HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-09-02 - Orange Coast Pilot-.. ... -
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1988 25 CENTS
Children watch car hit ·their mom
Driver faces murder charges after car
speeding In Balboa a lley k ills woman
By GREG IU.ERl.X ................ . "
A 19-ycar..old Hunttngton Part
man is being held on suspicion of
murder in connection with the hit-
and-run death of a Balboa \\Oman ·
who was killed Thursday aOemoon as
she walked with hertwo voung sons in
Attorfl8Y General John
Van de.Kamp ttaa gone to
federal court to challenge
Irvine-based American
Stores Co. 's acql.tlsitlon
of Lucky Stores l~./M
Nation .
Mlchaet Oukakis plans to
bring back the campaign
manager who admitted
deralllng the ~mpalgn of
rival Joe Blden./ A5
World -
Flnal speech of Mexico's
President Miguel de la · -
Madrid was met with
cheers and jeers.I A4
IDdez
Claaffied
Comics
&,tertalnment
Optnlon
P..,.razzl
People
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Wedd Inga
86-8
A 11
Oatepook
A6
oatebook
A10
A3
8 4·5. 8
81-:4
A7
an_ alley «hind their home. poh~
said .
Police today decided 10 rec-
ommend that a second-degree
murder charge be filed against Dann)
David Ornelas, who was arrested
shortly after the 5 p.m. accident 1n an
alley behind 211~ E. Ocean Blvd. near
M Street. said police spokesman Bob
Artist's .
project
really
a bomb
BJ PAUL AllClllPLEY .... ..., ........
At first glantt, the art piece outside
Pete Humey's house is a little
unnerving. It's not the kind o f piece
you want to study up close. or get
close to for that matter. Even the birds
qiiabt think tv.1cc before the) land.
It's a 'bomb. Sticking through the
roof of·Humey's front porch. It\ tail
pointing to the sk~ and nose poking
through the patio cover toward the
front door below. the "bomb" looks
like it carfte-mighty close to bullse)'~.
But> despite any inference tht
uninitiated might assume about
Hume y's work. ht intended nothing
sinister. ·~1t·s furt art." he said. "No pohtical
statcme~ no scrii>us statements.
"AJI fun."
Onlookers rcall) need to put his
work into4 pcrsp«ttvc to accept that.
And Hurney hopcs"'to give them that
opponunit)' through a gallery show.
TM Hurney bomb. "htch he
's•~cd might be mled .. ()op&.
Massed. .. is the second p1«e of roof
an he b.as erected on his ho me on
Hamilton St('CCt JUSt east of Harbor
Boulcyard m Costa M~.
His first was a g.iant ait. Planned th
the futurc-is a broken piano crush1na
an unfonunitc soul beneath. The ait
was blown down m a stonn. He
doesn ·~ know how long the bomb "ill
last. ·
"Whether Mother Nature takes 1t
down o r I take it down 1s undecided
yet," he said.
Hurney, 31. is·tal(ing phot<>grqphs
of each work before he disma~tlcs
them, and plans to display the photos
in the show. He is an art student at
Onn~ Coast College and a BMW
mechanic to pay t~~ills. . ·
(Pleue .ee ARTIST/A2)
Oakley. He is being held on SH0.000
bail.
Ornelas was onginaU) held on
suspicion of vehicular manslaughter.
felony drunken dnvang and (dony
hit-and-run after has c-ar struck and
It.ailed Debbie Ann K1lhlea. 37. "ho
resided only a fey, f~ a"a' from the
collision scene. ·
The charge was upgraded to
murder after pohcc concluded that
Ornelas mtent1onall) s"en ed to hit
Killilea. OaltJe~ sa1d.
':Facts have de' eloped an this case
that indicate the suspect s"ened into
the victim." Oakley said.
K1lhlea and her t .... o sons. ~ 6
and 10, were walk1na an the alle}
•hen Ornelas' 1984 Nissan 200SX
came eastbound tov.-ard tbctn at a
high rate ofspeed. Oakle) said.
Luis St. Hila1rc. "ho h\Cs in the
house dircctJy adJattnt to the aro-
dcnt sctne, saKI he vmnesscd the
collision and saKI K.Jlhlca apparent!)
tned to move her ch1ktrcn o ut of the
path of the speeding car.
"She tried to att the bo)S o ut of the
.__ .............. ._
Artl8t Pete llllra97 abowa off Illa .. .,_ ......... •••11
way," St. Hilaire said. "But he h11 her
hard and threw her a good 50 feet or
so."
Ornelas' car apparenth pinned
Killilea agafost a bnck s0und "811
separaung St. Hrta1rc's home from
the alley: the impact brokMhe "all. ~
streak of blood and bl I.. urc marl..s
art etched onto the bncl..
OakJe? said Killilea ap1>3rentl~
tncd to shield her ch1ldrC'n from the
oncoming car. ,
.. The lmis duckl'd in behind thl'
"all. She had no plale 10 go I don't
th1nlt she felt thrntencd at all untll be
swerved toward her. Then cvCT)'lhiQ&
happened too fast ... Oalde~ satd..
After bounong off the wall. Or-
nelas' car ct<>ssed the alle' and
slammed into the back of a P,..
shaucnng oM of the support walls.
Thea r flipped o'eund skJddcd toa
stop.
Oaltle' said Ornelas climbed out of
the 0\ enumed \ eh1de and fled on
foot •
Diane Muench. "ho h,·cs at 2046
(Pleue .ee DaIVEll/ A21
-Newport girds for·
·10Calballot battle
over Slow growth
Opponent~ uneasy
des pit~ def eat of
countywide plan
By JOHN LONG WELL ... .., ..... ._
Last June'js slo"-gro"th \Ole in
Ncwpon Beach does not bode "ell for
opponents of a growth-control
meas~rc on the cit~ ·s ballot this
November. spokesmen on both side"
of the issue agree.
~hile 52 pcrttnt of the cit~ 's 'oters
opposed-the countywade Measure -\
in June, the margin of defeat in the
Ncwpon Beach prconcts was not
enough to foreshadow 8 s1m1lar fate
Tor -the local growth-control ballot
measure. the spokesmen said .
"It scares me ... said Jt-hn K1lleler.
chairman of Ne.11.-pon Bea h RC"S1-
dcnts for Traffic Soluuons. :i cam-
paign steering commin~ seel..ing
defeat of the measure. .. \\ e \l.Ould
have been more comfortable "llh tht"
54 percent that the count~ dad ··
Mcan"hile. -\llan Bed.. a pol.l'S-
man for proponents of the tratlir-
ma~meill uuuau,e. ~e"pon
2()(X). interpreted the Junt' 'me
&voratfl~. sa~,ng The Tocar mt•a<;Ur~
will be cas1er to sell to loc:il 'oters
than \he countv~1de measun.-"8" ~It. relates to :'\e"pon Beach It's
local and eas~er to understand.:· he
said. "It's just upda11ng thl' traffi -
management ordinance. "h1lh "a!>
.wrinen by the same people."
The New~rt Beach traffo:-man-
qcment io1tiatl\ e. "hach "111 be
known as Measure K on the S o' em-
ber ballot. would stengtbcn the cit~ 's
decade-old· traffic-management ord1-
naocc that ues de' elopment to rood
capacit) and "ould. funher restrict
the Ctt) Counc11's discreUOnat)
authont~ to appro"e development.
KJllefcr said Residents for Traffic
Solutaons 1s 10 the process of Pulltng
toarther a broad-based alliance of
homco" nc~ and bus10ess groups to
fisht the 1nallau,e.
··w e·rc the ~nderdog.. We don·t
ha,ean)oncrunmngforCit) Counnl •
hkc the) do ... he said. ··The) have
three candidates running for Cit)
Council."
Kallcfer said he v.as womed that
voten "ma) confuse th~ measure
Wllh the pcrsonahucs" and \hat his
croup believes It needs lO "a&C a
grassroot1-style campaign to counter
the slow.growth mo,-cmcnt.
"We feel the cam~1gn will have to
be wo n on one-00-one cont.aet. so
...,-c·re going io the communi~ for
voluntcen..·· be said. Ln parucular. the
iroup plans to target neighborhoods
v.here the count~ growt~ntrol
measure dJd well.
K.JUcfer also saJd the group hopes to
raise S250,()(X) to $300.000 to ~ a
successful campaign. is conStdcring
bm ng professional campaign man-
qcment 1f funds are available. and
has hired pollster Gat') Lawr~ncc to
conducta 350-sample poll He declin-
ed to disclose results of the poll_
Beek. mcan""hale. said he expects
M-eamrc K-baclccr.. te ~
outspent. perhaps raising about s 7,()(X),
··we all ha" e f~ speech.·• he SfUd
"Some people can JUSt speak """' a bullhorn and some people can't." .
A first pubhc forum on Measure K
sponsored b~ the '.'<ew·pon Center
Assoc1auon 1s schc-dulcd fot 8 a.m
Oct 19 at the :--;e" pon Beach Mar-
non Hotel The p~ram and ron-
unentaJ breakfast cost$ I 0 and rcscr-
'ataon5 can be made b' calling
640-1861
ll~Dtington ~eachers r~jeCt new coiltraCt offer
By ROBERT BARKER .... ..., ........ \
Teacher unrest that htt a ~ak 1n a
onc--day stn'lte in May apparently will
carry over into the new school )'ear in
the Huntington Beach Cit) School
District after classroom instructors
overwhelmingly_ voted down a two-
year contrac1 offer Th ursday.
District Education Association
Prcstdent Carole .Autre) said today
that teachen plan to stage infor-
mation picketing and distribute fliers
outlinina their position when classes
bqjn Tuesday at the eight distnct
Sc:hools. •·
district offered teachers a 3. 7 percent
pay increase (a .i.s perC'CnJ total
packqc including fnJlg~ benefit ) for
f98T-'88: The aistrict offered a total
4.1 percen t proposal (pa) and fnngc
benefits) for 1988-89 .•
· Teachers turned do" n the ~ond
year offer out of fear their share of
insurance premium costs \\ould tale
too big a bite ouf of their ~131),
·Autrey said. ·
Autrey. a six1h-$rade tC'acher at
Sowers School. said a 1·7 percent
climb in insurantt premiums co l is
,cquaJ 10 a I percen t across-thc-1>oard
pay increase. Insurance C'OSt are
.projccud to climb to 64 JX'fC'Cl\t.
Autrey said. ·
. . -NeWport-Mesa teachers vote on pact
ByGREG-.U.EIUtX .,... ............
Teachers in Newport Beach a"d
Costa Mesa' were CAp«tC'd tO"aecept 11
m ulti-year contract toda~ S" ing
them their first pay increase an thrtt
yc•rs.
•
said.
Reprcsentath'CS of the teacher;'
assoc1atton and schOol daMnct nego-
tiated ··1on_gand hard" from ~ug 9 to
Aug. 16 for \he contract. "h1c-h runs
through 199 ... said Pipes. a t~acher at
Killybrooke Elementa~ ·hool ·
Unhke Pf'C' 1ous n<'goturnon".·
which ~re marred b~ fr,-quent
!9Ulbblina and unclC3r ·proposal
Pipes said the rcttnt contrao Ulls
fttt straightforward and gen<'rlll'
fnc:ndly.
JUSt let each other ln<N \•h.1t "c
needed. It worked out mul h helter ..
The ne" contract 1nduJc, J ' 5'
pctccnt ..Q.3)' incrca~ for .tll tC.ll h\!~ th~ llrst such increase in thrl·l· H'lr.,
Ncwpon:-Mcsa teachl"T"o \\M~l·d IJ,1
)Car without a contract
lnstruC'tors m the d1~1mt had
1n1t111ly sought a Oat 5' J'('r,'ent ra"
hike.
Each I percent sala~ in~rca\C, "''' the d1stnct appro\lmatch SJJ11 111~1
rcttl\'C an add1t1onal 2.:? ~nt for
each progress1\'e step and column
increase. ummcr school teachers.
athletic coaches a od ~am coacbcs
wall rctttvc a 4.1 perccnt salary
increase.
One issue tt}at remains un~h·cd
is benefits. Pipes said. a s1 -member
committee bas been fonned to~·
options and 1s e..~pecte<Mo prcscnt a ·
rt"Commendauon tt> \hC' tbchcn•
assoc1auon b~ No" I ·
-
Eiahty-three percent oft¥ teachers
voted to apProve the first )Car phase
of tM peckqr. but turned dov.n
proposals for the second ~car. thus
tumina aside the entire package.
Autrey•id.
A total of 145 of the distnct's':!20
teachen participated in the balloung.
Sdtoot Supennkncknt Otana
Pctcn. said today that the d1stnct
owed It to the tupa\~n to adhere to
Votinafon,eachersin the e"port-
Mcsa Unified School Distact was
scheduled to take pla~ fro m 1 to 4
p.m. at Nev.-pon Harbor High School.
said Phyllis Pipes. past president of
the scache~· association and a mem-
btr of the MtOC&atint \Gm:
There arc approx~matel~ 7$0
tcachm m the •~soctataon. Pipes
.. lot.h stdcsame in .. nd td. ·t~t'1.
clean the slat~ and get th1 donl.' ···
P,pes said. .. Instead of ha~hng "e
_Pt~illif.
icachcrs with C'duc3tll'n ,·n·d1"'
be)ond the reQU1red m1n1mum "'' I
Under the con tnYL salaries will---
come up for rcnegot&ahon m 1989-90
Buttrftlcd b) the recommen-
dations of a Slate fact findtr. the ~ .ee Bll/A2)
A bargain
. r
hunter'·s dream
acountma
and 1990-91. Ptpcs_sa1d..
