOUND BUILDERS" tn thl'
Artors Phlybox at Golden Wc\t
C oll ege Hunt inaton Re ac h
(895-8378). Fridays and Saturday' at 8 p.m. throuah ApnJ 19, Sttndn)
matinees Aprif I J and 20 at 3 p.m
"MUlU>ER AMONG f'IUENDS"
at the Newport Theater Arts Center
2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Buch
(63 1-0288). Fridays and Saturd8Y' flt 8 p.m. throuaf\ Apnl t 9.
"PAJAMA TOPS" at the Uunt
,1 .. :~A~11111~1 .... 11iiiiiill\DAl•-I
CONTINUED
inston Beach Playbouse, Mam s~
at Yorktown Avenue, Huntinaton
Beach (132-1405), closing per·
formanoes tonight and Saturday at
8:30.
"UNSUITABLE FOR ADULTS"
on the Second Stage of South Coast
Repcnory, 6SS Town Cent.er Drive,
Costa Mesa (957-4033). closina per-
formances toniJht at 8:30, Saturday
at 3 and 8:30. Sunday at 3 and 8 p.m.
S.tmdal
"ALONE TOGETHER" at the
Harlequin Dinner PlaybOU$C. See
Friday listi
.. A ceoftts LINE .. at Coastline
Community Collqe in Corona del
Mar. See Frida listing.
"GEORGt WASHINGTON
SLEPT HERE" at the Westminster
9>mmuo11y Theater. See Friday list·
C.all DinnCT Theater. See Friday
listini.
Thanday
.. ALON!! TOOETllElt .. at the
Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. See
Frida listing.
.. B~ ClllLD" at South Coast R~ory. See Tuesday listing.
'BELLO, DOILY" at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. See Friday
lis · !1fto, I DO" at the Grand Dinner
Theater. See Friday listina.
"TRI!! UNG AND I" at the Curtain
C.all DinnCT Theater. See Friday
listing.
THE MYSTERY 1'ILUN presents a
one-day caper, .. Gourmet M)'Slery
for Mot.hers." on Mother's Day, May
11. Dep&rt.S Los Aqeles Union
Station for a secret location between
Lot Anaelet and San Die&o. and
features French cuiline aod cbam-
pqne for Mom. Participants submit
fun and fanciful bi~pbics fo ad-vance of both trips. Pickwick writen
then design a mystery with that trip's passenscn in miod. Atiy passenger
may end up the hero or the
'wboduniL • 494-6800.
BALBOA PAVILION, 400 Main
SL, Balboa. CataJina Passe~ Ser-
vice provides daily set'Vlce to
CataJina. 673-5245.
BRIGGS CUNNINGHAM AUTO-
MOTIVE M\JSEUM, 2SO E. BakCT St.,
Costa Mesa. Antique can circa 1912-
imsent are on display. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Wed.-Sun. 5~7660.
DISNEYLAND, 1313 Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim. The new .. Circus
Fantasy-event. a Park-wide circus
celebration, continues daily sbow-
cuina profeuiooal • clowns,
da.rWevils and live animal acts.
.. Circus on Parade" is praented al 3 wba.Jes Orty aod ~. pdicam, p.m. todaj', and 2 and 8 p.m. Sal-peQIUins., wairusi dolobim. lad lea
Thurs .. The new .. Country Bear lions.Ss.dult.s,hcbifdren1F1l-ll.
Vacation Hoedown" anncuon ~ The perk is f\illy ope1l f'tom IOLm.-S
tu.res contiauoua abowinp. The · p.m. with Guided Tours OD wcekeods
Macie Kintdom continues to eel-only. (213) 377-IS71.
ebrat.e iu 30th annivenary with I.he MO\'lEt.\ND WAX MU9BUM.
04Gift Giver Ext:raordinaire M._ 771 1 Bcacb Blvd., Buena Put. Elvira
chine1'' includina a new Pontiac is the newest featured rq>lica amo111
Farebird every day ... Videopotia," a the already elaborate col~ of dancio• ruptspot for YOUftl adults, movie and television memorabilia
enten&Jnt Sat.-Tbun. Also, an incJudina life.like replicas of more
exhibit of more than 20 artifacts and than 200 renowned stars. Daily 10
photOlt'lpbs uaociated with the life a.m.-8 p.m. with Fri.-S.L open until 9
of President Abraham Lincoln bas p.m. 522-1155. ~ust been extended for one year. This OLD WORLD VILLAOE. 7S61
lOCludes ~ndence that bas C.enter Ave., Hunt.iQllOD Beach.
nevCT been p~~bed in its entirety, ~ty aboill are located ill UliJ
as well u the lut letter Lincoln wrote vtJ.laae that features the charm of
to his wife, just 12 days before his quaint European ~ witb ~
eii;ecution. 999-4565. bled •treel!: lantern l.iabta. a.ad 70
D01T'S BEllRY FARM, 8039 murals of turopean ICCnes paiaicd
Beach Blvd., Buena Park. The perk on exterior walls by European artists.
features 165 rides, shows and attrao-894-0747.
tions in four themed areas iocludina QUEEN MARY, Lona Beach
Camp Snoopy, a six-KrC wonderland Harbor at the end of~ Locc Beach
themed to the California Hjgh Siena. Freeway. Exhibits inchxk ~ 22~5200. effect sound and lialn tbows m the
MARINELAND, 6610 Palos Ver-Enaine Room aod ·~ re.
des Dr. So .• Rancho Palos Verdes. enactin& a near<Ollition at-, and
Featured are .. Baja Reef," killer an atensive World Wu U display '°tREU.O, DOILY" at Sebastian's
Weat Pinner Playhouse. See Friday ~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:!~~!:!~!!~:'!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~lr:::::::::=:=:======r-=====ijjiji~ij~:========Oiiii::=::~~==l listing. I
"I DO, I DO" at the Grand Dinna
Theater. See Friday listJng.
"TRI!! UNG AND I" al the Cut1ain
Call Dinner Theater. See Friday
listing.
'°TB!! LAST LEAF" at the Garden
Grove Community Theater. See Fri-dal listina.
'LU ANN HAMPTON LAVERTY
OBEJU.ANDER"atlhe lrvineCom-mu~ Thtater. See Friday listing.
' MOUND BUILDERS" at
Golden West CoUeae's Actors Play-
boii;. See Friday listing.
"MURDER AMONG FRIENDS"
at the Newport Theater Arts Center.
See Friday listing.
"PAJAMA TOPS" at the Hunt·
anaton Beach P1ayhousc. See Fnday
listing.
"UNSUITABLE FOR ADULTS,.
on the Second Staae of South Coast
Repertory. Sec Friday lisung.
811.DdaJ
"ALONE TOGETHER" at the
7 Ac.edemy A•••ch S OUT OI' M•tCA .. , $HOWS AT J :SI
7 :00 • 10:1cr
'" 70MM
~IL POOL"S DAY CR) SHOWS AT S :U 7 :45 .. t :4S
TtC .... YN'T(N) SHOWS AT I :IS J :Sf 5 :55 7·5S • t :SS
..,_ ""° °"" .. ~LY .. U.SC-J SHOWS AT 1:10 l :ZS S·)S 7:50 • 10:00
~ACADDllY
PMIT»re) SHOWS AT 1·45 l :•5
S:•I 7 ·4S • t 41
Welt OIWl•Y't ........ eaMITYfe) SHOWS AT S :JO 7 :1S A •:OO
CMISW.CR)
SHOWS AT St:U
7 ·ZS • t :H
eURaNOIN-t• SHOWS AT 1 :00 J :JO s 40 ,,00. 10• 1$ .......... ... K .... ta)
1 ·00 Ji 10 S:Jo 7 JO &. •'40
n.; COU>tl PUa"-1
ca) SHOWI AT 1 :el
4 OS 7·0S • IO:OS
TIC COLOll PV•f'IL.a (II
l"lut Co·""turel Cro-o•dt (Ill) ....... ., ..... " ............ hell
10 Ill• l'uture (PG)
ANIL POOL "5
DAY C-t Ptttt 511'1• Bui et (A)
011111 l llS DJt• t H WUt yall H Wh14t/Udtr 1J F rtt U•k• lett•
They loved.
They laughed.
They lied.
All in the name
of friendship.
Al> ONOl"f ~TvACS ,_. .. ,_._..,_, __ ,. __
,_,.YIUIYB-15'1 -dt...-._ rmn• wm • au1a mu
U-tM-2411 -u..Jfll ~LA.._ ' • cm coma
Harlequin Dinner Theater. See Fri-1-==========================:;t--------------------------~ daX hstina.
'IJEli,O, DOLLY" at Scbast1an's
West Dinner Playhouse. See Fnday
lasting.
"I 00, I DO" at the Grand Dinner
Theater. See Friday listing.
"THE UNG AND r• at the Cunain
Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday
listing.
"UNSUITABLE FOR ADULTS ..
on the Second Stage of Souch Coast
Repertory. Sec Fnday lasting.
Tueeday
"ALONE TOGETHER" 01 the
Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Set
Friday listing.
"BJ)RlED CHILD" on the main
stage of South Coast Repertory, 655
Town Center Dnve. Costa Mesa
(957-4033), Tuesdays through
Fndays 11 8 p.m .• Saturdays at 2:30
and 8, Sundays aJ 2:30 and 7:30 until
May II
"I DO, I DO" at the Grand Dinner
Theater. See Fnday hsttna,.
"THE KING AND I" at the Curt.am
Call Dinner Theater Sec Friday
hstmg.
WedDMlday
"ALONE TOGETHER" at the
Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Sec
Friday bstina.
''llUIUED CHILD" II South Coast R~ry. See Tuesday hsting.
•BELLO, DOILY" at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. Sec Fnday
list ins.
"I DO, I 00" at the Grand Dinner
Theater. See Fnday listina.
"THE KJNO AND I" at the Curtain
"A KILLER-THRILLER SUSPENSE PICK-ME-UP."
Ate.., Wlnstvl M 'f POST
!IPHll fOOl'f DAY
.. A cut abole the rest. -
"GUIG •IS GRUT HIN~ ...
., Mllwn't been tNs guno-hO tor. movie this ye« .••••
..,. (i.~ t/Vt "'.,.,.,
I
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NOW PLAYING
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VH \1' ... mo ........ /MMll ~n&l
cortA ..... •llWllll •IA -.GA "*""' ' ~ ,.,...,o-c-m•r·""" '""""'~'""' l•lillw.S.O ~'""° ,_...°'*"'w"' 4/114"' 11'>1•11 __.WIUO •1 ~
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Deity Piiot Datebook/ Friday, Aiwll 4, 1986 1
I :Al
C O · N
dcp1cting the "Queen's" acuve role as
a troopship. Daily 10 a.m.-{) p.m
(213) 435-35 11.
giants as they JOUtney on their annuaJ
15,000 mile migration from Alaska to
Mexico. $8 and $6.50 admiMion.
group rates available. (213) 432·8993. QUEEN 'S WHARF
SPORTP'ISBJNG, Berth 55, Port of
Long Beach. Whale watching cruises
depan tWlcc daily through Apr. I. al
I 0 a.m. and I p.m., to sec these gentle
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
MISSION, 31882 Ca mino
Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano.
Features Serra Chapel, California's
"THE GANG FROM POLICE ACADEMY CARRY ON
WITH A LOT OF LOW HUMOR!"
"-NEW YORK TIMES -VINCENT CANBY
UM09 U!-1770
STMllllOl-11
llU SZ!·SJ3'
MMllmAPWA
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..,. 154-1111 wra MA s.to-7444
mtlMDS llMJSITT EDWMDS lmSTOl
U UIU (ZU) Hl-0633 n"1'11 ftl-0567
AMC f ASIUI SQUAii EDWMDS ft.lMll COOD
MDI HU • UA ~ •• m..etu
THE MEMORY OF SOME MOVIES lASTS A LIFETIME. ..
.na ... sec-2111
1.-stGmf
COAST ft.AZA -a 19511-MOO mw•o.Tmo
SHARE THE STORY AMERICA LOVES .. .
SHARE HEARTS Willi .. .
MiMIN .. 141.fn o
~ QtM1D CDnl(
.... 551455
--~ Mi IM • IM IOIWlO IMl.l • 193-0546
a OeJty Plk>t Datebookl Friday, April 4, 1986
oldest buildina. the ruins of the Great
Stone Olurcb, soldiers barracks.
beautiful ~s. and two museum
rooms with artifacts from NatJve
Amencan and early Spanish C\IJture.
Daily 7:30 a.m.·5 p.m. 493*1424.
SEA WORLD. • 1720 S. Shores
Road. Mission Bay, San Diqo. Sea
Lions explore a "Spooky Kooky
Castle" in the seal and otter show.
Also offered is "Dolphin Discovery,"
the ARCO Penguin Encounter, a $7
million exhibit that houses 400
penguins. and killer whale Shamu.
Daily 9 a.m.·8 p.m. (619) 226-3901.
SHER.HAN LIBRARY AND GAR·
DENS, 2647 Pacific Coast Highway,
Corona dcl Mar. Roses, cactus,
annual gardens, an orchid con-
servatory, koi ponds and a gift show
Daily 10:30 a.m..4 p.m.
SIX FLAGS MAGIC MOUNTAIN,
Mqjc Mountain Parlrway exit off
Interstate 5, Valeneta. More than 100
rides, shows and attractions includmg
an 1800s style crafts village and a
Roaring Rapids white water adven-
ture are offered. Call for hours, (818)
992-0884.
