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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-25 - Orange Coast PilotFRIDAY, JULY 25, 1986 • Abducted baby's father charged en angerment BJ PAUL A.RCBIPLEY ............... Charaes of felo11y child endana,er- ment were filed Thursday apinst a Huntinaton Beach man who took hit infant son from the UCJ Medical Center and fled to Colorado. The 8-mooth-<>ld child, David Spy convicted rormer !fa.y radlom.an JflfTJ Whltwortll la COD· Yicted of ...,tnc. A4. California Attorney denies sexual allegatlona brought by two woman cllents./ M Na don America's "super-rich" famines now have their biggest slice ever of the economic pie./ A5 Sporta The Dodgers move Into fourth plaoe. /C1 INDEX ild Kennedy Jr., it now m a Denver hospital where doctort said he it in aood condition. "No surpry will be ~uired, .. said Tom Rees, a •Pokesman for the Univenity of Colorado Health Sci- ences Center. ''He•a a real 3;~(. fellow. This afternoon be was - ina au me nuflet." Police aid today the child ii likely to be returned to Oran~ County when bis health permits. They are hopeful the parents will accompeny the boy. "Ooi111 thro uah the _process of' extradition is messy and timo-<:on· sumi~ Hopefully they'll come back to Ca.bfomia on their own,"' said Sst. Mike Relic. · David Kennedy Sr. and his wife Kimbetlynn took their sob totbeUCI Medical Center last -i-ieek on the Earning hi• atrlpes In the ring Rare royal white &encal ttcera and aolden Siberian U,en line up for tralner W&de Burck dartne the Rlqllng Bro.. recommendation of a family phyt- ician. Docton found the baby was blecd- ina between h11 akull and brain and were watchana tum closely to de- termine if be would need suraery, police aid. Accordin' to police, docton also found a vanety of other pruent and past iajuries, includi~ broken bones and bruises, that 1ndi<:ated poujble child abuse. The bead tnJury 1s commonly found in infants who have been violently shaken by the lboulden. causina Miiplub and n.sptwed blood venela, 1114 Or. Cbristi.oc Taft. Hunti!'l\OD Beacb polk:c placed the child an· protective custody after UCl docton notified them about the 1u1piciou1 inJunce. But Monday niaht1 while Kennedy Sr. was vtsitina, ho aptrited his eon out of the accond-Ooor pediatric ward, police said. Police put out an all-points bulletin feanog the child's life could be 1n dan&er because of the head in.Jury. and Barnum a Ba.Dey Clrcua ahow that comea to Anaheim Con•entton Center Tae84ay, July 29. See Datebook. Btlievi!l& relatives knew the where- abouts of the couple and tbeir IOD, police convinced them oft.be teriou.- ncss of the beby's tnJury. Wednesday ni&ht. the chikS•s pat· arandmother took him to the Denver hospital . Kennedy Sr. attended a Denver couruoom ~Thursday whm his eon was p in the custody of the Denver Social Services Depart- ment, but has wife did not attend, aid Rees. (Pl ....... r ATBltR/ A2) Parking to oust fair land projects Revised plan OK'd after traffic crush at this year's event By TONY SAAVEDRA oe .. o..,,... .... Tbe Orange County Fair Board gave prchmanary api>roval Thursday to an updated fa1rarounds master plan that would put perking lots on most of the property now set a&1de for commercaaJ development. Under the draft revisions con- sidered by the board. two seven-a~ lots reserved for commercial uxs at the Costa Mesa fairsrounds would be reduced to two acres apiece. The rcmaanmg land, at the comen of Fa1rv1ew Road and ArbngtOn Dnve and Fa1rv1cw Road and Fair Dnve, would be utcd for 10 acres of paved perking. fair director Norb Banos1k said. The $20 m1lhon, I 0-year master plan is still in the early stages and (Pleue Me PA.Dl/A2J Advice and Games Auto Piiot Births Bulletin Board Business Claulfled Com lea C5 81 A6 A3 810 Oil drilling ban hailed on Coast Turtlenappers offered $500 By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. 0.-,,... .... 82-7 C6 87 Date book 812 A6, Datebook A3 87-9 C1-4 Date book Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Publlc Notices Sports Televlslon Weather Weddings A2 A6 Plan approved by congressional panel would halt ocean exploration ti 11 1989 By LAURA MERK Of ... 0.-,,... .... The House Appropnauons Com- mmce approved a compromise Thursday that forbids ofTenng new 011 and gas leasing in federal waten off California until 1989. Instead of a moratonum that would halt all lease sale nego11at1on' for one year. the committee approved a plan that delayed the scheduled lease sales in both Northern and Southern \ahfo rn1a from 1988 to 1989. The com prom 1se also establish- es a procedure to select the slles available for lea<;1ng Huntington's first citizens proudly recall good old days 50-year residents' feelings unchanged: were invited 10 ( 1ty Hall this week to be <Mtlut<'d hy Chamber of Commerce and C"1ty offiual'i a" part of Pnde Month They sttl~ wouldn't live anywhere else Thmp were different 1n Hunt- maton Beach so years ago. There were JUtt a few thousand people 1n the little town next to the ocean along Pacific Coast H1ahway. Everyone knew everyone else. And kads didn't act into much trouble Hun tin charge Flrm.19workers named ln defense contract Indictment By th Aa..ct.ated Prat A Huntln&to n Beach man was .-mona those 1nd1cted Thursday in a tenes of alkaed kackblck tchemes apjnat the aovemmcnt and defen~ contractors. Nineteen defen,c industry workers. includina several Oranac County bu11nessman and a Los An,eles County company, were nam~ in lhe 1ndJctment1. because the adults in town knew them and wouldn't permit thinas to get out of hand. Folks didn't bother to lock their doors. About 80 people who resided in the seaside hamlet at least 50 yean ago ton man in fraud Also among those oamcd m the 1nd1ctments was suburban Rosemead City Councilman Louas Tury Jrf 47, and a company he owns. ury Prcc1s1on Mach1n.an1 of Rosemead. Bonner wd. &Sides v1olauon of ant1-k1ckback laws, most of the 1nd1ctments charge mail fraud and tu evasion Tho aljqcd kackbeck IOhemcs in- volve employees of more than 20 defense contracton and ~ubcont.ra~ tors. 1nclud1na Huahc A1rttaf\ Co .• Rockwell Jntcmational Corp • Lock- heed \orp., Huahct Hehcopter Inc., Garrett A1rcKa~h Manufact~nnJ Co. and Maanavoit Advanctd Prod- ucts and Systems C'o The 1nd1ctment were the late<at to stem from a 22·month crackdown by the Justice ~ment on dcfen~ industry fraud. Previously, 18 other people have been pro cuted and convicted on k.ickbeck and kickhack- Mo'lt of the guests 'lt11l hve in the cit} that now covers 26 square miles and 1s home to I R0,000 people. They recognize that the c1ty'5 chanJCd a lot, but almo'it without exception they said they love Huntington Beach and wo uld never hve anywhere else. One of the>~ in attendan~ was Although Interior Secretary Donald Hodel can begin prcpanng for the upcoming lease sales by next March, 011 companies cannot be notified about the ava1lab1hty of tracts until February 1989 and bads may not be o pened until March 1989 Laguna Beach City Councilman Robert Gentry. in Washington D ( at the ume of the comm1ttcc's voice vote, said, "Th1<i 1s a nice wind for Southern Cahfom1a because 1t buy~ us ~me time and puts the lease ~le for <;outhern Cahfom1a into a new Ro BERT BARKER RETROSPECTIVE Tony Tovall, 66, who came to Huntington Beach in 1925 He and his family o wned and operated Tovatfs hardware store from 1925 to 1980 Fora longtime. the store was at 211 Main 'it In 1959. he asked fnends to help move the entire inventory a couple of blocks inland o n Main (Pleue eee CITY I A2) adm1nistra11on "We will have a new president and new secretary of mtenor:· Gentry $Cltd Both President Reagan and Hodel have pushed for increased oil and gas exploration ofT the ( aJ1fom1a coast The amendment requires Hodel consider all proposal~ submitted to him from the negouating team and Go" George Dculcme11an By Janu- af} I 91S7 Hodel must resubmit hi s five-year plan to the negotiating team. (Pleue eee DRILLJl'CG/A2) Fountain Valley pohce arc try1n$ to crack the case of the massing while turtle Meanwhile. the owner of the rare reptile 1s offenng a S500 reward. hoping to secure its safe retum The ob1ect of the 1nvest1ga- t1on 1s a female aJbtno A<i1an turtle. Her owner, Walter Allen. 59. ,.,d the animal 1s (See TURTLEfPale A2) Dogs and cats help to predict quakes By G. JEANETTE A VENT OflMO.-, .... li.11 Jame'i Berkland predicts eanh- quakes with the ~me confidence mO\t people forcco'it weather Before the end of the da)' Saturda) there will be a ma1or 7 0 earthquake ~me place in the world. Bcrkland said Tuesda' If the 55-year-old ~nior engmeer- ing ieologist for '>anta ( Iara ( ount\. is nJht. he will have \UlCCsslull) predicted 205 out of 24f) earthquake<, <;ince Januan 14174 he ~1d But Berkland'' enthus1a<;m for earthquake pred1l t1on 1s not shared h) C'Wl""Onc The l J <\ (1eolog1cal ~urve't ha\ n.·1ccted his last five paper' on l.'arthquakc pred1ct1on Sull h<''' not gi ving up 'Tm going on the offensive·· Bcrkland -.aid . C'\plain1ng he·'i going puhhl "Eanh4uakc' ha\t' al~a}s had an aura ol m\\t<'r\ ahout them Th~y·ve httn called J ( t\ of C 1od, random f Pleue -.ee QUAJ[Jt/ A2) CdMcan't have old church in England By STEVE MARBLF. Of .. ~ ......... The ul<' of a I lth C'<"ntur. E'.n~l\h v1llaae church to a con'lt'rvat1vc Fpt"opal conveiat1on 1n Corona dcl Mar v.·as ham'd Thuf'lda) b Ena· land·~ l'hurc h comm1\\1oncn. da\hin1 hopc'i for mo\.1n1 the build· ma \tone by \tone t'O Newport Beach. Had the an<: 1cnt (hun:h bttn ~ a\~mblcd on a Heliotrope ~venue sate as the conarcs-uon envmoned, at would have ~ome the old~t church of ( hnst1an wonhap 1n the United tatc, The chun:h. loc.tcd 1n the uny EnJ11 h farma"I town of Covcnham, has not been uxd for~~ 1n c · t "ta" It probebty wtll ~ dtmol Donald Uoyd Watktna. 39. a buyer for HTLK West Co. of Santa Ana. was named in lhc indictment for violation ofantJ-klckblck laws and mail fraud, llid U. Attorney Robert Bonner 1n lotAnacl . (Pl..,.. ._ DUSft /A2) A Corona del Mar concreaatlon bad boped to buy tbla 13th centuy EDCllah cbarcb. Rev David Lambert, charted ath (Pleue ... SftOLISB/A.2) • ' \ A2 **Orenge COut DAILY PILOT I Friday. July 25, 1086 Crashes kill child, 3 men One child ..,.,., Inned aod another injured today when a car plowed into the bicycles they wtTC rid1 na. Ao Irvine polJc:c spokcswman said the driVtroflhe car Otd on foou.Aer the noontime aceident at Y&Ac and Bryan avenues. Police, who didn't know the chil- dren'1 qes or the st00nd child's condition, were interviewi"' wit-nesses to'act an accurate descnptaon of the bJt-and-Nn suspect. On Thul'1day night, th~ men died in traffic accident!i in Irvine and San Juan Capistrano, a Cahforrua H11h- way Patrol spokesman said. Ju.st before m1dn1sht Robert C. Stock, 42, of Laguna Hills, wu drivins south on Moulton Parkway when Anthony Gurrola, 23. of Pasadena stepped from the curb in front of the car. His bod_y Oew on top of Stock'$ car. ldllina Gurrola instantly, \HP spokesman Kevin Dougheny said. Jn Irvine, Luis P. Rivera was drivioa bis Chevrolet truck north on the San Diego Freeway at about 11 . 30 p.m. when biariaht rearttiT blewouL He had slow.:d IO lbOul 40 mph IS be 1ppr01Cbcd the Jeffi'ty . Road over- cross1na. Dougherty 11id. Appueolly. two men drivu'I be- hind Rivera on a motorcycle did not see the truck dowiq. era.shed anto ft1 ~lid underneath the tNCk bed ana died instantly. The driver of the motort')'clc was 21 and the passenaer wu an 18-_ycar- old man from New Mexico. Their names won't be released until their families arc noufied, FAIR LAND EARMARKED FOR PARKING ... Prom Al must undergo environmental studies as well as public hcanngs before it can replace the onginal $16. 7 million plan approved by the board 1n 1978. The cost of the revised master plan was increased partly because of mflation, Bartosik explained. Among the projects contained in the c:ustiog plan were the 18,000- capacity Pacific Amphitheatre. com- pleted in mid-summer 1983, and a hotel, which bas been stalled b) financing problems. Drafted by POD Inc. of Santa Ana. the updated vcrs1on reshapes the configuration of the fairgrounds to accommodate year-round cvenu when the July fair 1s not 1n session. Two new multi-purpose buildings arc proposed for construction, wtth the fair's four main exhibit halls unc:ierJoing major renovations. Add1t1onally. the fair's 5,000-seat Arlington Theater would eventuaJJy be replaced by more parking spaces. "'h1le entertainment would be moved to the Grandstand area, Bartosik said. The new emphasis on parking was prompted by the increasing popu- lanty of the 10-day fair, which auracted a record 439, 177 visitors this year ENGLISH CHURCH'S SALE BARRED ••. From Al overseeing the Covenham church, told the Associated Prt'ss that the saJc was disapproved because the Corona dcl Mar congregation has broken from the Episcopalian establishment. "I was told by our diocesan secretary today that the com- missioners did not want to embarrass the bishop in California. as the people who wanted to buy St. Bartholomew's Church at Covenham belong to the breakaway Conunuing Episcopal Church," Lamben said Thursda}. in January and said it had raised the necessary $35,000 for dismantling the church and shippin& it in crates to the United States. Rev. Samuel Scheiblcr, assistant pastor of St. Matthew by-the-Sea in Corona del Mar, sajd at the time that the ancient church would provide the corurreaation with a sense of having "r00.s.'r. Neither Schciblcr nor another pastor at the church could be immedi- ately reached today for reaction. advised the commissioners not to approve the sale of 13th century St. Bartholomew's. There are now three possibilities for St. Batholomew's, said Lambert. "The commissioners may pass it to their Redundant Churches Fund, which would have to maintain it for future use. Or they would decide on an alternative use for the building, or demolish 11. wholly or partially. "f think 11 will eventually come down·· Coast clearing for the weekend U.S. Tempe ....... ON.. , . If ""' ..... .. 17 l.e =City to 14 IO to .. ., It ~ .., 83 ltl.NI .. 11 " 12 .... Wk• City 83 f1 AlllMIO City II 14 Ian NftonlO .. 14 ~ 100 14 ....,_ 14 N ........ • 72~ .. IO ............... .. 1•~ .. 11 .... • : T-..etPlrl«Jo 11 71 9olloft • .. . Sl'IOwtra .,.,. .., 10 , ..... 100 n ,__ w .. ._ """"'• MOM U S Olo4 ol ~,. Clwtllloll,a.c. 11 10 ,."'°"°" 102 ., ~wve. t2 , .. ~ w~oc. .. , . Dflll1ollle,MC IO 102 1t Calif. Tempe ~ ll .. &:!.! .... ti 71 WlaNle II • 11 • . .,~ ....... ..., ti ... Gllw1ill .. to ~ IO • ~IOr 2A llOur9 elllllftt MI a.m. .. .... II II CclUllbul,ONo • ~ Smog report 12 17 ...... ,.,. II a o.....f'I WOt1ll .. lwllle ., IO ... aw • .. °"Y*' .. 71 ,.._ .. .. ............ a • a.-.. .. ~.....,, ..... ~ ~100 ~ .., .. ..... __ • II O..Mollle8 12 .. 9000; 100-200 ~ tCw ....... ~1°1 II a ,.,_y., n u °"'""' .. 71 peclClll; JC».aoo ,,,.,_.,,... lot -• II ,_ 1t to °"""' ., M IOC>400 ......, Fhl -.,. II 11'.o "*"' to M y __ ..,, . , .. II~-t1 13 10da(:J:.c, '--t. ~. ~ EIW 16 71 -· pll "9d IMI tr .. '*'**-.. : ........ to M4IGAl1lv lllwd. •.•• ~ ...__,Qly to • =-: ... n S--o IO It Eztended • 11 IMll9, tec1111• •et v.,,_ .~ .. 11..., ..... 70 15 =~m 71 .. _.., .. 1'4 ........... _.·----42~ 11 u ~ :::i---_,toe. ~ .. 1t LM """"'~--·--..... ..... n 17 ....,.,. • " '**'°" .. ., ..':t ... ~~ ..._.... .. 71 Ti dee HICillt.IOwDMllow'li~et:t"'· lnllnd H IOM. ~to ... Jeoba .... t2 .,. ~ II ... ~v-, .. v.,...,........ lowaM ic.....Qty .. 70 ....... ., .. '°"'· LMVIOM tl' n TOOAY .....,.,..,.. • II "'*"°'* " " ._... t:ltp ..... 4.1' ...... n 41 LOIAlllltle tlS 71 .....,. J:ttp.111. l.1 .... t7 .. Surf report ::::'* .... .. " =. 10S 11 .. 11 MTUNMY n 80 MIW9Alee . , • ""'llilClfl ll'OOUll. 4..1' CIAMrClly .,.. ea L.OCAnoet .. 9ltAllW .....,,.. ti • ........ ,. .. _ 0.1 l.Ol'lllllllill 80 • Hwllrlgton .... M .. ........ .. 1t leoolldlllCllll t:Mp.111. ... ~ ., .. ....,Mf1,,..., t..S llllr .... ~ ta 7S ....... l:ap."" a.1~ .. 80 24 .. M01111u11 .. .. 4CMll 81N11t.,...., NewYOtltCfty 17 7t lull .... = • 7:le P.lft.. "-~., 70 .. 22nd..,..~ a..s .. ~City 10I 74 ...,,..... a.m. """ .... _.., .. II .., ---= a .. ()INN • .. ......,,~ 74 u -a:..s .. l'l\lldlllpllll IO • 1.•p.111. ~~ 14 ,.., ,,_,... IOI t2 .._.,.....,.... ~p.111. .... °'*"" N ea: W...T.,..:M ........ 10'.JI e.M.Md"-..... ............. 10S n :r. ...... f7 • ,...._. 13 ., ....._._~ 11 t7 rn:np.11'1. The Corona del Mar congregation. onJy 64 members strong, announced plans for movl't\g the English church Many in the small town of Cov- enham, about 130 miles nonh of London. were in favor of moving the church to California because they feared it ':"'ould be demolished other- wise. QUAKE FORECASTER ASSISTED BY DOGS AND CATS ••• .... TURTLE ... From Al worth about S2.000 ~ Allen 1s Fountain Valley's well-known "Turtle Man." He earned his nickname from the collection of about 400 tunics and tortoises he maintains at his home. His residence 1s a headquarters of the California Turtfe and Tono1se C'lub and Allen's collection 1s viewed frequently b} school groups and other public tours. Allen told police "White) .. d1sappeared from his rear }ard two or three da}s ago S1m:e the yard I!> surrounded b) a sn- foot-h1gh blo<:k wall w11h a gate that 1s always locked. Allen contend~ the animal could not ha .. e escaped Allen said he has had the turtle for 19 }Car\ He ''>ti· mated its age at 50. but dcx.~n "t know 1f that makes "White)' · elderly or s1mpl~ middle-aged The tunic 1s about 10 inches long and weighs about six pounds according to Allen ~llen said he ha\ offered the reward "for rrtum of the turtle. in good ~hapc no ques· tions asked." The tunlr collt'\."tor c;a1d anyone with information can contact him at %2-0fi 12 or his secretary, Martha Young. at 962-8989 "There arc strong feelings. pan1cu- larly among some of the older people, that the church is part of the village, but most of the people arc happy because they were upset that the church was going to be demolished," Barbara Harrison, a resident of Covenham. told the Associated Press earlier this year. The church, a Gothic cross-shaped structure, was built in 1257 to serve a pansh established some 200 years earlier by William the Conqueror. Except for a stained glass wmdow added in 1852 and necessary repair work to its limestone block walls, the church is unchanged smce its con- struction. said Sche1bler. The church was declared surplu~ propen) m 1978 when the town's 253 "'c:s1dents decided to use a second church located m the farming village "\\-e couldn't raise the mone) 10 restore 1t." c;a1d Hamwn The comm1ss1oncrs who barred mo' 1ng the church control the finances of the state Church ot England and are responsible for the upkeep of its buildings. Amencan Episcopalians. who with the Church of England belong 10 the worldwide Anglican Communion. ~pht over changes in their liturgy and the ordination of women pnests. A breakaway group started the Continuing Episcopal Church, touch- ing off a controversy within the Episcopalian establishment. Lambert told the Associated Preso; that beoluse of the spht he believed that Bishop Simon Phipps of Lincoln From Al events. That's baloney." He said he was able to predict the 6.5 Coalinga quake 1n 1983 because 1t fell within a sc1sm1c window-one of several key elements in a prediction. Each year as soon as he receives the tide charts. he outlines nine to 11 seismic windows, a period of vulner- ability 10 quakes. The recent Palm Springs, Oceanside and Bishop eanhquakes all fell in'lthe July 19·16 window, he said. "Tides cause the crust of the earth to be pushed up and down." The potential for earthquakes increases when pengec tides and spring tides occur at the same time or arc close together. Pengee tides occur in proportion to the distance of the moon from the eanh -the closer the moon. the higher 1he tide. On July 19, the moon was less than 224.000 miles from earth -one of1ts closest approaches to earth in its orbit. The 5 5 Bishop quake followed the next day Seismic wmdo..,.,.~ arc also charac- tenzed by high ~pnng tides. During the July window. there was a full moon. Berkland said. "Spring ti les accompany a new or full moon." Sc1sm1c windows which open up again Nov I -7. Dec 1-8 and Dec. 2~­ Jan. 5 ind1catl' only the possibility of eanhquakes. To actually make quake predicuons, Berkland studies several other indicators, including news- paper lost and found columns. Dogs and cats stan responding to an CITY STIRS PRIDE IN CITIZENS ~ .. From Al Street. '"\h tnrnd'> ""ere Jll l ustome~ ... he ..aid. "and the' moved all the hardwarr item\ We didn't lose an}lhlDg." hl' <,aid '"That'!> how people were then .. To' att 'i31d his fath er also named Ton). built the Holly sugar factory in the F1 ... e Points area of Huntington beach in 1911 He d1'1mantlcd 11 a few years later and shipped 11 b) train to 'Tomngton. Wyo where 11 1., rnll operating. he said fovatt said he would hkl· to ~c red .. velopment move ahead '"It's such a me'>~ down there," ht· ~1d. "There's no rcao;on to go thCH' The beautiful old downtown needc; IO be revitalized · Gail Langcnhn k Rll wao; anothr r v1s11or at the nldt1mers' \3lute Sht• came 10 Huntington Reach from Iowa in 1924 tu bcrnml' tea<hcrat Hunt- ington Ekmrnlar) <x.h<x1I (now Dwyer) ""hcrl' ~he "'a~ paid the grand total of SI MIO per )car Her hu,hand 'v cmon now dc ceased wa' a lormer ma)Or I\ cit., park 1s named 1n hi\ honor While M '' l ~ingcnhet k wa~ \har mg rccolleltHHI\ \nn C1oct<;eh 'llid mlO an adJuin1ng r h,111 '"Mrs Langt•nlx·c ~" \hl \JH..I. 'I don"t know mul h math hut t'\.l'f)' thing r learned I learned trum HlU Goetsch said \tH came to llunllngton Beach in 1921 Another 111 M r\ Lanicnbct k '~ °taA:s~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE 130 'Nf"1 A.., •' 1.4 Mll''WI It M• 11t.f••· P ' V t,. U~ A -.1,t' • former pupils. France~ Rathbum. has been a resident since 1927. "I lo"e 1t (Huntington Beach).'" she said. "E' erything -the weather the people. the beach I'll never gel too old lo love the beach .. ~nother pioneer. Gene McManus ha'I spent 60 of his 78 years 1n Huntington Beach. His JOb with the ')tandard 011 Co took him to Ket- tlemen Hill \ ID the San Joaquin Valley for a while But the heat was too much and he and his wife. the former Alberta Lam who first became a resident 1n 1923. returned never to leave again One of the longer-term resident-; at the gathenng wac; Charlolte J Kinchen Due. who came to Hunt- ington Beach from Los Angeles m IQ 13 when she was J She said growth ID the city ha s been "phenomenal" and she takes pnde 1n 1t, but thing'i used to be nicer when the town wao; <;maller. she said. "But 1t had mudd) roads when 1t rained. My father would get on his tractor and pull out the cars (that were stuck.)" Mrs Due o;a1d she's done lot<; of traveling and ~en lots of lovt"I> places but no place 1s quite a'i niC'<' a\ Huntington Beach She and her brother. Eu&enc Due of C1lendora. own 17111 acres of land at Heil A venue and Bolsa Chica Stre<'t where the Huntington National Bank 1~ located. she sa1ri. Se' era I lormn ma)ors. including Don Sh1ple\ and Bob Lambert. auended the afla1r Sh1ple\ n.. a former biology teacher at ( ornell L niversny and Cal State Long Beach. said he opposes some of the high density develoJ>- ment. hut takes pnde in the city in several area\ "We have a park system like no other. the hhrary 1s pracucally a national 1n<,tllut1on. and the beaches arc still in public hands." He'" sat1o;ficd with police and fire and other 'icrvices even though his Main Street residence has been broken into twice. he said. Lambert. M. has spent all his life. except for the first 11 months, m Hunt1ng1on Ueach He. and his father before him. owned and operated a .service stallon at Beach Boulevard and Talbert Avenue. He holds the lea\C on the propeny now occupied b> the W1encr~hmrzel hot dog st.and. Lamben \81d he likes the climate and cit) services but womes that too manv homes and businesses are being built ID the c11y Ma}or Bob Mandie a Huntington Beach n.it1 vt" son who introduced th<' early-day re'i1dent'\ to the City Coun· c1I and who's known mo'>t of them all his life. calkd them "the best pcopl<' tn the world." "They've ne.,,er done anything wrong." he "81d, "not even the mosl minor thing " Dally Piiot O.Clvery I• Guarantffd M ~1' J -M'f I~ Y' ,, C ...... ..., • .,. ~} <,1;1~ 0..\"'-' M •I"' A ... , 412• Justcall 642-6086 "'1• "-"• r<YVA ~ o, :>JO r "' t• -·'' m •'IC "°"' (00) .... °" VOL. 71. NO. 208 What do you hke about the Daily P1lo1., What don't you hkc? \all the number above and your mcuqc will be recorded. tran\Cnbed and de· ltvered to the appropnatc ednor The same 24-hour answenna Kr" ice may be used to record letters to the edllor on any topic Contnbutors to our ~nm column mu~t include their name and telephone numbtt for venficat1on Tells us what's on your mind • - ' ..... .., !U'O., .ne s.-, " 10\' "" ...,. ,..,_ '°'~ (Of'y l>y 1 • "' t• .,...,.. •O • m 1no .,.">.IA t <ICIY -oe~.., Clrculetlon T1 .. p."M>nH impending earthquake a week to 10 days in advance. However, there is a lag tJme in reporting runaway animals, he said. Allowing for the 4th of July and thunderstorms, more ads start showing up about four days in advance of a quake. Preceding the 5.3 Oceanside quake on July 13, there were advertisements for 44 missing dogs and 11 missing cats in that area. FATHER .•. From Al The parents were granted super- vised v1S1tat1on nghls as "'ell. Rees said The d1stnct attorne)."s office hasn't )Ct decided 1f 11 will file charges against the mother. said Huntington Beach police spokeswoman Jo Anne Bonkowski. Kennedy Sr -whose real name 1s Nicholas Peter Navran -1s wanted by local authont1es on several other matters. too. Court records show warrants for h1sarres1 have been issued for charges stemming from petty theft. indecent exposure, lewd conduct in public and dnving with a suspended license. Records also show he has used three or four different aliases. "Friends told us he says he's related to Bobby Kennedy, or John Kennedy, and other members of the Kennedy family," said Bonkowski. .. If there are more than six to eiaht cats and more than 30 dogs missina, expect a quake. rve monitored three city papers since 1979. It works time after time. It's a uscfuJ tool." Animal response is not limited to domestic arumals. Wild animals often react by running away from their normal place of safety, Berkland said. Rats and mice come out in broad dayliaht, homing pigeons &et lost and manne animals beach them- selves. The phenomena ofboming pi,eons get~ lost and marine animals beaching themselves is tied to changes in the earth's magnetic field, another quake indicator, Bef'kland said. Homing pigeons, honey bees. salmon. sharks. whales au navigate using the earth's magnetJc field . They arc able to navigate along magnct1c lines because of deposits of magnetite or iron oX-idc in their bodles. Magnetite or lodestone is a bi&hly magnetic natural substance found everywhere, Berk.land said. There have been several homing pigeon races. including a 1984 Bishop to Los Angeles race, where the navigation system didn't work. Bcrltland said many of the birds did not finish, because they were "flying over epicenters of quakes to be." However, "many animals have forgotten what to do with magnetite -like people." Earthquake sensitive people do respond, however, with physical symptoms, he said. Up to to four days before a quake, people will get a headache between their eye- brows (where the magnetite is con- centrated). a stuffy head and watery eyes. Berkland said animals are not bis only early warning system. A I,()()(). foot well in Palm Springs reportedly "surged 20 feet in a few minutes four hours before the 4.8 quake on Oct. 2. 1985." Some have caJled Berk.land's work "little better than reading tea leaves." However, Berldand said, "If you put enough information together and stay with 1t long enough, yo u'll begin to see the correlation. (But) we have got to have continuity tn earthquake prediction." The success of earth- quake predictions are tied to system- atic reporting ofkey indicators. "High science has not dealt honest- ly wufi the subject. .. In China and Ruma, they're closely following chanse in water levels and animal reactions, he said. Despite ·•a lot of nused eyebrows'" and cnticism that bis findin$S arc all c-0inc1dental, Berk.land continues to offer his predictions to all who wiU listen. For the Los Angeles area, Berk.land predicted a 3.5 quake before Satur- day. According to his sources at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, there was a 3.8 1n Oceanside Tuesday. And a 3.3 temblor rattled Canyon Country northeast of Los Angeles Thursday. However, he said, "I don't think the activity is over with yet." DRILLING FOES CELEBRATE ... From Al which 1n turn will return 1l with its commments Hodel is then required 10 submit copies of the final five-year plan. including the comments made by the negot1a11ng team. to Congress and the president w11hin 30 days. If Hodel opposes anything in the plans he must give a detailed explanation of his reasons. Congress then has 60 days to act on the five-year plan . The amendment provides that the c;ccretary may not sched ule a lease sale off California prior to Jan. I, 1989. The current ten ta ti ve schedule calls for two sales in 1988, one off Northern California in Apnl and one off Southern Cahforn1a the following month. The lntenor Department already had agreed to delay the !x>uthcrn CaJ1fom1a sale but not the northern offering. for which prep- arations began 10 April "It kind of walks and talks hke a moratorium but it is not a mora- tonum," said Gentry. According to Gentry, the com- promise is more protective than the moratorium would have been be- cause it gives foes of offshore oil dnlling the time to push the issue into the presidcntal campaigns. •·we can also push for an en· vironmentally concerned secretary of interior, one who understands the precious resources of the California coast," Gentry said. The amendment to the lntenor Department's funding bill must now be approved by the full House and the Senate. Gentry said legJsl.ators were tinng of lobbyists from California and he prcd1cted that a moratorium would have had little chance of passing both houses. "In Washington they call the people from California the 'hot lubbers.' They think the 'bot tubbers' fly here 10 the hill Just to try and save tbe1r precious ocean views they have from theu hot tubs. They would not have allowed another moratorium to go through." Gentry said. Bill Schreiber, aide to Rep. Robert Badham, R-Ncwpon Beach. said the agreement was very promising for Orange Coast residents. "This 1s great. Outside of a mora- tonum forever, this is the next best thmg. fl is a real victory for us locally," he said. DEFENSE KICKBACKS ALLEGED ..• From Al related charges "This 1!1 a cancer on the defen~ indsutry.'" Bonner said of paying kickbacks to get Jobs. a practice he termed "very widespread and very l<>ngstandinJ." More indictments arc expected in the government's ongoing invest1ga· tion of defense fraud, Bonner said. Assistant U.S. Attorney • Fred Heather.t who 1s prosecuting the latest group or cases, said he was unable to put a dollar Hgure on the amoun1 allegedly paid tn kickbacks. But Bonner said the latest ca<1n arc believed to be only a fraction of kickbacks bc1na paid, which he csu mated at .. tens o f million~ of dollarf' over the past decade. Defense proarams involved 1n the current cases include 1 critic.al com- ponent for the space shuttle sohd rocket booster, sophistic:atcd mihta.ry SJrcraft indudina top-of-the-hne Jet fiabten, the B.Sl and B 1-8 bomben. the CN1K mis le system and the Army's Silconky "Blackhawk" heli cople~ as wtlJ as ··a number ofbtahly class1ued Dcpa.rtment of Defense prosrams," Bonner '81d "The.e cnmes innate the pnccs &ht aovcmmcnt must pay for defense. nd they dMtroy compcouon 10 the muketplact for defense contracts.. .. ' • Bonner said. "They have the poten- ual for Jeopardizing the quality and rehab1hty of the defense indu'itry's goods upon which we all depend for our national security." He said the invcit1gat1on had turned up no evidence that the schemes had caused inferior quality components to be used in any weapons systems. Tury was accused of pay1n& more than $20.000 in kickbacks to Richard Herbert. a former vice president and general manager of Teledyne Camera Systems Inc., in exchange for getting aovemmenl subcontracts between 1980 and l 984 Tury, accused of v1olatina ont1 kickback la~ and of mail fraud. c-0uldn't be reached either at Rose- mead City Hall or at his comapny. Herbert was convicted last year of rece1vina kickbacks Those named in Thunday's indict· ments arc e~pcctcd to be amiJne<t over the next three Wftks, Bonner said. lks1dci Watkln' and Tury, thear names, compa_n1es ror ~h1ch the>· worked at the tJme or the alltjtd "'olations and lhe charses 1nit them arc: -James Paul Juckabcy. 5 I. of Cypress. senior buyer Mth K.a1Kr • Electroprccmon of Irvine. anti-kick- back and tax evasion. -Carl Andy Romcrio, 70, of Westminster. senior buyer for Datron Systems Inc. of suburban Simi Val· Icy, antJ-klckback and mail fraud. -Albert V. Din&er, SJ, of Garden Grove. purchasina agent for Ai~ search Manufactunna Co. of Tor- rance, anti·kickback and mail fraud. Correction The salaries of Huntinston Beach City Attorney Gail Hutton and City Clerk Aheta Wentworth P.Ublished Tuesday in the Daily Pilot were incorrect because of inaccurate infor- mation provided by the city's person- nel office Hutton's salary, 1nclud1na a 7 percent oontnbution of ta.Jtpaycr money to her retirtment plan, is S73 . .a3 Wentworth"scorrtet sa.lary, anclud- i~ the city's contribution to tM reti.rcment pla_n. 11 S<M,670. The two elected officials, wtlo rtcrwed a 5 pm:ent .-y lncreate from the City Council Monday. aJso W1ll rtte1ve Iv, percent pay h•kc Jan. I Barbecue slated byBB's Masons HuntiQP>n Beech MaloaJc Lodae 380 W1U •poMOr it• annual bltbecue at La& Part in down&own Huntin&ton Beadl Aus. 3, markina the 60th anni~enaryoftbeevent \hatlW'led ua ~b party in 1926. The public is invited to the event. which is ~beduled from noon to 2:30 p.m. Tbe aftemoon will rnclude entenainme111 and clowns for tbe cbildren1 and the menu will couist of batbeeued beef ano portk beans, aaladl and prlic bread. The pnce it SS for adults and $3 for children under l2. Contact Rich Taylor at 962-3178 for further information or tickets. Toan require raervatloa• Besinnina A ua. 2.L. the free public tour of Marine Corps Air Station 1 ustin will be available by reterVations onl>:. Tbe auided tour will still be given at 10 a.m. each Saturday, but visitors are asked to call in advance to the station adjutant's office, 651-7303. The tour ~m at the main gate on Red Hill A venue, with vi11tors parldna near Hangar No. 1, one of the huge buildings that housed submarine- hunting blimps durina World Warn and are DOW home to helicopter squadrons. The ~rvations arc aimed at keepina the toun to a manageable size. SclJolanlUp award 9et The Orange County Indiana University Alum- ni Oub will award a $400 scholarship to Fountain Valley resident Cbarlts Orchard at its annual summer potluck party Saturday. The event is scheduled for 4 p.m. at 3165 Yukon Ave., Costa Mesa. Phone Susan Eaton at 76().1691 for reservations and more information. Hl•torlcal meeting slated Judy Liebeck, commissioner of the Orange C.Ounty Historical Commission, will speak on history in Orange C.Ounty Aug. 2 at 10:30 a.m. at C.aspcn Wilderness Park.. Liebeck: is a past president of the Irvine Historical Society and presently is employed as a technical writing consultant. Computer cl ... planned A hands-on workshop entitled ·'Micro- computer Accounrina Software Survey" will be offered Aug. 2 by Coastline Community College at the college's Huntington Beach Center, 20661 Farnsworth Lane. Robin Elder, an accountant. and Deborah Janus, a lecturer and consultant for software convenion and implementation, will conduct the work.shop. The cost ts $35 and further information is available at 241-6186. Coaple8' semlnar bJ Irvine .. Couples' Communcation Work.shop," a two- day program, will be held next Friday from 7:30 to 10 p.m . and Aug. 2 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Room A2 I 2 oflrvine Valley C.Ollege. Dr. David Coombs, a marriage and family counselor, will present the workshop, designed to help couples communicate effectively. The fee is $65, which includes lunch during the Saturday SC1Sion, and more information may be obtained by calling 559-3333. Terrorism dlscauJon set The international impact of terrorism will be the topic at the Aug. 4 meeting of the World Trade Center Association of Orange County, to be held at Auor Corp., 3333 Michelson A vc. in Irvme. Dinner speakers will include author Vladimir Sakharov; Harry Pizer, genera] manager of corpor- ate security for Pan American Airlines, and Frank Brittell vice president of Business Risks lnter- nationaJ. The meeting begins at 5:30 p.m. at a cost of $30 for members and $40 for non-members. Call Susan Lentz or Cindy orris at 549-8151 for more information. An Invitation: Attention organtz.atlon pt~ta and aec- r9tertea: W• ..,.t to help meke your upcoming everitt, meetlnga, MmlNlrt and fUndrelaera IUC• cellful. ~ brief ennouncement1 lnctudlng time. plllee, coet (If eny) and a phone numb« '°' addltlonel lnfonnatlon to: Bulletin Boerd, Delly PMot, P.O. Box 15e0, eo.ta Meu. 92828. Aepof19 Of your Club CK ~Uon'a actlvttl• -llke communHy ..W. Pf'Ojec:tl O< etectlon Of omc.n -"'°'*9 be dlrect.S to the Communtty ,,._. Edft« at the IM'4t addreu. ~ bteck and whit• photographa .,.. wetcome. • Pressured trailer tenan t s move to city-owned park Relocated f amt lies can spend th eir lives In new HB f acllities 87 ROBERT BARUR Of .. Dlllr ....... Twelve tenants under threat of eviction for ~ve years &om a mobile home park on choice beachfront property in Huotinsion Beach have moved to the Ocean View Estates, a new park built and operated by the city. The new park ia believed to be the only municipally owned and operated mobile bome park m Orange County, city officials said. The families will be allowed to U ve 11 the 2(}.acre park at Golden West Street and TaJben Avenue for the rest ofthc:ir lives. ..., .......... ., .......... At the time of their deaths, the coaches will be moved and the propenY., when the !as~ tenants. have diCd, will become mcoporated m the 220-acre Ceqtral Park system a.s a recreational vehicle camping area. They all come from Huntington Shores Park, owned by the Huntington Beach Co. J oe and ~ Nocella In their new mobile bome park. Company officials first pve tenants of the 64-space park eviction notices in 1981, tenants said. Many were elderly and apparently bad no places to move their coaches. Othcn sold their homes to the company and used relocation payments to move into apart- ments and other residences. Joe Nocella, who moved into the facility with his wife Betty, said it is a happy ending to a sometimes bitter struggle. 'Thank God it's finally over," Nocella · said at dedication ceremonies Thursday. "Now we can get our lives back together." Betty Nocella said moving into the new park is similar to keepin$ a fam.ily together. The residents have built up friendships over the years and frequently get together to dine and play cards, she said. "We're like a family. we talce care of each other." she said. The Nocellas said now that the unccr- tainty is settled. they plan to get rid of their old coach and buy a new double-wide model that has about 1.200-square feet of space. Dan Brennan, real property manager for the city and manager of the park, said residents will pay $160 a month rent, the same as they paid at their previous park. Th.e ~obtle. ho~ park is on property the city 1s buytng m stages from owners of the Mushroom Farm at Golden West Street and Ellis Avenue. GWC'sDeanShawlresigns By MICHELLE COLE OftlleDllllJ .... Coast liege Community District trust on Wednesday accepted the resig tion of Dr. William Shawl, dean of educational development at Golden West College. In a statement prepared by college President Fred Garcia, Shawl was called "an innovator who gave the better part of his life to Golden West College." Shawl wash ired by the distnct in 1969 as dean of instruction. He also served as Dean of the Arts, Humanities and SociaJ Sciences Institute during his tenure at the community college. His career in education began in 1956 in Seattle, Wash. as a social sciences teacher. In l 96l, Shawl taught history at High.line College in Seattle and was also director of student activities there. He became regis- trar in 1962 and served in that capacity until he moved to California and Golden West College. Shawl is a charter member of the Entries invited Christmas is stiJJ five months away, but it's not too early to start thinking about participating in the second Harbor Home Christmas Light Show, 'Sp6nsored by the Orange Coast Daily Pilot and the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. Association ~f. California Community College Adm1rustrators (ACCA) and is active with the National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development (NISOD). Shawl and other faculty mem- ben at Golden West have ttiecived ac.claim for recent prescnutions at the NlSOD conference m Austin, Texas. His retirement will be effective Sept. 12 but S~awl will remain with l:he college as a part-time consultant said a owe spokesperson. Invitations were sent out this week to about 1,500 Newport Harbor area homes and businesses, asking them to participate in the hght show Wtth the chance to win a donation for a favorite charity. Winner of this year's Best Overall residential display will receive a $1 ,000 check from the Daily Pilot for his or her selected charity. HARBOR HOrvffi Private and commercial decorations judged Best Holiday Theme, Best Use of Lights and Best Use of Animation will receive other special awards and recognition. Unannounced evening judging will take place from the water. Dec. 13-15. 1986. And Light Show entrants will be encouraged to let their lights shine during the following week's Festival of Lights Chnstmas Boat Parade. CHRI LIGHTS Cheerleading champs off to Japan By MICHELLE COLE DllllJ ..... C.. ii Ip I l'Mlleo1I Three hours of daily practice has paid off for the Mater Dei High School songJeaders and cheerleaders. After winning a nationwide competition last spring, the pep squad has been selected to make a two-week summer trip to Japan Son~eaders Maureen O'Brien of Anaheim. Carrie Striclcltn of Huntington Beach, Kathie Smith of Irvine and Carrie Concialdi of Mission Viejo recently em- barked on an all-expense paid tour courtesy of the Japanese $Ovemment. The girls will participate in international sonJJeadi~ competition and will perform dunnJ exhibition shows. Eight other Mater Dei songleaders and cheerleaders also will travel to Japan to perform during the International Pageant. ~id advi~or John Merino. They are Lisa Oberly and Kathleen Carroll of Fountain Valley. Tiffany Hoover of Huntington Beach. Carrie Holmen of Newport Beach. Monica Villa of Seal Beach. Kristen Aguirre of Oran$e. Sue Foster of West- minster and Brigit Fite of Irvine. Menno said the girls spent five days prior to the trip brushing up on their skills at an mtensive workshop at PaJos Verde~ High School • • • ·* grantaicl8 UC Irvine eye clinic Tbe Lon V, Smich FOWldatioa Ml cootnbuted SlSO.OOO to tbc UC IJ'YiK Colltte of Mecticioe to aute an C)'e cliDK oa c:ampm. The Lon V. Smich Eye Qimc wilt be boUled in a new bail~dint Id=-=· t to lbe mcd.ical tchooJ: 01-oUod · is planned in the ran.. Tbe cliAic will oft'tt the la1csl treatl:'DQts for eye cliJorclen. campus ofticiab Mid. The m.oclical school's dep&rtment of opbthalmolOIY will a110 collaborate on projccu with UCl's 8eclcman Luer la.- atilute to hdp mr in the ftnfront of~ reaearch. d.i.apo$is and tnatment. OCI officials s:aicl Loo V. Smith wu a ~"!~ Oil Company executive and a pbilanthtooist who cstablit.bed the foundation in 1952. The foundation·a a;ift to UCJ came from the sale of .. Smilbclilfs. •• an 11...acrc 9Caside estate in Emerald Bay. where Smith and his wife Marguerite lived while iD Oranae County. The gift was announced recently 11 a luncheon of the Re$carcb Associates. a UCI College of Medicine support aroup. MaJJU~rite Smith was presented with a rendering of the campus complex that will house the Smith Oinic. IrvbJe offering laadll Non-profit community pl)ups in Irvine arc being invited to apply for the fin1Dcl.a.I help offered once annually by the city. This year, the lrvine City C.Ouncil set aside $35,000 for allocation to community aroups which must meet requ.inments Kt up by Irvine officials. Copies of lbele guidelines arc available from the city. Applications can be obtained from the lrvine Community Services Depvtmc:nt., 2815 McOaw Ave. Fonns must be re- turned to the community services depart- ment by 5 ~.m .. Friday, Aug. lS. Apphcauons will be reviewed by the Irvine Community Services Commi.ssion and city staff memben. Public hearinp will be conducted to allow al)l)licarus and resident& to make additionAI comments regarding bow the funds should be di~ tributcd. The Community Services Comnuuion then will make recommendations to the City Council, which will make thc tin.al decision in late October UCI gets cancer grant UC Irvine has m::eived a $60,000 American Cancer Society grant to study "innovative but untested approaches to cancer research," campus officials said. During the two-year grant period, an interdepartmental committee wilt make awards to promising researchers at the assistant professor level. Sudbir Gupta, a UC professor of medicine and chauman of the committee, said a maximum offourS7,SOOgra.nts will be awarded each year. Junior faculty members arc being asked to submit proposals for these grants. Gupta said. ..These grants help the junior faculty member who says, 'I have a terrific idea but don't have the money. What can I do? .. Grant recipients' names Will be an- nounced in September. CIJUd care panel •IJ6bt The Cityoflrvinc'sOtild~Commit­ tec is seeking applications from comm uni· ty members interested in serving a two- year tenn beginning in October. The panel meets on the first Tuesday of each month. The Child Care Committee. formed in 1979. has identified the city's child care needs and has made recommendations to address them. Two at-large positions on the committee are available. Applications can be ob- tained by calling the Community Services Child Care Coordination office. 66().3991 , durin~ weekday business hours. The deadline 1s 5 p.m .. Aug. 29 • • • Car theft suspect nabbed after chase through yards a.m. Thursday • • • A $350 bicycle was reponed stolen from il. sltdr prOJCC'tOr was stolen from a busineu on Wha1ney A. resident of the 4400 block of Sea Harbour reponed Thursday that someooc had stolen a green 10.spced MUJTay b1cyclr from her unlocked prqe The lou By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. ~ ......... Costa Mesa police collared a suspected car thief this morning after a wild chase on foot through the backyards and streets of the Mesa del Mar tract. Offic~rs surrounded the neigh- borhood in search of Mauncc Irvin Wesley, a 24-year-old Santa Ana man who fled after being pulled over in a stolen 1987 Nissan Maxima. police said. Officer Tim Schennum reported that he stopped the car about 6:30 Fountain Valley A woman who hves on the 9700 block of El Ott()() told polict Thursday that she bad been involved in an ~ment over 1 posa1ble accident in the dnvc-throuah line at the NaU&)e's restaurant at t 729 t Brook.hunt St. Durina the d111pute a man became 1111fY and atf'U(k her blue 1983 Buick Riviera with his hind, accotdina to the woman. She aaid the man made a dent that will 005t S200 to repair. • • • An assistant mana,cr at the Home Club, 16061 Brook.hunt St, reported Wednu- day that thievee pulled a ~ blue 1962 Chevrolet pickup truck bdllnd the store. loaded ei&bt wooden ptlleu on 11 and Oed. The loll WU estimated II $''· • t.L A raldent of~ 104UU block ofC'irculo de Juaia repomd Wednctday that t0me- onc 11.0le the front lift from h•• btcyclc. wb1ch wu locked to • rack ouU•de the Fountain Bowl. 171 IOBrookhu"'ISt The a.m. for allegedly running a red light at the Bear Street offramp from the Corona del Mar freeway. During a routine check, Schennum discovered the S 15.000 Nissan matched the description of a new car stolen during a residential burglary in Santa Ana. The vehicle still bad the dealer's plates. The driver sped away while Schen· num was awaiting bacl(up units, the officer said. He chased the car to the end of Post Road, where the driver abandoned the vehicle and jumped over a six-foot wall into an industrial area. loss was estimated at $50. • • • A resident of thc 10300 block of Calle lndcpcndcnda rcponed Wednesday that someone used a bhtc felt·tlP marlccr to write numbers an4 lcuen on the trunk of his white 1978 ~let The vandals also used yellow cbalk to mark his trock and mailbox. The duuac wu e~hmated 11 $100. . . ' Someone entered a lounsr at the FHP Hospital, 9900 Talbert Ave .. and broke into 1 locker used by 1 phf11c1an who hvC's an Huntinaton J)ea(h, the doctor reported Wednesday. The It> included a V1~ chartt card and opeN111na room clothcx valued at s t.20. Newport Beach A caasette tape deck worth ~ was '1okn rtom a Corvette ptrkcd on lhc t 200 block of lMnc Avenue- Officers located the man in the Mesa del Mar neighborhood, where the chase proceeded over backyard walls and other areas of the tract. Schennum said. Police were aided by several resi- dents, who telephoned the station or ran out of their homes to direct officers. "They came out and pointed that (Wesley) went this or that way." Schennum said. Wesley was nabbed 1n the 1700 block of San Lucas. police reported. He was booked into Costa Mesa City Jail on suspicion of auto theft. • • • Someone smashed the beck window of a BMW Pfll'ked at Newpon Center ind scatchcd the paint on the car's hood. • • • Gardemn1 and consiruct1on equipment wonh more than $3,000 wu stolen from a locked prqe on the 500 bfock of <'ama11on Avenue Coetalleu Cash 1otalin.a SI, 961 """ reponed stolen from 1 safe at Taco Bell, 22S9 Harbor Blvd .. bctwttn I 1·30 p.m Mon· day and 8:45 1 m. Tucsday. • • T Annoyina phone cal s were reportC'd at 1n apartment 1t 1016 Vlctona Sl Eleven calls have been ttaivcd bet\Wen 9· )()a m and 10 a.m. Wednesday • • • A wallet. a ate~ and cash, all t«>t.11hn.a $43S. ~re n:port.ed ,iolen from 1 car II an apartment com pie~ at 203 S f'ullerttln ~ vc bctwttn 11 JS pm Wcdn~) and 7 ~' an unlocked garage at an apartment complell at 173 Broadway between I p.m and t ·JS pm Thursday. La(una Beach A suophone valued at $689 was stolen from a Bon1U1 Way rcs1denoc: earlier this month, lhe victim told police Thursday • • • A Nonh C'oas1 Highway business IT'- poncd the theft of 104 C'ahfom1A lonery tickets Wcdnesdlly • • • A black leathtr wallet was IAlcen from a woman's pun<-Thursday at a South Coast Highway location The loss was cst1m1tcd at $65. • • • Pohcc arTeStcd Jimmy Allan Dunn, 29, of San Juan Cap1s1nano on susp1c1on of dnv1ng under the inOuenCC! of alcohol. Dunn was stopped at I 15 a.m. Thursday on Slttpy Hollow Lane at Cleo Strttt Irnne A t98b red Nr~\lln lOOu was itolen from .\uto Ccnter Onve Thursday • • • A pink and wh1tc Scars b1cyclc Wlth "Hcather" wntten in yecn letters on the ~.It WIS StOlcn frnm the 160() block ()( Parkv1C''A-l .anr • • • 1'bout S6,000 wonh of JC'~lry wt3 ttolen from a home on Los Gat<>S Thu.-,day t"VCOlnJ. • •• A f\'d. white and blue 1986 K.awHala Nrl\Ja motorcycle was stolen ftom out11<k 1 homt on the I 00 block of 8narwood • • • lwo Forum uckcu wttt found m1u1na from a motel room on the 111700 block of M1eAn.hur Boulevard • • • About $40 wu tolcn ftom th«' Jlovc companmenl of 1 Chevrolet SIO ptclrup 1n1ck parked tm C'ahfom11 ;\venue • • • The radio 10 a ToyoUI Crhca parked on thr I 7QOO block of Von IUnnan A venue was stolen Thursday evemna,. Hundzacton Beach A resldent of the 5300 block of Allstone reported early Thunday that a cat burglar had entered' her home through fron1 window oveml&ht The intruder stoic a video recorder worth $3_50, a telephone worth $1 25 and a lea1her J&CkC't wonh $350. ' . . Someone broke into a gold I Q84 Toyot.a C'clica parked early Thursda) in a ~flXlrt on the 17200 block of Koledo The los.~ included stereo cqu1pme01 worth $ SOO • • • A burslar used a bnck to smash a front window at the Radio Shack store. I 5976 SprinadaJc A vc .• bcfort the stotT opened Thursday mom1na. The manager later reported that phonc cqurpmcnt wonh $480 hid bttn ~tolcn was rm mated at S 185. ' . . A resident of the ~ block of Crest Avenue rtpor1ed Thursday that someone had stolen h1~ $70 portablc stereo from FarQuhar Park. 12th Street a.nd Cn:st. • • • Four hubcaps were reported stolen from a darlc blue 1981 Ford Thunderbird park.C'<l Thursday on the 19 300 block of Wol'C'~ter The loss was cstnnated at S400 • • • A. re,1dcn1 of thr 8100 block of Slater A venue reponC'<l Thunday that a buralat used v1cc gnps 10 twist off a doorlmo6 to entcr his home The loss included 1 S450 JU118f and 1 radio valued It $75. • •• Prym& open a rear window to enter. someone bu~anzcd a home on the I 0400 block of C'le.erwood. a rcs1dcnt reported Thursday The lou included a video rtCorder wonh S 500 and Jcwlery valued at SS80 Artukovic appeal rejected . ZAGR£8. Yuaoslavia (AP)-The upreme Court of the Yugoslav Republic of C'roalfl l"CJCCted AndnJa AnukoVlc's appeal of hi4' death 9Cntence for war cnme~ today, the atate-run Tanj ua neW1 aaenC) re- ported. Artulcovic.. 87. was the intmor minister Jnd secunty chief of C'roallA when •t was a Nan puppet \t.atc durina World War JI He wu found pilty May 14 of cnmes -sainu humanity and war cnmn and tent.enccd to death. He was extrad11cd from the United ~tat~ on Feb. 12 after h•Vlf\l llvcd tn Seal Beach, \-alif., for '6 yan. ~rtuko"ic can ap~l co the Feder- al Supremt Court In the Lnal the public prosecutor ~1d that more than 700,000 people were ~lau.ahtered ln C'ro.tian ~ trauon camps dunna Artukovic'' term tn office. Ht> was eccused !ptt1fically of involvemeftt in four murders. Defense lawyttl nwnL&lned lhor client was innocent. and ~rtftl ror trial bttau~ of and debility. 35 years in prison 'certain' for convicted spy Whitworth SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -For- mer Navy radioman Jerry Whitwonb is likely to spend at least 35 years io prison for his conviction as "the most significant player" in John Walker's Soviet-run spy rina, a prosecutor saysA Whitworth. sat expressionlessly Tbundayasa U.S. District Courtjury convicted him of seven espio~c­ rclated charges in what authorities have said was the worst breach ofU .S. military secrets since World War II. "I am pleased with the verdict handed down today," Navy Secretary John F. Lehman Jr. said. "His treason did grievous harm to this nation. Fortunately for this country. it did not happen durin' a global war." Lehman has said it will ta1ce years and perhaps S I 00 million to repair the damage done by the Walker family spy ring (Related story Page AS). Jurors who deliberated S2 hours over I 0 dlys found Whitworth awlty ofsellina vital code and GOmmUnica· tions secrets for $332,000 to the spy ~ run by Walker, bis lonaume mend. He also wu convicted of four counu of evadina taxes and one of conspirina with Walker to hide the money from the fOvemment by using cash &M cashier s checks. The jury deadlocked on an eighth espionap.related charge, of stealing and copying a secret document found at Wh1tworth's home. a minor por- tion of a Navy contingency plan for the Mideast. The defense said Whit· worth accidentally took the docu· ment home and never intended to &)ve it to Walle.er. Whitworth, 46, of Davis, was Lhe last member of the Walker spy rin' to be tried. Navy officials said the nng gave the Soviets invaluable infor· mation on codes, decoding equip- ment and satellite communications. · U.S. Oi1trict Judp John Vukasin scheduled sentenci" Aua. 28. The eapion.qe and conspiracy chafJCS are purusbabJebyupcotueinprlson. The tax cbarps cany a total maximum penalty of J 7 yean. A person sentenced to life is eliaible for parole in 10 yean, but lJ.S. Attorney Jes:eph Russoniello said Whitworth bad no realistic chance of parole for at least 3S yean. He said the case was "the most serious espionaae case brouaht in the United Stat.es since Worfd War 11" and Whitworth was "by far the most sipificant player." But defense lawye James Larson said the wrong person bad been.J)ll trial. "There was no public accounting for what he (Walker) did." Larson said. "Jerry is, at least in~ another one of Walker's victims.' Marrin II. llttcheleon Briton set Bishop area 'no longer' in for trial danger of big earthquake Lawyer denies sexual attacks in hit-run fatality PALM SPRJNGS (AP)-AJudge ordered a British subject to stand trial on charges of manslaughter and drunken driving for allegedly hit tin~ a teen-ager with a car and killing him more than two years ago. Palm Springs Municipal Court Judge Arthur Blockon ordered Thomas Anthony Williamson. 35, to appear for arraignment in Indio Superior Coun on Aug. 7. Williamson, originally from East· bourne, Sussex, reportedly left the United States in December 1984 to avoid prosecution. He is charged with felony bit-and-run drivin,. man- slaughter and drunken dnving. If conv1cted of all counts, he could face up to nine years in prison. Kent Andrew States. then 15. of La Canada Flintridge, was killed by a hit· and-run driver May 27 , 1984. as he and a fnend walked along California I 11 near Palm Springs. His body was carried near I y 600 feet by the car. said one of the six witnesses called during the preliminary hearing Thursday Williamson was arrested by authorities after a witness supplied them with a license plate number. On Sept. 24, 1984. after a preliminary hearing, charges against WiJ!Jamson were dismissed because some of the witnesses could not be located. Charges were refiled, but Wil- liamson failed to appear and 1t was learned he had left the country m December 1984. His attorney, River- side County Deputy Public Defender John Wells. said he left because he believed political pressure by anti· drunken dnvin$ groups made it impossible for him to get a fair tnal. By t~e A11odated Pre11 BISHOP -The Eastern Sierra region is no longer in danger ofbeing hit by an ean.bquake similar to Monday's temblor that caused an estimated $2.7 millio~ damage. the ~.S. Geological Sur:vey.~ys. The f~eral agen~ ~Jed o~ its earher quake wam1ng Thursday, saymg the threat 1s clearly dim1nashed. "Unless something changes, we arc no lon,er expecting another severe. qu~e in the next couple of days," said Tom Mullins, a spokesman for the California Office of Emergency Services. Monday a quake measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale rumbled through the area, damaJing nearly 150 homes and mobile homes. breaking windows and triggenng landslides around this tourist- onented community. Parle land torched In San Diego area SAN DIEGO -A brushfire blamed on arson scorched 400 acres of park land. threatened expensive homes and knocked out cable television service to much of the city before being contained by firefighters. The blaze erupted in Mission Trails Park on Cowles Mountain at I :30 p.m. Thursday and raged close to several hundred expensive omes in the San Carlos district. It was brought under control at 7 p.m. and extinguished at I I p.m .. but firefighters kept watch over hots spot all night, fire spokesman Larry Stewart said. Firefighters were aided by air tankers dumping fire-retardant chemicals on the mountainside. Old WWII adversaries shake hands LOS ANGELES -The captain who led 350 Japanese soldiers in a 16- month battle with World War rt leathernecks shook hands with the Marine who negotiated his surrender nearly 41 years ago. Sakae Oba. 71. exchanged translator-assisted greetings with Howard KurJis. who lives in San Jose, and both smiled for news cameras recording their first meeting since the war Thursday. Oba led 350 survivors of the Saipan campaign in a running fight with men from the Second Marine Div1son until the war's end. said Don Jones of the U.S. Information Agency. The battle became a stalemate and Oba, left with only 46 men. negotiated a Dec. l , 1945, surrender with then-colonel Kurgis, said Jones. who publi~1zed the pair's reuni9n in the lobby c;>f a hotel in this city's Little Tokyo. Kurgi s retired a Manne bngad1er general in 1960. Man on trial In child-selling attempt LOS ANGELES -A man who asked $90.000 from a couple who wanted to adopt his 2-year-old daughter was engaged in a cold-hearted effort to profit from the couple's love ofh1s child. a prosecutor said. But an attorney for Alan Daniel, 30. denied that his client tried to sell bis child and maintained that Daniel was merely seeking compensation for arranging an adoption free of government red tape. A Van Nuys Supcnor Court jury was to begin deliberating today on a slavery charge against Daniel. an Encino resident who 1s separated from the g.irl's mother and has a 5-year-old son. Duri!lg a two-day trial. jurors heard tape recordings made last year of Danael allegedly demanding $90.000 from Ronald and Susan Miulli for the privilege of adopting bis daughter. Fallon. The Pros' Since 1957 UllITT llSIUKE J ~-Non-smoker ~. Rates 831-7740 441 Old Newport ams. Newport a..ch; Ca. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Famed "palimony" divorce lawyer Marvin M. Mitcbelson, confronting allega.. tions by two former clients that he scxuaJly attacked them, said be has spent his career "defending women. not attacking them." The distnct attorney's office is investigating th~ allegations, Mitchelson said ThUrsday, and "I'm certain they will make an appropriate decision. These incidents have never happened. I've spent my career defending women, not anacking them." Mitchelson. 58, said one of the women who claims he attacked her last year "interestingly enough has sued two psychiatrists and a dentist claiming they sexually attacked her -that's a history she has, everyone she encounters she claims sexually attacked her." He said he was rep- resenting the woman in a "palimony" claim until she made the accusations. The other case, he said, involves a woman he declined to represent in a suit alleging a sexual attack on her by a minister. Mitchelson said "it mys- tifies" him why she is now claiming to authorities that he attacked her. Police Comdr. William Booth con· firmed Thursday that "two adult females have made crime repons alleging that Marvin Mitchelson on separate occasions made them engage in sex acts with him against their will." "Both victims reported they were clients and the acts allegedly occ urred in Mitchelson's office. One allegedly occurred in I 981. the other in late l 985," Booth said. The cases were referred to the district attorney fol- lowing:. three-month probe by police robbery-homicide investigators. District Attorney's spokesman Al Albergate said the police report was received about a month ago and was being reviewed by the district at· tomev's sexual crimes division. the shores interiors 2o.tel Nori Strftt JOYCl CMOl ~ ~ 11coct> CA 02663 (714) b4z.2255 _-.......____,......__~ Truck Load Bicycle Sale lest Prices in Town· July 25, 26 & 27 CEN"l'UllON Bikes , . ...._ ·----'_, Save on 86 models Lemans RS Reg 1379" S.le t339tt Elite RS Reg ''69" s.i. •3a9•• Accordo Rt10 ~ S.I• '279" More bikes at discounted prices UP TO 80% IAYlllOI Shoes, Clothing & Accen orlH AVOCn CYClOMnER 20 v 1 Pr~·-l,\.~~~~,r.sri.lrrlf'I now '2691 was 134•1 now 'M" was '54" Vittorio Technlco Shoes Sew up Tires .... ----------:-i FREE ORANGE COUNTY 1 BIKE TRAIL MAP 1 'll'ftll 1111r<MM afld .. ~·· Vittorio '1-3 Sport Shoea w Wl<•O CI0\111. foc)li COf't'l!Nllttte •• 2 .. Mesa Verde Center 2701 Harbor Costa Mesa 751-4882 Israeli chief hack from Hassan talk with few results TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Prime Minister Shimon Peres returned from his Moroccan summit with few, if any, concrete results, a victim of the polltical constraints imposed on him by his coalitfoo aareement with the right-wing Llkud bloc. The Labor Party leader also is hamstrung by his scheduled October job switch with Likud leader Yitzbalc Shamir. now foreign minister. The change is mandated by the power· sharing qreement forged in 1984 after an election stalemate between Labor and Likud. Peres' efforts durinJ 21 months in office have failed to yield any signifi· cant peace moves in mdirect contacts with Jordan, and bis sole open meeting with an Arab leader, Moroc- co's King Hassan JI, may have come too late to result in any progress. .. Now that Peres mid his party arc about to lose even more of their influence on government pohcy, it 1s hard to sec bow they can bring about any revolutions," the weekly Koteret Rashit said in an editorial. A non-.commital j'oint statement issued in Rabat and erusaJem at the end of two days of talks reflected the fact that Peres was not at liberty to bargain on his own. It said the two leaders held m-depth discussions, with Hassan viewing the so-called Fez plan as the basis for future negotiations and Peres clari- fying his position on the proposal. The Fez plan. adopted in 1982 by an Arab League summit held in the Moroccan city of the same name. calls for Lhe creation of a Palestinian state and for Israeli withdrawal from all territories it captured in the 1967 war with Egypt, Jordan and Syria. Peres told reporters upon returning to Israel that he "tried to speak within the framework of ur government policy," which calls for peace talks with Arab states without precondi· tions. Hassan. in a televised speech to h1s nation, said Peres bad been unwilling to make concessions and the talks did not yield solid progress toward peace. Peres' left-leaning Labor Party 1s on record as bein$ walling to relinquish some territory an return for pcac.c. but it views predominantly Palcst1naan East Jerusalem. which the Fez docu· ment says Israel should give up. as an integral part of the Jewish state. • Shiite Moslems storm embassy BEIRUT, Lebanon (A?) - Thousands of Shiite Moslem demon- strators today stormed the Moroocan Embassy in west Beirut, ransacked the building and set it on fire to protest M<?roccan ~n· Has~n. ll's meeting wttb Jsraeh Prime Mirustu Shimon Peres, polioe said. Police estimated the attack wu conducted by about 2,000 protesters of Hezbollah. the Party of God, the most militant Iranian-backed Shiite factiort. The attack climaxed an hour-Jona demonstration in west Beirut's Bir Hassab suburban neighborhood called by Hezbollah to protest Hassan's meeting with Peres on Tuesday and Wednesday in Moroc- co. There was no immediate word on the extent of the fire damage. It was not known if anyone was in the building at the time of the attack. Moslems throughout Lebanon were staging a ge":eraJ strike today to protest the summit. Llkud, which was in power in 1982 and rejected tbe Fez plan, opposes all territorial compromise. As Peres was holding his ftrst round of talks with Hassan, Shamir was in tbe occupied West Bank urging the creation of more Jewish settlements. Some 55.000 Jewish settlers live in the West Bank among 800,000 Palestinians. Under the Likud-Labor agreement, Peres cannot pursue tcrritoJ'.ial con- cessions without reference to the Cabinet, which effectively bars the move without Lilcud support. Likud leaders reacted to Peres' trip with measured praise, reluctant to completely endorse: it yet unwilling to criticize the premier's initiative. "Every overt tnp by an Israeli prime minister to an Arab nation is welcome, .. said Likud's housing min· 1ster. David uvy. The Moroccan· born minister warned. however, that "we must not develop illusions, and must read Hassan's words for what they are." · U.S., Soviets open talks on test ban GENEVA (AP) -Superpower negotiations on a Soviet-proposed nuclear weapons test ban began today. with the United States and the Soviet Union disagreeing on pri- orities. Negotiators from the two sides met at the U.S. mission. Two cars carrying the Soviet delegation entered the compound at mid-afternoon. Reporters were not allowed inside the gates and did not have access to any delegation members. The confidential talks are part of a series of U.S.-Soviet contacts which Washington hopes will help prepare a new summit meeting between Presi- dent Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, perhaps before the end of the year. The Soviets, who have frozen their own atomic testing program, have said they want the talks to focus on a total test ban. The United States, however, wants negotiators to deal mainly with compliance to existing treaties that limit nuclear eJ1.plos1ons to 150 kilo- tons. or I 0 times the yield of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. Japan. in 1945. Washington and Moscow each claim credit for initjallng the nego- tiations. A White House statement last week said the United States had "long sought" a meeting to present its concerns about the ant1<heating provisions of the 1974 and 1976 treaties on nuclear weapons tests and nuclear eJ1.plosions. Neither treaty was ratified by the U.S. Senate but both sides have said they have voluntarily observed their limits. Reagan said 111 March that ratifi· cation could move forward if the Soviet Umon agreed to improve control provisions. including the use of U.S.-developed monitoring equip- ment. The official Soviet news agency Tass said Thursday that the meeting was convened at Soviet initiative and would be "an mdicator of the real intentions of the two sides and show who is for and who is against Lhe termination of nuclear explosions." Today's meeting comes two weeks before the unilateral Soviet mora- torium on nuclear tests is due to expire and a day after the Unated States exploded its 15th nuclear device since the Soviet frcc-ze on testing went into effect Aug. 6. Tass claimed the U.S. tests serve to develop arms systems for President Reagan's Strategic Defen!IC lnitat1 ve. a program designed to develop spac~­ bascd missile defenses. The Reagan admm1stratton has said nuclear tests will have to con- tinue for the time being. whether or not foolproof safeguards exist against cheating. 8,400 activists reported detained in South Africa By tbe Atsoclated Pre11 JOHANNESBURG -About 8.400 activists have been detained for varying periods since a state of emergency was imposed six weeks ago-mort than were held dunng the entire seven months of a previous state of emergency. a monitoring group said. The newly formed Community Research Group a team of academics, said in a report Thursday 1t knew the names of about 3.400 people who have been detained without charge since the nationwide state of emergency began June 12. The monatonng group sud It "has knowledge of another estimated 5,ooo·· who have been held. The group, based 1t the University of the Witwatersrand m Johannesburg. the nation's leadina English-lang~ge college. said it did not know how many people still were 1n custody but added. "Rclat1vcly few releases have come to our aneotion." Car bomb detonated In West Germany FRIEDRICHSHAFEN. West Gennany - A car bomb exploded early today at tbe offices of a m~or West German defense contractor, sbattenng hundreds of windows but injuring no one, polict said. Authorities said they suspected the radical leftist Red Army Faction. The explosion m the parking lot of an adminislf'lttve building of the Dornier aeronautics company was the l4tcond terrorirt bomb attack in a.s many days on West German hlah· technology companies. Police wei,e l4tarchina for a second bomb around the Dornier offiocs because a letter left at the scene mentioned two bombs. said spokesman Alexander Ptech•cl of 1he federal prosecutor's offioc in Karlsruhe 2,000 nee loret1t llre. bJ France J NICE. France -Forest fires on the bills above Cote o· Aiur morta killed one penon, in)urcd several othen and foroed the: evacuation of 2,000 people today, authonties said. About 2.SOO fireNhtc:rs, some from aa far away ., Paris. worked throuah the nis,ht to control t~e flre~ wtuch broke out Thursday and bad consumed more than 7,400 acres by earty today Authorities said they beli~e some of'the fires were suned by arson The sky above the a ide Wlls VIY with ~mokc: The fires destroyed eeveral homes, di rupted oommunica· tions and closed ~vc:nl hiahways and ra1lr<>1d lines . Rich et richer; wealt up38% over 2 decades W ASHINOTON (AP) -Ameri- c.'1 .. tuper-ricb" have inc:ruscd their pip on the nation'• wealth over the ~t lO yeara, aivina them their f>illelt llico ever of the economic pie, ICCOrdina to a new Democratic t lud.J: The nation'• wealthiest 420,000 bouleholda -the top one-half of I perceat of boutebolds -saw their shaft of the 'Neal th IJ'OW by 38 percent between 1963 and 1983, said the study releued bl'. the convcssionaJ Joint Economic µ>mmince. lbat elite bracket of Americus controlled 3S percent of the country's wealth, wd the study, which is hued on 1urvey1 by the Federal Rexrve ~m. In 1963, the same aroup beld tty more than 2S J)Cf'CCDt. · Democratic majority and not en- dorted by Rcpublic.ns, said Mike Freeman J)fe5S teeretary to Sen. James Abnor of South Dakota.I the Republican vice chairman oi ~ Houle-Senate panel. Obey called the 1tudv "proof that the rich set richer." Jt "maket lbcet mincemeat of the notion that tbit country needs more incentives for rich folks." Obey c~ that Reapn admin- istration initJ.ativcs to lower tu rates and ~vide tax incentives for financial activities limited mostly to the wealthy will perpetuate the trend toward increased concentration of weaJtb. .. A continuation of that trend erodes the basic confidence of the ) avy's lo sin spying critical a, NOUUN BLACK I#__, .... WASHINGTON -The ck'llf c.usod by tbe Walter faniil)' ~ riill to the Mavy"s iilcanal com•uai,.. tiom ftC'IYtOlt was eo atnti¥e IMt lbe terVice believes the SovW stilt may be IUCCellfully mon.itorinl cer- tain lower-prionty cbannda, Navy ~tary John F. Lebmaa uya. 1983 level of concentration exceeded the ~vious high level, which occurrechn 1929 just before the Deprmion, a.id Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., the commince chairman. The level then wis 32 percent. AmeriC80 ~blic . in our enti~ .sys-Radloactlye Wute container tern," be wd. "It mcrcases cyruasm. and adds to the us.-versus-tbcm ~obeer'Te uad ~pla tlae b~e attitude about all institutions, econ--. ~ cu.k tbat n.uo.ctt1111 ft omic and governmental. Ifs the delida tiom tbe damUed nu. e llland worst possible thing that can happen nv.oleu reactor. Tbe llC).toa caak traftled in a democratic society." throqb 10 mte. by rail OD Im more tban 2,000 mile trl_p from PeanaylftD!a to ldalao. lt 18 the tint of 40 eldpment. of the debrla tbat wW be Radlecl and atored lndeftnltelJ at tbe Idaho National Baal· neerm., Laboratory. Fwna the dtm• will tak'e ~ detpitt the oomoletioo of the 'J"O"': ecutiooofoneo(tbeoountry'•bisltst npionaac scandals with the coovio- tion Thursday in Sao FranciJc:o of former Navy Petty Officer Jerry Wbitwottb OD espiODIF dwJes. The Navy expects to spend rouably S l 00 million just to re-secure its ridio and communication channels, Lehman uid in an interview aranted while the Whitwonh jury "' dc- liberatina. While the study was released by the full committee, it was prepared by the Some farming operations reap millions in subsidies W ASHJNOTON (AP) -An ex- pected flood of multim1U1on-d0Uar subsidies this year to weU-bccled arowen could create a public rela- tions ruahtmare and thnatens to derail a new five-year farm program that was touted as a life preserver for st.rugling family farmers. lawmakers say. Dozens, and perhaps hundreds, of the nation's largest farming oper- ations stand to collect payments as high u $20 million under the new law, which is designed to gradually restore slumping U.S. farm exports to health. ··~ys j Oing to be a publicity disas- ter, wd Rep. Pat Roberts. R-K.an., a member of the House Agriculture Committee, which helped wnte the law. "We're in danger of trashing this pravam before it's had a chance to work." Tbe apparent top recipient of subsidies under the new farm law 1s aaribusincss giant J. G. Boswell Co., a farming operation growing more than 62,000 acres of irrigated cotton and 30,000 acres of wheat in the rich San Joaqum Valley near Fresno. Many others wilt collect upwards of SI million from the government this year under a law sold in Congress last year as providing protection for financially ailing Midwestern family farmers. "Mult1million-dollar payments in rice and cotton will not be uncom- mon," Robert Thompson, the Agri- culture Department's chief econom- ist, said of the bill. "It will get obscene." Rep. Tony Coehlo, D-Cahf., said lawmakers are braced for a flood of cnt1cism over large payments to big, and apparently wealthy, producers. Pare~ of Madame Nhu foun ead in DC hoIDe By Ge Aaaodated Preas "They're aoma to be big. and very controversial," said Coeblo, also a member of the House Agriculture Committee. "We knew that when we did this. But the only way to tum it around is to get these big guys cooperating so we can help the family farmer as well." The payments are part of an estimated S30 billion the federal government will spend this year in various programs to support farm incomes. Officials of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Ser- vice, the Agriculture Department's subsidy arm, sax their computations show Boswell will collect nearly S 10. 4 million in payments on cotton. wheat and barley, based on current prices. In addition. Boswell may receive that much or more as the marketing handler for its own cotton. Announc!ng a Summer~'" ForTeen5J '"6'UI" WASHINGTON -Police arc 1nvesugatin$ the deaths of an elderly couple who played a maJOr role in the old South Vietnamese government and whose daughter was Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, the "Dragon Lady" of Vietnam. The bodies of Tran Van Chuong, 88, and his wife Nam-Tran Chuo ng. 75, bearing no visible wounds. were found Thursday in the same room of their northwest Washington home, District of Columbia homicide detective Dave Forbes said. He would not give a cause of death but said an autopsy was scheduled for today. Chuon~ was Vietnamese ambassador to the United States from 1954 to I 963, a penod that saw growing American involvement in Southeast Asia as a prelude to the Vietnam War. But he opposed the actions of ' President Ngo Dinh Diem's government and resigned over the treatment of Buddhists in his country Hay pourlng ln to parched South Farmers coast to coast are donaung tons ofhay to the scared South, where a drought has caused more than S I 5 billion in damage, and cattlemen queued up in Atlanta for a new 4,000-bale shipment for their starving livestock. Scattered thunderstorms that dropped more than 4'12 inches of ram on Comeha, Ga .. within 70 minutes Thursday afternoon and kept temperatures below JOO degrees for the third straight day provided some relief from the droughtand heat wave, which has been blamed for43deaths. South Carolina's governor has asked that 39 of the state's 46 counties be declared disaster areas. makinJ them ehglble for tow-interest federal loans. Georgia's governor has proclaimed Sunday a day of pray,er for ram. and the mayor of Chattanooga. Tenn., proclaimed "Cool It Weck ·and urged residents to dress casually to keep cool. President Reagan provided moral s~pport dunng a bams~o~mg v1s1~ to Columbia. S.C., praising farmers for their mettle and promising c;verythmg that our farm program will allow us to do." John Rot>el1 Powers has designed a ~1a1 Summer program to mttl lhe stll 1mprovemen1 nttds ot teenagers for ovl'• '>O years John Robert Powers hilS Sl!rved the emerq1n9 woman 1n 1JtrS011dl bus•ness or carter develop· mPnt and protesst0na1 moo~ing Now lht' tten.:iger can especially learn lo rtacll her lull pc1en11a1 !he Powers w,w 1n ltlP rtlaxtd atmosphere ol 5umM~1 classes Receive substantial tu•l1on tl1srounts Dy reservmg classes nnw Cttll tor tree 1ntormat1on , Teen sltter gives life to save.kids John Robert Powers LAKE ORION, Mich. -A 19-year-ol~ baby s1tte~ was c.rushed to death >'{IN.•~ J['l(lOPM{Nl & ~Ulr«i scim.5 when she threw herself in front of a .van with three children u~s1de to stop .11 ORANGE COUNTY from rolling into a lak~. police sa1d. Rachel Snyder of Onon Township ORANGE N3 Town & Country momentanly lef\ the children 1n the van. ?nd when sbc rct~mcd, she. saw It ' 547-8228 rollint toward Lake Onon, said Pohcc Chief James Leach. It looks like she thought 'I've got to do something..' and JUSt got in front of the van," he said. EL TORO. Saddlebeck Valley etaza The van' came to a stop on top of her. Leach said. and her bod,Y was discovered "E· 1 • 837-9900 under the left wheel by a boy who was fishing nearby, the chief said. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. ... , ..... c.... .... 1m -llll~ can 1111-sg..11se Pierce Brothers 1--.. II Broadway Mortuary 110 lfoedwt1 642--915 LOW FIXED RATES 9 % 15 yrs Fixed 101,.t 30 yn Fixed * Wt Specialii. in * Jumbo Loans Coll for Current Rates .. Sierra Mo r1gage Co. '71 4) 559 -4828 ·~;1 •• •M>MIC.....U WE CARRY AU. MOOILI AT .,._. "-'• DISCOUNT PRICES! : ~~.:":':..':""""" ,,_ .. °""._ • 2 • e II fr11t111 • All COM«!Otl lf'I ., •• * MAD£ IN U.8.AJ * • ltMfty ..,... of • ...,.. .,,....,....,..... • HIW4 -voll199 "911" ... IAll!e! ~ .. ,,.·;,,.. ~;,, ... ..,.,.,. " Fa,,..,. ~ .JJ. •• •. •. ~ •• • ...1. •• , ., ~ u .., \>/\A 2971 HARllOR Rl VO •• (OST A MESA - l 'f llf ,,, ••I •<tft•fllllfl•Ar • •y•••r•111o1t 1·· .... ,,.,,., ... , .. , ..... ,..,. (714) ~56·LAMP ( 714 ) !>40-FANS eTOtla~ MOO«IU t•1~·· •0 ... PM~ .. 'lll,..OA'I' •ooo ~1o1 tao""' -• llMl"ll'CAllC) &cc.1'0! Even when that process is com- pleted, however, "We don't want to kid ourselves that we've solved all those problems and closed it all off," be said. The Navy believes it bas scaled off 1u most sensitive intern.al com- munications systems from Soviet scrutiny, Lehman said. Annual Farm Program Costs "But some of the lea temitive, we cannot say that we have totally cloeed off' acceu to the Sovieu (because of) just the mechanics and time it takes to rcplacc equipment, .. Lehman said. "But we took immediate measures to see that no hi~ classified information aoes thro any chan- nels that we believe cou have been compronused," Lehman said. "It's JUSt a lot of hardware that bas to be chan&ed. $26 IN BILLIONS 20 10 "It cenainly illustrated to usa lot of Jlarina inadequacies in our naval security system, namely one of vol- ume and numben of people that had arown beyond the ability of the security system to effectively man- age." Source: U.S. Departm ent of Agrlcvltvre The uncovering of the spy networt also has left a lepcy of hei&htcned secunty consciousness that includes tbe adoptJon of ela~te procedures affecting hundreds of thousand.I of m1btary personnel civilian Pentagon employees and det'ense contractors. SINCE 1879 We are the Oldest Carpet Co01pany in Southern Calif~rnia 3 locations to serve you. Our Summer Sale is on NOW! Prices start as low as s12.99 installed over 9/16 '' pad. MOHJlWK Catalina fully installed at St6.99 t hrough the month of July "Family Owned Since 18 79 .. 2927 S. Bristol Street. Costa Mesa ,..,~----""' $ov1P1 of ~'"' C<MI 1 1- 751-2324 ALSO IN LOS ANGELES • l ONO 8 ACH Financing Available r.11tforn11 ~evada r.ont rartor ·~ C'ontraC'tor '" l.iC'fn f l.1N'n~t· 27823 1 l 43fl { Store Hour Mon -Fri 9·6 Sat 10-S Frederick and Michelle Robe. Ray and Jan !kola with Tom and ADD Key. IUau Tenter (JiCbt) welcomee JloD and Betty Karts. Fund-raiser has smooth sailing By MARY LOU HOPKINS ~'9MC..v ;1,..ot .\ (nyth1cal cruise aboard the Sea Goddess attracted 300 guests to the Four Seasons Hotel in Newport Center. The hotel's general manager Klaus Tenter, and Sea Goddess Cruises L1m1ted President Ron Kurt1, who came from Miami for "An E-.ening Aboard the Sea Goddess," were hosts for the party. Special guests at the benefit for the Orange County Pacific Symphony were Consul General Jou Winier of Canada, and Norway's acting Consul General llnat Ivar Halvorsen. who were honorary chairmen The fund-raiser began at 5 30 p.m. HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL May %0 Mr and Mrs. Janes Ceccon1 New port Beach boy June %5 Mr and M~ Thomas Verloop ( mta Mesa. b<n· \.1r and Mrs Michael Torres Hunt- ington Beach girl June t6 Mr and Mr'i (1regof} Ho""ell < oc.ta Mes.a girl June ZI! \1 r and \1r, ~te,cn ( 1k1tht·r Laguna Beach girl June 29 \.1r and Mr<. James \\h11t· ""c""port Beach girl Jane 30 \.1argaret \anct• ""e""port Ekath .t1-1rl \.1r and Mr'i Rohert ( aqa,al Hunt 1ngton Beach girl July 2 Mr and Mrs Randall Long. In int• girl Mr and Mrs Marc D1ch·, Hunt ington Beach. bo} · Mr and Mrs John MacBeth. ln1nc bo) July 3 Mr and Mr-; Charil''> Dumont Newport Beach. girl July 4 Mr and \.1r<, .\n1on10 ( olomho Laguna Beach girl Mr and Mrs Maartcn Flucrkt• < o\ta Me\a girl July S Mr and Mrs. Da' 1d < arpentcr. Newport Beach bo} July 6 Mr and Mrs R1chMd Booth Jr Newport Beach be)\ July 7 Mr and \.1 re; Darrrn \.foon Hunt- poolside with champagne and a fashion show. "Welcome to an evening aboard the Sea Goddess. Thi~ 1s your captain spealong," said Kitty Leslie, coordi- nator of the cruise wear show pres- ented b} Fashion Island Merchants .\ssoc1at1on Opening with swimwear. the first <>egment oft he sho"" wa<; an aquacade performance by the -'\quabelles to the music of Lynn Wiiiis and his or- chestra. Wtlhs atso produced the Las Vegas style show. Interspersed with the fashion promenade dancers in bnef and flashy costumes. performed the cha-cha. beth dance and a spectacular closing re-.1e" The show was the l'>cg1nn1ng of a 1ngton Beach. girl Mr and Mrs Ga~ Pulford. Hunt- ington Beach. girl Mr and Mrs Charle\ (1nmes ( osta Mesa. gnl July 8 \.1r and Mrs. Richard l 1ccht' Hunt- ington Beach, bo) \.1r and Mrs. T1moth\ "lt·""man "Jewpon Beach, girl · Mr and Mrs. Charles Da\I<., Balboa girl HUMANA HOSPITAL HUNT· INGTON BEACH May 11 \.1r and \1rs Larr} \\ Wt•1kcl Huntington Beach ho~ Jone 13 \'Ir and \fr\ Robert J \1aag. Huntington Beach girl Jone 16 \1 r and Mr .. Budd\ l..<1mlx'rt. Hun1- 1ngton Beath hm Mr and Mrs Kirk \\. I ,1-.lor Huntington Beach. girl June 18 Mr and Mrs. Anthon' De Bano Huntington Beach. girl - Jone %0 Stan and Steven f\oont1 ( osta \.1e~ t11;10 girls \.1r and M~ J S Rubin In inc girl June tz \fr and \.1 r-, \.11t hael flaht•n' < Mia \.1eo,a. ho> · June 23 Mr and Mr'> JohnO\ \\. AHum Huntington Beach. girl Mr. and Mrs ~an J l>1Ck. Hunt- ington Beach. bo} \.1r and Mrs Leon Jad,,on Hunt- ington Beach. girl June 27 "1r and "1r<1 Robert \ 'Vtueller Huntington Beach hm busy evening that raised about SI 0.000 for the Orange County Pa- ci fie Symphony, according to Watten Johnson, chairman of the benefit for the third consecuti ve year. From the pool area pa.i:tygoers moved into the ballroom where tables were centered w11h arrangt ments by Zen Flonsts of Bel-Air. After a lavish buffet dinner. guests moved into the "Casino de Pans" adJacent to the ballroom to test their skills at the gaming tables. The lucky guests gave their chips to the croupiers for tickets that were drawn for prizes Wes Hyleo was a big 11;1nner Dunng the drawing he first \\On a man's Gucci watch. and later he had the winning ticket for the woman\ Mr and Mrs Paul Thurman. Hunt- ington Beach girl June 28 :..Ir and Mr<, Joseph (JlagoHch Foun1a1n 'valle\ girl Jq_oe 29 :..Ir and Mr.-. R1 .. hard \1tlls Jr . Huntington Beach. ho~ June 30 l\.1r and Mr.-. ')tcvcn <hbornc. llunt- 1ngton Beach. bo:,- July 2 Mr and Mrs \1arc Rosen. Hunt- ington Beach. bo\ \.1r and Mrs Dann\ :-.:c""port Bealh. bO\ July 5 \tr and Mr\ Michael La1ear Hunt· ington Beach ho~ Deborah and MH hacl I cpp. Hunt- ington Beach girl July 8 Mr and Mr' Randall Fong. Hunt- ington Beach. girl July 9 Mr and Mr'i J>a\IJ (1ar\ in Laguna '\1guel girl July 11 Mr and \.1r'i Ke-.in R Henklt·r. Fountain 'vallt'\ bm July 12 Mr and Mr'i Philip \\.oo. Hunt 1ngton Beach. ho) Mr and Mr.-. Peter Waythomac,. Fountain Valle> girl July 15 Mr and \1r\ Dan Gyerstanf Hunt 1ngton Beach girl Mr and \1 r<, Donald Lae1ckre Huntington tkalh bo~ Gucci watch. · Although the symphony conductor Dr. Keltb Clark wasn't a lucky gambler, he was enthusiastic about the orchestra's new season _at ~ won-to-o~n Orange Co~r­ form1 ng Arls Center. "We will have 41 events at the center," Oark said. "In addition to our two gala opening concerts Oct. 2 and 3. we will have classical end pop concens. and we arc almost sold out." "We have come a long way since Plummer Auditorium in Fullerton," Clark added with a chuckle. Mary Roml, Warren Jobneon and Joan Wlnaer. Gila.no. Other symphony board members excited about the new season were Tom Key, Marcy Millville, Ray lkola !chairman ). Tom Stepbeuon, Stewart Woodward and Michael But the big excitement of the evening was a drawing of the door pnze - a SI 0,000 cruise aboard the Sea Goddess arranged by Mary Homl of Newport Beach Kelly Anne Long LONG-NORDELL Engh sh. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Nordell JI of Omaha. They plan to be mamed in the summerof l987 in Newport Beach. HANLON-LUNDER Karla Hanlon of Newport Beach will marry Manin Lunder of Ames. Norway. ne.xt Apnl. She· 1s the daughter of Mrs. Eduh Hanlon of Newport Beach and the late Edward Hanlon Sr . and he is the son of Mr and Mrs. Enk Lunder of Norwa) They are bolh residents of New York Ctty The couple are graduates of the Un1vers1t} of Oregon in Eugene She 1s also a graduate of Newport Harbor High School. She 1s with the account- ing department of Abrahams Bros. in New York. Her future bndcgroom 1s with the lnternauonal Banking de- partment of Manufacturers Hanover Trust in New York. The engagement of Kelly i\nne I ung ot Newpon Beach and Robert H '\ordell III of Omaha. Neb .. ha'l bet•n announced by her parents. Dr and Mr.. Dallas C Long Ill Qf ""ewport Beach An April 11 wedding 1s planned in St. James Episcopal Church in New- port Beach. HA WTRORNE-CLARK Mr. and Mrs Carl H Hawthorne of Laguna Niguel have announced the engagement of their daughter Jen- nifer L>nn to Enc Norberg (lark. He 1s the son of Dr and Mrs. Aldon E. Clark of South Laguna. .\ graduate of Newport Harbor High <ichool, the bnde-elect received her bachelor of science degree in p\ycholog} at the University of .\n1ona 1n Tucson Her father hol,ds the 1960 Ol>mp1c bronze medal and 1964 gold medal as a shot-putter Her fiance 1s a graduate of Valley High <ichool 1n Valley. Neb and 1s a graduate of the Un1vers1t}' of Anzona in f Ul'iOn With a bachelor's dl•gree in The couple are graduates of Laguna Beach High School. She 1s also a graduate of Cal State San Diego and he rec1eved his degree at the Un1 ver- ">ll} of Southern Caltlorn1a The) will he mamcd in Laguna Pre5b\ tenan Church 1n Dccemher \.1•\\()ort C 1•nt1·r fa..,h1<1n ""'"}"' ( )\,[ {),\~ ( )\i/)-\1<h· ~ ... -1/J.. 'i,1/1• \\tll />1•g1n .1t l/ 11 < /rn J.. i.,,11wdr1~. Jul~ .!.'1 f1nrl r;o·~. 111 ~'> "r. prt< ,. rt'duc t l()n' un ,1•/1•< tf'<I \f1·n' "1pporel \'\unH•n' Appan•/ /t•wp/r~ \lt1•n' \\'omen' and ( h1/<lwn' 'ih1w\ i.,purt1n~ Cocid' "'~' < .1tt' ,rnd \-1w h "vtu< h \,f(ln•' (onH• C'arl-.. fur the 1>1''' ,, .f<•ct ion \1•11n.rn \t.irc m Huhin,un' rlw /lr11,11/I.' ,,.,, Hu//111 Ji, \I\ rhhtrc' 1\11wn \\ Hrl~ H1dl11m• ,md In int H.1111 h f 11m•'" \1,uk1•t < h Pr 11~ l1n1• ,,,,,,., ,,, ,i// \,1f1·r P,uf..1n11 ,l\,1.t.1/111' 11111'11/1 \11111111 '"'"' '"'' 1111 f',1• ''" < "·"' I l1i.:h1''" ,,,.,"''''n f.1111f,..,,.,. ,mcl \t,11 \1/twr Hr·ul• 1,,,,/, in "•'11/l<•fl /11•,11 h 0 NEWPORT CENTER FA HION I LAND Kurtz drew the lucky ticket, ·and announced that Denise Boocbe of Laguna Beach was the winner of the tnp. Papara11J 11 edJted by Dally PUot Style editor Vida Dean. WEDDING S Mr. and Mn. M. V. Hardy BARDY-CRABRE The Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar were the setting for the June 28 wedding of Sharon Anne Chabre and. Michael Wilham Hardy. A reception for 300 gueslS followed. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs Gustave S. Chabre of Corona del Mar and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond W Hardy of Irvine. The bnde. a stxth generation Cali- fornia. wore a Victorian style gown tnmmed Wlth Chanully lace. Cameron Chabre was her maid of honor. and bridesmaids were ~aurecn ( owen. Amy Foerster, .\nne Fournier. Monique Richards and Karen Hardy. Michael Garbett was the best man. and ushers were Sean Ham1sh1ge, Richard Waters. Paul Burshmger. Chnstopher Thompson and Steven Chabre. The bride 1s director of Graphics West Gallery in Irvine. She 1s a graduate of Anzona State University and a member of Pi Beta Phi soronty. Her husband 1<> a graduate of C.al State San Diego and affiliated Wlth Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity He is wtth Nissan Corp The newlyweds honeymooned in Jamaica and now are at home in Laguna Beach JACOBS-FIORDA T1volt Terrace, Laguna Beach, was the setting for the June 21 wedding of Joss1e Ftorda of Costa Mesa and Charles R Jacobs. Missoula. Mont The bnde. daughter of Mr. and Mrs John F1orda of Costa Mesa, wore a mid-calf length light blue and white gown and white roses 1n her hair She earned a mixed bouquet of white and hght blue flowers. The bndegroom is the son of Mr and Mrs. lkrnardJacobsofMontana. Following a honeymoon cruise to Ba,ia. the newlyweds will li ve in M1sc;oula JOHNSON-FORSYTH KJmberly Anne Forsyth of Costa Mesa became the bndc of Robert Le1ah Johnson, Anaheim, durina June 29 ceremonies in the Wayfarer's Chapel, Palos Verdes. The bnde 1s the daughter of Joan and Ru~'ICll FoMyth. and her husband 1s the son of Leland and Ethel Johnson Attendant<; were Heather Forsyth. maid of honor. Archie Crawford and \.11ke O'Hare, be~l men. Mcpn Forsyth. bndesma1d. and Cra11 For- syth usher Afier a reccpuon for 75 guests, the newlyweds lcf\ on a honeymoon in the Canb~an Islands They will rt'l1de 1n Santa Ana The bnde 1s with the Wylie Aitken law offict,, and her husband is wtth General Moton Corp. • McLean Cadillac, 201 !f. llahl St. in Santa Ana, 18 the aclaaJ.e <>ranee County distributor of tht. special Cadillac Coupe de \'We cutombed by atyll8ta at AutomotlYe Marketing California, Inc. (AllCI) of Torrance. Thia unique model ha.a a color- coordlnated half-roof with bruahed alamlnam taraa band, prl•ate backllte and di•tinctive. cu.- tom-etched opera wtndo1". Add personality to domestic cars When discussing fine automotive styling, most car aficionados con- jure up lmagee of European auto- motive technicians apptylng their talents to cuetomtze and refine aoch "yuppie mobllee" as BMWa. Mercedes-Benzes and Porachea. Thele succeasful European salons lend lndtvlduallty and ft air to these expensive automobllee by making subtle design changes. Automotive Marke,Jlng Cali- fornia, Inc. (AMCI), of'r orrance has successfully applled the same con- eept of auto enhanoement to a wide variety of automobiles. ''We've brought the same con- cept home for domestic cars,'· says Jim Wangers. ohalrman of AMCI. ·'These American cars are depen- dable, durable and most Import- antly, affordable to many American motorists desiring a car with more personality. "Besides, contrary to popular belief. not everyone wants to Invest a large chunk of their Income in a liuropean yuppie mobile." AMCI bases Its success on addresslng a well defined auto- motive market. ''Our goal Is to Inject some additional personallty Into the American car scene and offer the average motorist an opportuntty to drive an uncommon car,'' Waoger1 aayt. AMCI can redesign a cat to mllke tt mOf'e dlttJngulahed, mOf'e sporty or more elegant by using creative roof trMtmenta, targa bands, etched opera windows, hood ecoops, ground effects and other equipment. AMCl'1 most eucceasful model Is the Buick EJectra/Park Avenue Sport Coupe. This package uaee a factOf'Y quality, cotor-coordlnated roof treatment, brushed aluminum targa band. etched quarter win- dows and private baci<llte to tr.,. form a conventional two-door sedan Into a personalized luxury coupe. Another popular AMCI package Is the Ford Thunderbird Towne Landau. This model Includes a color-coordinated half roof with matching trim, brushed aluminum targa band with accent striping. roof car with private bacidtte and opera windows with etched Towne Landau emblems. Wangera and AMCI Vice Chair-man Al Carpenter have over 50 years of combined experience In the specialty vehlcte market, lnvotv- lng more than 250,000 vehicles. AN INCREDIBLE CHOOSE FROM: * DODGE COL TS * DODGE ARIES * DODGE DA YTONAS * DODGE VAN CONVERSIONS * DODGE CARAVANS ALL VEHICLES READY FOR lllMEDIATE DELIVERY llEAT Umlll .. All MODUS . EXTRA SPECIAL BONUS/ 4 DAYS ONLY! THURS., MY 24~ (1:31-lpa) e FRI., lJLY 25~ (1:319-lpl) SAT., JULY 2S~ (9-1111) t SUM., JULY 27~ (1 .. lpl) ORANGECOUNTYS#1HYUNDA CHOOSE FROM: * EXCEL 3-DOOR HATCHBACK * EXCEL 5-DOOR HATCHBACK * EXCEL GL 5-DOOR HATCHBACK * EXCEL GLS 5-DOOR HATCHBACK * EXCEL GL 4 DOOR SEDAN * EXCEL GLS 4-DOOR SEDAN STARTING FROll 54995 OVER ·400 NEW & USED VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY. OUR LOTS ARE OVERSTOCKED AND WE HAVE MORE MODELS & COLORS TO CHOOSE FAOM THAN EVEA BEFOAEI '-· I --7/86 .............. Mr. Customer 1 N I m Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Frtct.y, Juty 25, 1988 CALL 642-5678 IF CAWNQ PROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE J AT THll "UCI (2400M)(240l521 (2*81) NEW 1986 F·150's FROM $7986 NEW 1986 MUSTANGS FROM $6886 NEW 1986 THUNDERBIRDS FROM $9986 NEW 1986 RANGERS FROM $6286 &.9010 AHNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE AHANCING ON SELECTED MODELS UP TO 36 MOS OH APPROVED CREDIT SAIL INTO s~ v1NGS 4 lines, s7&0 or s5eo 7 days... with prepayment Private P•l'IY ONL v. No A.al Estate, Coml'l'l«clat. Of ti.is> Went~. SHDIECLIFF 13,200,000 --·-ft.W 2bd. ·-oated oomm w/poo4, 1 csencto-r, Jdt cond. Sat.eoo. 12CM>51e. IWDI ..... rer lalt UM OCbR viEW Wittl JG Breae. 28R 28a. den, 2•x57 Senior Puk. $49,500. &45-MM. llMlt "" 1111 .... Willi Enjoy the privacy and trar.~ulllty of HUii ftU DISSOLVING PARTNER-this unique ocean front property SHIP. Mutt .... lmmed. nestled among mature trees & Prtced tor fat ..crow. No exc:henge9. landscaplng unmatched. Appt. ( # 112 Bdrm, 2 ba. 2100 eq n. F'Nmtum w tot. Unfum •----·-•.•.-.•.o.•.o ____ ... 1:J~~. 2 be, 2100 eq n. Prtwte lot w/grftM CLA891FIED INDEX 642-5671 FROM NORTH OAANOE CO. ..1220 o. ...... Prof decor & furn. S179M (#3)3 Bdrm, 3 be, 2300 eq ft. EL DORADO MOTEL Prof decor & furn. I 195M. Pvt perty only. 830-3511 AM/Wkdaya. as1-2002 Of as1-1~e PM/Wkend1. AttrectNe clMrl 28' 1S.. lndry, gar, dee*. 1 bll to bet\. Avail 811. '800/mo + dep. 546-3727 Ret aPC*lltno seoo c1Mr1 crptd · deco( beak: kit othef'a avail 53M191 Agtr.. . emu LI llu llB 21R 1BX OWi gwage. 1 car gar. So of hwy. UOOt mo. Avall 811. Diane &31-1298 liiim * ...... * 38r 288, 2 c:er gar, btlne. encl yrd s 1050 ,.. 1IUlllT 111-1111 38drm. 2 Beth, flreplaioe, W/D hoolc-Yp, $12$0 per mo. 517 NARCISSUS ..,., ... 111·21'2 8Sunho" l\l·alt' NEWLY DEC 38A. 38A COM Cottage. Garg. yd, frplc, laundry, patio. $1500/mo, e"-093. 9tl()-.&433 •BR 2~8A duplex, frpk:, 2000 eq ft. Aval 811 . SHIOO/mo, 1 ~ ..... 7~7406 New 3BR 3'h beth, frpk:. wet ber. dbl gar, top of the tine appllencH. 12000/mo. Agt 873-535' Cetta •111 1114 1 Bdrm, ffl)IC, range, lfV encl yerd. perking epece In ,..,., No peta. Otll pd. E. 19th St. M50 11t + MC. (71•)777-3325 **lllfALI** AH ., ... , prlcea + ebiee Monthfy Of yr1y. Let UI Hetp? F• Tl1.DllT ., ...... * .. nMn* 2Bdrm Ha. 1 ow o-eoe. ... bltJne. muet ... onfy M25r.. 1ILDlll llMlll *..,, .... * 18' 111a, e.~ 1 C8f oar. pet'*·,..., etove. ontyllOO• 1D.llllT ITMMI *INST ANT ..fNlt* New Luxury Condoe. 38( 2~ tip, ~ dbl 0- PM<*. 2 ml1o bdl l11M .... 11440tt424111 • LMge 2 Bdrm 1 Betti t>uptu. G~age. 2171-C Ptecentte "35/mo. No ,,.., 545-7983 2 tty tMm 38A 211.A. wd bumlna trprt, patlO I 10IO Weterlront Hotn. Inc 111·1• llMl&Tl l R epedoua twnMlee lbcl 2~ba, 2 cw ca-pdoa, w/d Plkup. NO Dool S 1300 + eecutty ... &-tM0."'-*7 ............ Frptc, veutted cellng.t, dbl get. pool, IP&-No pet• 18drm $775 28drm 2'AS. + Den $975 Me W. 18th St &45-2739 •PEHTRIOOE COVE* 28' 28a Condo W/D hkup dbl o•reoe w/opener $995. Near 1trM1N & falls. No pet1 5-49-2447 Daaa Pilat 21U 38A 28X'. dAEXt View New land9cape w/euto aprlnki.. w/d, retrrg. trplc, $1200. 240-9145 ..... INcla 2140 18A t;;, new Cfi>Wp;nt Front & rMr yd1. Utllt pd Snol pef'IOn P<9f No petl S5~5tmo 54&-IM47 Send a Happy Ad to hfl a friend out of the doldrum• (\ I let Us Helt Y• Sell Y ,., p,.,_,.,t Call Cla11111H, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. 11AUK7111 ASK ABOUT OUR VACATION GIVEAWAY WITH EVERY PURCHASE JllS I OVER THE -----------~ zo ••• SADDLE BACK -.. 735i • SALES • LEASING • SERVICES • PARTS 528e Saddleback BMW 45 Oldfield Rd. IRVINE 380-1200 • 800-831-3377 B w IN THE BEAUTIFUL IRVINE AUTO CENTER 325es --_..., __ .. * o.-.. CoM1 OM. Y ~LOT! Ff1der, .Jtif 25, 1NI ..... ... ... ... ... .. ........ '"'l!:!l!!!o ........... i. •• •••rt-J!M1Lp I I.,,_-... c ....... ~t!!:_,;;;~·~'8!1~~ -·--· HIW I & I MM; I ... iiiia"!~~ 1111 mm-m.... 9:: trtewr ...... Mel wf'11£1"1W11 alf'1'6M~l/lldl =-~ i= = ~ ~· .... = W-=.Nr~ OOCT~~ = ::.~ ·~"·:=:: 'f!."':J:tiiJIN .,_.,, :::T= ~:..~All ~~ "'*Y M0-7ttl D11t '•e.~z No• ~.. ==-Tiiie ......... ..._ lft CAI. W... +Ullt.1111Mk,C::-="' •ate L11t: . t3tOIMtaAM .... •••mot • ~~1'~~11:. MOO --·-::.::+:.::----~&celBICtlll-4 blkl•llt ..... O.al• *"-"""" TSI. MOUT IQ.1IOS ~T'Of .. IACH Nopeta.tt100/moyr..: FIM ptOf ._. NI IP' ll;lrntdAi B8 Croll, OIH ... '91, :::..:=-~ --• T1t1>ert/IHGh ll•d, MMl11 144-"110, w Mo# onty. Sbd, 2t>I. UIUO ..... = .::·,:,: .......... \uo 11+tr.a i!Od1' = :':r .:-~ •• ._.,,...,._... ts2S1mo. 1M 11A. 11 --~~ o LO a\L: lofta. mt11 •111t•urr aso ~.~~......._ a.AtM.0......,1. ..-eo.,.1111~ a1121mo. 2:1~~ ~,..,v....,.._ .,... blttne, ~· near f#·!!"' • ,.,,..., ll••oom. ~ ena-tfte•---otM•· otc:ir.ee..,.n ..,..._ w1.-otot17 -~111 tanlMI. 111e .... DLH. •eo..do.r.e-e.dlend '*""'· + •· CUb,w/dNcp,c:twc,prt rq _, iliALi &iili led< 11; ..-BMllor a.ntaAM.lkt-..,... u-erw.-. •floOl&980't 731W. 1 It. •gt no lee. C•ll f#· ......S01. '*""'9auetdoetedcaw; oondo, pooU~ MTll&,.... 2 ~1 ..,N..,'llrt:c111111 .,,__ lotloftcMll& ....... I '*"*' ...... IO TaLMOMT t42-1tOS NS-t500/M:M17M. ~!!:· 1• Utu"*'OJl.. .. ttao wld .... ~.or ......... ,..... .... ,___. ~ •XMi -.tlon ecroee t...ve"*'P 2•.....,... Hdrm, 181, lrplc, •~M ~lndfrpQ."= Mldlett4M123 ::::11.~ .,,..,,_,.... '::.0~"· t .H per. ~.~ ... •-=cir:: ~::::-:C.~ =•*r;-10=~~ bucti.nocrpt~ ::;.'f2::;,..:: 2.::S2~~~8ahlaaattt ftr ltat MM111 Iii' mln;a;;;;w ..,..~ NI ME ..,._ ~-.,.,_ .. p«a Cell. l410N4 :mo . .C...7 From t1315. Sorry, no mltoocn,'400/mo'AiUUl. Dtl .,-.-~Tiliia _ _11@ FOUND_. of...,.°" • w. WIL.80N grounde ..,. A~ I .... ,... pa CALL M4-05dt ~"" ~1 ... co;:=.... ... -WibdWdioNiVJ; POf'ICM Ket Mo It Ml· 1111 now. No peil&. 54M27' Dlllghtful oow bt9W. * 1 mllll ... NEWPORT MANNA APT8 Oow -. ~ Iott &:::• t76hft0. Calf Why ~ ~::: TO. .~ no GNdlt PCH/Forf91t Aw Lia. • Pll'8tl c:arp9b & ctrapee, Aefrig. dllh•..._ & "°"' '*hyvt9w 18r 19a. 1 tOO hOme n/llNtr *1lllaM a. 97W117 pttole ,_ ~ "e11 o.-8wltl let. 71tt. ldlM. C~N ~! :: NEW POAT VtLLAGE ~. k>1t of doleitt. lnct NO PET'S 51& 4155 tq ft. W/D hkup, IM:fo. m•I•' ao+ S4Hlmo. ~ ..... 1 CAR ~.:~:.-.: ;;.:~m 7'1t &42·11'79 .. o..e1 '°'..,.. per90n: "'l!::"8 ~ oereee. Ir.dry 1BA unfum _,. •IOfll. "'*· MCI ,.,.,.. PM 41M-511M GlnOlf lndMdulf .,.... MOnct r,-'19q, A. '"'*"Y· a Of·J Bii FOUND Untvec• b'll•. AYllt/1. 54Ml14 PRE.STtGE LOCATION ~~~·~tyl~•nd· Acroel from Udotorlhope. &:::" .!1:.1eo.oe19 PAOfE8SK>MAL tiem.-(o•t•d) COmMunlly, ftoll. .00 tq ft,....,. ......... ,. ! Fountllln Vlll! •• Ctil. Md 5 8loc*t to __. . ....,..,. · sec>O/mo. P9'19ct one ' • 1125/Mo 7IO •42. ~view brMd ,__ ~return on dllCflb9. ......... 2 --~·-2BR28AAPA penon.~1981 NEWPORTPIEAARE.A nut. non·1moker ' orpts. drpe l AJC Cel TOt.AaeOlllndonlbuy Hr w A\4111 ~ ~ C...OC .. ~ 38R 2~8A TOWN E SBA. 28A Apt. Ywty "° prefen'ed. wanted to .... IHI ~1 · TOI 1 10 000 up to FOUNO Youno'f .._ Cet, Moo/ · •---to .... ....., • lll-tlJ 1 2Bt 1ea. ger199. pOOt, ....., 11400' mo "*• 3 l>edloom, 2 beth -'eo·a C.. OtMllOr'I gt'fll •11111 ..,..., *Y IPPl-mo. •7 Mlnutee to Bwltl ... leundry. petto, Int• I ~ ,:.91ta ee•o condo In Hunttnoton · NEW STORAOE ... IT.TY• JUM ,n.1111 fr .. ndty. Vcty HllGOr Lro tlr on VlctoM, · nr •Nlgtlt Ugfltted. Send IWT IUll'l ..at e-peld. t725/mo. · Beed\ Poot )9Clu&:d, ten-Mcllty, *" .,... '° ._._nwtne ~. · v. ~ ~ Nwpt 9Mj. 8pencllno Voleybel' Tennis cm 1801 15th S1. l50-t213 SEEKING qi.-f9llPC)n-... b.e .,.. 1275 • ::_-.!:1 ~Mc:-~~ "'' ....... .... LOST ... Codi«,""" deen.crpta. .... 0¥9. •Poot.Jacum.980 QUIET RESORT LIVING *wnan•• .... ~ fWIMtlWI month+depo.lt.CalEw ... ,..... . . c:Ntm1119&rW1.... BB .My 11ttl,"' AdMle I qul9t 14H . Ho '*'· •CowredPerttlna Refl1g dlehw..,_&ltow lgl28r.1107&/mo.yrty. •t &42-4U1 m. ™or C---*l l'Mdyfor"MOY&-IN" IMtlf.... Provld•noe. HI Reedy to go teo-2110 •Clllle TV A....i. •Spenlllng l'lllted pool Ind NO PETS S4Ml55 Stepe to beect\.146-112:2 ~7. l.L~-•--t IS1......, ...... 2 .. 21 ______ ..,,....._ •Ate Aoom with FINpleoe •Cour1 ywd .. dining . .... ._. .. E.Mtllde 28dnn. 1 Beth Ind BIJllardt ·~ BBO.,.... 1-.-.. -B-RA,...,...,..N=o...,.N.,.,,EW"""""'2:-:8'~2ee=-a,1111• a,t. 1... PAOf Ml2WO 1;rn~ &t omce SPACE! MJ aq ft fnlM\ ADS -Loet-F="t:=OOl-,.,,-_..~ .. '.""'a .. ~-~--=-, l.IP!!. ... d -~, 0 1 AAdultgt •SeunM F •l'Wtlght dlM In CC>llrt yrd c:tlokie .,., .,.tlo, gtlt· ......... aa.1111 RESPONSIBLE ONLY ITlt ........ In Sen Juen uunu ..... 3 yra. TUICin I • pr., .eso/inc. . 1 BA FURN/UN URN gaieOol • S900 IM No pet• OM blk lo bc:h S300 Cll c.plettMO ..,., '6()0. NB ... ~ Sun • 241-4282 JR 1 BR FURN •Spedoul Apenmeot• 780-'713 or M2·5to9 VEASAllLE8 18A Pnthae 1o-3pm dlly 'l50-8513 186 + tq ft mr OMC: Aleo uo tq ft ,... .. or IDl" FREE 722·1392, AEWAADI ---111.m Comer Nwpt Fwy a BM• •vou·,. own prtv1t• pe11o ~ locatkln. AVllll now. • 1n w..tclff t U6/F1. 1nc1 ofllot IPtlOe MOO mo. Ml. ._,_ Sorry,Nopetal •Gounnetkttc:Mn •LlllUfnm* sn5/mo, ...... Aoent ROOMMATEWAHTED utlla a JMttoriel a.. NoTM.483-4011 Cal• L.o.t-KITTEM-7 WKI 2Br L 1 ~•• .;:,,•cloi:_• (714)557..0075 •New ocw. tan c:ari>et 38' 281. $2500 mo yrty. ~7211 F/Pf'9f to lhr Miiiion V"fo &4Ml3I or 811-7111 Shere tlnoM Ofttoe In • ORANGE & WHfTt =-=· Format~ :Llrge Wlllll4n dolete 8 t81282-n33, 87U14a v ...... VIII 8llboa hom1, pool, Ju uul, ••• fllT pttrne IEJleouttve. Mtt In la .. ll . ~~ .. Ing p.t patio pool •r•tJIJIU Geted covered pti(ng -fl IUll• t&Aa 17~5 '380/mo, Tom 4&6-1324. ---Newpot1 c.n. AYml on ~ S7t 5/mo. NO ~ wmutorlgl *••u-• bit or 2BRa 885041200 Str9'ght M•uitw Newpor\ 1e1fwelic:lft llmlt•d .,...... Dy• L09l-MIWHT LAB PUPPY pell. Ednl &42~ ...... ,.... ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 1~~ lv.::; r: AQt 631-418() Creet TWnhM. '315/mo. Nwpt Bdl. 641-.5032 egt 7~1905, E\le 84Mm FOUND Odt»ltc:!:.,,'r-; ·a::...c:s-=:...~: ~ CllWI 28dnn, Feetunng bWltlful land· 1 l 2 BE.OROOM TEUllJT llMIM Pool. •P•. ten n it . .. .. ... c-..... "·m =-~ yn. cn1'i 848-3075. AIWAJllD.teO. 1'1•8a feH, II utlla pd, ecape. 8809. pool/ape. , 642-3150 °' 646-teet An'l)6e s*a. ut11 pekt. I ~ 498-48t4 frig. gtlt. Sorfy. "° peta. P1tlo/decb. Gllfagee Of FURNISH""°8 AVAIL BAYI Ocw'll Pllill ( ~ blk) hJln• !'" Str8'ght n/ttntu prof fem 2eaa E e.fHwy 87Ml800 4 LOST .,._ helP UI find 1NO Wllace cwporta. Sorry, "° peta. SorrY. No pell 2bd. Rent r.uon1bte on iU56k TO BEXeR" .... ..,,. to find or* 2 u;;i; m ID 9q ft. FOUND llttll ..,.,... tona vtul• Dog. Kktt .,. 846-2139 or &42-4914 1Bdrm M20 yeerty ball•. Apt ahown 1 bd, enct::t + W9hml, 28' 281ept1n CM/IMM. •WlllWM -• ittop & 214 aq ft. omc. hett' kitten M mo otcf, hWtbr«*en. Fem ~ ~ 2Bdnn 1'.~81 1710 LA llmtl llllllU on Sun 7127 '" to ""1 MSC> y +eeounty. 0y9 752-4500 X5074 or A~ I .th ft"9"* (edi-tt). 70. aq ft. c.2 new 1ttn & Ptllotntla.. t>rwn, crOl)Oed tell, Elly' EMtMde 2Br 181.. beamed 825 Center St 842-142'4 1112l 1 p-ei1t .. ln. HB 123 38th St or call 213 LeMet t.4959 Ewa 553-0100 X825 131·7900 tone. C.M. 541-~ &42.o430 lft tlPfn HB. 848-0164 oe1Nft09, trptc, gerege. 430-7880 for eppt ~ =iwr~ ~ IWll I.E. 141-1441 FREEi CABLE TV. cozv ..... nii No Pet• eso . .'1798 E.tlde lrg, nu dee. 2 bdrm, SEAWIND 28r 2811 c.nnery Vlltage RIUSOIEf. meture mr · 1 bath. petlo. No peta. Moblte Home Stepe to w/prv bl.. Pod. llun/ltltc 1 or 2 BA Eltlde. Nice. 317 C.trito. SMO/mo, + wller SS50 53$-7312 pnv, S300 ut1 Incl, 8Y911 $585 & $700. OIW, Fng. Se50 MC dep. 831""°3& ... now, 841-0725. tv meg. =-'v~~~No 111YllTllWI VlLLAGE l!Qll!lllc~ Twormaevlltor2peope. --------28' w/;er. Crpta, drpa, P'of M/F, Wiik to beach, 1.-LI a.II t>ltlna. Fncct yrd w/petlo. NB. 1 nn rum ott... un- Laundryfec, dtw,ger1g1, 836-4120 Celt 1-SPM WIY llTT rum 722-«555 ~. S750, 556-2279. &e7 Victoria "C" .M75 WANTED nn to rent In NB E/elde tiny pvt 1BR ept. MESA PINES 2e50 Hlr1• LIVE WHERE YOU HAVE for Mf1oUa ooteege atu- tvm, noo-. $350 Inc utl• tBR 18a w/gar $650 •Spec1.acular apt• •t1 12 ••"' letsH. dent. CINn & reec>. Aug ...•. . . . . . . . . . .. , . & lndry. Wiii rectuce Nnt POOi, ape, bbq. * 1 l 2Br. 1 I 2Btl tuft• 1th. Bud 983-1959 to ac:tl"9 ret handyman to TOP AREA, Outet, No Peta •*~~townnou... San '' te HOO lateli/-...JJ ftli 1--------...... ---------ir----------..--------,.--------, •• ,.,...,,.,do minor,. .. •IMt-2447•. ......--• ....... I - pelra & patr.Ung. •Prlv•t• b1tcon1.. or II ••""' llMI. ••&1 •-llTll. "-=1:1:: l.ttll =ri lledrical La......... Pllad!t ,._.._.k>ne~ TOTALLY AWESOME Gerct.npetlot ~• li~;;;;;;~;;~iiiiiiil~~~~(;;;~i;:-I'-·--mi!i---iiiii!9--""""'!'--..._...... ......"' MWty r.m~ 1pt • Month·to-month Wkly rentlll now ...,.., ,, ARI' door mpeclst, El.ECTAICIAN. Qua!. WOt1c _ __... GLASGOW PAtNTIHO taken. 646-2&52 2BR 18a from 1&45. 3BR WIY llTT also available S 141 .oo wk & up. 2274 $2 40 d tr• eatnw lie IM Hex· F,.. llt. S20 hr. C&B LAWN SEAVtCE lntl&t. 30 yra ~ .. MESA BREEZ.El H~B• $725. Pool. *3 l.Jahted tennta couna Nwpt Blvd, CM 846-7445 , per ay lmerConet 213 592-3831 #487892. Oreg, 91M279 MOW•EDOETWICE MO. reif'e. &42·5214 New t bd $575 I 2 bd cwporta w/ator1g1, coin •2Swlmmlng poota . Furnished/ ltatah te ~art Thtt'a ALL you pey kif C...t~C-e 1 -ILllT.al $20-$25. 548-5722 PAINT£R NEEDS WORKI $700, pool, Jc. no pet. l•undry, 2214 College •Streema & pond• unfurnished rz•.41 3 llnel. 30 dey minimum .... • SHRUB & LAWN CAD"" Int/Ext ~ ,...,, cab &46-1740 Avei celt &42-5210 *C!~, "° .-, -ortVw• pettis Onlr• extra weetcend .... (-.....; _.. -i:f=s · ""'' 1 ....... ·Fitness centers. In the • , • WOt1c 54a-o350 Llnd9Caplng. gen. anup. • .. ,, T•• -....... • •FumtaNnga evlll Roomm•t• Connectlorl SERVICE ate. No )ob too em.at. · Bal~HBICM. 87S-1tee Devta Pelntlng 1 Cntl lltsa 1124 C..ta lltsa Jl24 Gu for H .. ~~ & ~Ing tennis. swimming e 100·1 of Leed• Avail. Reu. Mickey, 536-0553 HEW/REPAIR. Quallty. Ho QUALITY PAINTIHO Models open daily 9 6 •Open 1 D•YI A Week ~ler!let !Obi to amall, rwonat>te. Cleln Upa•T,.. T~ Spec. In otd ~I grel-WOODLAllD VILLAGE A PERFECT BLEND Sorry,nopets •::>etvlngallOC.841--0229 DIRECTORY ~ Fr1eeet .. ltc'd.93 t-~ Shaplt19-~ • ftttlremoY.a.Beettny_ NATURE Buut dealgner'a Nwpl ou yra exp. .... ·MIKE 850-32 t*S, guer. WOt1c. 17s.eea APA.,.11111 ANO Newport Beach No Bch BayrldQe hOme. A~ retlebte. , ... , •let. own ~ TreefTrlm/Cteenup comp1 SEE ME LAST LIVING 880 Irvine Avenue now Fem $600, 1at, tut. CALL TODAVll Irena. Pina 845-98N Dela FENBES-OXtE§f,..trtm gardening. Competltl"9 I .... be9t AH'( BkS. wen Come & tntoy our 1arclen style apts Qu1et. comlortable hv1n close to lret•ays & So Coast Ptua wt111e only minute~ to t beach C1r~ avatlabie NO PHS PllASE P90LS • Ull • LA_.Y ltOOllS BAClllLOlt •s•s-•sss I 81HOOM '63S.'6•S 2 -OOMI '760.770 •AS, tmAT 6 NOT WATlll 91CL. MlltA-......0 Hl M.AllAGUlml 711-00lt 642-HOJ WIYllTOW. ltl-11U SUWlll YILUIE 15555 Huntington Vlllege Lane, from Sin Otego FrMWey, north of 8Mcfl to McFedct.n, weet on McFedden ta! 16ttil "~ utlla Reta 759-3515 Ill Fii Liii Hoo~. c:atp9t• & Dump runs. C.M.IN.B. prioel. Chudl &42-2873 quar. 722-7537 upholttery, '#tndowt, ate. WM. Jim Whyte, 1542-7208 ~-------1,,,__-"'!" ____ _ 645-t104 ROOM for rent, ferMte Y04X Klrbyt Mlllnl. 831-6272 •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. !!u!uy fa...a. Newpon Beach So non-amotter, etllld OK. Servlce0ir9Ctory tr·--Peint. Orywd. Cerpentty ;m;;-'..ua, bfawoft:. l .. FitXWfkiiii!IJ:1NOhl~iHf€AKSA8••11B11mr- l700 161h Stree1 54~7513 itter 6pm Alp_,tltlYe _,... etc. G1ty 846-5217 PTL conc:t9te. Comp petloe. HANOIHG/STRIPPINO fat Ooverl COM • 2BR 28A houea, ••2-a2111t. lot 8.1. wit86N I SONS ••HANDYMAN•• 15 yra exp.-, 846-4834 VISA-MC ~1512 642-5"3 ~I non.;:'k~ll 25i! ~thA~ ~7 ~· Large or tm111 I do It 1111 BRICKWORK. Small ~. fluter;.,. 0enn1:'i5&-9480 ' 30 ~ ..P 1546-1740 · P•t 531-5579 or,.,. m80· Newport, Colt• Mela. int.IEXt. rn+&l111 Cig. Acnsdcal Ceiliata · .U. lrvlM. Ref1. 975-3175 eu.tom Textuftna. Oullty CdM DECORATOR tum REBLOWN ORPXilfeb ceutrUilft t If St~ Ceblnetry Wortl. Pr~ Prob-.""'"'rtment~ I house. pvt b•th, trptc In 'Ito lnt/""-t PA'-t~ 11= LT HAO'LING . MOVING No Job to 11'1\811. All._, lefMI 13291&4 154-7831' Radio, ltereo, ,..,_to-reel ~ bdrm. Avail nowS550 +~ "' """ .... Oww & Yerd Clnu.,_ .... ·~ ct...illecfagotgr•teounda R&8Mallagec!Proper11~ . utll.640-42e2 LIC#288597 &31· 5 THEM DOOdas Jon ....... &45-8192 F,..eet.Uc. .... 1 ....... 5 ........ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~f~~~y~oo~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~Aalt ~~NG~~eu.tom w~~~o~una ~~~~~~~~~ ,.. Aemodelfng & Addltlona HAULING • CLEAN-UPS. REASONABLE PRICES. H llr D. 711-11M p Ing x, .. ep;i;; I 543-0397 (#"89423) 7 Deya. Loweet ,.,... 548-1452 llcl4137t0 •All ptumOlng& ~ $1 ~~45 ~:; :.~· \ .,Q .. ~ '1"" _._.. e •'7"• • ..,,.....g I ' _.. ,,.,vt1 pl' .,,.01)' Not $19,000 Not $18,000 Not $17,000 But.only $15,898 1981 CAMARO S.C. ' I ~ '3977 c..•1•n2 ......... , S, Pl......._ A/C, '*· <tVlie. ................... ~. ..---==--.,-....... 1985 CHEVETTE cs ~ •• \ f. v ' "./ ]OJA •3977 1983 HONDA ACCORD , . ,, ,, p 1 ,., onw~ rno A "I I M c 11~0•11, 6J/8P •7977 1982 C-20 VAN CONVERSION J H .,,,,,, P S • c ao'"'"' ,.,..,, lC'\1rP'I roof ,.,, ... '" • winoow' I J6HA •9977 ONL¥ J 5 MINUTES FROM THE NEWPORT -COSTA MESA AREAU 10511 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove 714-534-2700 213-924-1888 9 a .. ,,,,,,'°' 0••"9., Cowf"\ty, •'"I\,,.., .&I lll• ~-'°'"*' '°' 0..•• Ml •u•a Rllurleclng •Roofing & •20Y..,. lnAIM. au.ltty Cell Slrry, &31~748 DAAINS a.EAR Ffom 115 WltefP(ooflng• 83l-411M1 REMODELING & REPAIRS HAULING I MOVING ll!!i!t FIUCleU. ~ ......... la1lan1 LnlCtl All Typee. Stor.....omc:.-College Student wltrudl *'"' ..,.* &41--0907 Uc. 122...oee REUEF BARE SERViee Homee-etc Uc'd/lna'd * Thank~. i..wta CLEAN a EXPE~T P•I i ~ Emergency! Hr Dey-Wk Pllombo Conat. tea-3584 ... ltnlen Over 25 )'Mr• expeneoce _ Secrt't.BJckpg 9rS-9937 . Room Addtt~Almodal. Lie. T • 119,428 130-1)63 CAL Y EST ~ Ooore-Wlndowa-Petlo •lllllllWll HABC MOVING•• ~:'~:H°ia ~. ~-Covera-Oeck•. Frenk, PIT FIT. 16 hr.+ ml. to Quldl & Cereful T138048 • • · Expert ~ry rm "8-7107 Ucl480817 atart. 722·"59 LO RATES. 552-0410 l""'-L ~alr-Remod 1--Addlttona It tt1.9t ITAnml llUIM ~Nd Wlii 6Mt Doora-.tc. W-498() Entry I Fr;nct; ooo;; w-RJdRtMJ!lE PATROL llmlill --.. ANY B6d by 50%. FREE [)oc)(l..Moldlng9-Bey By Horm1n The Doorman tlk• lovlng cera of pett, Or Co OrialNI let. Work quar. 24 hour :'~~· ~:!<: Olk & Fir. 857-000R wat•. mall. ate. 751~55 S~ McMra. Tnaurect MMCe. 722-7537 un....e PIUI 54W8e() 0 lutndi• Uc. T12~.&41-M27 ... l!IUlli/W!tlla. ..... --------,....--ll•trlcaJ HEWW~Stor1g1 'A3(1~ Ooort-Rec>elr·Att•atlone PtAHO llMOl'la: P1tlent Top Ouellty Low PTtol. C.blnat .. PIMl·Loc:b-4tc PUllll ILllTlll UCI greduete. chffdren & llYll·UI Fr• let. Uc · 931·2346 35 yr• •KP Mry &42-0597 Quality WOt1c, free eet. ldUlt•. aood rat•. Colt• Cereful...Courl~ 1 ="",.----· ---- --------.s425513 "8-7401 Mela. c.it Ooldle now. ey tw.lor P*le. ~ TU. Pk.le Smell Remodel Ind • 722--11 deys/9Vee. him ... '11..,.P'l'PIP!tPllm'!~ Addition• Wiiis. Doon. AESIO/COMM L/INO 29 Putin/Occuieu EXPERT CERAMIC T1lng 142-1110,IUU,ID ~7~'?°~~2~· Ladlcal La:.:,, Rev UOMI GnbO Brite ~=i>:::'=1as ~===========t=========tr;3;;i;"'Ts~kt;;". look.._llk• for klda 8-~ L . a. Oays/Plrtlea .. 643-1810 TIM ltnlct 8 House of imports ..... MERCEDES-BENZ SAl\ITA A!llA FWV • 8UElllA PARIC d~~i MERCEDES ;• "l 637 ·2333 :::_ ~·&!°~2~ l~uda lmiM JXYM tREi 8tRVICE orry _ Tr1f'nmlng. Aamov91. Ywd I< C TREE SERVICE /Aldtm for llw delnupa, heul. 54l-052e T .Trim. ..___ • ., "'"·-• In C1119 I ltte hetcpg for op, . .._. .. ,,.,.. . wvw. the elderly (714)833-2009 ...... Cku• .. Serv. Uc/Ina. fr• llt. tet--8283 or ~ f aiatiat LET THE SUNSHINE 1H ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE FlNE llfNtiNd BY A ~ cmm.c::::v od. CIMIHlpa. Mllnt. erd Sinor. 19 yra of Nippy · Sprlnlcllra. .. c. 850-4141 custom... Uc. 280&U. ceo.~iiim;;..,..;;.;;rclal~l1'Riii11iktdiii111ii11tl9I~ DUSTY'S~ 'Thentl·Youl "3-4114 1'410ty$30 • 24toryl40 llln. S..V. Wkly/month/ A.A.A. PAINTING Int/Ext Calif. Wlndow9 "4-5124 1 time. F,.. .... 241-1640 LOWEST~ price. ,..... RSI 10 Step SeMce. 8e2-3236 MeHtR PAf:SCROOL TIEii EXTERIOR EXPERTS CMatllf'I Mlnletty. 9 E.C.E. ToWect/removed. CtMn-Dl1flcult repalrl R IP9dlttY unite. Co1ta MeH. up, MW i.wn.. 751-3478 Uc#28e597 ~1-92t& &42-9181 111111 E1\C :1·11111 ............ .. ............ 900 IOOS OVER 80 NEW SAABS AT SPECIAL PRICES _ . . COME SEE WHY WE'RE ••• # 1 IODTURID IDDD TURBO ' Ill~ 1:, :1-111 Al ~~ .. I<• w"1on IO II• I• A '°" !wt • ,,_ - IMPORTS 848 Dove Street. Newport Beach , Calif. 714-752 -0900 ' ll:'a-. !! /9m /1•111•11 .... .. l•ilel • 1!151 5 _ Wf ! [; I !! ------· -.... -w;:#"'°"'*19twa, "' I unm•ma .... ln1F1111ocw.--40'*· - - -_... -· -~~~&:!!_!.•• .. a.,__.. __ ._... ,111 .... II •••••~II ftl 1111 wan•KUt..., ... ~~'!!?.....-........... _ .. -~ ........................... PM-*' .. Clllf ...,.on.,. H. ~& ..... -... dlllon. uoo CAIH ... -·,,..... ................ -... ••!"lt1rtt..1: LOiT'iMlr='*''~ =~= ·.~..!.......-ttwf,LllM49440tt b111F11ClotC011'9.. llM11t == .... .....,_ ..... ..... ~i~iiNii;: ,_..-. 11 .~~ iil&ifiOICAIHiii ,..&Hc»I•• t.-.c.1 11 ' ,,...., _.00 iAfiJ llD lliiii iii: ...... .--.. ---rr '°' '~...,.. _., Mt-t2'18-0t1Mtt r .... w4 w ttu to.fa ' • ....,, -t -.., Ill&~• 9' ?':=::'a\i'::': W /Nii •uu '*"•'11111 .-......... ....,,,. •· • • ... MO""°' ... u1111 ',... .... •111. ,_ .._. .. ,~ -9iiiiiii 7/IS. ..... .., ColdMI ..... ~ ..::.••• t~. teniM ..... helldtlng OMHOl!COUNTYAMA ....... KITCH8f .... w4Cllllln «!I ?14.:r.:--. ... 1111-••!r.~ = "= ":.: •. =·j.:'" and°""°~::-~ Ho ~ neMed. Lii .l .. 111 ~~:.n.oe: .., .... .,, Nlw,o•t lllCH '-=l!-~-~--~OOft'l!! .. !I Good-------mlrieda.... ~l.M4-I070 W.'llnllftyculnOMof 2 1ilOf1JiJL CHINA -. .... ,...12= COUN'Tftf CLue ""--------T, ---. the epectatt ... llet..t CAIMHITI ilfoonct-'m... ~...._ .. ,.._ ""'°"· ...,.._ . ~ •'*''d. M.80RTHOTiL .•.-. llJlll Ill blllow. You'• ww one Y0411 Cltlolo9. -; aeoo -. ~ IUfl'90MO Cawle= .._...,,..,. IJJ9'su11*1m1/fm/.ltit W"'9 to: OolC. '90 loll 1 ltioM ~ tor IOOd ter· Uo)od ,_ oonrot ,,_.. _..,., Wfl monttl In• llJGhl MO .. , ~ Cii&' iAJ ...... otd ~ ... &k mr w MM1.....,. 9d\, t2M1 ---vitre& bu191~tooPert .__... ~ .--. .._. looll Al""I ,__.... untt. S ~·..-. ~ M ' ~.......,.. _,_, _ ... ,. ·--•wwn .._.. lndude '60.000 •MOYtMO. IW iOfi ll'!llfY ped llllO. ' door ..,.II Good...-, t I ... "*-~...._ ~:::':..~ •om• oarp•ntry ••· group ... "*""'°",. comfortebl•, d•••r• ~ °""" 111 9' IGW ..... fiiliii WTOWlft AIM,,... f .... ._ lllabwtlla Mii ~~.«;;.::" "3 pftlf' • ~tr~::-.:. tlr91Mnt pten. fP9C41 tcnee, nobby fe1H1c 1226 tel, UGO. t?J.27• 11 ....-. ~ .... t , .. Ill I ....... .._ ... ,,,_, m. 80ftWWW 1 UllO 1nperaon ~.7M021. ~trl!Y9.ot•tct oeo. teino Md. bo• MOVIMQ . ""*",...., .._.""' ...... ""'"'"' , 11i1ow °'c.111••..._M..., lntOetl ~ t1I _.,.., 1:30em-1 noon = etc. AVllltebll tipttnta, JCtra tln'n, IWn-tofa iovwt & Oll'd IM.W .114-7* TICKITI Ctub ..._, ....... 111 IHI Hf. ~ Mortng, For .. llw firm. Vatted M· Th, ~ "9eon Mfm fll i. "* moM matt., fftiml, hl9d-tbl/dwe. Wood/ltf tHI• •UA:iOA MY CUii• W /PU k I n I • IO b Mypt'Ofpn'loreoftwwi, ~.Qoodldareq. 