Labor ~ay observed
with-parties, daYoff ·
I .. .
GE $ GlmlW,.V.-oJlfftdlw.SafllFMr2, 1-
~--------...---
DRIVER HELD ON MURDER CHA~GES··~· ~
,..._Al
E. Ocean Front Blvd .. said she and
her husband were sining in their back
yard when a man came running across their lawn. ..
~He was covered "'ith scratches
and obviously drunk. He feU do"'·n
1CVeral times.. .. said Muenctt, whose
famiJy moved into.their home onl) a
week. •o. "Then my lids came
running up and said there'd been :fn
accident and that police couldn't find
Police rescu e
ba nk hostages
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
Police fiTed tear ps into a bank and
rushed the build1qg in search of two
holdup men who locked four em-
ployees in an office as they arri vcd for
work today. but the gunmen had
apparently fled hours earlier.
"Its ironic the wa) it worked out:·
said Officer Douglas R. Anderson.
The two men, armed with a sawcd-
off sholj\rn and a knife. had broken in
thRMCit• back window of the Third
National Bank ·branch and "ere
waitina inside when it o~ned about 8 a.m.. t~ spokesman said.
It was not immed1atel) known 1f
l)le 1un~n SJole lln)'lhing.
the driver. We figured that mus; be
him." .. .
During a search of the area. a police
officer spotted Ornelas. who again
ran and was pursued o n foot. The
officer caught up "1th Ornelas at
Channel Road and Ocean Boule' ard
and he was arrested without fu rther
incident.
Killilea died in uraery at Fountain
Valley Regional Hospital shonl~
after the accident. Oakley said. Her
right leg was se cced and she suffcrt'd
massive bodily injuries. Her sons.
who witnessed the entire incident.
were not inj ured.
. Killilea·s husband. Bnan. was at a
neighbor's home '>'ith his children
this morning and dedtnC'd to com-
ment on the accident.
A 17-year-old male passen$er in
Ornelas' vehicle was videotapmg at
the time ofthecollision ~nd sustained
minor head injuries. He was taken 10
Hoag Hospital where he was treated
and released.
Oakley . said investigators v.erc
hoping to fi nd evidcncc of 1he
accident on the tape, butjt was blank.
St. Hilaire said the alley behind
Ocean Boulev~. whicti is only a
•block or so from The Wedge. is oflen
a raceway for cars and motorcycles.
"You hear the ones that go really
fast Maybe four or five times a week
somebody comes through here rcall~
going." he said. ··Whm they get near
The Wedge. they step on the ga .
"The) sho.uld have_ signs or some-
thmg." he said.
BB TEACHERS .•• FromAl ,
the guidelines provided b~ neutral
third-party fact Jindt'r Mei Bickner.
who\lrged a t"-O-)earcon1rat t.
Peters said the fact fi nder and the
Peat Marwick Mitchell a uditing firm
held that the district offC'r 1s ··ve11
competitive" and that the _d1 trict
sho1.tldn't dip fun her into its re-sen cs.
Autrey said toda) that 1eachers art'
falling farther and farther behind in
-the .marketplacC'.
Bu" Peters said.the offers ~ould
assure that the paychecks pf1ocal
teachers would remain above the
Orange County average.
Peters said she doesn't belie'e the
five school board members will
change their P<>sition aQd m_akc a
higherofTerthan propo.sed b) the fact
finder.
.. ~
DISCOUNTS AT..TRACT OC CUSTOMERS •••
Fro.A l
Southern Caltrornia.
Build.i ng o" nc< Stan le>
H i n a few )"ears ago to take a
dose k a J his customer mailing list
and realized a new location out ide of
Los Angeles was a logical ne t step.
-He saw that many of the addresses
were in Orange County. 5o it was only
a matter of time." Bo"ers said. "A lot
of. the-people who come· here now
used to dnve up to Los Angeles to
shop:·
The Orange County location open-
.. in May 1987 with a handful of
stores in one of four faCU>r} "'are-
houscs at 1928 S. Grand .\' e. tn Santa
Ana. Sintt then. the roster has grown
to about 21 stores. •
On Thursday. N.O. W. - othing
Over Who16ale -opened its doors
as the first store in Building B of the
oomple". ~As it fills with tenants.
Buildin1 B. like A. will feature
manufacturers· outlets and discount
stores. A third tfoilding is designed to
offer wittkcnd4csigncr samples sales
and a fourth will house a Garment
District bazaar similar to thC' lie) tn
Los Angeles.
Visitors.to the Cooper Buildtng "11J
find a set of four low bu1ld1 ngs.
t0tiethcr mtas'1ring about :?0.000
.square feet of space. arranged arQ und
a parking lot. Building A has two
entrances, one of which tak.es '1s1tors
pasl a receptionist wflo offers to add
shoppers' names to the mailing list _.
and point out tndl\ 1d ual store lo-Tony l..tmben men's sweater for $44
cations. at Ian Stewart; a Sarah Kena dress at.
Inside. the stores are arranged as 1n Best Kids for $39.93. less than half of
a mall, shanng narro" corridors that ~t it sells for in large dcpanment
lead past sparkling white wall . blue stores. ·
signs poinung out directtons to stores ·or the other stores. Collectibles.
and huge windows offering shoppers which features a wide array of
a alimpsc oflhe storC''s merchandise. women's dcsjgner labels including
It's ll clean but austere. no-frills Carole Little, Anne Klein II, Donna
environment that underscores the Karan and Nolan Miller. is con-
basic idea behind the Cooper Build-si<kred a favorite. offering prices at
ing. By keepin' overhead low and up to SO to 70 percent off retail.
profits slim. sa 1ngs of better than 25 Other current tenants include
percent can be passed on to the •sponswcar stores. jewelry hop.s. a
customer. cosmetics counter. Perfumes for Le s. Merchants 5a)' pnces arc Cllt b). . . locating in buildings ~ith lo'\\errents . children's clothing_ .shoe stores and
than traditional shopping malls and KK 88 An Wear. a manufacturer's
by buildina up high , olumes from outlet offering hand-painted spons-
manufacturcrs· surpluses. wear and dre~541. \
Relatively low rents also are at-fo future months. Bo"ers said
tractive to tenan~. Bowers said lease she'd like to add a housewares outlet,
qrccments call for starting rates of m ore men's stores, including one
about $1:75 per square foot with an stockingunusually largesi1es.jewclry
• additional 50 cents per square feet o f stores, linen stores, pl!rhaps a'bndal
common area. with some modi-'salon and a career women·s shop.
fications depending on. the size of the But attracting the right m1A of s.-cr anJ its location widmrthe ten6nts continues to be a time-
bullding.. consuming ' enture.
.. We're very careful when we bnng "We want the ri&hl people."
in MW tenants." Bowers said. "lft"he Bowers said. "If they will bclie'e 1n
people arc not going to d1 5count this building. the ~hole concept I
enough to make th1s work, Mr. Hirsh know isgoingto work. The customers·
won't want them in here."' already believe in it." •
Comparison shoppers would~ in-Indeed. Orange 1County shoppers
deed finct bargains: a snakeskin belt · are willing to drive· a bit to find a
(or $3.99 at A~ Y Leather Goods; a bargain. eveo if it mnn.s.pu.lUngCJ1lra
---mifes on the limousine. '
San Diego man win s $6M LABOR •••
~CRAMENTO ( P) -A ~
year-old proofrcadei" for a Sao D1cao
t~ing firm "'On the $6.04
m1Uion top pnze in the Cahfomia
Lottery's Wednesday evenina lotto
dnwin1. lo,tery spokCSn\ln John
Schllde said-Thursday.
ScUdc said Tom Yoki of San Dieeo was working the niahl shift
when .. he saw the num&cn on
• television during his dinner break,
raliaed be bad aJI the numbrn. and • be went home ...
He aid Yoki told lottery offals
that l9e bouPt I I lotto tickr1s on Ins
way to woi\ Wcdnctday. one ""9th
lucky numbers be J>laY1 rcg\llarty, and
10 "quick picks" of random numbers
selected by the lotto computer. One of
the quick picks won for Vold.
hadc said Y oki plaM 10-start his
o..-n business with his winninas and
take his mother lo visit her nati•e
Finland.
Yoki Is 1hc I 191h person to win SI
million or me>tt in lolto d.rawi.np
smcc the pmn star1ed 22 months
ago. After witbholdi111 for federal
tucs. Y okj wdl reuivc annual chedcs
ofS24 I ,600 for 20 years.
He won by pictins all sill winning
num"'bcn: 4. 14. 31. 40. 42, 47.
-.......-----·---· ... .... -·· -............. ...... .... _ .... ...,...._
·-..-..---~-c.i.. ....................... ----.....
VOL.et.••
From A l
offices will be closed Monday. There will be no majl pickup or delivery and
bepb, tchools and most busmcs~s
also will be cl~. -•
Police and' fire departments. of coune, will be open for emeracncy
services.
In all Oranac Coast cities, Jrash
collection 1eticduled for Monday Wiii
be picked up on Tuesday. l'he pickup
IChedulc for the rest of the week will
be one dat. behind.
The O.dy Pikn wiH be published as
usual, with delivery oo 1 Monday
mornif\I.
..
· .. B:'i.,
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a.rtone,N_C 12 eo .. l ... 87 73 ... ~ 17 66
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.... lledl :I 11 ~lledl~ 50 ....... 51 IAI ....... Mrll0'1 H-42
..._.. ..... ..... =.
~Chy
~ lOf'lllMcl> LA. """°'1
110 ... ...._., ......
~ ...... a.-to ,... ....... ..... ,,,. .........
..... MoNca ,.,_"..., ,_ ........ ·-vi,
101 15 79 41 ... 56
107 81
• "98 ..
76 82 103 70 14 ,13
70 II .. ... 65 55
1oe 71
61 11 .. 15 W2 13
IO 12 76 57 ... IO .. •• 75 II 12 ·st 92 IS
.-
Tl dee.
TOOAY leccnd Ngll 2 2t p"' 5 4 8-ldlow 10 31pm O 7
Mn.mAY
fQINgll 121pm 33 '"*'°" 14eun. 32 a-id!IWI 3 53pm $2
M -I~• 7 15 p m ,_ ..., .... "27 &.lft._encl •• egelri ••
7:14 '"' .._. ...... !Oda)' .. 1121 p"' ..... .__.,,,.,"'
Vietnam vets h _it dioxin report
CHICAGO (AP) -A veterans
group criticized a new report hy t~
federal Centers for Disease Control
that suggests most Vietnam G ls
escaped hca vy exposure to the poison
d ioxin, unless they handled the
herbicide Agent Orange.
"This study seems to be pretty
much the same data that was released
a year ago. only a year ago it was
ponrayed rather difTetently:• saia
BarryKasinitz,J spokesman for the
35.000-membcr Vietnam Veterans of
America. .
The CDC last year concluded that
uposurc to dioxin could not be
determined usina military records of
troop locations and spraying of Agent ~nae. which con1ained the dcadl;
poison.
"Now .... they arc jumping to the
conclusion that very few people were
uposcd," Kasinitz said Thursday in
a telephone.interview from WashinJ-
~ ton. "That was a bit of a jump in logic
that doesn't seem to be substan:
tiatcd, ". ·
J The CDC's new report. in today's
Journal of tbe American Medical
Association, describes a comparison
of-blood tests ~'ttll 646 VRmam
veterans and 97 non-Vietnam '1et-
erans.
"Current TCDD (dio>.tn) levels
were nearly identical in Vietnam and
non-Vietnam vctmtns." ,.Jhe re-
searchers said. •
' The latest st'tl'h deliberately dre"
Vietnam veterans from battalions
that had served in areas most heavily
sprayed with ·Aaent Orange around
Saiion in 1967 and 1968. ·
Only two Vietnam vetC'rans. or 0.3
percent of all 646 tested, had blood
dioxin levels grwenhan 20 pans pcr-
tri 11 ion. co nsidered ··ctearl)
elevated," the researchers said.
e two men were not among the·
14 percent of the Vietnam veterans in
the study group who did•link health
problems to exposure:
·ARTIST 'BOMBS 01:1.T' AT OWN.HOME ••• ·
From A l
While much of today's an is not year."
easily labelecl Hurney $8id his work -Besides. -friend Malinda Mvers
miahl be considered "construction pointed out, ''Somebody might really
art." He ,aid his ideas aren't meant to bomb his house."
convey a grim outlook on life. ~ Hurney has a few bombs hanging
"I'm not morbid," be said. "I just from the ccilinf or sticking into walls
like strong imqes.... . on the inside o his home. too. •
In fac1, when he was building his "Bombs have a cool form to them
bomb, various friends suggested he' -if you don't think about the
add a hammer and sickle or the stars implications of them ... he said~ ··1
and stripes, bu1 Hurney would have don't." ~
none of that.. · , The inside of the house is loadC'd
"I don't want anyt.hing political." with bis work, making it a gallery in
he said., .. Cspecially at this time of its own riaht.
Something •
beautiful is about
to ltapP.en . . .
It will ~~m spont•n~us ...
Unpl•n n~d ... Impromptu.