SPRUCE ~E. Long Beach
Harbor at the end of the Long Beach
Freeway. Howard Hughes' all-wood.
200-ton flying boat majestically
berths for visitors to view the inside
of the world's largest clear.span
aluminum dome. A variety of dis-
plays including modules that show
close.up details off ascina ting areas of
the plane such as the cockpit, flight
deck and wing interior arc featured.
See the Queen Mary listing for more
informal.ton. 10 a.m .-{) p.m. (213)
435.3511.
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS, 100 Uni-
versal C11y Pl., Universal City A
guided tram tour of Un1versal's
famed 420-acrc back lot and the
Entertainment Center. which fea·
turesfivehveshows.isoffered (818
508-9600.
EiC.
" ... Creates edge. surprtse
and romance.''
RICHARD CORLISS TIM£ MAGAZINE
"****% ...
Uncompromtslngty
honest ... "
' .JOfHN CORCOAAN KABC-TV
••... Surprlalng
poignancy~
tender humor ... ''
PETER STACI<.
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICU
IWIMWCT PCIU61Wa l()JY ltQll(D .-p SW101
~ II PW Di O!l9I AIM P!'1S MS 9111(9 w N09 WCN1!Kr
£.-~ .otl tWES W 11'.>Wl 0t0 ._, 111 .()fl tWfS ~bi lAl(lf 9UEA o.c. i,,..., OOIOf 4 AIMQMT P(l\11
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NOVI PLAYING .... -·-•LAmlllll •STMTWI -• NOll11rflY'U '' ,...,h,,,,,. ~c-~•U""''°' f~V,.. m ......... »tWt ~'~ ... lQ "-•!OS.I .._,_ ......... ·~111.U ._.._. WB1-Rll
,..., .... ""'°""'"'..,_ UA..,_ I~ ,...,. --:'.mo !==--tl14'1 =-.... ........,,... ... r-c:..-•C91f• ..... 11 fll'>C10 asm ...... °"'4 .. ._ ..... c-~~'1711 ..... '-"" l)f 256.l l»tna
.1
,
Channel 10, Huntiqton Bcacb'sown MJCllAl!L JOllDAN, ICC Friday This c:onfanc:e with women writen
cable TV station, and &rand prizes are listiq. and critics &om a variety of c:uhw'a ia ~llllJ=MA•·1~l .... lliii .. l\ElAJl::11 ~=:U~ ;;.; n .... , ~ied0'K0l~~~~~:~ a N T I N u--~ &AVENA playsoriainaJs and tunes ...,_.._. or UR wvw ....... .. D calBBAGB is played on &be te0-by compoaen includin1 . Joni esperiencc and her obeervatiou
ond &Dd fourth Wed. each month &17 Mitcbdl, Bonnie Raitt, RiclDe Lee ~t-day Asia cultute. I p.m.., ~RODVCJ' SHOW, ICC Saturday list-SEARCH-FOR-A-ST AR, an p.m. Oui.s ~ter. Room I A-8, Sth Jooca. and many others. 1-11 p.m.. Fine Arts V'~ T'bea!ft.. SS,
1°" ...... IC'" .... INDIAN seo-. amateur talent contest for those and M.arpaerite, Corona de1 Mar. final1y A Unicorn.. 214 Main Sl, S3 and S2 adrnilsion. S6-6616. THE -.r.n """' ,.. loolci.ns for the yellow brick road to 644-4138. Huotin&lon Bcacb. No cover olwJe. ASIAN -
tee Saturday listina. _ stardowm,continuesfor.U Wed.net-AllA.NWED..tceMonday~ 969-1794. ...---,•Moodatlisb.aa.
lloaday da)'I at The HuntinJton Beach Inn. • ROBOT DUQlJl!:!INEL. ICC Fn-'l'llE ANA11ED1 BOAT SBOW, .ee ~ I.An STOP, aco uaday
.. alAN ___ _. 1.s -n·__. at UC Contestanu are previously selected da~ w~ liJti.Qa.
no wr..r..a .,, __ ~ and pve their fiDaJ petformance at llE LAPP STOP, see Tuesday " . &ATDllG OUR VOICES: WOMEN'S EXPO 'II. tee Tuaday
' lrvinethroupFridayasaoelebration tbe Inn. Contestants are featured on listiq. Multicultural Women's Writina." list.in&.
of national traditions by Chinese, ir====================:::================;-r;:::=================-;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;; Filipino, Indonesian, Korean and
Vietnamete students. Includes cook-
ing and mania! arts demonstrations,
food sales, a fashio n show, traditional
dancing and music. 11 a.m .-1 p.m.,
Gateway Plaza and Univenity
Center. 856-6922.
SCRABBLE is play~ each Mon-
day at I p.m. at the Leisure Wor1d
clubhouse 2 on Moulton Parkway in La&una _Hills. CaU 837-7223 for
1nfurmauon.
THE LAFF STOP presents an all-
malecomcdy revue. 2122 S.E. Bristol,
Newport Beach. 852-8762.
MICHAEL JORDAN, see Friday
list1ng..
"SEMESTER IN PAJUS," an
AND HER
SISfEBS
~ -OIUOl't~-.. c.••-r--·--OWIHOWINGI
onent.ation and slide presentation. u mt 9'Ml21 ..-r• WJ.l'f m-1•
presented today at noon, Saddlcbaclc 111llNIS4 ~ JCllR• M.1fY
College Lab. I OS, 28000 Marauerite a Tm 511·'511 llWNIJ .. MM1'1 -IJ4.ltl1
Pkwy., Mission VteJO; and tomorrow ~ 0. TCllO ~..ml Ill an CDtll
at 7:30 p.m.. Irvine Valley College, ~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~iii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Bldg. A., Room A IOI, SSOO Irvine ri
Center Dr., lrvme. SS9-9300.
MAGIC NIGHT ts featured each
Monday at 8:30 p.m. Bolie's, The
Best Western Huntington Beach Inn,
2111 2 Pacific Coast Hwy.. Hunt-
ington Beach. 536-1 421. -T11eeday
THE LA.FF STOP features Don
Ware and Dick Hardwick. 2122 S.E.
Bristol, Newport Beach. 852-8762.
NEW YORg POET MYRA
SHAPIRO joins poet Jill Youns and
sinaer/guitarist Kerry Geu in a show
at 8 p.m. Bowen Museum, Irvine
Room. 2002 N. Main SL, Santa Ana.
SJ donation. 972-1900.
"SEMES'l'ER IN P ARJS," see
Monday listina.
ASIAN WEEI. see Monday listina.
WOMEN'S EXPO 'M is featured at
lbe Oransc County Fairgrounds from
8-10 p.m. 100 F11r Dr., Costa Mesa.
SS adult admission. 7S 1-3247.
CONFREY PllRUPS, see Friday
listing.
SCRABBLE is played each Tues-
day at 6:30 _p.m. at Home Federal
Savinp, on callc de la Plata at Pasco
de Valencia, Lquna Hills. Call
S86-2378 for infofUlation.
ROBERT DUQVESNEL, see Fri-
day listing.
LOUCllUN, hypnotist, appears
each Tuesday with audience partici-
pation for adults ages 2 1 and over.
Seatin1 bqjns at 6 p.m., showtime is
at 8 p.m. The Best Western Hunt-
iDJton Beach Inn, 21112 Pacific
Coast Hwy.. HuntiDJton Beach.
536-142 1.
MICHAEL JORDAN, sec Friday
listina.
Wedllemday
THE ANAHEIM BOAT sBOW
opens today with boats for skiln&.
filhina. and racina featured &Jona
with boatina aooeuories and the lateSt
water sports eqw..P.i:s>enL "Stiwcr"
Alan Hale, of Glllipn's Island. is Official Hott. Wed.·Apr. 11 3-10
p.m., Ar.. 1211 a.m.-IOp.m .. Apr. 13
fro m I a.m.-6 P·"'"· $4.SO lldult.s, $2
children 6-1 S. 999-3900.
SCIU.llLE ~yed on the first
and third Wedn Y1 of each month
at 1 p.m. at the Newport Beach
Tennis Oub, 260J Eutbluff Drive,
Newpon Beach. Call 979-7321 for
infonnation.
"OMEN'S EXPO 'M, sec Tuesday
listing.
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
BEST COSTUME DESIGN **** -GENE SISKEL. CHICAGO TRIBUNE -ROGER EBERT, CHICAGO SUN TIMES
"TRIUMPH" "'t-TIME MAGAZINE
ARM BY
AKIRA KUROSAWA
erl ward s CINEMA ···.·: ·-· .. 546 3102 .........
SAT/Slll 12:45
l:45. 1:4S. 9'A5
!I ACAllE\1Y A\\',\RD I \\'l~'.\ER
BES'I FOREIG'.\ Fl 1..\1
rfhe Official Story
fll 7:15
t:lO
EIOLlllYE EllllE•m
edwards UNIVERSITY
=~-854-8811
W/UI l~
2;45, S:tl
7:1~. tJe
• • • • • • • • •••••• • •
: BARGAIN MATINEES MO NDA> THRU S A r· ,tJ[ .ti.• :
• ·~'!.PtRF(Jf<MAN <.f<,., ..... 'A·"·.-... ~• • · •
LAKEWOOD
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Dally Ptlot Datebook/ Frktay, April 4, 1988 9
DANIELS •..
From Pace 2
sweetheart Chen , and came to
California I 0 years ago where he
went to work in his father-in-law's
sporting goods business.
"( JUSt didn't feel effective there, ..
he recalls. "I've always been more
of a creative person than an
administrative one. Then o ne day
Chen asked me, 'Why don't you try
acting? You've always loved it.'"
That was all the encouragement
he needed. The son ofa stage actress
who had given up her career for
mamage, Daniels was raised on the
movies of Spencer Tracy, Henry
Fonda, Gary Cooper and other
greats of a bygone era. and had
developed an admiration for their
tough-minded integnty on the
screen.
He plunged into ''the business,"
at first Landing a few commercials,
then a guest shot on "Wonder
Woman.'' He gnns as he recalls the
expenence. ··r played a som ewhat naive
Olympic athlete and· .John Car-
radine was a mad scintist who
wanted to transplant has brain into
my body-before Wonder Woman
bailed me out."
This was followed by brief roles
on "Falcon Crest" and "Father
Murphy." and a movie, "One Dark
Night.' H is confidence growing. he
answered a casting call in 1982 for a
new soap opera to be set in
Washington, O.C. -.. Capitol."
"I onginally went to read for the
part of Thomas (the elder. handj-
capped McCandless son)," he re-
calls. ''but then they asked me to
stay and read for Tyler. The tryouts
were held an a big hall the size ofa
basketball coun. I was scared to
death."
Dand Muon n.nJela with C.therlne Btckland, who played
hJa wUe on the TV 1oap opera .. C.pttol."
Needless to say, Daniels won the
role of Tyler and sperrt the next
three years as the granite-jawed,
ullra-eth1c~I ex-military hero per-
iodically bidding for the con-
gressional seat of has batter pohcaJ
nval (and brother-in-law) Trey
Clegg (Njcholas Walker). who
snidely refers to Tyler as ".Captain
Clean "The McCandlesscs and the
Cleggs are Washington's version of
the Hatfields and the McCoys.
The faceoffs between Daniels and
Walker dunng those first three
years provided some incendiary
moments on the tube and. lookfog
back on the experience, Daniels
terms 11 "an invaluable training
ground, both professionally and
personally," but the pressure in-
volved in thedail(soapoperagrind
soon began to tel .
"It's a lot to cope with all at
once," be said. "You become aJI
focused on your career and you're
slowly weaned away from what
really matters. I Just finally felt that
I had to move awar, to a more
natural environment '
This he rud in 1984. bnng.ang
Cheri and their two sons, Will, 6,
and Tucker. 3, to Fountain Valley,
Jo0 llcnrerJ llold9D&atelaatpnp0int ln .. lla.tder Amoai
l'denda" at the 1'ewport Tlaaafer A..rt8 Center.
•• OaJJy Pllot Oetebook/ Friday. April •. 1986 ,.
and last year he turned the broad
shoulders of Tyler McC.a ndless
over to Dane Witherspoon. But he
hasn't gJven up his professional
career or even ruled out another
soap opera.
''I'm open to more soaps-I Just
fimshed doing a bit on 'Days of Our
Lives.' I feel I can handle the
pressure now without feeling
stampeded. That's the one thing I
didn't like wtth 'Capitol' -every-
. thing seemed so rushed, and there
was no real ume to prepare."
Other cast members had their
own way of dealing with pressure,
Daoaels rccaJls. Veteran actor Ed
Nelson, who plays Tyler's fnend
and mentor. Sen. Mark Denning.
came up wtth a number of devices
to keep their mission in per-
spective.
"One time.Just as we were getting
ready to go on in a real tense scene.
Ed turned to me and said. 'Just
remember, kjd, there are sax million
Chinese who'll never see this.'"
That took the edge off.
Despite the pressures brought on
the more mexpenenced actors,
Daniels speaks highly of his
"Capitol" years and of executive
producer John Conboy. And he
plans to continue his professional
career, augmenting at with the non·
professional world of community
theater.
"I feel like a ltid in a candy store
-I just can'tget enouab of acting."
he said. "But r don't want to get my
&Qals confwed "My ambition 1sto &e a aood father. a good husband
and a Jood actor -in that order.''