1107Jambof•N.8 . 30 Hf'tlWk In ~Co.* elMl!Nnt =: = ~ \~ b•d. dHlill, drHr Woutda.topwGtwa 71'""6t.771Dl'll'MDl4. ••flt~--t~1, Ger.. Jo at t44-1612. ROTHSCHILD'i Mutt lwl'4 exp. ~ :~:=P::**~ Otder .... ool« 11'' TV W/rtMor. C'ellrff ,.. ,,.,,..,.... ~ ... •u '''" "'7."1lllllllRI li!IS AE8TAUtWfT tnCI -e ~&ob ;a;o.;e M0080.13Mft1 Vlctor\M IMlfJlte. oak Otbutlfw.17'-1-..S tcublcflll1"-r.t129. ~.-0. Iii It ml1/UID121•11 .... entry iw.t poeltk>n a.nn.tt(7t'll 71 ~ood~~, =-...:ie:=-~ f!Mtp ~ iiOO. IEI ClllM0-1'04 .,.._w ... Ail ~:.:~'m~·= ~~= UllllAP1tnrm1 C09t•Mw~1021· 4 Pteoe~.=' •. enttque ..-......, c.Nno ... aeo ....... iWii COli5UOT •• n• Womenorrmm ..., ~ • . . N!_•Od ,ull-Tlm•. Hurt~oln~~~~, = ,,.,,: Mil :=: All prlc•d to ..... "'*~T frtoer•tOf wllo.maiti': biLT'A -· ....... dll forM-lnc.n1of:=, dtctlllftonel'llllpM.Stett· 8Al.£8..8AJ(ERYICAFE onermanOerdtnl,CdM. \iti°" 152-4264 11M27' ~ t31' '31, Notte.__,,_,.,, .... ,..,_,, Idle, "::.':'::~ • :~,1~:12~.st:~::; W~~or Oof::.::.:::'1 ~u:'t:lft.J:11 e• Ivory mod couch MOvtHOSALE IS._.,.,. ...t 199 dl)W al.::\.: :.~~,...,.. Cebot "d· at• 2ot. _,._ SentaAne557..a&90 w/metch love 1ut, Alm09t new~ .,,_._1117 ~ =.=. '•--------Pulm--:lw Laguna Ht1e. DMdtlne ~tnc.fil ........ ARMYRESEAVE. ftlnut9'1Mcoftbte,end dining rm Mt IMO. ~Mlcroown.1t9oe.-· -'1 Ill MwfeLo..I 1111 .wiy 28th et &pm. EOE IL SONWA BAKE.AV ExpMt!IOI In al .,... Of BE AU YOU CAN 8E. tbte w/metch lemo com-Wlele« lt_.,., lllld'e pedty S1IO wt"'9 Iron iP~ABLI 111 WC iiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiii!ii•ioiiiiuiii!iiio._..,;,;.-1 SECTY/RECEPTIONIST CAFE. Atrium Ct bulldlnt malnt, good la .t--t Wu... Pl•I~ Mt HOO new bdrm MC, wood dlell & awd9n turfttture, 8pc9 EJeettlc, ~i'9Clwood J'~ •} Liil lmlll Local CPA Fm need9 a IMCM271. Debby/Marcia comm .... abtllty to ·~-· 11•1 ~-7~.'~~3T5::Lu°' Ctadte. ~ b9nc:ftet & 175. 7204t12 .. MW, t1 toO ~ .. , -ir. Tired of "-E.. Become e MATVA! per.on wttn • --·--wort! w/OUI profetalonal • Ml tree. 281 ~ ~ ~ Me-1IOO Oillk, ~ (IOllllr, 1101a. Loan .... R.E.. Uc req'd. p<of ettltvde tor front Of· --tMm. AP9io 9COIP'9d ep;;mnureeiOtior BDAM SET·fTALIAN MOVlNG 8ALlJ ~ from Atk. & Tenn. Meny Tourmellne Embe M4f* .. Glib , .. JCT_. l8M S..-41P tor you In the fie•. Outlet Include la ecceptlnQ tlPCllcatlone M~F. •~30-4pm. F1agehlp ~. pflyeicel ttler9PY Contemporary, burgandy, Met, trpl drs, 2 ... _.,,,. & cotcws. S150-Coet. u--. ••MW. "'*'· lentt. , .. ~ ft9ld + Trllrq. c.. tor phonee, g'9etlng clenta for ho1tH1 .. /ho1t1. HeatUI Cere Cent•, 4M exper, IM In/out. l.oGll Q.pletform, new, ooet untta, twn ~ cNlf'I & am. 120-3t12 sa. a. Ito oo111r 11500. enepptn0-«>l7Ctludt typlng&c:omputerlnput: =~aw:_:~• ~Rd.NB. refl.761°7832 12000. tlk• U75, mlecltemLMl-74" c.117204912 .... , '+ ... c.it Lone e&o-1914. Mnw. ~ In ~ llTB 1111'1 ...e40-4590• 6-83~7001• MOVING! ~ ~= WA8HEIU1llO. Dryer 171. • La"" ••• HUI-·-hc'y/Aeceotlonlet: Top 111 S6Mpy Hollow Ln. Avehbte In lrvtne .... •11ck ... ln BEAUTIFUL SOLID oell 8oltd wtllnUt oct9QOnel pp 71• 114 H40 New Cennon LAN S75. ~..,,.., _, .. _, 1klll1, ref1, for buey Laaunee..ch.Nophone S300toteoo.Nocoffect· L~at1 All bedroom 1U1t1 king a GflllM tbl •".,,, c:fwl New_,._doofopenar. Meg7'D4137I llronc oMoe po91tton, Mwt Lagune Htb Lew offtce cellt ptew. lnO 344 hou'1 day Ptrkey, bought S2llOO, St,000 reduced to S200, CHURCH PEW . 5'6-3IM b• •nthu11 .. uc and (714)830olee0 · ..:= :t is•• McWs,.ythNFrld~an.,: IN EGuStovei12i. •U1175o4>o75W137 lg ofc deek & .......,c:tw J!!'d~.·~lona VALE FORKLIFT a NGt ... ~~PEI._ chMrfut & .one ..n ... tt9' ... noon.'Saturday end Sun Old Hemmond Cord f100, mlec~S42. ,,._ .....,..., .,.., offer Lib -.--.-.,_... .,.. .. w/S*)P ... mutt have l&lilliiiml.. llOHmll' d•Y ·morning caii Organw1ou1c1e,1otaof lllTUTllf-New twtn ~ newr 146-1632 "*'· 4K lbe ClllP· out Hll 8trete ..._ == r.:Y = Till•llU , 842-4333. a9k f~ Kine. lheet muak: U 5. l4M2-4I ~:: :s:: .=.w::e UMd. End tebtli.. Mlac Cult king comfort•, duet :: = fCt QUtC* .,_ Oullllty, ~. · aooordtng to exp & ablfl. 3 YMrt dlttcel bp req d. ~ O.Mt Beaut Amerlcen oeit an-etc. Mu.I Mil by July furniture. Beat otter! rutne, tfiemt. entry prtnt. -.AY• Di I I ti. Diane 6-831 51eo4 Work tchedule Sam to Growing Newport 8Mch I ...._,, tlqu.. with: Hoo•l•r 27ttl no peteonal checlca 751-7132 RoM/lvotY Pd S700. Sec fdl le TM MU Aegl .. etecl '2JO l8d\. e ...-.561-MSe • • 2pm. S1'1&-a11201mo. Ad Ao«tcY neect• lherl>. r..w S745 Sway b•d w111 'ta1ce ca111 ltertl · S175080720-11o4 ..-.o1c1. 1ae-1sn =.,...,.....,,...,... ______ . ---Appty In ,,.,.on, Fount.In d•talT minded bllllng 330 ·Bey St. w/cu1tom mattr .. tH July 22 e75c2310 ng OAK CHURCH PEW COURIER PIT GO ctrMng VialM;iy 8ct1oo4 Olltr1ct, dlttt. Mutt be good With co.ta M9N. CA 1211211 asoo. s.wtng meeh $275. ' · Good cond, I ft long ESTATE SALE 7 Month old Aullt. Shep, ~ NCOtd. Know O.C . .,..._ 17210 Oek St, Fount&AI\ flou,_, ~ 55wpn, UM PART TIME/P.,,,,.,,...t ' Bed trey S75. Card ftle Cr .... Coltec:tlon • 6pc BEST OFFER Bedl, oouchel, l\er.._ no~.alllhotl,OOocf Poodle pupa. Teecups. mature, re1pon1lbl•. Velley. Clotlng dete tb,k•y by touch . day w••k, a.m.4pm 150. And other email Se<:Uonal. Peneaonlc 14&-M32 furnlture,etc.~11111 w/cNtdten, "-to good Toy, Min. 1310 up. ••getlc. 040-0140 7125180. EOE Prevlou• 1gency ••· dally, no n11•1Wkndl. Item.. Call 842--8487 ex ltereo. Video Carner•. Oueel\ eta water bed ~ Of d,780-5ae9. hOme.131~ aft Clpn 546-..., mt1&.•-m T blUl/f.... pertence deelrabte. Ex· Small Co , order H• .~ndu "Garage 1146-4762 luxe model, h••t•r. Expo vwww. ladlel 1 ~ Semoyecl, "'9dt Atiod .. lan AldOeb•ck S.-_, 11 1 .a. cellent beneftta. cs.pt/wrapping. CM S5hr. Salee end come by Sat. Cuatom bull1 wtilte on hdbrd & tr.me, extt cond. way 11t Ucket from John • happy hOme wmVciffll.. ~ AJ<C. 4 ...._ oeo~ = ';:": S~ SbfO RESUME TO: Cell em 846-l640 BEAUTIFUL CHINESE white broclldt 2 pleoe S300. 720-0896 Weyrte 1111. S1llO obo. dren end• yerd. F'99 to l1S0UP. Cell ~11 or prectlceW'MQH8. AlllJllM.. Mrl.Bredte Perttlmt GBORONNOESZEVIGASEO HCdtloS300nal '7~N.,9ood REALISTIC Stereo Cal(714)1M-.3nl OOocfl'tome.640-7871 _llTM)300iiiiiiiiii::iiiiiiiiiiiiiit Pr.-ROA. Potltlon 11 kw FIT, entry ...... Ac:counl0 f1tlf ... .._.._, ORA N NLY con ~ w/ep9Uera, 40 ........ ··--·-·Ill• FREE Gokten ,.,.,., .--_-..... 3-4~ ctys/M. f"-c.it Ing a.it, fOf biting, flt-P.O. BOX 8710 J _. $12001 71~ fH mAlJ..&Pf equartum round .:;;;· _, Malt, Chooolate brOwn: _,__.."' Or. Ford'1 ofc, 842-7431 Ing, & mtec. duta Newpon Bwtl, CA l2&68 NO SELUNGI 2 Clertca ANE ANTIOUESll Signed Uke new loveMet sec> 640-4792 . ...,.. well beMYed. 1175-0832 ::..°:'o~ .. 1d~••MllCll~ -1&.PIDlllll ll Send '"ume to Mr. AIDE TO MANAGER In needtd to vertfy , .... Hl1c:tic:odt breekfU1 Mt Bluevetcnr$50.Cofft~ SEALYPOSTVREPEOtC •Alltmm• ..-.11og1ontyt . _ ' _, --•11111_ filent• el Robert Bein, e111W81l11g Mrvk:1e PIT, phone order1. Hourly. S550 e drawer cherry ·m b1e twelnut' •~" & TW Haw4Ucketeonq.20. --apr,... ..... ~ Of'Mt PIT job kw exp. Wllllam Fro1t & Al· flu hrl: 1401 AvocadO Houri 5:30pm-1:00pm. trench country lingerie 'ell':at1d w Scat1dan~an SP~~:~~~ Will trede kw Writ n6aht ,.......!:-.& Ill I AKC, ctuamplon HM, Dent.el~ thet IOdet ... 1401 Quell St., AY9. Ste 204 Npt 8ctl Sat 9·0Qemc1:00pm. F« c:Met $850. llght oak walnut' $50 842.oeoe S3S 546-1032 other t"-1 Aug 18 tfwu "";;:.• «&nge. :•003: a, tor, her'-"1 n-. & ...,_. ~~.~~~~~ ·-~ ~~~~~~~r~~~i·~~~~~~~i·~~~~~~~~d~.~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~·i'~"~·;1=~~~S1illO~~~iG~1i4i4i•1~~ -•-• 5:30ptn 842-51178. tab6e S 1450 Set/II trencfl lllftTIL W• OlllUTI H• D For new rmpldty growing ti•-•lllUI eountry Chalra w/~ -.a.D Muat he"9 own trucic l'lalr talon. FUii time r• -• -----rUlh ... 11 St59M. Pine ~ 11 IWt e mo exp 796-0828 eponslbte cerw ortented Ctlelteliglng poett~ & elm country hutctl In al ~ Of hotpttal Sil penon, ltyti8t ctl&lr avail, In "' expending r C 1830 S 11150 Small ~ blllrlg Fiii ~ h8Y9 Ulery, exp, ltc. ~ Gary tlal ehemlcal dependency cuslonal tablel lampe good ·~ t~ 494-3031 progrem for women Amer country dbl bid Mre. Harper 253-7324 . Claalfled Adwr1tllng AUTO DETAILING ~In rotation lhtn. ex· 1395. Amet golden oek ~ IALll Relponllb6e mature young oeltent beMl!tl. FOf more S«pentlne drtmer $850. Plll&m ... adult '"' Moblll Auto 0.. Info NEW DIRECTIONS Much mOf•lll By appt. NMdl lnluranoe bllllng The Orenge Coee1 Delly telling 164-1026 714•54a-55411 Prlnclpa11 only 498-1187 c I erk, exp er I enc 1 Piiot CU"entty l'tu Qpenc SERVICE MAN • L. 0. F San Clem41nte. pretwr.ct, beck offtee Inga '°' • full and pat1· OAFITllll lil.P tire balancing, 5'A deys: .,,.....---,.-,---=---~-- P«IOf' wlll train °' exp. tl!M tel•phone NJ... Newport MIH Unified S350/Wk Union 78 ~~:~K~G~NO = Beneftt~ & oompetlt1"9 peraon In our ClaMH\ed Sdlool ~rJc1 Food S.0 Newport~ 944.7;51 anllmm und! a~ard­wege &50-1147 Advertlllng depwtment. vtce Dept II now aQ099t· .. ,~ ' Mull~ 45 wpm, haY9 Ing ipplleatlonl fOf PIT SERVICE STAT ATTNONT walnut finish. Louie 15, Cltrical/Otflct u&A prior t~ aa6M .. , wonceri. ~t• 11 5.854 Exp w/ref D•y lhlft. $5/hr incld1 50+ rotll $5000 _ ,,,,_ pertence, and • ple&Mnt. per hour. minimum 3 + time & 1 half. Union 711 873°2803 illlllt• c:tleerfulte61phone voa. hour• I* dey Apply at Newport B..eh&44c7151 HOME FULL ANTIQUES & Entry leYlll opening f« r• Excellent Hlad plu1 2985 Beer St. Bldg. A. a.T-11111 Ollll I MISC FURNITURE pott dlttt. FIT poetton, c:omml~ en good eo.t1 M..a. 556-3~73 Grend Opening The 50•1 Cell Judy fOf appt must know 10-lley, wll1 beM!tta. CU llml & 80'1 Lounae •t the I ~ 1-3906 bet 9'c4pm treln thoM lnt••ted Call Kathleen Ot90n for In-~~:.:,..-may~ 2688 Newport tervtew 1ppolntment, Roaring 20 • Start •'1111 Blvd. CM. 714-842-7702 842-4321 •xt 302 OpenlngsNowAvdet>le le/Hr AJ>C)ly at 1s7o Hou .. luff Of Anttquell Earn extra cut\ fOf ~ Newport Bvtd after 8pm Reuon•blet 361°1528 lllUCFPll Ml• llUT 11....-y THE HUNTINGTON or call '°' -c>P' 84Sc54"' r /CAR Pr~o.--1-1 ~t eo . l&ILYPIUT BEACH/ FOUNTAIN T9'emartc.i.1ng Auliucn IOU 76 (WASN _.-LET 11£ PROS WASH YOUR CAR =·kw~~ Colt~~~s~2e2e :i~v1 •~::=:-~0 lllRl'91S 1manuAMU C01'n9Utertt9d tcCOUntc • coflec11ng, no IOllcltl~ NOWAVAILABLE ILH 111-1111 A FULL SERVICE AUTO WASH & DETAIL CENTER ino. property mat1&09-Must haw de9end• Enernatlc P*>Ple needed -- - - - - - - - - - - - --, ment bedlground prefd ,. Ill c•r truck or 1t1t1on ~ M k I GAS itove-Mlcro com-' HA • NEARBY S•l•ry commen1urate •Earn S35K. to $50K w•Qon and ln1Uranoe ~udy r': ~he 6br~1 blnatlon Calorlc, bfown, II ND WASH I • ALL SOFT CLOTH • ~!:1HM~T~RK~ .... ·es with expertenoe Send •Ouellfted LMdl Call 842-1 444, uk I« Coaal PublllN Co 30 In, e11cellent cond ~ 188 E. 17th, It• 1-A. 1Uppc>f1 CAR WASH '*' Of pvt Pllatant phone voice a K~NMORE WASHER Available for I -reeurnt to TSL MGMT •E•c1llent edvertlalng JoAnneCran.y. NoSelllngln~ 1325 Eves9Mc7507. saoo' •WeAccepl Cotta Mee&. CA. 121127 •PrOY"en Mtrket Cadllleca. Hand wunad mu1t, no Hperllnoe r• Elect r te dryer. wht. CASHIER ExperlenOldl o...htlta +Im! ExperlenOe p<efd. lrvtne quired. ldMI IOf hC>fMc $200/pr or best offer. Special Cars I I Hr1 7:30-3:30. Maj« bro-Only tl'toM w/quallfled ar ... 281-0748 makera, high 1choot 675-3544 or 962,7069 ~ kerege firm neer o.c. NIM IU<4CllN apply. CHAUFFEURS , Full"""' Mnlor1, oolllgl 1tudenta Seara Coldapot retnoer· --------------I Monday 1s men's day. Wednesday·~ l~~1es' day ' Airport. Typing 50wpm Brad4IT-44~ , .......... ~1mu1t1 & moonllghter11 ~our1: ltor $125 Mu1t Hll. REGULAR WASH .\. Call 05M049 r;;w~~rtU~al Mondey,f'rldey ~.30pm Good eond 631·5680 '2059 HARBOR BLVD.\' FULL TIME TYPIST llTIUTI &nWl .,_ .. _ 2•1-01~~ to ll·OOpm, Seturday I s 1 0 0 I llOwpm. Some legel NcJ(, ... ..,.....,_, v .. v 9·00am to 1.00pm Start W&llfl tlOt OFF COSTA MESA gr:nd lrvtne law office s .. 1c. metur• ...... CLERICAUDELIVERY It 14.00/hour plul Dryer $501 Excellent. beet I I (Acron from 55;. •• •2 · peraon. Full/Part Time Mature/energetic penon bonuMI. Private deek & otter 54>39511 I I T>--., 1 -Appl 842 1197 '°' buay med lab In NB phone, CHuet attire ''""' ,.01> "" -.. -• FIT poe. Med knowted99 Home woncer1 weloome WASHER & DRYER S400 \ WITH THIS AO J (714) 645 1039 e~ -..-r-SALES-RETAIL helpfull M,F 840-0140 FOf lnt.,._.lew call M1ty Good condition•. ----------~-getlc pereon, good ···-·· ..... l-~·"~-~5~:30~~M~on~·~Fr~l :Of~iiiiii-M~ovl~ng~7~/~29~/~8&~ ... ~~~~~~~!!E!!:::~~!~~~~~~~~~~====~·!5~~!~~~ wtttl phonM tight bl(kpg -_. u ..... 1n C()m9anlon ald41, (714) 960-0496 dutlel, 10 . Key, eom. Exciting car.., oppt'y. wltl elderly women In NB 9-3 Set et 842-51178 typing well eetab ~ treln P9"IO"•bl1. exp Room, boald + ealary Mii oOocs hrl & beneftt1 MM penon CM Lovely 1urroundlng1 OAviS BROWN. 84&-1884 e59,556I 54&--3985 Mu.t hlY9 cat & maturity 411 E 17th St C.M UL.IS TUml p /T I Send retl, phone, Nl1ty UUL IHlnilY Houaeplent. exp prefd req to· 214 Drown St . FOf H.B. Bue l CMI Ut Rex h,.. 84S-02 to OJAI. CA 93023 Law Arm. Min of 5 JT1 TllD9m ULll OlllTD ULll current legel exp. WP we h8Y9 lmmed openings Automatlve exp. p<et'd exp, deelted, non emkr '°' enthultutlc P*>Ple to FIT Appty In peraon ore. mt NI. & beneftt• wonc afternoon•°' 9¥91. 1990 So. Hwbor, C.M. Send relllme to PO Bo• No exper nee Start Mc y ••-_._I 7780, N9t Bctl, CA 92e&O $5/hr DOE Apply 2850 U -w-"• Of call '40-1880 M.u verd9 Or. IJ, CM. CMttlan Sdlool, 18838 LEGAL SECRETARY 957·2525 M°F, 10-!PM Bnchuret, FV 1112-3312 Min 5 ~ •xp. In Perlonal Ut/ha lnJury1P111ntlff Addlt'I Q1 tauuh llllM• req'd: Ofo Mgmt, 1920 1hrthnd, min bkkpg. _..'I •• _. .. L.agun• 8ctl 497°1789 --•-• Aooeptlng app'1, no ••P UllPT/111,.,,. 1e yr Marte Callender'• IEWPllT llAll 4200 Seo« Dr. NB lnv.tment BMttlnO ftrm, llOl'l-llSTlll' lo¥9ty otftce'1, congenlll Dey Of Night lhlftl, F/PT. people, venety,typlng 45 Apply In peraon 213 1 wpm. fttlng, phonM etc W•tollft N B Cell CM1tlne. 15~2000 • · · utlPIWT,P/T Ai>e>fY~lt~ So F« young ArcMr I lltm eoe.t Hlw9y, NB ~ Exp req Type 55wpm, tween 2-4 ... Mgr tront ofl'loe llPC>M'lnCI. 1-------- farnlRal w/ 10-key & CJOmc If you'r• not marottlng to the put•. Hlghfy organtnd dlllllfled tUM, you may b4I ••If· It 1rt •r. M • F, ~ l)r1Clet"-t are out of &U-9080 8uun lt9') , ....................... , : Cf\Rf.ER OPPORTl "ilT' : • • : MANAGER : • • : Appli<'Ation• &rt' now hrin~ nr 0 : e c·rpttd for man•~t'mtnt po111tion11 • : lnttividuul~ mu~t br 11 t-1f,: • motivntt'tt. or~amizl"d. n .. ~lhle 11nd : : jlOlll orit'ntrd Applir1&nh muAt f'njov e • worktnll "-ith \outh~ • • • e Rrhahlt vthitlt', valtd litt>nr.I" • • and inauranrr • rnuat : • • \l '" oHtr tvtlltnl romp11n\ brn : : p(it,. 1ndud1n1t. Paid varatiom. and • • holid•\•, rnt"dtul trnd dtntal in· : : •uranrr. honu11 proitram .... ,.,, and e • m1ltajlt 11llow1&nrf'. • • • e \pply In ptraon Tut•. 1hru • : Thurt. 2:0(H>:00 p.m. : : IUllE CHIT PllUIMlll 00. : : 330 W. Bay St. : : Costa Mesa, CA 92626 : • EOE e • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••• C)Kl!f •90--Beny Boop 1 9 doll of comic strip tame 10 make for a g1f1 Authenttc 1n all detatls Tissue pat tem to sew doll and her clothes incl Send S3.25 plu6 7Sc postage handling lor each panem > 5'nd to ,_, .. ...,,.....,Crlf\. ._...... -~1 ("-IMllllet,.. a-1•~M. llY 111",,. ........ n, Silt """"' ....... LAURA WHHLEI C A A F T I :..____..;;;;.._=1 _«_==1 _____ ~ MER KUR ~' ~ : (LINCOLN 'j t MERCURY) 1986 LINCOLN MARK VII LSC ONLY $21,995°0 or lea~ for $394.20 plus tax. 48 mo closed end Total dnve away price $1767.86. Includes $500 cap reducuon 1986 MERKUR XR4Ti ONI Y $15,995°0 or lcasc for $262.22 plus tax. 48 mo. closed end. Total drive awa> pncc 11400.95. lncludc~ $500 cap reduction. 1986 LINCOLN TOWN CAR ~- ONL't $2 0,895° or lease for $377.91 plus tax. 48 mo closed end Total dnve away pncc 11733.~8. Includes S500 ca p reduction '84 Thunderbird E'lan '82 Toyota Celica GT '84 Datsun Pulsar V0 8. full\ loaded it I '147Q '84 Ford Tempo ~uto loadl'd #1 441 16 MERCURY LINCOLN .. '9895 Full> factory cqu1pJ>'d #010438 '6395 '85 Merkur XR4Ti •4495 Fully loaded. #621821 BEACH UN 18800 BEACH BL VD. ( .,,.,., k "' -,,.,,,., HUNTINGTON BEACH '12,895 M ,,..In wtitect to Pf'°' salt !'hi\ taa k , & OtK ltt l&J 1 2716 •• Perfect transportation •01317, •5995 '82 Cadillac Biarittz '12,195 LIFETIME SE.IMC[ GUARANTll -~ eo.t DAILY P1LOT I Friday, July 2&, 1988 ,._a..... :illl~~~~~I l!!!!.!ll!~~t~I·~ ._' If UI UbblMN ill. --.----~--.ft.~u, ......... littNn, ~ .._, Ult# _WP_,.1'7'M..,..., def ......... ... ... ~ ... -·~~ .................. ~ ...... -... .... ,.... T,~~ fllllla !!! ~llwl. A .. 4,-.1192 WAASITtiiV..:-oond,IMOO, -,,_, S IPd....., IMI M1ftV .N .. !!I UDO 14 Wii'Wlii liiO ..,... .,_, Mk for MU "l" --11' M>GlMl NYIR ~ w.ti 1614410 {cfAI. 1*• ~ Inch. 141 4080. 101111 'llOMC 64....., 8ahoOI I S4t-Wt,213 54a-H22 SELL M0-42N. ·u Torou ~. 'Imm ~ ~s:;:=.= ~~~:3 :£,.~~=~ I wn/tfn -. a/o, p/a. ~--------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~.~ ~~==rr~~~ l!!!!:~~~l!!IM! C...... llM C... 11au lllt C.ta... 1114 .. .,.. INd IHI .. r:;: ~ = 0:~· 1434321 • "ECON>8· "°"' 1uo·. k1no:; bed. d91k. !Mc wooc1d9lk30d8. otirome 1115 Dorothy Ln. s.1 onty ~e~r'='• ~ 1 1•1• eiw. CHIVROLET ..... ,,0 PIOk bow tv ...... .,..., thrv '°'' M-.o tqUlp, fumltur9' mud!, much tamp, eleO lt0\19 •100· 2 9am. BooecCMM, t>ootce. •PHker1, saoo 1obo ..... ,lid IMil up, lo ml, 1 .,., ,... MNIN!ige & phono ,.. toye end leM taoc ...... mof91 Sat/Sun M . 1845 1t•eo epeeltere. dining blk• beer 119n• & rnuch 5~ 1.,,...,.... Tiii w iwe 1215 mo. OOfda. (In ~) Fil & a.t. 89m An11N1m A~. IC. rm Ible l ct\tltt, 4 W mcwefl ~20-D 71CM>ns-H 217"rapa A.venue 2M3 8tnU AN Avie. C.M. MAPLE Mt 64" etooi.. met• tble, rn,·1 Amerlcen Oell entlquM T de9 11 n. lllm WllLB DODGE '17 " Ton r===:~~~ ~7-12 800K·A-HOLIC8 100'• round ~ tee!, 8 ~~-:~,;·.~~:~ e-ed under ent= J!UJ'!!! 28 H.P. JotwleOft. eleO. bed,=:E:kw =:. -·141112 PORSCtfl AUDI CHfVIU)LU H'911 .. t Q.11111 S.Jee6 S.nln .,..,_ l IWdbedl boc*I. chair• '100 Sturdey $-450 Green CSeek Qtlr, eided tu;e, king .. """ii;liiiiill 1111 =· ~ ~ =· low •• new. t3o400 090 otlold to ... , 211 MeM wottc bendl S20 Auto ~ha IOY9 ... 1 1250 c:o....w/rnenymetchdee 2CX8a.itliii~ • __., · 646-7880-CoeeaMw ANTIQUES. m•ternlty ~. C.M. (oomer Of Sent. bllle C8tTW Ml .. Much Tum tbl Sat/Sun ..... pllc)Mer::.trt ltend. E•~lent cond. 1425 Mey c.ny, 81~12 • Blk/181'1 Int ~~1t~m; ANA~~s.s..sui, 10..1 ~~ l:Jur~731t~10 3379 Marigold Cir•: =d.ooun~~: MCti. Buy 2 end-'* lllftllii"91,...t.t..... ~4'°"g.~49' ':.:.!:e.ceea.""1: lrlftlW•T., Aoeole BROWN & .,.... ~ • · · 557-3838 lw tteme.. ecube geer, Udo...._ 87M10I. .! -t .. .iuto .;.,., AJC' mei .,_,,., «Nfl(, 1IK ml. rlflT MOVING. Furnllur•. pllow .~ 2~· ~ MOVINQ. Fumltuf"e, peUo I t Inc~ 1141 cnMdrw' toye l dOthee, Row boM w/ltoe moor-INR.A Gt A8 SS wNIJWlde..,.... pi,r door Wmty 118,000. 472.f147 m E. COMl Hw11 oeotMe, l ..... t ftxtur•. oond. --· ..... 91ge..... Mn., ...... dryer. pie-u . A.prlea ltroUer, v«ve1 Ing. Mth Strwt. ~ H.P. EYtn t1H. I'~ locU, pwr .... tm/fm -· IJlll.llW Now~ lffcll .,,.. Sa Y9I tub cnen 125 ... t\11'99 & numetOUI 80-2 ;na, 1 ;;r 16' 17 ..... bdframe w/bltln lt..O WNI N .. pof1. t-400. t1715 9ebot 1175. s.c: ...,., .... tit wN. loeded 673 .,.. ~32~°ti ~ f:,tne a~.,.-=: cwori.. SatJSun M . 1tdnt deek S7. di~ eye. ...., ~oom l tot• 645-2117or111-1170 o.a. Ms.146-372.i Uo. ff00S300. Blcs1~~1..a73 ' ~~~;;·=.;i!i!;!iii= · • · _..,.. 804 ~ Ln S15, hm enttrt ctr $10.pwr mor.. Don't mi. tNt one ,1.,. • • · ,-:: .... llLL r;t"~ 1~ + xtr: Moving Sele: Fri/Sat M . mowr $15 981-9571 Sat Sat orly 1:30. 5 Kemalll ftwer .. ta flll ..... _ _ CEUCA ST '71 TOYOTA, '63 POMCHES518. a21 EwnlnQ Cer'YOf\ Ad 1 · oun wrou~ t H-. grdn dothee & golf M 20112 Moontld9 Cr. (Nftport Ct.et off &r TIU a.pd wnJ1m1 a... rune YeloWlbm. ,..,.., ono- CdM. 8at.l!lun. M !::.t-:-y~~ Antq fainting coucll, ESTATESALEI periorl642..&487 1t'IUUY'11 ;;5ap:;; ~I good oondltlon. lnal.many~a.1110D. Momg a.. Sunday ont-J oomlor1•. lhaml + dUet mor•. 1992 Bat.•rlc, Furn.TV, mlec ll•m• HUGE SA.LEI 3 FAMILIES 0MC 190tl9, rnertn.redto, MAACUS CHANNEL t.2150 obo. 494-5462 OBO. MO 9515 hm-12pm 427~ rvtneeetiii>.25ydl~ MeM Verde, north of RAlncho del Rey Moblla Baby dot"-. toye, Ctlbl 119hllkl.mpttme.... 25FT.l150. DA.TSUNZCl.A881C "72 '71 PORSCHE t11T bllt. f>oti.W. In dey. low & wMa ltripe acryt1c: AdaiM. Partll 18222> Mpnterey 1trollera. Antiquee, TV1. ~ ~ ::f!aoTt"t. 15CM145 240 RED Z. 4~, rabtt Fectory Te MW ehoclca b0t1c:anva125. MOVING SALEI Spec• 135. 8'0-8078 cotteott~. book•, lg _.,.,., · trane. vatYe , muct1 1,...,._ bftt1. Jdnt .• ortg1ne1 PARRO:so~ag~o· 6-43-0379 Houeehold ll•m•. ap-Set-sun 9.5 Ontyl balkete/Pottery. dothee. 24' Chrlectlft. 0'9¥ v..e. .,Fo,.RITSALE•••• 11t11a-... more, u 00/obo. S1UOO. MO 1515 ~ t . ot ch CHAIRS (petlo 4) with pffancee, cemplng IUp-Huge Garage Salel Fri ' kg matt, ~ ' mor~ caddy c:ebln, tune or-f. ... ·--419-3720. 722.e113. PORSCHE '71 114 Taroe S10. ~r::.., &:z. Ptd• l15, let99n door ~· Ptlnnl tinge. tumttuni. Set M . Aacllnef chetr, =~.i:n~:1&~':, ~2·~on.r· ... ~.~· <7141'75-f.435 4-S~lowuc~Ria~ DELOREAN ·11. Perteet w/ap.,.ar•nc_e gro~p1 19 ou ft $50. O'Netll )(am with ueembly 110. w ... u t, weeher-dl')'tl', tablae. eoft. dinette Mt, -• ......, or -• '"· MOORING 40' Off Shore · oond. 5 IOd. *· power, look.I & ~ grt11t. 4lnO __. eun:1SI s115,~ 2432Co11egeo...s151.s191 ~o~T ·11~;~hl~lf,~ ~~r1~~:.u:~~~e11::,: "!,~= s1~~E. :cie:= 24,LYIWI P=H=.~=~ IMM s 11.500. t141&&0-54'3 rn"~o:f~ a em ..._ 115 . ESTATE SALE M ... V•de .,... on etc. 9752 Clearbrook & 125, elec ~ter, etc. New eowt, new paln1. 28' Troi.n CfVtMt Fly-HONDA '11 CMo. 4dr. ,_.......,,...,,.....,,,....'.,.,,, ,.,,....,~--=-'o.':tlo ~~1878 . Garden furniture, tooll, Royal Pelm, betwMn St Jottn Ln 550-2802 Of 180-0784 873-3934 bridge, good oondltk>n 1uper clHn, lo ml.! PORSCHE 78 '28, gr-.t nu. Mahogany dining t•bla Adtml & Baller, look IOI' llt.aOo 976-Ml7 ' lhpekne/00'*. Mutt Mii lhtpe, .. xtrM, 70K ml, Celt .... lll4 w/8 chalre, miec. Sat & 1lgn1. SAT & SUN MOVING SALE. Living .,..Ul.IJ 2~~hl~2~= • • · .quldll3e00.&4M771 S10,500 obo tHe ..-. I Sun S.-5pm, 964 Spring-8AM-4PM. room a Dining r°:", All content• mu.i go by ..... , ., flll HONDA ACCORD •79 end 49$-0742 e::t!!L!1 fltld Ptaoe. OCEAN AND LAKE ~'f 9~T!\~ t Sa~3~~ July 2~· lndudt!fr: ~e~~-~l ='==: Why not tntoY lM ~ HATCHBACK mln1 oond. .. ... U4 "fm Vic. Victoria' Fedele! at ANAL MVG SALE. Found FISHING GEAR South•hor• Dr H B :::;wcnen ~·LutrScu..: refrlg, ltOW, Mu• on. ~~.y1 I air, .-.o. 12.300. Cllll Loml.w .erwt.IUtO.xft 830 Pine P1 Sal/Sun 9--3 M~ Treaeur• & Junk, •90 Coeta MeM St BulCNrd/Hamllton. Ing s~"' iOw ---()( a50-0643 -=:,;.,~ "Mreaeonel*OVE lli" Vua '"' Mitt• 1-!Spm, m-OG70. cond.t4250. 7151-7237 · prlc•• reduced. 295 641-9332 • ,....~ r-.., ""' ... " *-••• •* M... or C«net Santa BIO BLOCK SALEI bHt offer BttwHn 28' Peoemaker 'IO Tw Vol-831-6480 'if CAM 8TEP VAN MASEAATI Bl TURBO ~-k-lt -tbl ......... Ant Av Set/Sun 10-5 Set, 7128 lam-1pm 3318 ON BACK BAY CIRCLE 8·30-t2:30, F-S-S. t01<4 voeMKdn,1210mo Wiii SUPS '"VAILABLE Economic* 9 cyl., rune ·54 & '8& Executtve Carl .._..._, c. · ... -.. ' Maryland, Harbor & SAT28THONLV,9AM E. BalbOt blvd. on the 1Mbedt'hlntfor$400mo .,.___2"'.,._....30, eat 1 1800 obo SAVESIS$1 C¥ eplllre, welghtl & FULL ltze eofld bf ... b.cj Gisler 11ea. 0uMn b.cj, LOTS Of GOODIES Penlneula or c1ll 873-t974 or M3-0007 ~ .':: 2 -..-:_._. gr . 53&-2129 . 8Mct1 lmporte. 7152.oeOG *PEUGEOT• * MAST£AAT1 • * ALFA A0M£0 * * SAAB '* INTTER* we6gh1 bene:MI, IPMd 1150 D9l6I cttalr9115• lo.......t, labla, oe.k hdl>d 875-2310. ..._ ,_ ....__ b9Q. mlec:. '5450. SAT OU pelntlng1 $5-$25 & mite furn 241-9590 S.t O/ntoJ 35 mm camera -~-~-=-=----.,,.-=---=--*42' Piil fm* S.-59m. Mon-ht. '74 DODGE VAN % ton MAZDA '11 AX7 GL. 41K ilMii ONLY. 9em. 2989 MN~o. St~ flxturee, radii, etc i.n .... ottlee equip, elec· PROMONTORY POINT ·ea, tw gaa. 8 kw, nu Int, nu ML:. fr••--t•""-t1eevy duty, nu motor, ml, anrf, tm/fm CMe. orig C.M. Nr Beer & Bek• St IS-$25, c:tothlng, book• SAT JULY 2freAM tronlc1. much more JAMBOREE & PCH eurwy, grt ltYMt>Oald, 11.11111 -.---duel tenki 112150 O'MW. Mutt Seel 15700 3 FAMILY SALEI ~ l()e-$100 815 -6onor1 3102 MACE 10l<42 Stoneyt>roott Of ~ t::f lllp onera 98G-74e7 ~ 14 497-7009 080 Tlm 847-1131 1tyt. lg coffM teble Ad. 541-1892 Ai Dete & Hatbor Set only 8:30-4 Kit hama, 40• Chr1e ·47 Trkab. mint UTI0tY fRXilEA 231 MAZDA GLC '82 SPORTS * 752..0IOC). w/1lete top +epenletl GARAGE SALE. Sat./Sun. Fum. dOthel, KeMn1tor tempi, oolfM table, car SOFA, tablH, l1mp, Recant iurv•y Good Flatbed, equipped to haiJI lttS PKGI lmm8CUtate, ~ 1tyle hutch, M1ple 9.4 Luge ptctur• w/d llke ,_, 6'*1-7138 ... 11. ck>1hel, cNndel* or....,, mirror, cabinet•. lveboard. 213-SN-0313 care. etc. Exit oond. 230SL MBZ 117 2 Tw ownr. 1unrf/fec air/ blceut, 2 gold Y'9twt LR tremH, gl1uware, tOyt Ind Iota mor•. Sit 9'-3pm. 1~ W•t-or 805-293-7743 640-S2M ., _.... epd/eMoy Whtl, ONLY! C RMIE:R SUZUKI cttn l varlou9 lttme. dothlng, mllC. 239 Knox SAT/SUN RUMMAGE 20988 Seacout Cir. cllff.Nr SAVON-ON Newlntenorl e>eintttlree& "3&ol 857~1N 7/2&-7/27, tam-.3pm St on Orange A~. C.M. SALE corner 8Mdl & Atlante 'TWO FAMILY'S '81 S.Wey 22 11 e.xpr ... UTIL Tr.n.r 4x8 Cenv• 1011 top. I 18,800 MBZ 450SE •73 ~ 3238 Wuhlngton Something tor everyone! CrulHr Lo1dedl Exe COYerect Ideal !Of cemp-752-2181/D 842-24i8/E 545--4554 llAIT 11"'91 IAIAll 1798 Crestmont& 18th Sever1I luge ltem1. Antique bed•. aofe. lrldg. cont w/10' ZoOlt & eng Ing or hunting tuy to ' 1<48K, lmm.cualt• oond, ........ 7•2 • .,_. ......., • ... 1371 •••-·• ea1 • Porteble dlhwlhr & NW· clothing, Mt l-2pm, tun +lllp & 1rl. 840-5078 pufl MIO() 845-24()4 57 CHEVY BEL-AIR Spon original ~· call lft " --· .,. .. 7 ..-.. -~ -Saturday 9-5. GE e1ec Ing machine, Rattan twtn 8-12, 1>101 Kapa.I, nMf ' ' · Coupe. V-8, rtetorable, 89m 495-...,2 ... 770-7001 • ~n.t.. ~ R,-,... ~ ,,,,.,' W1teon A~. E1ec dl')'tl', Franlk:an dlehee, apple & cooktop, dahwr. die-bedl w/hMdbo&rdl, lotl M11gnolla & Banning. '81 SKIPJACK 24 w/dll, ··~lff/ no1 running 050. MBZ •64 2IOSE r======== IBM Setec typewrlt.,, othetpetttml1.Etc:Md ~aal.clothel,cookware, olmlac.9701AllleonClr. t •-Ii Lt Volvo Pent• 110, full Id.ten Hll 841-1413or54&-8441 Total r•etoretlon, "trfl •. ·"'~· " Sdlwlnn glri'• blk•. Kldt mlrrOl'W S3 Uphole. tabflc etc. 301 Hanover nr OCC. Sal/Sun 1-5. 964-9939 aa I-• t I• I ~ulpped. Estele Mia. G AR Ree1ot9d loelol It S22K Inv elk ltufl.Lotsmorel ~~d~\;~~: lnlat '144 1112 F ERS.75M173 1~~H*IM=~ J~9UXKE 2+2 euto, e/c, ~$,5~'411-1192' • Mefcedeelenz ltemware, cryetal etc 11-THREE FAMIL y SALEI Aid SXLE sXT t 12. 20091 B1yvtew. Seturdey ... UYUlll 21' bike Wry lo ml, beet Ott.. new clUllc ytlllow pelnt, MBZ •73 S&OSL xlnt oond... Ml11 Ull ICC SWAP IEn 13. Plctur•. bOol<a St. Cornlea& book•. Toola-Alr 20 El .. -'---T rtlaf k 7/28 8em. on Brl•1ol a Ftybrdg. Lotdedl Full COii· call to ... 1t. 645-2575 blk Int, '9000. 75S.-9194. any txtru Zender kit -0 $25 L t tu compreseor, car ramp•. .,...,.,.ry, u oc Birch. Stove, wa1her. ere 280 VolvolP•nte "!. Al ' ' Top ....,cadee ~Paid E~t=·F8J=g: S~~'!'.:'actt.:.'s1;~: ~.tapldery&Jtwelry Blk•. tum. houlehold dryer,dlahwUher,dlnlng w/1<4-0hra.H.H ellp 1vall '11UWlUIJU1• JUsc.Vtkiclet HH I •I wheetl, euto, CALLP£TEAorRAV Adame.Coet1MeM.Ad-Doll• 12-15 New Meu11 eQulp. antique murphy good• Mucti.muchm«• t~~·m1stereo. ex•rclM $38,500 988--0748 KeriCer. lartng. exn cono. 66YssEY'U35o .(714)873-0711 -••1111 miMlon a Partllng FREE 0 P/Quldllll\'er, lh<>rt.I, ~~d~~·!~"':!i • ..,.,. ltacli ,, Sb e9. ICC. -· . ...._.. BAY BOAT 18'. Cl-* 2 17~ 573-2898 6 h,. on new motor. Hit M:;.J,1-~!,~l>ooco:!: 2 .. 3 •11 .. "!!I!~ .. ~S10 432-5880 eporteweer $5 Fiie cab 8-3pm 2150 Rural Lane CA MPING . tlahlng / II -4 apt .. n1 ...... cockpit, In boerd, tau 'IJllYI 111R• cond $2000. Dey• 21 Loededl 121500 1 or .. _,._,_ ~ipmF;l2~l_7ogP':; 1S~~ huntg/Ptelt\c 250 ahell eye M renge, trig, h~ deck & trim, newly OYer· Perfect COnd U00 oSo 536-759t, ev911831-2509 ~17 ' OYOTA •17 Coro1-. Lo T Q ES Id t UNIQUE MOVING SALE loeder w/aupp emptye abed, recllnet. IOfa, bike, haUled 12700 Uk IOI' I« f Don J aso-ssoe ml air ~e. euto, At':xJe. ~~ ogeat ~ ,::~ ~~,~~between SO COAST SHORES nu/llp bag old tnmkl· tOyt. etc 1662 P~uut, Chuck 78G-25 l5 A or r la ... laJtrt.. tlll MBZ '83 300SD Tur1>o, u;t eOnd, Of19 ownt. dla MW. mach., old anop --------Wlkeham St Git• #3 on wtr canner: hlhld. m..C nr Brlltol & Santi na CHRIS CRAFT 23· SM ... YUllU PIH XCFfi&JEd ~camtlaH "'~ 12100. 545--4!29 Y9C.ball chatg«,eo. O.ttott19bulcABC"s~ Bear, betwHn Mac 11emt 455 WMtmlntter Mlntoneofpeoplelookto Skiff ciuelc rblt Tune V-Mu 5yrwerr81'1ty,Onty THE MILANO IS HERE cor S,MW :T ' . OYOTA ''2TenlelSA5 ~s'!':ar~~s:~~M ~~·=~clo9et · ::;u~~~n= Cuti (r~~'7.~~St), ~==-everyd1y-lt'1 tower fighting chelr, 3moNewtM0-3081 AT BEACH IMPORTS re:e~S.~~ 4 or ba,4a~oond, 1..:.:...::.::...:.:....:.::...:..:.::...:..:.::...: __ ....L.. _______ _._ _______ _., __ r ______ _._ _______ -1 = oro~~.!~:r,= .......... 752.oeOG MBZ '94 2IOCE. ,.,.. 5 =-_:,'1oe5.:dy9 . P.P. 64&-1130 Pl lal 141-11M ALFA SPIDER 1913. lvofy. epd. gee, ~ Cpe. 10 1-72152 Mndelftee __ :?e K m I. herd top. m1 rn1nt oonct 125 ooo b.,..,.,,,,:::-,-,,.,,.,,...::----:--:-~ Outfield 20, Electric Bay For Sala. HONDA 250R 3 (10186050. 110.1>95 ob0(7141647•9278 ' OYOTA 'e&Tenlel,4.,cl, boll. M500. Deya, Allt wtMl9ler 1984 8eact't lmport1. 752.oeOG nice lteteO. mln1 oond. tor Barry <471-27&8 E..... 495-718e AUDI '84 50008 TURBO MBZ '84 300SD, no quell-:.:&:""· ~ 18K ml 875-0211 SUZUKI ·ao GS 950L 31,000ml,INthar lnt.lnrl. ~~·~~DO..,~ ... .154-1 SOUTH COAST 24' 11700-LOW Ml PWf ... ,,, lteteo, tm le78/mo. 720-31>58 TOYOTA COROLLA SF\5 Bey leunc:h xlt cond, NB GOOO COND c.... excellent cond. '7~2 dr hrdtp, 15 IPd 111p, tocat9" o. Anu a11p 722-8589 111,500, caN enyUm• • .U W llHU get oond, ~ 11198, 327 treeh wet•td l•tt Lo.ti.a IOI' Richard 850-8394. .. ..... lftt 1425/obo, 777 COOied. Moving forcee -Many To ChooM From TOYOTA SUPRA '84 Nie "300obo 849-8223 PALMER MOTORS to, blll/burgdy ~ lall ltat1 7014 SALES I LUllll Aut~2~C::.-:30~ ~~2~~ 3,~1 cones. U' sli(80Xf with tr&. lU Illa SIMPLY THE BEST (714~5-8994 RIUMPH ·70 Spitfire good condl1ton, $750 I llllU S..... SeMoe . LMa1ng ASK OR MARK Conv. Compt ,_ot9d, obo E~ 831-8197 DOMESTIC a FOREIGN EUROPEAN DELIVERY MBZ BMW POR ott/INt rblt eng/trane+ more. lllln 1540 JAMBOREE RD. ' ' ' • M·_. ..._ to .-•tel ii'""CAT. with IOlld deck & change w/bfake lnlc>ec1. .,., ...., _,...._ trempoltne. 2 11111. trellaf Ill.El I LUllll NEWPORT BEACH 124.95. Weyent Ent. 922 12400. Of beet oftef · $1290. New 35 HP John-Adtaoent to FuNon laland SunMI Of. 831-6092 646-1343 or 641-15272 eon Mtr 11550 5-48--040<4 1g202 BEACH BLVD Open~ [)ey9 •Week -fl '1J 118 l14/Hl-41M 840-6444 *• •11 JM II _ ~ . .,.,.~. 25' ROBERTS SLOOP -...... ,._ HAUL & CABIN Some ftn-llPlllft llllflll _....-.;* 11000 obo. 931-1 llhlng to be done 17500 4 Wiatt) Dri"/ J.... DELIVERY DEPARTMENT White/blue IMthar, excai-OLVO ·79 2640L etc. tilt S BMW lant contttton 92K ml, 1 :.B=~ Ketctl ·~ 1---------McLAREN' ~ww~ty 1ve11. Thia =-~· ,:::· :*'~ Pertnerlhlp evell R.-'75 JEEP CJ5, xlnt eond. M-FUU,8--8tllt6 11J.lll 64$-1343or649--62'72 turbllhed In & out S15K xtre 0-tri. hllctt. new 8288.Euc:l4dSt C10oOe3 VOLVO '82 244Dl etc, +gift a Naplee allp Of J '°"1.,. ~oP.:..'3E500.<??018. Dyll" 7Futtert1 ... ~~P.e. ='a.· .,.1, cue ... epd +O¥erdrtlle, ;ff;~ !k(elflfa:r South Co ty VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU ~ Rue (213)828-0221 or ...,.......,., 119 ,__ " ...._........, ._ ..... cuetom IMo'f wNI. Mul1 (7t<4)841-1813 AMC JEEP CJ5 '72 2l3-e9l.f70 1 •llfl Seel 17300. 1$4-3-491 IN THE .'SO-II ... .., Compl MW, 15000 wtn 100! Quell St., N.B llOLVO •• ,. 710GLE. ,... ...,. _, tu• pert trtde. teee than LARGE SELECTION OF 833-9300 ...., ..-. Like new 1550 3000 ml 192-8308. NEW 1. USED 8MW'SI ••EACEDES 'l1 2400 blue/blue. -.0, anrf, *· 548-8338 ' 1 -IUll -.... lteteo, crulae, euto, greet 'II ----···· ..-4 IOd. d -.ctnc:, ax<*-oones. S13,000. 857-4739 NATION COLUMBIA 22 '76-$4500 ~ _..... VOLUME SALES !ant oondltlon 42,000 ml., -------- 7 Miis, •xctllant lhape <4x4 • St•eo CMMtt•. P/S, SERVICE & LEASING Manllt 8etge/Pelomlno, l/W '84 Bug ca...ic Xlnt 714-892-8308 Of aport bar. (049434) 3870 N. Cherfy A~. 113,IOO. 87'-7908 COnd lo mlt rtblt eng, nu 213·920-35315, iv mtg 11111 LONG BEACH wt.I fJ· brite.~ pte ~------------------~----------s~----d---d~~~~1 ~=~~,~~1~'~ ~~) FIND !~~.~ '86 vw G If '86 I tan ar great racer/cnileer. WOfl .,_,...--.au Tract.lneWtlloome ptlnt, tlrM ' ctutch. 0 s u z u :.8t-~~~':'~ 2524 Hi4t~· Mau OPEN SEVEN DAYS through classified =~7~1ne, S1100 rod••• P't'f.. I I) • llAQO<X) Bed __ -:;,.. \ Pickup ~~ ~= ~ ~ ...... i. .. ·-' 111!10 mu ton boght ..,,"' "W'+9' pr.,._... t..d ...;.t.n.n '0 •737S71 $6319 FACTORY STICKER YOUR PRICE You Save 57900 FACTORY STICKER $6987 YOUR PRICE $ 913 You Save $5864 $ 455 '84 Dodge Van LOtded Conv11r~1on • 1HUK4 19 $12,995 '14 Aebblt LS ._,.., EdttlOtl _,,., .,,., AIC At.I/,._, et•eo c .. , ~ -•sstU '80 Mazda 829 t, 'fJll Aor AM/!'M 119<90 c 11•1 4 fJnly !.4 000 m1 •ll1UP/ $3299 '85 GTI ~ "'"' " r "'"''"'' ,..., ~·•i lld1hnr rn•' ·a.t '82 Old• Flrenza 81~ M 11111<• 1111 DK-!I~ '""'P<I hilly ~ t>nly '1 00(\ m1i.s 1HHJlll\~ $3899 ·eovw Convertlbl• r, 'fl<l A ( AM l~M ti~ wf\•1" Of' wh1111 • I ACL 7 46 '86 Nl1Hn 4 4 P1ckuD lruc.k lully loaded b r'rl u11de1 1 000 m1l11<, on.10 $12,999 '82 BMW 3201 Lo1oed low mllee '"1ERJ283 $10,995 '85 VW Conv. .O.u!O AtC AM /FM C8U ~u.iom ~s l(lw m1~ r .. 11 t1ngtf\t' red If !MXC6J8 $11,995 '85 Chevy Sprint 5·1919(1 AMt fM \le<eo en s 11n1td windows Bnght ~' •On•e BUY TODAY! 1987 MAXIMA • 5 spd Automatics llEW 1986 300ZX T RBO's • 2+2's COUPE's 1 • INTO SAVINGS The laily Pilat has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH with a $7 .60 Classified Ad. "T.60 or $5.60 with prepayment 4 Lines 7 Days $7 .60 No changes in copy or cancellation. ~rivote ~ort!es. only. No Commercial, Real Estate or Employment Ads. There ts no pnce l1m1t to what you con advertise. If you n~ed to sell your car, boot, couch, high choir or any unused merchandise-call the Doily Pilot Classified staff or use the coupon below. 642-5678 --~----------------------------------------NAME ADDRESS CITY PHONE STATE AD COPY: 4 line.minimum, approximately 4 words per line. ZIP AMT. ENCLOSE D circle one VISA or M . C. Are you a subscriber to the Daily Pilot? circle one YES / NO 1442 S. Bristol. S.A. 141-1220 ... ,.. .... .... "' e Computerbd ~ • Al~-mOdlle • F,_ to buyer'I • It'• """* 8nd It wen. Buyer/Seier Connec11on •1-1111 JIMCLICK 'DI/RENAULT JEEP $0'1 IRVINE AUTO CENTER 714-951-3144 800-428-7 485 BUICK DEALER ·.~'' -· . - mt.WW .... C.M. 979-2500 NAllRS CADl.l.AC LARGUT Ht..!CTIOH of .... ~. lowmlleege Cacllecl In Orwige ~a.ueto69yt ••·1100 2tOO Hartlor 11¥d. COSTA MESA IWIM'11 .. ..... ea .... CAOtLLAC '83 El DORA~ blue, loeded, 31K ml, tlXOllent cond,$13,750, 831·7<>&4. CADILLAC ElOOAAOO '82-Blk WI~ lttw Int, we ~ CO'M'I, f\Aty loeded, 57,000 ml, '8000/obo, 95-7851. mn ... -..111 __ B_UC:_IK_REA __ G_l_'_8_1 -Auto. AC. ""· AMIFM 2 dr, Ve, euto, air, pb, pe, CMIUc# 1KUR041 pw, fm CMI, tilt, CC, Jdl ... cond, $3,050, eel Miele, &-Spm, 833--0070 _._UIMll °'· Iott °' power equip, hard to find va q . 1n beeutltul blue & matc:ntng blue Wlour Int, wire wnt covere, much more. ( 1MGM381). $11,585. JohMOn ' Son line. ~ S40-se30. . THEODORE ROBINS FORD 7060 HAllllOll 111110 CO!>IA Ml \A "'"' flO!O HEVY '78 CAMAAO LT, auto. w. VI, nu brU, ttll. loob/"'"8 ldnt, ~ 12500 obo M0-30I 1977 SEW.1.£ '6995 '•-cmzto> 1985 COUPE DE VIW $15,995 ,.,., .... ~Q) 1984 CORVETTE $14,995 ... ........... (TGnlt 1982 COUPE DE VILLE s7995 1976 SEVIUE s5995 1980 FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM $6995 LINCOLN '72 MAM N. ..,. cond ....... & MW top. r•btt tlftt· 11500.~ JDMISOI I SOI Or11&• C.11r-, \ ol~•'' UIC-'1 l trCl 'l •ult• I , .... , '"" ro. ,..,1r11 U lt$ \f"1Cf I ltU lll 1'16 "''111' '"~ 1C.111 leu ~ti ~• 11 diWW'l1 ~~;, 71M.. I Son Uftc. Mete. ~5'30. .. ., ..... 4 dr, '°'9 ol poww equip-"*''· In .,..,,., beige with matchlno brown c:tod\ Interior. (1NJKll) $11,"6. JoMeon' San Unc. Mero. 540-5'30. Pl.111111'1 'H .. 2nd owner. 'ti< Ofia mt .• good cones. '800 0.1.0 142~ Pl YMOUTH -. 1epor. ro '11, 21,000 mt. _.,,.t oond. mlt, new tit.. asa.ooo obo 122..aa. PONTIAC '14 Aero, OU9- tom epoler, ...... air, enrl, ' rnor91 17860 (714)840-30ea Ev.e PONTIAC GRANO PRIX BAOUOHAM '11·2 dr, *· .-. pb. pw, em/tm .• cc, '4, 100. C.-Mike ~Spm. 833-0070. . I· MUC ll>ta: MOTICa TO PUll&JC OI' "IQUllT FOR Ttm NIUAll Oii l'UNDI AND NOTICI OI' JIN> .. Q Ofl NO ltGHIP'ICANT mrFICT Oil THI INVIROf1UINT HAI MEN POaTID WITH THI CfTY .CLIM AND AT THI HUNTINGTON llACH U9lllARY City o1 Huntington Beach 2000 Main Street Hunttngton Beach, C1Jl10tnl8 92S.8 Telephone; (714) 53M901 TO ALL INTl!RllTBD AUNCIES, OROUPI, AND PERSONS: July 21 , 1986 The P"'P<>M of thlt notloe II to Identify an action to be tak•n by the City of Huntington BNch. I. On or about Augutt 08, 19", th• City of Huntington Beach wlll r9queet the U. S. Department ot Housing and Urban o.v.lopment (HUD) to r.ieue Federal tunde und9r Title I ot the Housing end Community O.v.iopment Act of 1974 (PL) 93-383) tor the following project•: 1. Admlnletratlon: Thia activity paya the personal and operating coata Incurred by th• city In the edmlnlatratlon of the Block Grant Program. Addltlon1I cost• auoclated with the city'• R9ntat Rettabllltatlon Program ond Project s.tf-Surflclency will also be charged to this actl\llty $139,459. 2. Nelghbomood lnhenoement Protecte: a. Oakview. TheM fundt Wiii b9 uMd to construct needed public Improvement• In both the northern and southern sectlont of thla neighborhood es Identified by a dratt comprehensive planning and clrc<.1latlon study prepared by a contultlng firm. $200,000. b. Operation LOGOa. TheM funds will be used for the personal and operating coats aNOClated with this youth employment program In the Oakview n9'ghborhood S-40.000 3 Citywide Aealetanc.: a. AehabUltatlon. Funds constitute the contribution to the city's ongoing rehabllltatlon loan pool Said funds ere used to provide the below market rate Interest home Improvement loans and deferred loana to low-Income, owner-occupied, slngt&-famlly homes and to Investor-owned multl-famlly structures. $400,000 b. Profect S.tf-8utnclencr. Funds will be used to support the personal and operational eotts for this HUD Demonstration Program. As well as the .. Adopt-A-Family" campaign which pledges up to $500 per famlly If matched by private funding. This program wlll assist 25 single unemployed parents In making the transition trom welfare dependence to economic sell-sufficiency $50.000 c. Public Service. These funds will be dlsburSed as subgrants to human service agencies providing services to low-and -moderate Income households within Huntington Beech. Specific agencies to receive a share of these funds wlll be the subject of review and recommendation by the city's Human Resources Board These recommendations will be subsequently forwarded to the City Council tor Its consideration $153,000. 4 Orange Countr Fair Hovetng Councll: One of the major ob1ect1ves ol the Community Development Block Grant program and one of the requirements for the city's participation Is to take steps to affirmatively further fair housing. The city accomplishes this objective by annually contracting with the Orange County Fair Housing Council to provide landlord/tenant relatlons to low· and -moderate Income tenants within the City. $31,000 5. Local Option: Each year as part of the CDBG Program, a share of funds la reserved In a local option account which will provide addltlonal flnanctal resources for any currently or previously budgeted activities which may Incur cost overruns during the source or the program year or to meet needs not Identified at the time ol the adoption of the budget $93,541 II. It has been determined that such request for release or funds will not constitute an action significantly affecting the quahty of the human environment, and. accordingly, the above name (Grant Recipient) has decided not to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement under the National Envlronmental Polley Act of 1969 (Pl 9 t-190) The reasons for such decisions not to prepare such statement are as follows: Due to the various site locations, it has been determined that significant natural resources would not be Impacted by this project The project is not located In an area of historical significance or where historical resources would be found The subject site 1s not in a wetland. flood plain or scenic river There wlll be no Impact on endangered species or sole source acqu1lers The project site falls within the 65 CNEL and Is not within 2.000 feet of an upset "hazard area " Environmental Review Record respecting the subject project. has been made by the City of Huntington Beach which documents the environmental review of the project. and more fully sets forth the reasons why such statement 1s not required. This Environmental Review Record Is on Ille at the above address and is available for pubhc examination and copying upon request on the filth floor. between the hours of 8:00a m and 5.00p m No further environmental review or such pro1ects 1s to be conducted All interested agencies. groups. or lndlvlduals disagreeing with the proposed action are invited to submit wn11en comments tor consideration Such comments will be received on or before August 8. 1986 All wrnten comments received will be considered, and the City of Huntington Beech will not request the release ol Federal funds or take any action on the described pro1ect prior 10 HUD's written authorization to use those funds OBJECTIONS TO HUD The City of Huntington Beach will undertake the pro1ect described above with Block Grant funds from HUD under Tiiie I of the HCDA-1974. The City of Huntington beach 1s certifying to HUD that the City or Huntington Beach and Charles W Thompson, In his offlc1al capacity as City Administrator. consent to accept the 1urlsdlct1on of the Federal Courts If an action 1s brought to enforce responslbllltles have been satisfied The legal effect or the certification Is that, upon 11s approval, Block Grant funds may be used and HUD will have satisfied Its responslb1llt1es under the National Environmental Polley Act of 1969. HUD will accept an objection to Its approval of the release of funds and acceptance of the certification only it it Is on one of the following basis: (a) That the certification was not, 1n tact. executed by the Certifying Officer or other officer of appltcant approved by HUD. or (b) That the appltcant's environmental review record tor the project 1nd1cates omission of a required decision finding or step applicable to the project in the environmental review process. Objections must be prepared and submitted In accofdance with the required procedures under 24 CFR, Part 58. 75 of the Interim Regulatlons round m the Federal Register. dated April 12, 1982 These regulatlons are available in the office of the City of Huntington Beach They may be addressed to Environmental Clearance Officer, U S Department of Housing and Urban Development, 1615 West Olympic Boulevard, Los Angeles. Caltfornta 9001 5-3801 Ob1ect1ons to HUD on the release of funds on basis or her than those stated tn the previous paragraph, will not be considered by HUD No objections received after August A 1986, wlll be considered by HUD. CharlH W. Thompaon Clly of Huntington Beech 2000 Main StrHt Huntington Beach, Caltf0tnle 92&48 2999h Published Orange Coast Da11y P1101 July 25 1986 P\B.IC NOTIC£ P't.el.IC NOTIC£ Pt.el.IC NOTICE F759 P\8.JC NOTICE P\llJC fl>TICE 'ICTITIOUI 8U1Mta November 2 1981 FILE FICTrTIOUI 94.1 ... 11 Rot>en W Klepp. THERAPUETIC HOME NAME I TATl•NT NO F1725n NAME ITATIMINT Tritt 1ta1..-n.n1 wu llled MASSAGE SEAi/iCE, 8 ff'Wl lotlowlng p«IOl'll Ire B J Flecller 13762 N-Tile rollowtng p«tonl are w11h the County~ ol Of. Almond Tr.. Ln , lrvln., dOino bullneM u port Ave •206 Tu1t1n C111r OOing bu•lneu as •noe County on July 11. c.m 92715 THE POPCORN SHOPPE. 92&80 CENTENNIAL MOAT· 1986 Andr-Blaine Mlli.r, 8 1582 Browntno St , lrvtne. Thia bullnesa WH con-GAGE COMPANY 2202 N ,'1 .. Almond Tr" ln.. lrvln.. C•lll 927~ 1 dUC1ed by an lndlvldu111 l aird S1nta Ana, Caflf Publleried Oranoe Coat C•llf. 92715 Fre1d1lch G Buchner, Thlt 9lalemeri1 waa flied 92706 Dally Piiot July 18, 25. Thia butlneH 11 con- 1532 EHi Ocean Blvd , with the County Cte<k or Or· Randa.II A S4tget111om,, Augull I , S. 1986 ducted by· an lndMdu•I Newport S..Ch. Calif 92M 1 ange County on July 8 1986 2202 N Laird Santa Ana, 1 F-732 .Andr-Blaine Miiier 0 OenlM Buchoet, 1532 Publlen..d Ollr\Qtl Cou1 C1111 92708 Thi• atatement w .. Iii.cl Eaa1 cx::..n Blvd . Newport Dilly Piiot July 18 25 Mary B Segert11om. 2202 PtllllC NOTfCE with lhe County Clerlc of Of· Beech, C•llf 928e I Augull 1 8 IQl!6 N Laird, Sanla Ana Cellf I enoe County on July 8, 111ae Tri11 bualneH I• con-F-7•8 92706 f1Cm10U1 94.llMll f'at- oucted by nutbend Ind wtle Tri11 but1ne11 It con· N.U. aTATl•NT Publletled Ofange Cou1 Freldrlch 0 Bucnner Pt.el.IC NOTICE Clucied by hutband and wtfe The IOllowlng per'°"' .,. Dally Pllol July 18, 25 Thl1 tlatement waa filed Randell A ~llrom dOing bu9inMI M August I 8, 19M F·722 wtlh the County Clenl of Of flCTITlOUI IUllNlll Tlllt ltalement -tiled ALPHAORAPHICS. 1835 •noe County on July 8 11188 NAME ITATfMfNT #llh the County Clerk ol Of. Newport Blvd E· 186 eo.11 _______ _ ,,,... Tiie rt>11owing peraons are ange County on July 8, l98e Men Cetlf 92827 Publl.ned Orenoe Coat doing but1nn1 u 1'11llOO Hanry H Yameno. 20122 Dally Pllol July 18 25 WA fER ELEGANCE. 2855 Publllhed Orenoe Coat• Big Beno Lil • Huntlng1on AUQUll 1 8 1988 East Coul H.ghwiy Corone Dally Pttol July 18 25 8Mch. CaHf 92148 F 735 del M1r CaHI 92825 Augull I 8 1988 Thll butl"-1 11 con --------DC lnvetlmenla Inc F·T43 dVC1ed by en Individual P\B.IC NOTICE Calllorn11 2855 Eu 1 Cout ~ H Yemano _ ___;,..;;,;;,, _ __;__; __ H1Qhw1y Coron1 d'll M11. P\8.IC NOTICE Thlt 1tatement waa filed flCTITIOUe 9UltHlll C1111 9262or, wtlh Iha County Cieri! of Of. N.-ITATIMINT Th11 bu11nn1 11 ton flCTITIOUa IU ... U enoe County on July I . 19M The followtng '*'°"'are Oucted by 1 corpotatlOn NA• ITATIMINT ,,, .. dOlng bull,_ u Keoy Ann Ford 0111c:tor or The ro11ow1ng panc>nt ere Put>""*' Orenge Coast CALIFORNIA PHANTASY Oper111on, dO!nQ ~ u Di iiy Plfol July II 26, GIRLS. 3100 W Warner Tllll ttll4Wnenl wu nled THE SUGAR l 0 AF Auguet t, 8. 19te Ave Sulle 8, S1nt1 An1 with the Counry Clerk of Of. CLOTHING COMPANY, 881 F-721 Cellf 1127(µ 1n~ County nn Juty e 1988 Plumer •C. Coeta M ... ~-------Ruben A Ftor... 1g:i94 f'11111 Cetlf 112827 fltB.fC NOTICE Mynlewood St • Fountain Publl•hed CH•no• Cout Laur1 Ell11beth Moore L--~~__;, ___ _ \/alley, Cllltf 92708 Dally Plln1 July 18 25, Rleney, ea I Plumer itC, 'ICTITIOUI llU ... 81 Thlt butlneH It con· Augu•I 1 8 111/llJ Cotti M .... Clllf 92827 .. .._ 8TATlmNT ducted by an lndMdull F·711l I Thi• bualnet• t1 ton The fOllowlng perton1 .,. Ruben A F1orea dueled by 111 lndMdull doing bvtll*l u Thia ltate!Mnl ••• llled DllDI Laura MOOft Richey TAYLOR MAO£. 1()1le2 wttf'l the County ci.eri. or Or rUU1.lC NOTICE Thi• 11etemenl wa1 "*' Wtr"-' Alie . Fountain V9'· llf199 County on J11rw1 17 '1CTITIOUl 1UltNIH lwtth the County Clerk or Or fey. cam 92708 f'tllJC fl>TICE '1CTITIOU8 IU ... U NAmlTA~ The lollowtng Pl"IONI 1te OOlng buelntM .. WEST STREET CON· SULTANTS, 31282 8'~1 SI .. South L-ouna. CaNI 92872 JMl\ne E Locey, 31292 8r<>e*1 SI, South l.aigYnl, CalK 82872 Thi• bu1tn•11 •• con ducted by. an lndMdual Jeanne E. Locey Thit llatemenl WU filed wllh tl'lt County et.fl! of Of. •noe County on July 8, 1eae "1aaM Publlllhed Ofllllge Coal Dally Piiot July 18, 25. Auguat 1. 9, 1914 f 720 Ml.IC NOTICE tON j NANI aTATllllNT 1= County on Juty 14• Fraootne l oulM Taylo(, ""'·~ ,.....,.,.."~~ the l()llOwfng !)«IOl'lt ere 1 8 ,,,., .. «9 N Oell 0reno-Caltf r.,_,_ vr-·..-004ng buelneee u 92e87 PICTITIOUI ., ..... Daffy Piiot July 19 25· TOP LINf MARKETING Publlltleel Orenge Coaet TP\tl l>VllMll •• con· NAm ITATDllNT Auowt '· •. '* 3700 Pm~ Ln • 11c· D111y P1101 July 18 25 Ovcced by en lndMduat Tl'lt 'OllOwlnO S*90nl.,.. '·727 lrvlne. C.llf 9'715 ' Augul1 1· I tOM FtanciM l Taytor dolnO ~ .. --------JMMy Kim. 5145 ac.... ' 724 Thia ltlltrnenl -need SfAGUll SOFTWAR[, rtaJC M>TICE ,,...... ~ La Caned• Ctlllf with fl'lt County Clerk of Or t87 Stentoro lrvtne. Caltt -._..;.~;;.;....;~..-.--e 10 , 1 P\BJC M)TIC( enoe County on June .n. 92715 ITATUmJifT °' Yon9 HO Cho 52 lllM ,__do Nfredo .Ataijo, U..-01 I MT°' "-drOdl IMne Caltf t2714 PICTITIOUI.,...... f't1M9 t87 S11t110rO. !MM, C... U9I 01 N:"'10Ut • Thia bull*• 11 eon. MAim ITATW Pubflatled 0r"'09 COMC H715 8UH•ll Mm ducted by 1 oentral pert. The fOllowtnO per.on. .,. Delly '*>f .My 1e. 26. Tltl9 b\!llMN It c.otl· TM f~ p«tonl '*111\p dolnO ~ • Augutt I e, 1... cluc:ted by en~ new eMnOoned the '* Of JohMy Kim A ~ R 0 P 0 M 0 11 L ( F· 720 A1oer6o Mrtdo UI• Flc11tlou• •u•IMH TNI ~ ... ~ MUSIC 100t3 Wll lP· n. 9'ltwllent ... lltd '"'--CAI. TICfi CABIHIT wttt1 tN County Clerk Of Or· PoOtWfll. '°""' .. " Vtftey, "8JC fl)TIC( wtth tflt County Clerk Of Or· HJMCU. 1"3 t ~ ~County on Mt e. !Me Callf H7ot .,. County on Jvtf •. 1 ... A¥e 1101. ,o ao" ta. nmw ~ Wllftam K1ee>9e, f'M:hflOU8 MWU "11111 r..ntn c... neao "'DMhed 0r-. eo... 10083 ~. 'oun-....._ nATDmlff "''*'*' OrW91 coeec TM Actttlout ~ o.ity ~ .My 111 21 fain V•llty. C4lllf H708 the t~ S*'IOtli IA Daly Piiot JI#/ ti, H , N9mll rfllel'r"9d to UO¥e .. A~ t, e. 1M6 · ' Thl1 bu .. neee 11 con· OolnQ ~ • ~ 1, e, 1M4 !-'In Orenoe Coun~ -~ F-731 Cluctedby enlndMdual O lllANGE COUNTY l f .737 u -- Pea pie NEED classified Useful easy-to-find information 1s a viral part of the work setting News· paper classified is one source busi- ness people have come to depend upon-for persona as well as work· related needs To reach active class1fed readers. call and let us help you write your result-getting ad Daily Pilat classified ads 642-5678 A defense against c ancer can be cooked up in your kitchen. There ,.., cvid<:ncc chm diet and c t11cL·r arc related. Sornc: fc >< >d~ Illa) pn >ni o te cancer. while o thers n1ay protect you from ir. f<ootf.~ related to lower- ing the rbk of c~1nccr of the larynx and c~c >phagu ~ all have high amount~ of caro tene, a fo rn1 of Vitamin A which is in cantal ourx:~, peaches, broccoli, spinach , all dark gn.·<.:n lcaty vc:gc:cahlcs. s9.re<..:t potatoc~. carrots, pumpkin, winter squ~t~h ~nd tornatoc~. ci tru.~ fruit.~ and bn1.'\~<.:b sprouts. Food.~ Lhal tnav ' help reduc:~ the ri~k of gastrointestinal Ltnd rc:~piratory tract cancer arc cabbage, hroccolt. hru~sds proucs, kohlraht, (aulifl<nver. Fruit~. \'tgetables. and whole- grain cereals ~uch as oatmeal, bran and wheat may hdp lcnver the risk of colorectal cancer. Food'; high in fats, salt-or nitrite-cured foods Ii ke han1 , and tish and types of sausages smoked hy tradi- tional method<; should be eaten in moderation. Ile moderate in con~umption of alco hol al~o . A good rule of thun1h i~ cut down on fat and don't he fat . Weight reduction n1ay lower cancer risk . Our 12 -yc.:ar study of nearly a n1illion Alll<.:ricans unc(>vered hiR11 cancer risks particularly among people ·~0 '% o r n1ore ovcrwci¢1t. Now, n1on: ttun <:vcr, \\.C knO\\' you can cook up your own dcfcn. e against cancer. No one face~ cancer alone. +AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY ' "8JC NOTICE l'tBJC NOTICE NOTICE OF CONTINUANCE OF CONDEMNATION HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Callfornla Code of Clvll Prooedure Section 1245.235, that the Board of Olrector1 of the South Ea.at Regional Aeclamatlon Authority (hereinafter referred to as "SERRA") will hold a public hearing at 2:00 p.m. on August 20. 1988, at the City Council Chambers of the City of San Juan Capistrano. located at 32400 Pueo Adelanto, San Juan Capistrano, Callfornla, to consider the adoption of a Resolution of Condemnation to acquire certain real property, dMCrlbed herein, wtllch property la owned by the Dana Point Sanitary District (hereinafter referred to as "DPSD"). At that time and place the SERRA Board of Otrectora ("SERRA Board") will receive oral t81tlmony from all persons who file a written Request to Appear wfth SERRA pursuant to Code of Clvtl Prooedure Section 1245.235, as further outlined below. Thia hearing. which was previously set fort the July 10, 1988, meeting of the SERRA Board has been continued to the date and time referred to above. The property which la the subject of the condemnation hearing Is a portion of that certain real property, owned by DPSO. located at 34152 Def Obispo, Dana Point, California. The DPSO property la further described In Exhibit "A", which Is attached hereto and made a part hereof by this reference That portion of the DPSD property which SERRA Intends to condemn la not shaded on Exhibit "A" SERRA Intends to adopt a Resolution pursuant to Code of CMI Procedure Section 1240 030, 1245.230 and 1240 610, et seq., to condemn the Property, which resolution shall Include: A. A statement that public Interest and necessity require the acquisition of the Property, B. A statement that the acquisition of the Property, and the f1ellltlea to be located thereon, are planned and/or located In the manner that will be the most compatlble with the greatest public good and the least private Injury; c. A statement that the Property which SERRA seeks to acquire Is neceasary for the operation. maintenance and expansion of the SERRA J.B. Latham Wastewater Treatment Facility; and --- D. A statement that, pursuant to Code of CMI Procedure SectlOn 1240.810, et eeq.. that the use for Which the Property la to be acquired Is a more neoesaary use than that whld'I DPSO h .. put the Property to. SEARA has the statutory authority to condemn the Property pursuant to Coda of CMI Procedure Section 1240. 140, Government Code Section 8508, Section 3(e) of the South East Regional Rect.matlon Authority Joint Powers Agreement. dated March 9, 1970, Section 31040 of the California Water Code. Section 37350.5 of the Government Code, and applicable California law. Pursuant to Code of Civil Prooedure Section 1245.235(c). the property owner haa the right to appeer al lhe public hearing and to be heard regarding the adoption of the Aelofutlon of Condemnation of the PrQPerty and the matters to be Included In that Reaolutlon. In order to preMrVe ltt right to be .....,.d at the pu6lic hearing a property owner must file a written Request to Appear at the publlc hewing wtth SERRA at 25411 Cabot Road. Suite 209, Laguna Hiiis. Callfomla 92653, whleh Request to Appear muat ba ftted or received by SERRA within 15 days of the date that this notice was malled. A form for a property owner to Request to Appear la enclosed wtth this notice. NOTICE. Failure to file a Request to Appear may rnult In a waiver of the property owner's rtght to appe11r and be heard at the condemnation hearing. SERRA hereby reeerves Its right to deny, In Its dI.cretJon. the right to appear and be heard by any pe<son or any entity who falls to file a Request to Appear pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 1245 235. Dated July 18, 1986 BOWIE, ARNESON, KADI a DIXON. Attomeyt tor SOUTH EAIT REOIONAL RECLAMATION AUTHORITY, By Robeft E. Analow Publlshed Orange Cou1 Dally Piiot July 25. 1986 F758 -----~: --·- ) • ~ l •• -' - -------- m_ ........ --11) ,,.. ........ .. . . 1 • - Onlnge Cout OAIL Y PILOT/ Friday, July 25, 1988 4 East Coast retailers coming to South Coast Plaza Classic apparel and specialty stores will open tn October By JOHN BREUNlG ............ Oellr ...... NEW YORK -A quarM ol chic l asl Coast retailers will open their tif\t Southc1 n Caltfom1a stores at South Coast Plaza 1n October Henf} Segerstrom. managing partner of CJ ~gerstrom and Sons. has announced. C.J. Seger~trom and Son!> o"'n the Costa Mesa shopping center. "-h1Ch 'oon "'II feature the following stores: Alcott and .\ndre"s a 2-\Car-old chain that specializes 1n e"etutl\e women\ apparel; Scnbner Bool Store which" 111 oixn m third store an its 135-year history. The Coach Store. ~h1ch produces leather goOOs in us Manhattan fact on and l ht.· T atboh. a Mas~chusetts­ bascd store olknng rl<t'>\lt. ''omen's clothmg. Segerstrom ahu announled at the press conference. held Wedne'>da' 1n the He lm,fe) Palace Hotel on Madison .\ n·nut.· that Poli) RJlph l~uren "-111 add a second store in South Coast Plaza. ··As Californians and Americans we are very proud of' this nation's tradiuon of conservative Amencan dress," Scgerstrom said. "We feel thll the emphasis we arc demonstratina this momina of East Coast retailers 1n classic American design is evidence of our commttment to that part of American retail." Oassic American desian certainly is the took of the 2- year-old Alcon and Andrews, which {>rescntly has six stores on the East Coast and will, m addition to the Costa Mesa address, open new branches m San Francisco. Chicago and Atlanta this fall M 1chael Jeffnes. president and founder of Alcott and Andrews, described his company as "dedicated to fulfilhng wardrobe needs of career women." As a result. the stores do not offer men's wear. leisure wearorhngene but focus on diverse wardrobes. l\lcott and And~ws' ne~ two-level sbop m Orange County will be 12.000 feet an size, Jeffnes said, not mg that his company has no plans to open o ther Southern Cahfom1a stores in the near future. The Talbots also 1s known for women's wear. but 1b ofTenngs are ofa clau1cal and elegant style. Next year. the chain will celebrate the 40th anniversary of its first store 1n ./ Massachusetts. They now distnbute approximately 44 million maiJ order catalop onually and claim 87 &tores 1n J 9 states. includina a Sin Francisco shop. "We appeal to affluent, well educated women." aid George Burnman Jr .• senior vice president of Talbot! .. "We arc classic, we arc chic, we hav<' been chic !ll1nce 1947." The Coach Store. which Segemrom descnbed a~ a "small specialty store." bu sold bags, portfolios. belt!. and other leather aoods to East Coast customers for 45 year\ Their products arc handmade m a factory on 14th Street in Manhattan. Pubbc reaction to a recently opened store 1n Dallas has encouraged Coach to open some more shops based in warmer chmates. bealnning with Costa Mesa, Coach advenmng director Helen Chaflcin said. Scnbner Book stores which are owned separatcl) from the publishing company have been 10 e>.1stcncc for 135 years. and presently have a pair of ~tore!> in Manhattan and V1rgm1a. Speak.mg on behalf of R1zzoh lntematwnal Rook Stores which purchased the former fam1I} store two yearct I so. C harles Scnbner 111 id. ..there roust be a hon1cuhural term for this, this has been a very slow flowcnna tree ··Two yc1m aao I $81d the acquismon by Riuoli wa1 the most 1mportnnt thina to happen to the store since it1 founding. 1 sttlJ feel that w1ay. and even more so, now th.at I may t'nJOY 1t in a warmer climate." Unlike R1zzoh Book Storts, which are k.nowo for special am and photography ofTenng.'> Scnbners sells fiction and nonfk11on in hard and soft coven. One th ma the two book tores do have in common is the) and tht' three other rcta1ler5. have joined Nor- dstroms, Laura A'thley, Eddie Bauer. Mark Cf'OS!t Ann Ta)lor. Jaeger and Dcscamp as retailers that chose South Coast Pl1Ua a!> the place to open their first stores in ~outhem Cahfom1a "South toa t Plaza feels very strongly that tra· d111onal Amcncan clothini 1s desuncd to have a peat resurgence." "iegerstrom said "European casual clothma stores are \Cry popular m Amenca today. but we are banking tha1 1he trad1t1onal Amcncan look is go1na to make a great comeback " ' Payphone exchange timing hit Railroad merger rejected by ICC \\\,111'-<d!l:O-. f \l'I -Thl.' Interstate (ommerce (om- m1.,,1nn rl ll l ltng I\'> ,1,tll'' rcu1mmendation 'oted 4-1 Thur!.da} w hind; thl· pH•P•h• d 1m r>!t.'r nl the \anta Fe and Southern Pacllk ra1lro.1J .. 