But it will ~ tot•lly by
d~sign. By WFD. Y•t,
som•thina b.•utiful is
•bout to h•~n in your
hom• with th~ u1i1t•nc~ o(
• t•~nt~d WFD Dftian•r
... cr.•tion. Wh•t•wr th•
style, ~•utiful rooms •t
com~titiv~ pricft. 11.,,.n
•wry d•y with tlw ~of
WFD. L•t tM nnt OM b.
yourt. CaH or stop by today .
..
/).
•
A bed headboard is cracked down
the middle by a meat clea'"C'r. There's
a mirway to nowhere and a window
you can't sec lhraugh.-:-Aowt-rvases
arc bisected by walls. There's a neon
art piece -a violin and hatchet
mounted and ft'amed-titlcd "Death
of Classical Music." So far, the neighbors li~e -or at
least tolerate -Hurney's roof art.
"The neiahbors love it," he said.·
"They-always look forward to seeing
whal l'U make nc"t."
At least he h.asn 't bombed yet.
WFO -~N INTERIOR DESIGN FIRM
•
..
•
Co
-if .•
t has little oil, report reveals Success semtitar
-pl~ened Sept-;-~
at·erange Coast
People scelcina to improve the quality of t~ir
lifestyle can take a step in that d1rcctaon for only Sbt"
a three-hour workshop scheduled for ~pt. 9 at
Oranae Coast Collcac.
The seminar, entitled "PowerofGoali: Succ:ns
in Business," will be held from 7 to 10 p.m. in Room
116 of OCCs Fine Ans Building. Richard Hart. a
par\-time busincu instructor at OCC, will conduct
~session.
Rqinration is under way in OCCs Commuai-
ty ~rvicc Office 1n the Student Center. Sianups also
can be made by phone at 432-5880.
GOP womea opea hoUM
The Ncwpon Harbor Rcpubhca.n Women will
hold an open house Sept. 9 at the Republican
headQuartcrs. 4200Campus Dnvc, Nev.pon Beach.
The event is scheduled from S lo 7 p.m. and
volunteers will be sought to help get out the vote.
CJa•mber forum 11et "-
.. Why You Won't Hire the Next Generation of
Studcnu" is the topic o f an information forum
scheduled by the Ncwpon Harbor Area Cha mber of
Commerce Sept. 8. "'
a, IOa-VAN B¥&£.N1--...---
ot .. ._ .......
A consuhanl°s f'CJ>Ort on the pomu1al for
oil develo~nt ofTOranat Cou~st
has concluded lhe L'n11ed : tale has l1,11le
nttd for the small amount of 011 hkel) to be
found there.
Offic1ats 1n •the county's coast.al c1ues.
many of whom ha\e bttn outspoken
opponents of offshore 011 drilling. reacted
to the repon wtth sausfacuon.
"It ccruunl)' reaffirms our susp1c1ons
that we've learned from other studies and
repons," Nev.-port Beach Councilwoman
Evel) n Hart said.
"If )Ou couple lhe small amount with
the fact that u's a \er} thick 011 that 1s
rtlattvely difficult to get out and refine,
then 11 cena1nl) d~ not appear to be
worth"-hile to destru)' our coa thne for
something that's of rclam cl)' little import·
aftce."
Laguna Beach Councilman Bob Gentf}
also hailed the repon. sa} 1n& 11 "ould ad(1
fuel to the campaign against dnlhng m
Omage Count~ coastal ~atcr
The US~ ~panment of the lntenofs
five.) cu.plan fatoilu.plD.mtion lt"a!>tn rn
the outer continental \helf 1n,ful1~ a
proposeda pro~ le in J~nua 11.iQO,
of lea~ for C\ploratmn tn 3 Coatal area
CX\Cndtn.J from the ~le\lcJn border to \un
Luis Obispo Dnllin~ 11n thl' outa lOn·
unental shelf "ould Ix no { lo~·r than three
milts lo shore.
The report on dc' dupmc-nt po1cnl1JI uO
OnnacCount} ·s lOJ)I v.J) pri:parcJ b~ the
Ar1in&ton V.~. firm of K1lhan.I T T1nne~
and Associate'> It 1~ thi.-fir .. 1 produC't of a
two-year stud' t:Omm1\\1ont·d b~ the
county and thet 111es uf I lun11ngton Reach.
Newport Beach. Laguna Bcalh and lian
Clcmcntt.
Based on figurl·~ rl'k.i\l'J h' the tcdcrul
Minerals Managcment ~r' it.e T1nne)
~archers es11mati:J th.it tht.·re nre .lbout
S2.8 m1lhon b3rre1' ol rl'lll\ t>r.lhle 011 1n
Orange Count~ 'I oult'r ,11nt1nen1al shelf
That amount I\ equ1\ .1kn1ll•11nh thn·e
days· suppl~ for the l.'.llllrl' l mtt.·t.l 1a1e-.
according to-t~ft'PttM
Furthermore tm·rg ~·'iu1,.ill n1 to the
amount thJt v.uuld Ix Jeri,ed from the
Orange Count~ oil c uld ht-\J\ cd through
con~n auon lhl' re pt>n '-I"
More petroleum than the cnttrc CSU·
mare<rOnl~ eoo111) 1Csc1 ·~couldrb•~
bttn savtd 1f lhc f~I go' emmc-nt had
not rolled bad. the standard for fueJ
cons4mpuon in auromobtl~ from 27 5
mtlC$ per pllon to :?6 nulc~ per gnllon. the
report concludts.
And af the federal ~O\ crn ment were to
abandon plans to dram the-Hetch lktch~
Reservoir 1n Northern C':rhfomta, the
report SA}S. enough cnerg). could be sa'ed
m 17 years 1n the fom1 of h)Jrodectnc
power to equal 1he amount ofo1I esttmated
to he under Orange Count~ 's coastal
waters.
C'alhng the de' elopment pott'ntial for
011 off the Orange Count~ l'MSt .. modC'St,"
T1nne) concluded that ··1t 11k nt.•ed for this
modest 011 resource ha<> been demon-
strated .. Should the~ oppor1un1ttes. such
as the auto mobile fuel et1incnn s~n
dards. be taken. all of the Oran~~W Count~
011 could be left m thl· ground v.1thout an~
etfcct on the econom' or .:iuaht) of hfc
Moreo' er. should a nauonal l'mergt>nc~
de,elo p at some t1mt· 1n tht: luture. the oil
"ould be there 10 h<'IJl meet genuine
na11onal needs ·· ·
NB coach .. The cveot wtl.Lbc..he.td.Sept..8 al.6:.l{l p.m. Allbe_
Le Meridien Hotel. 4500 MacArthur Blvd .• Newpon
Beach. The free 'forum is sponsored by Michael
Cannon of ITS Enterprises. Inc. in Irvine, and
l'e$Crvations may be made by calling 644-82 H . -.
Sus~ec t: in '84 Killing
extradited to county guilty·of
sex charges Benent luau In Mea
A Hawaiian luau will be thrown Sept. 9 from 7
p.m . to midnight at the Costa Mc'Sa Neighborhood
Community Center, 1845 Park Ave .. hosted by the
Newpon Outngger Canoe Club.
T he fo nd-raising event to suppon the club's
cnl!)' in the Molokai outrigger race this _year, is
pH&d at $20 in advance and $25 at the door. The
cvcnin& will feature authentic Hawaiian food and a
live Hawaiian show. Call Ellen or Lucky Hookano at
7S6-0194 for details.
Blood drlve11 In Huntington
Two blood dnves are scheduled neitt >Aeck in
the Huntington Beach area, the first to be held Sept.
9 from 10:45 a.m. 10 3:30 p.m. at Humana Hospital.
17772 Beach Blvd. Call 843-5005 for an appoint-
ment.
The M:Cond is planned for Sept. IOatSt . Vincent
De Paul Church, 8345 Talbert A' e .. from 9: 15 a.m.
lo 2 p.m. in the parking area. Fo r appointments. call
842-3000.
.G W~ Patron• to pieet
The Patrons of Golden West Collt'.'ge will hold
their annual membership meeting Sept. 9 at 11 ~45
Lm.'ffi..the Communit> Center on the Huntington
Beach campus.
Reset¥.ations for lhe potluck e.vent-mUSt
made by Tuesday. Call <>62-8 I 97 for reservations
and further informa11011.
Jledltatloa clua 11et
A free entry-level medication c ass has been
scheduled for Sept. 9 at 7:30 p.m. C-.111 Rick. \\eJt at
Sl6-2 l l 5 for loc.atfon and reservauoos.
· llelatloaahlp aemlaar
A counseling group for people ho ping to
impTovc their relation hips " 11h o thers will be held.
-mrtin,-thTnnonrh:-an~ ..\lrn ·
2S23 I Pasco de Alicia. Suite 203. 1n Laguna Hills.
8 ROBERT BARKER I ootie" claimed ihat Lamb came fro m °'~.._.,,........., Ne" Yorl t0Cahforn1a tornmm1t murder
G. corr· -Int Lamb. 27. a murder ~UV'"ll and l,hat he ant1c1pated get ling paid for It. ~ ... ~ Dtxie Dyson. 44, "~ <.on ' ll'ted 1n in the 984 murder of Huntington Har-March .. of first-degree murder 1n the
bour rcs'idcnt Mel Dula) 0 ) on. ha-, been bb d h fh h b J ~h h
C"trad1·t-"" from cw Yor1'. and lodoeJ in sta mg cat o er us an e as not
" ~ e-been sentenced. O~nac County Jail where he I'> being hdd Lamb. was arrested i.n June Ennquez.
.. wnhoutbatl. • Vasquez. JI. another figure linked tn the
Lamb was returnt>d to Oran~e Count~ . case as D1~1e °' son·s '>Omeumt'lo\Cr, also
by Huntington Beach police olllcers late "as arrested but on susp1uon ofa v.elfare
Wednesday mght after the goq~rnors of fraud 1n San Diego Count~ T oohe~ s:i1d
New York and Cahforn1a compktc.'d that Vasquez has not ocen charged 1n the
cittraditton proettdmgs D)son case.
Arra11nment 1s scheduled ~pl 16 at \'a§quez 'Aas 1dcnu1ied as Dl'\1e O)son·s
West Orange Count' \funtup:il Coun m lo, er in tesumon~ dunng her tnal
Westminster. , Dunngan mten tC"-\\Ith pohce in J unt>.
Deputy Dmnct .\llornl'' R1c1' Toohe~ · O}son allegedl) 1den111icd Lamb. a larate
said Thursday that Lamb (ace'> a po <.1hlc instructor. as the man" ho u~·d a') kuchen
dcat.h sentence for special lll\.um.,tancc-s knife to stab her husband I:: time'> 1n the
involving finanpal .uin fatt. chest and back.
$35,000 infunds for
PB! probe used by
co~stilting agency
Di.de Dyson-
Doris Ross dies
Dons M:l\ Ros<, a n:s1Jc:n1 of { o~ta
Mesa smcc · 1959. d1t·d \\ c:dnc-.da' at
Memorial Medical l cntcr Ln Long Ekad\
at the age of 00.
ACR'\M ~'TO (..\Pl-Thl' head 0 1 a
Sacramento eonsulung :igenc) rou11nd)
For m;wn -1.~a~. "he \\3'> a nur\ing.
tnstruCtOr and. COOfdlD.alOf UI n~ng
tnunmg at Fain 1cv. "tJtt• Ho p11al "hcrt"
shev.asonstaffsmu· ~ti~ ht•v.a,-al<.o a
leading fund·ralSt'r ior v.atcr polo team., at
Costa Mesa High ~huol lrum 1'4nt-It•
. bama. ap?('arcd 10 be signed b' ··fohn f 1976
• wrote cheeks on an 3l"COu nt he onl~
l't'Centl) learned "'~ oi)cncd "uh FBI
funds and \\h1c_ll no" figure'> prom1ncnth
1n a federal co1TUp11on JlrOhe at the '\talc
Capitol.