Which means you'll probably be
seeing a good deal mpre of David
Mason Daniels, both on the bi& and
littJe screens and. on oocasion, at
your local communit y theater.
11 FAii R
'Lu Ann,' 'Chorus
Line' open tonight
"ALONE TOGETHER," a new
comedy about parents and their
gr,own children, is the fare at the H~arlequ i n Dinner Playhouse.
3503 S. Harbor Bl vd .. Santa Ana
(979·5511 ). Performances are
given nightly except Mondays at
varyrng curtam times through
March 30.
"BURIED CHILD," a drama by
Sam Shepard, opens Tuesday on
the main stage of South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive. Costa Mesa (957-4033).
Performances arc given Tuesdays
through Fridays at 8 p.m .• Satur-
days at 2:30 and 8, Sundays at
2:30 and 7:30 until May 11 .
"A CHORUS LINE," a musical
about dancers' lives, opens to-
night at Coastline Community
College's Newport Beach Center,
3101 Pacific View Dnve, Corona
del M ar (241-6186). Per-
formances will be gJven Fndays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m . through
.\pril 12.
"GEORGE WASHINGTON
SLEPT HERE," a family com·
edt, 1son stage at the Westmmster
Community Theater, 7272 Maple
St., Westminster (995-4113). Per-
formances are given Fridays and
Saturdays at 8:30 thro ugh April
12 wtth a mannee Sunday at 2
p.m .
"HELLO, DOLLY," a musical
remake of "The Matchmaker."
completes its run at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Ave.
Pico. San Clemente (482-9950).
Final performances are tonight
and Saturday at 8 p.m .. Sunday at
I and 7 p.m.
"I DO, I DO," a two-character
musical about marriage, winds up
this weekend at the Grand Dinner
Theater, I Hotel Way, Anaheim
(772-7710). Closing per-
formances are tonight through
Sunday at varying curtain tames.
''THE KING AND I," a Rodgers
and Hammerstein musical set in
Siam, is being staged at the
Curtain Call Dinner Theater. 690
El Cam ino R eal. Tus tin
( 838-1540). Performances are
given nightly except Mondays at
----------
NIGHT TIME
IS THE
RIGHT TIME
SEE YOUR
DATE BOOK
fOa t•W MYAii.a
Coll 642-432,
varying curtain times through
April 27.
"THE LAST LEAF," a new
comedy, opens to night at the
Garden Grove Community
Theater, Chapman A venue at St
Mark Street, Garden GrovC'
(897-5 122). Performances are
given Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m . through April 26 with Sun-
day matinees at 2 p.m . Apnl 13
and 20.
"LU ANN HAMPTON LA VER·
TY OBERLANDER," a corned\
with a Texas accent, o pens to·
night at the Irvine Communtt)
Theater, Turtle Rock Communi-
ty Park, on Sunnyhill Road at
Turtle Roc k Drive, Irvine
(857-5496). Performances are
gJven Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m . through April 26 with a
matinee at 1 p.m . April 20.
"THE MOUND BUILDERS," a
drama set in MiddJe America.
opens tonight in the Actors Pla)-
box at Golden West College in
Huntjngton Beach (895-8378).
Performances arc given Friday~
and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through
April 19 with Sunday matinees at
3 p.m. April 13 and 20.
"MURDER AMONG
FRIENDS,'' a new mystery-com-
edy, is the fare at the Newport
Theater Arts Center, 250.1 ChfT
Drive, Newport Beach
(63 1-0288). Performances are
given Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m . through April 19.
"PAJAMA TOPS," an adult
farce, is closing at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse, Main Street at
Yorktown avenue in the ScachfT
Village shoppina center, Hunt·
mgton Beach (832-1405). Final
performances are tonight and
Saturday at 8:30.
"U NSUITABLE FOR
ADULTS," a new dramatic com·
edy from Britain, completes its
run on the Second Stage of South
Coast Repertory. 655 Town
Center Drive. Costa Mesa
(957-4033). Final performances
are tonight at 8:30, Sa(u~y al 3
and 8:30, Sunday at 3 andl8 p.m.
----------
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-Who's on first:
The Del Lords
87 RANDY JAY MATIN
o.IJNMC.llllfl aa 1
This is the first m an occasional senes of columns r.hat will loot at IMnch
in the openi111 spot for ma;or acu. Ofkn a rransitional period. the opeaini slot
is the best way for an unknown vaup to receive m.usive eJlposure. If
successful, the Mwcomcr may return as the next se.uon's heM1liner. TM par
sea.son saw such triumphs u Lone Justi~ openilJI for Tom Pr:tty •nd lbe
dynamic Midniibt Oil openitt1 for UB 40. In past years, now htadliner
Howard Jones was in the opening spot and incredibly Jimi Hendrix onoe
played third to the Monkecs.
Scott Kempner, the ruitarisl and main composer of the Del Lords, who I MON~2:ooo opened for Pat Benetar at Irvine M~ws recently and aJso headlined at the
COlillJ'fRAK Coach Houie -was sittinr in his New York •S*tmen1 watchina a rerun of
UTlfaTVLlllT1 "father Knows Best" when mte1'Yiewed by telephone.
lllfBITAlllllBffTOMOHT ··vou have to overcome a lot of resllcuness and apathy," said Kempner
llJfAL V1JB>1 about beinr in the openina slot .. The respo* we have bad so far ranees from
1'llOCWI very apathetic to very enthusiastic. All the stiOws were sold out before we~
BIBmlCY added to the bill. And since wc arc not all cSwer the radio or on MTV I don't
(C)MOYIE -t2:15-know bow people would have beard ofus.. ..... • * ''Calhnlt 1Co."119731.._ Bir· Kempner, formerly of the '70s band ~ Dlctatan._ U>Ok lbe name Del ~ Pltl1ca o..w.. Lords from the d.ircc1or of post-WW ll Three Stoosies ~ .. I srew-upiluhe
Bronx." Kempner explamed, "where we bad all these roving IOCial clubs on
®MOYIE -12:25-wheels (pop). There were the Del Diamoqds. etc. One night we wett sirunr ::~~ ~·· (1985) o.i around watching the educatJonal (s1c) channel and there was this beautiful.
tt ~ perfect name."
-1t:IO-The Del Lords, wb0tc second aJbum "Johnny Comes Marcbaoa Home"
Don Jobuon, one of tbe 8tan otMla•I Vice.
ireeD Bia.Dea= 4a.im. a recent breU [n ftlmtn1 aD ~ e:atltfed 'Pree Vene.'
Jaaer pwba,.~· t wtna American •••Mfn ID tile , ecbeM!aled to air toDICJat OD 1'8C-at 10 p.m.
al ~y tllJHT VIJB)I bas JUst been released, ha Ve toured befoni but th llll the fint time that the band
fM..fl MOM THE DMKM>E will be playina to audiences o( 20.000. ,,. lOlll_._ .. This is a year of first times for us. And." sa.id Kempner, "we arc oo a
-BIBITNl.WI pretty hectic schedule. In April wc playScolland onthe I Ith and then wc'red~
llllllV..,.. io Boston on the 12th."
GONE FISHIN' ...
FromPaaeS
sportfishina choices available locally·
• At Davey's Locker, sportfishmg
boats depan daily from the Balboa
Pa vilion. Fisbcnnen have a choice
amona several options. The half-day
boat depen at 6 a.m. and return at
about noon, ~n leaves apfo Wlth 'll
new voup for an afternoon e•curs1on
that returns at about 6:30 p.m.
T 1ck.ets for the balf-dar boac.s are st 7
~ach fOr 11dult! and S 2 for cbaldrtn
under 12.
A second option 1s called the ¥.-Oay
boat. which leaves the Pavilion at 7
a.m. and returns at about 6 p.m. Fees
are $28 for adulu and S 19 for children
under 12.
A fuU-day boat, which fishes off
Catalina and Sa.n Oemente islands,
departs ll 2 a.m. and returns at about
S ~.m. Tickets arc S3S for adults and
$30 for children.
Tackle is available for renl at SS for
the baJf ~ay boat and $6 for other
eitcultioos. Appropriate fisb1na
licenses also are for sale. Davey's
Locker offers special cbamn for
companies intCf'CStcd in fisb1nr as a
aroup. For information. call
673-1434.
' • At Newport Landin&. located
neitt to the Balboa Ferry land1na. half-
day boats leave Balboa at 6 a.m. and
12:30 p.m. Ticket prioes arc identical
to those at Davey's Locker -$1 7 ror
adults and $12 for children under 12
BeainninaApril t 9. Newpon Land·
ma's limited-lot<! boa I will depart at 2
a.m. for Catalina Island, rctumina at
about 4:30 p.m . That ellcunion cotts
='==-'O: Pal Benew who smas oo the Del Lord's album track .. Soldier's
DWlllBll Homeoomiog .. became a part of what Kempner dcKribes as the band's
MOYIE extended family when her busbend Neil Geraldo was asked to produce the Del
• "Rippin' .. (11115) Mirto VIII Lord's album.
Peltllel. Tllla V*1za. .. We prepared a list of producers we wanted to work with;' said Kempner.
CZ>MOYIE .. and we put Neil's name at the top of the list in fo=o-hi letters so that they • \; "Amin: Thi ......... • ~ c;..o•• • rd .,_ "'"' ,.. miaht &et the hint And as it turns out Neil bad coo the reco company
(lllel)Jollcl!IOllta. ~Keen. at t"be same time to ask if we would be interested in worlc.ing with him.
8 (I)~ "Nol only bas Neal become our producer and a aood frieod but ~ 1s
someone I can trust to edit my music. We wro~ scvera.I sonp totether aod
• ~E#S there is a aood chance that some of them may end up on Patty s next album. -
(!) _,....~ "Soldier's Homecomina .. -which deals with Vietnam veterans and
U \; "Aomnlt Al Alut" (l962) Er· "Against My Will" whtcb deals with hostage crises -set the tone for much of
rd~ Man.I O'Hn. the Del Lord•s album.
I fHU•UOfl~ MMER .. The fcelinr fora need of J>CMlC overwhelms me. EoouJb alnady with tlus
JlOFfmMAN> /""fi&htina!" stat.es Kempner emphaticaUy. "When I wrote thC1C soop I W1"
PAUL ff'fAH ' sfitina out on Beaver Lake 1.n Arkansas and it)USt bit me what these suuauons
KUNG RJ mUS1 be like for truly innocent victims. I did not mean them to be overtly
-1:21>-political soap but I th1nlt that at is important not to forset that we still have C/J,~~;-... Tom Hril, people held in ca{'tivity ... ..,..._, '""""" Orowina up tn the Bronx in what he dctcnbes as a .. bad nciabborboocr·
Ort! Hlmlfl Kempner cites Lou Reed and lgy Pop as bis maJor, early influences.
-1:30-· "Seeina lgy at the aac ofl 4 bit me vmh the foroe ofa smash tn thdacc. He I OOtlfS1( RAK dealt with rea)jty as oPPQSed to the rhyme and fantasy of the Beatles. It was ~ ac':f:'" ~ rouah in the Bronx and I lost a lot offriends. What kept me going and what I e MOYIE ho~ I can pass on to ofhcn is a vtSion Of the bis picture. I teamed that the
• • •'h "Hulfl .. Hult!, s... a.-arusu who garner the most respect a.re the ones that stick doJP.11y toa penonal
loltt" (11186) llltl• o.Aa. Ohta de vision. Even when Lou Recd became something of a cnuc's JOke when he ~ re<X>rded "Sally Can't Dance" he remained true to his personal inspinatJon. I DAV! AOE't9 .. In the Del Lords wt try to maintain a real per10oalJty. We hope we come JUNE~~.a across u \)COPle with somethina on their minds with a positive message for
-troubled umes.
$4S, A boat aJso Wlll leave shortly
after m idnight, bound for the waten
ofT San Oemcnte Isl.and and returns
at about 6 p.m. Tickets a.re SSS.
Newport Landin& also offers
special chartcn tackle for rent and
state-required fish1na licenses. For
more 1nformat1on, caJI 67S-OSSO.
• At Dana Wharf ponftshJng in
Dana Point, half-day boats leave
every day at 6:30. 10 and noon for
fi ve-ho ur cruises. Costs arc 1denttcal
to Davey's Locker and Newpon
Landin& with IPfl(•al d1tc0unts avail-
able 10 eemor citizens and active
military personnel.
A ¥..-day boat leaves Dana .f>o101
Harbor at 6 a.m. and returns at about
3:30 p.m. Tickets are $25 each and
SI 7 for chddren under 12.
"We don't wear tablecloths on stage or pull our pants down. We arc not
rich and we arc not at the top of the charts, but we are proud of what we have
JCC.Omplisbcd. Plus we all want to be EJvis."
Weldota 8mttla of.Coeta lleM
Dally Piiot OatM>ook/ Friday, Aprll 4 , 1986 I I
-
. ' ~~--------~L _______________________ .......................... ..... I
As for 'The Money Pit, 'it's definitely the pits
BEST
IQT
mcT1I
S•OIOI• POILACll
IQT
lmllP\.9
1""""'*"'°"1
!Wiil H•Dm
IQT
Cl&ITmlf'll'
DA'/10 lllfolKlli
IQT -... ..
J()Hll BAMv
IQT -CHRIS .tHlll!t.i
GI.Av AWIAICll A
lAllRY SllHSVOI D
tiii:::;;i• ~(R llAH()f ()AD ..........