1n1n '' h.11 \\1J11ld ha' l lx'cn the countf) 's 1h1~d largest rail SH tern I h1· 1kl1.11111 'tunnl·d 1'\1.'1.Ull\i.''> of ')anla Fe Southern Pacll1l l orp 1h1·h,•ldP \'11111111.111 l11rme tl "· ~car,agoa,partoftht.•mergcr plan I 11,· P111p.111' 11111,1 111"' .!1' r\t onl' of the railroad'> or pos'>tl'lh coml' ur \\ 11h I 11'\ i\•'d pl.111 th.11 lOllld pa<,c; IC c mu'>tt'r ''\\ r\ f!lll!lf In 11,1\ tn 'di ,.,m1·th1ng off .. John J 'ilhm1dl lh.11rm.ir1 11 thl h11hl1r1~,11mp.an~ tohl n·poneri. after thl· I<< \Oil' But ht.· ,,11d 1h1, I' n1111ltH1n1'<lJ,"' 101 tht.· railroads and 1n\1\tl'd both rail Int'\ l•lll \Ill' I\ \\1th 11\l-1..ut11ng dlort~ I ,1,1 \1,1, '' h1111d1 .rnJ 11lher \anta Fe ~outhern Pautit. e\i.'Utll\1'' ll \t1111·d hdorl· thl· I< < that ooth railroad'> might Ix lorcec.J 1nt11 h.111~ 11p1 ' I till' •n1r•n ''·''not appnned By JIM HATHCOCK o.w, l'tlol c_....,a,...11 When It comes to telephones these days. nothing 1s simple. Deregulation of the 1ndustr} is shaking users all over the world and the most recent episode m the saga of telephone company squabbles 1s bemg pla)ed out b) Pacific Bell and the month-old Caltfom1a Payphone Assoc1auon. Representallves from 37 com panics seeking their shcc of the pa~ phone pit' said at a. meeting Tucsda} m Newport Beach that Pacific Bell service personnel tale up to t"o months to remove existing payphones and the}' sometimes cut cables shon and hammer conduit into the concrete or wall to hindc.-r installa11on of new pa) phone~. California became an open pay- phone market in February when the Publtl Ut1lllH'' Commission decrc-cd all installation' within the Pacific Bell Times Mirror second quarter net rises 114% \\ 111 ll' · t 1•, um 111 ''11111 ';ml l nm h1n1ng the l"-1) r;.i1 I road' m ight hi.' 1n the pulil1l 11 11 '' ht. "wh\l;inllal ad't.'r'>t.' t.•tlel.l .. the mergl'r ~ould hJ\t. •n mpt.·trt11•11 m '°'m p:irl, of the count!') t>U t\\e1gh1.•d an' uH•r,111 puhltl tx·n ·111' fht.· ll < \lall t'\l111rn 1cd the mt'rgern1uld sa~e ,111pp1.'r\ ' tl m1ll11111 .s H'<tr he1Ju'e nl increased effinl'nu1.·, I O~ \1\.GEl f\ I \PJ -T 1mc'> \11rror lo )31d Thur~a\ that ti\ nt.·t '>Oared h~ I I 4 percent for thl' \t'l ond quarter and 104 percent tor the.-hllll but most of that increase was lrom prnlit' Imm !ht.· '>Jk of as\C't<,. \\dm11d1 "'1 \.tlkd 1111• IC< druc;1nn .. a hornble m1')talo.c.· · <.aid n(I tin '"'" h.1 bt:l'n 111:1.tt· 1111 \\h1 lht.•1 one ot the.· railroad' \\oulc.J Ix -;nld ,,,,, '111~k·e1111!\ ur , .. !d 111 J)IL'u' '•nn• ()\.•temtx-r I lJX ~ -"-hen \.in 1.1 I l 111 fi,..111n .111d 1 h1 ~ •u thn 11 Pau 111 < orr mt.•rg1·<l all \11urlw1n l'.111li1 ~.11lr11,ul \tod. ha\ hcen put in a \t.•parilt1.· \Ot1ng Th1.· m1.·d1a rnnglomerate. "ho't.' tlag<.h 1p " thl' I O" .\ngc:le' T tml'' ne11ed $11.J I , m1ll1on. or $2 % rx·r share on rcH:nucs of $748 9 m1ll1on for the thrt.'C month\ endcd Jum· 2•1 compared to ;1 ~l·ar carl1n "hl'n 1t earned $70 6 million. or 9Q Lent'> pn \hare. on r<.'\enue" of$ 746 8 m1ll1 on tllJ\I fl\'1ld1n•• 11 c 11 ltPn 1111 tht.· merger I h1· I< < h,1.I 111 11111,lhll111n o'er the 1.orporjle ml'r~·1·r hut h' ledl'ral I·"' 11111'1 .IJ 1 r "t.' rlw tumh1n1ng ofthl' t"'u railroad'> Onh '• 111111 "'1 m 1 h,11rman I leather < jrad1son 'upnorll'd merp,1nv thl· t'" 1 1 1,1lh I hr l11uro1hercomm1'>'>t0n nwmlwr\\,11u lon1.e11 '.1h" 1 1 I· lirll 111 1om1wt1t10n cau<;ed rhem I•• rt.·11.·rt lht.• mi:rgcr For the fir'>1 h:'llf of the >ear. thl· rn mpan~ c:.irnl·d i214 8 m11l1on. cir ~I o 1 per \h::m· nimpared to the~ t.•at earlier penoc.J ~hl'n 11 had mcomt 111 S 114 X m1l1 111n 11r \I ti' pt•r \harr -l1bj;11:11a,111:111;1 ------------------ NEW YOtll' I/I P NASOAO ouol•• on\ M>••in9 ...... ,. '""' and IDWHI _, O• ..,.,rh1 ma-•r> #' O' I om Thur\cM\I Pr tf'\ o. not •"CtuOt-'•'•~ ~rwup m•t"ti:OO•• o• comm.,,,.,, •o• fl\Ur\clO SloO ll•O ,.,. Afl Ar A " ·~ , ~ /;.( AA11 Ad• /l~a~• .,, ,,...,, .. ,,., ""'"' •• 8\" A' I •-a\' Ar r AV""'" An"'Ll.• "'""" ANllM If Af'4 d•IJll' Ar•gS~ /l•~/IC,. Aop1fl'r AolO"" \ At elf" ::'&!~' Av"~P" 8800 \ Ba,ror B••~H 8 1o l>J./o .. ... ". ... , • . .,.~..,.o 4 • ._.o,PGl HrttN• .. .... J '~ •" . . . ~ 11 16, , P• t(', 9 • 9 I P O"H I 7 16 I • Pou \ ' 4 4 • P:)wft 40 • 40~ P• Q•p 9 • 9 > Po~"I \ • s-. p ,, •8 \ 19171117 O Y } 11 tt • \.J •O'• 1~ 16 ), •• c~ 41 J 41 • ~OWi" )I._ 11 ~. ""'"" 0 • 0 • llt>O ( 49 SJ l'ltt .. , Sot '• S\ Pt-1,tr•t )4 '• l\ . Jlo•dh n • n . g "'""· II 18 • l'IOi.\t > 14 14 '• ~oOI t ' w•. \I , ~oit , 19 I 19 • ~1>1•(,~ ' 11 1& ' • 4)tf<11 \ 11 • 11 • s,,._.,,, 14 'i 14 .. tr OH )8 t. J9 • \,,,..,.," 11 , 19 \fro 10 ~ ,0 • \f"f'l\lt' )/ • UI • 1nt M1>r .tot, 41 \v""'" I • I.._ SnrM•~ l I 11 S"w"'•' 80 • SI • !:ul•oi. , 11 • 11 • sc o•W• 'A 'l . s .. f .~. • so .. ran \ I I \~(Ch \ JI l8 • ')O(lr40 l~ 16 • S•ooo:J• ..~ ~ '~ ; i:~~~fJ I ... ' , ~ 7-. '"" ... 1) 6 J•>o h. , .. ~ 117 114 16 • 26 .. )I , )~ 1• 1• 1 l2 9 J 11 17 .... '46 ' ) I ) )1 )T I' I• 11 • 21 • 10. 10-. l7•l2· IS , l\>o 2• 1• , s • s 11 1) '0" 41 1~ 1S , 29 • 18" 9 lb ... ,, •• 78 • '"' I • ~4.\oo ~4 • )~.: .i. )>., ) '· 1 f6 • 2J '. 1• • ., . ""' • ,.. 17 '"· 11 • -C1111u111 ut!J!t~·-------------- NEW YOR~ AP Shows tl':p 0<e stocks 11r>d w•" t the mo,1 ano a. "" ,. p.ercenl Of tt 11 'Jf' f r • Name 1 Ct lcor w• 2 A lfdRtshA\ 3 Unlo11 . ' lnterfero" S ~stnComr 1 l holeslln< pf"~~r~LOli ts>lloen 10 Aufosoa ..,,, • l • 1 . 4(] 10 • ... 186 n'l 1n 28 8 8? ,, '~ ~ r ~' J l '8 Au•OSIJ.S 2~ +s 16 UP IS 1 J Dataca'O 1• , ~ l'e UP 14 9 J (P t'Jr uf"ll ~ + 1 UP r• i ~ E , •nPrc. + . UP 14 Vf!rO • l l 11' UP 14 6 • T•on 1 ... 1 2~ '\11 UP ·r I (p•r.Asoc s 1•. UP l ~ ~ U•dEdSllw s s 2 + °'11 UP ; AmNucl~n1cs 'l'. + • UP 12 s }~ D KvAm wt 'l • t • Up a1 AmKft run 6'• t 1. UP n '"V\I Ch un 2 \11 • Uo 11 1J (l'nSprinklr \ 12 • + I • UP 11 4 7• HOSPOS wt ~'; + ... uo 11 1 }~ Phor>A~rm t • Up 111 ~' P1;t>lsr> OP ~ ; t ~ UP 111 r,.c,., 80 + Ut:> 11 I DOWNS Name Pct L ost Ch~ E r\lreCorr 3 -1 • §ii H~ H•th(rf!SY 11 • 3'1 '\11vers1nc s -1•12 11 A 11\l<OA r 11 Newe 13 /</tdlt</'o " Ponoero\a IS ZeroCP s lt 1'1H I B•i•C 11 v L tv pfO 9 AheQhlnlJ 19 11,(hertCo lo (l'lyron 1 vlL TI of( 7 An11og , l GCA CP •Mo cof:'d S P11n1ro11 '" Uo I J UP " Up 1'11 Uo .. uo 1t UP • UP '... Uo • ui:i • UP ~ Uo '.ti UI) • ui:i t UP '• Uo DOWNS Lest ,. _c~ l-.. -~ 2J~ = ,'t • Waren\e~""'" s AleQWSI ng ' F·rs•~ulh Robes~nlnd\ ' AlleQli ev 8anc0kla ot 10 lhdl1lnOI\ 11 Potvmus un 12 2•rlsler ! ll ommon hr 14 f""' IS 11ltw1 s Jj ltVHHYcr kMldAm of 1, trCOf ~ nvlr ec s 1nven1as~n w1cot s' W land vc Mooulalr~ Hanover Ol H~motec Q 0 ExPt ' ~ 1..omnM10 wl 6 FluorCP 1 ~ow1n I Hecl1Mno 9 NorskHvd n 11 K1n1t>Svc I WnUn 10,~t 1 To•coCi:i 1 S.blne 11 McOrmlnt w1 1 Mo«tMC l TtxAm8ncl'I l US HOl'f\I 11 H1rr11co 1• CtfltrOV Tlci.w1tr :m•Mc pt ~ 01mon Co ~ [~.r~t t ?OPf ) ... -1~ 21 ,, -.,... ~l~ -1 ... '• 1Jl.4 -2. 13 -2., ,) .. -., 7 2 -I~ I~ -11 .. -2 r -1. 1 ... , -11. r ... 1 • .., -2 1 l~ '• ~ l '> . ., I • ... 1 • ) "' 1 41 ... -J ii 12"'1 -1 • JJ. -~ 9 -• 17h -I'• 2'i't-13~.-1 . 1~~ = d . .::=1: t'--) ) • -'1. ~lit -" 14" - 1 S"-1' 14 J -1~ " -1 • 11h-j'" 1§1/) - 20. 171 17' 16 16 I 16 1 IS l IS 14 10 14 1 B~ 12 12 5 12 5 lH 12 1 116 II 4 II I II l franchise could choose their hard- ware provider. But Pacific Bell owns the Imes and sphts the income fro m the use of the non-Pacific Bell payphones wnh the new provider and the loca11on owner. The newly formed assoc1a11on wants the PUC 10 assure that Pacdit. Bell removes Its equipment in a tamely manner and doesn't "'llfull\ delay the chan$eover Representatives of different pa)- phone suppliers cited casec, '>I.here the) alleged Pacific Bell "''llfull\. damaged lint's and took C'l:CCS!>tvc amounts of time to d1sconnt.'<:t phone!>. As a re.,ult. bus1ncs., o" ner' lose income new payphone com- panies lose income and c,o d occ, Paulic Bell However. a~~oc1a11on members claim that payphones arc Pacific Bell'!> i>econd largest income producer just behind the Yellow Pages. They MUTUAL FUNDS also speculate that Pacific Bell rould poss1bl} realtze a gTeatcr net income from its payphone operation 1f It quit pro\ldang the hardware ahogether andJuSt collected tts fees on 1hc l1nc'i Some d1stnbutors complained that Pacific Bell 1nten11onall) dcla'.f<o the remo ... al of m pa>phone<o to dt'i courage bu1;1nc~~ owner\ trom switching. In <,omeca~<o. Paulil Bell "as accused of using the dcla' to recontact clients and ti) to pt'r\uack them to keep Bell phones Greg G ilben. president of < PA said that the organ11allon ha'> 400 to 500 documented ca..e!> of al:'lu!>c\ b\ Pantie Bell and said hl'i organ11cil1on "ants to reach .,omc l\JX' nf mean· 1ngful agreement w11h thc.-m 111.H01d funher dela\.\ Hownt.·r· Jean C1recn Pa1.1h1. lkll'<> prc>JCll manJgl'r ha'i '>aid th.It "h1lc then· ar1.· \Onll' 'allJ rnmplamt\ \OICl'd h\ < ·p.\ m memtx•r, \hould bear 111 mmd that her company has never faced the complex1t1es entailed 1n a payphone hardware exchange and 1s current!) work.Ing hard to redut.e the backlog an phone removaJ orders Pacific Bell doc!>, m some cases., ~ek 10 .. enf) a letter designating a "t'ndor as a payphone customer's agent the> do not contact accounts that 'it~n lttter of agency. said Grttn. Pat. 11i1. 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Analysts said cnvcston seemed to be gTOWlJll 1ncreasin,gly confident that the worst of tilt sd.hna pressure that set 1n ea.rlY. this month was over. The drop was attnbutcd in large measuie to concxm that economk growth was still slu~sb. and might slow further. The most recent stattstics. however, have suggested that circumstances ~·t all that bad. Larry Speake1,, the White Housc spokesman. said Fnday that the Reagan adm1mst.rallonexpccts the arowth rate for 1986 to be less than 4 peroeol, but that st looks for gre.atcr than 4 perocnt expansion in 1987. The Dow Jones average of 30 tndust.nals climbed 18.42 to 1,810.04, extendm& its pin for the week to 32.06 points. Advancing 1ssue<1 outnumbered declines by about 5 to 3 on the New York Stock Exe~ Bl& Board volume totaled 131. 96 null1on shares, against 134 71 m1lhon 1n the previous SC'SSIOn. WHAT AMEX Om ' 1 WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK (AP) Jul 2S I AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuorEs 1 METALS QuorEs NEW YORK fj\P\ -~ -~-,__, ~ ,,,.,,.,., .....,.._ . » 00 cent1 -PG<""' ~ Come.. tCIO« _,,_Thu ~ .. -...as cen111 PC>Und. us --•-C-Stl llO cent• -PG<""' NY C-epot monlh.CIOMd TllV l Nd 21·2• cen11 • PO<lnd &. ,,.._.cent11 POUnd ~ea Tiii S3 ~,,.,...Wt W--le P<i09 I* ID 1 --. '6 020 ---"~' ".,.,,,.,, ...... • $S 008 I* l•Oy ounce NYC-. llPQI manll> ctclMd l'hu Milrcwy $230 00 U~ 00 per 7611> l\Mi> -Y(lrtl ........_ "36 00 ... ~ 00 OomMllC: ,,__,troy 011noe NY NEW YOttK (AP) Jul. H Dow JoNE S AvER AGES NASDAQ SUMMAR Y thz. b.Jtton do.lln sh1 rL our t\na.st.oll"Crttal CJ(fbm cloth eh1rt ~ fbr u:,, b,r (x)rdon ~ r.bw Or~ 91ngki ~ t.ml002d W\th 9pi1t yoM. ~ruction fir ultimota. flt arrl ~fbrt m wtnt.4, bhA..qcru.plnk .ydlcw . - Piescription for drug abuse is 'immoral' label In recent days. much attention has been given to the deaths of Len Bias and Don Rogers. This is under- standable. Bias, 22. was arguably the best college basketball player in the nation in 1986 and Rogers, 23 . was among the best defensive backs in the National Football League as a rookie in I 985. Both were young; both were excellent athletes; both had great tutures -and both are dead from drug overdoses. What's it going to take? It seems that not enough people are getting the message regardrng drug abuse. Consider the facts that, according to current statistics, two out of five high school students smoke marijuana._ and one out of ei~t use cocaine (the drug which etided the lives of Bias and Rogers). ' 1 And, of course. drug abuse is not limited to our youth. It is a problem which has infiltrated every segment of our society -every age. every class. and every profession. Literall y mLllions of Americans have experimented with cocaine. Accordtngl}. we must continue to broaden our enforcement and educati onal effons. But we must also return to a former tack which goes beyond warning people of the dangers of drug abuse. The Amencan Bar Association recently iss ued th e results of a year long stud}' reviewing law enforcement techniques. The ABA fo und that no single law enforcemen t tactic presents the magic answer. Police depanments cannot devote enough manpower to arrest all drunk dnvers The same holds true for th e enforcement of drug laws. With regard to drunk dnving. th e ABA concluded that the best way of combating drunk driving 1s to co nvince th e public that it 1s immoral. "Immoral." That's a strong word in an age of moral relauvism. But JU St as we can no longer afford to .. sugar coat" the wickedness of drunk dn vmg, we can no longer afford to gJamonze and tri vialize drug abuse . Very simply, drug abuse is immoral. It has caused immense harm to innumerable md1v1duals . fa milies. and to society as a whole. And when being under the influence of drugs 1s viewed as morally reprehensible. thus attaching a moral stigma to drug abuse, the demand fo r 1lhcit drugs will decrease and !>O will drug abuse. MAR IAN BERGESON Senator, 37th District An e1nergency situation on Costa Mesa streets To tht f dttor Re ·· fhL·atrr lrJniL .ls'>a1kd" (Op1n1on Jul\ 111 Whethrr h\ m) om1~\1on or your deletion d 'l'1: <Mong point wac; missed l ndl·r urc. um\tancc<. c;uch a' pre' ailed Juni: I hth la ··normal com.:en n1ght1 Jnd lhl' mmt recL"nt fiasco Jul\ I lith 1 Hcadltne Fair pluo, theater cquJI\ gndlod .. Pilot Jul\ I~ I ha\ 30\llOC (h\:\1dL'\ ( 11unL1lman Da' c V. hn·lcrJ u 10\ltkrL·d hou. emergLnl\ 1•h1dl' could fX'OL'lr.111 this g1gant1< trJlltl 'n.ul t11 '·" c .1 ltl• 1n am pan of thL· ut\' HeaH·n heir anvont: v.IH1 v.ould rL"qu1rt paramedtL t an 1n J rn.!.111r traffit alcldt·nt heart all.ll \.. firL' dro"'-n1ng 11r an' 111 .1 mul111udl 11! ()t hl·r emergenuc' <>n tht' 11.111 lttl' all -n·pt>at all 111 ••lH 111.11.ir thor•,ughtan:' wt·re L11n1pli:11·h 111.11 tC'i'>thk llarhor Hh LI I ,111' ll v. "ev. pon Ah d Hrl\lol \1 B.1k1•1 \I and nc111hhonn1t H'\ldn111.il '''n 1 blocked '><>lid' -\11 that even a bicycle would tw hard-prec;sed to find a wa) through Wherr arr 11ur < ounty and State reprc.,rnta11' l"' thdt c;uc h a publit l'ndangermt·nt .ind l1abil1 t) 1s allowed 111 t''"' '" n111 1n fall. <'nlcrtaincd?fl \.-\ t' tht t 1111en' ot ( osta Me!Mt '"'l'm to h,t\t' no rL"cuursc Our cit) p11lil c .111<1 111un1 ... sheriff<, depan- mcnt hait· i'xTn tot.all" ema~ulated h\ \h11n \lghlt d CJI\ council mem- ht-r\ and unl anng county <;uper- ' ""r' 1, 11 nnt lime for our state rt·prl'\t·nt.111 \I.'\ to c;tep 1n with a \ t ngl'JllLt·' I\ 11 no1 time for all Costd \k,an' 111 \l,rnd together and sec to 11 th.11 thc1 do·• < J1hcrw1se we had all ~ttt•r pl:in our hL·an attacks or other rl\:r\on.il t magrnc1eo; w that the} d11n·r ltt1nt1lk \I.Ith Ned-W<'"I con- l'r1 night \ f-RONH A GRAM\ < oc;ta Me"'-• Young officer wore job well -I II t ht• I d 1II11 \' ,1 pro!')l·rn 'l\'lh·1 .111d 11r1t r.1t 11 111 a hu\1nl·" in I l•\t,1 ~11 ,,, I h,1d lh1 c; ~t·d· lhl' Ol'l'~~f.+lf thl' \l'I \ 11 \'\ ttf a ( O<.IH \ft'\<t f>nlltt' I ltf1t l'I \l1t·1 '11m,n~ '" 111\ ,11d ,111d n tlir our\t 111 L11n1r1,,111111 11 ' \1111n~ 11fl1 l'I l,t\U,tlJ\ I <1111111Cllt U that lh1• da•. "·" .~.11111111>' 11p .111d ~-.1uld I>< hot f 11IN·l\cd lh.11 h1\ utli1111m \l.,J\ d:u I. .111d •>I th• h\: .1 \" I \J!t 111 milt< nJI u<.u.111\ 11·\l'f\ \:d l11r "'IOlrr In fl''P"''" 11 m. 111q111n I k.trnt•d that < l>'t.1 \11•\,1 d111'' 11111 h<t 1 I.' .1 <.umnwr l1••ht...,n yht un1t111 m I lwn tom~ \11rpr"' thut p••rhilfl' lo nn !J01' t'l'>CI \l.,J\ 111\ di\< 11\Cf\ lhJI he V.,I\ wcann~ 1 h11llc1prnot 'L''' tfr \Cl'm('d untllllLt"rnl"d .1hou1 Wt'.lf10K 1h1c; add1t111n,tl g,1rmt·nt. hut I wa\ "Ho\.\ tloc'\ 1t ln•I , .. I ,l\lo.:l'd "I f Ml 11 ,. ... Daily Pilot ' .. .. d11n 1 nwan tht• "'-l'1gh1 ·Htiv. do(.'' 11 ht•I \1111 kno""' emot1onall\" Dcx·c; 1t h11thcr \ 11u'1" • He an.,wr red 1n the negati ve and lh.tt hl· wa\ u'led lo 1t bv now He\ •inh heen on thl' fore<'· for a vcar V. ilntcd to he a top ever \IOC(' he was 1 kid hrc;t one 1n h1c; famll~ All h1\ \lhlingc; arr maling a lot n1llrL' monc\ ht• c;a1d. hut hc'c; doing what hr llJ\·C~ 111 do Law f-nforcemrnt I <11t·r that day, and that night and "l'' even today, l'v<' hccn thinking dhout 1ha1 youn$ offic<'r and what ht" doe'> for a living. Ht· get., up t'ver; worlong morning and strap-. on a hullctproofvcst1 A prmt'nt to prott"C't ham from getting killed' He doc'> that e'rr\ v.or\ong <L1y1 Ht' doc<. that to protc{ t th<' c1111enr; of< o\ta Mc\3 THO MAS f C RO<,~()N Rall'x>a l\land I( •••n Witt me• f ,, ,,.,_. l_,4_,. ,.~'""' f •1'1f f Onn '•lllef ly (1Mor f om Cl.nln ,,, ...... , f '"'"' Cr•to thett or''' f d•'"' Aobffl Centrell Proov<llnn DtrlW:lo• f•frJ l(Mtefle C••C:ul•toon ~•nttQ., Moward Mvlennary Advert11•nQ O.r..-tt>< ''90~ ... .,,". r'.l~f\tf.-d DtU••r.tor DON ROGERS ~ 82CNm$ 1961-1986 --- DEA information is best weapon against cocaine In the U .S. and Bolivia. facts could make drug enforcement agencies· jobs easier The questmn v.hclhl'r the prl.''.>1dcn1 1s JUC.ttfied in ..ending troop-; 10 Bolt' 1a to help d1 .. mantll' tht' rnca1ne 1ndu'>tf) therr 1<; an tv.o pan' The first ha' to do '-'Ith thr lcgaht> of the acuon Tht•rc are two hill\. one ancient b\ .\ml.'ntan 'tandardc; (1878).thc othcrrcccnt!l9.,IJ "h1ch respccll\ el\ lorh1d the U\~ ol th<.· mahtaf) for la"' enforc<'mrnl and forbid the U\t' 11f the m1lttar, abroad where there 1<. a danger ot' lighting unless Congrc•" g1vec; its approval Mr Reagan ha~ acted on th<.· grounds of national srcunt\ \omc Ph1ladelph1a lav.\cr in the "'h11e House ga' c him that one 't ou \t'C It t'i a ma11er of our nauonal ..ct:untv lha1 one of our alhcs (Boliv1a1 fal·c<. dc:stab1hzallon tx·cause of the corrnp.. 11on ofpoh11c1an~ and police brought on b) lhe lu<. rail\ t cocarnc industr, If that mandate ~ere general the adman1s1ra11on '>hould he ahk lo argue Wllhout .tn~ trouble 1ha1 we <.an send lhe Manne' to an) rnunlr) 1n the world with wh1lh we are alltl'd 1n order to "stab1h1e" the regime there Much mon· plau'>1blc 1\ the 'ihelter g1\.cn b) ( ongn·<,<, in 1981 . perm1tt1ng thr limited U\l' of the m1hlar} 111 ~hacld us from the elope runncrc; Mr Reagan I\ not going to lo\C thl\ one 1n coun I rue. the u!.ual pcopll- ( .\mencan C 1' II l 1hcrt1cs l 'nion ct al ) arr rnntL mplat1ng a law\ull hut the ton<>t1tu11onnht) of the "'ar Powers 4-l I hJ\ 1t\(.'lf never bn·n tested. and \tuart Taylor Jr ot I ht• Nev. 'tor~ I 1m<.''> \late'i 1n ht<, run- do"'n on the l\\UC that soml' of thl' prcs1den1., l nt1n "conceded 1ha1 lht' prohabal1I) th,11 an~ m un "\.\-Ould ruk them illegal app1oaches Lero " Moreovrr. the argument that thl' u<.e of the mil11an for law cnforu·- ment 1\ 1nhrren1h· dangerouc, 1c, not hd\11.. training ~ou don't get taught 10 tl'll the cnem) he ha! the nght to kerp ~1lrnt and to consult a lawyer But such training could be added to the rurn<.'ulu m of m1htar) un11s going ahroad v.1thout an) pro blem. Morco,rr. therr's something that ~t1sfies the 1nnate senc;e ofhusband- n 1n us1ngour Na' :r to help our( oast C1uard defend our <;horec; from con· traband 1f indeed we 1nt<"nd 10 gursue thl' polaC) of tr)ing to nip the drug 1n tht• bud Rut hcrt·. ~urch . 1s the ultimate tu11ht) ol our \t1a1eg) \.\e know that illegal drugs ot almost ever) kind are selhn$ on the street corners of '\menca for k<.s than lhey were selling for a frw yean. ago. which 1s 1cs11mony lo our failure 10 keep thl.' drugs out \uppo'i<' -JU'il \upposc -that our -\rm\ un11s 1n Boll' 1a succeed in grca1h reducing the re~rvoir ot cocaine available for !.ale in Amrnca "'hat would happen') Obsen a11on \.o I An) change an the <.uppl'.t ·">uld prove trmporan. b} the opcr .111on of the ~me la"' that make\ ""age Jnd pnce controls 1ndTt.'ct1ve Prc\'>· urc at one end of th<' balloon will c,wcll .inothl.'r end of the balloon !Raid\ on !\1n1tan man1uana fields a few )l'ar<, ~go introduced Haw(11 to the man- u.ina hu\inec;s l -\nd Point No. 2-· During th<.' interval before th<' supply 1s made up h' another country. one would e'<f)t'll J n'>t' 1n the pnce of the drug. The 1m phlat1ons of such a nse art• 1v.olold The drugs continue 10 he 1c.1d1I> available 10 the upper mlddlc l l:w; ·1 he lower middle class and thc lov.er t.'conom1c class need to excn thl.'m\Clve'> more cncrgeticall) to come up v.1th the monry necessary to WILLIAM F. Bue KLEY feed their habi t. That means more cnme. It would be truly refreshing 1f the federal gO\.emmc:nt were going into lhe quesuon pragmaucally. us1 ng simple data Th<' Drug Enforcement AgenC) should tell us. with respect 10 heroan and cocain<': I ) How much did 1t cost on the street comer five years ago'> 2) How much docs 11 cost now? I) How much more of 1l 1s being 1:onsum<'d no"' than then'' 4) How much have we spent 1n a11cmptmg to shnnk the volume? 5) How many drug-related crimes did we suffer from" W<' can find the answers to those guesuons on our own though the lagurC"s ar<' l<"ss ac.cura1e than those kept by the DEA . But we know that we are losing the figh t and that as we lo~ 11. we continue: to endow our own criminal class. Worry as one should, as a good neighbor. about the nse of l"orrup11on among law rnforcement otlic1als 1n Bohv1a, we have reason to won) at least as much about the corruption of our own people and 1nst1tu11ons One should get from thc DEA o ne more thing, namely some mt1ma11on of th<' na11onal seal<' b) which we might hope to d1scourag<' the pol<'n- 11al drug user. There has been a huge d1minutton in dangerous bomosex· ual sex c;1ncc the AIDS ep1dC"m1c. One might hope for equivalent progres~ agarnst drug consumption What we can·t hopc for. reasonably. 1s that thr l IS Manne'> 1n Bohv1a or Patagonia are going to keep the stufT away William BuckJey 11 a syndicated t'olumolst -111.urn:rai.n• ~ 1;i1,gij.s,r.1•m·'·-------..... v,--------co h n denies having AIDS, but can 't deny its effects \\ \\Hl'IC1T<l"J-RmCohn th<.· S'1 \l'ar-old Jet-\ct la\l.)t'r fl'lCntl~ d1\harred 1n New York. " one of \t'"cral hundred patients ""ho ha"t' bt·en treated tor \IDS at thl' "ldt111n.il ln\lltutcs of Hc<1lth 1n &th<'\dJ Md '\ IH l'i running tests on .1 nt•v. npcnmental dru~ that hold' \om<. hope for A ID\ palt('nts. and C ohn h.t' rccr1vcd the drug. ( ohn fir\! gaanrd fame a~ a )Oung prosecutor of Juhu' and Ethel Ro\enherg. v.ho \.I.err e11;ccu1ed for pa'ising nuclear ~l'rl'I\ 111 the 'in\ 1ct l nlon Hr then \Cr\.L'd J\ ch1d rnun'il'I to \rn 111\t•ph Mee arth) dunng thr Wl\rnn"n lfr publican·~ red-hunting hncla\ tn tht· earl) 1950<; It ~a\ ,1 ttml' v.hrn homoS<":itual'i ac; wc-11 ,,.. \U\Jll'l 1rd 1..ommun1s1 'i\mpath11t·r, "'-l'f<.' ht•1ng fin-d from gnH·rnntl'lll 1oh\ ·" \l·l ur aty mks. ( ohn has dt•n11•<1 h1• ha' ·\II>\ I A.tqu1rt-d lmmunt• f.ktirn•nt \ \, 11 dromC'I. which ha\ kilkd muu th,111 l~{)(XJ .\mn1t.1n\, 1mlud1nK .utor Knd . llud')On <\nme 71 rx·r1..cnl 111 adult i.\10\ 11tl1m' haq· hel·n homoc;c\ual\ or b1\t'J.ual\ C onhden11al mC'd1u1I rt•t·nnh ot the Na11onal ln<;tttutec; of Health c;how that ( ohn wac; adm1ttrd la'>t No" 4 to 1t<. ( 11n1rnl (enter. and wa\ rrlca'Cd Nm 21 H<' v.a\ rc admitted la\I Jun<' 2 to dc1crn11ne Ill\ rcaC'lloM to an <'llPt"nmcntal drutc u\ed e\CIU'1 Vt• J\. for .\I 0\ patient\ he wa~ rtka\Cd Jun<> 4 Thoma .. Bolan, a I.iv. partnrr ol < nhn dtn1rd rmphot1rnll~ that Cohn hd\ -\IO~ 'If ht ha<. •\JO\, 11'\ a su rpnSt' to me ·· Rolo.in <.aid ·Hr'\ d1aano\C"d 8\ ha \ ins camrr nd that's what ht'' ~mg trC'alC'd for · < ohn h1m'idl ha\ publtcl) denied hl ha' •\IDli -;ay1ng he suffers from h ver tancrr On<' of his doctors tntd1cd la't Octohcr that ( ohn had onh tv.o tn 12 months to hvc \I I >'i ,., not d11'('ctl) a fatal da~a\(' hul h' dntro)"tn$ thl' body's natural 1mmunl' \'¥\tern. 11 render\ the victim helplcc,\ again'it other 1nfcct1ons or d•'-<'ase\ -ltke pneumonia or c.anc<'r -tha1 do 1hc actual k1ll1ng The \ID\ v1ru\ 1c; transm111ed through an l \Changt• of hodil)" nu1dc;, a~ tn <;Uual intl'rl"OUr'><.·. blood 1rnnc,fus1ons or 1ntra1enou'> drug u~ It 1c; not pa,scd h\ lJ\ual rnntact. \t-rording to the medical record'> < ohn wac, admuted 10 th<' NII I Cltn1cal (enter, Building 10, at 12 42 pm on Nov 4 The adm11tang d1agno\t\ wa~ "sarcoma" and the a11en,dtng phy!t1cian wa~ Dr. Rohen < Young. <.'hic.·f of th<' National < ancrr lmt11utc'\ mc-d1l1nc branch I>unng C ohn·~ Novemhcr '>t3) h<.' ~a., descrihc-d an the mt'd1cal r«on.h a<. .. alt'n:· hut "not alwayor; oriented He · m1:(f' up det.atl'i .. had "hand tremor\ • and "doc'i tirt' L'a•uly ·· the M<"d1c.al rcrordi; \tatr r he rtrnrd 1ndudec; a note h)' a nur\<' that on No .. 21. at I pm . Cohn .. ac;kC'd for 1nformat1<m on c;e,ual pracllct"'I... I h<' nu~·, rtport con· llnued "I stated thut thc '3ftst ""' wa\ none. but that 1f h<' wanted to havt' \C\ h<' would n~d to u~ a rondom and e<iPt'('tally inform h 1-; panner 1ha1 he had l\ID\ I did \trc\\ that he should ~ta1n from 1Cx wtth 1h1'i d1~a\<' und' on th1\ (prnaram ul treatme nt ) · T ht rt'rnrd of C oh n • s rf'ka~ on Nm ~' tnclud<'~ a "nur"i1ng JACK ANDERSON r ... and DALE VAN ATTA d1agno'i1s" that lists as a ··problem" the fact that th<' "pauc:nt statt'd (he 1s) \Omewhat reluctant to become tchbatc ·· < ohn was r<"-adm11tcd 10 thc Na ttonal < anccr lnst1tu1e'c; AIDS pro- gram at 4 45 pm. last June 2. The records show 1hat he had been taking the drug "BWA 509U" at home. and wac; hcmg brought m to dctc:rmtnc the eflccls of th<' mcd1cat1on on ht~ 1}''ilem. HWA S09U 1s a Burroughc, Wetlcomr ( ·o 's des1gnat1on for ·\11doth) m1dtne or A7T an Cit· penm<"ntal drug that has been ap. prmedonl> foru'iCon <\IOSpa11cm1s Th<' drug ha'> created hope in the medical community's urgent battle apinsl .\IDS bccau<te 1t hu shown prom1\<' o( 1ncre1 1n patients' 1m· munological defenses ~dly, h<' had alread)' detenorated marked I~ tk wu "not \Clf·rC"hant." wa' "quite lcthar&Jc" and had to bf helped to 'lhowcr and ,have. accord· 1ng to tht June rt'C'ords Foo1not<'. AC ohn 1nt1m tt told U\ l.s\I Ftbniar; that ( ohn had faded no11ttabl~ but 15 d<"term1nrd to fin1'h hi\ c1u1ob1ograph) before he dt<''i Jactr Aodtrso• ud Dalt Van Atta art t)'ndle1ted C'Ol•maJ1t1 • TMIAS ELIAS Maki_ng move on • movie business It's not North vs. South in the newest war between the states. This time it's California against the other 49 states in a war for movie pro- duction money. Giant billboards alona the garish Sunset Strip an Los Anieles are the most visible front in this battJe of the movie bucks. High-tech sipiboa.rds that nonnally tout movies, rock music and designer blue jeans now foaturc the Chicago skyline and messages from the hkes of San .i\n1on10 and Nonh Carolina. The tussle 1s no joke for this state, which has seen 65 state and city film commissions nse up 1n the last 10 years. all trying to take movie doUars away. Meanwhile, blase California djdn't even have a film office until last year and the one 1t has now is budgeted at a mere $338,000 a year, less than what little South Carolina gives its tiJm comm1ss1on. "There was a day when I 00 ~rcent of production was done in California; today 1t is less than 50 percent," Charles Weisenberg. Los Angeles director of motion picture and telc- vmon aff&Jrs. estimated rettntly. The results are obvious at Academy A wards time: Stars and producers of movies like " Kiss of the Spider Woman," "Witness" and "The color Purple" offer 1hank.s to places like Bnu1I, Pennsylvania and Nonh Carolina for their help on loca11on. Money and bureaucracy arc the key reasons produce~ tak<' their crews far from California. even though most film rditmg and distnbu11on has stayed at home fa.ample: Makers of "Down and Out 1n Beverl y Halls'' had to pay S 1.000 an hour to shoot alley scenes in that ntzy city. There are no standardized permit procedures in California.. each city having d1fTercn1 rules. Beverly HilJs. for one. makes location mnagers visit pohce. fire. public work.s and sani- tation dcpanments before shooting can st.art. Crews working in Pasadena cannot begin before 7 a.m. and must wrap up their day's work by I 0 p.m. And when filming overlaps c11y boundaries, the complexit ies can become mind-bog- ghng. So it's no accident that producers are responding 10 the blandishments of oth<'r c111cs and states. many of which offer penn1t-frcc shooting. hotel discounts, free use of police helicopters and rebates on vinually all production costs. Cahfom1a officials claim they lost about SI billton of the total $5 billion movie production pie in 198410 other states. But figures from elsewhere indicate the: outflow of movie money was far larger N<"w York's fi lm commission reponed SI 7 billion wonh of work wa' done there llhno1s checked in with S34.9 m1ll1on, North Carolina S61S 3 m1lhon. Flonda SI 14 milhon. An1ona $34. I mllhon. Rewards arc large for the new host states. Every dollar spent on pro- duction means up to $3 in anc111ary spending for hotels, furniture rentals, food and other services. But California sull remains by far the largest loc.auon for movie making, °" tth about S4 billion spent on shootang h<"re last year. the 5ame as in 1984 Of 175 feature films shot in this country tn 1985. 94 were filmed in California But the state fina lly appears to have woken up to the threat from el'iewhcrc That's "'h> 1t now has a film comm1ss1on And Los Angeles has started a promot1onal campa1J0 advertising the fact tt has 255 sound stages. 20 film laboratones and 56 video producuon labs. h has cut th<' paPt"rwork needed 10 iet use pcmuts an half. whale the Stale 1s also working to reduce the bureaucracy burdens placed on filmmakers. But all that is still little incentive to 'ihool here, say movie execu11vt':1 who can ship lh<'1r unprocessed film home for ~1tmi 1n less than a day from anywhere 1n the world. So the end ofth1s war 1s nowhere 1n Sight "We ofTer producers whi te clouds and blue sk1<'s. thtngs they_ can't find an ( ahfom11." says one offic1aJ of the New Mc'\1co film comm1ss1on. Offi~s here complain that's a fal5e slander. but ~y they can't match offers from stat~ w1lhn1 to close ofl hndae'i and downtown streets ind !tar up tht gr&'i'i in city parks 1f tt Wlll bring an 1tan1fican1 movie dollan. '\nd produt'trs are certain the pot will keep bo1hna. Af\er all. repn:tcn- llll1ves ono i\mencan and C'anadltn film romm1ss1ons tumed up 11 one "location expo" in Lo Anaeles thas c;pnna. each mak1na offers dcsiancd 10 draw more movie money away from their ho'it'i, T11omH EllH 11 1 Suta Maaktl- ba1e-d cel1mal11 • state l1111a. --- .. Angels take on Clemens The Botton Red Sox and 16-pme winn.er Raser Oem~n• invade Aubeim Stadium to~t for the tint of• tbreo-pme leries with the Anatls. Both the An&eh and Red Sox have. a lot in oommon. They both lead their' divisions in the American Laaue. and ironically, both are 11tu11lina desi>ite their status. The Red Sox. who have lost eiabt of Ton.'6lat'• 1ame Boston (Oemens 16-2) at Aacel1 (C-andelaria 3-0). Time: 7:3S. TV: None. RadioU(M PC (710). Saturcfay's pme: Boston at Aniels, 12:1S p.m . their lut l 0 and six of seven sinee the All-Star break, will be tryina to hold on to what is left of a threc>pme lead over the New York Yankees in the East Division. A week aao the bulge over the YanJcees wu seven pmes. And the Anaels, winners Wednes- day ni&ht before aetting a day off Thursday, have won just two of seven sinoe the All-Star break. but have seen their lead over Teus an the West expand from I 'h to )Yi games. On the mound tonight for the Angels will be John C-andelaria, presently sporting a ;..o record wtth 3.06 ERA. ........ ..... --. , ....... •11-Ill ...... . Aelroe...., hot wllll 111y wM ..... RI•• Bot Dodgers post sweep of Pittsburgh Madlock, Stubbs gtve Valenzuela support in 9-2 rouf PllTSBURGH (AP) -8111 Madlock oertainJy could relate to the boos that he'd just beard Pitubu~ fans vent oo Pirates Mana,er Jtm Leyland. After a~. he's beard them enough. A frequent tars.et of the Pirates fans' jeeri~ last season before beina traded by Pituburgh to Los An&eles, Madlock didn't iet many cheers Thursday ni&ht as his three-run home run powered the Dodgers to a 9-2 victory over the Pirates. Neither did Leyland, who also was forced to endure the wrath of the Pirates' frustrated fans. "Bill Madlock as a professional and he knows the fans are go1n$ to boo him here, but he doesn't let at bother him," said Dodgers Manager Tommy Lasorda. DMtenatClricaaoCuba. l:OS. ...... , .• c... Dodem at Oucaao Cu.bl. Time: l :OS p.m. TV: Chan.net 11 Radio: KA.BC (790). attempt to force Su at tee0nd bue to homer over the left-field wall off Pirates' starter Bob Wallt in the first innina. Stubbs followed with a solo homer to quickly make it 4-0, and Walk., 4-6, wu forced to exit without retirin~batteT. The n added solo runs in the second and ourth and two runs in the third before Hamilton homered with two out an the ninth. "We came iO here and did what we had to do," M.cllock said. "I think we have a better team than they do and that's the kind of club you have to beat. But it's nioe to win three straight on the road no matter who vou·~ playina." After battJn& hJS 18th and 19th homers of the season, Stubbs said the Dodgen can get only better when atling sluggers Pedro Guerrero and Ma.kc Marshall &el back ID the lineup. American League All-Star starter Oemens ( 16-2) goes for the Red Sox, who will be trying to salvage a djsmal road trip . Rafael Belllard of the Pirate. pat8 the~ on Dod&er buenmner Len llatauek at tliird bue dmtnc flnt lnniDC of Thunday'a 9-2 Yictory o•er Pltt8burgh. Franldan Stubbs added a pan of solo shots and Jeff Harnahon hit ha s first major I e homer whale Fernando Valenzu a , 13-6, allowed five hits over sc co innu1gs to become the Natio n I Lea&uc's first I )..game WUUlCT. c Dodgers woo for the fifth ume m their past six games. Madlock followed a Steve Sax single and the Pirates' unsuccessful "I thtnlc I'm going to hit my home runs anyway," Stubbs said. "But rve been trying to go out there and play lake J can and not worry about Pete (Guerrero) being out." A fishy story: E:JCaggeration just a part of it These anglerSCan provide whoppers as well as anyone By BARRY FAUL~ER o.llJ .... C.I IJ •it Fishermen have long been known for their powers of exaggerauon. The dimensions of their catches and the space between hands, used to depict the length of past conquests, usually grows farther Wlth the passage of time. If so, one can only wonder how much the future "fish stones" of a group of mentally handicapped adult anglers -who were recently treated to an cvenina of deep sea fishing o ut of Newport Harbor -ma~t inflate. "I caught a big one," said Maxine, wtth tnumphant hands raised an the air, shoWlng the size the fish she had JUSt reeled an at about three feet long -only mildly ovcr-cst1maung the actual size of about 13 IDches. Maune. alo ng Wlth about 35 other mentally handicapped fisherman from the Holiday House an West- m1Dster and Casa Grande an Anaheim. J01ned the ranks of sportfish1Dg's self-h1stonans thanks to the efforts of a group calling themselves, appropnately enough. Fresh Fish. The group, headed by Costa Mesa resident Gary Kalus, has organized these fishing expeditions for the handicapped, which are funded solely by private contnbut1o ns; for about five years now. "It started about five years ago when I said to my brother Jim. who as Robinson pleased with drill mentall}' hand1~pped himself and a fixture on the "Freelance," which hosts the cruises out of Davey's Locker in Newport, 'Let's go fishing,' " K.alus said "Fresh Fish says 11 all," Kalus continued, "We want the chcnls to catch fish that they can take home and cat. We are reaching out wath fresh fish." The frcquenq of the outangs vanes with the amount of donauons, but they average around fi ve tnps per summer, according to K.alus. "We'd like to charter the boat every Friday, bul it's the funds lhat stop us," K.alus said. K.alus, who almost si ngle-handedly solicits all contributions, said has tactics basically consist of "hassling my friends." . "We want those who donate to gJ Ve more than just money." he said. "We want them also to comm1t 11me." In addjLion to the donors, K.alus enhsts Lhe aid of youth groups. On this 1ri p the Chrisuan Fellowship Group from the Vinyard Newport Church in Newport Beach assisted. "The uips not only help the handicapped above the age of 18, which are looked upon differently (less compassionately) than mentally handicapped children. but they help me interface the high school-aged groups with the clients to gJVC them a good cxpencnce helping others," Kalus added. "This is our second trip," said fellowship leader David Lyon, add- IDg. "they (his members) love it. I'm so proud of them because they help others before !hey fish for themselves. It's good exposure for them Our society is so glamorous. 1Cs a nice change for them 10 do somethang real." "This is dcfinately all they (the clients) will talk about for the next few days." said Casa Grande recreation director Kathy Hawk. before she was interrupted by a commotion near the sh1p"s railing as Chnstina, from the scat of her whttlchair, hauled m the biggest fish of the night, a 29-anch barracuda. "She wanted to catch the whales," said Hawk of Chnsuna's comment dunng a recent whale-watchlDg cruise. Mary Green (abo•e) of the Vinyard Youth Group ... 1ata Jama Mayberry darln& a flahina outtn.r fot' apeclal adalta. Below, .,.., .... ,..... ., L.-. ...... the •Jieclal aaalm IJ'OUP and 't'Olanteen head oat to 11ea for one of ee't'eral aum.mer tripe for the mentally handicapped. Boyd says he's clean, set to play Red Sox waiting for ~ests before making comment on status WRENTHAM, Mass. (AP) Suspended Boston pitcher Dennis "Ott Can" Boyd said Thursday all has drug tests were nepuve and he wants to go back to work. "I have been gJven medacaJ clearance to return to baseball and I am eager to reJoan m y teammates as soon u poss1ble," Boyd satd 1n a statement released by his agent. George Kalaftis. "I feel good and hope that I can get back on tile mound very soon. .:·My medical tests and evaluallo ns have been completed and the sum- mary of the results have been p ven to the Red Sox. I know what my difficulties are, and I have taken pos1t1ve steps to deal W1th them ... The Red Sox have not received the results of the tests, said a spokesman. Jam Samia. and had no comment on Boyd's statement. The team anno unced earher an the day Bo}'d was released from a hospital, but remained suspended and would continue dady workouts supervised by club officllls. Bovd admined himself last Thurs· day to the Un1vers1ty of Massachu- setts Medical Center an Worcester for a complete evaluation. 1Dcluding 1estang for drugs "Resolution of the suspension penod will entail not only medical advice and assistance, but also financial counseling ID an endeavor to ease outside burdens that have been a ~urce of 'I tress for Boyd." the Red Sox learn statement said. "Once all of these concerns have been addre'>sed to the satisfaction of baseball. 11 ·~ ant1c1patcd Boyd will be reinstated without loss of compensa- uon retroacu ve to Julv 14." Red Sox General ·Manager Lou Gorman said Boyd's return to the starting rotation remained unclear. The agenl accompanied Boyd to the Norfolk C ount\ Dmnct Court where the pllcher appcarc.-d before.- Judge John t Cyr on an arre'it warrant for an unpaid. three-~ear-old speed1Dg ticket Boyd ~a1ved h1'> nght to aJUf) tnal and paid a S~5 fine for going 8"' mile" per hour m a 55 mph zone Rams Coach John Robinson was beamina over some of his young players after has team returned to its tra1nana complex an Fullerton Thurs- day from a scnmmagc against the Chariers in San D1eao. Quarterback Hugh M11len, a 1h1rd- round draft cho1oe from the Univer- sity of Washington, completed ei&ht of 17 passes for 84 yards and was 4 Tor S for 6S yards durina a passing drill. Raiders cut 15 players, including three veterans "I was impressed wtth Hugh Mil- len, the way he popped nght back up after he was hat hard," Robinson said. "I also laked the o ffensive line play ofJsecond-year tackle) Duval Love an (rookie auard) Tom Newberry. And on defense ( thouaht (rookie nose tackle) AlvlD WriJht did a good job." Rookie runnina beck Lynn W1l- hams led the Rams durina the scnmmqe, pin1na 91 yards on nlDe cames. He had a run of SI yards. In the pre-scnmmaae passana dnll, Robinson played all three of has veteran quanerbacks . Dieter Brock.I. last year's starter, completed 4 of 'I passes for 69 yards. while Steve Bartkowski, sianed as a free qcnt dunn& the off-season, was 2 for 9 for 29 yards. Steve Dais was S of 7 for 74 yards. Nefson:Montgomery. Smith released by LA ·--OXNARD (AP)-F1f\een players. mclud- 1ng veterans Jim Smith, Bob Nelson and Cle Mo ntgomery, were released Thu~a> by the Los Angeles Raiders Vcte"ns were required to the National Football League team's tramana Thu™1ay and all arc expected to take part in the club's tirc;t full practice session this af\emoon. wtth 1he exception of Charley Hannah Starti111 fullblck Frank Hawkins rrportcd 1ocampandl&fttd to contract terms Thu~ay leaving Hannah as the Raiders' only un<.1gned player Smith, a 31 -year-old wide rt\t'1vt'r. wa'I obta1ned by 1he Ra1dt'n from 1he Pimhurgh Steelers la,t September in e"hangc for" fifth· round drat\ choice Smith had three receptions for 28 yards and one touchdown ID sax games for the.-Ra1deN before sufTenng a gtOID 1Djury which sidelined ham for the rest of the season. Smith played for the Stctlcn from 1977-82 and forthe B1nn1DJham Stalho nsofthe United Stales Football ~.ague from 1983-85 Has best year for the Steelers was l Q80 when he had J 7 receptions for 711 yards and nine touchdowns 'im1th was considered expendable because tht' Raiders have several young prom1s1na rect'1vers an camp Nel~n. an inside linebacker. and Mont- go mery. a wtde rcce1 ver-k1ck rt'tumt'r wert' rckased because the> f11kd physical examlD· ataons Nelson 33. m1!>scd the ent1rt' 198~ sea~n becau'IC of a kn~ inJury suff'crt"d in tra1nma camp He Joined the Ra1de" .. , a fret' aacnt "" )'CA" ago and wu a 'itartcr most of the time Ix-tore being IOJured late 1n the 1 QR4 ~a\On Montgomery 30. 1oincd the Ra1dfr\ a' ll free agent late m the 1981 season He 'iuffcred a ~ason-cnd1n& knc-e anjury an last vcar·, fourth game Montgomcl) had returned bolh punt\ and k1ckoff'I last season befort' be1Dg IOJured at Nl'" Eng.land All other playef'5 released were rook.1c' They were Comcrbacks l« Maller of Cal c;u1c Fullerton and Raspee Occ of Northern llhnot\ punter kfT Carter of Long ~ch State; place· kicker Jim Mavor of Chico State, quartcrbark F~ Buckley of Stanford; runnina backc; Gerald ~an of Teus Tech and Ed Barbero of Catarom1a; safety Tam W1lhams of North Carolina .\&T center Nack Haden of Penn tale. linebacker l« Blakeney of W15h1n11on State. otTen"t1ve tackle of C"arlton Walker of l tah; and defen'\1ve end Cl~nn Ho"Arcll of .\n1ona A ,pokc'\man for the Raider\ ,.,d the move t('f\ the team wuh I 05 playe" 1n ramp .\1-:o. thr <1pokc\m3n ,;a1J, thtrc wM noth1na new to report on veteran defensive end Fred Dean. who was given a tryout b> the cluh Wednesday "He went back to his home an San Diego '-' t'dnesda\ nil.ht " the spokesman said. "Wr tncd him out ft wac; Judacd that he was sound Noth1n1's been dont' as of th1'i 11me 1he s11uat1on 1'1 under con~1dera11on ·· Dean '4 tned out wlth the Ra1de" wuh the perm1 ion of the l\an Francasca 4~. who reported!~ tned to pe'°'uade him 10 rct1rt' It was al~ announced that defcn-uve end Boh Buakow\ltt of Pltl'lburgh. the Raiden' No I draft choice. will practice this af\emoon or 4\aturday momma an full pads 8uetkowslc1 has not pract1C'C'd Wlth the C'lub s1n"·c tus am' 1l 1n camp la\t ~eek btt"auK of a blck ailment 8uctko~k1. a 270.pounder. '" bchcvtd to ha"l' twi"ed somethana an the <11dc ofh11 back whale warm1n1 up for his tint practice after 1 ont'-da\ holdout. • Or11ng11 Coelt DAILY PILOT/ Friday, July 25, 1988 Wall-to-wall colle1e football Ooocla falf television achedUle From AP d.lapalda If the college footbaJJ fanauc 1s not sataated by the Oood of pmcs that will be televised every Saturday in the tau. he probably never will. "My God. it's watl-to-wall footbaJI," satd Donn Bernstein. ABC's director of college spons. "We've beaten 1t to death. We think it's overexposed now. In some markets, you can watch eiaht to I 0 pmes every Saturday." EvCT SJnce deregulation of college football, ordered by U.S. D1stnct Coun Judge Juan Burciaga 1n September 1982 when he struck down ABCs exclusive contract with the NCAA, networks, cable, pay televts1on and syndicators have the spon available from noon to midnight on Saturday Pnor to the 1982 season, ABC was the only outlet that had the ngh1s 10 televise college football dun ng the regular season. But the antitrust suit filed by the Universny's of Oklahoma and Georgia changed that. CBS Joined the NC AA 's television family 1n 1982 under the old TV plan, but deregulation opened up the sport tn 1984. Whereas ABCs 15 games every fall were the ltm1t for college football, this autumn ESPN will televise 17 games and Turner Broadcasung another 37 tn add1tton to ABC's 15 and CBS' 20-22. Those figures are about the same as last year and do not include any of the pay TV services or local synd1cators. ··Nobody can watch that man) games," Tononc1 said. "And 1f there are that many choices. a Ian 1) not going to sit in the cold when he can watch It on TV." Despite the dramatic increased availability of football in the last two seasons. broadcasters say inttrest has not declined. "There's no question on 1t~ vitality that the public has an appetite fo; 11," said Peter Tononc1. vice president of program planning for CBS. "Things ha' e changed so rad1call) and 1n so many directions. the question now 1s what 1s it's relau-..c market val ur." Quote of the day Abe Lemons, Oklahoma Cit) ba~ke1ball coach, on how he came w11h1n two stroke' of winning a car at a golf tournament· "It was a hole- in-one contest and I had a three " Fed Cup play becomes heated PRAGUE. Czechoslovak1a -Hana FIJ Mandhkova and Gabriela Sabatan1, both extended to thrtt sets. led Czcchoslovak1a and Argentana into the semifinals of the Federauon Cup Thursday, whale West Gennany 's 1op player, Steffi Graf. was knocked out of1he tournament by a broken big toe. ln the consolation round. Bnta1n also lost its top player Jo Dune v.ho was bneO) hosp1taliLed for exhaus11on Mandhko' a and Helena Sukova. also earned to thr~ sets. v.on their singles matches against Australia and moved r Lechoslovak1a, the No. 2 seed. into a meeting with No. 7 Argentrna The onl-v relattveh one-sided match among the fourquanerflnal singles.had Mercedes Paz of Argentina beating Judith P~lzl of Austna. 6-4. 6-2 Hecht said ( laud1a Kohde-K1lsch and Bettina Bunge. Nos. 2 and '\on the team, would fill in for Graf in today's quarterfinal against fifth-seeded Bulgana. In the other quarterlinal. the tor>-seeded United States pla)s No 8 Italy. Mlnne90ta trio acquitted ... MADISON, WtL -Th~ former m Mhioeso&a buketb&ll players were found innocent on a total of 12 counts charai11t IMm with acxual asautt qainst an 18- ye&N>ld an student in a verdict read early today in Dane County Cin:uit Court. The jury deliberated about s11> houn. Mitchell Lee. 21, of Carol City, Aa .. had been ChaJJcd with six counts of flrst-deatee sexual assault; K.evll\ m1th, 21, of Lansina. Mich., was da.a.raed wtth four QOunts, and Georse Williams Jr., 20, of Oakland. Calif., with two. The woman had alleacd trur<1..tt and Smith forced her anto a hotel room ana raped her after Minnesota's Bia Ten basketball victory Jan. 24 over Wisconsin, and that Williams joined in later. The <lcfense wd the woman consented to sex. Howser teat reaulta ezpected KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Kansas Clty Ill Royals Manager Dick Howser has a lot of people pulling for ham as he continues to recover from braan surgery. Dunng a three-hour operation Tu~y. doctors found a cancerous tumor an the left frootaJ lobe of Hawser's braan. They removed only part of it for fear of damaging healthy brain tissue. The results of pathological studies were expected to be disclosed today and will and1cate the type of treatment needed. Howser's cond1tton remained fair. Dean Vogclaar, the Royals' vice president for public relations. said Thursday that Howser 1s getting about 500 cards and I 0 10 15 telegrams every day. Rookies share tourney lead Davia Love Ill and Billy Plerot, both !I PGA Tour rookie~. each shot 7-under-par 65s 10 share Lhe firs1-round lead Thursday 1 n th' Buick Open at Warwick Hills Golf & Country Club at Grand Blanc, Mich. Alone at 6-under. one stroke behind the leaders was Ed Fiori who b1rd1ed the last six holes for a 66 on the rolling 7,014-yard layout. Jim Colbert, who aced the third hole, was one of five players at 5-under. The others were J.C. Snead, Howard Twitty, Brad Faxon, Tom Byrum and Jim Rutledge ... At Woodbndge, Ontano, Cbrla Joltnaon shot a 5-under·par 6 7 to take a two-stroke lead after the first round of the du Mauner Classic, the last of the LPGA's four Grand Slam events Johnson cames a two-shot lead over Hall of Famer JoAADe Carner into the second round of the 72-hole tournament. 49ers waive veteran lineman ROCKLIN -The San Francisco [i] 49e~ Thursday waived defensive end Fred c II• Dean. a four-time Pro Bowl selecuon Dean. 34. had refused the 49crs" request to retire. He had been the '>UbJt:Ct of trade talks with Los Angeles Raiders owner .\I Dav 1s. who watched Dean work out Wednesda) at the Raiders' camp in Oxnard. Davis had expressed concern about Dcan·s cond1t1on, particularly since D\.'an underw\.'nt anhroscop1c surgery on his left knt.'l' a year ago Television, radio TELEVISION 8 p.m -WRESTLING.<. hannel So 9 p.m. -BOXING: Make .\yala ""·Aaron Lopez in NABF super bantamweight lham· p1onsh1p, 12 rounds. from ~an \nton10 I c.>. Channel56 RADIO I p.m . -BASEBALL. Dodger~ al < hKago Cubs, KABC (790). 7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL. Boston at Angels, KMPC(71 0). (714) 675-2550 1.-1 I ~h•P' ,ird \\a\ •Lido \larir11· C 1·11l1·r •'''"purl B1 ·ad1 Sports on TV for weekend IUJ>IO 12: I S p.m. -BASEBALL: Boston at Anad•. KMPC TELEVISION 9:30 a.m. -AUTO SPORTS: World of Outlaws oatioaaJ cb&lleqe., sprint cars on a half-mile dut U'ICk (I hour), from Mesquite, Tex., C'bannel 9 (710~. p.m. -BA.SEBAU.: Oodatn at Chic:qo Cuba, KABC(790). 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Mannao&a at New Yon Yankees, KNX (1070). l 1 a.m. -WllUTLING: Channel 9. 11 a.m. -AUTO SPORTS: Inside NASCAR, Cba.nncl 56. Noon -WRaTLING: Channel S6. Sanct.7 TELEVISION 9 a m -SPORTS SUNDAY: Tour de France bicycle race (fi~al.lca). (I hour, delayed), from Pana. Channel 2. l2:U p.m. -8.U£BAU.: Boston at Angel, Channel 4'. l p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodaen at Chicaao Cubs, Channel 11. IO a.m. -AUTO RACING: Talladep S00 (3 boura. 30 minutes), from Talladep, Ala., Channel 2. 10 a.m. -OUTDOORS: fasbma the Well, Channel I p.m. -MEN OF STEEL. FINGERS OF BU'M'ER : Rick Monday bosu this comical look at aoof-ups from the wol"ld of sports, Channel 7. S6. 11 a.m. -WRES1UNG: Channel S6. . 11 :20 a.m. -BASEBALL: Oodatrsat Chicqo Cubs, Channel 11 . I p.m~ -WRESnJNG: Channel S6. I :JO p.m. -GREATDT SPORTS L~GENDS: Billy Cunnin&ham, former NBA star, is profiled, Channel 7. 2 p.m. -GOLF: PGA tournament (2 houn), from Grand Blanc, Mich., Channel 2. 1:30 p.m. -WATER SPORTS: Profile of f~cr NFL quartetbe.ck Dan Pastorini, presently a draa racing driver, Channel 4. I :30 p.m. -GOLF: PGA tournament (90 minutes), 2 p.m. -RODEO: Pro tour. Channel 7. 3 p.m. -PRO FOOTBAU.: An insightful look at the prcssuriz.cd profession of coachma m the Natiorial Football Leque, with profiles of l 0 current NFL coaches (I hour), Channel 7. from Grand Blanc, Mich., Channel 2. Cham 2 p.m. -BOWUNG: Doubles Nauonal - p1on1h1p (I hour), from Reno, Channel 4. 3 p.m. -AMERICAN ADVENTURE: Channel 2. 4 p.m. -AUTO SPORTS: International Race of Champions, the third of the four-race IROC auto racing series (I hour), from Talladega, Ala .• Channel 2. 3 p.m. -BOB UECllER'S WACKY WORLD OF SPORTS: Channel 4. 4 p.m. -Atrro SPORTS: Speedway Amenca, Channel 56. 4 p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Amateur boxing -U.S. vs. USSR (I hour), from Sacramento. Channel '4. RADIO 4 p.m. -WAR OF THE STARS: Channel 7. 4:30 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Boxing - Mike Tyson vs. Marvis Frazier, 10 rounds, heavyweights (90 minutes). from Glens Falls, N.Y., Channel 7. 11 :20 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, KABC(790), I p.m. -BASEBALL: Boston at Anacls, KMPC (7 10). Louganis :Poised McEnroe for sports festival z:pended 4 000 thl te t -in ticket sales. 1n return • a e S Se Lougan1s' main competition as event kicks Off should come froi:n Olympic silver medalist Bruce Kimball tn the plat- toda;,, In Houston form and M~rk Bradshaw and Ron J Meyer m spnngboard. The women's divang features HOUSTON (AP) -For Gre,1 Michele Mitchell, the Olympic silver Lougan1s, the National Sports Fest1-medalist on the platform and 1984 'al always has been special. This year. World Cup uthst. who was a double the event's first as the United States winner 10 last year's FesuvaJ. Olympic Festival. It carries extra Challenging Mitchell will be Olym- meanrng. pie platform bronze medalist Wendy ·'This 1s the most 1mpon.ant meet Wyland, e1ght-1jme NCAA champion we have leadinf, up to the World M~n Neyer, and 1984 Olympic Charnp1onsh1ps. ·said Loug.anis, who spnngboard silver medalist Kelly has won a pair of gold medals an each McCormick. of the last three Festivals. He·s been While the divers don·t ,1et staned JUSt as dominant on the world scene, until next week, the actton begins with three world championships. In Saturday an 19 spons -archery. all, Lougan1s holds 38 national tttles. baseball , boxing, canoeing and k.ayak- The top two finishers in the diving ang. cycling, equestnan. fencing, fig. here. which begrns on Wednesday ure skating. Judo. roller skating. w11h prehmanarie!> in spnngboard. rowing, shootang. soccer, softbaJI, quahfyfortheworldmeetinMadnd speedskat1ng, sw1mm1ng and next month. synchromzed swimming. tennis and "This 1s the best field we'll have for table tennis. any meet this year." Lougan1s said Several other Olympic and world ".\nybody could win and there'll be a champions will compete here this lot of pressure to perfonn well weekend. In shooting Matt Grylce, the because only first or second place in 1984 Olympic gold medalist m skeet, the Festival iets to go." and the husband-wife world cham- The Festival begins today w1th pions. Dan and Terry Carlisle are compulsories in figure skating and entered. synchronized swimming. followed by Darrell Pace and Rick McKmney, opening ceremonies at the who have dominated world and Astrodome in the evenang. A concen Olympic compet1t1on throughout the headlined by The Beach Boys. Jose decade. are entered an archery. Feliciano and Otts Day and the Speed skating champion Bonnie Kn ights will be the main feature of Blair. wo won five gold medals in the those ceremonies. 1985 festival. and 16-year-old INGLEWOOD (AP) -John McEnroe, despite showing signs ofbis old form after a six-month layoff from compctiuve tennis, came up just shon of handling Ivan Lendt in the first step of his comeback aimed at the U.S. Open, losing. 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (7-4) to the world's top-ranked player in an exhibition match Thursday ~g.ht. McEnroe got off to a shaky s&an, losmg the opening set, but then began reeling off the deft voUeys and crisp passing shots that made him the world's top player for almost five years, winning the second set and taking a 4-1 lead in the third. Lendt, however, showed why bas has succeeded McEnroe at the top of the tennis world, winning six of the last eight games to force the tie- breaker. In the tie-breaker, McEnroe went ahead 4-2, but Lendt reeled off the finaJ five pomts to win the match, wrapping it up when McEnroe's forehand return ofa volley wound up an 1hc net. A crowd of 13,856, including McEnroe's fiance, Tatum O'Ncal, attended the match that climaxed the Michelin Championship Tennis Challenge Series, which has been played over the past 15 months. Davlsswlms to world best An estimated 4,000 athletes an 34 Michele Granger. who led the United spons are expected to compete here States to the women's softball world EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) _ and organizers say they expect to crown in January. will perfonn Satur· Canada's Victor Davis clocked the 1-m_e_et_t_hc __ brcalc __ -c_ve_n_m_a_rk_o_f_3_5500_._ooo __ d_a..:..y_. ------------. fastest 100-metcrbrcaststroketimeio VIDEO MOVIES s2so1 Day ADDITIONAL RENTALS t/2 PRICE VCR & 2 MOVIES ••• MOn. ·Fri. s515, Sat. s915 NO ::;::.::!'•• FeH •ver WEDNESDAY••• Monday · Saturday to a .m . · 'p.m . ALL RENTALS s1oo SS&·&J&J 270 S. Bristol, "Bristol Vlllege" et Bristol & Redhill • Costa Men Cto•ed Sunday It's• •ree Dayr ( the world this year as the swimming program of the boycott-hit Com- monwealth Games began today. Davis clocked I :01. 56 and set a Commonwealth Games record as he headed eight qualifiers into tonig}lt's final. The 22-year-old Canadian, psy- chang himself up for a shot at Steve Lundquist's world record 1n the final. was slightly faster than England's Adnan Moorhouse. England's cyclists gamed the first gold medal of the games in the I 00- km road team race. The v1ctonous quartet of Paul Curran. Deno Davie. Alan Gomall and Keith Reynolds completed the course in two hours, 13 minutes. 16 seconds. The second gold medal went to Canada. shooters Guy Lonon and Sharon Bowes winning the air nfle pairs with 1, 16 7 points. Our penny loafer in tan English calf with natural linen vamp. Our shawl tassel spectator in navy/white or tan/white. #119 Fashion lsland•Newport Beach•759-1622•BuJlocks Wilshire Wing . Astros erupt early to rip Phlls Etght-runsecon lifts Houston past P 1 a e phta. -3 Fr.m AP du,.taet PHU.ADELPHIA -Mike Scott had the kinda of pitches bo wanted. but the Hou1ton Asuoa ... ve him what he really Deeded -ei&ht run1 in the leCOnd anJ'lina Thursday ni&ht tha.t led lo a 9-3 victory over the Pbiladel bia Phillies. Scon, feadina the major I~ in stnkeouu1 fanned a career-hill> 13 and Kevan Bass went S tor S incl~~ a two-run 1inale in the bii upnstna. u Houston won iu seventh strai&bt aame. "Ilwf a aood split-finaer pitch, and •.&ood fastball," Scott said, "but the eiJ)lt runs early 1ure helped. You can chaUenie people a lot better when you have a bi& lead." Scott, I ~, p ve up five bits in his seven inninp. lie raised his strikeout total to 187. "He had it all toniaht," Phillies Manager John Felske. "He threw a pitch to Mike Schmidt that Schmidt said was the best pitch be had ever seen." the 14th inn.i.na wttb I ain&Je and ICOred OD Mit.cb We~. double, eendina Mont:ral over Ci.nclnnau and eOdina the Expoa' four-came loaina atrCU.. The Reds rapped 15 bit1 but abeorbcd their rlft.h conaecutive loss in lbe teaularl~ scheduled pme, their second 14-inruna lOll in three amet. Earlier in tbeevenin&. the Redtand Expoe resumed their pme that wa1 1uapended July 13 in the sixth innina and Cincinnati won 10.2. The pme had been halted with the Reds leadin& 3-2 and when it resumed Thursday, Dave Parker hit a srand slam and Enc Davis added a thn:c·run homer. lo the American Leque: S.yal.1 t, Tlsen t: Lonnie Smith broke up a scottless same in the * NATIONAL LaAGUa ... 11. • ..-2 -,...,.. .... ClHCINNATI MONTREAL ei&btb inn&Qa witb a home run tbat pve KanUI Qty i1' victory over DctroiL Winner Scott Bankhead, ._.., ecat- tered eeveo hiu in aeven in.ninp, strikina out eeven. 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Jim ~ and lM Laey both drove in lb.rec run1 wtth three hits. ....... ,!\w.J MOUITOlt ~ •r ll... •r91911 J 1 t 0 RMUI W >I I 0 1 0 I I A.ueY'O-1I0 I S 0 O 0 ..._cf • t t I .ioo ..,,._.,. •too 0000 kntldr• 00 •• 0 0 0 0 Melllch 19 • 0 0 0 4 1 0 I ~-2110 0000 .... .,..,. •021 S 2 S I Teill~' 0 0 0 0 S I 2 1 GW!lloft rl • 0 I O J 2 a I JObalc • I I l 1 0 1 0 Jlltt" J IOO 4 022 ......... 1000 4 I 2 I Huf\Wp I I 0 0 0000 <MrmM• 1010 0Qnla1W 2 t I 0 "'"' T.