The compan) d1rcllor unv.111mgl} fun-
ekd J.S.000 -rn fond-s m-cd to bur
pohltcal favors for an FBI front com pan).
he disclosed Thu~da)
Gordon. .. dcscnbed b~ ourcc<, dose to the • he 1s sun''~ b' her hu<.h..tnd Ph1hp
mvcst1gauon a an FBI agent v. ho posed as of Costa \lcsa. mothc.'r \l.irgun>ntc
I\ GulfSh.runp c'ecuu,e. ThomcyofGarcfen Gro' c J.iugh1a LC'\tc:
A man.,., ho idcnulied him-.elr a' John E Ph1ll1ps. 3 ns. Rod. Rrll and P-i<"r. t"o
G ordon met repeau.•dl) 14 nh :in .\sscmbl) brothers. Don and Tt'.'dJ Thoml'' .ind ruur
consultant regard mg a special mtere'it btll grandchtld~n
sought b1 Gulf Shrimp. .\ 0·p7 3 b) Se" ices are I p.m "'unda' at Harhur
l\sscmbhv.oman Gv.i:n ~toon: D-Lo La"'~ :-.1~ m Co'i1a \k..a
l\n1t.eles. ·
By JONATHAI"' VOLZKE
OI -Dell) ..... ltefl
A former high '><-h tml t'\asl etbatl roach
pleaded 1u11t~ to Ii' e tclon) child molesta-
uon charges and one ,ount of allegedl~
ha .. 1ng sex v.nh l~l' tl'l·n-"Jgt' gar+!. in hi\
Balboa Island home
Chnstopher \11l hJel Bruce Lee. 41
admllted 10 fi,e ldl•n' .ounts of oral
copulauon and pent'tr.ttH•n v.11h a foreign
obJCC'l. Dcput~ 0 1.,tnd .\unme) Kathleen
Kendle said
He also pleaded gu11l' 10 one misde-
meanor co.unt of an nu' ng or molesting a
minor. coun offi l 1als \31d Three s1m1lar •
charges "ere droppe-d Judge M)ron
Bro" n accepted tht· pleas an· upenor
C'oun m Santa .\na q,nd se't $entencmg for
NO\ I ~
Kendle \31d a p~-~ntenc1?Jg repon
1nd1cated Ltt ~ould l1 lel~ recel\e pr<>ba·
uo n and less than o ne \Ca.r m 1a1t. but sht•
stressed the plea v.ia<.n·t pan ofa deal
Lee and his auome~ "'<"~ una' a1labk
for comment
The former Es~ranta High School
coach was arresled m Janua~ b~ Brea
pohce after two girls. 16 and I.,. told a high
school coun~lor about allqcd se,_ual
hasons with Lce.m cla~~ and.Lee's
Balboa Jsland home fapcranza High
School 1s in '\nahe1m
Police said the" d1 o' erl"d photographs
of both girts at Lee·., hdmc
Both girls said Ltt enticed but dtd not
force them into ?('norming se'ual acts
Ltt v.:a tn~ 10 tcal h 11od .. coach at
Esperanza three )Cal' .Jtto and tool O\t:r
as head coa h of the b<>'., basl.etball team
last )ear Before "ort..ing at E!>pe-ranza. Lee
roached scm1-prokss1onal basl c-tball in
Europe and was the ,-oach of 1he West
German nauonal team in I Q~J
Lee Smith is in charge of the group. which will
be limited to eight people and will meet Wedncsd.a}
evenings for 10 weeks. Call 855-0908 for further
information.·
Pcter~uv. s. dir~tor o t tht" Sacra-
mento-b onhern ( ahfornia Re·
search ssoc1atcs. s~ud h1'1 lirn1 rcce1' ed
twocheck 1n 19 6-o ncfor$:!7.000 Jnd
another for SS.000 -a" part of a conrract
an associate of his firm. Dam. I Freeman.
had with Gulf hnmp F1shenl'!>.
Will Bro" n. chief n1n .. ullan1 111 the
.\ssembh Finance anJ Insurance t om-m11t~e. said Gordon \\anted IU C'ttabllsh a
subsidiary in C nhforn1a and that he
wanted to con' 1ncc Bro" n of 1h~· need fo r
the bill.
Jacobsen has new job
Ba.pltal worken aought
Lauwef's. "'ho dcn1l"d an' \\rongdotng
m his tran.sactton . pro' 1dcJ copies of his
financial document'> to The ~ssoc1a1cd
Press.
St. Joseph Hospttal in Orange is recruiting~
volunteers to work tn its hospital gift shop. Mpming.
af\cmoon and evening ~hifis arc a'a1lable.
Training wilt be provided. for more infor-
mation. contact Jan Dohort)' at 771-81 25.
Gulf Shrimp 1s one of two FBI front<;
apparent!) c')ta~hshl·d 10 pu h .pcc1al
interest -t),IJl during a t\\O·\Car tcdcral
sting opdi°t1on The other FBI llumm)
company "as Peach\tJll' Capitol ~\'e'>t
Ltd.
The revelatton hro ught 10 at least
$84.000 the amount of m.one) dispersed b~
the FBI dunng 11 1n,c.s11gauon
He said he d1dn·t km>" the FRI ''a~
bankrolhng Gulf hnmp unt1I ne"s ac-
counts follO"-ln8 the FBI raid on the
Capitol la t v.eek d1sdo~-d the 'itrng
operauon
rrlday, Sept. 2 "I would ha'c to guc s that ~ou arc at
around 90 percent'' of the fund-, spent on
the soph1sucated undcn.:~' er prohe. a
source k nov. ledgcal'lle "nh the
"Capscam" '"' esugauon said
Federal agents. hunting for matenals
rtlated t01he passage of the sptt1al interest
bills. searched the Capnol offices of ti.1ur
k-g1slators. Moore. Republican -U· ~mbfTmen Pat :-Jolan of Glcndolc and
Frank Hill o f \\'lutuer. and • n Jo~Jlh
Monto\a. ~El Monte.
No meetings schedul~d
Monday, Sept. 6 "The checks '-'ere dcpo<;1ted and then
Darryl Freeman "-OUld gt\ c me n list or
~Jt?('nscs for tht~ account ·· s~ud·Lau\\~
He said both chc~ t.s dr.rn n on Gulf
Shrimp's ban1' account ,,,· ~fob1lc . ..\la·
<\II ha' e denied 3n~ '' rongdo1ng. l'\u'Jlt
Hilt. v.ho has declined to speak '''th
.,.
No mceti"as scheduled
re pone rs. ;
.H~nti~gtoli sU~pecf shot by
:Police-after 1_00-.mph ·chase
IJ JONATHAN VOi.BE ...............
An unarmed Hu.nunaton Beach
man was shot twicr b) police offlttf'S
afteralleFdlY leadanaauthontinon a
I S-minutc, I ()().mph chase Thursday
that beaan in Santa Ana and finished
in Seal BaK:h.
Richard James Capdlai.., 34, was
shot in the ankle and s&oukkr after he ~ly ran from Santa Ana pohcr
oflieen. lben had in some heaV} brush
ud appeared ready to shoot tM olftcen. Santa Ana Police Sat. Rick
Hic:bsaia. . C'apellai wu an aood coodiuon an
the jail ward at UCl Mcdka.I Center,
Hicbuid. T1ae SUNM!d was inatially stopped
..
for an alleaed traffic v,olauon 1n
Santi Ana. Whilt chttk.1ng Capclta1·
driver's license, pols« found three
wamnll ouw.ndina on the Hunr-
insi<>n Beach mu. includin& one for
armed robbcry,4H1cks said.
The officer rct\lmcd to Capell.i1'"l .
car to as:rest him, but CapeUa1 Ow 1"
t~ v~ide. Hacks wd.
The chae wa~ throuah the
atreeb of Santa Ana and Founuun
Valley and contanUC'd on the • n Dicao Frttway toward ~al Beach. Hieb uid . At the inteneccton of the
Sea Dielo and Gardin Gro' e free·
ways. ~er. Captllaa Iott control
of'bitC9laod slammed 1ntoa woodC'd
arm ~n the ftttways. \he
....... .md.
Michael James Bf')ce, :!5. of S:lnta
Ana ~mained 1n "the car .:and "a
ques11oned.3nd released. pohcc S3.ld.
Ca?('lla1. ho"e' er allc rob r.m on
foot .\n otlicer cha.sing him olk·gcdl~
sav. h.Jm crout.hed 10 me lrccs..
appeannJ to ~ach for a "c3pon The
officer hred th.r« ume . grazing
Capella1 t" ice. t-f td.. said. . 4
Capella1 tned to n~. but >Aas
qutckl) arrc!>ted· Officers scar\"hed
the surrounJ101 area but nll "capon
was found h~ ~•d ,.
The Hunungttln lkach man "·' boo~ed into the Jiltl ""rJ on su,,,..
c1on of robttcn. e\1Hiina arrest and
chick thcfi the or he al1<-1t'\ih
ulCd to nc-c offic'Cf'\ >Aa!I l't'portcdl).
stolen. Hieb \31d
.. David Jacobsen the IMme1 Hunt-
ington Beach rt"S1Jen 1 "hl' "as held
hostage tn Lebanon fnr I "' months.
has a nev. JOb a., chief operaung
offi~r of Mere\ \kdtcal r enter IO
Durango. Colo
Jacob~n. .,, u a<; kldnappcd ~~ thC'
pro-Irani.in \loslcm group Islamic
J 1had on \1a~ YS. lll 5
'\t the ume he "as tat.en capu'e
Jacobsen "-a!I an adm101s1rator at the
Amencan L'nl\e.-Sll) oiBe1rut ~1ed1-
cal Center
He -..-as relea\c.'\l in ~o' em~r 14 n
and return~ h• h1' Huntington
Beach home.
The Coloraul• Jll."-ltl\1n is
Jacobsen'\ tif')t prl•ft!>\ll'\nal cmpl~
ment since h1 rele-tt!>C tn•m cap11' 11~
,f-•
Wedn~a~ . . ~ .
,'\ n11e and~' eral credit c-ard~ "ere
stolelf from a home 1 n the I 0800 hlOl l
of El Mar bct"cen a.m. and ..i· 1"'
pm \\ edne"ida'
lrrine
' M Oi • C.... ~y PLOT/ '"-·'Sepeember 2. 1118
I ' ' . t ' " ~ .
MEXICO CITY (AP) -The
z=n1ed chaos in Congress PNS.a, Miauel de la Madrid
cleliWNd bis i.s1 address to the
Mlioll drew a blizzard of criticism
Md praite, with some calling it dnli~ando&bensayingitwasjust
~in action.
ODDolition delqates interrupted
de 18 Madrid continuously Thursday
in a leries of displays never before
teen in Conaress. which has been
ablolutely controlled b)' the Institu-
tional Revolutionary Party. or PRI,
for ~9ycan. ~ outbursts included chants of
.. Fraud!" and "Mexko!" Oppos1tion
ddep&es waved what they sa1d wctt
burned, invalidated ballots and 11-.ed a walkout that almost de-
~ted into a.brawl.
De la Madnd ma1nta1ned hJS
QOmposutt throughout the 311r~ur
speech as he sought to sum up a m:-
ISLAMABAD. Pakistan ( .\P)-'\
newspaper said today that an air force
squadron leader and ·eiih1 other
people havc'becn arrested tn connec-
tion with the plane crash that killed
President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq.
Jang, an Urdu-language da1I~.
quoted "informed sources" as sa) ing
the nine were arrested Thursda) night
at Islamabad Afrpon. which do ubles
as a military airbase.
It did not name the suspcc\s..
identify them further. sa) where the~
were held. or detail their alleged
involvement in the case. G o' ern-
ment offices "ere closed toda). the
Moslem Sabbath. and officials "'ere
not available for comment.
Zia's personal C-130 transpon
plane took ofT from Islamabad oo
Aus. 17 to the southeastern cit> of
Bahawalpur, where he "atchcd a .
demonstration of the . . M-1
C,, I 'f ,\ r"\. '.6i ~ ' I f ~j r<, ri I M
Coptei-cr•h ldllS
slZ crew members
yar term that bc:pn an near
bankruptcy and is end1na with econ-
omic rdonn and political con-
troversy.
"Let us be tolerant, even in the face
of the insults of our political
ldvenancs, .. he said, depanina from
his prepared text after the walkout.
The noisy demonstrations ''show-
ed tJacdelqates' cou,. .. in demand-
in& .explanation'-said Democratic
Front presidential candidate
Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, who claims
fraud cheated him of victory in the
July 6 elections. "' ..-.
The general secretary of the PR I,
Manuel Camacho Solis. praised de la
Madrid's cooJnna and condemned
the protesten for "immaturit> .. and
"ann-<lcmocratic practices."
Adel Velazquez. the crusty 87-
year-old laboT leader who heads' ooe
of the stronacst sections of the
aovemina party, said he'd never seen
anyttuna like it. "But then. we never
had such silly opposition before.'' he
added.
Later, a Democratic Front del· ..-c. Salvador Miranda Polanco,
aiuk>unced he was chanaina his
loyalty to thc~usc 1'e
"does not ~ with fascist idco-i....; .. ..,..es. ..
A presidential spokesman, who in
accord wilh standard practice could
not be named. was more sanguine.
The protests, he said, were "normal in
any parliamentary-system." ~
The speech was interrupted reg.
ularly from &he beginning, but the
climax came when leftist Democratic
Front deleptcs led ~Y Sen. Porfirio
Munoz Ledo walked out amid shouts
of "Traitor," "Get out, Judas:· and
assoned obscenities.
Munoz Ledo, who was once presi-
dent of the PRJ, was kicked in the rear
and hit in the neck by two PRI state
~de la lladrtd
&(>vemors. A governing party lcgis-
latorgrabbcd Munoz Ledo and asked.
"What is happening to you? This is
not the time, brother."
BARSTOW (AP) -A California
Air National Guard helicopter
crashed and burned in a Mo,ave
Daert mountain ranae. kiUinJ all six crew memben. authocitics said . Tbc crew of lhc Htl-3 search-an'd-racue helicopter that went down
Thursday was made up of four
Ouardlmen and two Air Force of-
ficien en a training mission from Qeoraie Air Force Base, said Sat. I st
C ius Carolyn Hamifton ,
spobswoman at National Guard
heldquners in Sacramento.
Thchelicopter'was from the 129th
Air Rescue and Recovery Group
baled at Moffett Naval Air Station at
Mountain View and was pan1c1-
patin1 in a trainina exercise at George
when it wtnt down at IO:SS a .m ..
Hamilton said.
The Air Force officers were 1dent-
1fled as lst Lt. James R, Dooley and
h t Lt. Patrick L Henry. bolh of the
27th Tactical Air Support Squadron.
.said Air Force Sat. Sarah Hood.
Hometowns and ages were un-
vailable. _
Names of the other victims were
withheld for notification of relatives.
The helicopter was almost ob-
literated by the cTash and fire.
"We do not know the cause of the
crash. That is being investiaated."
uid Air Force Tech. Sgt. Jorge
Cabellero.