PICTURE
~QurOF
~CA
--NOW PIAYING--
·~ .. ....oi ~......_,.._ -... _ ---.. -. .-..... ................ ........
....... . ... _,,... ""'-'''411 .. ftW ,,... ..... ------~· .--~ ......... ::,.~ ~~=-............ '""'-' .. .,.. -·--
By GEORGE Wll.LIAMS
~ ..... ---
No one could wreck a house in a
movie with more eloquence than
silent screen stars like Chaplin,
Keaton, Laurel and Hardy or Harold
Lloyd.
There was always a fine logic, a
balletlike rhythm and meticulous
timing running through their scenes
that made them supremely funny.
These arc the qualities missing
from "The Money Pit." directed by
Richard Benjamin and starring Tom
Hanks and Shelley Loni. Without
them, the movie becomes Just a senes
of aged gags.
The story is about a couple who
invest $200,000 in a million-dollar
house that seems to fall apart as soon
as they move in.
Hanks, a la~er, lives with Long, a
classical musician, in the apllrtment
of her former husband, AJexander
Godunov, a symphonic oonductor
away on a world tour. He returns,
0 A SHARP. SOPHISTICATED.
unexpectedly, and kicks them out.
They decide to commit themselves
to buying a house in the suburbs
where they can eventually settle down
to married life and raise a family.
After jumping a.t what seems to be
an amazing bargain, they move into
their big new home -and disaster
strikes.
The front door falls off its hinges.
The sta.ircasc collapses. A bathtub
falls through the floor. Tbe interior of
a fireplace slides downward so that
the top of the chi.,mney gapes out into
an upstall'S bedroom. The winng and
plumbing fa.ii.
And this 1s only the first few
· minutes. The house keeps falling
apan, monotonously, for what seems
like hours.
There is no l<>Jic to it. And no
rhythm. You begin to wonder why
these ap,arcntly intelligent pcaple
would aJJow themselves to get into
such a fix. Finally, you don't care.
The story goes on into the rep&Jr of
FUNNY, SEXY, COMPASSIONATE
PICTURE'.' -Jocfll ltlOI, MIWSWlllC MAOAllMI
"RICHLY ENTERTAINING'.'
-OcMd Denby, NIW YOH MAOAZINI
edwards LIDO CINEMA
N(Wl'Olf IOUll •UD 673 8350 ,., .. ,. L.100 •
Ntwro u llACM
-OIVOl'I-... ........ _~ ~
Fm 6, •• 10
SAT/Slll 12
2, 4, 6, a. 10
Zodiacs -Step into Spring
Sol1,.leofher moccasins 1n plenty of cOlors and
styles IO chOose from ~--.........
8~~~
56 FASHION ISLAND· NEWPORT BEACH· (714) 64A -5070
• 12 Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, Aprll 4, 1986
Alaander GodUDOT
••• ,, ~ TDL.9111
•a.a.a ~ ....... , ,. .. CAiu ,.._m,,.,.
the house by a gang of laborers who
treat the homeowners as if they were a
sub-order of humans only ex1Stin1 to
be victimiz.ed.
But that is just the way director
Benjamin tw presented his stan.
Though Hanks and Long a.re much
better than their material and manaae
to maintain a cenain level of dianity
through sheer charm, they an not
enoUJh to save.)bis othCfWJse boring
mOVle.
Maureen Stapleton is wasted as the
owner who sells the house, as is Joe
Mantegna as an aloof contractor.
But Godunov, the ballet star who
defected from the Soviet Union,
shows as he did la.st year in .. Witness"
that be bas the 'magnetic appeal of a
major film star of the future.
And Philip Bosco, as a construction
foreman, is a bundle of energetic
talent. reflecting the wide experience
of this Broadway veteran.
There 1s a lot to be admired about
the productJon. The photosraphy by
Gordon Willis 1s tint-rate. And
Patrizia von .. Brandenstcin's pro-
duction design -the construction
and destruction of that house, inside
and out -is the son of work
remembered when Oscars are passed
out.
"The Money Pit" is a Steven
Spielberg project that reminds you of
his "1941." Like that comedy about
the effect of World War II on
Southern California, this movie suf-
fers from iiga~t1c overkill. The pro-
duction is so huae, the laughs seem to
have been stepped on and pushed
through the cracks.
Call 642-5678 .
Put a few words
to work for ou,
"11iE MONEY PIT IS
SIDE-SPLITTINGLY HILARIOUS!
Pure undiluted fun from start to tlnlsh. The supetb
perfonnances are Inspired lunacy. Shelley Long Is the most
appealing ochess slnce Corole Lombard, and Tom Honks
hos 0 ftekl day. Ifs a to1ol joy." -Rex Reed, NEW YORK POST
m\1
HANKS
SHELLEY
LONG
•
:~. "'·i . .,.~.-~. ---~-'. I("~
FIN&AI I Is------------------------
rt.S education is the key to success of center
There a.re DOW nine pro-
siooal and semi-professional
chestras with their borne base in 1se County. lo the past two
onlbs, two of them have
celled concerts and one has
celled an entire season. What
happcn.ina?
When you bin a musician, you
ust pay him ... and it follows that
e groups of musicians must
so be paid. Of course, this is
pensive. When the ball is half
pty, OT when "cnligb~"
hestras lower ticket pn~ to
11 the hall, the cost of a concert
n no longer be cove.red by ticket
es alone. Therefore orchestras
~ in fund-raisin& efforts
uts1de of the concert hall. When
at fund-raising fails, so goes the
rchestra.
Fund-raising for the ans is a
scinating topic, which we will
xplore another time. For now, let
s consider the other half of the
ubject: filling the hall ... audience-
uilding, and the role of arts
ucation in an affluent com-
munjty.
There has been much talk of
late about an apparent discrepan-
cy: the investment of large
amounts of funds into a new
perfonning arts center, and the
concurrent reduction in resources
available to the arts programs in
the schools. ·
The well-to-do in Orange
County have invested much of
their wealth l.lld ofthemtelves in
construction of the new Per-
forming Arts Center, a great
monument to their vision and
their capacity to see such a project
tbrou.gb from ~nning to cod.
In the meantunc, the public
schools find themselves strapped
for funds, and the arts being a
cooveqieot place to cut, they a.re
cut...and cut and cut Year after
year, we see a deterioration in the
resources made available 10 these
programs. Recently, I spoke with
a Jona-standing teacher of music
in our local schools who today has
half the budget for bis program
that be bad in 19551
It is importnt that we recognize
two things:
Fint, the public needs the
Performing Arts Center. Like the
Los Anaelet Philharmonic which
has scrved so lont as an example
of excellence for Orange County,
and enabled it to envision great-
ness for itself. so we need to see
and feel theeftectsoftbiscommit-
ment to excellenoc in our midst.
The builden of the Performing
Arts Center have done us a great
service.
Secondly, the Center needs to
~the extent to which it is
dependent on the education of
present and future audiences.
Those who have been at concerts
of Ora.nae Co~'& musical or-
ganizations will note that the
audiehoes a.re significantly older
than the population as a whole.
The Center relies on nourishment
of a young audience, to mix with
its current audieooe, and to per-
petuate the tradition of great
music which ia being established
now in Ora.nae County.
With whom does responsibility
lie for such an effort? The clearest
candidate for educatina one's
citi7.eos is the public schools. But
bow to strengtben the (seemiosJy)
most vulnerable of that inabtu-
tion's programs to the point
where it can effectively educate
the next generation of audienoea
for the arts?
One can march on city baJL.or
mobilize the PT A. These are
t.iJDe..bonored traditions, and
provide effective means for put-
ting pressure on those in power to
do what you would like them to
do. But the effects of political
pressure a.re mainly tem~.
What such achievements lack 1s
staying power. Lacki.ng~ power-
ful constituency which makes
itself and its clout known on a
regular basis, such accomplish·
ments tend to succumb to the
achievements of the next political
pressun organization.
What we need to do in Orange
County is plant seeds. The Center
for the Performing Arts is one
C1111
Pue
such seed. The awesome praenoe
of a special "temple" for musical
perfonna.noes, to which all of the
county's children are introduced
early m their lives, is a first step in
plan ting seeds.
An important second step is to
nurture those teeds that we plant.
The c.oosciousoess of the per-
forming ans which the Center can
tenerate ii a v,..uable resource.
Properly exploited, music pro-
gnuns in the schools could rcoe:ive
a psychological boost, as well as
added 11aying-power in their
quest to develop and educate
tomorrow's audiences. We can
only hope that those with the
power to do so use tbis resouice
wisely.
=-----------------~
.. ma& -....... __ .,.. ...._1'11 ...... ---ClllD ...a-u1.-1 ___ .,.. _.._. ..
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Dally Pttot Datebc>c*/ Friday, Apr11 4, 1986 II
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1 • Delly Pflot 0.tebook/ Frtd•y. April '4, 1986
Fun with classics
by Canadian Brass
By RANDY JAY MATIN
• .,_, .... CQj $ a e
Think of aclass1caJ music concert and scary unagesanscoftuxcdoedgcnts
cscortingjcwcl-bedecked princesses in to the Ooroth y Chandler where fussy-
fa~ musicians hold out for total silencc. Then from m ystirious, ancient
charts these musicians play ume-honorcd compositions note for note .
Now slip a few tutus over tux tails, sit the tuba Pia.Yer on the floor and mu
some Queen, Billy Joel, Dixieland and Renaissance pieces in with the Vivaldi
and Bub and you begin to get an idea of what is in store when the Canadian
Brus play the Long 8cach Tcrracc Theatre tonight .
Speaking by telephone from Toronto-one very early Saturday morning
-the Brass' trombonist Eugene Watts began to explain th as aeemingly odd
behavior: .. We play fora lotofyoungeraudicnocsand it became apparent that
kids who a.re UJed to the fa.st~ of television were oot aoing to sit throu&h two
hours of non...stop born mu11c. So we decided to dress up the program with
humor. WeoowlookatwhatM:playasmorcofasbowandlessofarecitaJ." ~ isooquestion that wearebascd in theclassica. But if you desire to
play brass quintet then you get stuck with a lot of music and composers wboarc
less than spectacular. When you ao back to Civil War bands or even Susa it
wasn't really great music. You can play music from that era but you really have
to make adjustments."
"It was different b6ck then bcciuse the only place you could hear music
was the concert ball. And I think that people went to enjoy the music as much
as the silence. Now we arc inundated with soundsaod amap from all corners."
At first the Canadian Brass took some flack from the1rcontemporarics.,
who, like purists of any genre, were afraid that the brass were telling out.
Said Watts.: .. I don't lcnow bow much more classical you can get than
Vivaldi. As far as l lcnow classical Just means playi na in a ttadi tional manner.
But I think that all this ovcr<mpha.sis on the scnousncss bas probably IC&J"ed
away a lot of people. We feel that this is not necessary. And, i(you will, the
stuffiness ins m ucb a part of the •act' of typical classical concen.s as humons
to our act."
Following its current tour the Brass will record an album of Dixieland and
may even attempt an album ofBcetboven.
"We determined that therein whole untap~ market ofpeoplewhoe;;_w
upon the BeatJcsandarcstill look.ing forsomethaogdiffcrent." said Wans. ·1f
what we do is considered li&bt classics or seen as fCDrc st.retching it has evolved
naturally from our combined professional openenCC$."
..What this business bas comedown to isentcrtainmenL If necessary we
will c~ the intro to a piece, or change the order of presentation to keep the
audieric:x s intettst because there is a danger oflosioa the whole classical
tradition. All over the country people are losing money presenting classkal
music. And it isjusta mattcrofbusancss. Things that lose money usually don't
11.tck around m ucb longer."
Art imitates life in
'Mystery of PicasSO'
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
"The Mystery of Picasso," examan-
in1 lhe life and work of the great
Spanish artist, will bc&in an ex.elusive
one-week Orange County engage.
ment tonight at the BalboaCinema.
The 7S-minute fiJm, by French
tilmmaker Henri-Georges Clouzot
may be one of the most ongjnaJ an
documentaries ever made.
The I 95S prizCswinn1ng film wa.s
Oouzot's effort to reveal lhe mind of
the grcatest arust of the century at
work. For lhe movie, Picasso painted
on a screen with colored inks that bled
throuah while the camera recorded
the evolving art works from the other
side.
"The Mystery of Picasso" will
screen niahlly at 7 and 9 p.m .. with
weekend matinees at I :45, 3:30 and
5: 15 p.m. tbrouah Apnl I 0.
The Balboa C'anema is located at
709 E. Balboa Blvd. on Newpon
Beacb's Balboa Peninsula .
"A TOTAL DEU&HT •• .COMPLETELY
CAPTIVA TIN&, REFRESHINlil Y DIFFERENT.
Rex ~ NEW YORK POST •
****"SET READY FOR THE MOST ORl&llAL
MOVIE IN YUiii w111oem Woll GANNETT NEWSPAPERS
fJl 7:00
9:15
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TON THE TC\NN
y CHRIS CRAWFORD _..,,..ea . .,,,.. 1
harlotte Dale, owner of the Villa Nova
urant. Newport Beach, says one of her chief
o 1s "basicaJly to maintain the family tradition
1.ause we, after all, have been in the business for 53
cars now."
· The family tradition began with her husband.
the late Allen Dale, who founded the restaurant in
Hollywood in 1933. following his career as a silent
screen actor.