-11171 sc...w ...... ........ . .. ,._, 111'1111 I I 'It -_, •1-J Genw W'""'"9 ._ .. -..,.., (5) a-AINl'v ~IOfl 1, P'M I J I IA 1 L.~IOft 7, 19t!llaJ I ll'c: 1 a-sc:otl, o.r-, TllOn, ltedut, Ii.. Hlt-AINIY C•>. Jo.RUIMll Cll St-4te«M (141 ..... If' M•DMIO kottW,10:6 7 S I t 4 13 ~ I 11000 Funll l 1 1 1 0 0 ..., .. , ...... ..wltv L,11-7 U-> 6 I I 4 2 Hume IM 'l 0 0 0 I Gormeft ) 71100 Sdlelrlder I 0 0 0 0 l Tellulw I I 0 0 0 1 W~ume, Gormen. Pl!l-Ar.hbv. Umolf'K Home, o.Muttl; ,Int, Grew; Sec· ond, Davi•; Third, .............. T-2.l7. A~l,ON. Shane Rawter, 11 -7, took the loss as Philadelphia s four-game winning streak ended. TlbOIP I 0 0 0 ltMl'don P 0 0 0-0 Wrlollt Pll 1 0 0 0 Ft1"'1d llfl I 0 0 0 Slllwl" NJ/tftW cf Rowdll P11 v..-.11 .....,rl EO.vlatl .... 8Dle1 c l!Mtlty lb o.i.r21> G4..llldlt11 p Pwe1 Pll Frencop Oenlell llfl Powerp lltOMPh WIMlt P l O OO f iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 0 0 0 0 In other National Leaaue games: ElpOl 1, Reda 6: Tim llaines led off * 8ur11• P o O o O Sabre p o o O o S2SISS 81trdlllo c 1 0 1 0 T..... SI 611 6 T ..... :a II I 9 T..... » 2 10 2 SC... 11¥ ...... Sc.-""....._ Mlller..i on on • 011 11-6 ~ • 121 MJ-tt ~ • • • 010 11-s ,_....., 112 • --2 Game Wlnnlne 11a1 -W.t., cs>. Cornllletlon of Juty 13 Wll*ldld N l'M. E~r•nco. DP-MontrMl 1. LO&-MolllrMI 21.4% ANNUAL RETURN• AMmltlCAN LaAGU• ll9"tl 1, T1-'I 0 G1mt w1M1no 1te1 -St"-" <41 12, C1nc1nne11 10. !9-Mllnar 2. w•i.r. L11111ttd supply of Rare, Pnm1um lnmt· tr~':1~!!. 'e~~~. 6st:=j :=11.C•>~D~ls ~~Slr.'-::111e 'm· ment Grade, U.S Mint $20 St. C.uden Gokl KANSAS CITY ~OfT •r1111111 Hlt-f>.ntw (22), E Davia C141 S&-OenWt (6) S-Webster, 8flardello 2, 0..1.,, ....,_,, Coins, (1907 1933) (ApprOll loz pure •r1tlllll LSmltlllf 4 I 2 I W1tson cf • 0 0 0 lretl lb , 0 0 0 MdlMdtl 4 0 0 0 Wiiii. 211 l 0 1 0 9elboftl lb • 0 1 0 IClnMN rf ,.. . 3 0 0 0 Sundbro c 3 o o o As.lair u l 0 0 0 WNIKr 21> • o 2 o 5-el'ownlne. SF-0.wwn Gold) Available now for possession Tremml u S 0 0 0 lft H It alt aa SO If" H It Ell U SO Glblofl rf • 0 2 0 CllldllM1I Mal*'MI -C 'LL LNPWV. c • o 2 o l!lrownlne w ,,..7 s ' 1 1 o s Tibbs 1 t • • • s ft - O.Ewns lb 3 o o o Wllllt 'l 2 O O O O McClure I 1·3 I O O O 1 CERTlflD RADC COIN CotftPll 1000 Frenco 1 I 0 0 0 I l!lu<ke 2·3 0 O 0 0 I ~ LOWfY lb O O O O It. MuTPllv 1 1 0 0 0 1 RMrdon 2 4 1 1 0 I 714/642·9089 GNObdh 3 0 1 0 Mllter..i S.00-e W,1-0 2 1 0 0 0 'l Htrndn !HI 1 o o o T1bbl s , , , • Olldlwla• I 5 3853 Collnl If 3 O 1 0 81.rte L.7-4 1·3 I I 2 1 GulllcklOll f f 4 4 3 3 714 64 • I L-cf • o O O McCluA 2 2·3 • • 2 1 Frenco 'l l I o 1 l "Olul' lb • o 1 o Sebr• 1 J , 2 1 Pow., 2 1 o o o o RESERVE ynuns NOW Tbb Ad And $4.00 Good ror One Reolar Adult Ad.albsloe. : • 1 4 I T.-. » 110 I WP-Til>Os, 8ur•t WIMl1 L, t·2 1 4 1 1 0 1 UUI\ ! Oood Wttkd"!Jl Only July 25 23 29 )a JI .ind Augl.ISI I f I ac.r. ll't...... umiWes-Home, wev.,, Flnt, Monteoue. Urn91ret-Home, Monteoue; First, •Soufn SoloNft lhtNn ._ell.,.._ Yon 1 I tc....a CltY --111-t Second, Rennert. Third. Brodl.landef' T-2 29 BrockS.ndef', S.Cond. Wever, Thfrd, Renner1 ~---------··----••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• a.tr.it ----0 ~A=-~16~..121~~~~~~~~~~~~~T~-4~·t~O.~A:-~~~·~°"!_~~~~......:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:.::.:::.=-:.-==:.=..=:.=::.==.==..=.=..=~~=-==-===~~=-==-===~===-==-=-=...:~=-=-= Geme Winning ltBt-L Stnrtll (S). - E~. Stnltll, O'NMI OP-t(antH Cllv I, Detroit I 1.08-t(entes Cllv '· Detroit 11. 28-Whllt. HR-t. Stnltll <Sl 5~1bton (II), Colllns 1171 K-tCllV 8en11Mec!W,4·4 81eek Qulsenberrv s. 9 o.trlllt If" H It alt aa SO 7 10011 1 2·3 l 0 0 0 I 1 ·l 0 0 0 0 0 01NMl L,l·S 7 1·3 4 1 I 4 4 ~HAR . C.mPbell I 2·3 0 0 0 0 0 UmPlrtt Home, Gercle, First, Ford, SK· ond. ltMd, Tlllrd, ICOK T-2 46 A-26,401 Orteeel 12. ~ Sex 6 CHKAGO aALTIM09ta Cenoel1 cf Gulllenu TolltMlnn 8elntt rf Nlerloh rf Kltllt dn Huitt! lb FISk c GWelkr lb Celder" If Crur 211 T..,_.. Mlr ltlll Mrltlll • 1 1 1 J8onlll 211 S 2 l o 3110 Wloolm211 0000 1000 L.ecvrf 4 133 2 1 I 0 Lvnn cf S 1 0 0 I 0 0 0 ltl'Pllen u S 0 1 0 l 0 0 0 Traber lb • 2 1 1 3001 Owverdh S23l • 100 ~"" 3100 4 112 Sflelbv" 0000 RACQUET CLUB TENNIS. CLASSIC PUR~WOOL~ Los Angeles Area BMW Dealers for t~ Benefit oft~ Childrm 's HoTM Socae~ of California In A ssociation with the 3000 OMellvlb .,,, 4 I 1 0 C>empsv c J 7 1 l J2 6 S S T..... » 12 14 12 SC.Wirt ... CHcael --,._ 6 SaMmwe 7U 100 Ob-12 Geme Wlnnlno lt81-0wver (l) E-t.vnn, Crui, J l!lonllla DP-eenlmor• I LO&-<lllceoo l . 8•111mor• 6 HR-otmow v ( 101, Trebef' W , I.KV (I), G Welker (12), Dwver (6), C•notloll (2) SF-+iulett CMc.eee Cowi.v L,S·6 01wlev Sffr0t ......,_. lft H RHaaso , • , • • • 2 2 ' • • 0 3 0 0 0 2 2 Fteneoen W,S·' 7 1·3 S 6 3 2 Bofdl 1 2·3 0 0 0 1 WP-Oewltv, Fleneoen UmP1r11-+iome, MerrlH, Finl, Hendrv. SK· oncl, Cou1ln1, Tlllrd, JohnlOll T-'153 A-13.•I ltllft9WI t lldeM l CLaVELANO TEXAS 8ern1rd 2b Sutler cf C1rttr rf Trvntn dll MH•"tf Frencou JKoOV 30 Tellier lb S.ndo c ••rlllllll • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 4 I I 0 • 0 0 0 • I 1 1 3 I 1 0 • 0 1 1 l 0 I 0 l 0 0 I Mce>wel cf Flttcllr u oeri.n lb lncvoll• rl Slerre rl Werdtf LAPl'lfl dtl 5'eUOlll c 8uechle30 Wllk"'1211 Mlr lllll S 1 I 0 l I 0 0 4 0 I I • 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 • 1 2 0 l 0 I 0 4 2 1 I l 2 I 1 4 0 I 2 Jl l 6 J T ..... ken llv ..... )47106 OWtllnd -1• --J Tuu .. •1 lOX-7 Ge,,,. Winning R81-8UKMll m OP-TtJtH 1 L08-<ltve&end 4, TeHI 7 28-SleUOlll. Certtr, J~v 38-WllllerlOll HR-Sle uolll (IOI S8~1elC:lltr (I) ~ P Nlekro L.7·7 Notti Ot01er1 WIH1 TeHI IP' H It alt H SO 3 2·3 • s 5 l 0 11-l 0 0 0 I 0 I I I I 0 1 2 1 I I 0 3 Lovnd W, l·O ' S l 3 1 6 Moh«Clc S, 1 ) I 0 0 0 I Loynd PltCMd to 2 betl«I In Ille 7111 WP-f> Nftkro, Otlktr1 Umolrtt-Hemt, PllllllPS. Finl, Votteoolo, Second. Welkt, Third, McCoy T-2 4S A-34 .2S6 Racing returns to Fairgrounds Doug Domokos. the self proclaimed "Wheelie Kina." wlll perform at halft1me tomaht as speed· way motorcycle racing returns to the Oranae County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa after a one~wcek layoff. · Domokos 1s listed in the Guinness Book of Records for the longest continuous wheelie. His other wheel- ie stunts include, chmbina San Fran- cisco's famed Lombard Street, circl- ing t~c top of the ~mpire State Building and the circling the New Orleans Superdome. Domokos wlll perform on both motorcycles and A TVs and wlll include a ht&h wire act tn has routine. On the track, Huntinston Beach's Alan ChnstJan will be amona the first d1v1s1on nders tryina to mount po1nu for the U.S. Champ1onsh1ps. beJ!n- ninf with qualtfy1 n1 Saturday, Aua 16, m Auburn. The deadline for quahy101 for the U.S. Champ1onsh1ps as Wednesday. so aood performances tont&ht could be crucial. R1vcn1de's 1cvc Lucero 1s the current points leader. followed by Mike Fana, C'hnsuan and Brad Olllcy of San Clemente Gain open at 6 30, wnh the fint heat race tchcdulcd for 8 Parkina and prosrams art free Vitas Gerulaitis Pat Cash (714) 644-6900 August 6-10, 1986 N'TH E NEWPORTER RESORT •TOU.• ... "9CMI Ta••• r.JNorelCO ~ Put Quotrty F 1r~t lll'llllCl•lt Daily Pilat John Fitzgerald Vijay Amritraj Roscoe Tanner TOURNAMENT PRICES & FORMAT BOX SEA T PA CKAGE i """" 'f\o\tM••dr fur All fhr •r'~',..'"" l1u lutk• • inv1tat1on• 111 Mttt th,. Pl'" 1 • l'uh ;met h•llnt1 in Tournam,.n1 Pn•11r1n WEDNEWA Y, A UGUST 6, 7:30 p. m. l •1uar1t'r linal \lnl(IM mah h,., THURSDAY, AUGUST 7. 7:30 p. m. i 411.art,.r lin•l •tnl(lt • mall ti ... FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 5:00 p. m. I '""" lin•I tlouhlr• tn11t1 h l'rfl ( ,.l,.hntv luurn~n1r111 SA TUR.DA. Y, A UGUST 9, 12:.10 p. m. I b1t1111tn Ka111ur1 ( l11h I .. tunn "h"'" ) ,,.," fin ti ""l(lr• 111~11 ht·• I "'"" ht1•l 1ln11hlr. '""'' h SUNDAY, AUGUST JO, 12:30 p.m ''""'"' < on•ol•t1011 M 111 h ''"''" ~ 111 ,, J1,.o11>l-. l 1n1I ( II\ ,,,.,,.. /111 J,.lrphtmr ft"'""' t ·• ''' t ti \ Jn •~" tt I ii{ • \ ',, "' ,.1 \dlt1thl1t,, J lfi • l 1t II• t I \1lf1ll"\I •I $1. I S t .rorr, \ l1tt•''"' • l l ' I I ""I t l'lt-ftw "'"~r \•'\I• """ ~ I"" •hi<-"' II•!!"'~'' l(""I""' I luh '""""I l•u" "'"lm~1l .. 11h ,.,.11•1.llT'wtl ,.,,..,...1rm1'lc'ltrto ll•r•111A1• H 11 f""' I luh '"""" ( ln1M n f1•hn \\.onr lrtlfU• I luh 11'1 lanoh.....-Kna<I ,.,.,~ ... R-o .. ,h t " •1•--11 ~ Pro g~lf results . . .. . Mtlll'elWI ...... °""'~ u-n-10 hltlfWIUI •»-n MAJCMl L•AOU• ITANDtNOI ~'-"tUe Boston N.,_ York Cltve1411\d Uttmora Toronto Oelrolt Mltwt ul\M WHTOMMON W L so ... • • 45 SI fl S2 0 S4 40 51 ,. 5' IAST OfVISfOft S1 37 SS 4\ Sl 42 Sl 44 u •s .. .. ..... ~"'''-'" Kansu Cltv I. Ottrolt O h lllmore 12, Clllca90 6 T e11u 7 Cleveland 3 T .. V', c- 01 3 S\'J 6111 '"" .,,., 11111 ao11on 1ciem.n. 16·2) et ~ (CancM19rla J·Ol. n MIMHOI• (Hfflon 3-9) •' N-Voo (N~ 2·11 " Kan .. 1 Cllv (Laonaro 6·11 at Ottroll (King 6·2), n Cn1eaoo IAl*I 1•1t al 8a111mort (BOOCllc.l<tt 12·5), n Clevt'anO (Butcntf l·O e r T .. u \Guzman 1·10), n MltwallllM (Higuera 11 71 al S..rtle Moroan 7·fl. n TOf'onto IJoMion o 01 at oa~1ano <Rllo •·I) n S.tu"*V'I 0.mtl aou on '' "'*'" MlnM•Olt ti New Vork Cnlceoo at Balllmort Toronto at OalltanO Kania1 Cltv at Ottroll Cleveland at Ttxa1, n MllweullM at S..llle, n S4'NlllV'I GlltnM Boston at """"' Kania1 City at Ottrolt MIMHOll at ,...._ VOi'._ Cnlaoo tt Baltlmora Toronto at Oaklario MnwaullM at S..llle Cleveland at Ttxes. n Natlenll Ue.U. WEST DIVISION 1-1ou1ton Sen Fra ncl1<0 s.n oi.eo ~ Cincinnati Allen ta N-Vork Mewl tr ff I PnllaOtlPnll St Loul1 Cn•cal>O Ptttsouron W L S4 47 50 4S 47 .. 4j 50 ... 49 43 Sl aAST DIVIWN '3 71 49 43 46 47 41 S2 40 SI 31 S4 llwndeV'• Sceret 0"-1 9 P1t11ouron 2 GI 3n 6111 ,.,., ..... 10 ,. ... 11 73 13 7S "> Cincinnati 10, MonrrH I 2 lcomP~llon of 1u1~11a~I MontrHt 6 Cincinnati S I 14 tnnlnQU Hou1ton 9 PlllleOelPl'lla 3 TedtV'I Gamel Oedearl (Wt!<n 4·8) at Cnte•llO Trout J -31 HOullOfl IOHll•I.. S·71 el PhlleoetPnle I Hudson S·9 I n ~n Francl1co f~1on 2 • at PlltU1ur11n IBle!Kk• 6·S) n Montrtel IMar!lnai 0 71 ar C 'ltlnrrerl !Otnnv 6·9) n New Vor• •GOO<lt n 10·0 "' Atlanr e IPer~r 6·11 II ~an 01e90 •Whll\On O 11 at ~' Lou11 1For1<h I • fl S.turdeV'1 Game1 l)ad99n at C ntc.a11<> San 0 1990 at SI L0..11 Ho.nron " Pnhaoa1on11 San Fr1ncl1co a t PltrlOUro" n Montrea ar C•nc•nner " Ntw Vork al Afl1n1a n Svnda V' I Gamt\ ~11Cnlca110 Ho.i11on ., Pt11110.IP"•• S.1> FranCt\co e r P11•101;rg'> ,...w Yori. at Ar.ante S.11 0 -,, SI Louil Montrea 11 C•rx•11nar· AMERICAN LEAGUE An911 av.raw' (n.r.vtf\ WldnftdaV'I Gama) BATTING A8 It H Hit Itel l"ct Joyner J77 sa 111 n ,. 321 8ur1Hon 170 ?S S4 • 19 311 Downing 311 sa .. 11 SI 171 Grlcll 16' 20 16 s ,. 171 Jack1on 250 le 67 9 l3 268 HtnOrlc~ 172 ,. 45 I 27 262 Wlltong 19• 18 •9 7 19 2SJ Pt1t11 m 49 '° 2 31 249 Jon" us S2 61 II 37 249 DtClncH )00 36 7) 10 49 2~ ScllOflt lO 2SO 39 se 1 2t 733 Howell 82 •• 19 , II 232 Ner"O" 49 • 11 l • '14 Boone 2..i 7t SS 3 10 709 Totall l:IOl 470 11' " Ot 161 !"ITCHING II" H aB so W·L EltA '"•d"' c• 0 0 0 0 0-0 0 00 Jlwr:•t fl't 0 0 O·O O 00 L"<ai 44"1 ) 0 l O·O l 93 """ 160 • 140 47 1)0 9·7 3 03 , • .,o, ••• 17,., 11 , 14 3·0 3 06 ~ n t• 10 , 21 11 11 1-0 3 10 MC(tl• f ·~1 126 SS 131 11·6 317 '°O"t'•' )1 }6 I) 23 •·I 3 18 C.ort>fll'I 52 40 14 77 1-'2 ) 11 111'00'1 ,. 23 I 10 1-3 4 1) Sullor 116~ Ill 24 74 1-1 4 63 Tett4l ~ 111 JO) SSt S0-44 U7 s .... Moort t Cort>att t Foor.,. 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE Docl9en t, P1r1m 2 LOS ANGELES l"ITTS&UltGH l enorv cl JGonm ct M101c• lb Htmlln3o_ Sru1>011t Melull lll Sc lOIC•a C Dun~en u RWllm' •I v11enr10 ,, ,..D'a t P let•h ab r II bl S I 7 0 4 1 2 I 0 0 0 0 , 1 1 J 1 I I 1 s 7 1 7 2 1 1 0 I I 0 0 • 0 2 0 I I 0 1 I 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 .+.tmontf Btlll1ro u lhv2o uw1ntn 7b MOtu lO Morr11n lb TPtnl c 8onlll11 rf RReyl"' ,, Wal~ I> Clmnh p Wlnno ~111 D C.uente 0 RhQOan D~ l3 t II t T9'9l1 Score bv tnnirl9'I lb r II bl ~ 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 I 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 l 0 0 0 I 0 ? I • ? 0 J 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 ' JS 2 10 7 L .. A""'91 4., 100 00 1 • li'tttlbvt'Wll 000 l 00 00 I -7 Game W """'II 1t81 -M<1d10<• ) E-Mao100. DP-LO\ Ar1ge•H l P1ll\Oy• ;• 2 LOB-LOI AnQtlt\ • p 111ourgl'I • 2B-Rar Almon R Rev"Old' HR-.Ya<!IOCk S Sti,.OO' I ,9 Ham1t1on 111 S8-~1 23 l •nOru.Jf 9 A•,.,on l8 5--S< O\C•• ve f'n1ue e tit M A ER 8B SO L01A,,_... V11tn1ua••N lJ6 I ~ 7 C D a1 "1 D l"lftlll4.lrl!fl Wal• L • •6 D 4 U C1trne"'' 7 1 l 1 ;;; "" S I I 7 Guente 7 I I o Wei• pllcnad 10 ~ t>•t•a•\ " th" 111 e,,,.,.,.11"'' 011cnf'd to 3 oa11en n 1~ JrO Umolrt11 Hom• Pl)n(IM I'''" p ,111 !,f'{ :>1'0 C.r1r10er Tl'llrO B Wllll•m• T -1 •• •-11 o.u MAJOR L.EAGUE LEADEAS Amertun L .. eu• (T'M.u_, W~V'\ Garnti) 8A TTtN(, 1118 a1 l>allJ B090' BO\IM JH .Yal••noly Ntw Yor~ 343 Euler N•w 'fn" t12 AIU 8 0\IOn )31 Pu ... tlt Mlnl't4'\l)ll l/V RUNS--lt H1nc1trJO" N41w Vorlo. I P...c•11• MIMHl)ll 10 M11n1 .. gl~ N•w Yor~ t1 ltll • Ot(\111~ M l"!'illlr>I 0.lo.htnO M 11!81-<.al\l~O Oeklt "<f 19 8tll Toron• I\ ~. A,,..., 14, 8erllt l<! TMonlo n Me• 11no1y New Yorio. 10 .. .,... ........ , ffll..,_, »-3t-10 ltldlcr-JWt-7> 0.\111 L..ow Ill JI·~ ~Hoc:fl JJ·»-10 &r1911 T MWMll'I ,...,,._,, &!IV Plarot J')..,,_., M9() IN:CUl'NIW 3S-»-71 OIN ll**"' . .,,_,, l!dFlclf'I ........ L.M'IVWldllM ,,.,._71 "1IWll P'ftll ,..,,_,, Jltn RuttMN M·J>-61 owww ~dWlit-,,.,._71 ~Meeoml'11 ,,.,.._,, J.C.$M9d ~-,,......., s~ '""*' ,,.,._71 lllt l(rlthtt 31-»-n HOwll'O TWltty ,..,,...., OIO~tt 3~71 o.or..c.. ,..,._,, 9rad l'IJIOl'I ,..,,......, Mat'll trooq M-U-11 Jol\nA4'ml •u-n Jim ColOer1 33·~ EmltGonUlat »·U-71 ,,.,.,_,., J9'-U-73 Tomlvrvm u-~1 Kellll CINrwatw JS-3'-71 9r1C1 Febll lS·»-7> Jey Otlslne ,..,,..... Andr-Mleee »·U -71 Ir.if UPI*' n-»-n He lSullon 33·35-41 VenceHMtrw J6·J5-71 Jiii\ Otnl 3M'7-7> Kenny Knox 3Ml--41 Miit• Mee ullovol'I ,,.,._71 ~•Oon9kt 3M7-74 09Mlt Trlxltl' 3'·»-41 TOllv $hit n ·»-11 L~9n ltoo.rti 1'·.U-14 lri.tr Claar Sl·u-.1 OA Wtlbrlno ,. )S-71 J•v Horton t1·31'-74 .... ., jlCOOllf\ )6-~ Pat LlndMv M-U-71 StavetradV )S-39-74 Tom Pvrlt« )4-~ SrtvtJonH 37.,.....71 Roo.r1 Wrt/M 37·'7-1• TOM Kitt >4-~ Cllrt lvrum :M-37-71 MIMW .. I 37-J?-7• DavldGrallam J2·,........ OaMy&rl9o• lS-36-71 [)eyt It lllTllftlllt 31·3'-7• Br~Llttrk• 31·31--6t OtnnYHtPitr )6-JS-71 Gr .. ~ Jt·U-74 &ol>EHIWOOO 35.,....., Mllo.t S.UUlv1n 3'·U-11 CWlt lurrouotla J9-JS-74 JOlln COPlr. :M-3s-6f larrv Jff(ktl 34·37-11 Mltr.eN~ lS-39-74 Jeff Slumen lS·~t Jlm Helltt 31·,....71 •ex ClldW9ll l6·39-7S ~Inman 3A·3s-6f Wavnt Levl 34·37-71 Payna Steww! )6-39-75 G-Sa..-1 36·:0-.f OavldOorln l5•l7-n MllleMI ... •31-75 Wavna Gredv lS·*-'f Kan Green 11-u--n ... GlaUOll )5---75 8oC>bv Wadi! Int )4-~· Victor It eoaladel :M·»-n Marti Ca~VKIC!lla 37·»-75 lk.tdclV Gardl'ltl' )7-:n--.t 8oOo'f Cola 3'-36-n ~&um• 37---75 Ban Cranallaw 34·3s-6t &rad Brvant 3MS-n MlkeSmltn 3'-39-75 LM Trevino 34-:0--.t Leonard ThOmP&an l6·M-n P.ui Allover Jt-31-75 Maril LYt lS-~9 RuuCocnran 3'-»-n Kllluo .Aral 31·17-7S TomGllMton 36·:0-.f Da n Halldonon 3'-»-n LOU Grel'tem 36-39-75 Harrv T1Ylor 35·*-'9 JOl'lfl FOUOlll J1·JS-n Tom J«llllnt 17·»-75 Brla n M090 :M·u--69 !lob Lonr 3'-»-n ~·· Oolttrnul• 37·»-75 LaNY Z.leolet 35·*-'9 CalYln PMtt 3MS-n Tommv Vai.ntlne 1t·l6-7S Lon Hlnklt 3S·~t Jacki!-3S·37-n &ol>Gllder 3t·37-76 ltOd Clll1 JS·~t S<:oll VtrPlank 3'-Jt.-n Davthrr 37·39-76 BoObY Cla,.,,l>tll )4·3~9 Georoe Arcnar 35·37-n LYnn Jenion 37-39-76 JodYMudd 3A·36-70 E011ardo Romt<o 37.3s-n Jtf1 Grvelel 39-17-76 TC Cntfl 36·3.t-70 BOil Twav 31-Js-n Jim Mi»ltllno 31·»-7' DOVll lewell 36·3'-70 GrH Twloo1 36·36-n Rocco M9dlell l6·4C>-7' 8 111 llf•etson 31-3)--10 Gery Plnn1 36-36-n Woodv Bledlburn 31-39-n Steve Pall JS-3$-70 81all'l9 McCaMllllr 3'-U-72 AoamAoam• ~»-n Mike HutOert 36-3~70 Jeff Lt"lll 36·l6-72 RandV EriklM 31-39-n GervMcCoro 31·U-10 Jim Gallagher 36·»-n Rick DalPC>t «>->1-n Mike Hiii 35-35-70 AOrl•n Still\ 31-3+-n David Lundstrom )9·3'-71 Jim Simoni. JHS-70 Rick Ftnr )6·37-73 MacO'GractY 31-40-71 Deve ElcNll>eroer 3S-3S-70 Roy &1ance lana 31.J.r-n Pet f!ltulmona G-37-79 Morrl1 H•lel11ty 3S·3S-70 Trt•tr OodOi. 3'·3.t-73 TomSllew Je-41-79 Tom Pernice 37-3)-70 Antonio Cerda Ja-3r73 Greo Pow.,1 41-le--79 David Paot>tea 35·35-70 8oObv P•ncr111 37·l6-73 Andy Soltv 41·1<>-tl L.PGA tournement • HHfhtr Farr 37-36-73 Lisa Vouno 3'·37-76 (et Weedbrldee, OMarla) LH Jlf Ptar\Orl 31·35-73 e.dly Larson 31·:»-76 Chris JOl!n1on 33·3A-67 1(1t1>y Wl'llfworrn J7-J6--73 Sllarrl Stalnl'teu« 3'·31-76 JoAnna Carner 36·33>-19 JuOv 01c~ln1on 37·»-n Sl'lellev Hemlln 37·39-14 CatnvM«" 35·3S-70 Atll1on Flnnt v 37·31-74 Bartlara Pender11a11 36-41-n Nanc.,, S<r•nton 36·3'-70 Palll IUu o 4l·U-74 CllldY lhrldt l7·4C>-n Pa ttv Sllffna n 35-JS-70 Sally Qu1n1en 35·3t-71 BerlMlre Barrow 37·4'>-n Cetny Jol\nston 34·36--70 Penny P11lr 37·37-74 Donne Caponi ll-39-n Laure 8a11111'1 3'·3.S-11 (pjlatn Wtlto.er 37-37-74 O.otllt Au1tln lt-3t-n Lori Gart>ao 35-36-11 Jo Ann Wuham 31·)7-74 Susla Paoer lt-3t-n M4rv Mure>nv 39-»-11 C etll't' RtVnolO\ 39· 1.r-14 Anri.-Marlt PaHI 31-3"-n Send<• Soll1k11 37·34-11 Pam Al'tfl 31·36--7• Carole Chartlc>Mler ">-37-n Nancy Wnlte 37-34-71 Martlla N1u1t 37-37-74 Clndv Hin 41-36--n Susla Mc:An11ttr 35·36--11 Mitri Eooe 3'·l6-74 Marci 8ozartn 39-:»-n Jull lnktlt< 3S·36-7l O.oorafl MCH•Hle 38·36--7• H011l1 Stacy 41·36--n Mlllle l!larltOttl 36-35-71 0 Howe Che nce•lor 34·40-7• Janet Andt<SOfl lt·40-71 LtAnn Ca1..oav lS-36--11 J1"aGaooa1 )7·37-71 Nancv Ltdballer 36·42-11 Jan Sltl>Mnion 36·3S-11 Vet Skinner 311·36-71 Joan Delk 37·41-71 L..auren Howe 36-JS-71 BtYlfltV Oa v11 31-3'-71 Snarrln Smvtn 3'·40-71 Sendrt Palmer )7·34-71 $u1le Berning JS-3t-74 Bonnie Lauer 41-37-11 Sllarrl Turner 36·35-71 Hlllhtr Drew 36·39-75 Karin Mll!ldlnoer 3'·40-71 Bt11v Klno 34·3&-71 Amy Bani 3S-40-7S Kalllrvn Vouf'IO 31·40-71 ICelhY Beker 39·33-12 ~llY Llllle 39·36-7S Btllv 8arrtll 43·36-79 CalhY Krelltr• l1·3S-72 Vic~! Fer11on )9·36-75 Jent 81el0Ck lt-40-79 Sii Seman 34-3.-72 Parr.,, Haves 37-l&-15 Joan Joyce 35·4+-79 Allee Rittman 11-J.r-n M Btlll Zimmerma n 31-3t-75 ClnOY MadctY 43·36--79 J1nt Crafter 39.3..-n C Montoomery 38·37-7S Dianne Dalley 36·U-7t ~01te Jon11 38·l4-77 Pat Mt'ftrl le-37-75 Meliua Wnllmlrt •1·:»-79 aJovt McAvov 36·36--12 Btrn Dt nlal 39·36-75 Marlene Hegge 37-42-79 Slllrlay F urlon11 36-36-72 Cerotvn Hiii 31-37-75 Sul it BtrOoY 41·31-79 AlietMllitr 34·31-77 Amv Alcott 31·37-75 Katll'f Hiit 39·40-79 Klm SlllPman 36·36--n 8everlv Klan 36·39--75 Sula" Tonkin 38-41-79 Oaoble Mauav 3t·3:r-n Ro1>1n Wenon 36·39--7S Margeret Waro 39·•1-tO M.. SPtncer·Dt vlln JA·ll--71 Dot Germain 36·J9--7S aJennller Wvatt 40·IO--tO Sn1ron Berrtrt 31.3,r.13 Becto.Y P1ar1on JMl-75 Otfll\t Le vlont 39·0-tO Aveko Olr.emoro 31·3S-73 aSneron Smtrn l9-l6-1S LorlWt1f 41·39--IO Mlnov Moore 36·37-73 Sllvla 8trJ()jaccln 37·»-1S aMar'-Slrtll 39·41-tO M Flouer11·Do11 3S-31-73 Lino• Hunt 38-»-16 LYM Connellv 39-11-tO Pat Br1olev 39·3~73 Lauri PettrlOn 31-lt--16 COflnlt Chlllaml 38-4~ Laurie Roni.er 36·37-73 KalflY Polllewall 31-»-76 Jacklt 8tr11Ch •1·.o-11 Miu •• McGeorge )9·l4-73 Catnv S11arto. )9·37-76 Ptnnv Hemmat •2·39-tl Oewn Coe )7-36-73 Oto Rlcflaro 36·40-76 Kav Kennaov 40-41-tl O.OOran Sk•Me• 36·37-73 Dele Eo~·no 37·39-76 lemmy Fraor1ck1on 31 • ..._., J1r1at COies )1·36--73 SttDlltnle F1rw·g 31·39-16 Ot<·Hft Ku 43·3'-t2 O-.Lll•er )7 36--73 J1ri1vn Brtrz 35-41-76 M J Smith 41·41-t1 S.."" Sa nder\ 17·36-73 LYM AOam1 31·:»-76 Barb T11oma1 40-42-.2 8erll Bunltows~v l1·J6--13 Myra Bracto.we10tr 3'·37-76 T narese Heuron IS·37-t1 Ceroltnt Co w•" )1·36--73 JOOY Rostfltl'lai s.,e Fog•e,,..an lt 3S-13 Merv 0 Nver SAVES-Aue 81 •rmore JS. Rtghtlll, Ne"' Vorl< 11 Herna n0t1 Ottrcilt 1• Harri1 l au1, 15 B Sten11v 8o"on 14 Han"• Toronro U N1nonal U.~ (Tllrevtfl WMIKdeV'l Gemt1) BATTI NG C718 al l>afl)-Brookl, MofllrH I 337. 8eckm en New York l3S, C Brown. San Frencl1eo lll, Gwv""· San Diego, 333. Ovkltra, New Yori\, .331 RUNS.-Vwvnn. San Dle90 63, H•nt, Piii!• 0411onla. S9. Murl>llY, Alltnll, SI, Schmidt, Pnllaela1Pllla, S1, Carter, New Vork, S6 RBl-Scnmldl, Phll•otlPllla , 73. Cerltr, Naw York, 70, G Davi•. Hou,ron, 66, Ptrktl' Cincinnati, 66. Brook1, Montreal, sa HtTs--Gwvnn, San Dlevo, 173. Sax, Oodliln, 1111 Rell\ff, MonlrHl, 117, Beu Hou1ton, 104, Parktt, Cincinnati, 104, Sand0tr11. Cnlceoo. 104 00U8 LES-Ha'fH, PMl aOt lPl\la, 21, Oun$1on Cnlur110. 75. R Rtvr\Ofo1 Pl1t1ourgll, 1•. S.11, Oec19en, 241 Srr1w1>err. New Vork, 24 TRIPLES-Samuel Pfllladtlollla 8 C~n. Sl LOUI\ 7, McGee. SI LOUI\ 1 Ovk1tra, New VOl'k, 6, Mo<eno Aflanta 6 Rtlnt1 Montreal, 6 HOME RUNs--G o.~,, Houlfon. '1, Parke<, Ctnclnnell 21. Sc1>m101 Pnllaaetl>llla, 21. Mlll"lllel. D9d9an, II, Hor~tr Aflanle , 17 Stutlbs, OeOew1. 17 STOLEN BASES-<oeman Sf Loul1 61, E 0 1vl1 Cinclnnet •7 Rt•nt1 MontrH I, ,,., C>Ynea11, e>ooeen. U : Do••" Houlton 33 PITCHING 18 <Jec.·l•on1)-K ... fel0 HOUi ton 7-1 2 0 . RRoo.n•or· (1n(•nnal' 7· 1. 2 20, Ferna nOaz New Yori< 12 l 713 Oieda, Naw Vorh 11-2 226 Oa ring,...,.. Vork 10-3 77' STltlKEOUTS-Scon Houlton 174, ValalUvtla, 0000.n, 10 , Rvon HOU1ton. 116. Wtldl, ~1. 1131 Z Srn•tl'I Allenta , 111 St.VES-Rtaroor 111'.ontrto 77, WOf'rall, St Lou•' 19 D S,.. It-Hov11on 17, Gonaoe San O•eoo 16 Lt Sm·I'> (ll •Caoo 16 LITTLE LEAGUE ALL-STARS s.ntor Dhfl"41n SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT lat J...,,,., Jr. Hlgfl, W"!mlnltt~) TllurMilV'1 Score Cl II' t' .18 I Froflll•rl 17 District 60 I Rowland H~ II"°\ I TOdl'f'\ d11amolonlft~ GarM 1 c" -D•~tr1(I 62 tWt1tmln1ter) Yl O·sor0c 1 18 i:rontltr) lloxlne (ti Fttt l'OfVl'TI, lffw Y9'111 -EAVl'llVEfGHTS Renatoo S11l1>t1 •o• ·~·• N v 1e:o·o O.nnl1 Flt.ts (Lei l•g~' \~0"0 round l Sn11>es 11 2S S· I Flktl 11 ~ ' I Y OOLENEtC'.HH -Iran B1rlllev (New fO•• ~ o·d Ba1Mt1 Bt.nco (Ca rac.11 Vtfl· 'I ,.,,., tourO\ rounG N•OR MIOOLEWEIGHTS -Marl• ltoucco •0 .. 10<> FranceJ def Ron Malell (WIC,,lte rc.an I "'''' Cite ••o" 1111nr round1 CRoucco 11 1'-0l WEL TEltl/YEIGHTS -All S.IH m (Ottroll) • () c l'ei Roo•n IMleml. Fla ). WVtfllh r~ \4 eam s 8·?·1 ROl>ln Is lf S·lJ (RUISERWEIGHTS -s .. tmil Mc()onagn '<fw (prl< 1 KO'd D•rrtll RIJ!ar (f'tllled91Ptlla /, '''" •ound IMcDOfll(ln ll S·O Rllltlf' 0-l) < at Sen C:.l'lft, Ce!. I WEL TERWEl<iHT -AndV Nance l.S.n QA'~?<• l"O'd MllCMll J11llen (Palo Alto). 11\lrd no fllanct 11 n 1 ?, Jurten 11 19 7) 0-. ... ...... 36·40-16 1C.r111 Arron11f011 47·41~ 43-U-76 Dem, , .. .,..,. Dam IO 8ortll Powar~H KR) Powtrl\ovla to Lake l"bllla) MAOlltA -Sen Joaouln River (mldOlt fork I S.Olcllar L1kt, Slarltwaathtr ulle Misc. CYCLING Tour de tr~ 20lll LE~ It.SUL TS I Bwnaro Hlnaull (Frencel, I nour. 15 mlnutei, 35 1Kond1. 2. Greg LaMond IU.S ), 25 IKOndl Otnlnd; 3. Julia n Gorotot (SC>tlfl), 2 mll!Vt .. , 1 MCond oelllnd, 4. JMn·f!rancoh &t<nard <France>, 7-0S 1>9111nd, S Marino Leier· rtta (Soaln), 7.31 6 J .. n-L..c Van04t!>Oroucke lhloluml. 7.lS 1 Ptttr StlYtnl'IHOtn (IN Ne""'1ench), 7:5',. urs Zlmmttmann <Sw1t1an.no), ?:St, 9. ClallOa Crlo111eflon (8el01utn),. 3:03, 10 Andrew Hamr>tlln IU S), 3 12 II Sllvt Bauer (Canada). 3·13, 12 J .. u, Bla nco SP411n, 3 37, 13 Paul Haohadooran (9efolum), l.31, 14 Guido Wlnl"""O (Swltttr· land). J 43 IS Maartan Oucrot (tn. Nethtr- landll ) ... ()!Mr A.mencaft, CaM4lafl ltlden 12 Ron Kltftt, 1 mlnvt ... '6 MCOllOI Otnlnd 1• Boo 1to11. 1 S6 b9fllnd1 12•. Jeff Pl9!"ca. 11:06 131 Alex Stied• (Canada), 12:S4. OVERALL STANOtNGS (A,_ JO Utll) I Greo LtMond (U.S.), '2 hOut'\, SI mlnutt1, 49 1acond1. 2 8ernard Hln•ull lFrtncal. 2 mlnut11, ll iac:on<1• btl'tlno; 3. Uri Zlmmtlf'menn fSwllltrlan(f). IO·IS 1>9111nd, 4. Andrew H1mP1llfl (US), 19:33 S Cla u04t Crtoulellon (8tllllum>. 1•·S3 6 ltonan Pen1te (France). 2S:31; 7 Niki Rultlmann (Swltzerland), 71:17; I. Alvaro Pino ISPeln), 37 37, 9 Stevens RoOks (Illa Ntthar· 11no11. 33 32. 10 Yvon Madtot (Franca). JA:OS 11 Samu.I Cabrara {Colombia), 3A:36. 12 Jtan·Francol1 Bernard (France). 3S:SS. 13 Pa1<al Simon !Franca), 36:S2. 14 E0111rllo CllOIH (Se>eln), 37:S6, IS Robert Mlll1r I 8rltaln) <I0.31 Ottttr "'"*1cen. Ceftedllft ......... 73 Steve 8all9r (C•n.dal, S3 mlnute1, '17 ..Condi btlllnd, U 8oC> ROii, 1 N>ur, 47 minutes, 2S IKondS 1>9111no. '° Jeff Pl9!"ca. 1 llOur SJ mlnutft. 4 1Koncl1 btl'tlncl, '9 Ron K 19ftt, 2113 25 Otnlnel 113 Alex Slleda (Canada), 7 15-36 Otnlnel TliNN15 l'ed9rallellC..p {at ~llt!Ut. ~Hiiia) QUAltTalt,.NALS C~•llla vs. AvstNlll He!\• MandllkOYI (CZ«llO\IOVakla) a.I WandY Turnbull, 6· I, 3-6. 6· 1, Haltna Sul<ove IC1Klloslovakle) <Ml Ann. Minter, 6·4. l-6, 6-4 °'"""""' n . A\lltrla Geor1t11 Sa~llnl CAr09'\llfla) o.f Petre llubt<, 6·2, S-7, 6·4, Mtr(edtl Pei IAr111ntlna l dtl Judi!,, Poet11, 6·1, ... 2 CONSOLATION SCOttlS Brl!aln l Finland 0 Batgtum 3. Sw.O.fl O T .. m t9M11 ,., OH!eM) LOS ANGILH M, OAICLANO D ,,,,.,,,,~ Miiie OtPalfMf (0 ) Off !ltol T~. •·$ Wern.rt a.in Hff~MalllllOIY Nt w YO"• ''° Puc"•" ~,,._,, llS '""'"°'' T()lo,,to 1)0 Be• •0ton10 1'l ""'-• AJt111111, 111 00U9 LE5-Mat111191, Ntw Vor. I) R c1 Boll<lfl, 1' &oott •01•on. 24 It Hanoar""' Haw York, t• '11011..-8• ''"'Wl'• H T'llP\.ES-8ut1tr, c .. v••ano t F tf"lndtl Toronto 7, Ci Watt.tr c P\l<.tw • °"""' S..rr't, 6 Wiiton, l<e"Jel C•tv • DAVIY'l l.OCl(I .. (,....._. -..ct\) -• oott1 271 •llOltO'\ • IMllTtcuda 15 l>onlto, 21 vt•iow1a11 )0 wntta 11111, IS roo: lltll, i lleMbul, SO r el•co !Min t tlS Mnd IMIH 170 mecllartl, I .. 1111, '" t>au 1' '*" V!¥1u • rnallo \Nlllki HI WJll'Ollt T LA NOtNG S boe 11 I )I LI~ IOIMltr ILAl def PM1111r Louie, 6·4 MM'• °"*"' Tellcll« SI.... Meliler !LA) Off Cnrlt Ounll OtPel!\'ltt, .. , w.._-,~ lond«·Pannv 19'11 (I.Al def Sflaron Wel•ll Louie •·I HOME 'IUNS>-eerl l lO Toro,.ro 7S Cent.Ko 0a11 .. no, 1l Peg lt •UIO N-Yor•. 13 1t11 Toronto n. l(lt!Ome'I o.-ieno n STOLEN IASEs-til '1~'°"· N1w VO"k $S. C~I Clllcaoo IO '""""-A,._, D i w 11•0•1. K•., .. • c11v. n. 1t1Yn0101 "9111e. n !"ITCHING II dKlilon11-<lt<'*11 ao,tll<' tt 2 1 ff A119"1 ClllCHO 1 r 1 t1 f!tr• reen"1 Cttv, 7· I, 1 Ot 'IHmvu.,,. "'9w vor~ 11 2 ))0, kllfom, Clevel.and, 11·7, lt4 ST'ltut(OUH Cl•mt l'I\ 80110• U • •nQ•tt1 I Ytllo..,1111. 17 IMlrrKVda l llOl!tto, 1 OOS \and IMllt 41 ce llco IMlu l "'uloln. , .. "'•Oartl DANA WHA• .. -' l>Oelt 212 anolen 1,2«! oau , oarracvoe l)t boftlto 1 llallbut l!il "'•tkartl. I ro(I< ""'· I #NII -IMIO Tilb ..... ~ .,,.. LOS ANGILIS -11(1 ltoo CrMI\ SAN •laNA•OtNO a10 ... , L•-• Gregory L•-•. Sl"'-"wOOd Lat.a SAN ~100 ~II l 111, '!av La~t ,... .. 0--. l tltcl'l(·Sondet (LAI def Ounll·W1t111 6 j MM', ............. (llf~-.J.) ~ .......... trld Gllben (US) dtf Todd Ntbon II.IS 1 6·1 6·4, Semmv Olemmelve (Us) dti lttc:erOD A(Ui'\I ((!'!fall. 6·). 6•2, Mlltt LN<ll IU S l <JM Nduk1 Odl1or (N~le). J·6, ... 3. 7·6 °"~ SMtlitl ,.IT W•alC TIMIYey, Aue, S Houston 11 ll8IM w ..... ,. Alie.. New VOt"tt Ot.1111 al Att.nla ,,...v, Awe.. lnolenaPollt at SHttlt PlllladtlDNe a t Detroit, I p m .._.v, A119. t IMfalO ar C ..... ti9fld Cl\Jeaoo at PlttiMOll ClllCll'!Nll al K1n .. 1 City Dalla1 el Sen Ole9o, 6 p m. Miami ., MIMMOI• N-OrltMs at o.i,,. Ntw Von J•tt •l Gr.n ••Y (MaOl&an Wl1.), I pm St LOU•i ti Tame>e hv luftdmv, Aue. 10 It...-. at S.n Franc."co· noon (Cnanntl 2> WH,,ln11ton ., New El\Oland SICONO W••ic ,,_,,Aue. IS CleYNnO •• Mleml •• pm (Cllan/191 1) Pllltbur11,, at WaM!lnotOl'I, I P m Seattle 11 Ottrott, t P.m Sa1W•v. A• 16 OaHe1 ar It....,., 6 p.m (Cnanntl •> Atlanta II Tempe Bav Buffero 11 Houtton. I P.m. Cincinnati at N-York Jall, a om Otflvar al MIMMOll lncllanaPOll• al c,,ic.oo. 6 p m KanM\ City at St Loult New Enolan0 al New C>llen1 PnlladetPl'tl• a l S.n Dleoo, 6 D m New VOf'k Glenl• at Grttn Bav (MllweukMI Melldly, A!$ " S.11 Frenctico et lllms, 6 Pm TH•D Wiik ,,,.v, A• 22 Ntw E1111land al ltelden Mlnnttota ti SHllle Pl\fll>IK(ll\ at Oalla1 (Channel 71 Setw•v. AU9. n S.n Ole90 a1 ltatm 8uflaro al l(en .. , Clt11 Clev ... nd at Atlanta. I p m OtlroU t i lnotanal>C41s GrMn Bev e t Cinctn11a11 Miami ., PMadt!Plll• New C>lleni at Hou1lon, I D m New VOl'k Jt11 at Ntw York C lan11, I D m St Lc>Yll a t Chlca90, I Pm (Cnennel 7) S.n Frtncl1<0 at o.tlvtr W11n1no1on a1 Temoa &av ,outtTH Wl•K T!Mlndav, A-:it Cleveland at It•*" New V Ofll Jt ll a t PtllladelPlll• 1"11day, Aue. 2t ltam1 •' Oeflvtr (Channel 4) Allanle ti Wellllnoton, I pm Detroit at Cincinnati, t pm Sr LOUii al San Otego Seattle al S.11 f!rancl1<0, 6 pm Timpe Bev •I Miami, a P m S.turdev, AU9. JO Buffelo et ChlcallO (U of Noire Oamt1, l 11 m Hou\ton at DellH, a P.m <Cnannel 21 l(an .. 1 Cllv at New C>llen1 Mlnnetot• at lndlanal>C41t Naw Enola nO •t GrMn Bev Pll11bur11n •l Ntw Vorlt Gla1111, I p m TiwndaV'• tranuctt.m IASIEIALL NatleMI ~ HOUSTON ASlltOs--itac:tlved SltYt Enoel Pltcnar IO Cornpltlt ,,,. trade Wltll IN Clllca!IO Cui» and anlO'ltd nlm to T..clOll ol tht Pacific Coa't LHgllt MONTREAL EXPOS-Treoao Dan S<t1a1tt0er Pltcnar. and Skftttt Barna1, tn- tltldar, ro Int Pnllao.li>nle Ptllll111 tor Tom FOltv lnfltlder. and Ltrrv Sonn.an, pllehtr Rtctlled !lob Stora, C>ltcner, and PU•ClleltO ,,,. contrect of Oevt lomtln, oltcner, from tn Ol•naooll1 of ll'lt America n Anoclallon ~nl Rene GOflzale\, lnfltklt< •nd Rendv St Ctalre Pitcher, lo lfldlenal>04l1 aASKaTaALL NatleMI .. slrdlll AIMCl9tltfl INOIANA PACERS-Slolltd Greg Oralllno center ,OOTIIALL NtftlMI , ..... LM9Ut ltAIOER&-Annoul!Od thet Frtnll Hewr..ln1. fullb•ck, hat •11reec:t to contract terms RelffJtd Jim Smit,,, w!Oe reclevt<, Boo Na!SOfl •nd Ltt Bl•kanev. llneoackan. Cle Montoome<v, kick rtturner. l.M Miiiar enO RHPM Oct, cor- 11trt>eek1, Jeff Carter, PUl'lltr, Jim Mavor, klcllt<, Fred 8..cklev, OUlrfaf't>eCk, CtralO BHn end EO Btrbt<o, runnlno t>acltt, Tim Wlnlam1, .. ierv. Nick Hao.n. Ct flfer, Cartlon Welker offtn1lvt tackle, and Glenn HowtM dlftn1lv1 eno BUFFALO 81LLS-Slont0 Leonard llllfton C.tnlt< CHICAGO &EARS-Stoned v .. '" JeClllOl'I, otfen1l•t t>eck 10 • serla• of four. one·vtar contrteh CINCINNATI BENGALS-SIOned Par F1"11n1<· 11n rul\tll1111 beck, ano Oouo Yndr\I, lfne4)adtt< CLEVELAND 9ROWNS-Sf0Md Wat11tw SlaUQl'ttar, w!Oe reclever DENVER BRONCOS-Waived Mark Miiiar, ouarrtrbKk. Joe TllomH , SlllP Pelle, eno Eric Poote. wide reclever1, Emmitt Cox ano JoM Nt\Olll, runnlno l>edl1, Tom Flald, klcllar. rc.an OodlOfl Ind Fred 9Hkln, oefamlY9 lln.mtfl, •nO Greg B•llle, Don Mo..itv, •nd Jev NornM, nne~Ckar1 HOUSTON OILERS-Signed Jal'l\9' Menan, wloa rtclavar. INOIANAPOLIS COL TS-Stoned Don Balley ct n I er. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Announced tht re- lrtmenr of Di ve Llndllrom, o.lentlve end MIAMI OOLPHINS~$1gned Jam11 Prull! WIO• ractlYtr MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Sign.cl Da rrin Nation, runnl1111 ~ck. 1nd Steve JOf'den, 1i11hr eno, 10 • ~rlt1 of ont ·Ytar contract1 NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Sig'*! S<ott G1 ... 1ma11, !lgl'lt t fld NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Announced that ti nu ratlnoul1r..o Ill rlOhh to Kalvin Clerk, offtflllvt guard Sl11ned Tvrone Young, w!Oe rKlt ver to • one·vu r COfltract Signed HObv 8 rtl'IMI', 110111 tn<I, Tvrone Young, wl04t re- clever, Wllllt Tulll1, oefen1lvt ~Ck. end Frtnlo. Warren, oaten11.,. and NEW YORK JETS-Placao JOl!n l(lloo. Ot· tan1lvt lineman on IN rft.,Ve·olcl not report 1111 AnllO\JflCtd the! Greg Gunlf\t< Ctnltr llaO ltfl camo PHILADELPHIA EAGLES--Sionea Anthony T0<>av lvff~ck . to • lou<·Ytar COfltract PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Reltt11d Clarence Kettv a nd Earl'l911 COit! oatan1lv• l>aCltl SAN FRANCISCO ltERS-Walvto f!red DH n o.ftfltlva and TAMPA BAV BUCCANEE~S--Announcao 11191 J 0 Matrteveld 0Hen1lve tackle, flu l'Orffd lo contrKI te<ml UllltM Stll'" , ..... LMWt NEW JERSEY GENEltALS-$fllMCI Jonn Jewell, ~.., Bllfton ano Arland Th0ml>1on, ~"''"' guard\, Walton Moroen end lt0d1'19Y Ctav wldt rKt lvert, Hauan AOOVIM"' end Kevvn Wllll1ma puntttt, and &lllY 8all, Ot· len,lvt llt(k HOCKaY Ha .... Hedley '-MtUe NEW YORK ltANGES-Sloned Douo S(Wile•fl 00.flttnder '""'"'9"'"91 H«*av LMtue TOLEDO GOALOIGGEAS-A~ed ttlav would au1oeno ~a1lon1 for fN 1"4·17 Melon socca1t A~ .,..., lecCM Auecil11911 AISA-NetMCI Peul DenQtlo OlrKlor ot <NOie eno ~i( rtte11on, CANTOH INAOERS-Sloned Don Tootn Ken LOlla mldfltld«1, Kie ZOINrnaln lorwaro OtnrM AlllOl!lo, ~. to two-vMr COlllrK1' Clall'IWCI ltuei.tl AtllOartM mldfl9idtr, 0-erci Ctla\lln encl Solomon HlllOfl lorwlf'd\ end Jim MCGewotl. oattnd9r Ofl w11,,_1 trom ll'lt Colllmbu1 CIOllals CO\.LIGa A'IMSfltOfllG STATE-N1mt0 I ll Wrlv'lt 111l1tant rnt11'1 IMl\llttlMI• co.ell l<ANSA5'-H9mtcl Jeff aollle 1nl111111 ~II ~rneuon dlfec:tor MOHMOUTH, NJ -A~ 11\al JarM\ S COidOutll. dlf'9Cfor o1 a tlll9tta, w• r .. ltl'I 11 1n. lllCI ol "" lfM-17 K.edamk v•r PLATTSIUltOH ST-H~ Ooutla1 ltllt\I '-Cl ,,..,., Mtlctl._. Coecl'I Ull'Ml.A ~,,_, !Ileen r ~ffl' c-o orclll'lalor ol _., •llllt•le• Named ••rr• Wo4hon, '-CS ~·1 1>9tll:elbell coeel\ N11Md Ot"' loneo\ira mMl'I ltnlllt to.th ~·•• Oelroll 10 McC•w•. A~ n11 ~ • ....,.._., t•1 l a!IOllon S.rtltl 17' l(lltN -Keorn ltlvtr 10tm0ertt Dem 10 l"."I Powtt"<>utt1 Bon u l>OWtttlou\• to Democrar Wally Me1Uf I Au1tr9ilel <Ml Jav L..al>kfut llH J, 6·l 6 I ICAVlllt-A~ •II t•l9"\ton o1 t!Nlll< .01rac:t0t Jtff f OOMOll ' contrtct Del Mar handicap .,.. M9' UTWOAY"l •..,...I ,. " ., ... ., .............. , l'hf lllltl I -.m, ""ST lllAC& 6\\ flrloftet. Purw. 11),000 TIV• v.., olctt elld uP. Clalf'lllllll Prle9. 120,000 111000 1 liaM Flvw (VetenrU911) 111 t lA~ (Oll\I., .. , 11• 3 VtMeerone (~l 11109 4 OouOle o.ffcll ll-"'rntrtnol • 11' s Orum commenoer tLIPhtml 116 6 •1111 Shift• IOrtaoel 116 7 Oltllnctlwtv (Soils) 116 I Mr. •HCtot (C•sllllOll) 11' t Cltv Of Uel'tt IOouola•l 116 10 ~I (PtdrOH ) 116 l"ALL 'L Yltt 12· ll lmPrtlllvt w11ww 1a.1 out. ltlls OtlCh tlvtl Ulould nt 11111 oval 10 • '"· VlN•OAllC*I 14· 1) Orootllf\O ffom IOVOMI' for • tao todav, c:omo91111v• thl• ........ SLUO,•ST ( .. I) Dlrnfftlo oet0 mvtl 0-Comt OUIJldt «•""· brtd lo be Quid! tnO\Hlf\. LOHGSHOT OOU8LE DEFICIT. SIC:ONO aACI. 6 turiono. ~ t 12,000 MakMm tlllln and"*'""'"' vtarl old and UP Clalml"-Prlca: U0..000-M5.000 1 Lotta O.wn <Bladt) 11115 2 tOIOtr ... VIV ICtJlallOl'I) 114 ) Wlf'I A waoon (Ollnr .. ) 116 ' Fren•w•v (Slt>llla) t 16 5 Sllddan s.u (Warran) 120 6 Coll OYlf'run (o.lall0u1 .. v•> 11' 1 trllft Zuni !Ptncevl 11' I For K B (Vetenrualal 11' t let SI-(SllOlmakar) 116 llUSH ZUNI (5·2) Varv swift and PlnceY fMY make ll'lt dltfaranca lodly, COST OV•lllllUN 14· ll Fr .. l'ltnld since S.nte Anita, tolld work1 on work tab; ,CMt IC.a. 13· ll Oellnllt conllflder lrt1n from 1trono l>tl"forrnenca •I blo 111'1«, P vaten1\l9la rides. LONGSHOT. WIN A WAGON THlltD a AC•. 6 furiono, PvrM t tt.000 Flllltl a nd mar .. l!'lrM VHrl old anO UP Clalmlno Prlc9: M0,000--'3S.OOO 1 Aller Vite (~kt<) 116 2 Torkatut (Plncavl 111 3 Flontlno Marl•ll• (Olivares> I II • Ottawar• OtllOhl (Black) ~ 109 s Vita! S<:Oft (Toro) 11' 6 EXPKI Mort (Vatenru.la) 11' 7 Maonttlc Dancer <Ca1tenonl 11' • uura OOOfl IOtlal!Oui .. Yt) 111 IXttlCT MOil• (S-7) Oroe>Plno ~OM allow anca race1 and has ll'lt s~ to clear tlllt tt.ld. lhOulO hotel I way, VJT AL SC0. a ( 4· 1) V trY teltnttO rrelntr hat lhl1 mlu honed 10 Ptf IK!lon, flGHTING MAltllTTA (6·1) Taklno on d almtr1 lodl'tl etltr ou• tflor11 to !>attar. can Improve. LONGSHOT MAGNETIC OANCElt l"OUlltTH ltACE. 6 turlonllt PvrM '12,000 Mal0an1 """ vea" old eno uo Clflmlno Price lS0,000-'4 s.ooo I StefllH O Vo\cHar11uel 116 2 0u1crou (Plncavl 116 3 Walen ·n Win (ON~, .. .,., 116 4 Trump UP (Gtrrlllo) 114 5 lttaO Mv LIPI (Vaten1utla) ) " 6 Ftburou1 C.t vln (Soll•) 116 7 Stead!Hl"911 (Solo) 116 I Btu1n A 8ve (Llpnamt I 16 9 Chill Hin (Ollvartt) I 16 10 Tltl Of Blue IPedl'Oza) I 16 STAllSTIAO ()·I) Touoh lou Whllt In 1rou1>1e tllrouollout, can mekt amaoo•. READ MY Litts IS-71 Moved 1>11 Hrlv 1111, repeal and rtohl move mav l>a tnouoh tOdav. WATCH'H WIN (4-ll Vtrv Quick, ma y never look b.aclo. LONGSHOT CHILI HILL Flfllt ltACE. I 1116 mite\ on lur1 Pur11 '37.SOO •Oded. OSUNITAS HANDICAP -lST DIVISION Fltlltl '"° m'""· thrft VHrl old •no uo Tole! Pllflt Ml,000 WlnMr '26 175, l«Ond '7,soo, 1111ro U.62S, tourth n .817 so, llfln 193150 I KMP Oetlno (Orleoal 109 2 Loucoum ISoll•l I IS ) Midi• Girt (Valtn1ualal 115 • StalOnal Pldlue> (Toro I 116 S Rtrt Starlet (&leek) 10. 6 Udll (o.i.11oua .. va) 111 1 PrlmrOM Valltv (~ktrf IU I Nata11t•1 Forll (Plnc.ty) llS 9 Ft~lnlana IS.Oto) 11? 10 let St .. lt< (Otlnrft/ Ill 11 8art1arrna <Gomer> 107 12 OcMn Wave IAreoon> 113 LOUCOUM U· ll Tnl1 turl mucn like S.nte Anife . .,,.,.y «>n1lstent ml11 ..ioom1 run1 1 POOf one LICHI (4·1) AlllrtO courM roting Otll cnance, h11urei tor • inert with clear trip M•DtA GlltL (9·2) WIM °' '"" -to ••o In • 11t1t wltl'IOUl an •bunde nce of IPHO LONG- SHOT PRIMROSE VALLEY TERRY TURRELL $1XTH lltAta. SI,\ 1UrlOl19L PlirM' ti..oo MalcMn r:1•1es. two Yawl Old. I V•l Merl Kerl (81eca) x 11 2 Moral.mt {~ .... J II l Allmar (L.amotn) 11 4 Ca11a1t•• (OllYal'h) II S Down The SlflP (Mor-I 11 ' Tri Stat (P.droze) 11 7 Pie-<Soils) 11 I CeW &OOl (PattarlOllJ n 9 Arts l"l'ONltclor (V aitfU\1149) II 10 llH So wevv IMcH•roue> 11 11 L..a Creila Ntvvo (1<-*l 11 12 FIOwtt Cl'tell'I ("ncavl 11 ........... l)A Wlltt1111 end Vouno {Ori ... ) 11 ,LOW•lt CHAlN (l ·l) 8'fd to t1a var oulcll, F'lncav llddld lllu\ dttP!te CIUlt l'lumtle 1"'91Ya POii, ttteaNa ( ... I) ·~ llerO a t ll't 11ar1. wldt "'«Mft•" can i..tlar 11111 rOUIJI debut, ""'°""IMA (4· 1) t1111dt draw and ml• fll• r-1.c!IY 11 verv ovlca, dlllMfoui lier• LONGSHOT; ARTS Plt05PECTOtt s.vun•H uca. °"' m111. 1>Yr11. uo.ooc Flnlft and mar.. """ VMfl old •no Ull Allowenc:e. 1 Baeulahlalld IMcHar11119l I 1'. 2 Roval Otrbv Love I011111rti) 111 3 Ackt Sofia!• (P.droze) 121 4 Velvet ECllO (Valenzuela) Ill 5 AMa Purna (Oalal'tOU1 .. vel Ill • Tantellted (Patton) 1111: 1 Lonna's LaclY (P\ncayl I 1: I~·, Walla! 181aekl x10: f Bthv LaYM (Solo) I U llOOllt'S WALLIT 11·5> Wtt bec.ktd Ir lall, In llolll todlv end lhOUIO lmoro.,., .. ~ •POI lo dale, aaAULAHL.AND <•·I) SlrOfl( effOl'l for 11111 Arltona lflvader i..1. tnilde <Ira• 11 one mlll a 1>19 PIU\ we, L<>tfNA'S LAO~ 16· l l l"taced wel todav. nlca ..ortr. oetterr lnolc.al" fltntu LONGSHOT: TANTALIZED alOHTH uca. 1 ''" m11e1 on turf """ .. '37 ,500 0.Ul'lllH Hanolc:aP, second dMajon r:1u1n end""''"· lllrw YMrt old alld UP Tola -ta Ml,000, winner S26, l75. MeOl'ld 17.SOO tniro 1u1s. 1our111 t2.112 50, flfln 1937.SO 1 MISI BIYanv Hiii• (Ollvatei) 11 1 2 Kramer (SOll1l 10' 3 MIU '!oval Mofttt (Sll>llltl 11 1 4 FIYl1111 Glrl (Solo) 111 S Rlvarttte (Vatenrutta) tll 6 Blu1hlno lteon..d (UPlltml 11c 7 Cll'IVlk'i Star (Toro) Ill I Call Aoaln (Bleck) Ill 9 AHKllon AHlrrnld (Plnc;.vJ II! 10 Bon Genre (McHer11Utl 111 11 Le Ml~ (Oala"°"1 .. vel 115 17 Ontv (SnotmektrJ 119 Cl .. Y AIC'S ST Alt (8· Sl SoflO atfor r wltn !ht °'" 11111 .. Ofl tl'lt Wiii Coa1t, 0.S...Yft '"' caH, LA MIMOSA ll·ll Mav 1>a tn. 111te>rt11 NO.a11t with l>Ood !rlP, uP11ll1r, ONI. Y U·I) Hiii llard lre111, blew out 1narl>fv. oanoerou1 loa lONG· SHOT FL VING GIRL NINTH ltACI. I 1 16 mlle' on rur1 Pu"a '30,000 ThrM vear OIOI end 110 Claiming Price t IOO,OOO•tlS,000 1 Vev•I• IT OfOI 111 7 EmPerllorl IMcHerouel 120 3 lllllloP'1 Rlno (Plncavl 111 4 Paranolco IS.Oto) 111 S Rtmor\alet.s (Oalal'tOU\tavtl I 16 6 Pell! 8oMornme (0Uv1rt1) 111 1 Aviator (V•ltnlutlal llS I Boil"• l&lac.kJ i.111 t Or Oalv <snotrna•er> 11S 10 C1mp1 H .. 111 lKetnall 1 lt ats~s lttNG (3·1l w1m r.ct1 ana "r"' ,,,. IOP Rov<• 11'1 IN fTnale. Oil. DAL y (4-1) Wlltntvtr Shotmekt< 11\d Wllltrlf'IONm 1llct< around tor lht IH I one one mutl Otwert aMatalllDOltl 1 ... 1) Beel< In for • tn and "'" nard 11 1nl1 lave! LONGSHOT PETIT BONHOMME aEST llT CENVAK'S STAR 11th lttct) ~ICE l'LAY LOUCOUM (Stn ltect ) 11~no1e1 apprentice lockt v Del Mar results Del Mar THUttSDA Y'S ltSSUL TS (Jrld t4 4l·•v ~ l'nMftlnt) ,. .. ST ltACa. 6 lurton111 Grenoble (Slbllte) Oomlnanl Roni (8 tac1t) HovtrlllO Pr .. ance (Steven'' Time· l~ •1S n ao 1100 140 •60 310 4 '° Atio re11 Mor\t Cooe, Anolemen. Snaro ConlrOI, 8t lhallklut, E xcMl•a Klno Dance On Down, Murmvrl1111 Bffu No scralchls U IEXACT4 (4·1) e>alO t 10060 SECOND ltAC•. 6 tvrlongl LedV Shaman (Bartl COdld Lt lltrl (Vettn1uete l Cevtlole (SfD!ltel Time 110 315 110 5'0 J60 t410 seo 4'0 Alto ran Procureu, Ab Oriolnal, Lovtland L• Prtctow, Wlllrllno Too No ICrtl~ U DAILY DOUaLa (l·I) PalO 11'7'0 TH"'O ltACa. I I 1' mli.1 Veve <Stev.,,.) Joell (V•tenrutla) Exotic Arbltor (Ftfnenot1> Time 1·42 100 leo JOO )00 2.0 460 Alto ren Natlva ForK11I, Blow Tht Truml>tl1. Red Ca rOln11, Forwaro Command No 1<ratcn.. U aXACTA 11 4) Paid '4A 50 l'OUltTH ttACI. 6 lurlo110s SuPtf AOto\ IO..ello1111e11el Finl Sl'toottr (PedrOl•) Soito Gold Sound (Slblllt ) Time l 12 100 4 20 00 uo 310 100 AllO ra11 SlteOV Ster Calmo, Cratty Crelg, CIW'l1 Cen Do II Tna 1'1 8ttr"9.,,, Makt A Poci..11u1. Eararl Oto Souroou11h. Allracllvt VlelO Scratcr..o Canaolen Pvnkln. 80IO Barg1ln ""'" RACa. Ont mite on turf Klmrldoe Roao (SllOtmalter) • 40 FebufOu\ S.Ound (McCarrOr!l Ravet'1 8oltro (Soto) Time l.J6 l1S 2 IO 710 HO 340 sao Al\O ran Paromo Charil• Bau lrf1ll S1or1t1 Czer'1 Charm. Ce>rdon l CO<T1mana Scralcht<I. H1rrl•on'1 Turn U •XACTA (I-SJ Paid M l 00 SIXTH ltACE. l li 16 mllu Avertao (McCarronl 8 1tef!. SIMI !Toro) Go!Otn SP<oce (Bracl<l llma I 4-t l/S 410 l10 760 3.0 210 710 Al10 ran SuPtf Cllaroe f!lvlno Gib. Rid It •tr Bold, P 8 'l Cllolce S<r1tcl'lad To Ba S04d. Doctor T Ar• C•lla~t Ttn Prince Ambert VIOorlOfl SE V• NTH llACI:. 6 lurtong, Ttmmv Lu I Dtl•l'IOU1tay1l 13 90 Trauma Time <Ortega) Promr" Me L..cl< <McCar•on1 TirM I 10 seo 1.io 140 260 110 41to ran Martian Ou1t11orm, Gatl•c ·, Bono Miu Sa n Dito<>. Rooar s S.Crtlarv S<rarcr..o none U •XACTA 17-41 oelO 16200 U l"ICIC SIX II 1 4·1 6 <><r 7 71 ~IO $1.144 .0 10 77 llcktO llht l\or'9\), ll<llO t 116 00 to 419 llckt11 (llvt nor1t1) •IGHTH ltACE. 1 1116 mite\ Stuanc:la (Plnc.tv) S 10 Reklndllng (Sltvtnil Rock'n ROii L••dtf IMcH1rg1 .. ) Time l 0 215 Allo ren Prlnceu Carlote, Hlgra Scretclltd Call Again Landladv u •XACTA (7-•I Peld 27 so 2 40 , 10 no 2 10 2 10 NINTH RAC• I 1116 mll1t1 Neuml1 1 Glri l S1avtn11 Hldd•n Angle IMcCarron) Oevalllll Dallier correoal HO 320 190 3 00 ) ()() 6 "° Time 10 .t.110 r•n Axiom, Surpr!1t Gill Gr"'1 A11eln Tradition 04 H~. Se>end!OIV L..c~ v Cl'lorllla Quffn Sc re I (!ltd none u •XACTA 11·11 oald UIOO n DAIL y DOU&L• 12·11 oalo '" 90 Atrendano 1) 951 Mututl l'lan(fle t2 472 176 Quarterhorse entries Htllvwood Penc TONIGHT'S aNTIUIS ( Ill e4 SJ."""'' 41U•rttmer'M "'"""91 ''"' -11 no fttlST ltACa 400 Vtrdl Pur1t '1,.00 TnrM Ytar Old1 Clalmlno Prkt u ,000 8orn lo Soe• Glvo!o tC.lo Felr Mt<rldoc r.111er Tl\an Liiv OeOdv HtrOnaad Kafl Run Some Alamlto1 Doc Eatv lncllnallon Two P,e1111010uom11>tclat Blue Moon Freddie .t.f\o EllolbW-Slules Rave11119, Soa ml, Hoodv Kid, Goloen Nol" HCONO ltACI. 400 Yerdt Pur1t '3.IOO Malden two vHr olds Na1ur11 P1111urt Ker"" !;Old lllaO ~rvte MarrlOOO Reos Niece Florenrtne Oaring 0 1111er ll\alemtvtr1dll!On Startin f!rHn THlltO RAC£ )~ Vero\ Pur~ U .IOO Th•M VM r old\ •nd UP C11lml110 Price IJ 100 Tlla1'1ll10 Parllll ftrlftl Dual Turbocllaroe Mellllda1 Etforl Zlr!OO Cllar.. ltlllO TflrN Two NOlll Hht l lQOtl' \..f'"''" •o Val Lou AllO Ello•~tectrtfv, Golla POllcv Cllau11t 8aYou. Pell loy Jo l'OUttTH ltAC• 350 Vero1 ""'" U .600 Maldanl ll'lr .. Vllfl old C .. ll'lllnll Prlet t6 1§0 '""' Sendai Son Sma1ll W1r S11Nl'9\ 51erlet GolftO r:ano $trlclt klYCM" SOY Ptlmarv l"vr-l.U(ll Tu l l'lt lrlsl'I rr1.,. DPI Merrlrntl'll For1llf• Ve y Girl l"IPTW ltACI Jto Ytfdt ftur.. \) 100 '"'"' a nd marat ''"" ¥Mr ~· •nd I.rt> c11rm1no PrlC• u ,000 Seucv M<ionma10 Miu SOldlf IWtMY Secrete We1c11 Wllllt SlOHnn S1r .. •1n Cnenov11 Moofl ~~II .f><llW\I L•'"''er Nlru vlllll l •dv ~t Mt• e n Cllrt\ S.n1 AltO Eltglblt-lull PIClllrifO. Tiny C.•11 PoPalM SIXTH ltACE 110 Vard1. Purw '1 to0 Tnt .. vear ~' a nO uO Clalmlno Price '3.700 Count MY Act\ Buos AfOfetl'lOU9tll NHrt11 Ma Red HOI Ruttr Swlu Benlle• Gone Jot>"'°" Ru1~H •ovvMech E.aPend Tiit Pact S•VaNTH ltAC•. 3SO Varos Purlt 11,600 Ma109/lt, 1nrM vear 0101 Ct.lmlno "'It•· U.7SO Va!Ytl 0 l OOla Court RIMI i.1v1nci Ftalurt Netural Love Inceptions Emllla On Tht l•O Provo Starbuck CO\Jr!fry Jtan' ltll., Than Shu Tlnt11 8ed 04 AOift •IGHTH ltACE. 150 Yard1 Puf"W t7,fo00 FllllH '"' .. ~ .. , 010\ Clalmlf'IO P•lct M.000 Ont Wom•n Show Cllaulo1 Joy Flv Rvtllm Frv Erick• frtebO C•bt<1'19t TlrNl To Tntnti lrtt li'tlloro\91 Pe me aou11<1ue Sn Good Ladv NINTH ltAC• 350 Varo1 """' 1),500 f lllle\ '"'" YH" Ole! Ct•lmtng Prlca ttO 000 • A1ura Rov•ll'IOWtf ltal11 Tu M•n Vi<l~\I Song DuU TH 0.wn Doc• Fllfl'f!f Gt r Mv k inda Pia Polvorln Min Luther N Lee• OClil'1 Oar1ter Memorln Of Balv Alto C:llQll)la-Mlrin•t Zanini Pflll~ Co.., l•OC>li .... TINT" ••Cl 400 Vard1 ,....,.. ~ OOll ·~ (lll(aOO V MancJICa D Tlw'M ~r OICtl end UP Scott L_t, V•~ P'oli(v l'lty CoriYWUillOn ltllt H H"-" 0 1tn '" St\111 Ca~ ltatt •&.•VIHT'M ltACI. 170 Vardl ,.,. .. st.IOO TnrM Y•ar OIC!t ano 1m Ctalmlng llltl(a '3 )00 '11,..•roale Oii•• Anottltr Vanl eo..,,. 141 '° ~I'll" rorr11na ~or Ont MlCltltVT'avnam ,_, Tna Vlfl:t Miu Gii• Bar • a I Sa1~a11H d ' . de~~rt~ 21 ·Apnt l 9): Contacts made during past week could now pay IVl 1 · .. ou are on more solid cmotional-finaocial around. JudJment, ntunion prove reliable. Nqotiations favor your efforts asp1rat1ons. • TAURUS (~prit 20-May .20): Puzzle. piec,cs fall into place, mystery 1s sol.ved. ~tfhas11 o n commun1cat1on, vanety, intensified relationship. Your opinion 1. be ~uaht by people you respect, Short journey may be necessary 1n connec:tton with ""brother, 11ster. GEMINI (May ~I-June 20): Family member ac.quiesces you set what you want, ~Oney w11J be made avajl. ' able. SpotliJht continues on hopes dreams, visions, luck in matten of speculation. Taurus, Libra dominate vital scenano. SYDNEY CANCER (June 21-Juty 22): Be discreet, ma!n\atn aura of mystery. OIOR glamor. You 11 be 1nv1ted to dine in . . "out-of-way" P!•ce. Member of op-••Ill••••••••• pos1te sex 1s mt.ngued and makes no secret of it. Pisocs, Virgo play roles. ~(July 23-Aus. 22): Circumstances take sudden tum in your favor. lnd1v1dual wh~ h~d been bcth~ren.t could now become valuable ally. Focus on travel, pu~hshmg. commumcatw.l, dissemination of information. Love relat1onsh1p intens1fks. . VIRGC? (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Burden 1s lifted, you'll reach wider audience, you 11 ~1ve offer w~1.ch could include overseas journey. Dig deep for mformataon, stress onginahty, create your own "tradition." Means don't follow crowd. ~RA (~.Pl. 23~0ct. 22): Emphasis on independence, creativity, p1oneennJ spam. Wish 1s fulfilled, romance flourishes. Focus also on pannersh1p, publicity, senous consideration of marital status. Leo, Aquarius play roles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21): You're being pulled in two directions - choo~ c.oursc that leads to happiness as contrasted to intrigue. Focus on rpc:htng. lcaminJ. secunty, home. family obltgauons. Money picture bnghter than onginally anticipated SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21) Define terms. satisfy cunos1ty. check wurcc matcnaJ. Social ac11vn1es increase and so does your populanty. You will be concerned with romance. physical appearance. wardrobe. body image. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19). You team plenty about propeny, about past debts and obl1ga11ons What appears negative 1s due to boomerang in your favor. Know 1t, be confident. avoid senseless brooding. Older individual 1s your "secret ally .. AQUARIL!S (Ja~. 20-Feb. 18): Be ready for action. Emphasis on movement. vanety. tnps, v1s1ts, urgent requests. What had been moribund will now be alive and k1ck1ng. Member of opposite sex expresses f~hngs in frank, surprise manner. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)· Family conferenc.: centers around bud$el. finances. income potenual Emphasis also on possible purchase of an ob1ect or luxury 11em Domestic adjus1ment is featured, could include actual change of residence. IF JULY HIS YOUR BIRTHDAY you become more aware of wardrobe. appearance, body image. weight Demands will be made on your time. populanty increases. you'll be asked to JOIO poht1cal organization or special interest group Taurus. Cancer, Capncom people play important roles 1n your hfe. You are a natural execuuve. w1lhng to accept challenge and respons1b1hty. You are intense. sentimental, romantic. seldom dO anything 1n halfway manner December will be memorable for }OU in I 986 Check 9th and the 201h People lowest when t hey f eelun w anted Worst thing you can do to people 1s show them they're not wan1ed. So sa}' the psychologists. An attempt to murder shows tt. most conclus1vel}' To file for divorce shows 1t. too. so ranks high. very high, among can· d1datc actions for that "worst thing you can do" d1st1nct1on. To fire a person from a JOb 1s likewise wa) up there on the hst It's said the desire to be wanted 1s second only to the desire to survive The religious order of the Dom1n1- cans is not so called merel) becaust 11 was founded b} t Dominic The name came fro m "Domini canes" meaning "dogs of the Lord .. J u~t before St Dom1n1c was born. his mother dreamed she'd given b1nh to a puppy with a torch in its mouth The nomenclature e ' ol\ ed o ut of that fanciful no11on Q. A third of all the plant hit-nov. known on eanh 1s 1n one geographical place. Name 11. A. The Amazon Basin. PEOPLE L.M. Bo YD Q. Ho\,\. come heavy beer dnnkers hardl~ e'er $Cl diarrhea? .\ Bactena causes diarrhea Beer ma~es stomach acid It kills bac tena .\re }OU happ) With )OUrJob? lf1t's trouble-free. > ou arc. presumabl) 'r OU knov. what Thomas Jefferson said: "It 1s ne11her wealth nor splen· dor but tranqu1hty and occupation that gi '-CS happiness " Pc\\.1er deanc; up pretty well if you rub 11 with a cabbage leaf. I'm told. L.M. Boyd Is a syndl.ca ted columnist. Living together gains popularity Th1npllurnedenrout~iolookin, up orher thinp: •That the number of unmarried men and women livina tosetber has more than tripled Ii.nee 1970, to nearly two million American couples. (And tbe median a&e -25 for male and 23 for female -for newlyweds is the ruahest ever recorded for both SCXC1. ' •That over half the American children of di vorccd parents, who are in their mothers' custody, never see their fathers at aU; at some time in their lives, 60 ~nt of American cruldren wiJI ltve in sin&)c-parent homes, and more than 90 ~t of these will be reared by their mothers alone. •New Jersey was the first Ameri· can colony to grant women sulfrqe in July of 1776 -but the statute was revencd in 1807. •That butterflies do not merely "bask" in the sun~ they need to raise their internal temperature in order to be able to fly, and wben they bask they are really .. fuelinJ up" and absorbing enough solar radiation until they can Oy off. •That the first Jew to hold an elective post in the New World, Francis Salvador, a member of the' South Carolina Provincial Cof!gress, wils also the first member Qfhis faith to aive rus life for Amtrican indepen- dence, in a skirmish on July 31, 1776. •That there are only I th million nursina beds in the Uruted States for an elderly papulation of 28 million (who will arow to 67 million within 50 years. when the number of old people with senile dementia is expected to double.) •That a single sneeze expels as many bacteria as someone reading ··war and Peace" aloud from bcgin- nin• to end. (For reference, sec the fascinating new book, "Heaven's Breath: A Natural History of the Wind.'' hv I VAil Wi11mn ) •That advertistna accounts for sliabtly more than IWf of mapnne revenues, with circulation rep-raentina the be.lance. (But adverus- ina l(lC()UOts for an even higher percentqe of opcratina profit, bc- cau1e the cost bf attractina additional subscriptions is biaber than the cost of aettina additional advenisina-) •That New York City currently . has more 0Unese-lat1suaae daily newspapers than Enabsh-lanauaae dailies . •That Kina Henry VII, who wrested the ErWish crown from Richard III in a brief battle of only two houn at Bosworth 500 years ago, was more Welsh and French than Enalish, and had hardly ever been in EnaJ.and, but spent his first 14 years Ln a remote castle in Wales, and the next 14 in exile in France. •That half of the ftnt araduating class of cadets at West Point, in t 802. were Jewish; the class consisted of two members: Joseph Swift and Simon M. Levy. •That, next to mining, farming 1s the most danacrous ocx:upatton m the country, in terms of deaths and disablin& injuries. •That in l 935, when pharmacists were still compoundina medicines themselves, retail sales of brand- name prescription drugs amounted merely to $200,000 annually; by last year, that swn had risen more than 75,000.fold, to nearly S 15 billion. SU.ey Barri• J1 a 1yndlcated col•mal•L We've been saying 'OK' forso•etime DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was interested 1n your comments on the overuse of"OK" and decided to do a tmte research on 11. .. OK" was first used 1n I 839 by C.K. Greene. the editor of the Boston Post, as an abbrev1atton of "oil korrcct." a faceuous m1sspelhng of"all correct." Given meanings were -approval. endorsement, accepted as lcgittmate or correct. While there are no hard statistics to prove it, one can safely assume that the most widely used American word 1n the world is "OK." Spaniards utter 1t more often than "saJud" and in England 1t 1s more common than "nlthto." Even speakers of the Djabo dialect 1n Liberia say "0-ke." "OK .. freely punctuates the con- versations of peorle who do not know another word o English. During a World War II soccer match, a team compnscd of Potes. Czechs. Danes and Norwegians was hamstrung by their language d1fTercnccs until a Polish player shouted "OK!" Every- o ne on the team knew what that meant. and from then on the play proceeded smoothly. In 1840. v.hen Manin Van Buren was running for re~lcction. the Democrats banded together under the banner of the New York Demo- cratic OK Club and soon after the word became part of the language to s1gnif) that what 1s OK 1s all ri&bt. - MRS. J.H.R .. RENTON, WASH. DEAR MRS. J .R.R.: Tllank yoo for sharing your resureb. Yoar letter Is another fine example of bow my readers educate me. • • • Ali luDEIS DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your response to "Fixing to Kill in Seattle" showed that you have never had any firsthand experience with an ex.-wife who is a total witch (I'm trying to keep this printable) and a stepson who would try the patience of a satnt. I've had plenty, so please let me speak. That woman should understand that the problem is between her and her husband and not between her and his ex-wife. She should enhst her husband's support -tell him 11 1s destructive to their mlirriage when he has secrets with his former spouse She should be as sweet as honey to the witch and refuse to become in volved 1n any ugliness that can only make her took bad. And most of all she sho uld make a real friend out of that stepson no matter how bratty and hard-to- handle he may be. That child 1s her husband's and unless she makes peace wlth him and turns that situation around her mamage will be forever in danger. This is the best adv1ce she'll ever get. I hope she takes 1t. -BIN THAR IN VT. DEAR BIN: Beaotifal Yoa did a lot better job tbn I did. Tlla.nb for the .a11l1t. 'J .R . 'talked Mama out of retiremen t By tbe A11oclated Press BOSTON -Mary Marll.n, a 72-year-old great-grandmother. says her son. "Dallas" star Larry Hapnan, per;uaded her to come out of retirement to tour with actress Carol Cbaulog 1n a stage comedy "It has been what you call utter madness But it's been great fun." she said of her role in "Legends ... a farce which opened here Wednesday for a 2•1,.week run Martin said she had had trouble remembering Imes and felt in- secure after so many years off 1he stage, but that another veteran actress. He.IH Hayti, encouraged her to keep goma. "One 'hould never stop because when you stop. everything stop~." Manin q1d "Carol has nt"ver ~topped playmg. and she never will ' Anutaela back LOS ;\NCIELES -N11ta11ja ~1kJ and Ru Hamsoe will appear 1n 1 four-hour NBC' m1n1· ~nes ba~ on tht h1'1onctl t\nd rom1nt1e myster') of Pnnc-t \ Anastasia Ktnsk1 will star u Anasta~1a 1n tht film "~nana'11 The tOf) uf Anna Andcrwn " Ham~n wilt Mary Martin portra) Cirand Duke C. )rtl Romano', the maJor protago nisl 1n ihc 70-}'car~ld controvcril) surrounding the po'i'itblc \Urv1\al of Anastasia The stof) center<, on the claim b) a woman that she wa'i Anastasia, 1he vounacst dauJhter of Ct~r Nichol• 11 N1cholaHnd his cnt1rt famil) were shot 10 death on Jul} 16. IQ 18. b) Communl\t, dunna the rt'vol· ut1o n. ACcordtn& to 'iome ac- ' Paul Newman count' The repon" v.ef'C' never con finned Stan proteet WES1 PORT, Conn -Joane Woo"wa.rd and PH1 Nunnu are amona more than ()() propert)' owners fihng suit np1nst West- pon's Board of Tu Review over 1t~ October I 985 property rc- u~~ ments Repre~nt1na both re~1dent1al and commencal intere~b. the sutts by the couple Sttk a reduc· lion in the assessments to what they say 1s the tcpll) required 70 percent of the properties' market value Newman 1'i appealing the assessment placed on land and improvements at two addrcssc;; which were <;et at S60 000 and S988.300. The propen) assessed at S988.300 was 1n111alh asscs'iCd at S 1.02 m1lhon. wh1c h. l'icv.man appealed. License lost CHICAGO -\1 ~.Rep Daa Ro1te.uowtkJ, chairman of the HouscWaysand MeaMComm1t· tee. will lose his dnver'' hcen~ for a year after plcadin.g au1h} tn W1scons1n drunken dr1 \1ng charies. ,tale offi c111, ~1d ··He's goma to ~rvc-out h1-; suspension iust hkc anybo<h c-1\C would." said David P l owe Rostenkowsk1's laW)'ff 1n Mil waukcc Rostenltowslu. 58. an llhno1s Democrat. pleaded 1u1lty and paid a SSSS fine last month af\er he was stopped by pohce near 8urhniton. Wis , and rcfuied to take a bttath test for blood alcohol content. .. . ... D IS roa DUJCil.D Eut·Wnt deals. vulMrable. North WEST NOITB ... , Q QJ8t OAe •AQ.186 t A 109872 <:;:>93 EAST •Q63 QT• 0 Qt5 •1e 0 KJ 1087 • tOfZ SOUTH t&J Q A IC 10 5 2 0 •32 •K 98 The bidding. North Eut Soatll l 'Vl ,. I• ha• 3 P P ... '¢ Pue 5 <:;:> ,... ~Pua Pan 'NT 6 <:;:> Opening lead: Nlne or <:;:> We are reluctant to throw away anything or value. In the home, that can lead to a lot of clutter, at the bridge table, 1t can be a false economy. North had as little as the law will allow for his JUmp raise of partner's suit. South could not use Blackwood because of his two fast losers in diamonds, so he launched a cue-bidding sequence. When his partner showed a diamond control, South asked for aces and settled in a small slam when he learned that one was missing. Cwtls Gott• o ... SU11 West led a·trump. Declarer dttw a aecond round and, when the .Wt apllt 2·2, he wasted no thH ln adoptina the wro"' llne of play. He played five roundt or clubs, dJ5'. carding two dlamondt from hand, then led a spade from the ,table. We would like to report that he guessed correctly and put in the Jack. In fact, he went up with the king and lost two spade tricks for down one . The sad part of the whole affair 1s that declarer did not need to guess the 1pade position to fulliU his slam Instead of 1duffing two dl· amonds on the clubs, he should have forced rums.elf to get rid of both of his spade honors. Now there 1s no way the contract can be defeated All declarer has to do Is concede a diamond trick, and then he can ruff his last diamond on the table South traded in a sure thing for false economy. '::~~~, S~\l~1A-~£trs· .... .... HJt.41 ~ C\AY I, l'OUAN O lteorronge i.tt ... a of !ti. I011r 1Cro1T1bled worli1 I» low IO form fovr 11mple words C A R B E K 1 I I' I I 12 I EVEHA I I I' r I ) I t r r 1r· I ~ ... ~-.:.::~ .. ~ lo hefp wuh and wax, but too I 0 I G R I F I young to -the - ~ ........ ,-,-,-.... ,-.... , --,,.......i e COl'l'oleie Ille chvckle ouoied . • • • • • . by folf,"Q •ft the m1,..ng "'O'dS '--....l...-J._....__,.__.___, VOii ct.