Jhe helicopter. a craft called a
"Jolly Green Giant" with a capacity
of 2S passrngen-ud 16 litters or
S.000 pounds of cargo. picked up the
Air Force crewmen at-George for
search and rescue training. Caballero
said.
. ~ Nobel ~rize winiler
alesa asks halt of~ti:ikes; d?~k Alvarez dies at 77'
worker spr.otest-4ee1s1ori OI-1 fir:1ng_-BERKELEY(AP) -Luis w. day a1\cralongbattlew1th cancer.He
. . . . Alvarez, a Nobel Prize-winning was 77.
WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Solidarity leader Lech dec1s1on call.in' fo r an eod to strikes. . physicist, inventor and developer of a
Walesa met today with striking miners in southwestern The Sohdanty lead.er had hoped to.set.lie the stnk.e by controversial theory aboutthe extinc-
Poland to persuade them to return to work. and hundreds telephone? Walesa's w1fc. Danuta. said in a telephone ti on of the dinousaurs, was a scientific
of p<?n workers ~n Gdansk protested a management conversauon. Renaissan~e man who cnthusia.ucally
dcc1S1on to fire strikcn.. In Gdansk, 700 workers gathered at the pon this ventured mto many fields. hts col-
Five other enterprises remained on stnlte after morning after management told :.bout 400 involved in the lcques said.
Walesa appealed for an end to the work stoppages that strike action· not to retumi(o their jobs, Gdansk Solidarity "Luis Alvarez was a stunningly
bcganAug.16. Walcsasaidendingthcstrikcswouldopen spokesman Bogdan Borusew1czsaid:'" ,,...;.' creative individual," said David A.
the way ~or tal!cs with . the; ,.ovemment on workers' . Management told the workers to ti.le applications for Shirley, director of the .. Lawrenc~
demands, tncludina lqahzatJon of Soltdant> · rcanstatement but finally allowed most of the protesters to Berke.Icy La?orato.ry. H 15 dis
Mine spokesman Antoni Pilny said Walesa accom-return to work the spokesman sald. " cove~es and m vcnttons span!1~ an
panied by an aide and his parish priest. the Rev. Henryk ' amazing range of the frontiers of
Jankowski, arrived at the July Manjfesto mine and began Strike committee leaders were negotiating with pon man's ~~~ledge over more than half
talks with the miners. who launched the recent wave of authorities to secure formal reinstatement. No agreement a ccn
1
tury. h k..u h 1 bo
labor unrest. had been reached, he satd. A varez. w o .wor cu at t e . a ra-
. The sinking miners said they would not stQ.p their · In the Baltic pon ofSzclecin. stnkfoe dock workers t<?ry and t~e University ofCahforma.
strike unless Walesa came to the mine to lxplain his resumed talks with management over pay issues. died at has Btrkeley home Wedncs.-
Chilean exiles allowed to.return
His wife, Janet, said Alvarez died
from complications of a series of
operations to treat cancer of the
csophaaus, according to Lawrence
Berkeley Laboratory spokeswoman
Mary Barbcria. She also quoted M ~.
Alvarez sayihg the ph)'sicist's health
had declined after surgery for a
benign brain tumor last fall.
In 1968. Alvarez was awarded the
Nobel Prize in physics for the de-
velopment of the liquid-hydrogen
bubble chamber and for th~ numer-
ous elementary paniclcs of matrer
that his team discovered using the
device.
Abrams battle tank. , SANTIAGO. Chile (AP) -R1ght·wtng President widow of Allende, also plans to return. '"We are going to
The four.engine tu.rboprop ex-Augusto Pinochet announced that hundreds of his critics prepare a ~od entrance, through the front door. as we've
~ille i' spared death
penalty by high court
plO<ied after takcofT •. o n the return living in exile may return to Chile. but opponents said the . always said," Allende said.
flight and crashed. .\II 30 people move, and others like it. arc aimed only at winning votes _JoscOyarce. a Communist who was labor minister in
aboard ~re killed, including Zia. in a presidential referendum. \ ' the Allende government, returned 10 his homeland.on the
More than 20 Palustan1s ha .. c been Four hours after Thursda) 's announcement. Isabel same flight as Allende. ·
arrnted in"lh~ crash 1n~•e ngmion:-A1ltndc, 44, the' dauffucr of former President SaJvai Pmoc et lifted a ban on the return or 430. hi leans
which government officials said is Allende. new to Sanuago. She has been hving in-Mexico who had opposed him, including some of the fiercest
focusing on sabotage. since her father, a self-proclaimed Marx 1st. died during a lef'tist opponents of his mil ita~ government.
Jang said an aJrpon sccurtt) officer bloody coup led b) Pinochet IS )ears aeo. "The prohibitions arc hftcd. All of them," the
and some Cl\ titan av1a11on officials Asked why she returned. she told reponers at the president told reponers. "I ha ve spoken this morning
had also been detained but "ere airport, "Because it's m y lcgiumate ~gJtt." . with the interior. m1n1stcr and have given instructrons
released before the Thursda-:. arrests. She said her mother. Horte_ns1a Bussa .. the eXJled _with respect to ex al~ that totally soh c<> this probkrn."
l.ABOll
DAY/I
1,300.Kurdish civilians
reported. killed by Ira(Iis
By Tiie Auocla&ff Press
N ICOSIA, Cyprus -A spokesman for Kurdish rebels fighting Iraqi
aovemment troops claimed today that the Iraqi army slaughtered about 1,300
unarmed men, women and children this week. The official Islamic Republic
News qcncy quoted Kurdish refugees as sa'ying their houses were set on fire
a nd they fled into the mountains without food. In London, a group of20 ~urds
occupied the offices of the United Nations, accusing Iraq of using chemical
weapons against their people and demanding that U.N. Seactary-Gcneral
Javier Percz<ie Cuellar intervene. An official of the Kurdish Democratic Pany
told The Associated Press in Nicosia in a tele(>hone interview that the 1,300··
victims were arrested Aug. 28 in the Dahok region in nonhwcstem Iraq, killed
and buried in mass graves. In addjtion, 43,000 people trying to get out oflhe
rqion arc being held back by the Iraq! military, said th~ s~kesman. There was
no wa~ to independently confirm )he repon. He said the ttf~ were
"suffenng from huo~, disease and serious chemical injuncs." The
spokesman, based in a West European capital, declined to ajve his name for
"security reasons."
Two Ame.r1caa• ~led Ja aJr uo• crulJ .I
RAMSTEIN, West Germany - A U.S. Army private and her 9-ycar-old
son arc the only Americans identified am on~ 49 people killed in a faery crash at
an air show at a U:S. base, Air Force officials said today. The officials also
lowered theirdcatb toll from Sunday's disaster. Earlier they said 52 people d ied
when three Italian jct fighters collided durihg the air show and one plowed into
a crowd at the Air Force base in Ram1kin. West Germa n ofticials said a bldly
burned male victim died Thursday. raising the death toll to 49. U.S. and West
German officials now have the same death toll, said blsc spokeswoman
Monika Stuppy ... There was so much confusion at the bqinnina. Now we arc
meeiioa twice a day to coor.dinate-morc closely on this;• Stuppy told The
SAN.FRANCISCO (AP)-A man sentence in 1983 on another issue: he
convicted of killing a Modesto couple was sentenced to death again at a
foT $4,000 was spared the death penalty retrial. His murder convic-
5cntenctlor Uie secohd t ime and will tions were upheld.
face a third hearing to de~rminc his Therulingwastbe 13th reversal out
penalty, the state upreme Coun of SO death sentence rulings since
ruled, conservatives pjned a majority on
The unanimously ru_!ing Thursday the court last year ..All of the reversals
said lawyers represcnttn' Eiben Lee have been unanimous.
Easley had a conflict of mtercst that The ooun Aid Reiner .Junghans'
prevented them from challenging murder was ordered b'y Joseph Pcnka,
crucial evidence in the case. a fcUowstockholder in a corporatio n
Easley, 48, faces a third penalty trial who had been tf}ing to gain control
for the October 1978 m urders of from Junghans. He paid SS,000 to a
Reiner and Sigrid Junghans. who former employee, who passed S4.000
were both stabbed numerous times. alona to Easley, the court said: Mrs.
Mrs. Jun&hans had a rubber ball _Jun1hans apparently was -k.illcd..be-
stuffed in lier mouth. cause she happened to be home at tlte
The coun reversed Easley's death time.
-Disabled 1nunitions foe
inocked by angry CJ90Wd
'CONCORD (AP)-Cnppled apti-
war protcsterS. Brian Willson says he
wasn't bothered when angry. nag-
waving counter-demonstrators
mocked · a ceremony marking the
anniversary of the day his kgs were
cut off by a monitions train.
"I have 40 relatives -uncles,
aunts and cousins -that don't
support me," he saict .... "My parents
don't suppon me."
Willson. a 47-ycar-bld .Vietnam
veteran who has become a martyr to
the Inti-war movement since he was
1njured Sept. l of last year, seemed ~
more saddened than angry at Thurs-
day's demonstrators, including a man
who carried a sign reading: "You
supply ICJS, we'll supply arms:· -
"It's not going to stop people
""' .
blockina the trains," he said. "If they
want to murder people. I suucst they
sian up and go to Central America
and do it. Don't ask somebody else to
do it"
The sian about the ltgS and anns
was carried by Jack Withrow. 65. of
Sacramento.
"We came to protest these crazy
people.'' said Withrow. a World War
II v1teran who. along with about 14
others, appeared at the Concord
Naval Weapons Station to oppose the
memorial service.-On~ man held a sign bearing Oliver
North's picture and the words "MY,
true conaressional representative, ,
while another shouted. "Pray for
pea<:e, not communist victory ...
Anociated Press. The Air Force idcntifitd the two dead ,\mericans as Joshua
Frymyer. 9, and ~other. Pfc. Genevieve Rias of the I 10th Military Police Teen held .. ~ in .. ~·~ ifCation Co. in Pirmascns/Wkt Goimany. The child is survived by his tither, Michael &U ·y · ~
~:~~fo;~~w;:~~;~: Penn .• an Air Fo~ statement said. No aaes wen: r' of$ 2 million Oriiad& fire ~
•
,..
' l•--~
CLEWISTON, Fla. (AP) --Atr-
boats fanned out over Lake
Okeechobee for the first sta1 ewidc
alliptor hunt an 26 ~cars, a 30-day
reprieve aimed at thinnin& out the
once<ndanaered species whose thick
hides fetch S42 a foot.
"We could have fil led our I 5-gator
limit toni&ht," Warren Schafe r
boasted about four haul"> aner the
huntina season opened Thu~ay
ni&ht. He displa)cd bis prey: three
ptors rangin& from seven to 10 feet
Iona.
"lt wasn't as hard as other animals
I've hunted," said ha fer. 45, of
Miami, a veteran big-game hunter.
Across Flonda starting at sun·
down, more than 200 hunters selected
by the state began to ~arch for their
rcd<yed pre) with flashlights and
head lamps.
Harpoons. narc and bo"" and
arrows arc about the onl) weapons
permitted. Most alligators arc taken
alive, their Jaws secured with duct
tape, and ITC delivered to proce~smg
plants still kicking. ome are killed
witt\ a "bang-stick." a dC\ ICC that
shoots a cartridge on impact. Guns
are prohibited bc'cause . 1he gators
often sink aftc1 being shot.
..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/FrkS1y, September 2, 1988 AS
•
. Feds indict 25 over dmg
conspiracy:,_r-.cketeering
MONTGOMERY Ala (AP)-\
btlhon-dollardrug nngaunnC'd do"n
the mother of a potential watne s.
hatched 1erronst·hke plou 10 free
their Jailed k1ngp1n and laundered
profits through phony coal com-
panies, prosecutors allege.
U.S. Attorner Jam Wilson an-
nounced the 1nd1ctment Thursda} of
2S alleged members of the ring on
conspiracy, racketeering and obstruc·
t1on charges Eighteen v.ere m
custod> Thursda)'; tht' others re-
mained at large.
The rma. described as one of the
bag est an the Southeast. smuggled 33
tonsofcoaune \J.Onh S 1.6 b1lhon into
the United States ov~ th-e )t'aTS.
\Vilson said.
Jerry Allen LeQuare the alleged
nnr.Jeader, has been m pnson ~mce
before his COn\lct1on an a 1983
smuggling operauon tn\olvmg about
710 pounds ofh1gh-grade Colombian
coca me.
Sill Warner a Dru@ C:ntorccmcnt
Adm1n1slrat1on agem .. aad that case
launched the probe 1h111 rt''>4l tl.'d 1n
the ind1ctm~t unSt"alcd Lha~ v.eel..
Cocaine was brou'ght from ( ul·
ombia anto small or rem,ote a1rporh
in Alabama. Geors1a and T cnoc~c
and hauled to Flonda. "t'ntuck} and
Tennessee for sak . authon11e'> ..aid
Wilson said the nng \l'I up, '>l'\Cral
phon) coal compan1t''> in KentulJ..\
and one 1n Nonh ( arohna 10 launder
ats prorits. v.hKh hdl)l:d fin Jn<."c: o
la\ 1sh hfe" .ot . ddlt\ Jnd JJguar\ l(lr
some member'
"1embers of 1hc rmg comm11teu
cnmesranging lrom th1..· mdl·h1m'-gun
slaying of a "'lint''>'>. mother w
w11ness tampenn~ and ath:mp11ng 10
record grand iun prtxt'edtn~\ pro~
ccutors saad
In one of the allt-ged c:~ai:x· plul'
hatched 10 tree Lt•t)ulrl lrun pri"'"
couft continue-& fines in
Yonkers.segregation case
By 'I'be Associated Pre11 ·~ 1.