The first Villa Nova started out on Vine Street
in Hollywood and a year Later moved out to Sunset
Stnp, where it remained until the move to Newport
Beach in 1967.
At present, Charlotte has two sons who work
with her in the restaurant -Jim, who is generaJ
manager, and youngest son Charley. .
"The restaurant has been doing a lot ofbanquet
business, up 31 percent over last year," reports Jim.
Their main banquet room, named Top of the Villa,
"1s a very popular room," he adds. "h has been
remodeled, with added track lights, and it has a very
warm. personalized atmosphere ... It is also popular.
he believes, because "there are not many banquet _ Chef ltmest 11.eqeathaler, at left. with
rooms overlooking the Newport Bay. with their own Charlotte Dale and Jim Dale of the Villa
boat dock." Non.
Recent events for the Top of the Villa have pnme Eastern steaks a.I veal, and a daily fresh fish.
included the "Speak Up Newport" and the UCI A la cane specialties include scallopini dishes,
crew fund-raiser (with Jim servmg as an auctjoneer Bracioli Cacciatora, Osso Bucco, Frittata di
fo r the latter), both hosted by the Villa Nova. Prosciutto, Pollo AJla Marsala, Pollo Parmigiana,
Next month the Top of the Villa will be the site and Salsicce and Peppers.
for the Villa Nova Leadenbip Forum, a seminar . Pasta offerings include spagbetl.J with various ~nes for entrepreneurs and businessmen/women sauce5, Fettucini Alfredo, Mostacc1oli, Ravioli,
1n the community. Beginning the first Monday in Lasagna, Linguini, and many more.
May, the seminar. conducted by Spencer Shenk Selections for children under 12 include
Management Consultants. will run for six Monday spaghetti, rav ioli, Scallopini Dore. and Scampi
C\ enings, with a different topic each session. The Casalinga. all with a choice of soup or salad.
scnes. including dinner, will be$300. per person and One of the Villa,,Nova's most famous dishes isa
will be limited to twenty people. Those interested much copied Mozzarella appetizer that Allen Dale
may call the restaurant for more information. ori~nated. The restaurant also continues to offer
The restaurant's executive chef is Ernest their signature Capuccino. as originally presented in .
!So nny) Mergenthaller, who received h is training 1937.
from the Villa Nova's original chef, the late WaJJ y Desserts include spumoni, ice cream, sherbet.
Gentile. Mergenthaller served as Gentile's direct cheesecake, Zabaione. Bisque Tortoni, Tia Maria or
assistant for eight years before assuming Amaretto Mousse Pie, and Tanufo Gelato.
responsibilities as head chef. The piano bar area offers a beautiful view o f the
O ne of MergenthaJler's prc~tions, Pasta New~rt Bay, and musical entertainment is
Primavera, is offered below as Recipe of the Week. provided from 8:30 p.m. to closing.
Broiled Jumbo Prawn•
u,Jitly Ft.vored with White Wine. ~fVed llt'flh
RJssoto, Fre511 V~r.tbl~ of the Day ".15
Chlck•a Romano
Crisp~ Coated Brl!HI of Chic.le en. ~rved
with F1uffy Rlssoto, and Fresh Garden V~t!tabfes , IJ.50
Fllet Mignon Ed•n Roe
Ski/let Sautttd. Topped with Ham Sia. Fresh
Mu$hrooms and Tomatoes. Claud 11>'/th Madeira
Wlftl! Sauce 11.15 -t=:AmPc>Ri ER INN.. ._HOTEJ._.
&m,uat F•dlltla
18700 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine
Acron from }olttt IV•yne Abpott 833-2770
Tl)e
Tl)al-1bucl)
Cuisil)e
Come enjoy 11 unique eJqHrlence In fine
dining. Thal Touch offer• 11 variety of
authentic Thal food ITom tbe mllde•t
to th• traditionally •plcy Thal dl•h••·
Co•plete L-c• Speciale
Mo•-Frl 0.ly •4.95
Open 7 day• a Week for Dinner
Open for Lunch Dally ex~ept Sunday
2616 San Miguel Dr.
In Newport Hiii• Sboppln11 Ctr.
S.n Ml11u•I Dr. at Ford Rd.
640-012S The restaurant offers dinner only, but serves a The Villa Nova is located at 3131 West Coast
full menu until I :30 a.m. In addition to a wide range Highway, Newport Beach. Call 642-7880 for II~~~~~~~~~~~============~ of pasta and seafood specialties. the menu includes in(ormation or reservations. I~
~eciJ!._f-J_~_
F Tt-=iE WEEK
CocktaiU
OF THE WEEK
PASTA PRIMA VERA
U ouce1, dry pasta of your cboke
4 cloves garlic, crulled
3 to 4 oucea wllole better
J to 4 plwm tomatoes, peeled, 1ffded, ud diced
I medJ•m ncclalaJ, diced
l ~ lludf.U of bl"OC!CeU Ooweret1, par-cooked
Parmeta11 cltttse
Salt, pepper to taate
Cook pasta. Saute tomatoes in garlic with butter.
lo a double boiler, place spafhetti strruner with pasta,
diced zucchini, and broccoli, in pot of boiling water.
Drain well. Add to the sauted tomatoes. Toss,
spnnkhng in pannesan cheese, plus salt and pepper to
taste. Serves 3 to 4. ,..
SEABREEZE COCKTAIL
FIU a lllPklJ pall wltll Ice. Add 11/t oaacea
vodka. P'W wttll equl part• irapefnl& ucl
cranberry Jtllce. Servet oae.
'nete recipe• were sabmitted by ah VIU. ·~
Nova, Newport Beacb.
Dally Piiot Oatebo<)t(/ Friday, April 4, 1986 11
I M IT ON THE TOWN
.
Writers give local restaurants high marks
Lists can be so listy (loosely
iranslated into borina). However,
there are lists that pack a lot ofuscfuJ
information into a small space.
Perhaps you will find this "reference
file" worth clipping and putting into
the comer of your wallet for further
reference.
Each year members of the Southern
California Restaurant Writers put on
a black Ile awards banquet and give
out coveted acknowledgments to
deserving restaurants from Santa
Barbara to the Mexican Border.
There are approximately 16,000 res-
taurants in the southern half of our
Slate
There arc 19 members in the group,
o f which 1 am one. Therein. of course.
lies the fallacy. Nineteen people
cannot possibly cover all those res-
taurants; however. we do the best we
can, and many of us arc evaluating
dining houses about five nights a
week and at a couple of lunches per
week as well.
Members tum in an evaluation
form on each restaurant visited and
grade on food, service, ambiance,
¥alue, appropnate wine list, and a
host of other amenities.. Those estab-
lishments rettiving at least 80 ~ints
on a l ~point scale were cons1dered
for awanis. All scores for each
restaurant are put into a computer
and averaged.
Everyone attempts to be objective
in evaluating; however, scores can
occasionally vary quite a lot. In those
few cases where I personally feel the
award was undeserved. f have so
noted.
The wnters each year cjve Golden
~ptre Awards (only seven in all of
southern California) to those few.
restaurants deemed to be the epitome
of a fine dining experience. Res-
taurants garnering more than 90
· points arc considered for Golden
A wards. The-sc restaurants are found
to be excellent in all categories.
Restaurants receiving over 80 points
are considered for a Silver Award.
Finally, the writers select a Chef oWie
Year, Maitre d' of the Year, and
Restaurateur of the Year.
GRINDER RESTAURANTS. ~
BECAUSE NO ONE SHOULD HAVE
TO EAT OUT OF A PAPER BAG.
r irr•11 of t11ir~1·r\ Ill.JI unr.~Vl'I wrl11 ltH' wr.irJwr) 01 lr1>n< h
Ir II'\ \OJkH Ii-! Ill ,, ... (),I 'lrtr 1k puddl1·} II \I 11111' VOlJ I rn·c1 I hl'
Cm 1d1 •r, wtl(•rt• •II •he •OIJ" frf'<.hly prt•p,u I'd 111r•,1I" \t'r vc•cl on
r 1 •.ii plrit 1 •<, only 111< ik .md t <1'>1 c · l'l!Pl'l1"rv1 • Wll1 •11 • jlJ<-.1 $ ~ l)',
g1'!'> you our flt'W I l,ir111>urg1·r r ..... ,(. I ,, po11nd PIJf(> twr l
p.itty wrlh rhP(''tl' lru·-. '>IJlJpor <..it.it! .t'>oft dr111k .ind ld'>I
fr 1rndly serw ~
.... """" ...,,..
NO ONE SHOULD HAVE TO
EAT OUT OF A PAPER BAG.
xi 101.1110m ltlr<>uel'K>Ot LO\Aflil:lt'\ dflO Or.i~ Cc~inrv c .ill I A<lO 468 JHi
1111 rhf. C.11nde'f nt;t!~I Voll
'I ""IM' !hf\ month l)rlly
t • Deity Piiot Oat~/ Friday, April 4, 1986
In theintenstsofsomebrevity, this
column addresses only the 0ranae
County restaurants and people re-
cei vin& the top awards. You are ci ven
permission to clip below this aen tenoe
and keep the remainder of the column
for reference.
Tbe Chef of the Year A want went
unanimously to Bral Ch1ao of
Rntaarut Aatallle in Newport
Beach Hotel Meridien. Cirino is
widely considered a genius in the
kitchen, and be bas brouabt to OrufC
County the quality of food found in
the best IU\auratns of Europe.
The Maitre D' of the Year Award
went to another talented gentleman
named Bruno. This time it was Bnae
Serato of La Vie Ea Rete Rata111Ut
in Brea. For seven years Scrato bas
made dining at La Vie En Rose a
memorable experience because of bis
carina service, professional attitude,
and his senuine interest in sending
everyone home with a smile.
Restaurateur of the Year was
bestowed upon E4lmomd Sarfati,
owner of LaFa1ette Raturul in
Garden Grove. With bundmls of
wonderful restaurants nm by true
professionals, this is one of the most
difficult choices for us to make.
However, this gentleman was
selec:ted because be bas for years not
only served the public fine cuisine,
but be bas also gained the respect of
other restaurateurs for his pro-
fessionalism, indeed, the respect of
bis whole industry.
This is the tint year that all of the
above awards have gone to Orange
County. Since every other year some
of them have gone to Los A~les or
other counties, this is undeniable
proof that we are ranking with the top
cities of the nation as a dining mecca.
Of highest stature are the seven
restaurants rcccivina Golden Sceptre
Awards. a.et ~ in Orange has
long been on the hst; last year, the
only Orange County restaurant to
make the lofty circle. This year
Orange County restaurants claimed
three of the seven awanis.
One oftbe establishments elevated
to the list was Aas.el.lo IUstoraate in
-
-
BA VE BRUNCH WITH BUBBLa
S••••Y Clla•pa .. e Bn•ell 11-2
Select one of many delkious
entTees from our criticofly oc-i
claimed menu w+tile enjoying
the BUB8lfS' DIXIELAND
JAZZ BAND throughout
the afternoon in the
authentic 1930' s setting of.
Bubbles 8ofboo Club.
l.ll N C H DINNER C OCKTAIL S BANQUET S
So•t• Coa•t Plau ste-Sltl
FIFI
Cuo
Santa Ana (South Coast Villa&e)
because its owner, Antonio C,qnolo,
is aJways looking after bis customers,
because it has a s~ng)y warm
and comfonableambaance, and it has
marvelous Italian food, fine service
and an extensive wine cellar.
The other Orange County res.-
taurant that received the hi&hest
honor is J.W.'1 la die Aaaidm
Marrion Hotel. From the day it
opened five yean ago, this intinate
restaurant bad a singular goal -to be
the best. They have suoceedcd ad-
mirably. The young chef, John
MclaughJin, charms the palate with
his inventive and classic culinary
(PleueeeeCBAO/Paee 18)
COMING SOON/
Watch for Sunday Cham-
pagne BruAch on the Hiii.
Ours will be a Brunch you
won't want to missl
Come join the mourners at
our "Tax Payers Lament"
party Tuesday, April 15.
Sa,.,,""" • Un &I,,,.,,,.,,
7 AM • 2 A.M Dally
Sunday 8 AM to 12 Midnight
428 E. 17th St
Coste Meee 7 1~1750
GULLIVER'S
Had Any
Really Great
PRIME RIB
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18)
,
TONTHET ..
SHOWLEY-WIUGBTSON Friday. Besides CAtensive dinner own kitchen, and breads in our
Opeu For DIDer menu offeri~ the restaurant aJso bakery," said Franco Vessia, general
Showley-"Wrightson, Orange Coun-features luncheon specialties and a managtr. "And we know our clientele
•5 oldest Gourmet Tako-Out, is now children's menu. AcafuJco is located will appreciate that our radicchio
n for dinner. The take-<>ut faciUty at 1262 S.E. Bristo Street, Costa lettuce and mozzarella di buJala arc
s been serving lunch from 11 to 3 Mesa. flown in from Italy."
m:e 11s opening in November of PREGO Prego fcatW"C'I an exhibition
81. and this will continue. Dinner ()pe9a la IoU Cattt kitchen and an oak-burning pizza
11 be served Tuesday through Bringing the tradition of authentJc oven. lo addition to &ably made
nday evenings from 6 to 9:30 p.m.. Northern Italian cooking to the ~ta and authentic Italian pizzas. the
d the menu will change daily in sophisticated environs of Ora.n&e Prego menu feat~ No~ Italian
rder to bnng their customen the County, Pre&o, an Italian trattoria, specialties and charcoal-Jrilled
rshcst an<kmOS1 innovative food opened its doors two weeks ago at meats, fish., and fowl. Breads arc
ss1blc. All items arc prepared on Koll Center Irvine, near the John made daily in lhe bakery. The
,, premises. Outside dining is avail-Wayne Airpon. trattoria's i,nterior, further enhanced
hie as weather pennits. "Everything is freshly made here by wooden floors and vaulted ceil-
..\ rnmprchensive wine list is avail--sauces from scratch, past.a in our ings, will seat J SOdineninsideandan bit> to compliment your entrec ..---------------~----------
ho1ccs with a very smaJI corkage fee
IS I 00 over retail price. Wine will be
\Jtlable by the glass also. E:n1rc~ starting at $9.SO wiU be
('ncd with your choice of soup or
alad and fresh bread and butter.
l'\\.'r' attons wilJ be honored, and
1Y Mastercard, and American Ex-
rci.s cards are accepted.