-lelop frOlft llep No 3 below e ~:~7iR~~8i~~RES I' r r 1· !1 ,. I' I' I e ~~~~:RMBlE fORI I I I I frHtj I I I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Sctiool book 6 Robe 10 Pouches 14 Excite 15 Salante 16 Tiii 17 Potson 18 Hub 19 S Ame<lcan capital 20 Scat" 22 Penny-ante type 23 To be Fr 2-' Most tri m 26 Foot part 29 Yours and mine 31 Kindled 32 Civic VIPs 34 Tableware 38 Eye part 39 Poor player 4 1 Designation 42 Abhor 45 R&Jses 48 Deportment 49 Sal - 50 Superlative ending 51 Run nimbly 55 Dlsmoun1ed 57 Indians 58 lnerasable 63 lrlstt Isle$ &o4 Swear 65 Dutch pa1nlel' Jan - 66 Equine 67 -avls 68 Actress Drew 69 Thin bOard 70 Earth 71 Four pref DOWN t Ub9fal 2 Caught 3 Oe -posh 4 Privately 5 Legislator 6 Proffered 7 Roundl1h 8 Preseoted 9 8eV9fage tO Dividing 11 Seltsame 12 Arrives 13 Dat1t-lk1nned 21 Ear part 22 Su1ter1ng 25 Wapiti 26 Sky-high 27 Toast spread 28 -St Vincent Millay 30 Snoots 33 Smell cate 35 Urn 36 Ratltes 37 Month abbr 40 New York lhoroughfare 43 Body parts 4.4 Pno< to -'6 Unwarranted 47 Carpenter'• punch 51 Pretends 52 Red shade 53 Armadillo 54 Competing 56 ,\ppeltatloo 59 Aata'a mistress 60 Strike 61 Mashef's look 62 SICiiy town 6A Spartt streem , THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane ''I'm getting tired. Instead of a wishing well. let's have a wishing puddle." MARMADUKE PEANUTS : '-ANT "'~LI\ NOW MARC IE \..APTAIN TUTOR 5 11ERE lre GARFIELD by Brad Anderson CAUTION DOG CROSSING ~ by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Care to try something a little pifferent, G!orge?" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ 6 ~ ,,..- .-1:..c.:_.> ,. 'DAD1 WOULU YOU FA1TEN UP M'( HORSE ~" by Jim Davis IMAGINE HAVIN~ 10 SUFFER I'M SPENDING TMf Rf5T YOU GOTTA G£.T UP PRETTY EARLY TO PUT ONE OVE~ ON AN ENTIRE Wf.f t< OF MONPAY5. ~ T~E WE.EK IN BEP WEL L.THEY'RE NOT uETTINU Mf.! TUMBLEWEEDS Pe.ALLY! I C?IPrJT r'.fJOW YOU COLLECTEl7 ~ifERFLIES, L.IMPIC7 1..-IZARV'! DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE OLD GARF"IEL'1 by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOll COUNTY U.S. ACRES FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE •WHeE.Z.E JVST A Brr FARTHER-ITS AN IS~D. we.·~ GoNNA Mf\t<f=. IT J FU~Y WINKERBEAN DEAR BAND AWMN I , WHE.~ OJR NEW ~I~ A~IVW I WE WERE ~RINED 10 Dt&DVE:.R AN (MI ~ IHE FRON'T INSIE.AD OF ™E t..Er'fER '(A)' R)R WE5iVIEIJJ I I DOONESBURY LUCl<HJ; I WE'VE BEEN ABl£ 10 RE.C.l1Ft..> IHI~$ f£) WE CAN t>JEAR OUR N8AJ UNI~ FOR. IHE Fl~i GAME ! by Berke Breathed .• by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally by Tom Bath.Jk ~ iHt Wfl/..) I lX)()R AL.MA MAl£R'6 NEW NAME 15 MIDVIEW .' by Garry Trudeau 25~ FRIDAY, JULY 25. 1986 • Offshore drillin .blocked House panel's compromise measure postpones offshore drilling until 1989 Southern California from 1988 to 1989. Thecompromiseaboestablisb· es a orocedwe to select the lites available for lea.sins. ByLAUl\A~ Of ............. :nie House Appropriations Co~­ rruttce approved a compromise Thursday that forbids ofJ'enna oew oil and ps leuina in federal waters off Spy convicted Former lf•TY radioman Jerry Wb.itwortb la COD- Ylcted of •pyin&. A4. . Coast Offer made to save China House In Newport Harbor./A3 Callfomla Attorney denies sexual allegations brought by two woman clients./ M Sports The Dodgers move Into fourth place. /C1 California until 1989. lo.stead of a moratorium that would halt all lcue sale nqotiatioo1 for one year, the committee approved a plan that delayed the .:heduled lease sales in both Northern and Althousb Interior Secretary Doaald Hode°l can beain preparina for the upcomina lease sales by next March, oil companies cannot be notified about the availability o( tracll until February 1989 and blda may not be opened until March J 989. Lquna Beach City Councilman Rare Royal white Ben,.. ttcen and &olden Siberian ttcen line ap for trainer Wade Barck darmc the RJ.ntUnc Bros. Roben Gentry, in Washinaton D.C. at the time or the committee's voice vote, l&id, '6Thi1 is a nice wind for Southern California because it buys u1 IOme time and puts the lease sale for Southern California into a new administration. "We will have a new president and new secretary of interior, .. Gentry said. Both President Reqan and HodcJ have pushed for increuc:d oil and ps exploration off the California coast. The amendment requires Hodel consider all propoealt &ubmitted to him from the oetOtiatiaa team and Gov. Georae Deukmejian. By Janu- ary 1987 llodel mWlt resubmit bis five-year plan to the DCFtiati na team, which will in twn return it with iu comm.menu. Hodel is tbeQ required to submit copies of the final five-year plan. includina the commcnu made by the 0.-, ......................... and Barnum • Balley Clrc:u •how that coma to Anaheim Con.ention Center Taeeday, Jaly 29. See Datebook. aeeotia11n1 tQm, toCo.npas and tbe praideut within 30 days. If H...:.t..~'f~., OpPOICS anythina io the plans be mUlt 11ve a detailed explanation of bis reuon1. Consress then bu 60 day1 to ltt on the five-year plan. The amcndmcot provides that the secretary ~Tc not IChcdulc a lease sale off · ornia prior to Jan. I, 1989. TheCWTCDt t.cntativucbedulec:alll (Pleue ._ D1t11.LIRO/A2) Parking. to bump projects at fair Board gives tentative OK to major change to faJrgounds renewal By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. O.., ........ The Orange County Fair Board gave preliminary approval Thursday to an updated fairgrounds master plan that would put parking loll on most of the property set aside for commercial development. Under the draft revisions con- sidered by the boa.rd, two 7-acrc lots reserved for commercial uses at the Costa Mesa fairgrounds would be reduced to 2 acres apieoe. The remainina land, at the comers of Fairvlew Roed and Arhnctoo Drive, as well as Fairview and Fair Drive, would be used for 10-acres of new paved parking. said fur director Norb Bartosik. The $20-malllon. 10-year mastt.t (Pleue eee r A.lllOR0111fD8/ A2) INDEX Advice and Games Auto Piiot Bulletin Board Business Classified cs 81 A3 Animals, tides give man quake clues fa~!~g~~~:~~fnd Comics B10 B2-7 C6 87 Date book Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather Weddings 812 A6, Datebook A3 87-9 C1-4 Datebook A2 A6 By G. JEANE'ITE AVENT Of .. O.., ........ James BcrkJand predicts earth· quakes with the same confidence most people predict weather. Before the end of the day Saturday, there will be a major 7.0 earthquake some place 1n the world. says Bcrkland, a 55-ycar- old, senior engineering geologist for Santa Clara County. If he's nght, he will have success- fully predicted 205 out of 246 earth- quakes since January 1974, he said. His enthusiasm for earthquake pre- diction is not shared by everyone. The U.S. Geological Survey has rejected his last five papers on earthquake prediction, but he's not giving up. 'Tm going on the of.. fensivc." He's going public, he said. "Earthquakes have always had an aura of mystery about them. They've been called acts of God, random events. Tbat's baloney." He was able to predict the 6.5 Coalinga quake in 1983 because it fell within a seismic window -one of several key clements in a prediction. Each year as soon as he receives the ude charts, he outlines nine to 11 Huntington's first citizens proudly remember when ... Longtime Huntington Beach residents reminisce about halcyon days gone by --~ ---- Things were different in Hunt-kids didn't get anto much trouble angton Beach 50 years ago. There were because the adults in town knew them just a f~w thousand people in the little and wouldn't permit things to get out town next to the ocean along Pacific of hand. Coast H1&hway and Main Street. Folks didn't bother to lock their Everyone knew each other. And doors because they knew nobody Defense contract indictment names firmt 19 workers man amon those char ed with fraud LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Hunt- 1naton Beach man was amona 19 defen1e industry workers and one com~ny that ~re indicted Tbut"l- day tn a series of aUqcd klckblck schemes apinst the aovemmcnt and defense contractors Donald Uoyd Walkins. 39, a buyer for HTUC. West Co. of Santa Ao&, was named in an indictment for violat.aon of ant.a·klckbtck la and mad fraud, wd U.S. Aftomey Rohen Bonner. Alto amoaa tboae named in the indictmenuwu ubwf>en Rotemead Caty Councilman Louis Tury Jr .. 47, and a company he owns. Tury Precision Machinma of Rosemead, Bonner said. Besides violation of anti-kickback laws, most of the indictments charae mail fraud and tax evasion. The alle&ed kickback schemes in- volve employees of more than 20 defense contractors and subconttac- tors, includina Hushes Aircraft Co., Rockwell International Corp., Lock· heed Corp., Hqhcs HeUcoc>tcr Inc., Garren ~h Manufi cturina Co. and MqNvo~ Advanced Prod· ucu and Systems Co. The indictments were the latest to stem ftom a 22-montb Cf'lcltdown by the Justice Ocpanment on dcfente industry fraud. Previously, II other people have been prosecu\ed. and (Pleue ... D&Rm/A2) ~ would take anything. About 70 to 80 people who resided 1n the seaside hamlet at least 50 years ago were invited back to City HaJI this week to be saluted by Chamber of Commerce and city officials as part of Pride Month. Most of the people still live in tbe city that now comprises 26 square miles and a population of about 180.000. They recognize that the city's changed a lot but almost sc1sm1c windows, a pcnod ofvulner- ab1hty to quakes. The recent Palm Spnngs, Oceanside and Bishop earth- quakes all fell in the July 19-26 window, he said. "Tides cause the crust of the earth to be pushed up and down." The potential for earthquakes increases when perigee tides and spnng tides occur at the 5ame time or are close together. Perigee tides occur in proportion to the distance of the moon from the earth -the closer the moon. the higher the ttde. On July 19. the moon was less than Ro BERT BARKER RETROSPE CT!\ E wtthout exception, they said they love the Huntington Beach and would never lave anywhere else. They've remained loyal through the years. One of those in attendance was Tony Tovatt. 66, who came to Huntington Beach in 1925. He owned and operated Tovan's (Pleue eee CITY I il) ' 224,000 mites from earth -one ot its closest approaches to earth an ats orbit. The 5.5 Bishop quake followed the next day. Seismic windows are also charac- terized by high spnng tides. Dunng the July window. there was a full moon, said Bcrkland. ··spnng udes accompany a new or full moon " Se1sm1c windows which open up againNov. l -7,Dcc. l-8andDcc. 29- Jan. 5 indicate only the poss1b1hty of earthquakes. To actuall} make quake pred1ct1ons, BcrkJand studies ~veral (Pleue eee QUAKES/ A2) By MICHELLE COLE o.llJ,._.C.n4 • I Dcchnang enrollment and unex- pected cuts in state funding have put the Coast Community Coll~c Di~ tnct in a financial bind, the district's budget director reported Wednesday. In a revised 1986-87 budget prepared by Vice Chancellor Michael Webster. trustees learned that the d1stnct must trim more than $2.7 m1lhon from a $96 m1llton opcraung budget that had been tentauvel} approved tn June. (Pleue eee COLLEGE/ A2) Father who took baby at hospital charged By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .... 0.-, ........ Charges ot telony child endanger- ment were filed Thursday against a . Hunungton Beach man who took his baby from the UCI Medical Center and fled to Colorado. The child, David Kenned} Jr t'i now tn a Denver. Colo . hospital where doctors said he 1s in gO<ld condition. "No surgery will be required." ... said Tom Rees. a spokesman for the l nt\er\tt\ of Colorado Health Set· enc~s Center ··He's a real hvt"IY fello" · .. Thi' :int'moon he was da111tng all tht' OUl""'i("S •• Da' 1d Kenned\' Sr and his wife K1m~rh nn tool their 'ion to the l Cl "ied1cal · Center la~t wet"~ on the rt"Commendat1on of a fam11\ ph\S· 1c1an Docto~ found the bab-. "a' bleed· mg bet.,..ecn has skull and brain and (Pleue eee r ATHER/ Al) CdMnot getting English church ......... daft ... '"" ,..rta Tbt o( a 13th ccntut) English to an Epi!opal con· m Corooa dd Mar was b) Enalaod'i l'Cllmsu:~aen~ bnnckd t'OI._. .. • "'1we&kaway COLLEG~ DISTRICT'S REVENUES CUT ••• l'romAl Awa.re last month that the d1stnct would have to tiahten its belt1 trusteei had imposed an across-tne-board hirina meze for 0ranae Coast, Gold· en West and Coastline coUeaes as well u KOCE· TV, the public television station manaaed by the district. But as trustee Armando R. Ruiz said Wednesday night, "I thought it couldn't act any worse." Webster told the board that the shortaac 1s due to a $1.S million funding cut by the state on top of a $600,000 cut in the distnct's enrol· lment allowance. The district's colleges suffered a 2. 5 percent drop in enrollment, losing 661 students last year. It was among 3S collqe d1stncts in California to have s~te funding reduced because of declinina enrollment. Coast colleges lost an additional $1 .2 million in state funds that had been allocated for equipment purchases. Trustees will have less than a month to mull over a revised bu<f4et that was presented during a spectal study session. The bud&et calls for m~or cuts in equipment pu~bascs. Webster said be has recommended a reduction of about S l million in purchases of non· instructional equipment, including office machines, computers and maintenance vehicles. Webster also has recommended cuts in instruc· tional equipment. Without the nearly $4 million in revenues from the California Lottery, Webster said the district would have been in even f!:Cater financial trouble. "It was a hfe saver," be sa1d. "It's always tough balancing the budget, but it is particularly tough when you don't have funds that were in the governor's budaet in January." While the budget calls for no faculty or staff layoffs. Helen Evers of the 1,400-member Coast Federation of Employees said she is concerned about that possibility. Evers also is concerned about bud&et allocations that she does not think are prudent dunna a fiscal crisis. Even said she docs not mind "~tenina her belt," but she does object to the district's spendina an additional $75,000 to increase some administrators' contracts from 11 to 12 months. "I'm not saxina they~ squander· ina money. Stlll, everybody agrees the district is already top heavy with administrators," she said. Evers also objects to the disparity in milcasc allowances allocated to administrators and other distnct employees. "When someone makes a $60,000 salary, l don't think they need an additional $300 to $400 a month for mileage expenses, especially when other district employees only get 23 cents a mile," Evers said. FATHER WHO TOOK BABY CHARGED .•• From Al were watching him closely to de- termine 1fhe would need surgery. They also found a vanety of other present and past injuries, including broken bones and bruises, that in- -'dicated possible child abuse. The head injury 1s commonly fo und in infants who have been v10lently shaken by the shoulders. causing whiplash and ruptured blood vessels, said Dr. Christine Taft. Huntington Beach police placed the S.month.old bo) 1n protective custody after UCI doctors no11fied them about the SUSPICIOUS inJunes. But Monday 01ght, whale Kenned) Sr. was visiting, he spirited his son out of the second-floor ped1atnc ward. Police put out an all-points bulle11n feanng the child's life could be 1n danger because of the head inJury Believing relauvcs knew the where- abouts of the couple and their son, police convinced them of the serious- ness of the baby's injury. Wednesday niaht. the child's grcat- grandmotber too\ him to the Denver hospital. Kennedy Sr. attended a Denver courtroom hearing Thursday where his son was placed in the custody of th~ Denver Social Services Depart- ment. but his wife did not attend. said Recs. The ~nts were granted super- vised visitation rights as well. However, Huntington Beach ·police want to talk to the parents and may seek to extradite the father. The district attorney's office hasn't yet decided whether at will file charges against the mother, said Huntington Beach pohce spokeswoman Jo Anne Bonkowski . Kennedy Sr. -whose real name is Nicholas Peter Navran -is wanted by local authonucs on several other matters, too. Court records show warrants for his arrest have been issued for charges stemming from petty theft, indecent exposure and lewd conduct in public, and dnving with a suspended license. Records also show he has used three or four different aliases. "Friends told us he has a scam going, saying he's related to Bobby Kennedy. or John Kennedy, and other members of the Kennedy fam1I}." said Bonkowsk1. FAIRGROUNDS RENEW AL ALTERED ..• From Al plan as still in the earl) 'itages and must undergo en"aronmental studies as well as public heanngs before at can replace the original S 16 7-mallion plan approHd b" the board an 1978. .\mong the pr<>JCCt'> contained in the exa'iting plan "'ere the 18.000- capacit~ Pacific .\mph1thcater. com- pleted in mid-summer 1983. and a hotel. which has ,been '>tallcd b) financing problems. Drafted b" POD Inc )f \anta .\na. the updated "ers1on reshapes the configura11on of the fairgrounds to accommodate year-round events when the July fair is not in session. Two new multi-purpose buildings are proposed for construction, with the fa1r's four main exhibit halls undergoing maJOr renovations . Add1ttonally. the fa1r's 5.000-seat Arlington Theater would eventually be replaced by m ore parking spaces, whale entertainment would be moved to the Grandstand area. Bartosik said. He explained the cost of the revised master plan was partly increased because of inflauon. The new emphasis on parking was prompted by the increasing po~u­ larity of the 10-day fair, which attracted a record 439, I 77 visitors this year. Authors of the proposed revised maste r plan had projected at would take another fo ur years for attendance to reach even 404.000. and another nine years for the fair to reach 445,000. The report recommends the board consider lengthening the fair to 17 days. although Bartosik said that change would be "a long way down the road." DRILLING FOES CELEBRATE ... From Al for two sale'> in I 9XX. one off Northern ( ahforn1a in April and one off Southern ( ahforn1a the fo llowing month The I ntenor Department alread} had agreed to dcla\ the Southern California '>ale but not the northern offering, for wh1th prep- arations began in April "It kind of walks and talk!. like a moratonum but II 1s not a mora- tonum ·· S<t1d (1en1n According to (,entl') the rnm- prom1se 1s more proteCtl\C than the moratorium would have hecn be- cause 11 g1 vc\ foes of off<. ho re oil dnlllng the lime 10 push the issue into the pres1dcntal campaigns. "We can also push for an en- \ 1ronmentall) concerned secretary of interior. one who understand'> the precious resources of the < allfornia coast." Gentry said The amendment to the Interior Department's funding bill muc,t no"' be approved b) the full Hou'>c and the ">en ate (,entl) said legislators were tmng of lobbyists from ( ahforn1a and he predac.ted that a moratorium would have had little chance of pac,<,1ng on both floors "In Washington the) tall the people from ( ahforn1a the 'hot- tubbcr'>.' l hc) think the 'hot tubhers' fl) here to the hill JUSI to ti) and save their precious ocean "1ews the} ha\>C from their hot tub~ The) "'ould not ha\C allowed another moratorium to go through." Gentry '>ltd Bill Schreiber. aide to Con- grcc;c;man Roben Badham. R-Ne"' port Beach said the agreement "'as \Cf) promising for Orange ( oast resident'> "Thie; 1c; great Out'itdc of a mora- torium forever. th" 1'> the next hest thing It I'> a rt·al 'Ktol) for us localh .. he '>31d CITY STIRS PRIDE IN CITIZENS ... From Al Hardware \tore that "'a" under lam1h ownership from 1925 to I 9Xll • For a long t1mt• the ~tort· wac, at 211 Main Street In 1959. he ac,kcd friend'> to help mo"c the entire 1n.,,entof) a couple of hlm:k'> inland on Main <itreet "\h friends were all cu'>tomcrc,." he c;a;d ··and the\ mo,ed all the hilfdware Items :.We didn't lo'><:' an\oth1ng." he r,a1d .. That's how J'.)l.'ople "'crt• then ·· To\ att \<ml hie, lather aho named Ton) built the Holl) ">ugar f-actol') 1n the f1,e 1'01ntr,area of Huntington beach 1n I'll I lie dismantled 11 a few years later and c,h1pped 11 b) train to T omngton v. \() whcrt• II I\ still opera11ng he c,.11d To' att c,a1d hl· IO\ C'> tht c1t\ and wouldn't h\e .tn\whcrt: el\e But he would like to \CC redc\elopment mo"e ahead "It'<, su<. h a me\\ down there:· he said · r here ' no reason to go there The bcaut1lul old downtO'-"n needs to be re\ 1tal11ed .. Gail Langrnhn k 86 "'a' another v1s1tor at the oldt1mer.,· \alute She came to Huntington Beach from Iowa an 1924 to become teacher at Hunt angton Elcml·ntal') CX:h<x>I (no"' Dw)er) where '>he was paid the grand total ofS 1.60<1 per \.Car Her husband Vernon now de- ceased, was a former ma) or. and cit) officials a few )Car'> ago named a cit) park 1n his honor Whtie "frc; l.angenbeck "'a" \har mg recollectmn'i, .\nn < J<>Ct'><'h c;hd ~~AA~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE 3JC ,,. .. ~. M• A Ma "df'1•1't' <i • F ,,., ,,.,. A ~ F.."1- into an adJOining chair (,lcndora own 17 anc'> of land at '"frs Langenbeck.'' shc \a1d "I Hc1l \\cnue and Bol'>a ( h1ca Street don't kno"' much math hut nen-v.hcrc the Huntington "'a11onal Bank thing I learned. I learned from )OU ·· 1s lo<.att•d. <,he '>aid (1oetsch said sh<.' came to H untington ~C"t:ral former ma)ors. 1nclud1ng beach in 1921 Don ">h1ple) and Boh Lambert. .\nothcr of "1 r'> Langenbeck\ attended the affair lormer pupils ~ranees Rathhurn hac, Sh1pk\ ..,.., a former b1olog) been a resident '>1ncc 1927 teacher at < orncll l n1"ers1t) and "I lo.,,e 1t (H untington Bca(h). ·<,he Long Beach <->tatc l n1.,,crsll). said he said "Evel)thing -the weather. the oppo'>C'> '>Orne of the high denc,1t) people the heath I'll never get too development. hut take'> pride 1n the old lo l<nc the bc.c1th.. c1t\ 1n \l'\Cral area'> \nother pioneer (,enc "1c Manu<, :.V.c ha\e a park '>)Stem like no hac, <,pent 60 of his 78 \.Car'> 1n other the llbraf) ,., pract1call) a Huntington Beath H1c, JOb \\otth the national 1nst1tu11on. and the beac hc'> \tandard Oil Company took him to arc c,t1ll 1n public hand'>" Kettlemcn Hill'> 1n the San Joaquin Ht•\ \at1\ficd with police and lire \-allC\ for a while But the heat and other '>Cf\ 1cec, even though h1'> bctame too much and he and his "'tic \.1ain \trcet re\ldcn1.e has been the former .\lhena Lam who fir'it hroken into t"'ICe he ..aid became a rc<;1dcn1 in 192'\ returned Lamht·n 64. hac, c,pent all has hfc. ne\er to lea"e again except for the firc,t 11 months. 1n One of the longer-term resident\ at untington Beach tie. and his father the gathering wa<; Charlotte J fo n .. · him owned and operated a Kinchen Due "'ho came to ~ -~sen ice '>tat10n at Beach Boulc"ard 1ngton Beach from Los Ahgelc<; 1 nd T albcn .\ \Cnue He holds the 191 3 "'hen she was 1 <ihe said growth lea'>t' on the propert} no"' occupied in the cit) has been "phenomenal" b\. the W1enerschn111el hot dog stand and she takes pride in 11. but thrngs Lamht•rt said he lakes the climate used to nicer when the town wa\ and ut) '>Cn ice<; but womes that too smaller, she said maO\ homer, and hus1nec;<;e<,areheing "But 1t had mudd) roads when 1t built 1n the ett\ rained M} father would get 1n his "1a}or Boh :"1and1c a Huntington tractor and pull out thecars(that were Beach nat1\e son "'ho introduced the '>tuck )" early-day residents to the ( 1ty Coun- Mrs Due said ~he's done lot<; of ul and who's known most of them all traveling and seen lots of lovcl-. h1'> hfe called them "the best people place<; but no place 1s quite as nice a<> 1n the v..orld .. "They'"e never done Huntington Beach anything "'rong." he said. "not even She and hc,r brother. Eugene Due of the most minor thing " Delly Piiot Delivery 11 GuerentMd v >nJa1 r oay 11 1,,., 10 Class·'~•O• ~4} ~679 bv .. '~" ~ •1' ~· ~•1 41'' Justcall 642-6086 t '"'""'e yOUt peper by ~ 10 p "' caN oet0<e 1 r m 100 yOV' CoPr woll 0- ~•·.0 -1. -- ~' ,.., ..... llM':-\fl .... \C fl!C at• VOL. 79, NO. 208 i What do you hkc about the Daily Pilot') What don't you hke'> Call the number above and your · message will be recorded. transcnbed and de- livered to the appropriate editor The same 24--hour answcnng sen-ice may be u~ to record letters to the editor on an} topic. Contnbutors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for venfica11on . Tells us what's o n your mind S.•,, 1'1, •'Id s..no., " yOU -'O rlOI 19'-yOV' CC>Pr 1>y 1 • m c• oetore 10 a m l"<l y<N' COf'y w• De°" ... *" ' Clrculatlon Telephonet § rt Mostly clear sky by afternoon Let...,.t through mkS--momlnc(1ow cloudl wtll pert to moet1y deer lklel thli ~ owr the Orenge eo.t, the National Weether 8eMoe Mid. Hight wit renge from the 70. at the ~to the low IOe lnland.Tonlgttt'1 lowl wm reno-from 511to85. Locel mountain• wtH be failr wtth gutty wlndl to 25 mph at tlmee. Hight wtll be In the 70., lowl from 45 to 55. Gutty ettemoon and ev9nlng wlndl to 30 mph wtll blow through the deMrts. Upper cs..t Nghe wMI be 88 to 97, lowl 58 to 88. Lower cs..t hlghe wtl be 100 to 108, lowl 88 to 75. 8outhweet to Met wlnct. 12 to 18 knota wll blow through the Inner coutal wet.,. thtt ettemoon and evening OYlt • eouthweat twelt of 2 r.t. Farther out, v-1able wind• leel than 10 knot• wtll blow with 3a to &.foot .... through tonight. Extenalv9 low cloudlneel wtlf part to moetly clMr lklee thll afternoon. S"°"*• U.S. Temps ~ --S.V.C. NOAA US 0.0: ol C-c. HtgN. !owe tlwougll I p m. Thurldey .. ~ ....... .. 71 Alberly,NY .. .. .._.._,. .. 71 Calif. Tempe ~ 17 .. MIJll1 Ml Of111 .. .. t1 t7 ....... 11 11 Anc:ftor90e IO u Mptl8t ... .. 74 ...... lowe tlvougll I p.m. 1lllndey ,.,..,,.. .. 72 ........ .. 74 .. .. == to .. 8t*1on Atlltntle City t6 71 .... °"-"' t2 74 t2 .. TlftMVe/l/llt 72 42 AUICln 100 74 ..._YorttClly 17 72 ..,.,. 17 .. ,_ 71 to INmllnghem .. 72 Norfollc, VL 17 71 ~ .. .. y_.......,,, 11 .. ~ 11 IO Oklllhome City 102 74 ...... n 4S 9oM .. 12 Omehe .. 71 lloelon .. 70 Ortlndo IO 72 llllllOP 17 ... =-IOI 71 lufllllo 17 t6 l't' f IS tile IO .. 72 to Surf Report IMtlngton. V1 .. 12 ,,_. 106 12 ~City 71 12 c...-n M =="°'9 17 .. &ow-. a ... cn.t.ton.ac 17 ., n 14 ,_ .. .. ...... .... -. Dir. Ctllirtotte,N C. to 71 =~ to 72 ~ 17 14 l.111111 2 a IW ~ IO 13 to 14 Longa-fl to a ..,.. __ 1 2 IW ~ 11 72 a 11 N9wpoft t a 1W to to Ndllllond .. 72 ~ 11 a CobMle,l.C 17 71 It LAIUll .. n ., .. lenDllp~2 I IW CoU!lllul,ONo .. 11 MtU.Qly 12 IO ...,... .. IO °'*oil lot Utlllt cMnte- ..... , •• 1 14 14 c.o.-d,H.H. .. .. .... ,.,.... .. n = .. -10 .. ~WOtlh .. 71 ... ~I'\' .. 11 74 12 ~ .. 11 ..... 74 u .. .. Tide. 0.-.. .. ...,.., ... .. 72 OrMl1o .. 12 O..McMMI 12 74 n-100 10 ,.._.,. 103 71 Detroit .. .. T"1MI 102 71 ........ a 11 TODAY ElfWG t2 .. w~.o.c. .. 74 ,._...,..... IO IO l'lrllllllfl 12:11 Liii. 1.5 F*'**t 14 IS ....._.aey to .. ,.,.. 7:02Lm. 00 F.,.o t1 .. ......... 11 .. 9-ldllllfl 1:atp.m. 4 7 ---n 44 ----IO • 9-MllOw 7:11p.m. 2 1 Onftd .... .. .. Extended ..... 10 17 IATWmAY HclnoMll .. 71 ............ 17 a ,.,.,. 1:00LJll. 4 7 Houllon 14 71 ....,,.... 11 14 ,.,.. 7:11a.m. 0.7 llld19n1Paet .. 14 ...,..._.. .... _ .... ..._ 11 11 ._..,. 2:24p.111. 4.1 '**-'·Mlel .. 74 --.... .. """ .......... -... Alie 11 12 ~-t:SSp.m. 1.1 ""'-aa 12 nonnll. a.di hlgll9 .. to 71, .... ........... n IS lk.wl .... := .. 7:11 p.m. Ind,... ~City 14 72 lnllnd 71 to ... ~14 tot4. IMtaCNI .. .. LMVegM 17 .. V-*'fhlglw .. tot4. io..M .......... 12 IS tomorrow at I: Liii. Uttle "°'* .. 71 ..._.,... ~ ~-p.m. Ind tol4. ........... .. a .... tolllonow.. 1 ........ DEFENSE KICKBACKS ALLEGED ••• From Al convicted o n kickback and kickback· related charges. "This is a cancer on the defense indsutry," Bonner said of paying kickbacks to get jobs, a practice be termed "very widespread and very longstandini." More indictments arc expected in the government's ongoing invcstiga· tion of defense fraud, Bonner said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Heather, who as prosecuting the latest group of cases, said he was unable to put a dollar figure on the amount allegedly paid in kickbacks. But Bonner, talcing a broader view, said the latest cases are believed to be only a fraction of kickbacks being paid, which he estimated at "tens of m1lllons of dollars" over the past decade. Defense programs involved in the current cases include a critical com- ponent for the space shuttle solid rocket booster, sophisticated military aircraft includmg top-of-the-line jet fighters. the 852 and B 1-B bombers, the Cruise massle system and the Army's Sikorsky "Blackhawk" heli- copter. as well as "a number of highly classified Department of Defense programs," Bonner said. "These crimes inflate the prices the government must pay for defense, and they destroy competitio n in the marketplace for defense contracts," Bonner said. "They have the poten· tial for jeopardizing the quality and reliability of the defense industry's goods upon which we all depend for our national security." He said the investigation had turned up no evidence that the schemes had caused inferior quality components to be used in any weapons systems. Tury was accused of payina more than $20,000 in kickbacks to Richard Herbert, a former vice president and general manager of Teledyne Camera Systems Inc., in exchange for getting government subcontracts between 1980 and 1984. Tury, accused of violating anti- k1ckback laws and of mail fraud, couldn't be reached either at Rose- mead City Hall or at his comapny. Herbert was convicted last year of receiving kickbacks. Those named in Thursday's indict· ments arc expected to be arraigned over the next three weeks, Bonner said. Besides Watkins and Tury, their names, companies for which they worked at the time of the all~ed violations and the charges against them arc: -James Paul Juckabey, 51 , of Cypress, senior buyer with Kaiser Electroprccision of Irvine, anti·kick· back and tax evasion. -John Robert Rennert, 62, of suburban Panorama City, purchasing supervisor for Rantec Division of Emerson Electronics Co. of Los Angeles, anti·kickback and mail fraud. -Stephen Rowland, 36, of Ox- nard, senior buyer for Systron Don- ner of Los Angeles. anti·kickback, mail fraud and tax evasion. Kenneth Leroy Pipho, 43, of suburban Sun Valley, senior buyer for Whittaker Controls Inc. of Los An· gclcs, anti·kickback, mail fraud and tax evasion. -Carl Andy Romcrio, 70, of Westminster, senior buyer for Datron Systems Inc. of suburban Simi Val· Icy, anti-kickback and mail fraud. ENGLISH CHURCH'S SALE BARRED ••. From Al Church at Covcnham belong to the breakaway Conunuing Episcopal Church... said the Rev David Lambert. Lambcn, Rector of Fotherby charged with overseeing 10 other L1ncolnsh1re churches, includmg Covenham. disclosed the decision m a telephone interview. Many in the small town of Cov- cnham. about 130 miles north of London. were in favor of m oving the church to Cahfornaa because they feared 11 would be demolished other- "'1se. The church was built tn 1257 to serve a parish established some 200 years earlier by William the Con· queror The comm1ss10ners who barred mo' mg the church control the finances of the state Church of England and are responsible for the upkeep of 1ts buildings. American Episcopalians, who with ~ the Church of EnJland belong to the worldwide Anghcan Communion, spht over changes in their liturgy a nd the ordination of women priests. Some of the traditionalists started the Continuing Episcopal Church. Lambert said that because of the spht he believed that Bishop Simon Phipps of Lincoln advised the com - m1ss10ners not to approve the sale of 13th century St. Bartholomew's. The building was declared surplus property in 1978 after residents of the farmmg village, which has two churches and less than 300 people, decided they did not need both and could not afTord to repair St. Bartholomew's. Lambert said that St. Bartholomew's needed 30,000 pounds (then $55,000) for renovation 10 years ago that wasn't fonhcomm~ "and now it must be double that, • (over $89,000 at the current, lower exchange rate). The cost of d1smanthng and pack- ing the church was estimated in January at about $35,000 by the Rev. Samuel Schciblcr, assistant pastor of St. Matthew's by·the·Sca in Corona Del Mar. Shipping costs would have been extra, and. the pastor said the money could be raised. Lambert said there arc now three possibilities for St. Batholomew's. "The commissioners may pass it to their Redundant Churches Fund, which would have to maintain at for future use. Or they would decide on an alternative use for the building, or demolish it, wholly or partially. "I think it will eventually come down once archaeologists ha vc cxam- i ned it thoroughly, and then they will excavate the site for evidence of earlier religious use. "The chu~h is not considered of sufficient historical or artistic merit to be worth preserving in relation to the amount of money needed." QUAKES SIGNALED BY ANIMALS, TIDES ••• From Al uther indicators including newspaper lost and found columns. Dogs and cats start respondmg to an 1mpendmg earthquake a week to 10 days in advance. However, there as a lag time 1n reporting runaway animals, he said. Allowing for the 4th of July and thunders10rms, more ads start show· 1ng up about four days an advance ofa quake Prececd1ng the 5.3 Oceanside quake on July 13, there were 44 missing dogs and 11 missina cats. "If there arc more than six to eiaht cats and more than 30 d<>fS missing. expect a quake. I've monitored three city papers since 1979. It works time after time. It's a useful tool.'' Animal response is not limited to domestic animals. Wild animals often react b} runnina away from their normal place of safety, said Berkland Rats and mice come out in broad daylight, hom101 piacons act lost and mannc animals beach them· ~Ives The phenomena o fhom101 pipns acttinf lost and marine animals beachma themselves is tied to chanacs in the earth's maanetic field, another quake indicator, said Berkland Homma Pt&C<>ns. honey bees, salmon, sharks, whales all navapte us1na the earth's maanctic field. They arc able to nu1.ptc alona maanet1c lines.because of deposits of maanetitc or iron oxide in their bodies. Mqnet1te or lodestone 1s a hi&hly maanet1c natural substance found everywhere, said Bcrkland. There have been several homm1 pigeon races, including a 1984 Bishop to Los Angeles race, where the navigation system didn't work. Bcrkland said many of the birds did not finish, because they were "flying over epicenters of quakes to be." However, "many animals have forgotten what to do with maanctitc -like people." Earthquake sensitive people do respond, however, with physical symptoms, said Bcrkland. One to four days before a qualcc, people will act a headache between their eyebrows (where the maanctite is concentrated), a stuffy head and watery eyes. Berkland said animals arc not his only early warning system. A 1,()()().. foot wcU in Palm Sprinp reponedly "suraed 20 feet m a few mmutes four hours before the 4.8 quake on October 2, I 98S." Some have called Berkland's work "little better than rcadina tea leaves." However, Bcrkland said, 0 1f you put cnou~ information together and stay with 1t lonacnouah. you'll bqjn to see the correlation. (But) we have aot to have continuity in earthquake predic· uon." The success of earthquake predictions are tied to systematic reportn)I of key mdicators. "Hiah science bas not dealt honestly with the subject." In China and Rus11a, they're closely followina change in water levels and animal reactions, he said. "Around the world, u's work1na. It _, __ _ doesn't work here because high science says 1t can't." Despite "a lot of raised eyebrows" and cnticism that his findin~ arc all coincidental, Bcrkland contmucs to offer his predictions to all who will hstcn. For the Los Angeles area, Bcrkland predicted a 3.S quake before Saturday. Accordina to his sources at the California Institute of Tcch- noloay in Pasadena, there was a 3.8 in Oceanside on Tuesday. However, he said, "I don't think the activity is over with yet." Correction The salaries of Huntington Beach City Attorney Gail Hutton and City Oerk Alicia Wentworth P.Ublished Tuesday in the Daily Pilot were incorrect because of inaccurate infor- mation provided by the city's person- nel office. Hutton's salary1 1ncludina a 7 percent contributio n of tupayer money to her retirement plan, is $73,483 Wentworth's correct salary. 1nclud- 1na the city's contribution to the retirement plan, is S«.670. The two elected officials, who received a S percent pay increase from the City Council Monday, also will receive 11/J percent pay hike Jan I \ • JULY25, 1986 DAILY PII.Df ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE VOL2/N0'19 Lusty 'Henry IV' at Grove Festival That duhin~ of swords emanating in the late evenings from (Jarden Grove signals theatergoers that the Grove Shakespeare Festtval 1~ off and running again. opening with a lust}'. full-blooded production of"Hcnry IV. Part 1:· Each year the festival seems to grow in scope and d1mcns1on. and 1f the "Henry" now being performed in the Festival Amphitheater is an) 1ndicat1on. it 9hould again be a banner summer for classical theater buffs in this. the eighth yearof the event. Director Richard E.T White has mounted a nch. hairy-chested interpretatton of this violent power struggle for possession of the English crown. The play progresses on three levels -an the coun where Kmg Henry IV defies his nobles' ambi- tt0ns. in the rebel camp where Hotspur and his fiery forces prepare for combat. and in the tavern as the heir-apparent. Prince Hal, who wields the balance of power. carouses with the merry old Falstaff and his cronies. The cen- Toi Titus ••••••••••-tral element of the plot -the hero interceding to help save the day-is familiar in movies from "Shane" to "Star Wars." but it's still fun to watch. Gregory Mortensen endows the key role of Pnnce Hal with a robust, devil-may-care machismo which validates his later heroics even though his acceptance of responsibility after a father-son chat may seem somewhat contnved. Jn the title role. Benjamin Stewart is a sturdy picture of regal determ1na11on. but the stght of one of his years an combat may cause some audiences 10 wince. The role ofHotspur is a showcase part mdeed. but Carl ReWardo seems bent upon wnnging even more seething emotion from 1t, and hence overdraws to the point of caricature. More restrained, and ultimately more effective. is Daniel Bryan Cartmell as his uncle and co-conspirator. Then there 1s Falstaff. a character so robustly memorable that Shakespeare used him again in "The Merry WavcsofWindsor"(which foll ows "Henry JV" into the amphitheater ncx t month). Harry Frazier virtually dominates his scenes in this role. chc1tmg both our laughter and our pity as he soliloquizes eloquently on the arttfic1al virtues of honor. Other 1mpress1ve performances are delivered by Russ Terry a'I the Earl of Douglas, Patnck Massoth as the rebel Mortimer and Andy Gnggs ma single sequence as the mystic force of the insurgents. Owen < ilendower. Pamela Pan sh is excellent as Hotspur's persistent wife. while Claudia Weitsman is touching as Mortimer's wife. who rnnverses only 1n Welsh. The tavern rowdies arc an extremely efTecuve ensemble. particularly 1\1 \onstantmeau as Prince Hal's sidekick and Eugene Rubenzer as the scarecrow-like Bardolph, Falstaffs foal. Kay Berlet 1s a feist y M1strcs~ Quickly. hostess of the pub. Cltff Faulkner. whose set designs at South Coast Repertory arc among the most 1mpress1vc of that theater, has created a splendid multi-use facility which 1s enhanced by Peter Maradudm's lighting dTects. C'ostumtng. by Shigcru YaJ•. 1s richly atmosphcnc and M achacl Caweht's combat choreography is superb. particulary the showdown ~cene between Prance Hal and Hotspur. "Henr) IV. Part I" 1s one of Shakespeare's more visceral play~ and one which can particularly be enjoyed by action-oriented audiences. It continues Thursdays through Sundays at 8:30 until Aug. '>at the Festival Amph1thcatcr. 12852 Main St., Garden Grove. Call 636-7 213 for ti cket an formation. Il l'ub/1~her Karen A. Wittmer Ed1tor: Frank Zini DatebooJ.. Editor: D1x1e Redfearn 4rr Director. Steven Hough Circula110n Manager: Terry Kandlc Production Manager: Robert C Cantrell Da1cbnok is ruhh~hcd CH'.!) Fnday by thr Orange Coast Puhhshing (·0 P 0 Box 1560, 330 VY 8.3y St .. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Telephone (714) 642-4321 Rc,ular business hours arc 8 a.m to S p m .. Monday throuati Fnday Deadhnr for calendar of t'vrnts 1ttms and lcllen 1s S p.m. Monday The crlllrc contents of Datebook arc copynghtcd by the Orange Coast P\lhhsh1ng Co All nghts art' rcsc:rvcd 2 Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday, July 25, 1986 Contents THE CALL BRING THEIR ROCK N' ROLL TO ORANGE COUNTY •••.•.••.•...••...•••.............. 15 By JOHN ROOS Coming off a two month tour as the opening act for Simple Minds, the Call steamrolls into Southern California ready to showcase their original brand of heartfelt rock 'n' roll. "Opening for Simple Minds and Peter Gabriel (in 1983) was an almost ideal situation because theytre true professionals and we're good friends with mutual respect for each other," said the Cali's Lead Singer and Bassist Michael Been during a recent phone interview from Houston, Texas. FOR THE YOUNG AT HEART THE cmcus IS COMING! ••••••.••••••••••••.•.••.••.•.•• 16 By TOM TITUS The circus, by definition, is superlatives. And the RinJiing Bros.-Ba.murn and Bailey extrav•nz.a is the superlative of circuses. But maintaining this lofty position, especially after 116 years, is a demanding task. You can't just ring in the same acts year m and year out -even if, as is the case with the Greatest Show on Earth, the show's two editions switch circuits each year. Thus, producer Kenneth Feld is constantly looking under the world's big tops for new and different acts, and this year he's come up with a dandy -the Shanghai Acrobatic Troupe from the People's Republic of China. ~ 'ALIENS' WAS BOTH A HIT AND A MISS WITH OUR GUEST CRITICS •..••..•......•...... 12 This week our guest movie critics took a trip through unchaned territory and got a peek at 'Aliens: They were all somewhat frightened by the ugly little creatures, and they agreed that Sigourney Weaver was masterful in the lead role, but agreement seemed to stop right there. Check out their reviews on Page 12. Next week they'll be back on Planet Earth, and reviewing 'Hea rtburn.' OutOnlbeTown THE LOTUS ADDS YET ANOTHER GREAT CHINESE RESTAURANT TO OUR AREA. 18 By FIFI CHAO When Rya n Tsang opened the Lotus restaurant in Costa Mesa in late I 985, he thought Orange County would be a snap after the rigors of owning restaurants in Los Angeles. He quickly fo und that his mentors, and his own ideas, about opening a re~taurant here were wrong.-very wrong. Ifs been a struggle, but with a lot of bard work, thmgs are looking up. To paraphrase the popular song, if you can make it here you can make it anywhere. CALENDAR ••.................•••.••.••••.............•••• 4 PAP ARAZ,,ZI ••••••........•..••••••••••••••••.•.•••••••• 13 ARTS FESTIVAL REVIEW .......••.••.•••••.•.•. 18 On the trail if the eav1 riders BY ROBE R T H YNDMAN hileyotJ°re dragging through raffle, they're whizzing past our .H•dan. WJule you sweat it out in the gym. they're< hasing cool bree:es. And while you're hunting/or a parking space at the beach. they're cruising the boardwalk. Bicvclmg 1 \no longer thee ulu 'live domain of tht! penny pin< her or the eccentric professor The current fitness mania that got a running start with jogging. bounced through the aervhin room and hu/J...ed upon Naur1'us muchines ha\ turned to eye/mg~ ith an unprecedented pop11 - laritv ·Ind 111 Orange Countr. r he combinar ion ofa comfurrab/ed1ma1e .. ruburban well Ith and a ma:t' ofmadwa) ~and tratl.t ha'l Wrned the area inroa bicycling capital. "People are m ore inttresred now in health and fit ness. und that has obviously helped," Wl)I\ /)an Gilchrtsl of rhe 2-Wheel Transit Authorttyof Hunrington Beach. regarded as the largest cvcling store in thecountr.y. "Bui this area is a Mecca for riding. Loo1' around. the weather allowJ \.'OU to ride all i•ear ... The 2-Whee/ Transl/ Authurtl)'. which \'tarud out as a neighborhood shop 11 i•ears ago. ha.f expanded along with the growth in cycling'\ popularin·. If t if.'I amwal \·ale la.H Augu.H, the slwp recorded $1 mil/ton m w/t>f Thi.,· wt•t•!. .. iH 75 t•mplvree\· ure gearmg up fur a not hu wle b1 building up tht•intoc/... o/ h1<1·< fr\ to nwrt' than 1.100, w n Jun f rt'ihert. t ht• slrop'' ml verwinR < uordinator 1nd in Octnhn. 2 Wht•t•I rranHt Authonrr ~ J// mm·t intone~ lf>.000 \quure foot head- quartt•n 111 f ot"1tmn Val/er. mu/..mg it 'Amt·n- ca\ largeH h1/...t•depar1ment 'ton• ... Freibert {{H'S I he Huntington Recu h Hore ut Main .\treet and Orange , l\·enue a/su serves as an 1nforma1ion renter for local cyclist.\, distributing news/e11ers and announcing upcoming race.'i. tours and or her events and ho.Hing speakers and professional racers. ltalw rervedforthepast two vearrasthe starting point <~(the Race Across America ( RAAMJ. the crosf-country bicycle race. While the store has the resources to please rhe sertous racer or rriathlere. ils main customers are the riders who take weekend tripsorwhoride ro work astride a two-wheeler. "We'd li/...e people to make bicycling a part of their lifestyles." savs Gilchrist. the sto re's tour.~ and events coordinator whoa/so leaches beginninf( Cl'cling courses that coverevery thingfrom sh1jring f(ea r 'l 10 repairing /lat tires. "A/readi'. 1·ou 're \·eeing more people beg111- 111ng to commute to work in the earlv morning houn. "he .\aid The current pupularityof <re/mg hu ~ manufacturer'! scrambling tomeel the demand with a diverse rnpplr of equipmem arguably of heller quallfr than ever before. Local n clingclub'l like the Orange Count.~ Whee/men. rhe Bicycle Club of Irvine ami the C1•clepaths report long membership rolls And organi=ers o(hicvcle tours in such places a'I //a-...a1i. New/ ea/and and Europe are doing betler than ever But the most popular form oj cycling i.\' the el'ening or week.end ride right outside your home ''We'd like people to 1nake bicrcl ing a part of their l(/estyles ... -Dan Gilchrist Bicycle trails criss-cross Orange Count~·. 5omeof the mo'it popular include the route along Poe ific Coa'if l(ighwa~" the Santa Ana River path that runs from Featht'rl~· Par/.. in Yorba Linda tn Humington Beach. the \<'enic mutt' a/on~ thr l pper Newport Bav. ,':,an Diego ( 'ree/... and In tnt' and the rrai/s through Santiago Cam•on and I u1o:11na Can)•on C)·ding require\ li11/e more !Iran lht• purchase of a h1/...t' and tht• ab1/1n to pedal whtle holmu·111K For a short trtp to tht• beach or mar/... et. a .\imple on<•-gear "c.rui\·er" hi/...t• mi~ht ht• tht• ideal form oj tramportatwn Cover photograph by David Muronalca Bur to enjoy e 'l(tens1 Vt' touring. a mure sophisticated bicycle and t'quipmem n11gh1 be needed. For beginners. Gilchri'lt recommend\ a 10-ur 12-speed lightweighr bicycle that can he purchased for about $300. Such a crcle 1 \'light enough lo travel swift Jy and sturdy and com- f ortab/e enough for long-distance toun and al/- purpose traveling While many cyclists are satisfied ruling 1n a pair of gym shorts and athletic shoes. Gi/chnst recommends r pecwlfr de'ligned C) <ling 'ihort ~and \·hoes. The shorts .. f/...tn11gh1 and .ft retching to ahout rnid-t high, are designed for comfort and dnne.u with a lining to keep perspiration awar Shoes A.eep the feet from becomingfatigued ajier several hours of pedaling. lightweight lycra shirrs - mam· 'I porting the colors and logos vj racinf( teams are brightly designed. not onh for fashion· f mke. but to been sun by th(' paH1nf( motorist. A helmet. Gi/chri.'lt sai•s. "it ah,·u/utefr u nece.u itr" when rt ding along roadwal f · All thi'I equipment. however. doe\ nor mme ( heap/r Gilchrist .m 1·s the combtnat wn of cl'< ling shoes. shores. shirt and helmet can run ht•twet'n $150 and $100. (i/ovef,jackets, sunglu\.H'f and other acceuvries can run the bill to the rA.1 But, as with .wch other sports as scuba diHnR and skiing, once you have the necnmrr equip- ment. it shouldn't coJt rrrnch to en1vy 11 Cvclingclubsorgam:t• (reeruJe, nt'ar/~ t'H'f\ day with spuial emphasis un weekend toun rangingfrom I 5 to60 miles Clubs are recogm:eJ as the best places to pick up tips on cycling as well as fellow riding compamonJ ofsimilar ahtf 11 r More extensive trip.f tnclude such tour.\ as rhe annual Solvang Centurv. tht• Amira/.. Centun• in August in which q •cliff'I nde down to San Diego and ta/...e the train back. rht• f'ecace -to-f nunada run which attract.I/ about 8.000partu1punt~ and the Ro'laritu-to-f'n.-;enada c·oa.Hal tour wh1< h aim draws large crov. th ·Racmg ha\ het•n bvum1ng und dub, haH' been booming, .. 'a~ J (,i/chn 'ii, -... ho ha.\ heen cyclin~ since I <16 5 a.\ a co/lex<' ~tudrnt in l.ong Beach I'm t/C /..it'd pwJ... thar there'' nwre people rtcit11K I ht•se da~ \ bt'< uu.H' wt" re 'ieen more on the roa,J \ hl drfren. and r hut·~ good Vow. I ride mort· thew I dflV<' ·· Daily Pilot Datebook/ Friday. July 25. 1986 3 ( q ' JULY SMTW TFS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 1819 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 DA_l\ICF Friday ~-- THE AMERICAN INTER- NATIONAL DANCE CO. presents a swing class at 8 p.m. each Fnday folJowed by a dance social from 9-10:30 p.m.: a jitterbug class each Monday at 8 p.m.; and a ballroom and Latin class each Wednesday at 8 p.m. $20 for seven lessons. 650-3048. HOTEL MERIDIEN NEWPORT BEACH Kiele off the weekend with fantasuc entertamment of the 50s and 60s by the Stonebridgc Band in the Atrium of the Hotel Meridien 4:30 unul 8:30. For reservations, calJ Linda Horst or Bonnie Trumbull at 476-200 1. Saturday DANCEASY A new age SaturdaY. nt~t dance every week from 9 unul m1401ght at the Laguna Beach Rec- reational Kall, 505 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. This dance doesn't pose the problem of the smoke-filled, alcohol pushing meat OFFE~S TO TME PU6L.IC Om Ou Miiiin D11tu11f e1rr11t 11• Jut arrlwd nlta. '''rt c11t1. 1l1ck1. •r1111~lrt1. tin. 11• Hllrt ... ,.rtlWllr 1l11 ldl11111t1. 1l1ch .• ,.rt. CNll. .,. ....... 11urt1• .,.r11 .. 1r It n•tctJHL EVERYTHING LOOK AT THE ORIGINAL PRICE TICKET DEDUCT HALF NEVER BEFORE HAVE we HAO SUCH A GREAT MONEY·SAVING SALE NOTHING HAS BEEN HELO BACK EVERY ITEM IS ON SALE AT.,., OFF THE ORIGINAL PRICE• AMAZING SAVINGS• COME EAAL YI OFF THE ORIGINAL PRICE AN EVENT YOU'LL NEVER FORGET STORE HOURS: Mon-Sat 1M; Sun 12-s * Tu stin Store Only ~rd,V1N& Anwncan ~ ~ 621 South 8 Sa-ttt Tustin, CA 92680 Phone1 71417 }J.7151 ~ Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, July 25, 1986 I"" ~u ahtay1 11ff11 • owlloty llO<t •nf •Ill ,....,,ft • t Vlltly JIOtt Vftltl ~ latl Ny ot rl1 OIJftllU 11411 Ult J<ICH Oii I ... _.,tfefl-IH tr!ll ...... '°" .... '°"' "'" to -...,. You rt ...i •rtam•"t f~ll Mlf ti IOf JOU Oo• l"ltUll' Top Performing art& company 8uah EICut and Company will perform at Trabaco llll1a W,b Scbool on Saturday. July 26 :!!f.·m· and 7:30 p.m. u part of Mluton Viejo•• 20th venary vt.nal and perfo~ arta eerlee. Call 837-6050. LUAU CRUISES • Authrritic Soulh P.K oloc. Floor Show * Polyn1"'''1n BuHPI Donner • MoonloQl'1t 0..;rll ng on 111,•hd Deck ALSO • F rp1• M,11 T ,J <'I Sht~I Lt>• * 5·12 SO Pp• Pl'"''"' • Rt'""'vdlo 1n Rt:QU•rPd 675-4704 rYJn e • R()MA .. 11( \llNfTIA .. GONOA~S • ~l'\IPAlf -HA TfR Pl.... • fi • ..A,.... .... • llYf I AA l\f T • W£ Dr'•""·"' SEA :46. '-'O~~tar·t-.er.·"' •. R. ,, ~AH~ • \...n 11 J LIDO MARINA VILLAGE • NEWPORT BEACH SPORT WITHOUT RNING (Thanh to Surters') ~· BULLFROG. °0i Amphibious Formula .. Sunblock c ONTINUED Coast Community Cburch, S 120 Bonita Canyon Dr., Irvine. 8S4-7600. WHEEL OP PlllENDSBIP for sfoales over 4S meets at Ichabod Crane's in La Habra for T.G.1.F. at S:JO p.m. CalJ S24-Sl48 for rcscr· vations and information. I Wlll sponsor a tree ottntation (or area ~O'S a.UB M.AJUNA Qan. s1naJe parents toni&J'ltat 7:30 followed nebst Bob Keane and I ~piece or- by a house party at 8: 30 p. m. C.all cbestra for dancina and listerung from 89S-797S for meeting locallon and 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. $4 cover charse additional infonnauon. includes appetw:r b uffet. 190 Manna Membership in PWP is open to Drive, Seapon Vill11t. Loni Beach divorced, separated. widowed or (213) 493-6444. never mamed WHEEL OF FRIENDSRIP for markets where people can feel ~ Saturday parent.s oflivms children. Custody of sin&les over •S meets ton!lht for Jccted and leave without the fun thty WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP for the children is not a factor. A dinner at 7 p.m. at Suter Street 1n came for. Join fncndly creative singles over 4S meets for dinner at the nonprofit, non-sectarian, educational Lrvme. CaJI S24-5 I 48. people and dance, or play like a kid Reuben E. Lee in Newport Beach at 7 organazation. PWP provides a pro-PARENTS WITHOUT PART· with costumes and percussion mstru-Prlda p.m. Call S24-5 l 48 for reservations gram of soetal activllies, discussions NERS Hunting10n Beach Cbaptcr. menu provided. Healthy refresh-Y__ and informatJon. and study groups for single partnts sponsors a free orientation for area ments and conversation THE CAllTIERS AND 14 li.l\AT BIG BAND 4h SINGLES DANCE and their families. single parents today at 6 p.m fol- available in the kitchen. Admission CLUB for singles gathers for psychic 7-11 p.m. Santa Ana Senaor Center. lo~ by a ducuss1on group begJn- $3. Ull Mary Ruth at 497-2044 or C. faires. dances.. and house panics at 8 424 W. 3rd St. Santa Ana. $2 Sa.aday ning at 7 pm. Call 898-7975 for Shell at 831-8064. p.m. each Fri. in Newpon Beach. admJSS1on inclu~ refreshments. FOCUS 31, a group of singles ages meetanJ location and add1t1onal 1n- $1-PLUS DANCE CLUB 8-ll p.m. 641 -3987. 547-5671. 30-39,mectat ll.30a.m.aufieSouth formation. Saturday evening ballroom dancing POCUSit,agroupofsing)esages PARENTS WITHOUT PART-Coast Community Church. 5 120 JEWISH YOUNG PRO - to Lhe music of"The Music Makers.. 20-29. meet at 7· 30 p.m. at the South NERS H untington Beach Chapter Bonita Canyon Or .. Irvine. 854-7600. FESSJONALSsingles an 20s and early wt th Ray Hall. Light re fresh men ts. S 2 r--jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil -per person. Orange Senior Center, 170 S. Oltve, 10 Orange. 538-9633. SARAH ELGART AND COM· P ANY One of the ten dance com- panies selected to represent Los Angeles dance 1n the 1984 Olympic Ans Festival. will prcstnt a multi- media performance tonight at 7:30 p.m. an the Performing Ans Theater at Trabuco Hills High School. C'om· plimentary tickets arc available through a vant by Mission Viejo Company Call 837-60SO. Monday MARTIN & TONl'S Swing Dance Club meets at several Orange County locauons. Dances. dance contests. dance tnps. pla} outings. be~ch panics are ~me of the act1v1t1c\ Dance lessons arc offered beg1nnmg to advanced ballroom to swing. For 11mcs and locattons, call 840-3518. Tue8day WEEKL V SENIOR DANCES an· presented b)' the Co~ta Mesa Senion from 8-11 p. m Featured is hve band music and a large, wooden dance floor. Costa Mesa Women's Club. 610 W 18th t., ( osta Mesa $2 donation ED LEACH BIG SWING BAND plays for danc1 ng evef) Tuesday from 8 unul 11 p m at the Meadowlark Country Club. 16 782 Graham Ave. rn Huntington Beach. Adm1~\1on is S4. Wednaday THE AMERICAN INTE R NATIONAL DANCE CO. See Fnday's hst1ng. SAMBA BAND with female vocal- ist Nil\a, appcanng Wednesday and Thursday at the Irvine Hilton and Towers. with Confre)' Phillips Jazz Tno. 9 p m. until I a.m 17900 Jamboree Bl vd an Irvine 863-31 11 FREE DANCE LESSONS by Cay C.annon tonight 7-8 p.m at San C~mentc Inn, 2600 Aventda dtl Prcs1dente in San Clemente Dance to the music of Les Douglas and h1<1 quintet. 496-9202. Thunday SAMBA BAND lCt'C Wednesday hstmg. CENTER STAGE, The South Coast Ballet's first suppon group, kicks off 1t~ membership dnve wath .. Bubblts and Toe Shoes:· a cocktail ~ption tonight from 5-8 p.m. at Bubbles Balboa Club in Newpon Beach. South Coast Ballet 1s a professional Orange County dance company under the anist1c d1re<:t1on of James Jones. Prospective mcmbeM of Center State arc 1nv1ted to attend and learn more about the group. ponsors art Bubbles Balboa Club. C.J Sqcrstrom and Sons. C'~p1strano Valley )ymphony. \ap1strano Com- postna Room and Main~ Advcn1f1· ang. State Senator Manan Bergeson will be an honored JUCSt. Tickets arc StO. Fot more 1nfonnat1on. please contaet Alyce O'Connor. Center Stage Coordinator at 640-J023 Pet land l.AIOE srucTlON OF AJCC REGISTERED. VETERINARIAN CHECKED AND PETLAND CUAltANTUD- YOU ADO THE LOVEI • COCJ(BS • CAllN • Sl(lfltlOKIE • S04NAUZEIS• DAO.SHUNO • PH5'AHS • MALTfSE • HUSKY • IRITtSH SHOITHAa • YOllClf • fl'UGS • HIMALAYAN • flOODLlS • LHAS.A'S • MMMAN • IASSET • WESTIIE • GHAT PYHHf.51 URAANCHIES $7.al GUY COO<A TIBS $11.11 PAlAICHTS $6.18 HANO Fl'EDtNG MCCAWS, COHUHS, PARIOTS <M:lt 30 VARIETIES OI FINCHES, CAHAlttES, lDYEBlRO$, CONURES MJUIOTS, COCtcATOOS & MACAWS TO CHOOSE f.ROM. BIRDS --FISH NEON TntAS 414 &.G. ALGAi !A rats 414 SAL TWA Ta DAMSllS rmAS 214 $1.aa ASIC ABOUT OUR FISH CLUB SPECIALS Petland HUNTINGTON BEACH HOUIS M-f (11 -9), SAT (10.9), SUN (11·7) 10111 ADAMS AVE. (At Bookhurst) 963-4887 Oalty Piiot Oateboot(/ Friday, July 25, 1986 ... ~ ............. _... .......................... _... ....................... ~ ................... _. ______________________ ..., __ ~--~.._.--~~~,~-.--. ... ' CONTINUED 30s met>t for cocktails and hors d'oucvrcs in the upstairs lounge at Rcm1ck's, 18120 Von Karman A'e. in Irvine. next to the Irvine Mamou at 7 30 p.m. Group mttts founh Sunday of each month. 760-0209 weekdays w ed.need.ay C ONVERSATIONS & CAMARADE RIE AJ( Orange Coun- ty Smglcs meet at 7:30 p.m at a new larger room at the Hunungto n Beach Inn 211 2 Pacific Coast Highway. S3.50 covers one drink, hot refresh- ments and social hour. Happy hour from 6-7:30. Call 644-43S9 or 380-779S. Tueeday THE NEWPORT IRVINE CHAPTER of Parents Without Pan- ners presents their Newcomers' 0ncntat1o n each Tuesday from 8-9.1 S p.m . followed by coffee and conversation Call S49-1 I 35 for funher information. WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP for singles over 45 meets tonight at 6:30 for dinner at Simon's Sweet Water Junction 1n Fullcnon. For reser- vations and information. 524-5148. PARENTS WITHOUT PART- NERS. CHAPTER 3M invites all SJngle parents to a m1n1-dancc and onentation tonight with a no-host snack bar and barbecue. Oncntation begins at 6: 15 and dancing at 7 p.m. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club tn Dana Point. 34S5S Casaw. 493-7102. For . more information, call the ·infor- m ation line at 586-9183. -·n nBIPI J,A,C7. _.,. _ HIMTMIRN 911 ltt.il-l>#_I ... -&llATMQIOUl.,_ --TOI' GUN 4"1 1111 JIU ltll Ii• 1.,U __., llQIOI -fTMIW -ICll PIHIS IUIU.lll'S DAY OfP ,._nt ., .• --.... -· .... OUT Of aOUNDS (81 .,,. 1111 4;lt ......... . -T-11\.0 UCK TO SCHOO\ ,.,II n.ae b4t •:U --,,.., OOU'f ITDIO ~ O.'ITT'OIMTTW _,. IUTHUSS PtCWU 911 ,,. _____ ,_ ANAHEIM llHltlt ""'',.,., I Dt* ft!'f ... • '"""° ....... !iC.111 £0'6 --~­MAUNTID MOMIYMOOH fN! llNIN OP 1MI LMNI DUt111 TOM CllUltl TOI' GUN<"! ILUI crn Ill OUT Of IOUNOl 111 TO LIVI AHO Dtl IN LA.1111 ORANGE A.UINI• CQMM .. I00111 -T1WWl'099'K'P PIUlllUIL&.D'I DAT Of,,.., .. uua , .. ._.., ,..,1e _., .. _.,.._ IUTMUSS PIOPU fll 11•• --..,. ... , .... _., snuo -n ll'llUPI JM:S NKNOl -HIAR'RURN 111 , ,,,. ... _ ... 1..U _.,.,.., * AUINI C91 ........ , .... ,.io .......... llTloMOW _....~ ~-. .... ~. KAUJI IUD PUT II 4"1 lrll atM 1..a tM 1 .. 11 -~~ PIHll IUILLll'S DAY Off ,.,II IJM 114' 4'Jt toll -II .. TOM CltUIW TOP GUNCNI n M .... 1,11 rM •U BUENA PARK 111•1111 •111/\-11•. of 1-"I ....,,,. t1 °'""-.AU ~fN"' -..ODllYU MAXIMUM CWllORM 111 CH•llTINI 1111 _, ............... aACK TO ICHOOl 4"-UI ,, ... _....~ tcMAn KIO PUT II ... NO llTUAT, NO suaar ....... Lo HABRA .. ~ .... DI lllf ~ li--• • . ......, .. ¥990 •untLUI HOPU ti) DOWN AHD OUT IN MV11t1 T HJW t11 _.,naao OUT Of IOUNOl 111 ldl ,,.. .... 7'4J - _., ma10 MNll~M­ MAUNflD HOHITMOON !NI , ... ,.., .. ,,,._,_ _.., ITIRfO -lOWt MOU'T LAST NIGHT 111 h M Jc4t-l·lt I ... IAI It» MJ -t•• .... ,. NMfW .... -.aT ITlllfO .. _... -sllMU T CllTITA.l •UNNINO ICARID JI) 1100 ••U a.H 11•1 IOtW llOlAYITDIO LIGAL IAOUS 4"'t ., .... --....