LcQuare in I IJ85 came up with a
scheme to blov. up pav.er lines.
airports. dams and Naval 'essels to
con' a nee autnori11es that 1erroris1!>
were acu ve 1n 1he l ' n ited tales.
according 10 the 1nd1c1men1
The organizauon had profit, total·
ang more than 5280 m1lhon 1n 1he
year beginning Jul) IYIQ alone and
the same amount of cash wa!> boned
an 'aults on a farsn 1n Grecnbacl..
Tenn . Walson i.aad
"This 1s probabh one ol the b1gges1
(amponataon operations l an the
Sou1heac,tc.-rn l n11rd Siatt·'> ·· ..aid
FBI agent Gerald ~hodk~
TM 1ndittmem unseah:d T ucsda'
an Kno·(\ 1lte Tenn . and announled
here Thursda} named LeQu1rt' as the
leader of a gang that \\ 11,on ~1d
smuggled 33 tons ol cocaine 1..111e sun
of manJuana and I 200 nwth·
aqualone tablet'> an10 thl· outhl'd'>I
from I 9 I IO 19 "
BakkerPTL
takeover ,
postponed·
FORT \111.L C 1-\P)-lhl· On Lake Okeechobee. hunt.ers.
reporters and a fev. 1ght eers de:
paned under the din of a1rboats and
through a mist churned up by their
large propellers. Bugs twuered about
like snowflakes in the hunters· lights.
"'~· The Smith broth_;n-from left, Howle, Bryan and Norman
-bring In an aUJ.&ator ln the Miami C~.
YONKER . .Y. -The l .. ~upreme ( oun has refused 10 halt
mounting daal~ fines against lhe cit~ for blod,ing a fcdi:ral housing
desegregauon plan, a dec1s1on the ma~or sa'" rnuld \ause Yonkers "to
plummet to bankFuptc..:." .BuL m a rultn-&..JliUed Thun.da!-night. the coun
temporanl> spared the (our ell~ councilmen v. ho oppo~ the plan from gain$ to
jail un11l 1he} ha' e ume to ask formall) tha1 their ~a!Ks be full~ rC'' 1ev..ed. L
Supreme Coun spokesv.oman Toni House said The" ;us11ttS sta~c-d a lov.er
court ruli ng lhat had upheld contempt c1ta~1ons against the four councilmen
expected anntluncement that J 1m
BakkeT had signed papers tu rl.'ga1n
control of PTL v.a., abrup1I~ po'>\·
paned toda'
Thomas Alpern, 25. a free.Janee
writer from New York Cit}. s:ud to be
the only Northerner "Who rccei\ ed a
permit. was still searching for has Ii rst
alligator at midnight" 1th the aad of a
professional trapper.
"Who knows~" he said. ''Ma)be I
won't even be able to loll 11 once v.e
find one."
· But Alpern. like man) hunters.
couldn't ifnore the profitable sade of
the hunt. n addition to the lucrati\ e
hides, gator meat sell' for up 10 $6 a
pound.
"The mor1e) 1s Lhe.b1g factor." '>31d
Rodne) Crawford. a 19-)car-old cook
from Lake Worth. who "'II hunt on
Lake George an Florida
State game officers arc clo'>el~
monitoring the hunt for poachers and
permi1 holders using illegal v.capons
or taking gators belO\\ the four-foot
minimum length. _.
Since. federal ant1-poach1ng
methods were adopted 1n 1970. the
alliaator population in Florida has
about doubled to an C'>llmatcd on1..•
million. 'earl) 1.01'.JO gators ha'c
been captured 1n e\penmcntal hunt'>
since 1981 . and 1he · ·ptemht'r «ason
will be isolated to :! dastm t "here
the alligator populauon " e\·
traordinanl) t11gh.
Tom Succ. a b19log1~t "rth the
State Game and fresh \\ atcr F1<ih
Commission. said a cm'>'> '>'-'Ctaon ul
the public was sought for till' hunl.
Simulated •pace •battle test halted
SP.\CE C'E:-O:TER Houston -.\ s1muja1ed shu11 le mission designed 10
test the Disco' cf) astronauts' trouble-hooting sl.1lb v.as halted Just before a
mock landing because of a real-hfe computer crash '.\ .\ officials saad The
fhe astronauts "ere prepanng to end their 56-hour m1ss1on Thursda~
afternoon b~ s1mula11ng 3 shuttle landing v.11h J nanire v.hen the computer
shutdov. n cut 1he rehear~I short. "I'm sure thl'~ II bl' lookang at 1110 Stt v..h~ 11
v..cnt dov. n but ooboch here considers ll 10 be a big problem that the
stmulauon ended ear" ··said'-.\ .\ John,on pace Center spakMman Jami's Hartsfield
U.S. Jaunche• eavesdropping Ntelllte
PTL's. banl..ruptl' tru\lt'l' ~ad
Thursda~ 1ha1 BaU.er was e'\pectt'd
10 sign a dl·al lllda' 10 pa~ ~I"'
million tc bu\ hack the T\ mm1stn
he lost 'l a 'lt'\-'and-monl.'\ scandal
and that the l'' ang\.'11.,1 couid be bacl.
on the air b' ~pl 'I
But a nev. 1,lonlcrence this morning
was cancelc'd tn a PTL spokcsv.oman
who dee Ii nl'd 10 gi' e her name. he
saad lhe contract v.ould not be s1gnt.>d
unlll Tuesda~ at the earliest
Dukakis resurrects ousted
aide to bolster campaign
CAPE C -\!\ .\ ER.\ L. Fla -.\Titan rocket propelled into space a ~rct
m1lital) pa} load· 1ha1 a ca' 1lian t'\J)l:n 1den11tied as a satellite ~apablc of
eavesdropping on So' 1ct m1htan and d1ploma11c communaca11ons The
pov.erful. 16-!llon-1all Titan 34D. S1..onng 11s third straight success after being
grounded for 18 month . lhundercd from llS launch pad at 8 05 a m. toda~ The
Air Forcedtd not announc1..• 1hc launch 1n ad,ance .. wh1ch has been Its practice
on m1llta11 space flights
.\ sourn: dose 10 the negot1at1un'>
""ho spokt.> on C'Q1ld111on of anon~ mi-
l) saad toda~ a number of paints !>till
had to be v.orked out. anduding Y.ha1
10 do "Ith Hentagt' !\11nastn~. the
newl> formed non-profit organ11a·
uon that includes the rchg10u!> opcr·
auons of the theme park and T\
com pie'
-. .
By Tlte Aasoclaled Press
Democrat Michael OuJ..ak1s. If} ing
-to rqain momentum for ha prCSJ..·
dential cam~. planned toda} to
brina back to his staff the campaign
manqcr who· admitted helping tor·
pedo the campaign of part) mar Joe
b iden.
A Dukak1s campaign • source.
.speaking on cond111on of anon)mll)-.
said Dukakas plans to announce that
fonncr campaign manager John
Sasso wall return to the camp J~ 'ice
chairman. · ·
Sasso, who engineered Du"-akas'
successful campaign 10 recaptur~ the
Massachusetts governorship af\cr a
term out of office. directed Dukakis'
presidential campaign until re igmng
1n September 1987.
The resignation came aftt·r asso
admitted he had circulated to re·
porters a videotape demonstrating
Biden had borrowed." 1thou1 aunbu·
tion, deeply personal remarJ.. of a
British polit1c1an. Neil Krnnock.
Only two da) s earlier Dukakis ha.d
saidhe llad been assured none of his
campaign staff members v.a the
·source of the video tape.
Sasso's return was de cnbed b)' the
campaign source as .. Just strengthen·
ing the team." But 11 v.as Ct' rt a in 10 be
viewed as an :rel.no\\ le<lgmeni 1ha1
Dukakas' campaign -v.h1ch ha
l>Cen cnt1Clt~~el'n1ng lo Oound1..·r
tn recent ~eels -I!> an nl'l'd of help
Meanv.hale. both Duul.1 and
Republican nominee George Bu'>h
took ad"antage of the 11mch con-
cerns -the opening of school and a
summ~r haunted b~ 1he spcc.tcr of
waste-strewn shoreline -to go after
voters befo re the ollic1al I abor D:i'~
operuns oft.he campaign 'l'a'>on.
"While the\·, e '"' c tcd b1lhort an
Star Wars. v.e\ e de' t.>lof)l·d a regional
network of star chools.'' DuJ..aJ..1i.
said Thursday· 1n Cali fo rnia "h1lc
contrasting h1 ach1c' emcnts .a!.
Massachu~ns go,crnor \\ith the
inaction of the Reagan Jdm1n1<i-
. tration.
"Where was tht' man who nO\\ sa~ ~
he wants to be the 'cduca11on pres•·
dent'?'' Dukak1 ~1d an Oakland
"He was pla~ing hookc~ He \\3S
nowhere to be found."
He charged the Reagan admana,.
tration has eliminated remedial m.uh
and reading programs for 500.000
poor chaldrcn. cut teacher retraining.
and "led an assault on colkgc loan
and grants."
. . TJ1e ,.
'\
He said that in \las~chu'it'tl'i he
had quadrupled chol:irsh1p as-
sistance to low and m1ddle-incoml'
students and inHstcdln profe<;c;ionaT
de .. elopment ct'nter<. to help tca(hcr'
update their sJ..1lls.
Plane crash probers target Delta
.craft's engine thrust, wing flaps
The Reagan4'(tm1n1strjt1on\Ough1 GR-\PEVl'E. Tl'\3s t -\P I-ln-
cuts an the remedial programs in 19 I 'es11ga10rs are poinu ng ta pos'>1 ble
but "'as unsuctts ful Jn an .\pn l problems v.nh Dt'ha Flight I 1-l l ";
1988 reP?"· the Educ-auon [)('pan-engine thrust and v. ing nap'> ~lure 11
mcnt said the numtlcr of children an crashed on ta~eoff and the' hop... 10
remedial programs had dropJX•d from -get ans~ers from the ~r~v. and 1hc1r .
five m1ll1on 1n 1979-·o 10 .t -million recorded cockpit con,C'1"!>.H1uns
in the 19 5-86 school ~cnr National •Tcanspon.:won ~alct~
· Board 1n,erngators said Thursda' a Oukak1s was planning to continUl' flap indica1or handle in ahc \\rccl.ed
that emphasis dunng appe.arantes cockpll was found in the v.wng
today in Portland. Ore .. and polane. position for mosl take'oth. ra1<.rng
Wash., as he co(Jrts th~ Reagan questtons whe1her the plJne"<; "'1ng Democrat~-Dcmocra1s v. ho 'otcd flaps v.ere c;et prnperl~ Republican 1n the 1980 and I 9~-l pr.csidential election lncorrectl) set Oaps led 10 the fatal
crash of a Nonhv.e t .\1rhnl.'s 1l1gh1
Bush. after a rall) ThursJa, inw last summer. The Ocha -\ar Lint's
night's tndtc3tor handle tll)\\l'\ er
could ha'e been aci.:1dl·ntl\ Jarrt'd
dunngor after the cr;ish 1 n' l''l•g•llor.
sa id
The Boeing "'2"' gN no m ''l' than
30 fet't off the runv.a' at Da l,11,.J-on
Worthln1ernauonat \1~1r• lxhtrl' 11
crashed \\ ed ne'>da' '' 11 nl'"n told
the NTSB Thant:rn Pl'••rk Y.l're
killed.
Pilots in plane'" a111ng 11n ad1acl'nl
1a,,.1wa~s told 1n' csu~!ltor' ··.1 "hill'
name or ,·apor" camt' tnm1 thl· kt1
eng1ne . said '1-.B mcmt'c.:r Lt·c
Dickin son
.\cockpit tape recording fl'('(\\ tn•d
from the bu med "'rl..'l l.igl' r~H·akd
that the pilots ta lked about engine
trouble ~ond~ before the crash ht>
saad
Fun hcr '"l"' ll'".., of the tape and of
the Oagh t data re('order v.en.-planned
roday at thr ~ T s·~ \.\ ashangton
laboraton
The DehaJCthnerlraShl·d d' 111m·d
totake ofT for alt Lll~eC11~ \\llh l.Ol\
people aboard !"-. rnct~-fi,' peopk
survtvcd tht' crash and fl"•Ulling
nam,t's, moo;t ·ti~ c'<.•apang through
cmergenc' C\ lls or torn-open area~ 0 1
the fuselage Thin) ·thrc:c rcma1m·d
hospatahzt'd Th uro,da'
\1 cda cat C\arn1m·~ ..aid thl· 11 dtl'd
from smoi.:e inhalauon.
Dubk1~back)ard."hc~~c~~~ ---------------------------~--------------~ the go\.ernor failed to &\-t S\\ aftl~
against pollution an Boston Harhor
conunued has campaign as a "ht~long
environm~ntalist" on the IXla".ire
and New Jcrse) shore OuJ...il.1 011 llOW IHROUGH LABOR . D.AY
called Bush's newfound ommatmcnt
an "elect1on-~ear con,er;1on ..
. .