'>howley-Wnghtson is located at
'11 E.astbluff Drive, Eastbluff Vil-
agc ( enter. Newport Beach. Parking
~ plcn11ful and frtt. Take-out avail-
hie weekdays and Saturday, 10 a.m.
o ti p.m.. closed Sunday. Phone
~MJ-970 1
AC APULCO MEXICAN RES·
TAURANT
Sport• a New lAOk
.\l'apulco Mexican Restaurant on
Bm1ol Street, Costa Mesa. has a new
lnoi.. Greenery, ceiling fans, and o~n
ht-am ceilings aU add to the new ha.ht
and airy atmosphere. Acapulco also
katurcsa pleasant patio dining room.
for those who hke to enjoy the
~unshine
"The remodeling of our restaurant
"a~ a response to the demands of
to<la~ 's dlnins out customer. People
"ant to enJOY a festive. bright
NOW PLAYING
Directed by
Richard Vath
.........
~ -""°"" "*" "Sir ...... ........ _,.,, • ..._r_
Performances Tuesday lhru Sunday, Saturday and Sunday Brunch
3503 S. H•rbor Blvd., Sant.•na, CA, 'It Milo North ot San Diego Fwy.
N
additional 7S ouuidc on a patio and
terTace.
"Prego is not only an ellciling ~taun.nt, but also an outstanding
architectural statement," said Rich-
ard Ortwein Orange County division
president oftbe Koll Company. •
the Koll Center Irvine busiOHs
com pin.
Don Kaufman. of Donald Kauf-
man Color, was hired to achieve the
effects of aaina and weathering com-
mon to buildings in Italy. As a world
renowned color consultant, Kaufman was involved in developing the colon
forevery material in the restaurant -
wood., marble, stone and tiles.
The first biabJy popular Prego
opened ID $an rrancisoo in 1981, and
its successful offspring in &verty
Hi Us opened in 1983. Prego is located
at 18420 Von Karman Avenue. at
Michelson, Irvine. Phone 553-1333.
Designed as a Tuscan villa by Ron
Nunn Aslociat.es, San Francisco,
winners of several awards for
previous restaurants. the stucco and
Italian tile roof of Prego appears to be
hundreds of years old. Surrounded by
a garden of fresh herbs and fruit trees,
the restaurant is a stark contrast to the
surrounding modem skyscrapers in ---------... OPENS APRIL 8
The Dinner Theatre Premiere
l"'~~~~~:_ ____ ~of the Phenomenal Musical
I 1 001 I DOI Ends.April 6th I
7 YEARS ON BROADWAY
WINNER OF 7 TONY AWARDS
WITH THE HIT SONG
"DON'T CRY FOR ME
ARGENTINA"
~
EVITA -· TNRa
DtRECTED AND CHOREOGRAPHED BY TIMOTHY SMITH
aimospherc aJong with delicious ~==~~=:=:=:;~::;::;::;~~;;;::=~~~===~~;=:=;;;;;;;;;;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=========:;;:..-, food .\cheerful. relaxed ambiance 1s I
nu" the perfect complement to the
authenttc cuisine we've been 9ef'Ving
m our Costa Mesa restaurant since its
opening." wd Karen Mathison. Vice
Prl'Stdent of Marketing.
To show off the restaurant's new
look. Acapulco hosted a gala remodel
pan>. The guests included Chamber ol~'ommerct members, local busi-
ness leaders, members of the press,
and longtime customen of the rcs-
laurant. The guests enjoyed the music
of strolhng mariachis u weU as many
ol the dishes that made Acapulco
famous .
.\capulco Restaurant is open daily
fl·r lunch and dinner, and serves
'>unday Champqne Brunch from I 0
.i m. 10 2 p.m. Happy Hour is from 4
pm. to 7 p.m.. Monday through
Now Serving
COUNTRY STYLE
SUIDtY$199 BROICH
Includes Beverage
Well Drink or &Jer
9:00 Al to 1:90 Pl
645-1891
1712 Placentia
Coata Meu
so
OFENGLISHC
I "-. ~ 1 I.: ,1~).
'
•
Glorious food. beauti-
fully pr~sented in warm
surroundings modeled
after one of England 's
oldest inns.
A cla. sic American
menu.
An nward-wmning
wine list
~i;.@~
FIVE
CRQWNS
A l•I''' R' ~(c ,lfll' '-l ''1''-) l\Rl 'l 11
1.,. I I \'I l \''\'I Hk oH\\A\
I ( lf<1 ''"' ,,, , \t'\R (.Ill lf.<1RM'\
RI 'I R\l\Tf( '"'" 1. 1~1 7t-.'1'\ \I
Dally Piiot Dateboot(/ Friday, April 4, 1986 17 ...
-
FIFI CHAO •.. gorgeous Chinese re5taurant with been totally redecorated in a modem presents It u t>Cauty to behold. a son ti ve SICtVioe and peal California
nacdoed waiters serving OUncsc li&bt style. of honor to all the sentcL wines, Prager bu built• formidable FromPa&e18
creations. The manager. James Con-
way, has long been associated with
only the finest dining establishments
and takes care of the customers with
finesse and understanding that ll}alccs
for memorable evenings.
food in a European manner. l111B:f1D. · e Contemporvy Cuis.ine can mean Of 11 aold winners in the Conlioea-national reputation. Becauteofalhhe
magnificent Oriental surroundings anything from aative coolcin$ using uJ Qrqory, only two WC1'Cin Oran&e thinas it i-. I would u()ltade this one
and flowen decorating plates rather regional fresh i~enu to tnven-County. Ftn Crowu in Corona del to Golden Sceptre status. Et.bnjc &old
than insieid parsley. Mu4arta live French ooolcing. The fotlowing Mar made the grade because it awards went to 8a.o.t a on Balboa
Gollrmet m Costa Mesa. whose restaurants fell somehow into this cbaracterizes all the most imponant Peninsula for iu refintd Thai cuisine
owner Michael Chiang was last year's bailiwick: ~ Tn.fOe in Costa thinp in a dining experience -the and intimate decor, and to &.yal ftai
Restaurateur of the Y car, makes the Mesa received gold rcoopition be-finest quality food interestin&ly and cuisine in N~rt Beach which bas
Without further adieu. here arc the
Gold Award Winners for Orange
County. In the American c.aresory,
the only winner was GruvUle'1 in the
Disneyland Hotel. My own evalu-
ation would place it in the Silver
category rather than Gold based on a
dmAer wh ich was not of gold quality.
Gold list year after year becawe of its cau.te of the inventive cwsine of the most appetizin&ly prelC'llted, the best garnered a lo followina.
"real" Qinese food and a fine wine owner-cllef Alan ~Icy. You will service, an absolutely fantastic wine For the ttncb Resr.wanu, the
list to back it all up. It has oft.en been find influences from France, the West list and that English country inn MerW.lea. of course, pbbcd a gold
wd that Mandarin Gourmet set the Indies, and good old regional Amcri-charisma that surrounds you. Tiie certificate becau1e it is a truly great
standard for other Chinese res-can in this understated restaurant. lllh R.eltaaraat in Newport Beach restaurant. and we've already ac-
taurants in the county. Yf!D c.t.1 in ne Towen in Laguna Beach's Surf always makes the Gold Award list. knowlcd&ed Cirino as Chef of the
Orange is the final Gold Award andSandHotelisasplendidcumple and the owner Hans Prager bas Year. Lil'aJett.t in Garden Grove,
winner in this category. Yen Ching of mirrored an deco and graceful formerly been the Restaurateur of the was mentioned above, and this is the
has packed them in for lunch and beauty. Chef Christian Chemin Year. Absolutely dedicated to first-typical little French aut>erae lef'Ving
dinner for years, and bas recently makes very fi!'C food, indeed. and be quality ingredients. fine food, attcn-lovely country food. La Vie FM 8-e,
In the ~ Catqory, winners
were: La ~lie in Lake Forest -a
IL~ I Dinner & Show
, ~ _ j For ReMrV•tlon• call ''" 6 "°"' •1511 ~ 690 EL CAMINO REAL, TUSTIN 92680
~. ( 714) 838-1540
WAITER-SERVED MEALS FULL BAR SERVICE
....,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!!!!~===========~~~~;;;;;;;;--~miiii!lf""I in addition to having the Maitre d' of 1 the Year, also bas a YC>Wll chef of "Bob Burm: Still conliderabJe talent aod a d~in-the-
G " wool professional owner. This res-rea t ••• taurant has pulled itself up in awards
•·~rly B..a. Smith
Daily Piloc Greek Nights ~APRIL 3, 10, 17 & 24
Complete Greek Menu• BeUy Dancer •Creek Music
From 6:30 p.m. · Regular Menu also Available
RE.5ERV A TIONS PLEASE
from Bronz.e three years qo, to Silver
~J:. to Gold this year. Le
y in Irvine ranked &old for
its artistic presentations, restf\l.I am·
biance, ahd aood Frcoch food. A small restaurant in Newport Beach.
Le MW!. meaked up on us with its
9CaSOnal French food and charming
demeanor t.o steal a gold oenificate.
Finally, Mu C'aa&ea• is partly
French, partly Belpan, and this ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~;;~======~N;e•;;po~n;;Be.da;;;;;=::::::=~64;~4~20~30~:ll f.amily-run restaurant in E Toro 1s ;: worth seeking out for its food and
pesonali.z.cd ICfVice. Jean and Ema
Vanhecke worked hard to achieve
their aold status. Breakfast !J Lunch• Dinner
6 30 A .M to 12 00 Midnight
Visit the Sall loft tor fine seafood & nightly entertarnment.
Upstairs -above the Jolly Roger. Reservations accepted.
494-3358
. ~ ~ ... ·. ··~I~~:-;.. . .. i ' ._, ''L: ~-~.,,Y-~ aie-• • • •
At Magnolia
HunhflQlon Bearh 968·50!>0
WE PROMISE YOU
GOOD CHINESE
FOOD
LUNCHES. DINNERS, TROPICAL
COCl(T AILS. BANQUET FACILITIES
CATERING. FOOO TO GO OPEN 1 DAYS
SPECIAL DISCOUNT
ON FOOD TO GO
314 8Md'l81vd 827 1210
995 9920
An Italian Import. ..
from Reggio Emilia, Italy. Carmelo's proudly
presents ENZO BERTELLI, Guest Chef
Extraordinalre arriving SO?"·
e\O~ ~orthern Italian Continental Cuisine
3520 Ea1t Coaat Hwy .• Corona del Mar 675-1922 · ~
WILD GAME
Complete Dinners
~ featuring; ..-
• Hippo • Venison
• Pheasant • Ou•ll
• WHd Bo•r
s 1 5. 9 5 to s 1 7. 9 5
!.
801 E. hfboa
673-n26
Alfre4e'1 in the Westin South
Coast Plaza Hotel stands alone as the
only other hi&hly awarded /Ulillll
restaurant in Orange County. They
got their gold because of consistently
good food, service and excellent
wines. ~ The Sa.food UttJ6ory is a lonely
one in theaold ranks. Res of Newport
is the ,ale recipient, but a mo'1
deservi~ one with its philosophy of
"let's do at the best." This is seafood
fresh every day, service that is
incomparable, and surroundings
divine.
Thcrc/ou have lhc creme de la
cmne o Orange County dining as
peroe1ved by t.tie people who wnte
about restaurants. Your year will b(
fulljuat trying to dine in all these first·
class places.
Sign up for
project
A "Hands Across Americ.a" sign up ~ is ICbeduled for Wednesday.
April 9, at The Hop LD Fountain
Valley, participants said. ,,;;;;.===========================;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;iti:~======================:=:=::::::::::::::::::;:~=======:il ~HandsAcroaAmerica."aF.Oject I of USA For Africa. is being billed a'
the latpt community event in
America. OPENING SUNDAY, APRIL 13 ,
at the CROWN HOUSE
Th~ Legendary Jazz Performer
EDDIE HARRIS TRIO
AppearinQ
Sundays 3-7 pm •Mon-Tue 8:30 to 12:30
Continental & Seafood SpeciaJUes
DAILY LUNCH & DINNER FROM 11 AM
SUNDAY BRUNCH • SEAFOOD BAR
Proudly In Our lStb Year
ntoJ s. Pldfi, Coatt fftrJ. (A't Crown Valle1 P\y.)