-M ...... MAUNTID HOHITMOOM ""' HTURN Of THI UVINO DIA0 111 UloCll NICMCM.- HIARRU•N • GUNO HOt _...,. -l'hllW ..., .... 1. PIUtt IUIUla-;s DAT 0,, .-.111 2. ClW 'MADIH.-111 J. VAMP 11'1 a Dally Pilot Oatebook/ Frtday, July 25. 1986 Thunday THE NETWORK FOR SINGLES ,ages 30-SO. meets every Thursday from 6-9 p.m for an After Work Party. All parties feature dancing. hors d'ocuvres. door pm.es and surpnscs. Tonight meet at Mannacs, 12777 Knoll A vc 1n Garden Grove. Call 99S-09S2 ~IC FRIENDS for age 4S and over. meets toni&ht a1 the Conccn under the Stars to hear Sarah Vaughn at the University of Cahfom1a at Irvine. Meet at the UCI Library al 5:4S p.m. CaJl 544-9259 for reser- vati ons and informauon. a P'rtday THE FULLERTON CHAMBER PLAYERS perform T hurs.-Sat. from 7-10 p.m for dinner guests at the Irvine Hilton and Towers' Morell's rcstauranL The chamber tno features Kathleen Murphy and Bnan Beshore on v1ohn, and Adrienne Biggs on cello. 17900 Jamboree Blvd .. Irvine 863-311 1 Satmclay THE FULLERTON CHAMBER PLAYERS, sec Fnday listing. Tue.day BENEFIT for the Capistrano Val- ley Symphony tonight at 7:30 1n the Yamaha Music Education Center's Recital Hall. I S4SS Jeffrey Road an lrvmc. All-French program pre!ented by flutist Mar) PaJchak and p1an1st !Utheryn Badey Suwsted donation is a m1n1mum of SS 559-5440. Wedneeday SEAL BEACH CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL on Wednesdays tonight and conunumg through August 13, featunng the Haydn OTchestra and other guest musical groups. Programs began at 8 and there 1s no adm1ss1on charge. Please note new location Church of Rchgiou'i Science. SOO Manna Dnvc in Seal Beach. at the comer of Slh and Manna Streets. instead of the Mar) Walson Library. Tonight Fulllenon ( onson. Glona Grace ((i1g1) Prosper. soprano. STEPHEN KING-a MABl'ERPIECE OF TERROR DIRECl'ED BY THE MASTER BIMSEIY Beulah Strickler, harpsichord; Law- rence Sonderlina. violinist. Bach. Wedding Cantata; HarnUI: Arias- Handel. Trio Sonata; Telemann: T rio Sonat.a. The Festival is sponsored by the Haydn Orchestra. A pre-conc~n p~ntation will discuss each e~c­ nma's program. The Haydn OrchC'Stra scnes bolds a umque place in Orange County. II rtt1cves no subsidy frOm the city or any other tax·supported source. All conct'rts are free to the public beauS<' of the dedicated efforts of the mu s1c1aos and the Patrons G uild. Ta"- deducublc contribution s to suppon' these summer concerts arc ap- preciated. Cheda should be mailed to the Haydn Orchestra. 119 8th Street, Seal Beach. CA 9074() Tbanday THE FULLERTON PLAYERS &c Fnday listing. Friday HEAL TB FOODS COOKING CLASS o ffered each Friday through Au&. I begins today fro m 11 a.m. to 12:20 p.m an Room IOS of Orange Coast College's Home Economics Bu1ldins-A fee ofS28 covers food and matenals. For funher mformataon call 432-5880. TYPING FOR BEGINNERS age'> 10 through adult. meets each Fmia> through Aug. I from 8:30-10·20 am lntcrmcd1atc class meets 10 30 a.m until 12:20 p.m. Classes arc held 1n Room 109 ofOCC-s Business Educa- 11on Building. The fee 1s S25 per level Call 432-5880 ' Saturday HAWAIIAN SHAMAN WAY ~n 1ntroduct1on to shamans and mcd1 cane men and their skills, 1n a onc-da~ I workshop b> Serge King. Ph 0 Focus on Hawa11an K.ahunas and 1hc1r amazing feats of heahng and magic Admission 1s SSS 1n advancc S65 al the door. Seminar 1s from I<> a m to 5 p.m. The HeahA Center 21732 Bircher1n El Toro. 859-7940 PK PARTY CONCEPT Bend \tccl with }our bare mind' Jack Houck .• 1 ~y~tcms eng.JOccr in the aerospace industry. will teach metal bcnd1n~ tonight at 7:30 p.m It the Heah\ <enter Learn ixychok1nes1s-8S J>('• lCnt of all part1c1pan1~ e<tpcnt>nn ~me lund of mcul bending The P"- pany 1s open to anyone 5 )'car\ of agt· or older Children arc encouraged to attend because th~ arc more open to the eApcnencc and apt to be mort· \ucce<1sful. Adm1ss1on is $5 per per wn or SIO per family. with ch1ldn·n under 12 free. Bnna old piece~ ut tlatwarc to take home as troph1a\ For futher mformat1on. contact thr Heahx \enter. 23732 81nchcr 10 t I Toro 8S9-7940 SHRINK OF THE STARS. Dr Irene K.assorla speaks to dieter\ a~ tht· kc) note speaker of the D1ct (en lCr\ annual Western States f'onvenllon Her theme. motivation as the ke> to diet success. 10:30 am. to 12 noon"' the Marrion Hotel in Newport Beach T 1ckcts arc SIS and can be obta1nC'd by calling S36-042S or send checks to Kathleen Greer, Diet Center. 195'\I Beach Rlvd Hun11ng1on Rcru h 92648 Monday THE WORLD OF COLOR: NOT JUST A SEASON The quaht> ofa pcr.>on's hfc. Jobs and rela- tionships can be enhanced by the knowledge of color and its effect' An illustrated lecture explonng the historical background. (Pleue eee CALlt"1>AR/Paee 8 ) -. S~rveLove EVENING WITH THE STARS FRIDAY• AUGUST 8 th 5 pm -Midnight John Way ne Tennis Club & "New" Newporter R esort Plaza Ballroom TENNIS * STARS * ENTERTAINMENT Vitas Geru/aitis Roscoe Tanner Vijay Amritraj Par Cash Hendrick Sundstrom John Fitzgerald Leo Lavalle Butch Walts Christopher A tkins Pat Boone Kevin Dobson Chad Everet/ Bruce Jenner Billy Moses Ben Murphy Bob Seagren $50 per person Includes hors d 'oeuvres & wine served during matches in the V.l.P. Gazebo PLUS 5 pm Professional Semi-Finals Doubles 7 pm Pro-Celebrity Tournam ent 9 pm Dinner/R_eception with T he S tars Entert ainment: Dix ieland Jazz Provided by Home S avings of America ,,,. TH E N r. w J>rnrrr. H R E~Ol~T PRO /CELEBRITr TOURNAMENT FRIDAY • AUGUST 8, 1986 ..-:3• A Benefit f or Children's Home Society of California HARTMARX RACQUET CLUB TENNIS CLASSIC Presented by BMW Dealers of Los Angeles In Association with the ORANGE COAST DAI LY PILOT c"•'d''" a l'\ome aoc11ty 00 CALL NOW (714) 542-1147 For More Information & Reservations t:JNore/CO i/\lt I I \:Jo >I I; I • & • . . . Thi~ ad compliment.\ <~{Tennis Clo.Hie spon.wrs for the Benefit of Children's Home Society of California. Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday, July 25, 1986 7 CONTINUED CALENDAR LISTINGS ... FromPaee6 b1olog.ical, visual and emotional response to color. Registration fee is $15. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at Coastline Community College-- Newport Beach Center. 3101 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. 241 -6186. Wednesday THE SUN SIGN 32122 Pasco Adelanto, San Juan Capistrano in the Post O ffice Shopping Center. offers Wednesday mg.ht lectures on varied topics. Call 493-7151 for information. Thursday RELA TJONSHIP MAGIC a f rce seminar by Desi Ama2 Jr. will reveal best selling author Vernon Howard's proven secrets for rela- tionship magic today at 2, 5:30 and 8 p.m. at the Peek Family Terrace Room, 7801 Bolsa Ave. an Westminster. Sponsored by Success Without Stress, a non- profit organization. Everyone 1s welcome. Casual dress. For infor- mation, call Leona at (805) 646-2000. CHILDREN'S CLASS ON MEDICINE WHEEL .Developed especially for children who want to know what lndia11s are really like. the Hcalix C.cnter Medicine Wheel class will stim uJatecuriosi- ty through direct pcrsonaJ ex- perience. Psychologist Jane Gold- berg will conduct a four-week class starting today 10 a.m . until noon at the Hcalix Center, 23732 Birtcher Drive in El Toro. Ad- mission is $30 1n advance, $35 at the door. 859-7940. Friday HATORI appears Wed.-Fn. from 8 LPG,-•----t---......... .,._.....,.._..., a Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday, July 25. 1986 p.m.-12:30 a.m. at the Sheraton Newport Hotel, 4545 MacArthur Blvd.. Newport Beach. 833-0570. FRAN MARTIN performs easy listening. Contemporary music on the piano. Dancing avai~ablc. Tues.:Fn. 7:3().10:30 p.m., Holiday Inn, Bnstol Ave .. Costa Mesa. THE HOP {>l'CSeOt.s dancing music by emcee Fehx Lane Fri.-Sat.; ·'The Authent1cs," a hve 50's dance band. Sun. at 8:30 p.m.; ··Rock 'N Roll Heaven," a hve show tribute to the legends fcatunng Bob Gully, Mon. at 8 p.m .• "Rock: Around the Oock," a history of rock and roll featuring Jason Chase, Tues. at 8 p.m.; and Crazy Contests, including Lip Sync, Limbo, and Basketball Shoot, Thurs. 18774 Broolc.hurst. Fountain Valley. 963-2366. LEE PERREU. SHOW features Ferrell on saxophone, piano and vocals Wednesday through Saturday from 9 p.m. at Villa Gino. 16883 Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach 848-4940 DENNY PEZZIN at the Bnstol Bar and Gnlle. Hohday Inn Bnstol Plaz.a Hotel, 3131 Bnstol St. 1n Cosu Mesa. ''Rocle. and Romance" 1s featured each evening Wednesday through Saturday at 8, as Denny Peum ta~t"s you through ume to dance to the mus1c of the fifties and romances you into the e1ghues C'all 557-3000 for more 1nformatton. GEORGE GILLIAM QUINTET at Florence Beane's Ivy House Res- taurant. 384 Forest Ave tn Laguna Beach. Dance 8·30 p.m until 1:30 a.m. Tuesday through Saturday War- ren Jason, vocalist and keyboard, fcatunng Elena Georgl" and J01ned by R~ Johnson on Fnday and Saturday Sun: 8 pm -1 a.m.. Mon. 8:30 p.m -I 30 am . Tues-Sat 8 3().1.30 a m. 494-9491 KEN WILLIAMS &r Co. at Chaz', 2710 E Chapman Ave 1n Oransc. JUSt east of the Newport Freeway. Ken W1lhams performs on keyboard. saxophone and vocahzcs solo on Tuesday and Wed, Lou Rossi adds vocals and the new guitar synthesizer on Thurs. thro ugh Sat., Rick Garvey 101ns the group every Fnday and Sat. on drums 9 p.m to 1·30 a.m Tues. through Sat.. Sun. from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. SEQUEL. contemporary duo cur- rcn ti y performing Wednesday through Saturday at the brand new Montere> Bay Canners Fresh Sea- food Restaurant. ln1ne Home & Garden Center. 15483 Cul vt"r Dnvc in ln1ne. 549-1757 Saturday NEW WA VE DISCO CLUB for teens 16-21 at "Jag" 23642 Rockfield Bh d 1n El Toro. Pre~nlcd by C'tt Farrow $6 adm1ss1on. 300 capacll) Call 837-1 Q6 t for more 1nformatton "WHAT'S NEW." The late\t in music and muM cal production\ 1s h1ghl1gh1ed tonighl it 7 30 as Full· erton ( olle-gc Communny Band !>tagcs 11!. third and final summer ( oncert on 1hc Quad at 321 E Grae• Jonet '' ,,,,,,... , .. , Phu Co , .. tur• Po11e.,e1tt II (PC I l) AUOG j ltJ ATI' 50)(4 0) 7 lS a. O 10 J Ho Puws 1 n 70M M • Oolby ~Q ..... (t'G) (12 2S) (2 4$") S OS 1·25 a. t ~o -IN 70MM- .UTH&..Elll fl'l!OPUl (It) ~ual Down a. Out In ee .. riy H 1lh f R ) KAltAT'a'. KJO U C"GJ (12 00) (2 25) 4 SS 1 u a. t ls 1tUl9l•Q SCAtU!D PU SHOWS AT (1) SO) (l 10) s H • 00 .. 10 20 ~:~.·~:. Clf~Cl~~[)f f9AMt: ... u.ous lJ rwr•~rw HOOM Creto ry H in•• ltUftfll .. G SCAltl:O (It) A ISo W11e Cuys (R) KAltAn llUO II Cf'G) Plus No Ret,.el . No Surrenoer (R ) * DRIVE lllS o,.... I 00 WU1Y111 lO Mn41 1 Clul4rt• U••" 11 f RH u-.. lht• "<NOFTIE llOTTEST COMEDIES OF 1986!" RUNNING SCARED -NOW PLAYING P'OUlllTAIN VALLEY LA MIRADA * OllANCE *SANTA ANA Edwards Fountain V1lley Pacific s Caffway C1ntdomt · (dwtrds Bristo! 839-ISOO 523 1611 63" 2553 5'07444 i1tvTHl LACUNA HILLS OllANCE •WESTMINSTElll Edwardi WoodbrldQf' Edwards/SoCal ~ L.aqunJ S1.id1um Ortv• tn Edw1rd\ C1n.ma S5t 0655 Hiiis Mat~7~ 66 11 639 8770 W.u 891 3935 ( IO()P~AC(ffl'TH JOA THIS(HC.A(,(M(~ ••At ~l .. !lOt" -CXJf--J ChaprtWl Ave. (bct~n Lemon ind Berkeley) in Fulknon. And be.st ot aJl, Director l..&rry Lowder aod com- &».nY present the conocn for free -a\ the audience enjoys picnic dtnners on the campus awn area. 871-8000. cu 253. THE HOP, sec Fnday bsung. LEE FERRELL SHOW See Fnda\ hsung · UN WILLIAMS 6 CX> See Fnda> hstJng. SEQUEL See Fnday hsung. 8GAday UN WlLLlAMS 6 CX> See F nda) Listing. Monday THE BOP, sec Friday hsting. SWALLOWS COVE in \an C1ementc: Live big band dancing 10 the music of Les Douglas and hi\ quintet every Monday evening 7-11 p.m . No admiss10n ChalJC. Wedne\· day. Grand buffet and dinner danu with Les Douglas Qu1ntct 8 p m -I:'. a.m. San Clemente Inn. ~60o 4.ven1da DeJ Pres1dentc \an Clemente. 496-9202. Tue9day SNEil PREVIEW perform~ 11\•' each Tuesday from 8 p m.-12. 30 a m at the Sheraton Newport Hotel 4'1.i'i MacArthur Blvd., Newport Bcad1 833-0570. THE HOP, Stt Fnda) hsung FRAN MARTIN, see Fnda)' li~ttn11 c ONTINUED ltEN WILLIAMS Ir CO. Sec Fnday lastmg. Wednaday SUMMER Olll'DOOR CONCERTS Community Recreation Center, 8150 Knott Ave, Buena Park, every Wednesday everuna at 7:30 through Aug. 13. Admission is fTee. 821-1010. RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS 10 Con- ctrt tonight at The Hop. 18774 Brookhurst in Fountain VaJJcy. 7:30 p.m .. S 15.00 per person. 963-2366. HATORI, see Fnday lisung. FRAN MARTIN, see Fnday lasllng. LEE FERRELL SHOW Sec Friday lasting DENNY PEZZIN Sec Fnday hsung SWALLOWS COVE 1n San Oemcntc. Sec Monday listing. UN WILLIAMS It CO. Sec Fnday hstmg. SEQUEL Sec Fnday L1st1ng. Thunday HATORI, see Fnday lasting. FRAN MARTIN, see Fnday hsung. THE BOP, sec Fnday listing. LEE FERREU. SHOW Sec Fnday lasting. DENNY PEZZIN AT THE BRIS'roL BAR AND GRILLE Sec Fnday listtng. UN WILLIAMS It CO. Sec Fnday hstina. SEQUEL Sec Fnday Llstina. CQl l\llHY Saturday BLUEGRASS TRIO Ev an A~dcrson and the Ke~tucky. Moun- taineers, appear from 6.30 -9:30 p.m. on the terra« at Le Cafe. in the Irvine Hilton and Towcn. 17900 Jambortt Blvd. in Irvine. 863-J 111. Sanday WILD WOOD 1980 W1nner of the LongBc.tch Bluegrass Fcst1v113:30to 5: l 5 p.m. at the Villaic Green, comer of Euclid and Mam street m Garden Grove. Admission 1s frtt and the concen includes a cloaing exh1- b1tion. Wednaday TM CrH}' Bene gives free country dance lessons by Ron and Donna at 7·30 every Wednesday night. 1580 Brookhollow Dr. in Santa Ana. 549-1512. m mn ilWAIS·011XU CWB PARADISE rhe VIK!Ulion )Ou'JI fle'\'U f°'*'- no muucr he~• hard \11U Ir'). FILMS Friday OCC SCI-Fl FILM SERIES con- tmues throu&h Aug. 11. Tonight -1nvas1on or the Body Snatchers." Films arc screened 8-10 p.m. in Room 119 of OCC's Fine Arts Bu1ldan1-Admission 1s $5 per film. ..for futber information, call 432-5880. ABSTRACT FILM A survey of abstract films W111 be presented ~ night at 8 at the Newpon Harbor Art Museum, 850 San Ocmcntc Dr. Newpon Beach. These films are presented as part of a series of films, lecture$ and poetry rcadmp pven in conjunctions with the exhibition "The Interpretive Link.·· This film evening explore$ abstract expenmcn- tal films employing animation tech- niques. Admission is $2.50 and the audience will have the opponunity to paruc1pate 1n d1scuss1on following the program. 759-11 22. Saturday FOREIGN FILM senes in the outdoor amphitheatre at Golden West College. I 5744 Golden West Street in Huntington Beach. For mature aud1cnoc. the films will be screened at dusk and the audience 1s anviled to bnna picnic baskets, chairs, blankets and p1Uow for the picnic hour 6:30 to dusk. Shows stan 8-8:30 p.m. All have. En .. ish subtitles. General Admtss1on 1s $2. Tonight ··The Tall Blond Man W1th One Black Shoe" a French film W1th bugings, break-ins and Watergate style shenanigans as the obj«ts of hilari- ous satire. For more 1nformauon, call 891 -3991. Wednaday CHILDREN'S FILM SERIES at Golden West College each Wednes- day at l J?.m. in Forum II. Admission is SI (children under 3 free). Children under 7 must be accompanied by an adult. CaJI 891-3991 for a list of rum titles. NEWPORT BEACH, ltil-H; A MOVIE is the title of a propam presented tonight at 8 p.m . at the Sherman Library and Gardens in Corona dcl Mar by Rev. W.H. Stockton. This prosram is open to the public and admission is free. For more 1nformatioo and to ma.kc rescr- vauons, pleaxcall the Garden office, 673-2261. t3j ........ ._.,.. .... IPG.. ~ . •"'-,,.. ,..,...,.,..,,,_ ~ . -~ ·--------"-----'-----""""""------.... ............ ._.IMIOI U-S1J-11U NClf1C CAll'WY -U.-3911 •cm cono fill 118 ftl-JH5 .--e11m111T Tluanday LAGUNA ABT MUSEUM presents fivecon~utivc Tbunday nt&ht fiJms at ilS South Coast Plaza IOcation. UTbeOriainaJSum:alistic Films"wiU be introduced by UCI Professor Tom OowJin&. Each proaram bqins at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $4 for mem- bcrs and SS for noD-'membcn. 494-65)1. ,IAZZ P'rlda....:::J;.__ ROBERT DUQUESNEL Monday thtouab Saturday in the lobby bar. Irvine Hilton and T~ 17900 Jamboree Blvd. in lrvioe, from S until 9 p.m. 863-3111 JOHN MORIARTY, JUZ pwust •wean Thursday tbrouah Saturday from 9 p.m. uotil I Lm. at tbc lobby bar of the Irvine Hthoo and Towen. 17900 Jamboree Blvd., lrv1nc ''BnAKI01JS and llEARTBREAKING ••• Oscar Nominations ... f or Streep and Nicholson." Peter Travtn, PEOPLE MAGAZINE MEBYL STREEP JACK NICHOLSON Sex. Love. Marriage. Some people don't know when to quit A Mill NlCBOLS flUI Heartburn • ft . .., ) STARTS TODAY 1MA El T1lllD ...,..TCll IUDI --v.JO ....... IEADI ITAllTm ....... Pim EdwlnlsBToro EO.O.Chartlr EcMrdl~TWll EcMrdl....,.., EdwdlW.C.. NI IM sa.sD 511-9500 C.. M1.o77'0 ma> C... ~ •14517 ,_..,..._. COIYA mSA EdWafdl TOM\ C.. 751-418' LA_. Pldfic La Mlrldl 984 2GI ._ Onaml ~ ~ .,__, ----- Delly Piiot Datebook/ Friday, Juty 25, 1986 • c 0 NT IN U E D ll6 \. ,, , , CONFREY PHILLIPS Jan fno pt.•rlurm" r un<l.I\ through \Jtu1d.1~ Imm Y pm 111 I .i m an !ht· /ell K11om at thl· lr\lnt.• ltil111n and T m~t·r' 1"''100 Jamhorn· Bhtl. lr\1m XbJ-1111 CAFE LIDO ~'ll)(l '\lt·\.\pon Hhd r-.cv.pon tkad1 n7'l 2Y6X prnrnt' I ado l\11 \tar\ kat'unng \\ .l\ nt.· \\ J\ nt.· I h ur,da' t hrou11.h \.t 1u1 d.1 \ Imm 9 nm lo I .1 m ZUBlE'S GILDED CAGE 17 J 4 Placentia tn < o-;ta Mr'>a , 654-XOY I I 1\t' DPucland Jail for dancing and h\temng" 1th tht· Bourbon ~trect la11 Band Thur!.da\ F-nda) and Saturda\ from lS pm Bnstnl and Red Hall 10 ''kv.pon ttl'at.h Saturday CAFE LIDO ')ce f-rida\ il'>ling ZUBIE'S GILDED CAGE c,cc In day hs11ng ROBERT DlJQl'ESNEL \Cl I n· da~ 1i~11ng. JOHN MORIARTY ~e h1da~ 11 .. ting. CONFREY PHILLIPS \l.T I rada' hsting. LE CHATEAU LOUNGE ~'l' f-n· day listing Sunday $55 percouplcor$29.95 per person in advance orS35 per person at the gate This pncc includes all dnnks and appetizers on board the double deck part) boat with danct> floors on upper and lower lt'\.els Boarding llm<' ,., I:! 30 p m and th<' cruise is from 1-4 e m t'\.r~ unda~ .\t the Balboa Fun lone to the west of th<' Pa' 1hon on th<' Balboa Pt'nn1nsula Call 7~2-3414 for rt''>en.alloM and 1nformat1on CAFE LIDO 2900 "e~port Bhd "ewpon Beach th<' Lido Ja11 .\II \taf"t pertorm from ''30-b p. m and lntasc(IJOn "Ith Denise VaJkn from 9 p.m to I . 'Oa.m Monday ROBERT DUQUESNEL 'x'c ~ n da~ l1$1lng CAFE LIDO, 21.100 J\.r""n1111 lif\tl lnterS«t1on with Den1'><' Valko from 9 pm to I 30a m Tueaday MARILYN SPENCER J:U.I p1an1'>t in the lobby bar at the lrv1nt' Hilton andTowcrs.17900JamborecBh'd'" Irvine. Tuesday and Wednesrul\ from 9 p.m to I am 863-3111 Tbunday CAFE UDO \Ct Fnday listing. CONFREY PHILLIPS Sec Fnd;n h~11ng· JOH/'11 MORIARTY \(:c fnd;n ltsung ROBERT Dl Ql ES!\EL ~·t• I ri da\ ltsung Zl BIE'S GILDED CA<.E \(·t· I rt· c.Ja, hs11 ng JAZZ AT THE YACHT CLl 8 ··ttt·- ttl•P h' tht B." 1n ()jna Point .u th( l jp1\trano Ba\ 'at ht C luh 14'.i5'\ C ·'"'•" l'l;1<t" 1n l>JnJ Pn1n1 HJrhor \Ion \\t'I" on tht t1.11inc1 the \un.nor l ugt·m· J \l. ntthl Jt ha\\ J1mnl\ \mt th ;it drum' Jnd ( •l'IT) C ,l\l' un tht· gu11.ir o\dm1,~11>n "$) lor l(Ut'\I\ .t1HI rl•Hl•mt•mbl'r\ C luhht'U't' Jnd har nrt n ,11 5 pm 'ipaghr111 d1nni:r .1,,11l.1hll-lrom 6 10 ., lO p m \pun,urt•d In Ornngt· < ount' IJ11 \ppn.•t1Jtton \cK1c1' 41\-1111\!i Friday CAFE UDO 2900 Newpon Bhd -------------------------Intersection with Alex Taylortomght 9 p.m. to 1:30a.m. LE CHATEAU LO NGE feature' tht• "Ja11 \<K 1et~" tn the -\tnum rnurt)ard of the ( uuntr) ';1dc Inn T ue\da) through Saturda} 4 111-l< 10 pm .l2S Bnstol St. at the corner of JAZZ CRUISES The ~um mer scne~ of J317 tru1scs 1n Nc~pon Beach rnntmuc'> e\.Cf) \unda\. with th<' T }'ronc .\nthon:r Jan Group on board for a thrtt hour ltve J3.ll cruise in Newpon Harbor Ticket pnce 1s "A CHORl Lll\E" h\ thc \an < kmcntc \ummc:r Thcaicr JI \Jn ( lc:mt'n tr H 1gh \\. h110I 700 .\' c Paw \an Clemt'nlc 1111.~t't~ at the door). Thur<l<l.!\\ through \,llutda~' at X pm \unc.Ja,' at 5 pm un11I \ug lb ''THE FUNNIEST MOVIE!'' "THE AUDIENCE WAS LAUGHING THEMSELVES SICK AND SO WAS I." C.000 MORNING AMEJUCA. /•w/ \1~./ "THE FUNNIEST MOVIE SO FAR THIS YEAR.'' Pl'OPLE, \tol /ltJll.-. "RlITHLESSLY FUNNY FARCE." OllANGI! COliNTY llGISTU. \ltt/Jtw/ llurlt<!tt PEOPLE ~:in": C.111 S' 111.==r ~-... 1611 -NOW Pl.A YING AT THESE RUTHLFSS THF.ATRF.S -_. rCOITA•U 1_ r--V1l.llJ °"-~· .... ~ tf!'lit.t'~ ... .. '""'" .... _..........., f!t....m•--• ....,.,... ' .. •U -.M 1107 lot 141 ,.. 6.'1" i1' a _,.A,Atl• "tll. '°"° 1'-"-...0"' l °"'-7sT .... lON .,, .... ,...., ···-~( ........ J ...... ~Uth\l '""'~ •-Mir-""llii 9!11 •9'11 SI 9'J((l ~ 1"" ,.. COIT•..._~.. T"'"''.'NGrOtitet.•CH ..n• ... 'W"'\Ao..LJ'u'r TPl4'il:"l'U,. ::;; '4~~ ... ~;.. ..ti .,,. ·-tf!IK.• .... .., .. , ,..._.C!l~ .... J· '~WINNER AGAIN THIS IS A WONDERFUL FILM .. .JUST BEAUTIFUL YOU'LL BE ON YOUR FEET AND CHEERING:' •.1-....,. \\Atirn R AL PH MACCHIO PAT MORITA Kid Part II ca .'::'.: ·::".!!' " ... NO\\' SHOWING. llU llALl • COl!A Ill • •\• .,_.0& MAU $.<•1• ... ~.,.... ._.,..un UA •..NWI n• l ,.,..,. ... ., .,_,., . t•'ltit(lil ! ..... Alt I ~ .. • ~1 '"' ., ..... ~ ... ,., . _,._, wa11-tt IOIO • OUIOOI SlAJflC* -· '""'""' 'N•W1 ·-~~ . ~1•6l,,4)~ ·-"'"""'>' --... ....... , .... ~· ,,..., 00-•"• •1ol)r'. ... _ ,.., "fl<' '-"° "Co• ••• 'ilM""'()<'"'' •WU,_.nt ••u °""""' 171 tO J(i '-~ tU~~Tl\1 IJ•C-·-· ·~-fl ll!ll0'>4tl Cill ·· .. -llAJllEJ DMY Al llOCI ~I .,,,,,,. .. _ .... . . .... ·-......... """' ..... ~ ..... .....,. .. a• Cally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, July 25. 1986 ROBERT DUQUESNEL See Fn- day listing. CONFREY PHILLIPS Sec Fnda\ ltst1ng · Wedneaday CAFE LIDO 2900 Newport Bhd present~ the New York Jazz Connec- tion tonight 9 p.m. to I :JO a.m MARILYN SPENCER Sec Tue~ day hsung. ROBERT DUQUESNEL Sec Fn· day hsung. CONFREY PHILLIPS S<-e I nda\ listing. "ANY WEONESOA Y" h'f the I P ReperllH\ < ompJO} JI thr Muc~l'nth<1ll'r ( ultural ( entl'r I ~nt W MahNn '\\.l'. Fullerton ( n 1-2792) dmang performanc~ to- n1&h\ through Sunda) at 7 15 "ARSENIC ANO OLD LACE" at the llarlcqu1n Dinner Pla)hou:.t'. 150.1 S Hartx>r Bhd \anta Ana 1979-5511) n1ghtl\ l'~rrpt Monda" at var,. mg runa1n 11mr' thmu1th .\ug )~ "AR.(iENIC AND OLO LACE" at th 1· \1\ ~\Im 1 n \Irr C om mun 11 \ I ht'ater "'2'" Mapll' \1 Wl·st- man<.>ter (Q9~-4 l I \J F-ntla" and \al- urda\S at X '"through \ug <J "BEAUTY ANO THE BEAST" h\ In tnl' ThcJtl·rta1n· Im < hlldrrn at lntne \alln I olkgt· ''~<1-H\\) I rrdJ\\thr1>utth\unda'\Jt., \llun11I .\ug 1 "THE E MPEROR'S NEW CLOTHE " h\ thr 1-ountain { allc' ( ommun11~ T°hl'itlt'r at (1oldcn "-r~t { ollc~c Hun11n~ton Ht"a1.h I X95-M \ 7o), f rnJJ\\ JI 7 lo \atur dav\al 2 lnanJ 7 \() \unda),JI 2 10 through \ug l "I c an't recommend this movie enough. If you don't have a kid and you're feeling a little funny about seeing it yourself, borrow one to see 'The Great Mouse Detective:·· -NIC MAGADNE, JOYCf HAUSfP ~~,, .. .. Tiil: ~ M()t)§I: l)l:Tl:CTIVI: ~ OISNEY PtCTURES ~ lHf Gl\.f.AT WtO.J5f DETECTM' .,.._....,, ""' -...,. .,.+ .51LVER5Cf\.E[N ~l\TNERS 11 .... 111o HENRY MANCINI o~-~ ~w UIJ •• t-.~,..... ....... V!\',J.. .. IM ••-• • • ..... • N C0$T4111CSA Id"""' 9'0 ..... F<>utll AIN VAi l [Y '".""' ,,, t v "' A.I~ I NOWPlAYING IAVINE fO••OlW~·""" ~I 1)1.\S l t.OUNA HlllS ...... 1 ..... ~ ,.._ '140"'~ 1611 ~r.·1 l A Ht.IRA • OA•..ot U/ f •\/! !;o • • Cl!> CHt> • ;• J 'M 1 OllAN()( OllAH(lf .... 1y¥ 1..,, ,.,.. ~l ••• w • l 111111111.! l11h h'rh .... ~·· D\snqtland 5Allf4 AHt. 1w t ' • wtStMINSflA fO.lf ~111"1 7"18t I~\\ -~-· "EVITA" at the Grand D1nne fht"ater. I Hotel Way, Anahet (772-7710). 01ghtl} except Mondav at vaF)ingcurtain times throu&Jl ~Pl. 7 "HENRY IV, PART I" at th Fesuval .\mph1theater ad,accnt t<• the Gem Theater 12852 Matn 'it (,arden Grovt' 1636-72131 Thursda)<.> through Sunda" at x In until .\ug. 9 "JllMPlf'-o '. JIVE ANO Jff. TERBUG" rn the Studio Thcatr·r 111 \addkbalk C ollcgc M1\~1on V1r1<1 c ~81-46561 pc:rformann"> "-t·dnt•, da~s through <iundays at ~ \0 "•th matinees <iaturdays and ~unda'' .11 vm until .\ug. 17 "LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST" at lhl C1cm Theater. 18251 Matn St <1.lt den (,rove (636--7:!11) Wt"dne\<la\' through Saturdays at Ii p.m . \unda\\ at 7 'i> until Aug. 16 "NOISES OFF" at th<' Laguna \1oulton Playhou\I: 606 Laguna C an\ on Road. Laguna Bt:al h c49+.D743), Thu™1a)s through l.oJI un1a~s at 8.-45 until A.ug 2 "OKLAHOMA" at the ( urtain < otll Dinner Tht'atcr. 690 El Camtn(l Rl'JI Tustin l!S38-1540J. ntghtl~ l'\lfl)I "1unda)S at 'arying curtain time' through .\ug 17 "PHILADELPHIA, HERE I COME" in the <itud10 Theater .11 Orang<' Coast Coll~. Costa Mr\J 1432-5527). final performance<, 10 night at 7 30. Saturda\ at 2 \C) anll 7 30. Sunda> at 6:30. "SHERLOCK HOLMES" ,11 Coastline Communtt}' ( ollegc' Huntington Beach Center. 10M1 I Fam~worth -\ ve. (96().. 76 71) Frida" and Saturda}'S at 8 pm through A.u.11. ' "TEN LITTLE INDIANS" al ~addlcback College in Mission V1cJ<' (~82-4656). tonight. Saturday and .\ug 2. 7. g and 16 at 8 pm. '\ug ' and 16 at 3 p.m "TWO YEARS BEFORE TUE MAST" aboard the Ptlmm m Dan,1 Point Harbor (496-22741. Fn11a\\ and Saturda\~ at 6 30 and 1,1 pm througth -\ug. 2 "WHERE'S CHARLEY"" .tt tht' Huntington Beach Pla,houst \1,un Str~t at 'orktown A.'enue in thl' ScachfT Village shopping ct•n1t·1 HU2-l 405). Fnda}s and Saturda\'> at I\ lll through Aug.. 30. mallnct.'' \uf. IOand 17at2:30 Saturday "A CHORUS LINE" h) thl' \an C kmt'nt<' Summer Thcatcr Set" In da} l1st1ng. "'LEGAL EAGLM' RATES A RAVE. ROBERT REDFORD IS TEllRIFIC." -,.. .... c;ooo~ UdlJ<A LEGAL EAGLES THE 'flt' fO'ltlH flO'f THI Dl•EfTOl or (;HO\Tlll \Trl' -";0\\ l'l.A \ '"' --coin•••· ·~TOll9UC)f •\A~ •W-.. ,.......~-.... -· \4,_. ..... ~ . •• t'Ol'C) ·-" ... _ --·----·"""-·• . ' Island, tonight and Satufliay at Fi- nally a Unicom, 214 Main Street in Huntington Beach. Sbow begms at 8 p.m. in the Informal coffeehouse. No frvme. 863-3111. Saturday pm. Friday and Saturday. Adnussioo as $3 and ch11dttn under 14 an admitted free CONTINUED ~6;~~94~hargc. $I minimum. SAWDUST FESTIVAL in Laguna INTERNATIONAL CAT SHOW Beach begms tOday and continues Today and tomorrow at the Anabcam ST AMP EXPO at lhe Anaheim untJI August 31. The festival is Convention Center. The show, spon- Holiday Inn near Disneyland today composed of 200 artists and sored by ~ the Garden Cat Oub, will through Sunday. This year's theme is craftsmen who erect their own booths draw 500 felines from around the the RoyaJ Wedding of Prince Andrew each year in an eucalyptus povc at wor1d. Purebred priz.e winnen and and M 1ss Sarah Fcrauson and every 935 uguna Canyon Road. Houn arc household pets will compete in the 2- stamp issued by Commonwcahh from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m . Sunday day event that as expected to draw nations honoring the event will be through Thursday and 10 a.m. to 11 30.000 people. 999-8950 "ANY WEDNESDA V" at the Muckenthaler Center in Fullcnon. Sec Friday hstmg. "ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" at the Harlequin Dtnner Playhouse. Sec Fnday listing. "ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" at the Westmins ter Commun11y Theater. Sec fnday hsung.. "BEAUTY AND THE BEAST" at Irvine Valley College. Sec Friday It sting. "THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHD" at Golden West College Forum ti. Sec Fnday hsung. "EVITA" at the Grand Dinner Theater. Sec Friday lasting. "HENRY IV, PART l " at the u rovc Shakespeare Fesuval Sec Fn- da) lasting.. "JUMPIN', JIVE AND JIT· TERBUG" an the Studio Theater of addlcbad. College. Sec Fnday last· 1ng. "LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST" at the (Jcm Theater Sec Fnday lasting. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse Sec Fnday hs1- 1ng "OKLAHOMA" at the C urtaan Call Dinner Theater Stt Fnday hstang. "PHILADELPHIA, HERE I COME" at Orange Coast ( allege. Sec Fnday hsung. ''THE SECRET GARDEN" at Irvine Valley College Sec Fnda) hsung. "SHERLOCK HOLMES" at Coastline ( o llcge. Huntington Beach. Sec Fnday hsung "ftN UTI'LE INDlANS" at Saddlcba.ck ( ollcgc. Sec Fnda) last· ang. "TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST" tn Dana Point Harbor. Sec Fnday hsung. "WHERE'S CRARLEY'r" at the Huntington Beach Playhouse ~e Fnda:. hst1np. Sunday "A CHORUS LINE" b' the San Clemente liummer Theater See Fn- da> h~11ng "ANY WEDNESDAY" at the Muckenthalc-r ( l'ntl'r an Fullenon \cc Fnda\ lasting "ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. See Fnda\ h~11ng. "BEAUTY AND THE BEAST" at In inc \all<:\ < ollegc ')cc Fnda" hsung "THE EMPEROR 'S NE W CLOTHES'' at Golden Wt'.'')t College f-orum II Sec Fnda~ hstang "EVlTA" at the C1rand Dinner Theater ~c fnda)' h<.11ng "HENRY IV. PART I" at the (1a rd cn (irO\.C Fcst1\.al ~mphllht'.'atl·r ~e Fndav listing. "JUMPIN', JIVE AND JIT· TERBUG" at Saddlebad. (allege See Fnda> listing "LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST" at the (1em Theater <;cc Fnday hsllng. "OKLAHOMA" at the Curtain C all Danner Theatn 5tt Fnda)' hs11ng. "PETER PAN'' at Saddleback Col- lege. M1ss1on VtCJO (582-4656). July '\I and .\ug I 9 14 and 15 at 8 pm 1oda\. and i\ug Q IO and 17 at J p"' "PHILADELPHIA. HERE COME" at Orangt· C oa,1 < nllege ~c Fnda) h\ting Tue9day "ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. \cc Fnday h~11ng "EVITA" at the Cirand Dinner TheatC'r ~ Fnda\ h<>llng "OIU.ABOMA" at the Curtatn Cati Dinner Theater. Stt Fnday listing. Wednaday "ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Sec Fnday listing. available at the show. frtt parking is ..--------------------------- provided and hours arc Friday: noon "EVITA" at the Grand Danner Theater. Stt Fnday hstang.. "JUMPIN', JIVE AND JIT· TERBUG" at Saddleback College. Sec Saturday lis11ng.. ''LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST" at the til'm Theater. Sec Fnday hsong. "OKLAHOMA" at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday hsting. Thunday "A CHORUS LINE" at the San Clemente Summer Theater See Fn- day hstang. "ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" at the Harlcqum Dmner Theater. Sec Fnda) hsung. "EVITA" at the (1rand Dinner Theater. Sec Fnday hs11ng. "HENRY IV, PART I" at thc Garden Grove Festival .\mph1thcater See Fnda) hstang.. "JUMPIN', JIVE AND JIT- TERBUG" at Saddlebaek College. See Fnday hstmg. "LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST" at the Gem Theater Sec fnday hst1ng.. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Moulton Playhou~. Stt Fnday hst- ang.. "OKLAHOMA" at the Curtain C.all Dtnncr Theater. Sec Fnday lisung.. ''PETER PAN" at Saddlcback C'ol· lege. See Sunday hst1ng. EiC. Friday AARON HOFFMAN of Balboa unt117 p.m.;Sat.10a.m. to6p.m and Sunday I 0 a.m. to 5 p.m. Adm1ss1on is $2 for adults; Senior Citizens aod juniors aged 12-16$1 . Children under 12 arc admitted free when accom- panied by an adult For complete information, call the 24 hour tele- phone number (818) 997-6496. CAFE MOZART features classical piano Wed. evening, and ·piano or guitar, pop, and show-tunes Thurs.- Sat evenings. AJI music is performed during dinner. Also featured is music at Sunday brunch. 31952 Camano Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano. 496--02 12 THE LAFF STOP, a premiere corned> night club, features Bobby Gaylor and Scott Shaw. 2122 S. East Bnstol, Newpon Beach. 852-8762. LAGUNA POETS meet each t-n. at 8 p.m for scheduled and open readings at the Laguna Beach Public Library. Tonight is Open Reading night with all welcome. Call 494-9550 or 494-8375. ROBERT DUQUESNEL enter- tains on the piano Wlth a wtdc vanety of musical selections Tues.-Sat. from 5-9 p.m. Irvine Halton and Towers' Lobby Lounge, 17900 Jambortt Blvd .. lrva nc. 863-311 1. CONFREY PHILLIPS features renditions of Cote Poncr, Gershwin and contemporary favorites Tues.- Sat 9 p.m ·I a.m. Also, the Bra.z1han songstress. Nilsa. Joins him on Wed. and Thurs. evenings. Irvine Hilton and Towers. I 7900Jamboree Blvd. in NOW PLAYING .. llllU • 11 ,., ----!• V'\Jll Y•---_,...WIU.rl "'-(_,_._, 051•• .... ~ ............. c......c..t1'•1tt --·--°"'-..... ptlK) ....... ~ ......... ,,_ .. _ -- --S.I ... ___ ..... _ ·~ -.,..,__ -·~-· mun _.,.,_. -r---1 ~ l-------·Or-.-... -... .,. .. , - Antf'lQnv Michael Hall isDOryl~ Eighteen years on an IONa farm never prepared him for a summer in LA COLUMBIA PICTURES ...... A FRIES ENTERTAINMENT PRODUCTION A RICHARD TUGGLE FILM ,. .. ANTHONY MICHAEL HALL OUT OF BOUNDS JENNY WRIGHT JEFF KOBER• GLYNN TURMAN " ... STEWART COPELAND ~~~~JOHNTARNOFF....,RAY HARTWICK ""' ·~~TONY KAYDEN ""' ' ~.CHARLES FRIES .... MIKE ROSENFELD ~ ~RICHARD TUGGLE .............. ()(Eiii¥wo-.g• ... ' ......... DSLl'HI ---~ STARTS TODAY. All._ •COITA mlll •-•U •A.DA OIMlll "OclllC 1 -I-di'°"" !°"""'"' --1 ...._ '-JoOC OrO'IOt 111c11 ~ 97996~ C-JSMIM ts-o•ll • ~l Miii ~ l!?-03'1) •COIT& .U a fOllO • U M.Ue.A ~ ¥llJO OI-i°"""'• cir-•-"' ~· N(C "°""""' ,, 1-"'"""' ,... c~ ~ c-c:-979,.141 :111 ~ 111 t1111-06ll ~ '\t n !>l • stMllOll tci-cls VlloQI C-1191 0~1 WUT1llllSTU IMl.L UA C•""""'3 89Hl'M( ·-·ool§.-1 ,., ... "° .. Sif,4'((.f ... Or(le•""•-•"' 0.-,... ~. QMl lfllCl9 ....,_ U•,.M -"A• A\._.._.., ...... ~ Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, July 25, 1986 11 .. 'sA 'Aliens' scared the socks off our guest critics Erik Tortelli Hlgb Scbool Julor Ha.otlnglon Beach To he totall) honc!>t, throu~hout mo~t of Allens, I squirmed, sighed and wondered how much lime was left. <\ftcrwards, however. I decided I hlo.ed the movie I thank this is because I was so glad the "thnll~" were over. Generally. Allens has two un- aliens beatable quahues. First, there·~ the incredible art d1rec11 o·n This movie JUSt plain looks great . and the images stay with you long after it's over. The tech- nology 1s amazing. as are the hordes of 1en'1fymgl) ugly Second. what saved the movie from being too inhuman. Sigourney Weaver. She bums up the screen an a ferocious performance. Her mixture nfbra1ns and brawn gives usa heroine worth rooti ng for Also, let 11 be said ht:rc that nobody. absolutely nobod}'. grunts with the same panache a\ \tguume)' And hesrdes. the sight ot her a~ a human forkltfi as bound to haunt both construction worker'> and 11on-con\trul't1 on workers alikt· for 'ear' lo comC' ~1111 . not C\.Cll l\1~oumt> Weaver's 'tubbornl)-\C\) Officer Ripley can dc.-\lm) one thing -1hr lcehng that Jfta 'ou·,e seen uni: alien t·hasmg a \4annc. ~ou'vc -.t"Cn them all Ani.I hd11:vc me. the ~ha\.C ~enes never \l<lJl The scene\ where the aliens ,1fl•n'1 present but 1hc ten<i1on 1\ arc 1011 few and far between There are so m.1n\ \Ccnes of ahcn' attacking the mJrinc\ and manncs attacking aliens 1h;i1 11 get'> 11nng. Because an 1h1s mo' 1c at'\ C'v1dcnt that too much of a ~oud thing -1<, \Ill! too much I {an't recommend this mo' 1c '"holeheartcdl> If you've had a long cla\ and want to C.-M"ape reality. don't sec 1h1s movu.' II will JUSl give you a headache And although I felt good at the end of the movie. 1t wasn't wonh 11 tx·cau-;e (e-;pectally) 1n th as case. the t:nct d<>t''in't 1us11h the mean\. Natallt Walker Nane A .. tswt Costa Mesa Allens as an above average horror movie that 1s actually bener than one might cx~ct. Its suspense and uncer- tainty wall keep you riveted to the edge of your scat and possibly under it. Aliens is an engrossing movie and sometimes gross too. but n's always interesting to watch and bet on what will happen next and to whom. The beast 1s back and this time 11's not alone. In this sequel to the 1979 movie Ahen. there 1s not one but hun- dreds of tbc nasty bugcrs that love notbin' better than to slime their human v1c11ms and take over their bodies. Sigourney Weaver s1.ars as Lt Rapley, the sole survivor from Ahen In Allens she is sent alonJ with a platoon of Marines consisting of Rambo-hkc women and the Marx Brothers in search of answers to the sudden disappearance of the human fami lies inhab1t1ng the al ien planet. (The same planet where Lt. Ripley first battled the deadly vanmts.) The photograph} and special ef- fects made this movie even more fnghtening than 11 alread)' wa\ You really begin to believe that tht"J<' monsters arc real and it's actual!> hard to bchcvc it's only a movie and that you're not being chased yourself Ahens 1s an effective. well-made thnllerthat never gives the audience a rest Just when you think the mo,1e 1s O\ er n's not and then something el5C.' temfy1ng happens It's heart-stop- ping actton that never seems to end So tf )OU like a lot of ac.11on. suspense and long-armed beasties and are ready to be scared out nfyour ski n tlicn Aliens 1s on the menu Dick BHdUDU HotelMaaa1er Larcma Beacll If Allens is not the blockbuster of the yea r, then there u no JUSllCc. This as what "movies" arc all about. And this is what acting is all about. in the person of Sigourney Weaver One moment she 1s playing a scene with a 7-year-0ld gJrl where the love and concern come right through the screen. and then she as a Rambo-Ii ke character. challenging the al 1ens. he plays the role so well that I found myself believing this un- believable story, and I could not do that with Rambo From the very beginning of Ahcns. the tension 1s so strong that )Ou 'Will welcome a "soft" scene so that your heanbeat will return to normal and you can gear yourself for what happens next. The special effects as cxpcc1ed. are dazzling. particularly the "aliens." I suspect 1ha1 the .. Star War"-type special effects are not quite state-ot- the-art. but there 1s a bit of nostalgia in having the assault veh icle (com- mandcrcd. quite sens1bl)'. by S1gournc> Weaver) actuall) touching the ground. The aftersJow from this movie comes from 11s treatment of women All the strong characters arc women. the head monster, the ht1le girl, the Manne Commando. The men arc e11her wimps. or mercenary so-and- sos >\nd 11 works It gives a feel to the film th.at will st.a)' \\lth you long after you have forgonen the plot. Allen has an R rating. I was accompanied by a 10-year-old and a 15-year-old. neither one of whom seems to have suffered any ill effects (the adults are s111l 1n shock). Wh ale 1t as totally fnghtening. there 1s no mean-spirited hacking and slashing.. Just good. clean terror Rlclulrd Wan er PsyclaJatric Tedaaiclu lrvlDe I've always found 11 rather interest- '"~ how renect1ve of their times s.cu:ncc fiction movies a re. In the brash. confident Fifties, 'The Day fhe Earth Stood Sull' ponrayed eJ1.tratcrrcst1als as all-knowing. benevolen t super-creatures come to solve Earth's problems In the psy· chedehc Seventies an 2001. A SpaCt' Odyssey. outcrspace was a renecuon of consciousness itself. ready to be united w11h man. In the turbulent Seventies, in Close Encountc~ of the Third Krnd. ahens were awe-1nsp1r- ing )Ct ac~rnble.Joining With us in a son of cosmic comrade~h1p. In the E1ght1t'S, we sull Set' outer spaCt' denizens as powerful. mtelhgent. and a1A.esome So. do we learn from them. Join them. become inspired b) them? Not an the Reagan era we don't - now we grab our guns and blow them to pieces Auuall>-I suppose there's more to AheM than may- hem and dcmo- h 11 0 n but 11 couldn't be much. Th1\ movie " a pacn to d<'struc- tlOn -a dnvmg, relcntlc'>s. loud (emphasis on l OUD) e~h1b1t1on of the l)DC ofmen- taht) that brought us the rec<'nt actions in Granada and Tnpoh !\Jot tha111·s a had movie -1t has a strong narrat1\C scn..c. a certain clement of ''"le some frequentl) spectacular \prttal effects -but 1t'~ all to pa1nfull' remin1"4.:en1 of 1hc recent Rambo movies dnd th<' mcn- taht'r the) represent " "'><>.in summa,... I can recommend A hens onl)' to tho~ who \<1lcly cn1oy classy heroines and wcll-phot<> graphed devastation Ju<,t II) not 10 recall the final, glonous -;ccnc 1n (lose Encounters. with the magnificent spaceship descending to Earth and the ~JX'('tators looking up in fasc1na- t1on. The contrast ti. almost to painful to bear JJ SteplMm ~•ffler Peillitridaa Newport Buda This week's assignment wa' 111 review the new bloclcbust.cr !>Cl ti horror moVle Aliens. I must say th:tt this type of film is not my pan1cular cup of tea. However. I went w11h thl' thoupt of trying to be a sample: movtqoer rather thao a reviewer Lei me tell you. this film 1s dynamite It is engrossing from the st.art II scares the dayhghh out of you. It 1\ wonhy of )our 3d mission pnce to 5ee it on the large\t screen w11h th<' best sound sy~tem possible The film 1s a ttrrific rum pie of what mOY•r' are supposed to hi: an CSClpl\t C111tn.ammcnt form Boy, do \Ou escape' · Bom of the 1979 megah1t !\hen JamC$ Cameron hu taken ove1 the producuon/dJrect1on dutat'S from R 1dely Scott. Once ag;u n the gorgeuu\ S1~oumey Weaver 1s aboard a' Ripley. Her classic beaut)' is ~c.-n even through the gore and violence ot the film . Interestingly. the ftm1n1\1' arc lined up solidly hchand M' Wet1veras usually this type of film h.i' a granite-Jawed hero to save thC' worltl rathC'r 'han a beautiful heroine And \SVC tt she does. What a hectic: pul" pounchng. nerve-wracking 2 hour' and 15 minutes at 1s. Th1'I 11mc around tht intrepid space crew returns to lhe planet L V-46 to 1nvest1gate the d1saf)- pearancc of the colonasts S('nt there t•• c1v1hzc .. the barren rock Thi: .... · unsuspecting colonists wcrr ~nt tn the ev1l .. Companf' (read bt& broth1·1 or some other such undcrhan1kd .. 111a1n) On~ on the planet. the (1111 begins m camesl as we watch the hopeleuly mismatched human' battlr lhc <'' er-mult1pl)1ng A hen' But why pick nits? (io to sec Ahcn' and be prepared to be amme™'d 1n fear and excitement up to you1 eyeballs.h is really a good movie! And 'Aliens' also scared the professional critics By GEORC.E WILLIAM lllkci..ctl, ...... ..,_ Aht·n ·· tht· 11n11 R1dle' ~ott space chiller wa\ onl· 111 tht· \(·ann1 mo,1c\ I ve e"rr \<'t'n "'1uth tom" surprise the scqud managt•\ to r1·1 rcate the 'Jl1nl'·t1nghn1tatm11\pht'n·11I the onganal while ~1"ng out C\Cn morr chill\ If ~lll'n' w," Ill nut of 10 on the lnght meter. then" \ht:n<o JlU'h''' the meter pa<ot 11' \apa< 11) We'll have to find a nrw wa\ to mea~ure I usually don'I Ir) to \lt't'r ;m\onc away from a movie. But .. ·\hrn'" " an exception I n:na1nly wouldn't recommend 11 for young ch1ldr<'n or for anyone else suKcptable 10 reall\tlt !>Care c:ffcct~ .. .\liens" ts that fnght- ening. When "Ahen" lt>ft off. Warmn1 Officer Ripley (S1gournc) Wea .. cr) was locking herself into a hypcrslcep companmcnt on the spalesh1p Nostromo for the lung voya~ back to Eanh She "'as the sole survivor of a desperate fight against a v1c1ous l rca1un· that had clamped mclfto the l:tt•' of ,1 t·rt'w member when the "'1o~tromc' -;topped to inves11gatc a dastrci.s signal on a \trangc planet R1pk'r managed to trap the creature in an airlock and hl•l \t 111nto obhv1on before going into h1bemat1on .\\ "i\hens .. opcn<o. Rapley (again played by Weaver)" hack on F.anh and is being blowtort·hed out of her h1bemat1on cell. &.-cause ofa burcnu· crauc foul-up, she had been drafi1ng in ~pace for 5 7 years Raple)' learns that a colony nl 70 families has settled on the ~•range ph1ne1 . now called Achcron. to C'lta~ 12 Dally Pilot OoteboOk/ Friday, July 25. 1986 lash expenmcntal farms. She tries 10 warn her supcnors of the danger they face, but no one take~ her ~nou-.1) Considered to he unstable. Ripley tll assigned to a routincJOb 1n the cargo d1vis1on. But then Eanh lo~s contact with the Acheron colony. A squad of Mannes 1s dispatched to the planet to investi~te As an af'\erthou&ht. Ripley 1sass1gncd to101n the MannM. JU~t in case there's any truth to her wild stones On Acheron. lhc Mannes find that what 1s left of the human colony hcu been cocooned b> the alien creatures The creatures use the human bod1e\ to store their cga.s and 'ICCm anxious to transform the Mannes into in- cubators The Manne commander falters whrn confro nted Wllh the homhlc violence of the aliens Ripley then takes over. and It as her coolness under pressure and her :1b1h1y to takr command with self-assurance that enables the Marine conungen1 to rally its fightina Power Weaver is especaaJl y &ood as Ripley One of the reasons this !>Ct:JUl'I 1Hs &ood as or better than the ongi nal as that Weaver has become so much stronger 1n her en ft through non-stop performing on Broadway and in othrr movies <.in~ 1979. For ex.ampk when Rapley " awakened after ~ 7 years and realizes she has outlived hrr dau&hter and still carries the shock ol her encounter with 1he ahen on thl' Nostromo. not a word Ill spo~cn about 1t But through her both language and her eyes and her acuon' she is able to communicate the horror It's an amv1ng performance Rating: R, tor language. v1olrncc But be warned th11t "Ahen~" also" the scarics1 movie of a hf<'llme ALIENS Ratina: • suu·1 --- The Irvine Co. previews NHAM's ambitious exhibit B\ CAROL HUMPHREYS o..., -Cen ; 0 3' In understanding thu cx.bJbtt, use your dreams. \11ur 1maginat1on. These artists didn't JUSt draw a tree. 1hn Jrt>wasymbol ofa tree,"sugested a museum docent 10 i"•n( of the guests invited by The Irvine Company to prl·' a·v. the new exhibiuon at the Newport Harbor Art \1u....-um fh1s 1s our most ambitious exh1b1t," said museum J rt'l llff ltevlD Couey. · The Interpretive Lmlt: Abstract Surrahsm into \h'1ran E-<press1omsm, Wortcs on Paper 1938-48" 1s the ,1•,1111d 1n a scnes ofeithib1tions supported by The Irvine < 1nipan) 's SI million grant to the museum last year and , ludl'\ 136 draWlngs by 22 artists. ""r leave the choice of exhibits up to the museum ,1.1•1 · ..aid Tom Nlelaea, president of The Irvine 1 mp.rn~ "The endorsement of plans (by the Cit)' .inulJ for Newport Center challenges us all to work out. h-'"" ·rn the museum and library, a sight for a future ,11,u .11 center." \lore than 250 Irvine Company officials and t"l·um supporters min&)ed in the splendor of the n ,, um·~ sculpture prden, They enjoyed wine and h:i npagne. listened to Frcnch-flavo~ v1ohn and • 1 ,ord1on music and sampled fare prepared by the Mam Event Menu lughhghts included filet mignon brochettes. Indonesian chicken sate. prawns, pates, exotic cheeses, veggies, assorted sausages and an elaborate dessert buffet Not bad ... and all paid for by The Irvine Company. Board chamnan Jack Sllea commented, "I think this exhibit 1s one of our best. Not tonight, but another lime, I suggest everyone take a quiet. serious look at 1t. It is extremely good, not bonnJ." ''There arc so many pieces to look at, you really can't sec them in one visit," said Jue Piuect.1 attending with husband Bob. Reception guests "talking art" united (amona others) museum curator Palll Sclllmmel, Non ud Hal~ ... artist GordoD Oaalow Ford, Lacrue ud Albert AUID1, AJl10D Baller, Marjorie Hartlt Beebe, Sam ffa)'HI, Deuy Freldenricll, BUI Flcker, Harry ud BercUe B•bb, Ray ad LlDda JollnaoD, Barban Roppolo, RlcUn ud J ... TelUn1l11dae11, Sally Somen, newcomer La Doua I1ea1U (Dew Ubnrlu from lllDol1), ud Dou.Id ud ClaMetie Sbaw. ''The Interpretive Link" will be displayed at the museum through September 14. The exhibit also includes a scnes of lectures, films and poetry read ings. For more information, call 759,11 22 Paparaul 11 edited by Dally PIJot Style edUor Vida DeaD Tom Nleleen chata with Demay Frel4enrlch an4 Tom Stepben80D • Linda Jotm.on areeta Jack and Marlon Shea. Mark Lere (left), llered.lth Palmer and Paul Schimmel (rl.Cbt) with ~nton Onalow Ford. . -._,. ·---.. -FmeArts ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Laguna Festival of the Arts is very refreshing The Laguna Festival of the Arts appears to ht' democracy personified. .\ hundred and fifty Laguna-based anasts have come together from July 9 to August 28 to ex h1b1t their works on the Festival grounds. The exhibition area 1s a circle. 1n which no area 1s no more prominent than another and an ~h1ch no artist has a more prominent space than any other. It 1s qu11e remarkable that a ci ty the s11e of Laguna Beach can produce so much an. and of such high standard. One wonders what might become of the world 1f every city of this size l·ould boast of such a wealth of artistic talent. Perhaps. though 11 1s not so unusual that Lagunans arc talented. rather, onl) that an enlightened populace has chosen to promote the fact Walking about the festival grounds. 1t was clear that the word "art" has two meanings for Lagunans: crafts., ranging from jewelry to knick- knacks to furniture; and pictures. ranging from pastels to oils to 1hrcc- d1mens1onal sculpture. One of the most unusual, and most extraordinary exhibits was hidden in the back, next to the snack counters It consisted of works by students from vanous schools.tanging from the Ii rst through the 1 l th grades. These works exh1b1ted a re· markable ran$e o f expression. m a ~nse, what 1s on display 1s the creative rendenng of the bt'st of Orange County's next generation of anasts. It is a fascinating study m ps)chology. watchmg the growth from the first to second to third, and up to the 12th grades· changes m subject matter. in matunty of ex- pression. 1n use of matenals. Of course. every md1v1dual will have an op1n1on about a work. Various comments overheard in- cluded: .. masterful" and .. it speaks to me" .... an to match your furniture" and ··pretty but innocuous" ... not to mention .. ho hum" and .. oh wow." The Festival 1s notable for its lack of ··failed expenments." It is almost as 1f this small microcosm of the an world has chosen to leave its explo- rations into the unknown in the laboratory In many respects it 1s a relief to SC'C works which are so refined. On the other hand. the festival suffers 10 some extent from .. prcttiness" ... therc 1s no shortage o f ··pretty" pictures hung neatly nei11 to expensive business cards The crowds seemed taken by three sets ofwork!l which provided alterna- tives 10 .. prettiness." They are, in no particular order the pastel .. people- ~apes" of native-Coloradoan Sally Strand, the 0 11 "faces" of Chinese an1st Gao Xiao-Hua, and the hard- wood "art furniture" of Jon Seeman. SaJly Strand's pastels were quite stnkmg. My m111al response was ··why?" The colors arc <1ubdued. the subjects simple. the style dignified but low-key. One can't help but compare these works w11h those of the children: they SC"Cm to possess a purity of vision. extremely insightful an its detachment. Yet these subtle pastels arc clearly the rendering of a mature artist. Gao Xia7Hua 1s a leading Chinese painter, exhibiting his work in the United States for the first time at this Fesuval. His portraits of Chinese peasants, painted while vmung many of the remoter areas of China, are somewhat more than hfe-like .. a few minutes in front of these portraits 1s enough to make one feel as 1fhe or she CHRIS PAllER had known the subJcctS for years. Jon Seeman has created son extraordinary an works 1n the form extremely functional hardwoc furniture. On display we.as a vane of Mr. Secman's work_ Panacular stnkmg 1s the fact that the 1im intensiveness of the building procc did not seem 10 sap this an1s· crcauv11y. These works arc anyth11 but dull. 'Vamp' fails miserably as a vampire movie By GEORGE WILLIAMS 1111c<:i.1cl\r ..... ...,._ \ amp1rc movies ha"c alwaJ-\ been a challenge to filmmaker; Their \uccess depends on wca\1ng an atmosphere of ero11c1sm into the fabnc of a horTor stor). ~1mpl} because "ampires trad1t1onallJ-must ~duce their\ 1ct1m~ before taking the blood. Onl) a few have sun·ccdcd indud· mg F W Mumau w11h "Nosferatu" ( 19::!2). and Tod Aro" mng with "Dracula" (1931) \tamng Bela L ugm1 in the 111lc role "Vamp .. 1s a failure bt'causc direc- to1 Richard Wenk never comes close. He depends on shock special effects. turning his No I vampire, played by Grace Jone-;, into a cardboard creature without any personality, without C' en a hint of the erotic. What 1s meant to bt' seal) 1s mercl:r loathsome and offensi ve. The plot deals wnh a couple of college freshmen (C'hns Makepeace and Robt-rt Rusler) trying to hire a ~tnp-teasc dancer as pan of a fratern1· t:r in1t1at1on A fnendlcss student (C1cdde Watanabe) offers to dme. and they become a hapless trio. They find their way to the After Dark O ub where Grace Jones reigns over a nest of vampires. When Rusler goes to Jones· dressing room to make a deal for the· fraternity bash, he docm 't return. Makepeace unwttt1ng- ly leaves Watanabe in the clutches of blood-suek1 n$ monsters as he goes off 1n search ofh1s pal. There 1s a long scnes of chase scenes leading underground into the sewer system which, as any fan ot vampire movies knows. 1s the place vampires stay while the sun 1s up. He acquires a new s1dek1ck. a d1ZL ) waitress (Dcdec Pfeiffer) who he figures probably has fangs. too, but who keeps ins1st1ng she knows him and won't bt' shaken ofT easily. Will he get out of that sewer alive'' Who cares? There 1s one admirable element The black Jones and the Japanese Watanabe have roles that usually would have gone to white actors. The movie pays no attcnt1on to their racial differences. But this one plus does not flu~h "Vamp" out ot 1 ~wer VAMP Rating: no stars Cast" G race Jones, Chns Mal peace. Robert Rusler. Dcdcc Pfeiff Gedde Watanabe, Sandy Ban Writer-director: Richard Wea Music. Jonathan EJ1as. Makeup fects: Greg Cannom. Productton • sign: Alan Rodenck-Jones. Photog phy: Elhot Davis. Editor: M. Grossman. Distnbutor: New Wor Running time: 93 minutes. Raung: R. for language, v1olen sexual content. ---~=============================== Sweaters at Al's Garage b...·sl<Y' Trader has all the sty1es ard1gonr. r,ootnecks crewnecks v necks and vests 8~~@~ 56 FASHION ISLAND· NE'NPORT BEACH· (714) 644 -5070 I I Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday. July 25. 1986 "•• sc•-11 EIPllB! _irs -JoelSleget ,AIC-TV I IC >f <1 .y ly SS 's ag - h<' .c- ~r. •n. ik. :f- ie- "8- 1rc Id. :c. • D - The Call ' shows its heartfelt brand of rock n' roll ~JOHN ROOS ,·'Ay Not C•• p1r ••it c 11rn1ng off a two month tour as t l opening act for Sample Minds. h • c all <;team rolls into Southern 1hlorn1a rc.-ad> to showcase their ,;1g1nal hrand of heanfeh rock 'n 111 .. OJ>l·ntng for Simple Minds and '.:ta C1abnel (tn 1983) was an llllo\t ideal situation because lw' 're true professionals and we're o•>J lncnds with mutual respect or i:a1.h other,'' said the C'all's Lead 1n~er and Bassist Michael Been unng a recent phone interview rom llou<;ton. Texas. \.\e'rt· 1n our second month t 1dl1n1ng -;hows and it's been c1nta\t11. · '81d Been. "We can pla> r m minutes an front of crowds hiJI are real!} coming to see and ,rx·nence us hve. The fan suppon nd l'nerg\ has been tremendous ... \\ llh an opponunity to highhght hl·1r oub1and1ng latest release on kktra Records. "Reconciled," the .Ill\ fiery brand of rock has merged into an upbeat. positive ,rx·nence -a chanse in focus and ''le lrom their carhcr foreboding nrl>.'> hke ··v101cnt Times" and the an11-war anthem "Back From the Front." On "Reconciled," songs like "I Stall lkheve" and .. Everywhere J Go" celebrate the hopes and dreams of the human cond1t1on in a genuinely 1n'lpinng way ··1 thank we''e matured an our outlook on things." Reen said ''..\'a songwriter I've become le'ls interested in global issues and more in tune 10 personal fceltngs and concerns.·· · Looking back. I think I used 10 glamonze despair ( .. The Tame of Your Lafe"), like 11 was cool to be negauve or something.·• he added. ·-rm stall searching for answers hke everyone els~. but now we're trying to break awa> from this image that we're a gloomy. humorless band·· Actual!> Been was quite funny when he hung out w11h pal Jo hn lklush1 v.h1le in high school m Chicago. ··John and I were good f nends an high school," Been said m a faraway tone. ··w e were an competing drama clubs. and John suggested that I enter a monologue comedy comi)ct1t1 on w11h him So I did. and an the state cham- p1onsh1ps. I took first place and John fintshed second·· -m:MI ~ £1J7..U£11t LOWE MOORE BEUSO PE~ "About last night..~ TRh~AR PllTilU,_ PR»lf:-.~ \\ \R.l\OU>ST111R ,qi BRrlTIOKL\ f'RO(){ <110\ Of \ nl.'1 Bl t'll~ ~Rll Zl''lfll ROBW'lft"\BOITIA'fl'\H1llT . .' ()f'U M00tU: HlW! Blll. HI ll..11.. \llrnt rtJUil.)10 i:.-. \Jl\OUl"inffl.1 --r..-i 0\\1D'lUfr•"" •• m II \1.lllN~K\ ltotWff ~ 111 -t H .. 'IOS llR£IT le ''Tl \RT Ofl.f\ -• !l)\f\RD l" 1111 i I", .. lftlh 11111\lllY\ ,,, ~ llf I PH I ~..-·~ ·-_ ... _....__..,._..,_.... • llUlfT*ilOll ti A( " I A KAI•• "' W1Sll•111tllll . .,., "' <Ml> ''He was funnier and should have won, but he was too slapstick and outrageous for a high school panel of judges," laughed Been. The Call is attempting to dispel the rumor that the band members hall from Los Angeles or Santa Cruz. Been and Drummer Scott Musick arc originally from Okla- homa, and Lead Guttanst Tom Ferrier (San Francisco Bay Area) and Keyboardist Jim Goodwin (OJ'tion) round out their line-up that formed an Northern California 10 1975. .. We wanted to acknowledge our fCJionaJ roots on "Reconciled. •• said Been. The son~ "Oklahoma .. and "They Tore the Old Plac.e Down" arc bittersweet recollec- tions from their home towns. The front and back album Jacket photos were taken from historical societies in and around Norman, Oklahoma. Even while they're touring, the Call is thanking ahead to their next album. "I want to use a ditfCTCnt recording technique -rent an old ball and record semi-live with more remotes," offered Been. "I'd really like to capture the loud, live sound that fuels the crcat1 vc energy of our stage shows, .. he added. But ultimately, the Cati is your dynamic, rock 'n' roll tourin& band that hves for their next $ii 1n front of a raucous, appreciauvc crowd "To sell enough records io k~p 1he band l<?fCtbcriscooU&h to make me happy; Been modestly stated. "And when I step on stagcaod they dim the hghts, my hea.n stam a pumpin' and I know why I wanted to be a musician " The C.all performs tontght at Garfield's in Huntington Beach and Mo nday night at Bogart's in Long Beach. Special Advance Preview tomorrow night ''Hilarious ~d heartbreaking and surely one of the best movies of the year~' -Joanna Langflelcl, ABC RADIO "Superbly acted, funny, sad, moving, wry and enormously touching~' -Jdftty Lyons, SNEAK PREVIEWS/INN TOM HANKs • JACKIE GLEASON IT'S A COMEDY. ANDA DRAMA JUST ln<E LIFE. NOTHING IN COMMON ~ TRJ·STAR PICTURES PmENTS A RAST AR PRODUCTION A GARRY MARSRAU. m.JI TOM HANIS JAOOE Gt.WO "NOTHING IN COMMON" EVA MARJE SAINT [HECTOR EIJWNOO] BARRY CORBIN and i BFSS ARMSTRONG tcROGER M. ROTHSTEIN ~JOHN A. ALO~W. A.S.C. ""CRIC~ PODELL& M1CHA£L PRE~!_ IPGTN11tru1.1UDMGamJTO e] "-eALEXANDBA ROSE ~GARRY ~AU ---•••--· ·---r.--..:...--·-• ..,_,..,..---; D It l "H 1 cal!W.fl'!VllM'.lAUUUU&AIU'" _..... 19l'at.19:TTa•tmtcrm> SPECIAL AO\IANCE PREVIEW TOMORROW NIGHT (Olec.k ttllt!8tra for peuitw times> COSTA MESA UA Cinemas 540 0:594 El TORO Eoward· Sadd~ar.11. 581 5880 HUNTINGTON BEACH Edward<; Charter Ctnler 841 0770 U MIRADA Pacific s Gateway 5 523-1611 ORANGE City Centef ~2553 Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, July 25, 1986 IS •\ I I 'UlllHUr .. .. "Cl.-PWl" ..... 111 edwardl fHAR l!R rfNIRf 841-0770 llU._.P,SIA," ,..,,.,lll.')11811•" ·-----.,.., .... ,.. , ............... .. edwards FOUNT A•"i. A_ .E' 839-1500 6A')0.-'"'.Jn~· a· t:J·~.1(P ~ ... , ...... I. ..__ .... .__.. . ...__ • • Deity Pilot Oatebook/ Friday. Juty 25. 1986 ecwar:is ---·.. :. .. :.::. 541; 2711 !: • . ... ,. ' ~ "' • ' ' ,, .. . . ' .. •• ---.. ._.. , ....... ...... -----............... .~ .. eowa·os -~ ,£;.~ · · 854 ee1, I \II• .. ,, 'I ·------.,. ..... ................ eowaros '"--_ :;c.:i: ~~ SS I 065S •, ~-... _ .... .,..our .. -:..~· r •' --... ----... _.__ .._11 •-s:.:r .... ~~-;. ....... _ .. ,.. . ,.. ...... .... ... ... ,... ..... - edwaros SA:J~LEBAC • 581 5880 E~·:A(,Q'"-l·.)1· ... tJ I [ ~ .. Cl" .,._ -..m•r (ft) .................. edwards EL 1 0?U 591 .9500 f •• • -·, ------"\!Ill umr,.. ...... -""'-..... :n ...... - edwards v1EJO ·w ., 830-6990 \A,.Dt:.c.i1w • • a ;..1:4 ... "' l' ~ .., .... ----mil--.._._... ......... ... ... - edwards MtSS10N v1LC ~A •. s ~ ,-,,.. ·c '."Ci"'" .& •. l· at -.. u .. -· ·· " , .... edwards SOuT..,CG AS' ,AG ·.~ .,'J11,,1 \J.'".,.-~) ••'It • l "SA.,,.1.,.1'\I • 1,;. '" -~ ..... Ulf ...... " .... (II) ed•••dl CINEMAS SoC•I CINEMAS LAGl.mA HlllS MALL 768-661 1 10,WYATHTOllO IH THE MAI NEJTTQ&f A~ '='-.,. ...... ................ 'Greatest Show• still the greatest By TOM TITUS Of .. ~ ...... The cu-cus., by definition, 1s superlatives. And the R.aoghng Bros.