,
I
ma BL_GW AWAY SAtE
·UP TO
50%
Selected f-only's·
JS MOVING TO . " Closeouts -Special
Buys from ... Coronadel Mar High SchOol
Sunday, --September 411 ·
SPECIAL CELEBRATION SUNDAY
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CMU&Y
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College Closs .
Cti11dren's hplos.on
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Senior H·gh Closs
Junior H·gh
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Fellowship coffN 1n the Courtyord
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Listen up, CM ,
race starts with
-sound.of silence ·
....
Those watching the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce
election forum Wednesday witnessed an oddity-candidates
who didn•t want to talk.
Most observers of the American political process would
-· qree that candidates-all candidates-arc passionate about
public speaking. It is just they dislike saying much of
anythina. h 1· h · · · · 1· · · ·11 • At event cs 1g test 10 vttauon, Amencan po 1t1c1ans w1
speak at length on almost any subject, whether they know
anythina about it or not. Pohttcians are born talking and they
never seem to stop. The coffee is cold in 1he cuJ) before they
ever S&)' aood ni&hL And lhe.yleaxe.hooks_behjndJo speak for
them after they have passed from the scene.
But so-called controlled-growthers must be political
animals of a different stripe. _ · . ·
Scott Williams. Sandra Genis and Jay Humphrey, who
arc seeking seats on the Costa Mesa City Council as a slate,
ssed up the opportunity to answer questions at the
-Chamber-sponsored forum. In fact, they jnsisted o n 11ot taking
their turns on the soapt1ox. ··
Normally, po1itical Jypes become tight-lipped only when
it is the Grand Jury ·asking the questions. Obviously, the
chamber's 10 hypothetical questions weren't of such an
,
accusatory nature. .
There didn't appear to be any d~nger of self-
incrimination. There wasn't an obvious need to have an
attorney present during the questioning.
Each candidate was given advance copies of the 10
questions. They were asked to prepare .. yes. no or undecided"
responses and told they would have three minutes at the
conclusion of the forum to explain their stands. Not
particularly thorough, but fair. ·
Seven of the candidates play.ed along and dutifully
selected the appropriate "yes, no or unctecided" placard and
placed it in front of them when the questions were asked.
But the silent slate held firm. The questio ns, hypothetical
or not,·were too complex for one-word responses. they said b y
way of apology. .
If they couldn•t respond at length. they wouldn't respond
at all.
Chamber representatives and the 25 citizens who
attended may n ot have expected much. but they surely
expected soll'letrung m ore than "no comment" from the tight-
lipped trio.
Some voters might feel cheated at the lost opponunity to
get to know the candidates. Others might feel the chamber
tried to cheat t-he slow-growthers in some manner. while still oth~rs mi$ht lambaste the trio for paranoia.
Offenng a minority viewpoint. we shun the obvious
responses. Instead. we con~tulate the chamber for Jiguring
out a way to present a candidates· forum in shoner time than
it takes a Democrat to give a nominating speech for Michael
Dukalcis.
. If this new kind of forum catches on, the chamber could
chan~ the course of political history by creating the quiet
candidate. Imagine a campaign in "[hich none of the
candidates uttered a wQ!d.
In any case, our compliments to the chamber. Noone else
has been able to silence a politician with an audience around.
Capitol probe
In the popular parlance of the Capitol, there arc not two
but three "houses" in the California Legislature. There are the
"houses" of the Assembly, the Senate and the house of the
lobbyists. • ,.
Such is the nature of the institution. The wheels of state
govcmmen.t arc c hurned by the flow of money. With the cost
of lqislative political campaigns in 'California rcacbina SI
million o r more, big-ticket spenders play tbe.major Joie.
Many critics contend that California essentially has
enshrined a system of Jqalizcd bribery that encourqes
money-for-votes beck-scratching between some officeholders
and special-interest lobbyists. That son of cozy relationship ~,,.._-o. _ _..._y have been breached last weclc through an ambitious FBI
stin& operation that rcponedly included video a nd audio
tapes of some Jeaillaton and their staffs trading votes for
campaip doUan and speaking honorariums.
Campeip reform laws passed by the vo ters last June
have created som e needed chanp. But the influence of
special-interest lobbyists has not diminished. ·
All such proposals (to reduce the temptation oflobbyist
dollan) are imperfect. ~ unty foolproof anti-comaplion
device is an~ ~fficeholde~ • .Many such lqislaton exist,
but they are .find1n1 at tough going am1dst the temptations of
Slcramento.
Stole~ good 'Stings
Vallejo·s Police Department landed itself some &ood
(S.. Fraacitc0) Bay area-wide publicity ... with the story of its
..... ndilll "stinl" operation through Valley Joe's Thrift
Sllop-astoreopencd ... in thehopcsofnailin1thievnsellin1
their s10len .,oos.
The nine-month operation was an outstandina success.
providina the police with accolades for a job well done in
catcbiD110me 6' people jn ihe act, but ahO providina iomc
liallt momenu of street-level humor. such as the man who
ltOle the same rental car twice to sell to the buy-happy
undercover officers.
Our drua problem can•t be solved by the pol~lon,: -althoulb a success such as Valley Joe's c:enai"r')' o 1 boost
of hope. The community, thouah. must .Fl_~vely invotved. . ,....n... • ...,
.__.. ........... . ·-11..-lillma.CA.--41 = ........ o.e .... CA
........... ,....., .. , .. ,..., .... ::..
-_ ... · ...... ....... ---..
....... ..................
~r.:.= ..... ....... ........... _... ...... ..........
''TomKeevllwasatrulynnehumanbeliJl.8ndhehalelt•ltflacyof
warmth and concern for hi• community andltirhlalelltiwll1....,,
beltWti which all oTua can cherish ...
JissemblJ!'smsh toJ_~4gment
closes unproductlve sesslon
Whi e Senate plods diligently along,
lower hou~e feuds and procrastinates
issue rs among those still unresolved.
DAN
WALTERS
· ll&a'llllWNU Cll ....
Lr' 1 ..
..__:-_
In defense
of
1
Ritalin
nerve drug
To the Editor:
I would really appreciate this being
printed as soon as possible to sooth
the frazzled nerves of parents of
hyperactive children.
Use of Ritalin has been researched
thorouahly, is approved, controlled
and it works!
People like Robert M. Lippmann.
whose letter was in the Reader's
Forum Aua. 28, really need to educate
themselves about hyperactivity. at-
~ntion deficit disorder and R1talin
before they write a hysterical lcucr to
the public...
While fuming over thisflaming-
exampleofianorance,I was preparing
to write an article to refute everything
the man said, which I could. How-
ever. the only people who arc
interested in lhis information are
parents of children with the problem.
I will simply discredit him and his
"Citizens Commission on Human
Ri&hts .. which was established by the
"Church" -of "Scientolo~~(culQ
whose mission is that of "anvestigat·
inJ and exposing psychiatric v1ol-
.trons of hmnannghts .... Bah:Ff um--
bu&! What about the rights of a child
to have every -possible chance for
happiness, to. succeed in school. have
friends and a happy home life?
SACRAM ENTO -This column
is being written at a press desk on the
floor ofthc,state Asscmbl).
It's early Wednesday evening and
the state constitution says that the
.biennial session that began in Decem~ -
ber 1986 must end in a few hou., ifthe
bills enacted are 'to become law.
Meanwhile. the Legislature' has
dcmonstraled that it cannut deal wilh
such gut-level mauers as auto in-
surance• reform or traffic congestion.
But it has devoted countless hours to
helping special i ntere t pleaders -so
much time that the FB I conducted a
sting oper~tion to ferret ou1 legis-
lators who solict ill-disgu.ised bribes
Most . attention deficit dis-
order/hyperactive children are above
average in intelligence. many are
aifted. Without medication, they do
poorly in school, peers label them
pests and troublemakers. parents and
siblinasareata loss for what to do and
the children suffer that l)orrible
consequence; poor self image and low
•••••••••••• · self esteem. '
A small legend on the front of the
Assembly's two-volume file of un-
finished legislation says that it is the
246th business day.
The Legislature has had 245 da)S to
act on the thousands ofbills that "ere
introduced but. true to fonn. in the
final hours of the final da) i1 is till
struggling with hundreds of them.
for votes.
It collected record amountc; of
monC)'. both personal and campaign
funds. from those interests. II spent
record amounts of mone} on more
staff and other internal opcra11ons.
And it ~pent muc'1 of it tlmc
fighung internal power struggles.
It's that way eve!) year. e"en especially in the Assembly. and
thouah the designers of the modem plotting election )Car stratcgemo;.
lcgislalivc system promised the In some ways. ttie final da~ "as a . state's volcrs two decades ago that J having a full-time Legislature would microcasm of the year.
end those crazy, last-minute logjams The Assembly finall) got ns session
that make for bad legislation. under way a half-hour aner the
In part, it's human nature to appointed hour of9 a.m .. then spcont the next I 1h hours in the-latest procrastinate. fo delay until the last incarnation of the muhi-foct1'on possible second the making o~.decisions. And in pan , it's purposeful. power slruggle that has been its
Those who want to enact legislation preoccupyi ng feature.
that could not stand the light of da) It raced throu~h dozens ofseeming-
love lhe confusion of the final hoors. ly routine bills -containing
the better to slip through Jheir greasy provisions wh ose true content mav ·
little measures. never be di'Scuvercd -and became
periodicaliy. during an especially
heated exchange. some lc~islat.or
would call another an unprintable
name.
It was mucb quieter. much more
dignified -and perhaps a liulc less
entertaining - in the cnatc
chambers on the other 1de of the
Capitol.
~it usuall) docs. thl' natc
plodded diligently through Its file of
.business and senators complained. as
they do every year. about the chronic
imlbility of the Asscmbl) to act on
time. ... -
As the evening wore on. gallenl's of
both houses filled with onlookers
accustomed to the chaotic traduions
of the last night. And outside the
ehambcr$. the-hallways were choked
with dozens of lobbyists ti) ing to
work some last-minute magic for
their clienJs.
It was a night for insider!>. which i!>
symptomatic of· the Legislature's
institutional problem.
Nevertheless, the 1987-88 lcgislat· bogged down in another wrangle over Like other closed social in!>titutions
I will nowgivccredit where it's due:
to the professionals in medicine who
arc devoted to the study and research
of attention deficit disorder and
hyperactivity; 10 the educators who
rcc<>&nizc the signs earl) in children
and suggest they be tested; to the
paren.ts who love their children and
do research themselve on every bit
and piece <>f information lhey cap
find. Jry alJ the "diets" and ''behavior
modification programs" go through
all the testing and •ionizing over
whether 10 try medication (most of us
wouldn't even give our children
aspirin if we weren't absolutdy sure
they nccdcd 1t!)
R.ital in (m c thylpben1date
hydrocloride) and the other two
medications u~d to treat attention·
deficit d isorder/h)'peractivity have
helped th.ousands ·of children make
the best oftheirabiH1ics;n school and .
that's a fact .
VICKI SEVEN .. Newport Beach
Beware of Iiew
interest rates
ive session has been panicularly a death-penalty mea ure. -a military unit. a fraternity house
unproductive. particularly prone to At one point. it rejected a bill that ora prison-it has developed its own To the Editor:
!>cing si~et!'llcked into peri ph~ral •. would have bcncfitted one pha<ma-r:ulcs of conduct that have· onl)' an This week Governor Dcukmejian 1ssu~ or11:ts1de gam_es t~at have. hplc ccutical company. but moments later incidental relationship "ith the sianed legislation allowing retail
relat1onsf11r> to the hves of 28 mil hon it approved another measure that outside.world. stores to cha'Je unlimited interest
Californians. would benefit another drug firm . It The lack of real lcgislati.ve ac-rates on their credit cards and
The final minutes of the 1987 didn't make mu.ch sense. but o n the complishment, the ceaseless po"er installmern 'tontracts. The public
session (the fi"'t half of the biennial final day. few thm&.s do. interest in fair interest rates is ·~ ~truaJ.es .and the FBI corruption °fi-" d h' I session) were consumed by a wrangle Pcriod1·call1v. someone would ac-bo f scan "·~ un er t is new aw. . 'J !AVCSt111r.at1on arc sym . Is 0 that n~ h. la k IT. J -over state aid to the counties through tivatc a little plastic toy that passed implosion. ucuusc t 1s w ta cs e11cct an. I.
assumption of court operational costs from hand to hand. The toy emitted a consumers should be aware that when
and a few hours before the scheduled whistling sound said to emulate the Du W•lters h • •Yodk•ted retailers raise interest rates in 1989,
end of.this)'car's meeting, the same sound of a dropping bomb. ·And any retail credit balances racked up '> columl•t. · durin.athccominaholidayscason will
---------------------~--~!!l!'lll!!!!!!!!!ll!!!l!!!!!!!!llllllllllllllllllllllllPlllll ... --1111111-be subject to tho~· h1Jher rates. ~~m rreev:i11e·~ta lasting ~~1:ii~i~i~·~~:::.~t:~:~ .A V, ,~ 1 i ~ :~1~!s i~~1i:':~~~~":s~0~~~tni;
legacy on Pilot and C~ast_.:·:.=liiJiiffel;
Ora nae County's daily newsi:>apcrs,
inch.1din1 the Daily Pilot, took note of
lhc ~nt untimely death of Thomas
Kccvil. former editor of the Da1ly
Pilol and, al the time of his passing.
editor of the-Las Vegas Review
Journal. --
But somehow, newspaper ac~unts
cannot really capture Tom·s heart
and soul. And althouah many of his
former staff mcmben might believe
otherwise. Tom really did have both
-in pat measures.