SOUTH l.AGUNA RES: 499-2826 • 496-$.713
18 Dally Piiot O.tebootc/ Friday, April 4, 1986
17502 Beach Blvd. at Sfater
Huntington Beach 8'42-·ssos
Scheduled for Sunday, May 25. an
expected six million Americans arc
planniq to fonn a human chain from
Lot Anldes to New York to raise
money for the hunpy and homeless
of America.
Partidpenu wiabifta to sip up at
The Hop can do so betwctn 6 p.m.
and J:JOa.m. Wednetday.
More information on "Hands
Acroaa America" can be obtained b)
callina 963-2366.
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OUT ON THE TOWN • --r--;, -r ._. ~-• ---.... ,._ ~
.#' .. -,,,. ••
---~ --._ - -... _ ---------
..
THE BARN
Heve the prime of your life choosing
from tbe ntenaive 26 it.em menu.
Stults, seafood, BBQ, Merica.n dia-
he" inclu<fini a&1ad bu, and more.
Wl.'1tem charm and country am·
h111nce. Brulcraet M-F 8:30-11:00,
Lunch M·F 11:00·2:30, Dinner 7
n111h~ from ~:00 p.m. Happy how
M f 4.30· 7 p.m. Satellite di.ah. Live
entertainment and d&nc:ini. Sun.
rharopagne Buffet Brunch 10-2:30
Hanquet raciliti•. 14982 Redh1ll,
Timm. 730-0115.
Tiit.: ORIGINAL BARN
FARM ER STEAKHOUSE
Y ~ ... • They are lhe original. Famo\18
f11r 1he11 one-and-a-half pound
l' .. rrerhou~ ateakt and featuring
•I 'Jllay broiling. Proudly eervinc for
~I \~1m Lunch Mon.-Fri 11-2. Din-
nrr nightly Mon.-Fri. from 6 p.m
:--111 & Sun. rrom 4 p.m. 2001 Harbor
Bl\'d · C'ust.a Meu.. 642-9777.
lH.~NIGAN'S
• rt••h food served with a aide of fun.
\tenu features unique appellun,
•llllids, seafood, croiaaant aand·
"''hes, burgen, Mnican di.abet,
•ml an exciting brunch menu.
Lunch and dinner from 11 a.m.
14t•ekday1. Brunch 9-3 on weeltenda.
Full oar with specially drink.A.
H11µpy hour 4-7 weekdays.. In Co.ta
\1~a. South Coast Plue parking Jot
Ii\ !')a k's Fifth Avenue 241 -3938. ln
\A. e~I minster, 546 We1t.inin1ter ~ioll 891-41122. Dancing eveninp in
\\ l'Ktminater location
008 BURNS
Su~rb 11 the word to deM:r1be th11
''"" dining eet.abliahment. Serving
\;ewport for 18 yeara, specializing in
l\ntrUJ railed beer, the finest you
1 ao get. At.o featurinf fresh fish,
veiil and chicken. The Unen covered
•~ble11. candles and freah nowen
t1dd to the elecance, with boot.ha and
high back chain1 tor privacy.
F'lickering la.nterna and clauical
mu11ic capture the charming snd
warm 1tm01phere. Open for lunch.
dinner and their splendiferous Sun
day brunch Extensive wine lttt. 37
f'a11hion b land. SU -2030.
BRISTOL
BAR&OBILL
At R0Uda7 Inn Traditionally an
•II American favorite pl.Ice to eat
and priced ror family din.inf. Every·
thine rrom juicy 1tMd1 and cboP9 LO
1pecial chicken dlahee and ftelh
M&f'ood. ~ni.oua aaJ.ad bar.
Sumptuoua dal~ luncheon buffet.
O~p daily tor d1ninc and coclrt.alla,
3131 Briltol St., Coat.a M..._
657·3000.
DILLMAN'8
Tbe Dillman family i1 ra.moos for
their tndl\Jobal warm boepi~ty
Ind (LM food. rtne111. prfme rih ~
Balboa and ftelb fi1h daHy. Com
pleta dinner ll*!ialt dally. Friendly
a..rvic:e and a fun. delightful at·
moepbere. Open daily for lunch and
dinner. Brunch Sat and Sun. 801 E
Balboa. 673-7726.
T HE HIDE-AWAY
Tared of eating out al pla<:ft with no
privacy? Search no more! The Hide
away provides privacy with ita
boot.he and partitiolll. perfect for
bu.sineu luncheone and romantic
dining. All newly decorated offering
• reluing atm01phere. The special·
tiee are seafood and stab. Af.
fordable dining for the whole ram-
ily. Variety of daily 1peciall. Home·
made soups and aaucee. Beer & wine
served also. 5874 Edinger et Spring-
dale in Marina Shopping Village
Hunt1n~n Beach. 840 6.'i18
JOLLY ROGER
Great American food and at the best
puces. The Jolly Roger baa always
been known u a good family value
restaurant. The menu features
breakfast, lunch and dinner wilh a
large variety or d11hee t.o chooee
from. From e11 diehes. griddle
c•lces, burgera, aandwiches. sa.lad11
to comple~ dinnen of seafood,
11teaks, chicken and deltcioua det·
~rta. Family owned for 35 years
wi th the friendheat service in t.own.
'400 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach.
494·3137.
PASTEL'S
The oewesl event in dining in lhe
Newport area. Feat.urine a special
blend of culinary creatione from
Calil'ornia and the reat of the world.
Such t1ntalisin1 item• u :
marinated ahrimp and acallope in a
gin1er viruaigrett.e u.lad. Mouth·
watering put.a like 1n1el hair with
aeafood and freah tomato. Piuaa
baited in an authentic lt.al.ian wood
bumin( oven, the only one in New-
port. And a variety of Grillades
11pecialtiea. Dinner eerved daily
(cloeed Monday) and Happy How.
Reservations recommended. 1520
W, Cout Highway, Newport Beach.
(714) 548-7167.
MONACO'S
BAYSIDE RESTAURANT
E,Sperience ranwtic Calif~rnia
nouvelle cuiaine a~nted wtth a
French t1air In a rel.axed. elegant
atmoapbere. that whiapen privacy,
while dinina on the waterfront over-
lookinl 1-ut.itul N.-port Harbor.
ln addition t.o lunch and dinner
from 11 A.M. daily, Mon.co'• offen
a "Super-Sunday" chu:np11ne
bnmeh. Accordinc to Pre.ident
01vid Schneider 1 ~e brunch la a
combination ol l>Ullet aod OW\U
i\t!DI for t tv.96. Alto.. tht ~ •
cordially invited tor a FM'£ babor
cruiH and be enter\&ln.d by the
"New ~leciana" jan b.nd on hoe.rd luxurioua 106 ft.. motor
yacht. " vanti" Bo&rd..ing from 12
noon to 5 p.m. Monaco'• alto pre.-
enc. the John Anaelmo J r. trio,
reaturini lhe euy liat.enin( IOUnde
or romantic jazs avery Friday and
Satu;rday nigJ)t •ta.rt.in& at 9 p.m ..
m.akini Mouaoo'a a very 1pecial
ttMt.. Monaco'• ia located aaoM
from Newport lmporta in the Toltai
Bank Buildinr at 3333 W. Cout
Hwy., Newport Beach · at Newport
Blvd. Phone in your reeervationa at
(714) 6'6-5225.
ITAi 14N
CARMELO'S
Thia ultra-amart haven or ucep·
t.ional Italian and Continental
cuiaine i.a ooe of lhe more rewardini
placea to dine. Freeh put.a and
apec:ial "U,ht" aaucee a.re carefully
prepared by three ol the fineat )\&).
ian chefe. Piano bar entertainment
complementa the fun at.moapbere.
Patio dininc available for the aun
loven. Open Tuee.-Sun. trom 5:30
p.m. for dinner. Sun. Brunch
11:00-2:30. 3620 E. C-0.tt Hwy. ~r
ona del Mar. 675-1922.
MARCELLO'S
Thit award winner orren an ex-
t.naive menu specializinc in putaa.
veal, cioppino "and their famO\m
handmade pi.ua. E.tabliabed .me.
1973, thia !amily owned rettaurant.
hu captured the hearu or Italian
food lovera. Lunch Mon.-Fri., Din-
ner 7 n.ichta a week. 17602 Bea.ch at
Slater, H unlin1t.on Beach .
842·5506.
VILLA NOVA
A beautifuJ t>.)' view creates t.he
romantic setting that hu made the
Villa Nova a "apecial kind of plaoe"
for over fifty yea.ra. Superb cuiaine
from Central and Northern Italy
served irt Old World charm. Ex·
u .n1ive wine liat. Dinner niihtly.
Plano bar. Full menu till 1:00 a.m.
31:11 Wett Coe.at Hwy., Newport
Beach. 6'2-7880.
r_ ---• . "' ~ 'i
CHl'E •
LI'S RESTAURANT
If you love Chinese food, you're aure
to en.)Oy dinin( here, u Li'a prom-
ises truly authentic Chinese food.
The menu offen a wide variet.y o(
exotic di.shes. from a la carte to
n1mbinations. Breatht.a.lting decor
in • supremely beaut.iful at-
moaphere. Tropical d rinkl to
Q\tench your thint.. Open aeven daya
a week for lunch and dinner. 8961
Adami, Huntinston Beach .
002-911 6. 31' N. Besch Blvd.,
Anaheim. 827-1210.
T HE LOTUS
l-:nter the Orient and experience the
excellence or Mandarin and
S:icchwan Cuiainea. Authentic Chi·
nete dishes eepecially prepared by
muter chef Liu. The Lot.ua un
offer culinary mut.erplect11 to your
liking. The lovely clinlng area ia
dominated wit.h piauroe of t.he
Lotu1 nower the symbol or purit.y
in Chlneee cultuf'9. Eajoy fine Chi-
MN dininc u nll u wine, 1pirit.
and hoapitality 1t the Lowa.
LoQc.cj • ln Harbor Ceui.r at 2300
Harbor Blvd. in Coat.a Meta. Call
546 :l!\!l l
MANDARIN GOURMET
A truly 1pecial place to dine, &he
Mandarin 'Gourmet bu been a sold
award winner and owner, Michael
Ch.iang wu voted R.taurateur of
the Vea~. Special.ii.Ing in PekinJ,
Shangha1. Ssecbwan and Hwwi
cuiainea, they offer an array of deli-
cacies including Peking Duck,
dumplinp, whole r11h and more
1umptioua diehea. EJeaant at·
mqtphere, impeccable 1ervioe and
ntenaive wine lilt. 1500 Adame.
Coat.a Meaa. 640-1937
MEDITERRANEAN ROOM ·
Airporter Inn
Congenw and aec:luded rrom the
buey airport. aUTToundlnp. The
Mediterranean Room offen superb
continen\al cu.i.aine for lunch, din·
ner and Sunday brunch. Top enter-
i.inment nia.htly in the Cabam
Lounae. The Captain'• Table ii
open for dining 2' hou.ra. Perfect for
watching California 1unaetl is the
Flight Deck Lounge. The Airport.er
lnn it located at 18700 MacArthur
Blvd. in lrvine. 833-2770.
MARCEL'S
Voile! Marcel! Dell1htf'Ully rerreah·
ing menu featurina Creth ...Jood '
and Loui»iana C~un speciala.
Gourmet ay1t.er bar. Elerant yet
caaual atm01phere. Live entertain-
ment and dancing reaturing oc·.
finest entertainment. Dancinir
under the at.an! Lunch from 11 a.m.
Dinner nightly from 5 p.m. {)ytter
h&r till 1:00 a.m. 130 E. 17th St..,
Coat.a Meea. 6'6·8855.
PUFFIN'S
An adventure io natural eating..
Freeh quality ingredient.I prepared
ID a aimple yel elegant way. Award
winning recipea. Carden eetting in a
European Cale st.yle atmoephere.
Caaual bree.kf'ut and lunch. Formal
dining for dinner. Sun.-Thun. 7
a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. & Set. till 11 p.m.
3000 E. Cout. Hwy.. Corons del
Mar. 640·1573.
RIVIERA Rew to 1raciOU8 service in an
elegant. intimat.e atmoaphere. Ex-
pertly prepered continental du1hes
by Chef Richard Bergner, since
1970. This award winning rew·
t4uranl .00 off en an e1ten1ive wine
liat, and escell in tahlnide p~p·
araliona and flamt>H. Open fnr
Lunch 11:30-3 p.m., Dinner from 5
p.m. Excellent banquet facilitie11.
CIOlfld Sun. and holida)'ll. 33.13 S.
Br11t.ol, Coeta Mesa. 540-3840.
LEBIARRITZ
~s~rie~ e1qu~11te Frtnch prov
inc1al cuame wh1I• dinina in this
int.1mate French chat.tau Speci81-
liee include rack of lamb, veal
MarM.la and a beautirul 11election or
frtth fiah . Homemade award win·
nln11 deuerta. EnJOy un. brunch
with unlimit.ed champqne, an
elaborate buffet., a hot enlrM and
de1111rt-all eerved 1n a cozy, rein-
ed at.moaphere. Full bar with
domestic and im~ wine 11elec·
tfon.t. Lunch, Mon. Fri.; 01nnv ~n nAfhta. Sunday bnmd\. 41.
N Nt"POrt Blvd .• N .. tport Beach.
SU 6700.
CAFBPLEUBI
Take a MAt in Cafe Fleuri for break-
fut, lunch or dinner. EQjoy an u -
quiaite environment inn uenc:ed by a
French touch. Hot. jau Monday
lhrough Friday from 5:00 till 9:00
p.m. and an outat&ndlna white·
1love brunch make this Cata the
pl.Ice to meet. Open 7 ~ a week.
8:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Moderately
priced. 4500 MacArthw Bkrd...
Newport Beac:h. •76-2001.
LE CHARDONNAY
The fineet in cta.ic P,.ncb and
nouvelle cuiaine in pluah 1unoond-
inp. E&c.ite yow 1eme1 with Su·
pre~ ol Duck with poeehed Cali-
(omia Fip or Lot.ter Cauerole in 1
Chardonnay wine uuce with
chantereUee. Extenaive 11elect.ion of
winet from a temperature-oon-
trolled cellar. Lunch Mon.·Fri.
11:30-2:30. Dinner Mon.-Sat. from
6:30. Sun. brunch 11 -2:30. In Regia·
try Hot.el, 18800 Mac.Arthur Blvd.,
Irvine. 752-8777.
LE MIDI
Several things make t.hla award win·
ninJ hideaway truly 1pecial: Walt.er,
the1r-Swiu chef. trained in IOme of
the best bouaes; Pa.lace St. Mori\£,
Place Gttaad, Beur au Lac, Zurich.
Authenti c c uisine
~rovencale 1euonaJ gourmet fea·
~I~~ s~ brunch ao unique
•l • like steppa.na back in time to an
era when 11cellence of food wu
matched by ceneroua hoepit.ality a h<>!'pitalit~ rattly found theee da)...
J oan Marica and Walter in their
French country home. Lunch, din-
ner and Sunday brunch. Banquet
racitit.iea. Clo.ed Mondays. 3'21 Via
Lido, Newport Beach. 675-4904.
~SE
NAGISA RESTAURANT
Thie fine little Japa.neee reatawant
specialiut in sushi. tempura. and
t.eriyaki. 1'be suahi bar ie prep&red
by their famou1 Japanea~
Chef-l.tuly a feeling of being in
Japan. Great for aocialwn,, authi
ban are a lot of run. Oinln1 room
allO available. Open Tuea. t.hru Sun.
for lunch and dinner. 3340 E. Co.et
Hwy. Corona del Mar. 673-3933.
Ml CASA
Their food i.e like 11 trip to Mu1co!
Hoepitality goes hand in hand with
their motto, "Mi Cua et Su C&N,"
or my houae it your houH. Eat.ab
lathed ain<"e 1972. 1t'1 no ~
friends enJOY dinina here. Open
daily from 11 a.m for Lunch, Din
ner and Cockl4!il~. Entertainment
Wed.·Sat. night.a in the Burro
Room. 296 F. 17th St., COit.a MMe.
6'5 7626.
FORTY CARROTS
"Delicioua tuhion food.'' per Henry
Seaent.rom. Oi11COver that real good
feeling o( eating JrMt t.utini m .. i.
p~~ dall>:, natural and ~thy
Ongmal rec1pea. Fr•h julcce
11queeud d11ly. A irut place tor
Dinner 7 dl)"I from 11 a.m. Sunday
Clwn~ Bru.nch. S.tw.en BuU-
ockt and I. Mqnin'. Sn. Co.at P\au,
lower lrvel. 556-9700.
Deity Pll01 O.teboOk/ Fr1d8Y. April•. 1a&e ••
•
« M JT ON THE TOWN
SEAFOOOJSTEAKS
ANTHONrs PIER 2
The Southern Calif. Rfttaurant
Writel'8 "oted th11, one the winner of
the be8t value restaurant3. Thrir
seafood i11 the Lalk of the town with
30-35 fresh fiah daily. CBS Tele
v111on claims they have the best
happy hour m Orange County
Menu hu caJor1e count for the
weight conl(Jioua Open nightly for
dinner Located on the beauuful Ne
wport 811y at 10:1 N. Hay11de Dr
640-512:)
CAF'E LIDO
I\"""' n a' '.'<e11. '"•rt ' ( <trH l t'f\ \ al
laKf' 11111 'I"'' 1-:nJn' i.:111irm f'I ""'d
with i:u11rmt-t 11111 1n an 1n11matt•
and r111v .i tnH"phert-Dinnt•r
rtal(hth ll pm 111 m1dn11(hl Enter
1 .. 1nmf•nt ni1:hth q 1.:m ~un 1a11
'~''"'" I I a m Hnpp,\ J&ll huur "> " :\111n Fri Ar11pl" parkmi.: :!91~1
Newpi1r1 Rlvd . Nt•wport Heac h
Ill!'> 2%8
THE CANNERY
Th11 hi11toric waterfront landmark
in Newport's Cannery Vill11ge fea
twee fresh loal seafood and Eaat
ern beef Conaiatently good 1ervice,
open for Lunch, Dinner. Sun.
Champqne Brunch and Harbor
Cruises. Entertainment nightly and
Sun. alt~rnooos. Enjoy the lounge
food galley-41uperb clam chowder'
3010 LaFayette. 675-5777
CRAZYRORSE
STEAKHOUSE
Country dining with claaa! Authen-
tic western decor reetaurant and
saloon. featuring prime rib, fresh
sealocxil, and their famous p&n
88\lteed 1teah. Lunch: Mon-Fri
l t -3. Dinner Mon-Sat 5 p.m. (din-
ner reHrvations guaranteed). Dane·
ing and live muaic in the saloon.
Oyer Rd. Exit/Newport Fwy. Santa
Ana. (714) 549-15 12.
THE REX OF NEWPORT
Located on the oceanfront acrOM
from the Newport Beach pier. The
Rex ia the Orange Cout'a moat
excha1ve Rafood restaurant. Well
known for fresh Hawaiian gourmet
fish selections and 11pedaJiung in
sweet Channel l1land abalone. ten·
der veal and prime meata. The
warm ambiance of the padded
booths, gothic paintinga and the
well atocke<l .wine racb lend to
Rex'1 convivt.J atmoephere The
Rex of Newport i11 the choi« of
locala al! well u vi11itoni. Recipient
of the pre1tig1oua Travel-Holiday
sward. Casual/elegant atlir~
Lunch, dinner. Call 676-2566 for
reeervat1ona. Valet }:>erking
TAL~OF THE WHALE
Experience a step back into time to
a place where you can dine at your.
own leisure. Enjoy the romance of
old Newport with a panoramic bay
view. Excite your MDMe with their
aenaational eealood and traditional
favoritiea. Bre&kfut 7 a.m., Moo.-
Fri., Lunch 11·4 Mon.-Fri .. Dinner
4-11 Mon.-S.t. Sat. and Sun.
Brunch 7 -4. ()ylter Bar Fri .. S.t. &
Sun. Banquet faciJitiea up to 500.
400 Main St., BaJbo.. 673-'633.
SAIL LOFT
Located above the JoU)"'Rocer in
Laguna. thia ocny reataurant (ea·
turee fine fresh aealood with oce.an
view dining. Enjoy the oyeter bar in
a warm atmoepbere and decor of
nautical motif. The tea/ood menu
features 1wordflth, shrimp, halibut.
&Cllllops and many other 11electiona.
The oyster bar offers oy1ter
shootert, clama, crab &: ahrtmp
cocktail and alao hot dilhes. The
Sail Loft. a restaurant that is de<li·
cated to the tradition of comradery.
400 S. C08.l!t Hwy., Laguna Beach.
494-3358
T HE WAREHOUSE
Newport's moet innovative water-
front dining experience. Chef
..
Charles Kalqiao features fre.b tea·
food and international cuiaine.
Hithly acclaimed, award winning
Sun. Brunch, alao featuring patio
dining. lncrecUble oyater bar. ex-
quisite ambience. es.ceptionaJ live
enten.inment. Banquets and cater-
inc available. Lido Village, Newport
Bea.ch. 673-4700.
Ol\E CF AKIND
GINO'S ON THE BILL
Almoet a Co.ta M ... landmark
where friend• and memor ies
meet.-morning, noon, and nicht for ...
break!ut, lunch and clinner. Gino'•
isn't an Italian Re.taurant, but a
restaurant being run by a (local)
Italian. Even though they MTVe
many Italian items, they aho offer a
l&r1e variety of other itema on their
menu. Known Cot "Honeat food and
fTiendly 11ervice," Gino'• feature. a
varied menu with emphuia on
quality and reuonable pric:ea. The
!ounce opem at 7 a.m. for the more
eerious. cocktail hour with intereat-
ing notiona at 4:30 PM and Piano
Bar Wedneeday thru Saturday be-
ginning at 8:30 PM. Wat.ch for
Gino'a lat.eat addition, Sunday
Champacne Brunch comin( 100n.
Located at 428 E. 17th Street, C<>1ta
Meaa. Call 660-1750 for reeer-
vatiom, ditectiona or what.ever.
DWl\ER"T1 FAI m =
GRAND DINNB8 TREATS&
'lDsw-ive dininc and Pf'Of-'ooal
produdiom .,. IW'e t0 ..... eeeb
time you vitit. The ~
buffet often rOMt. buoo ol bee/,
sJaed ham with a f:ru.it l&UC9, o.c..
pa chicbn wit.b peec.Mt uid slae
and the Mahi Mah.I ia Nrwd in •
peuant UUCll. Tri·co&c. fetiuociD.i
and C1M.1D ia • l'MI {ellOrite. BQjoy
dinner and a p1-y t.ooicht! Gnnd
Dinner Theawr loc8ted wit.bin the
Grand Hotel in Anaheim at l Hotel
Way. Call 772-7710.
BARL&QUIN DINNER
TBBATEll
Every cuetome1 can be npect.ed to
be uee\ed Uke a celebrity. The
theater often IC'l'WDptioue me&ls
with top productione in an elepnt.
atmosphere. The aumptuoua buffet
includes rout bA.rcm of beef,
chicken and fiah diabea, pMt.M,
ulada. ve,etabl-. and ainful d•·
Mrta. The $al. and Sun. bru.neb
includes a variety or ... diaba The
CAlebrity Terrece ia available for
private d ininc. The individoally
deconited private beloony rooma
overlook the '60-1eet borMahoe
1haped main room. The Harlequbr-
il located at 3603 S. Hatbor in Santa
Ana. Call 979-7690.
GUIDE TO ORANGE COAST R• 't l~I 1~4--
I ;:i
~ ~ . $ ~ ~ ~~ I $J? q, ~ ~ ~ ~ ·~ ~ # ·~ ~ § ~ ~~$ ~ ~ cf.I, , .. ·~ -~ § ~ t$ ~ti <::)'fl ~ ~~ ,~~ Restaurant \....J::i ~ '1 \J
AIRPORTER INN Conta.Mnt.al 18700 M~Arlhur BJ 1"""" 833 2770 $9 ~-$1895 $4 75-8 9S $8 ~·$10~ from '3 00 4.7 • • .• lO· 700 •
THE BARN Amencan rrom $4 95 lrom $3 95 $11 95 from $2 75 4 30-7 • .. • up lo
14982 ~lull 1\iltan 2~11·011:'> 600
BRISTOL BAR A GRILL-Holiday Inn ~nca.n $6 95 $l2 95 $3.115-$7 00 $8.95 $2 00·'5 00 4-7 • • up lo
3131 Brtstol, Cmta M-~~7-3000 400
THE CANNERY Seafood $1 l 9S $19 95 $4 75-$8 95 $8 ~$8 ~ 4"6:30 * • up to • 3010 LaFe~~. N~wpon BNch 117:'> ~777 • 7:1
CRAZYHORSESTEAKHOUSE Si-lu $9115 $16 95 '3115·$9 llS Holidays 5.7 • • • up'°
t)llO &ookhotlow Sani. AN )411 1~12 Seafood 200
DILLMAN'$ Amencan $7 9S-S21 95 '3 9:1-$8.95 '3 25-$4 9:1 • 1M5 • 80 I E F:lalt... Balboe 673-1726
LE BIARRITZ French ~.~·•9.9!1 $14.95 4.7 * • 20-7!1 4 l 4 N Nf'WJ)Ort Blvd Nf'wport 1¥..+i f\4~·8700
LE MIDI fnnch Crom $8 ~ Heer &
10-M ~21 Via Udo. Nf'wport 8Nch 87$ 4904 from~~ from $12 ~ Wmf'
LI'S ChinNe $7 OC>-S 12 00 $2.7!1-$!1 50 up to 111161 AdAnw. H unun,ton llHch IMl2 111 I 5 150
MANDARIN GOURMET ~ from $10.00 from .... ~ I'°° Aclanw. Caow M-540 11137 $8.bO • up lo
80
MARCELl..O'S IWian from $4 85 from '3 ~ ,, up \0
17)02 BNcl> Blvd. HU11tinpln BNch 842 ~~ 85
MI CASA Me:oca.n •la~ a la carw ' • • 2118 E 17th St.. C-M-~762e & combo &oombo
REUBEN'S OP NEWPORT See food from $811!1 from .. 25 from t(l.95 6-7 • • up \0 * 261 I:. c-t Hwy N....-port 8-.h -15
PASTE.L'S ~ c.on tine:n&al $!1 7!1-fl!l.OO OpmincSoon 6-7 U20 W C-Hwy H4lwport 8-ch )43.7Hl7
THE WA.REHOUSE Seafood from·~ $495-'7" t lU' 4-7 • • 1....00 "'° vi. 0panu. .._,.., a..ti m-4700 ~
1e Dally PlloW>atebo<>k/ Friday, April '4, 1988