-Bamum and Bailey cxtravapnza is the superlative of ctrcuscs. But mamtaining this lofty posiuon. espcctally after 116 years. as a demandinJ task. You can't just ring in the same acts year 10 aod year out - even if. as 1s the case with the Greatest Show on Earth, the show's rwo editions switch circuits each year. Thus. producer Kenneth Feld 1s constantly lookmg under the world's bi& tops for new and different act~ and this year he's come up with a dandy -tbe Shanghai Acrobatic Troupe from the People's Repubhc of China. In its first U .S. tour, the IS-member agreption fills aU three nng.s with simultaneoul superb showmanship. Your head iscontstantlytumangsoasnot to miss a trick. aod the traditional "lion dance" is a marvel of coorchnation. The Shanshai acrobats headline the CUtTCnt tour. which began Tuelday at the Long Beach Arena and moves next Tuesday to the Anaheim Convenuon Center. where it will play throufh Au$-5. But it's only one of a handful of headline-caliber acts o n the bill, inclodmg: •Tiger trainer Wade Burck, who mixes nine white Burmese tig.cn with a half.<foun Bengals and handles both with style and skill. The big ~ts snarl and swipe at Burck -and each other -during the act, which culminates wi1h Burk.e astride a Ben&al as a Burmese vauJts over hJS head. •The Flying Vazquez, featuring Miguel Vazquez, 21, 1he only trape?e artist to successfully master the quadruple somersault. He doesn't pull 11 off every ma.ht (missing by scant me hes at the opening performance), but 1f you sc:c: 1t, you'lfhave witnessed a one-of-a-kind evenL •The Gautier Family. Representing a seventh generation of circus. the Gau tiers deal in elephants -tons and tons of them. Axel Gautier and has son~ Michael and Kevin put the pachyderms through their pacn in all three nn~ before fomung the traditional elephant lineup tha1 stretches the length of the arena . •The J(Jng Charles Troupe. An old, familiar fa vonte. this aC1 can be described only by visualizina lhe Harlem Globetrotters on unicycles. This umc around they've added a "double Dutch .. Jump-rope routine on the unas before segueing into the basket ball hij1nks. •The Ringling Repeating React. Another new act which updates the "human cannonball" of circuses past Two daredevils arc fired simultaneously from a cannon across the arena and mto a waiting net. Bnefbut breatht.aking. •The Quuos. Wire walkJD& aspires lO new heights a.s this four-member troupe performs without a net hi&b above the arena floor. There arc two highlights here. first when Angel Quiro leapfrogs two of has brothers and then when sister Mana is transponed in a chair supported by two brothers hold1n1 a balance pole . •The Wheel of Death. Hopefully, this act won't be taken laterally, but when Marco and Phillip Peters span in their double rotating wheel (a vanauon on the single version exhibited in earlier years) you may find yourself holding your breath. Especially when Marco treads the steel circle blindfolded . There arc hones.. camels. zebras and bears, other aenahsts, tumblers and. of course. clowns. The costumes att glitlCrier than ever. 1t seems. and the producuon numbers -one fealUrinJ• blown-up Statue of liberty. the other a tnbute to Chinese culture -are a v1sual delight. Thcatergoen will appreciate the incredible pacing for a show so large and sprawling -a job well done by directors and cho~phers Bill Bradley and Crandall Diehl. Once the ringmaster's whistle blows, tbCTC are few seconds lost in transition as they acts are ptUCntcd. The Greatest Show on Earth plays at the Lona Beach Arena throua.h Sunday with pcrfonnance:s toni&ht al 7:30. Saturday at 11a.m .• 3:30 and 8 p.m and Sunday al I :30 and 5:30 p.m. Then it moves to Oranie County Tuc"1ay to run throU&fl Aua. 5 at lbe An.a.betm Convention Center (performances at 7:30 Tuesday, l :30 and 7:30 Wedn~y. Friday and Aug. 4 and 5. 11 , 3· 30 and 8 Aug. 2 and 11 , 3:30 and 7:30 Aug. 3) before moving to the Los Angeles Sport\ Arcan Aug. 7. Tickets may be ordered at Ticketron or by ailing the boit office at 634-1300. 'A Great Wall' opens in Balboa By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of ... _., ....... .. A Great WaJL" whtch tells of the influences Western culture hu had on China. will bqin an uclusive Orange County engagement toniaht at the Balboa Cinema in Newport Beach. The film, promoted u "The F1nt Amcncan Movie Made 1n China," examines bow a nation whose h11tory has unfolded larscly m isolation from the West now undersoes cycles of rapid change due to out.side 1n- Ouenccs. Alt.hou&h the film focuses pnmar· lly on human relationships and docs no deal overtly with political subJCCts. "A Great Wall" provides an unusual- ly intimate look at comtemporary post-Mao youth wbosc curTCnt du· interest in politics in itself a political statement of sorts. The story follows a San Francisco computer executive who wants to rctum for a visit 10 China af\er 30 years. He takes blS Amcncan-bom Chinese wife and teen-. son to V111t tus relatives in Pekina. .. A Great Wall .. wtll be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. l\,Jlhtly with weekend matinees at 3 and S p.m. The Balboa Cinema is located 709 E. Balboa Blvd. on Newpon Beach's Balboa Peninsula. , oc tK" 1n ~h op l" 1111 hr 1111 la1 '" 'fl \h .I .in r r Jn ""'. Jll lit• .Ill ~· lht Ja i.11• " Ir ,, f•ll t •fl \I r '• "'I I Ill pr "" - - ( c } s =+ Out On The Town :Restaumnu OF THE WEEK By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOVICH CNllJ .... C.. ' 3 0 Newport Beach welcomes back the talented res- taurant duo of Jerry and Patsy Overland wttb the recent opening of The AJlex located in the newly refurb1sbcd Newport Balboa Vallqc shopping center (corner of Balboa Blvd. and Pacific Coast Hwy.). It has been 10 yean since the Overlands sold their oct"anfront restaurant. The AJley West, which eventually became The Ritz and today is the elegant Rex. However, in 1979. the Overlands apin used their skills to open a lharmang restaurant c:aJlcd The Stockade in Crcsthne. "W11h The Stockade doing so well, and the Apnl opening ofTbe Alley, I feel as though we have the best of 1""0 worlds," said Jerry. "low they're beck ... and by the show of customers tilling the restaurant for lunch. dinner and Sunday hrunch. 1t would appear that Orange County has not lorgoncn the fresh Cahfom1a-Frcnch cu1s1ne made lamous at the Alley West. "There has been a temfic local rcspon~ ... said a ,m1hng Patsy Jerry 0.erland. Patay O.erland and Lia Jacbon. JS Due to Popular Demand ... Marcello•• .. Early Bird~ Spectat. An Now Available fTom Open to Clo.lot EVERVDA YI Super Specials Include Soup And Salad Garlic Bread, Sherbert & Coffee • F ettucini Verde w / Alfredo Sa~ •Chicken Marcello• Calamari Frite • Rigatoni ala Broccoli •Stuffed Shells M=~uce Linguinl Al Fruto Del Mare ONLY $625 17502 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-5505 The Alley·s ex tenor 1s 1n shades of warm taupe and 1nmmcd 1n deep black. s1tt1ng atop the restaurant"s ,h1ngled roof 1s an enchanung turret that will soon house .1 mod. satlor dressed 1n a 1900 era uniform with an .1n11que sp)'glass an hand. and The Alle>'s own blend of spices; Tenyak.i Pu-Pu·s. a ·':::;::;:;;;~;::::::::::::::::=::=::===~: sirloin steak charbroiled to perfecuon and basted with Iii The .\lie) 'sown secret tenyak1 sauce . Once inside The Alley, the ambience of early San I ranl1sco 1s captured by the warm burgundy tones. ant1~ue lace cuna1ns, marble-lake table tops and imported fll.'<tlh 11n1ed mirrored pillars. The restaurant'<; decor. although rooted an deep rich shade~. ~till manages to nn:\C:'nt an open, airy setting. "In the evcnang." Patsy noted, "with the ~Ii lights anc.l more formal table setting. the restaurant's mood .....-rms 10 shift 1n an unhumed and intimate d1rec11on." Beneath the shiny copper shroud which overlooks the e'h1b111on kitchen, customers Wlll find JerT). Pats) or daughter Lisa prepanna the trad111onal Overland cu1s1nr Jlnng wuh a sumptuous collccuon of daily special\ The Overlands' customers have long enJO)ed the , m p 'ialad served with tht' famous dre~ing created b> lern gr.tied pippin apples in a sour lTCam ba:.e "''th AJlnu ts spnnkled on the top. The Alley's satidw1chcs arc very popular with diners. 'P\.'Ually "The Patsy." The Patsy 1s made from choice ground bed. gnlled • •11111n., onega ch1h, bacon stnps and Swiss ch~ ~rved ur .1 IO.iSIC'd roll, .. explained Patsy c >1her favontc sandWJches to be t'nJoycd are The \lk~ (.at. a unique version ofLht' Amencan Cheeseburger :ir.d The(. able Car made from ground bccf.gnlled onions. 1Jnnatcd red cabbage served on a toasted French roll The sandwiches range from $3 75 toS5. 75. and all arc ,, r\cd wuh a choice of available chilled salads ~ favonte lunch special scrved on Wedne~a ) 1s the 'hnn nbs that come with real mashed potatoes and gra'' 1nJ ..i tre-.h vegetable." Jerry said The Alley West has an extensive wine hs1 that 111duc.les wine by the glass. The array ofappe111el" offered. rritcd from $4.75 to $7 Q5, include such delCX'tahles a\ .. wtn•cJ chicken !avers prepared w11h fre\h garden onion\ The dinner menu. $8. 7 5 to S 15. 95, includes Chicken Tarragon: a stunned boneless breast of chicken sautecd in butter and sherry wine and topped with mushrooms, shallots. cayenne pepper, tarragon and white creme sauce. served on a bed of brown rice wtth vcget.ablcs ... or Calaman l\la Mack a tender fillet dehcatel y cooked m sweet clarified huller to a golden brown served with brown nee and vegetables. All thr entrees include choice ot wup du ,our or garden salad. For 'lunday brunch,' The Alley offers a vanety of omekttcs. priced around $5 and each served with baked cheese hash browns Other brunch items are Eggs Fromagc. Huevos Rancheros or Benedict Neptune. to name a fe\I. of lhe ta~te bud tantalizers. Another t1db11 of delight created b) Patsy 1s lnsh l oflee Cheese Cake with an oatmeal coolue crust inade \I.1th cream cheese. eApresso. chocolate whipped layer on the top and dt'Coratcd with chocolate covered roasted cofTee bt-ans And for a double whammy. try the C hocolatc ~OU\'>C < hcesc Pie made with a chocolatc- chocolate cool.1e crust \ 1s1ting Thr .\lley for a cocktail orto dine. 111s easy to t'\pcnence the fam11) owned atmosphere Dan Tully, general manager formerl) of the Rex , opened Alley West as a busbo) with Re'( as has l:O-worker On an) particular day, The Alley customeTS may be \c.'Cn drc~d in business ~u1ts or tasteful summer ature; although The Alie} doc~ not have a formal dress code, men·s tank tops and cut-offs arc discouraged. Th e Alley 1s located at 4501 Pacific C'oast Highway, Nev. pon Beach Open for lunch Mon -Sat. from 11 :30 J m 10 3 pm and dinner -;even day~ from ~.30 p.m to JO pm Sunda) brunch is served from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m For rt''>Crva1tons call li46-Q I ~6 ec1pc of the Week White pepper 111 cvp sliced wblte 001001 Sweet batter 3 oancn dry sberry Melt sweet buuer 1n sautce pan. add onions and sautec bnc0)' Add chicken livers. season salt and white pepper Add J 111 ounces dry sherry and sautce --------------------until don<' ( mcely browned) Then add rest of sherry and qu1ckl) put on tight ltd and tum lire full up for 20 seconds. Tum off heat and let sit wtth lad on for 30 seconds Serve garnished with chopped parsle) F Tt-ifE WEEK CHICltEN LIVERS SAUTEED ' osnces ~ckea Uvera Seaaoa u l& Coe OF THE WEEK ALLEY CAT COFFEE I ounce Myers Rum Creme I 011nce Tia Marta 6 oaocea freab bo' coffee Float 2 ounces f~h whipping cream on top. Serve 1n a I 0-ounce clcnrcofl'cc mug to emphasize the lovely cream-tan color Wlth the white whipped ' cream cap. '" I .. Great Steak Break" Dinner I Why pay more when you can enjoy the best steak dinner an I town, at the lowest price around. Seven full ounces of Top I Sirloin with all the trimmings, plus the Grinder's fast. friendly I service. Only S3.95 served 5-9 PM daily with w I coupon. I Good ., Ne-wpo<t on Co.ut Hwy Hun1rn111on on Co.ut HW)' I 642-8811 536-1664 L /Ot \.ISOA(-•IOC>~·-n --..c.or,..,,., --™ __________________ _..... Dancing Under The Stars Th.:r.:\" 'ummcr placr .ll th' Mu1d11:n, on th ... R1~trot fl'rr.1~~. t>\.t>ry S.uurJ"r night Stonc"ndg( ProJuct1rn1' pl.1y' the mu,1c ot tht> f1ft1t>~ .ind su:to's L1~ and w 1·1L·<1m 9PMto IAM The Bistrot Thrrasse At HOTEL MERJDIEN NE'NPORJ BEACH Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday. July 25, 1986 17 !% I OutOnTheTown -Oiao~Dinesty ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Lotus has some great things going for it When Ryan Tsang opened the Lotus restaurant in Costa Mesa in late 1985, he thought Orange County would be a snap after the rigors of own1ns restaurants 1n Los Angeles. He qu1cldy found that his mentors, and his own ideas. abou1 opening a restaurant here were wrong -\Cry wrong. It's been a struggle, but wtth a lot of hard work. things are loolung up T o paraphrase the popular song. 1f you can make it here you can make 11 anywhere. When we recently re- turned to the restaurant after a delay of a few weeks, Ryan and I wt'rc lamt'ntJng tht' fact that New Yorl 1s not the proving ground It u!>Cd to be The doctorate 1n survival in the restaurant industry 1s conferred in Orange County tht'sc da)s First of all, Ryan Tsans was no novice at this stuff. His family owned a restaurant m New York. Ht' opened the highly rqarded Lotus West in Lo'i ~ngeles about seven years ago, fol- lowed sho nly thereafter by the equal- I> well-regarded Lotus West in Brentwood. Both restaurants con- tinue to enjoy much success. Every- one, though, was talking about all the good things going on in the county to the south. Ryan had a look. liked the altitude o f the public about good restaurants, and liked the area in general. As this ofT-the-cufT research was going on, a locauoo becamt' a vailable on Harbor Boulevard. Time 10 go for 11. Well. It was only after o pening the restaurant for a few Wet'ks that the reahzauon ~t in that this 1s hard compet1t1on tcmtory. We do not perceive ourselves as the ultimate "foodies" and the community. as a whole, 1s much more conservative than our nothem neighbors. Why, we even hke to stay home some n1fhts and we actually cook for 1n v1ted guests. No. we were not quilt' into the gourmet take-out syndrome of lazi- ness that keeps other c1t1es buzzing. We stall find somt' comfort in the n eat1 vity of our own minds. Bring your famlly lo th• B«ach and •riJoy the many plneurH of Balboa! ON THE PENINSULA BALBO A FROM $3.7 9 am to 3 pm 801 E. Balboa 673-7726 Mene's Terrace AUTHENTIC GREEK FOOD P1onPers of Greek Chic 13 -Herb Baus El Toro Rd LUNCH DINNER -IXI i..t>e><• 0. onge•r H Monday Ftodc>y M<:>nday Saturday I I ()() :l 00 ~ ()().9 30 Plo10 l'lo•o 830.3228 23531 El Toro Rd., El Toro, CA (OrC11f199 I'" l'lotol I I Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday. July 25. 1986 It just so happened that Lotus was helpful staff' certainly set the scene for in a good location, as aood locations a nice eitpenence. Such a canng go. Harbor Boulevard is a main attitude is not always found in ethnic thoroughfare, Costa Mesa is good restaurants. FIFI CHAO restaurant territory. However, Lotus One of my aounnet buddies bad found i uclf smackdab between two of called some t1 me aao to rcpon that the the most popular Chinese restaurants orange beef at Lotus was eitccptional, in the area, Mandarin Gounnct and and that we should try a whole Golden Dragon. It was hard to wrest steamed catfish m a Shanghai-sryle customen from either one, and what brown sauce. The latter enticed us has happened over the past few since it is noulways easy to find good in boihng water, drained thorougbly, months 1s that the pubbc has slowly Shangbatnesc food. Thts particular shaped in a lacy pattern in a wire come to acknowledge that there are cuia.ine relies heavily upon lots of mesh basket mold and deep fried to a three sood Chinese restaurants ginger, scallion. garlic and use of crisp. golden hue. Sine~ we had made withJn a shon distance of each other. several types of soy sauc.es . reservations a few days ahead, we It is giving the customer a broader The menu encompasses well over requested that the chef choose what base. 100 Mandarin. Shanghai and should be served inside our basket. It 1s aJways a pleasure to sit in the Szechuan d1shes. In the manner we His idea was prophetic -the orange mirrored. green-hued peaceful sur-l\ave become accustomed to. the beef which was already on our .. must roundings of Lotus. Tile h\.lge fish menu 1s categoncally divided accord-try" hst. tank that forms part of the entryway is ing to the main 1ngred1ents of the · Thouih 1t is sad to break the ablaze with colorful tropical fish. The dishes. 1.c. poultry, beef, vegetables. masterpiece, the idea is to enJOY tht> tables arc all napped m white, httle noodles, etc. crunchy noodles as a texture change vases of nowcrs and attractive place With enough notice. or for a round-from whatever hides withm the settings denote a level of so~h1su-table banquet, several items can be basket. In thi~ case, medallions o f ca11on we appreciate. The fnendly presented in a noodle basket. The very lender beef had been prc- grecting.s at the door, and the smiling. long water noodl~ arc cooked briefly mannated in soy. sesame 011, garhc "'>iiialiiii)iiii;:;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;1;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:::::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;ici and a little wine. then qu1ckJy stir· -fned wttll a spnnklmg of hot ch1h Award Winning Continental Menu Featuring A Wide Variety of Fresh Fish "Bob Burns: Still Great ... " 8.-verly Buh atilh Daily P~lot pepper and a generous dose of orange peel. It ranked with the best orange beef dishes ever before encountered The whole catfish was falhng-ofT- the-boncs tender and moist from its steam bath. A sauce had been made with soy sauce. garhc and scallions that was intense. authentic and ap- propriate. This same dish had been ordered on a former occasion and the Lunch • Di'nner • Cocktai'ls fish was slightly muddy tasting which a conference between restaurateur ENTERT Al NM ENT NIGHTLY • BANQUETS and purveyor can solve as indicated by this last try 37 Fashion Island New ort Beach 644-2030 Over the course of vanous meals ~~---e!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~--------------~;..;..;.;;~i-,jl.J we have ordered other not-too-often- ·' enJoyed dishes. Cabbage in cream sauce 1s a dish that could easily be mistaken for French The vegetable is simmered along with crab meat (or shreds of pork) for the pnmary flavors to marry before the add1t1on of a thickened sauce based on a chicken broth base. h 1~ fulfilling in a peasant sort of way. A plate of sauteed shnmp ap~red as plump shnmp bursting with the na vor of the wine in wl\1ch they were pre-marinated and the scallion wnh 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine (714) 833-2770 which they were stir-fned. A touch of admirable crcat1v1ty also crept in 1 ~~~~~~~~~~Au~-~f'r~o·~''*'~"~w~.11~ .. ~"';1,.,...,~~;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~~ The ch• ,\ad slivered Chinese cab-1-baJe into tht> finest Juliennes than qu1ckJy deep fned the th1tads tum1n& them a dark grttn and giving them a cnsp tellturc and slightly sweet taste They were arranged around the pcnmeter of the plate 1n a bcaullful contrast to the shrimp for eye appeal and la~tt differentiation. ~i ALL THE WARMTH OF SUNNY ITALY NOW SERVIN G LUNCH Mon. Thru Fri. In Our Garden Pat io & Romantic Dining Room featuring Italian Style Barbeque Entress Grilled On Our Outdoor Charcoal Broiler Choose from a variety of Fresh Fish, Meat & Poultry Dishes Plus Our New Luncheon Menu Ronnie Brown Trio Sun. thru Wed. From BPM H!t EHi C.•I Rlgtnuy Coroea del Mar '75-ltU Lobster 1n an aromatic catsup- bascd sauce should c•tcb the fancy of any lover of this crustacean. Tht> flavors of garhc. scalbon and the merest hml of spicy chili pepper give added enthusiasm. A &<>Od wa>-to bq1n any Chmc~ meal 1s with a mt:ited cold plate which allow, one 10 tute manr. different things prt'fe1TCd by the Chine~. At l.otu, they do a very nice JOb with the cold plate and the e'8 rolls arc tht> crispy, small kind quite amply filled with v~tablc and shnmp. The wups Wlth siuhna browned nee. 01 with hot and sour flavor are thick with 1na.rcd1cnts and abundantly full ofnavor from all of the items on the mef'lu, I'm ~ut'l' evcf'\'one will find their all- (Pleue 11ee CRAO/J>ace 19) ( Fl Fro ume IOt('r \atct "'a11t n .... ,11 qua I Lf tor II vcr; n1ce1 Orar ('\er Lt Bhd for r and there "1on r. l!l \ IJ th1• I JOd m.11 1 a ppr park honr Wt OutOnTheTown FIFI CHAO ••• FromPaCel8 time favontcs, and ptrhaps some interesting soundm& new dish wdl l atch your eye or your ear when the "a1ter descnbcs altemauves. Tho~ who enJOY wtne with meals "111 appreciate the more-than-ade- quate wine hst. Lotus has a lot of good things going for 11, and 1s finally amassing its own vcr) loyal chentele. This is one o f the n1crr additions to the dining scene an Orange County, and the service staff garners my highest acclaim for their e'er-attentive and helpful attitude. Lotus 1s located at 2300 Harbor Bl\d in Costa Mesa. Phone 545-3331 for rc~rvauons or take-out. Lunch and dinner arc served every day and there are special early bird dinners \fonday through Frida_y from 4:30 to ti 30 pm pnccd from SS.25 to S6.2S .\la cane entrces $4.95 to $9. 7S wtth 1hr l'\Cc pt1on of seasonal fresh fish and lobster which arc quoted at mJrkc1 pnce. Casual neat attire is appropnate. and there 1s ample sclf- parl..mg .\II maJOr credit cards arc honored Now Serving COUNTRY STYLE SUIDIY $199 BROICH Includes Beverage Well Drmlc or Beer 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM 645-8091 1712 Placentia Coata Mesa .,, ......... .. ~"":, C!4kdA~ Lit a._ ..... ,_. ,.,._ . .., ........... . ens. ~~~~~~~~-............ hlAn• I a• 1• t 1•1111.&·2'.& ......... Ullllllllll*D~llillll ... .............. 428 E 17th St Costs Mesa 71-4~650-1750 Cast of comics set adrift with no plot By GEORGE Wll.LIAMS ~-----As a stand-up comedian, Robin W1lhams is a free-wheeling, 1n- novat1 ve bundle of energy who never fails to entertain. But sometJmcs an the movies, he's a stand-arounder with vacant eyes who seems to be wondering what's going to happen next. He's just that in "C1ub Parad1~." Williams pla}'S Jack Moniker, an ex- Ch1cago firefighter wbo invests his pension and a h uge disability settle- ment into a Canbbcan island reson He's surrounded by a huge cast. including Peter O'Toole as the island's Bnllsh colonial leftover; the late Adolph Caesar as the pnme minister; Jimmy C111T as Wilham~>" mus1c1an-pat'lncr; Twiggy as his lover. Joanna Cass1d) as a New York Times travel wnter: and a platoon of Lclev1s1on comics from "Saturda) Night Live" and "S(Tv:· including Rick Moran1s. Andrea Manin. NEWI Saturday Champagne Brunch The Dinner Theatre Premiere of the Phenomenal Musi<dlJ 7 YEARS ON BROADWAY WINNER OF 7 TONY AWARDS WITH THE HIT SONG "DON'T CAY FOR ME ARGENTINA" EVITA -· TN Ra -· Na£W UCM>'IABER DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS a stron1 director does be seem to be able 10 build and suswn a credible character. In .. The World According to Garp" under George Roy Hill, he showed P,Otential. In "Moscow on the Hudson • under Paul Mazunky, he was able to shine. And you have to give him high marks for hi s dis- ciplined ponrayal of .. Popeye" under Robcn Altman. SOUTH COAST VILLAGE Featuring ALL YOU CAN EAT • Se.ifood & Baron of Beef • Hol Entrees • • Fresh fru11 & 5-llad Bar • Mu Shu Shrimp Bar • • Waffle Bar • Omelf'He Bar • Pasta Bar • • Breads • Pastries • Bananas Fosters • • Much, much more!!• All YOU CAN DRI NK • Juice Bar • Ch.1mpagne • RESE RVATIONS RECOMMENDED (7 14) 979-3474 1641 W . Sunflower, South Coast Village Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday, July 25, 1988 19 • , .. OutOnTheTown GOOD EARTH RESTAURANT Adds F ast Food "Amin " Dd1(·ous, nutn uous and faR I hose arc the watch words for the new (1ood Earth Annex located JUSt around the comer from the (,ood Earth Restaurant in South Coast Plaia Village Thi.' >\nneit ,.., the brain child of Olga and Randy Hunt. the nrw 11wncr<t of the Good Earth Restaurant lr.inlhtsc in thr Village ·'Many "'orling people and ~tudents want a good nutnt1ous lunch but either don 1 ha' c the lime to wall or cannot ..itlord to cal 1n a good re<,1aurant n c11 da\ .. ..ays Olga Hunt, "~ we deulkd 10 try w do something about that · 1 hl' H'\Ult 1~ the C iood Earth \rtnl'\ a ru:"' luncept IO fa\t food wnlle according to the Hunts, Ot'{:IU<,t' 1t feature<; a ~anet> offrt'sh. hr:ilth' d1c,h~ served at a cost and '>IX'l'd more often associated with MacDonald's or Wendy's. AndJUSt how fast 1s "fast, delicious, nutnt1 ous. food? "Well," assert the Hunts. "we don't think Mac Donald's can do 11 any faster. And they certainly can't do it as ~II." The Hunts also pomt out that the proxam- ll) to the Good Earth Restaurant allows them to use their special kitchens and on-premises bakery to keep the Annex well supplied with fresh foods. This advantage plus the deh style service of the Annex keep the overhead low. These savmgs are then passed oo to the customer m lower pnces The Good Earth Annex fronts the Center lawn and promenade of the V 11lage with shade trees and umbrella graced tables creating a pleasant setting for European-style sidewalk dining. This ambiance 1s espcc1aly pleasing to Olga Hunt whose French and Spanish ac~nted speech reveals her European ongjns. Open for lunch seven days a week. the Annex offers daily specials such as Potato Florentine and Seafood Quiche. Regular menu items include sandwiches such as cashew chi~en and almond tuna. fresh vegetable soups. fruit and salad bar selecuons. stuffed potatoes. and such amemt1es as the new Good Earth low fat frozen yogurt and freshly baked breads. pastries and cookies. Jkverages run from Juices. mineral water, soft dnnks, coffee and tea to capue<:mo. beer. wme and champagne. Every Saturday and Sunday the Anne" features hve music. and each Sunday there 1s a special Good Earth Champagne Brunch for only $7.95 Dunng the month of August, how- ever. the Brunch is being offered at an introductory pnce of $5.95. and the Good Earth low fat yogurt at only fl . Good Earth Annex hours are Monday through Friday 11 to 7. Saturdar 10to1; Sunday 1010 3 For more 1nformauon caJJ 557-8433. GRINDER GOURMET COFFEE SHOPPES Wbt'• die Cate'1? There's no hmit to the new seafood creations at the Grinder Gourmet Coffee Shoppes, for moutb-watenng taste, freshness and value! Dunng July and August each of the 20 Gnnder Restaurants in Orange County and Los Angeles will be fea tunng "the Seafood Festival." What's the catch? Broiled Fresh Salmon topped with herb butter, fried or baked potato, only $5.95. Or the new Seafood Pasta. featunng bay shnmp, clams. sea legs and thin IJnguine 1n a delicate tomato cream sauce. only $4.95. Both include choi~ of soup or salad. Other seafood specialties include Seafood or Tuna Salad. fresh Cabfomia style fish, topped with avocado. and rich home- made Clam Chowder. Available all day. E.tch nem 1s prepared wllh care and at1ent1on to detail so when It comes to servmg. 11 will taste as good finny creatures themselves may help prevent heart disease. July and August at the Gn nder Gourmet Coffee Shoppes. What a catch! Good for your pocketbook and your heart. 20 locauons throughout Los Angeles and Orange County. Call 1-800-468-2333 for the Gnnder nearest you BENIRANA NEWPORT BEACH S.mmer SaUJ Fnttval There's somethinc new under ttK blue tile roof~oih.ana in Newpon Beach -Roclfy Aou's Sushi Palace where the .. Summer Sushi Ft1tival" is now underway. The ''FC1t1var· offers all-the-sush1-you-<:an-eat for $10. ------------------------=====---=--===-===========-• as Mother Nature aotended. Bcn1hana 1s presenting this sushi extravaganza as an introductory special to the Sushi PaJacc Sushi Festival price 1s m effect at both lunch and dmner through August 22. Sushi Palace luncheon hours arc from J 1·30 unul 2:30. Monday through Fnday Open every night for dinner, hours are Monday through Thursday 5·30 unul 10:30, Fnday 5:30 until 11. Saturday 5 until 11. and Sunday 5 until 10. ~~ \fr-. ' 11 SfAGE SHOWS. MUSIC & MAGIC. DIXIE BANDS II Anctiored 1n the beautiful Newport Harbor. this maiestic paddlewheeler provides the perfect backdrop to c.elebrate yoor speoal occaSIOf'l. It's a rare combination of succulent entrees. famous desserts. muS1C1ans, magicians and enter- tainers Plus the authentic charm of the American 18(X)'s make yoor dining experience a truly special occasion Ooen dc11ly lei' lunch dtnne< .Jnd Sunday bfuoch localed at 151 East Co.isl Hll!hWay Newport BeaCh (714) 6755790 San ~o 477 Cammo Del Rio South (619) 298-4666 21 Dally Piiot Oatet>ook/ Fnday. July 25 1986 If good taste and great value are not enough 10 lure fish lovers to v1s1t thc Grinder during "the Seafood Festi- val,-what about your health? Now. medical evidence suggests that the (See REST AUR.ARTS/Paae :i 1) The Moat Popular Talked About Classic Comedy erfOl'mances Tuesday thru un y, Saturday and u~y Brunch 3503 8. Harbor 81Yd., a.m. Ana, CA, ¥1 Mile North Of San Otego Fwy. 50 Years of Fine Italian Dininc E:.ntoy our cuisine from Central and Northern Italy Every meal Is served with old world charm. a generous view of Newport Bay. valet parkmg and complimentary boat slips Piano bar and full me nu until I a m Make plans now to dine with us this evening Call t7 I 41 642-7880 for re~rvat1ons or Information about our bity view banquet facilities 3131 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach c I all1 {a I ~ OutOnTheTown RESTAURANTS ••• FromPaCe20 Bcnihana in Newport Beach is at Mar. has introduced daily lunch for Orange County, the mstallalJon of cooked by the: chef on the outdoor ly revi5ed to offer some reg>oo.all> 4250 Btreh S~ near John Wayne service, Monday through Friday. a charcoal broiler on the peuo to gnJI inspired and classic It.a.ban d1she$ .\1rpon Phone 9SS-0822. Like the dinner menu served seven provide Italian style barbecue en-The lt.aban styk barbecue selcc-rclauvely unknown an tblS country CAJOIEL(rS nights a week. the new midday ball of trees. uons an betng o~ as an alt.crna-Three or four DJlhtly ~ arc DallyLadlSenlce fare features the restaurant's award-These dady items. manoatcd 10 a nvetothcrqu.larmenuforthosewbo determined by lhc avadabdity of With an option to dine inside or winning Italian and Continental special blendofllalian spWC$. include want to keep midday dinina on t~ fresh . btgb quality ingrechents. alfresco on the flower-filled patio. cuisine. a variety of fresh fish, meat and filhna but bgbt sade. Carmdo's 1s at 3S20 E. Coast Hwy, < armclo's restaurant in Corona dcl The lunch service also marks a first poultry dashes. all of which arc Canndo'schnncr menu was rccicnt-Corona dtl Mar For rcservauons call ~r;:::::::c:==::::::1c::::===z====::z:====z===:::::s====:::z::,;:::;,r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~6'>1922 1714 Placentia Costa Mesa Call 645-8091 for information WE PROMISE YOU GOOD CHINESE FOOD I UNCHfS DINNERS TROPICAL COCK T Ali..$ BANQUET r ACILI nrs CA TEAING ~000 TO GO OPEN 7 DAYS SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON FOOD TO GO Presents LIVE DIXIELAND JAZZ featuring The Bourbon Street Dlx1eland Jazz Group Thursday, Friday & Saturday from 8 p.m DANCING Complete Dinners Only $4.95 Broasted Chicken- Our Specialty ·MMihl , ~ V.:,.,,,, • ,~ •• •nd•••food Happy Hour Special 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm Combination Dinner A lusdous combination plate that Includes tempura, chicken, a choice of yellowtall or oysters, rtce, mlso soup - and morel SS. 1355 VJa Udo • Newport Beach • (714) 675-0575 Lunch I I :JO ..,. -2:00 pm Dinner 5:30 pm -I I :30 pm RIUAI FOR •BS ntAI 1111 75 .75 t.50 .95 Dally Pilot Oa1ebo<>k/ Friday, July 25. 1i86 Z I '(llltOnThe Town AMERICA 4250 Martinicale Way. Newport Rt-sch. 8.13 0080 Open 11 Am. I :30 a.m Amtrican regional 1·oolt1nl(. lunch "(.>t'Ctal~. happ_y huur 1-'resh l.1\f' Maint lu~ttr New York -.tvlf' p11111 l·c1«1ke<I 1n d hrtck ov .. 11 N~ar O.C' Airport off Mal·Arthur I.ate d1ninjl( entert111nmP11t Hi-.. t.'r \8l1uni. an·f'ptf'<I c·a.~uul IOl'IJl<'n '"e Ml' \,Al'. T HE BA RN Have the pnml' 11( v11ur lif1· • t ...... inr frnm thl' i>1tent11ve 'lfl 1lf•m menu Sttako;, <;t'afuod. HH(.l Mu111tn cf11o h~ mcludinic "8lad har. and .-iore \.\t.,tern lh11rm and <mmtrv nm bumn! Hreakfu.,t M :1 Ii :111 I I 110 I.um h M F 11 oo 2.;10. I ltnnN i n11(hts from :, {,10 p m H1111p-.. h1111t M F i :lO i p m Satellite d1~h Ltvl' t'lltt.'rl11mmtnl and dam tnl( Ban q1u•1 lac 111111·~ I l<iMl Ht-dh1ll. I ll'<fln 'l~1~I 1)1 f I T H E ORIGI NAL BAR!'J FARMER STEAKHOUSE Yes! They art the origin11l Famous for their ont' and a half pound PorterhouM' 11t.eaks and featuring display broil mg Proudly <;4>rVml( for 24 yea.ni. Lunrh Mon Fri 11 'l Om ner nightly Mon. Fn. from :) run. Sat.. & Sun from 4 p.m WOI Hnrhor Blvd . f'MtA Mf'>\8 64'2 9777 BOB BUR NS Superb 111 the word u1 de11enlw tht>< fine dinmit ei1t.abli11hment. Sc>rv10g Newport for 18 yesn1, ~pen11.lmr11( 10 AnltU-'I re1M'd ~ef. the finl'llt you ran l(et AIM> featuring frf"'h fi'lh "Pal and ch1cktn The lmen <·overed t.ahlei.. randlf'll and frl"lh n11wf'M1 add to the elegllnce. with ho11th11 and high hack cha1rx fnr pnvac-y. f'lickenn11 l11nttrns and d1W11cal music capture the charmml( 11.nd warm atm1.sphPrf' Open fnr lunch, dinner and their "plend1ftrm111 Sun dav hrunch F:11A'n111ve wine h"I :17 f'Mh1on l11land f>.44 2030 BRISTOL BA R A GRILi. • Al Ho liday Inn Trad1tto011lly an all American favorite place to eat and price<! for family dm1ng. ";very thmg from JU•<'Y 11t.ead11 and d\op!I to 11ptt1aJ <"htcken d111heiii and fresh e,('llfr>nd Rountf'()IJll "81ad har Sumpluuu" d111lv lundu•on huff Pt Open daily for clm1ng 1mcl nw·ktJul" :11 :H Hr111111I St . <'0111.11 Mf'"n f>f>7 :1000 OJLLMAN'S Th• Dillman family 111 f11m11u~ fur th•rr trad1ttonlll w11.rm h• p11al1ty and fine food F10Ht primr rih in BalboM and frl't<h fi11h d1ttl) ('om LJ?lflt. dmnl'r 11~·1al11 d111ly fo'r1!_t1dly 11erv1a! and a fun, delightful at m01phere Open daily for lunch and dinner. Brunch Sat. and Sun. 801 E BalOO... 673· 7726 THE HIDE-AWAY Tired of eating out at placea with no privacy? Search no more! The Hide away provideti privacy with 11.11 booths and partitiona, perfect for bu.smeM luncheoNI and romantic dininl(. All newly decorated offering • reining atmoephere. The special tiH are 8e8food and stub. Af fordable dining for the whole fam 1ly Variety of d&ly 11pec1al.a. Home madt llOUpe and aaucell. B.er & wine served also. 5874 FAinger at Sprilll( dale in Marina Shopping Vill~e. Huntington Beach 840 6618 J OLL Y ROGER Cret1t American food and at tht be8t pn<'t'll The Jolly RC)fter hu alway• hec-n known as a Kood family value re11uurant. The menu feature11 brealtflll>t, lunch and dinner with 11 large variety of dishes lo ch<IOM' from From egg duihes, griddle C'akes, burgers. Mndw1ches. aa.lad11 to mmplete dinners of seafood, 11U:alu, chicken and deliciou11 de11 'lertll Family owned for a::, year» with the fritndht'flt ~rv1ce m tc1wn 400 S Coast Hwy , Laituna ~ach. 494 ;u:11 GREEK MtNE'S TERRACE Menf'" ferrace '" n fom1h 11wm·d rf"l~urant. With authent;c CrPPk fcHid made JU~l ai. 1l "' al homt' F:nJllV our Souvolak1, MouAAaka 11nd Mt>111"11 fomou" H11lcl11v11 in the Al rn1..,phert' of 11 ( :ri·rk 'I 11vern11 "f>f'r111l• r·h&nl(f rl111lv Cr1mplt-tt· Wint li•t. ind11clm11 WIOf'' or<:rl'f'fl' Sf.r'l111( l11n• h 11ncl cl1nner l.1m1tt-d ""''''\ 11t11mM :!:lf1.I:! 1':1 Toro H1111d rt 11. l':t Turn K;ICJ 14!18 ('att'ru111 11vA1h1hle V,MC' CALFDRNIAN PASTEL'S Tht newest event m dining 1n thl' Ntwport area. Featuring a special bltnd of culinary creatioM from C'ahfomta and the rNt of the world Such tantalizing 1tem11 111. marinated 11hrimp lllld M:a.1Jopt1 m a !finger vina1grelt.e salad. Mouth wa~ring pa.st.a like angel hair with 11eafood and fre.h t.om11to P1UA11 baked m an authentic It.a.hen wood burning oven, the only one in N~w p«>rt And a variety of c:riUadH ~~<"ialt1e11 l>mnt'r aerved daily (d11tlt'd Monday) 1ind HAPPY Hour. Rt'&erv11tion11 rrcomm1mded. 1520 W Codt H1ihwav. Ni-wport Bt'ach. 1714) f.4~ 7167 8 \JBBLES BAI.ROA C'l.UR H11hhlH 1 1t trl'11~11rf', 11 .lO'i; ~tyll' '4Up~r r luh tfonl' with f11ntJ111y 1md wit. Thf' Champiij(nl' 1ct' hu<"keta 1.11~ 12 Dally Pilot Datebook/ Friday, J uly 25. 1986 ehaped hke top hat.II and the light firtwea like IDMtini glauea. The walls are hung with original 1930'a a.rt and the restrooms are true to deco 1tyle. The cuil!ine combines French and Italian element.a in a homey Amtrican conte1t.. Open Cor dinner Mon Thurs 5:30 10:30 p.m.; 5-11 p.m Fri., Sat, Sun Sun- day Brunch 10 a.m.-:l p.m ~r vationa are auggested. Dinner from S9.95 t.o SI S.95. Full Bar. ViM, Ma.tt terCard, American Expreu Buh· blea it loca~ at 111 Palm Street 1n BaJlxwa •l tht' corntr or Palm Anti Balboa. C'aJI 675 909:l INDIAN RO Y AL KHYBER RESTAURANT IOOO North Bruitol StrHt, Newport Beach, (al Jamboree I 714 75i 5200 Lunch Dinner, exquLSit.e dining in the midst of a gleaming white TaJ Mahal ou~ Featuring award win- ning northern Indian cu111ne elegAntly preeented in the Moghul tradition Hora d'oeuvre&, eerved Mon-Fri 5:00-6:00, Lunch Mon Fri 11-2;30, Sat & Sun champagne brunch 11 300. Dinner Sun-Thu111 5:30-10:30, Fri Sat until I 1 :W: Re · ervationa accept.ed. M&11ter<'ard, Vi11&, American E1presa. Gourmet catering, weddmg11. privatt part1t'll, 11nd rorporat.. 11<"cnmodal1on11 ITAUAN CARMELO'S This ultra 11m11.rt haven of excep- tional Italian and Continental Cu1Sme 1s one of the more rewarding placetl to dint. Fresh put.a and special "h1<ht" aauces are carefully prepared by three of thr fine11t Ital· ian chefs. P18no bar en~!Uinment <"Ompltmentl the fun 11tm0'\phere Alfre9Co d1n1og (weather per m1tting) Open Tuel' Sun from 6:00 p.m for dinntr. :l520 E Coast Hwy, Corona del Mar. 675 1922. DEt'Al.C'0'1 "Uomt-of tlw 1111 v11u c1trl' 111 t'lll 1Ultlp&11tu 11nd 111ppa har" ~ 9f. Since 1911a1rad1tmn m lhrt-t' ntlt'' and two rnuntne'l. Truly 11 fnm1ly re11tauranl wllh family 1»rict-1< Om ner11 S4 9fi to $11.91l Veal, rh1cken. cal:iont!I, c11lamari, p1111ta11, ll<'ttmp1 heer & wine lu1t11 Open for lunch and dmnen Sund&)''ll fpaturt "Smit A Long" with Tony, a rtally fun rut~ <'IMed Monday11. 270 P..a111 17th ~trrt. llill(rt'n Square, C'o!IW Me"8 Re~Nvt1tinn11 722 92fi4 MARCELLO'S Tbi11 award winner offers an n · tensive menu 1pecializing in put.u. veal, cioppino and their fam~ handmade piua. FAteblillhed ainOt' 1973, thi1 family owned N!ll.turant has captured the hearts of Italian food lovere 1.unch Mon f'ri .. Din ner 7 n11htA a wHk 17502 R.•ch et Sl11ttr, HuntlnJCton Beach. 842-05()[1 VII.LA NOVA A bt'auttf11l t.11\ view rrr11t" lht> rom1ml1f >f'tllnli' that h1111 m11de the \t1ll11 Nuvu 11 "11rw•1111 kmrl of plart>" fuPovf'r fifty y1•11"' S111Jf>rh '1w11nr (mm ('ent r11l 11nrl "lnrt hl'rn Jt11h M!rved m Old World charm. E1 ttns1vt wme last Dinner niithtly Pianfl har. Full mtnu till I 00 a.m ;\Lii Wl'flt Coa.'lt Hwy. Newport Reach. 642· 7880. . ... LI'S RESTAU RANT If you love Chinese food, you're 11ure to enJOY dining htrl', u Li'!I prom 111H truly authentic Chint'l't' foe><! The menu ofCera 1 w1dt var1t'l\ of e1ot1c dishes. from a la canl' to lomb1nation11 includinit Cantont>W & S?.echuan style. Breathtakinic decor in a 11uprtmely beaullful at mosphere. Tropical drinh to quench your lhir'!t Open qeven dey ... a wttlc for lunch and dmner 8961 Adams, Huntington Hui h 961 91 lfi. 314 N Bee(h Blvd . An11he1m. 827 1'210 T H E LOTC~ i-:ntt-r l ht> Ortt-111 111rl l'llperienn I lu excellence 11f Mandarin 11nd "\1t< hwan C'u1,1n11' •\ulht:>nl 11 I t11 nf''" rh~hes esptnalh prep11rf'<I h\' mB~ln rhef l.1u ThP Lnlll' r 11n "fff>r rulinary ma11tt'rpit<'l''-tu \11ur hk1111< Thi.' lovely dmmR 1tre11 1s clom1nalt'd w11h ii•cture' of thP l.oltJ' nmr.tr the ~vmhul of purtl\ IO ( htne'W! C'Ulturf' f:nJO\ fint ( h1 llt''t' din1nl( ai. wl'll as wine, 11p111!• 11nd hosp11alit\ at lhl' L11t11~ 1 .... rntrd in Jfarbor C enter 111 :z:mo Harlim Hlwl in C'o-;la Mt"<a ('1111 'l·l'1 ITll M ANDA RIN GOl'RMET A t rulv '!pec1ul plare 111 dmr t ht· M11nd11r1n Cuurmet hat> heen ll i:ul<I 11<A...rd wmnt'r 1111d uwner. Mu hlll'I ( h1anl( wa11 votf'l'I Ht'llaurateur of t hr· \ear Spt'tllllttinjl m Ptkllll( Sl1ttn1<ha1. Surhwan and H11nnn c 111~1ne11, lhe'I' uffer an array of t.ll"li ll.l<lt''< indudtnl( Pektnl( fl11fk, clumplml(s. wholr fo1h and rno rf' >1u111ptioul' du.hei. i-;lel(ant at mo11phtrt. 1mperrahlr qtrv1rt.' anri u1en,1ve wine h'll 1.'lClO Ad11m ... < '1.-.tn Me a >411 rn:r; CONTINENTAL MEDITERRANEAN ROOM Airporter Inn Ho te l ( 11nl(ental and 'tdudl!d from t:i1 h11w airport ~urr1111ndtnRS Tht' M1>diterranean Room 111ferll ~uptrh n111lmtntal cu11ont for lunch. din nrr end Sunday brurll h Tup tnlt>r t•11nmenl niichtl~ in thl' <'abarrt l.rntnl(f' The Captam'" Tahlt 111 111.1t•11 for dminic 24 houre. Perfect for w11tch1ng \11hforn1a eun11elll 111 th" Fltl(ht neck IA11mge. Thr AirP<1rter Inn 1~ lor11t<-d at 1R700 M11cArthur Ahd tn Irvine IUI 2770 P lJFFIN'R 11.n udventur.-m natural eating Fre~h quality inicred1ent.11 prepartd 111 11 '1mplr yet rltitl.llil wa.v Award w1111111tl( rPc1pe~ (;1mlrn M'tlln.ft ma l•:11mpt'11n Cafe 'tvle atmMphert 1·.1~11111 hrf'akf1111t 11nd lunrh F11rin11I dinmic Im d11111er ~un Th11r11 7 ,, 111 10 11 m Fri & Snt ltll 11 µ m I0'1t1 F I '011~1 llwv , ( 'ort1na clf'I Mut ~140 I ;,7·1 HIVI M tA lh·ltn 111 i:r111111\IM ~" IH Ill IUI Plf'~t111t mt 1m11tr nt mo"phf'rf' Ki pnth flft'purt'cl c·•111l111t'nt.al d1~ht' Ii\ ( 'hl'f fli1 hllrrl u .. ranf'r, "'"' f• l'l' 11 Thi• 11wurd w111nin1t ""' tau rant also offel"ll an u~nalve wine Ii t. and ucels in tableaide prep· arat111n!I and flambes Open for Lun<"h 11 :10 3 p.m .. Dinner from 5 p.m ExlelJent banquet facilities. nu,.ed Sun and holidavw !i:l:t:i S Hrn.tol Co11t8 Mesa 540 :nwo LE CHATE AU A tou<"h nf the French countryside has comt to Newport Beach, with the opening of the Country Sidt Inn al tht corner of Bri1tol and Redhill Avenue. Fashioned afttr a Euro pean bed and brulitfut inn. emph111111mg a per90nal touch, the Country Side Inn ill the bome or Le.. C"hateau ~-1taurant Featurinl( fa11hionable California cu11ine with 11 Frtnrh flair, menu llpt'Clalities include Crtpeo; Aux Framboi&n, C'obh Salad Parisiennt and Tour nedos R0Mtn1 Rreakfut, l\lnch and dinner are '\trved daily, beginninic at 6:00 am ('Qmplimentary hor11 d'oeuvre<1 arf' served n1ehtly in the Loungt For reaervauon11 pleaJ11t call f.49-0:lOO CAFE FLF.l'RI Tekl' 11 -.eat 111 ( &fe ~'lturi for break fa,1, lunt h ur chnnl'r 1-:nl''V an ex 'flll'llt' t I\\ tronmrn1 mnurnced b\. f r~11t h t111u h lfot Ja77 \fonda' 1 hr••1111h ~ ricltt\ from fl 00 1111 9:0<1 I' 111 1ind .1n 11111. landtn1t wh1tl' i:imt• lm111d1 makP th111 Cafe tht pl11fl• 111 m<·1·t Clprn i d11v" u wtek 1, 1111 .1 m 111 111 p m \1oderateh pm t•d 1~>4111 :\lr11 Art h11r Hlvd '''"'l>"n H•·iuh 17h _!1101 U; MIDI :O-t•\t<rlll thml(• m11kP tht~ nwnrd wm nm1t h1rlt-&lo\11\ trul\ '<flt.'nul \.\ahtr. tl1t·11 ""'I'" c·hel lrn1n1•rl m "''ml' of t h1· l•ht huu ... es, Pale1 t St M11rit1, f'l,11t-I >'load. Raur au Lar, /.unrh \u1h .. nt1l cu1~1nr l'r11\t-nralt-~easonal l(ourmrt It'll t1vRli. 11 Sunday hnmrh 11<1 un1qut 11 " like ~tt-pp1nic back 1n time to an t'ttt wht'n txcf'llenct of fO<Jd wa~ m11tlherl h\. itt>nernu .. hu1p1tahty, a ho~p1Uil1l\' r8rf'I\· found lht'<# days J..,n Mar1n1 and Walttr m 1he1t Frem·h rnuntrv home. Lunch, din nN nnd Sunduv brunch. Banquet fut·il1t1t'•. 1'11,..ed MundaVlt 3-421 V11 l.1d11. ~f'Wport Heac h 67:1 4004 IVEXICAN Ml CASA Their food "' hke n lrtp 111 Mu1co' H<>'lp1talit v l<"t'" haod rn hend with their m11tto, 'Mt ('a11a ""Su C.11."8 or my hou t 111 your hou~ f:Stab lished 11mcl' 1972. 11 ·~ no 14e<:rtt frienda e!lJOY dinml( here Open rlnilv from 11 a m. for Lum·h. Din ner · 11nd C11ck\ail11 1-:ntf'rt31nml'nt Wf'rl Sun night.a m tht Rurru Room l9fi f; 17th ~I . <'r"'UI M~ 645-7626. JAPANESE CALIFORNIA B EACH ('ahforn11 Ht'aC'h Rt> t1111r11nt " nnt 11( '°ljtwpurt'i; mof'l conttmporor\ rfl' .. t1111r11nl1<. f p11t urin" t>iqu ,,.1lt Jap8nt'~i' '111111111 m< ludmK "u"h1 1<f'11foocJ 11nd t1tt'ak11, rnf'kf'11 thtM a trulv pll·"'urehlt• d1111n11 u1>t•nr11t'f' l.<1<0Altcl 11 '1'.1!1!> V1u l.1d11 tn \Jpw r>urt Rtut h l.1J11t h hourw Mon t'rt 11 Ill l :Ill, cJ1nner .• Ill 11 on 1 d&>" II 11\f'l•k lflll'PY hour "P.-• 1111 • :10 f1.:w All m~or credu tArd" .1r <"Pptl.'d Call 61'• t1f17'1 rm 1nf11r matifln OutOnTheTown THAI THE TBAI TOUCH "'~I' into the wonderlul world of I h111land The splendor of Ttw lUl!ont and elegant dining it found hcrf' at Thai Touch Cuisine. Your hu"tA are Pranee and Sonpak IJoungcbak and Lhey will eerve you 11n eut.hentic Thai meal whether ~·our tut.es lean toward the mild or th,. traditionally spicy. Thai Touch ·~ 11 little out of the TrlY. but well wurlh the find. Open for dinner 7 nighta and for lunch daily e1cept -;unday. Thal Touch Cuisine it lucauid in the Newport Hillt Shop- ping Cent.er wbue San Miiuel Drive enda et Ford Ro.d. 2616 San ~•KUel Dr. 640-0123. SEAFCXX>'S'TEAJ<B ANTHONY'S PIER 2 fht Southern Calif. Re.taurant \\ rileni voted t.hit one the winner of tht best value restaurant.a. Their "afood is the talk of the town with :U1 15 freab flab daily. CBS Tele- \'1~1on cltuma they bave the beet happy hour in Oranre County. Menu hu calorie count for the weight coruicioua. Open Friday, Sat- urday and Sunday for dinner. Located on the beautiful Newport Bay at 103 N. Bayaide Dr. 640-5123. CAFE LIDO Cafe Lido it1 Newport Cannery Vil- lqe't only supper club. lt'a locauid on Balboe Peninsula Cafe Lido it well known for IU rrtth seafood aelect1on1 and contemporary cuitline, preparN! by Chef Francia The warm, intimate and coiy am· biance of duaty rOM and burgundy decor create a perfect atmoephere (or your dining experience. Cafe Lido ia a1ao the rk1pient of the Pre1tigious Southern California Ratauranl Writ.era' Silver Award. Cuual attire. Dinner mghtly until midnight. Live JaU na1hUy. Call 676·2968 for reeervatione, THE CANNERY Thia biatoric waterfront landmark in Newport'• Cannery Villqe fea· turee fr•h local seafood and F..ut· ern beef Comiatently rood .ervice, open for Lunch, Dinner, Sun. Champqne Brunch and Harbor Crui..-. Entertainment ni1htly and Sun. aftemoom. Enjoy the lounge food galley-11uperb clam chowder! 3010 LaFayette. 675-6777 CRAZY HORSE STEAKHOUSE Country dinin1 with clus' Authen- tic west~rn decor reetauranl and llaloon, featuring prime rib, fresh seafoods, and their famou11 pan 11ut.eed steak.ti. Lunch: Mon-Fri ner reeervat.iona guaranteed). Danc-ins and live music in the ta.loon. Dyer Rd. Es.it/Newport Fwy. Santa Ana. (714) 549~1512. THE REX RESTAURANT Locauid on the oceanfront acrou from the Newport Beach pier, The Rei ia the Oranre Cout'• moet exclUJive aeafood reeteurant. Well lnwwn for freeb Hawaiian 1ourmet fish selectiona and 11pec:1alizingin 1weet Channel laland abalone, ten- der veal and prime meatt. The Wai;Jll ambiance of 1.he padded bootha, gothic paintinp and the well at-OckN! wrne racb lend to Rex's convivial atmoepMre. The Rn Restaurant 111 the choice of locala u well al vi111tora Recipient of the prestigfous T ravel-Holiday award Cuual/ele1•nt attire. Lunch, dinner. Call 676-2566 for reaervations. Valet parking. TALE OF THE WHALE E1perience a •~P beck into lime to a place where you can dine at your own leisure. EnJOY the rom&n<ll or old Newport with a panoraauc !.-J view. Exci~ your aenaea wit.h ibeir eenutional .-food and traditional favorit.iee. Breakfut 7 a.m., Mon.· F'ri., Lunch 11 -4 Mon.-Pri., Dinner 4·11 Mon.·Sat. &t. and Sun. Brunch 7-4, Oya~r Bu Fri., S.t. & Sun Banquet facilitiea up to 600. 400 Main St., Balboa. 673·4633 THE ALLEY RESTAURANT Ideally located al the corner of PCH and Balboa Blvd.. The Alley RMtaruranl off era meals with all the frethneu and innov•tion of Jerry Overland'• oriJjnal "Alley West" of ten years ago. Locah will remember it.a previoue location at the Newport Pier. Cozy boothl, mirrored pillaB and 1uuned gl.us, the new Alley restaurant lives up to a reputation as the friendli•t place w enJOY reuon· ably priced CIOCktaill, rine winn, lunch, .dinner or Sunday Brunch. Jerry and P•tay Overland have creatNI an elegantly comfortable rn- taurant with a menu emphasizing fresh seafoodB, continental Rpecial· ties and California cuisine. Vi1it thLS Newport Beat'h landmark. You may even recotcniu the facn of 11ome of your foend11. Dinner .erved every evenin1 from 5.30, Daily lunch 1pec:1al from 11 :30 and Sunday brunch from 10·3 RNervat1on11: 646-9126. GINO'S ON TBE RILL Almott a Cc.ta Mesa landmark where fnend1 and memoriee mfft Gino'• isn't an Italian Reatauranl, but a reetaurant being run by a (locaJ) Italian. Even though they .erve many Italian 1tel'OJI, they a1Ml tlffer a large variety of other itema on their menu Known for "Honest food and friendly service," Gino's features 1 varied menu with emphuaa on quahty and reuonable pnces. Cocktail hour with m~rf!lt· lnlf notiona •t 4:30 PM and Piano Bar Wednesday thru Saturday ~­ ginning al 8:30 PM. Super fun Sun day Champagne Brunch 9 3 Located at 428 E. 17th Street.. Cc.ta M .... Call 650·1750 for reser vationa, directiona or what.ever. ., = -:: GRAND DJNNBJl TIDATEB lmpn.ive dininf and pro(.-on..I product.Km. .,. 1un to pleMe ..ch time you vi.tit. The estntordinary buffet o«era rout baron or beef, sl.ued bam with• fruit aauce. c.o,. 1ia chicken with peacbea and slue and the Mahi Mahi ia ~ in • peaaant aauce. Tri-cob fettucdn.i and cream ia • rNI favorite. Enjoy dmner and a play toniJbt! Grand DmMr "l'bMc.ar locei.d with.in the Grand Hotel in Anaheim et l HoteJ Wey. Call 772·7710. HARLEQUIN DINNER THEATER Every CU1tomer can be eii:pected to be tneted like a celebrity TM theater offen ecnunptioua meala with top productiona in an elegant atmoephere. The sumptuoua buffet 1ncludee rOMt baron of beef. chicken and f..tl diahea, .putu, 11Jada. vqetabl•, and 1anfuJ dee aerta. The Sat. and Sun. brunch 1ncludea a variety ot eg dia.bea Tiw Celebrity Terrace ii available for privau dminc. The mc:hvidually decorauid priva~ b.Jcony rooma overlook the 450·.eet boneihoe 1hapt'd rrwn room. The Harlequin i11 located at 3503 S. Harbor in Santa Ana. Call 979 7550. GUIDE TO ORANGE I :c.•AST R• Ml~I IRANTS ~ ...... (£1 ..... ~ ~ !I ~ 9' q,, ~ -e ,~ ~ ·~ 'l ~~ ·~ ~ ~ ~ ·~ ;:: ~~ .~ §' .,,~~ ~ ~ ~ . "" § 'fl,; -!' ~ C.i ~~ ~ <::::) .... ~ 0 ~'fl ~ ~ 't.'tl ~-;;'l$' Restaurant c: """' ~ AIRPORTEI ·~N tLO;f.,EL IH'.'M M•Ant.ur rvirw 2 (I Coo tmen La I S9 ~-Sl 8 9:> $-47:>U:> $650 Sl050 from iJ 00 4.7 • • • I ()..6()() * THE AL~EY t.'1r:i sanst5 95 S3 50·SIO 50 M 50 $10 50 * l'.01 P .. ur.. -OM1 Hwy N.-wpon 8"ch &4tl llllfl Spl'C'lalun THE BAR~ Amt' nun from $4 95 from $3 95 $1195 from S2 75 4 30.7 • • * up to ~"'41 R..th1ll un 2!19 01 IS 600 BRISTO~ BAR a GmLL·Holiday Inn 1111 Rn.11>1 m1A M,_ 5S7 Amt>ncan $6 95 $12 95 $3 95-$7 00 $89~ $2 00-$5 00 4.7 * • up to 400 TUE f.ANNERY IOIO l..1 ~""'"° Nl'WIJ(W1 8Nirh 875 S777 Seafoud $119:> $199!> S4 75 S8 95 Sil so S8 50 4-6 30 * * up to 7l'I • CRAZYHORtE STEA~ffOUSE ~i:r~ $9 95 Sl6 95 $3 95·19 95 Holidays 5-7 • up to I \AA Antnkt><>t"'""· nta Ane !14 1)12 * • 200 ,, DIJ.-LMAN'rt,. 111'11 . R.tlboa e.1 873 7728 i\ti'wncan $7 95-121 9:> $3 ~ $89:> S3 2:> $4 95 • 15-4!i * DEFAL~o·~ 1~n A £ I th I c~ M-722.1264 Italian $-4 9:> 11 19:> S3 9:>-$6 95 from 16115 ... 7 ~& 10 60 · LE CHATEAU 12\ S Rn.olnl N~wpt1t1 S.-h funch S2 :IO 113 95 S2 ()() $59~ $1 25 S:l2:1 4 30-8 .. • 11).3()1) LE MIDI 14ll V,,, Udo N-pnn O..erh 117~4904 t'l't'och from 58 50 from '5 50 from $12 ~ 10-60 LI' Ch1l'l4"9C' 17 00 $12 00 $2 75 '5 50 up to Rlllll Adama Hununcion 8"<-h 182-1111~ 150 ~~DA~IN~OURHET cl.amt <ll\a ,. )4(). I 37 Chi..-from StOOO from $4 50 • ~'1£..,W:J:>:tJununrton a-+. 142 ~~ Imm $4 85 '"'"' $3 2:> II• rr ;. ltaltan "llh Ml CAS~ •la~ a la ca1'U! 296 E l'hh l , C.111 ,.._ IM~T$2111 MexK:an & rombo &oombo :> 7 • up to • 65 fiA.Pa ~'tr!!~ Bdl NO~ Ame' nun S2 95 $695 $2 8!i '6 95 $1 9~ $4 ~ 3 30 6 * ~~~l~'lwy H.-wport a.ch~ 7Ul1 ConuMntal $5 7:> SI~ 00 ~runa Soon ~-7 • ft~U~~~ ~~~ORT ~'?~ from sa~ rrom $4 2~ * • u~to • Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday. July 25. 1986 ta ... , 24 ·ou I The Belgian W&lt1e at Soutb Coast Plau VW.te T be Rae re•t••r•at• of So•tb Coa•t Plaza ••It• •P oae of tlle rat••raat capital• of tlle world. Few coaatrle• coald eq••l tbe a .. ber of q••llty ral••r•al• loated wltllla tlll• •lagle regloa." ••• P•lll Walllcb, Noted R .. t••••t Critic/ A•tllor. South Coast Plaza KAPLAPi'~ IJVIEl.A I ESTAlll.A NT BELGIAN WAPPL!ISN UP'ST.UTC'IO~ UOMPA~Y COPA DEOIO • IM11vro W1na 1~1 Ll'vl'h • rM11vro Wm~ l•t l..l'vl'll Whl'rP thr wmld'a 11rr11tr•• Boob!(>,., C'orftt Hout, C'alt fo:1gh1 rq1mal Mu1c:an Retail Center (Mall) N,.w \uric IJf-11 Y,, ttkdeVl! i South COllllt f' eu etnct ruJJtomr"' dtn!' Homt of lhl' f'mr luncht11 and d1nnr,.... cu 111 nt11 and food of I hr MW Ln9. "•lurdll) i to 7, 'unda\' 1967 C"onttnl'nt.al icourmtt fanwt1c tttlir1an warn .... with bt>t'r end w1nt 'lf'n u,. culture11 and culuv1t1•)1\A of A~ATO'\ ESPREO,!,O fAPE litu6 M< \. ~o 91.J22 cl&Mu prtparat 111n or vul four "'Kit omtltt.i., 11nd L111r tnttrt.a1nmtnl l'Vtr California WHkda) ·I B111lr.ck'A \.\ml( .!nd IA-vl'll fi•h. uctlltnt winr list ~U?4'rh aandwicht' A frtdn 11nrl ~aturdo frum M lunchtun 11 :lO to 2<\0, Ir alt..n "•'ortf'<i LA BAGUETTE Wl'l'kda)'ll and Saturd11v fam1~ ()f>f'ratf'd rt•l.Aur&nl ~ m to 11 pm M11nd1~ and Dtoner Monday Thurtd1y 6 "1ndw11 ht' pe~tr1I'• , .. r\'l"d • IS..1n. W1nic l •t Ltv"ll l.unchl'on 11 :10 LO :1, l ltnnrr Mon ay Saturdav Ii to k, Ul'lide" 11 to Ill. '''IO, Fr1dav and S1turday R frum an 11rl+'n Air Htol.Bl(f' frl'nch cu1111nt'. bakt'd icood• :1 to 11 ('le~ Sundays AK Sundfty R to fl. Mi7 ril86 Wtdnl"'<day and Thur•da\ lo 11 , Sunday brunch 10<)() pwnl W!'t-kd11v~ llllo':I, Sat Weekday11 Ii.~> to 9, t'B, CX', MC', !!Cl', V C.ANDHI INDIAN CUISIN E 11 to 11 . Frida\ 11 tu I l '" :i. Otoner 5 1-0 10 AE, CR, llllloll,S11n l'lt••6 •,4q 0741 S11tu rday 10 1.11 7: S11ndav 10 MO.:US40 T1ndoor1•PK11ll1t"11tr111•d S11turd11\ 10 tu I :1. ~•111rl11v 'I DI MC. SCI', V "'62-2672 l.o 6 7!'>1 1266 SALMAGUNOI in 1 garden aeltto1t Mondav· IJt ltl M<' \. P.112 tri'.li RAC'K BAY IOWINC, & THE LETl'llCE PATCH • IBullock"• Wini. l•t l..l'vl'll Thur8day 6 tn 10, Fr1d11y1nd JOUN POHL'S 8181'10 Rl'"i"ll"'IGfLl 8 SJ>('<'11lty k1tchl'n futurtnit S11turday B to 11 , Sundav fl ('onunental V arie<I nienu • rliul11.c-k 1 Y,,1n11. 1~1 l.t'llPll • tSear11 Wtoit. lat l..('Vl'll home madt IM'.lUP"·d,ut.a. LO 9 buff ti lunch Mnnd1v VERDl'GO'S Betr ind •1ne Hrv1ce . l\mnw~n \.1" larKI' mf'nu '>andw1rh~. ~11lad11. ~oUJl'I tori.I'll, qu1cht. aan w1rhl'll Friday 11 :to t.o 2 :10. M,ur11n d11h..-1rt' lhl' Rrukfut Mond1y Friday •eln 1111n Excrlltnl ~a lad&. Cu1cht frl'•h N1tural and d!'AAl'rt.I F:mphu1~ on Saturd11v ind Sund1v Spl'<'1ahty Wttkd•v• and 730t.o9 Lunch~m J!ff'.il vtl11d h11r l.nc11I ahforn1a 1tylr ru111ne luw M>d1um 11nd no Ch11mh.f nl' Rrunr h 11 'l 111 Saturday lunC'he<>n 11 lo I Mond•y Friday 11 30 LO 2 m.;1(111tot tuut1111<; wine 1111 W~kd&p JO 1119, S.turdav prl'Sl'rv11t11l"\ T1kt out AE.C . )( M< ~P,\' 01nnt'r Mond1v 'iaturdav ~ Oinner Tu-t1v aturd1y ''"" .. r thf' four llt'•ll to 11 t.o 7. ~unday 11 to 6 11trv1rt available Mondev 556 7273 t.o Ill Bar Monday ..,undav 6<ltl to 9 30 Ct<.ec! Sundn ( lr.-tnlCI' r ounl ~ Mon fn f>.45·8:!40 Fnd!fi 11 to 9, Saturday 11 THE GOOD P.AITH & 11 ~· 2, !)und1v brunch IO lo AE, oc. MC. scr . v 11 lo'I S111 II IP 1 '>110 I ~ lo MAGIC PA1'1 to7 .• und1yl:ltc16 MC' V THE GOOD EARTH AN"'IEX 2 :\11 AF:. oc k1<. SCP. v fi62 7~30 I\ AE 'VII • \ 1;11 01 lk Natur1lly healthy frf'lh • INordAtrnm Wtol(. l~t :\.49 9267 fooda; alf tnlrl"t11 ( n11t.urallv 5!'>7 :l70l PLAZA GAIDBN BENNIGAN'!. l~vell !OTH CENTUI Y LTD. raiwd ch1ckl'n, l~tr. Continental din1njj' 1n e • I Near S11ktl f'1fth Avrnu., I AccetUI from m1ll 11nd north • W&rouAl'I C'<Jurt, let Ltvt>ll Vl'J(l'tahlt'sl. M>Upt, 118ladl'. Monet iarden Mll1nfi Frl'•h fuod 1trved with 11 p11rk1nic 8tructurl' Cr~, D1nto1C from m11ll 11anlaj(e s&ndw1rhea, frMen yoffurt Town Center l>euerta creai.d esc uaively "d" or fun Ap1>tot1ur~. ~tukaand fi~h W ttk •)'II po tot or to OOt' of t WO Fre11h bakery Sun. Thur• Ii for the rettaurant 'ttlacl,, '11nr.lw1< hf'•. and except Friday 11 to I 0, r11ilroed can American t-0 10: Fri Sat 8 t.o l l V 1.uncheon Monda~Frid1y murf' "'f'l'kl'nd hrunch Frid1y and Seturd1i 11 t11 ru11me Wl!t'kd1va ind MC I l 30 t.o 2, Dinner uetday \,lon frt 1 I tu2 e m S11t Ill 12. Sunday 11 t.o 9 E. AC S1turd1v 11 30 to 9· Sunday TR! GOOD EAITB ANNEX ALPIEOO'S llSTOIANTE w Thurlld1y 6 :30 9-,;l(); 1 .. .:"m "un•111m 1 .. 111 IX', MC, V 5!>6 122:1 11 :io to fl AF.. Mr.sci'. v Fut tervioe, nutr1t1oua. &TAVEINA Friday and Saturday 6·30 LO pm AP.. \if( \ fl( MO 8822 del1c1ou1 Eurpoean a1dew11lk • ILocet.ed II fhl' WHtto I 0'.30; Sund1y 6:30 to 9:30 '..!II >i1llH Plll!T'S & l'EIPllCT PAN VIE DE PIANCE dining Daily 1pec1a.la plUJ1 Sooth Cout Plai. Hntell AE. V. MC 957 2644 • IC&rnoael C'nurt, lat Ltvfll ( Aff'E PASQI INI SelltMltmnal C'ountry F'rl"nch • !Nord•lrom Wini(, IM l!Oup&, 111.lad1. cj.ucctoo, Award wmn1n11 T G.l. nlDA Y'S • I M11ll F.ntr 'llt11r I M1111mn I cu11toe with Californ11 Level) bffr. wine. Sun 1y ltahan/Cl)nttoent.al ru1-1n" Amencan/Cont1nental Pa"1u1n1 KJfrf'11~" & t.ouchn putry, frl'llh foods Country French cafe ind Champqne Rrunch S.'i 9fi Eleg1nt, 1trium lll'lltol( complement.ct b~ull bu I 1tppuctn11 !Ir with fr1"11h & CARRY OIIT Outa1dl' bakery W~kd1)'119 tt19, thru A1.11. L1vt mua1(' Mon Spe<:11l1t1ea include vul, 1111 trll'~. p111tlla~. 11&r11'd enlr&nct Weekdaya ind Saturdty 9 ~· 7. Sund11y 9 10 Fri II t.o 7; Sat. IO t.o 7, Sun fresh aeafood 11nd 1erv1ce. Sunday turd1y 6. MC. 5f>7 17:14 IO to 3 6rt7 f!.43:1 homem11dt puta d11hl'e II 30 t.o I. Bar 11 :30 LO 2. • ""'"" w11h 11n lt11l1&n Oa1r S11turd11.{ IO lo IO; Sunday REUBEN'S Table1idt cook1n1 AE,CB, DC, MC, V Wf'1•krlAV~ '• 10111 !f. S&t 9·30 11 to 1 F.. MC'. Sfl'. V South Coast ~-2227 toH Sun 111 lllto '• !J!'>7 1221 r.f,6 6424 American/ate1k and Luncheon and dinnrr Plaza Village teafood. F'ull bar Wffkd1y1 weekdaya 1l::IO1.m. to 2 FOITY CAllO'T<i/Vl<TOllA'S PRONTO IUSTOIANTF. & 11 t.o 4: S.turday 12 to 4, p m.and6 1 m to IOp m BAKESHOP TIA TTOllA PINO AHTONELL0'8 Dinner Sund•y to Thur.day ncept Fnd1y and Saturday • <Bullock'• Will(, 2nd Ltvt>ll •<I M.,;nm Winit lat IA:vf'll Pronto dmin! room acceM E11cellent Northern ltalu1n 4 l-0 11>", Friday and Saturd1y lO 11 p m Sunday Brunch ('plrhrottnl{ 11f 1lt1 I"'' CU!alnt' Ind UOIQut' Wtol' l11l 4 to 11, Chamr.ln" brun< h IOam t.o2pm AF MC natural. hnllh\. from maJI an eouth parluna Offermi three banquet Sunday 10 to 3, E. OC, SCP, V MO IMO fa11hion1hll' fc11i<l• 11v81l11hll' •tructure C'l ... i<' Northem MC. V 979-:W74 ltaJianYl::t.u, breada madt room1 hold1nc from t..n to80 ll!STAUL\HT HOllK.AWA Raktd 11oud1111rh1d1nir "nut ~pie Weekdaya luncheon 11f·th11 world 'muffto, daily ttkdaya luJlt'h 11 30 11 :30 to 2. Dinner Monday J1paneH, 1nclud1n« CAYECASl1'10 n.ok11"1 •nd dtltr1nu~ fro1f'n to 2:30; dinnl'r 6 30 V> 9::l0, Thur.day 6 to 10, Fnday T~Jf.". Y~lr.i ,nu. 1ush1 har Brull.fut, luncheon ind YOlfllrt Mon Fri 11 tu 'I, !i&t Friday 5::l0 to 10: Saturd11y and S1lurd1y 6 to 11. cl~ a atam1 dinani room dinner Hrved ma French ~~~etf ... P. ... 11.i-.,tol.llo 11~16,Sun11 to6 Bak!' 5:30 to 9; cl<lffd Sunday Sunday AE, CB, DC. MC. 1ervice Weekdayt1 l11n<'h~n • Boulevard caft burfet 1tyle C-wry I.TD, A..-UO. o-thi, Shop~cn•9to9 M11n Fri, Tratt.ori1 WHkd1)'1 I I 15 SC P, V For pel'll)nal 11:30 to 2; Dinner weekday. Sunday-Thur.day 7 UI IO. ~...,.,~ v:i.i:·~ to9,Saturday I l·l6t.o7, 6:30 to 11; Sunday II t.o I 0 o\lf...So' .. Cal• c.iflO. c~ !l t<1 A . al and Sun. M<' SCP Sund~ 11 30 ~16 AIU>C, r'"rvattona call Anc.onio or AE,CB,OC,Mr,scr . frida.J ~d Saturd~i7 7 to 11. Joh" l'olol'• e-. ,ony -~ . v ~'>6 9700 Anna 761 7111.1 MC. P 761 27. h<MIMI IUMorUW.. Ttall<.t•• Pl"4' MC. P. V MO 80.'lA 667 2531 Delly Pllo1 Oatebook/ Friday, July 25, 1986