Durina his years of cditrng thjs
newspapr when it was owned by the
Times-Mirror Corp., Tom bwlt the
paper into an \Uressivc. ucitana.
award-winning publication.
And that was hard to do. 1 n that the
Daily Pilot covers such a broad and
divene area. The newspaper does not
cover a c:enain count)'. as do some of
its compnit.on. nor don it cover a
c:enain c.ity. as do othen. It ~vcrs a br09d and divene rqion -the
OraneeCoe11.
Tom buih the newspaper with his
tmUiM prohionabsm and with his
unusual cbann -and Jrith the help of an eudlent staff' which he de-
vdoped. tQerViled and iDIOV'ed.
Nol dlal Tom l'U all of I.he Cft'dlt • AllY•••J .-• ilaneltmtionOf'ill pu ....... IDCI 1.-n Weed W11 ...... ............... ..
ud Tom lrarvil~ an 1n...,11 put 111. m ..,....., -._. Weft• ..., ......... ......, ~
JI IP0Jr cmc ... IOC'ial .....
rt&..W:.T: !."':' = ................ i ...........
.......................... 10 ............. )
I remember Tom defending his
beloved newspaper at a lunch in The
Irvine Co. 's executive offices. At that
time. The Irvine Co.'s the~new
Promoo1ory Point apartments were.
the bit issue along the Orange C()jlst
(so uaar,. the detractors claimed) ~nd
the Daily Pilo1 had a negative article
~early tvery day.
. . .
MAITIN
BROWER
.. Why do you keep running thOst
ncptivc articles?" asked one Irvine
Co. executive. ~ · What a boOlt he could have Yotntten.
A"swercd Tom, .. The communny Our thouahts fO out to his w\~ow.
is up in arms about those apartments Claire, ·and to his first wife and the
and we reflect the thanking of the mother of his two lovely daqhten.
community." . Jeanne Keevil, lona-timced1torofthe
But that was another era along the Irvine Wortd News.
Ora• Coast, or as Tom Kcevil's With hit passina. Tom has taken
maftllina editor. Tom Murphinc, withbimatrauurechestofmemoncs
termed it in his daily column, -.the of tht Onnee Co11t. but he in tum
best ofall possible coasts." • P':t all. of us, every reader of the
I had to like Tom Kccv1l and Tom Dady Pilot, a hoard of memorin
MuJ'l)h1ne. like the ~ity of Irvine's wbicb wt will Iona cha'ish.
city manqer Wilham Woollen. we As the Dailf Pilot is sold for t~
wtre all four born in the samt ~ar-leCOnd time 11nce its ownership by
1928.a true vint.aeie ~r. Times.-Mirror and ror the third time
But then llunp belan IO chanlr. lincehsownenhipbyfounderWaher
Two other dail~pm in Or· l9unouehs. we mnanber editor Toni
a,..r County to •Ult-for Kee~. A journalill"1 joumalial'! Of
cimaladon and the ad¥ettitina CCMlrM. Tom .. one of'lht bnl. dDll1nncltbe)'~10pow,andthc But more than tlaat, Tom KceY1t
Tnn.Min'W CO: brQuPt in a new wu a~ ftM human bri111o Ud tae e-011a • to. out Of lllW IO hM left a kWlcY of warmth and
.,.. ....... ....,..,.,. Tlleold concern for lafs c0mmunity and for _., .. tr• la Alld we aU cbnled ltil ..,_ lllllllU bei1111wtlicb111 o1
.... T-ltenil Wll uhned • •cai:'lllria .... o1. ~ dljb ......... ••:taa;Ufa widloul,.. Will .,.,._ .... ,_.,._. • ....,,.. mevw'81111 ... aao.11tnba1ol•
.._,. wida Tom "'duri• dtt umc pu 11111 ~ ~dine. Murpllilllt
........... W~i. mWoollla..lel01 ... dltbnlof We wae 11 a 11ncbOll ol thr ., .... _,_...
.....,.,,., ..... .......,kcylnlft't ........... , ....... .....
Oub. Tom 1PC* of bis yan tn '...., ... • .. _.. ..... ~-on lhf Orantr Coat. 0-. ~,.
~ \
Correction
A ktter to the editor from Newport
Beach resident Jay Burchett publjsh-
ed in lhc W~ncsda) edition of .a.he
Daily Pilot erroneously said that a
Hununaton Beach polict offictr was
recently xntmccd 10 eiaht )Ut'S in
prison for lunna teen-ager 11rts into
po1&itution witb cocianc.
The person who was convicted and
sentenced for the crime was a Hunt·
inaton Bach resident. bu\ he was not
a police ofracer. The man was a former
California Hishway Patrol officer.
a-.........
nae Daily Pilot wtkomet
~ CJ;Pinion1 on matlen of
public iDlelat.
Lawa .... loaeer artida of
r.:-.:a--~s .,._ aad Int IO
IO die EDITOR. Dl6IJ Noc. P.O. loa I '60, Colla_Mlll. CA
'2626. • ......... ,.,... ...... m1111u•am••••t11a• -~ .... ........ 11 ... ~IO .... I_..
IRl''*iJMm.8'8= uallm-60.,...-'-1,~,~! IC ·~.
'
~-OJL•aT Ward. Cyrus Patell. Ste\e Tomhn and Ott
Cynthia Ann Gil~n of NeY..port The bride wore an off-thc-shoukkr and Gal Ward. bh>1hers of the bnde ..__ ____ __. h ~ wnh a lace bodace tnmmcd "uh The couple arc at home n\ San · -.n e-119 • ..,-v weddana \Ows wit andnttnt sequins and pearls endan1 Francisco after an_ ''.U~~"""u........,.-+-~ M~O•'IO'Y Lonsof'San ~tn -~ · ..;.~_...__bl Sh -Our Lady Queen of Anarls Cathohc an a ~.,.um auu uu~ u rosn at honeymoon an Ken)a and Tanzania.
Chiuch in Nc"'""'n Beach on Jul~ 9. ~~a"n"a _i_!.t:...HI ~pea1n. u de so1e slt1n A araduate of "1ev.pon Ha rbor -,,.., • .-u .,,... ... Haah School. the bnde hold\ degrees Geortetow" Un1versll} theo <>I> The bride's sawr, Merrie Jean an psycholot) and Spanish from UC · profnsc>r Otto Henu performed lhe Ward. was rrwd of honor. and Betke~ and a master's dcgree an
ceremony, and 200 aucsts auendcd bndesmaidswettanothcf11saer. Mrs. coun~hnJ from Ne"' York L nl\er-
thc reception ll the Santa Ana Joseph Vaera, Amy Bro•n. sister of suy. She as a )Outh prQ&ram coord.1-
Country Oub in Newpon Beach. the bridepoom. Mrs. Warren Col-nator an Hosp1taht) House 1n San R0ttr and Jocelyn G1 lbt'n of lin1. Mrs. Peter Pac1one. Lisa Francisco.
Newpon Beach arc parents of the Beazley. Lynda Hanson and ln&nd Her husband. a graduate of
bride. She wore a go"'n of silk Jacobson. Thacher School 1n OJa1 . graduated
shantun& with a chapel-length train. The bridcaroom is the son of Mr. cum laudc f'rom Harv~rd and hold\ Pearls aod lace embellished the off-d M s h B f H'll MB ~ H <:: the-shoulder filled bodice and she an rs. tcp en ro""n o i . an A irom an ard School of sborouab. Has brother. Edward Business where he "'as a Baker . wore a double tiered w111st-length Brown. was besl man. and ushers .scholar. He is an inH~Sfment banl..er
Orange Coast DAI LY PILOT/Frldey, 9->temtw 2, 1NI
bridal veil. \ Mte S~fan Pinter, Chm Cummings. with Volpe and C9' 1ngton. an wa~h~~~dC:,i:~o~~~~n~·g~~c~~:i·~~ r_J_o_na_t_ha_n_K_o_1bc_r._Da_vi_d_M_a_rg_u_1e_a_s. __ F_ra_n_c_1sc_o_. __________ 11_r ._an __ d_lln __ . _11_._G_. Lo __ n-:-& ____ 11r_._an_d_11n __ ._J_lm __ F_l'09 __ t ____ 11n __ ._11a __ ar1_c_e_R_oee.__n ___ _
were Susan Brad le). Margot Edel.
Cris Humbaugh, Carol Erskine, Lisa
Bois.set and TraC) Mcmu
The bridqroom 1s the son of Hal ~
and Kay Lons of Saratoga. He chose
his father as bt'st man. and ushers
Mtt Kenneth Long, Doug Don1clh.
Kevan Ke vorkian. Da\C T1morcr.
Tom Shclb) and John Pinheiro.
After a wedding tnp to Cancun.
Mexico. 1he couple arc residents of
San Jose. She .. is a graduate of
Occiacntal College-wnh a m:mcr's-
dqree in international aff:urs at
--c:ieorge-Washmgton t'nrrcrnt~ and
is worltin1 toward a teaching crcdcn-
1ial at Cal State an Jose. He 1 a
la~cr with the firm of Hopl..ioc. and
Carley in San Jose.
FR08T-llORV A Y
Eve Morvay and Jim Fro!>l. both of
Lquna Hills were married Jul~ 23 :i1
the home of the bride's son. Chip
Morvay, fn Min-run VieJo. "'here a
reception for 40 guests followed.
~ United Methodist ourustcr..
Re v. Frank Gray performed _the
marriage.
The bride wore a tea length gown of
pink lace designed b} tephan1e Gant
with bu11erfly sleeves and Je "'eled
trim on the nccltlille.and slce,e£
Attendants for the couple were
Beryl Jackson as maid of honor and
W.H. Bust as best man. Other
attendants were Danielle and R~an
Morvay, grandchildren of the bnde.
The couple are.residents of Laguna
Hills after a \\eddang tnp to an
Francisco. The:r are both former
employees of the cit,} of Newpon
Beach. Sbc retired af\cr 18 \Car
service and he was with the Cit) (or 3 7
years.
.
llr. and lln. CabOt Brown
ROsEN-SARTAIN
Varona Sartain of Huntington
Beach exchanged wedding vows with
Mauricc~osen of Yorba Linda 1n a
· · fuly 23 cerc{l\On} in 'Huntington
Beach Central Park. The co uple
· artetcd 1·7 5 guests at a reception 1 n the
Talben Room of the Huntington
Beach Library.
Mr. a~Mrs. J1mm~ nain are
the pa~nts of the bride. he "ore an an~bellum sty~ ·full-length . gown
with a ruffled off-the-shoulder neck-
line. Seed pearls and sequins adorned
, the bodice.
Attendants for the bnde ~ere
Sheryl Lester. maid of honor. and
Cheryl OcKonning. usan Bnll and
Tonic Tackett. bridesmaids.
THe bridc&room is 1hc son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Rosen of Yorba
Linda. Scott Rosen was his best man.
aftjl ushers were Irvi ng Rosen. Don ·
<>Saki and Tony Mancscalco.
The couple arc residents of Hunt-
inpon Beach after a hone} moon in
Hawaii. She 1s cmplo}ed b)
1 __ .rpokland Financial ana he is "'1th
Contin~ntal Ca-pitol Inc.
l .
BROWl'f-W ARD
Newpon Harbor Lutheran Church
.-as the settin& for the Aua.. 6 ""eddina
of MoHic Anne. Ward of Nev.pon
8each and Cabot Bro~ of n
Francisco. The couple pcetcd 300 aunu at their reception at the
Newport Beach home of the bnde's
parenu, Mr. and Mrs. Donald R.
24 .. RECCltDED llFO -
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Ameileanll•atl
Moclalan
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,
WPRE CELEBRATING THE GRAND . .
OPENING OF OYR NEW PO~MO TA SWRE
WITH SWREWIDE SAVL GS OF 10% 1D 50%
OFF OUR COMPARE PRICE
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MONDAY 9 AM TO 6.PM . .
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WW.. II!! e • ._ re• llfniled -.rran!y ap!n! f!c!OfY de'9cts'" wortunan!Np end constructiOn O.U.tls "'9•1ab!e 1n our llOtes
AIMl•I &Mii AM~ Md Hae Iola ~ 714·821-ISSO _,.MM: SM Diego Frwv eno Seput¥9dl &Nd between Bufbenk and VICIOry Phone 818· 780-22'4
• ~~ ........... ~ Frwy and v ...... ~ a1a..t1t-1971 C091a MllA: San Ojego Frwy Ind Hlrbof Bhld ~ 71.t-540.:1242
llCJMDllJ.wQ•IO: ~-Frwy Ind Ae•wow St Pt-. 71•·590-2007 Open Monday thr\I Friday 1().;9 SeturOly 10-6, Sunday 12·6 ,
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San Diego G&E
rejects merger
with Edison·co.
Van de Kamp
challenges
market merger
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The state
attorney general has gone to federal
court to challel)&C Amelican tores
Co.'sac~u1sition ofluckyStores Inc .•
By LANCE IGNON °' .............
San Diego Gas and Electric official
Thursday rcJected an unsohcttcd
buyout offer from Southern Cali-
fornia Edison Co. that ~ould have
produced \he nation's laraest utility.
Instead. SOO&Fw1ll proceed W1th
its plan to merte-wilh Tucson (Am )
Electric Power Co .• comJ>!ln) offic1als
said. The unanimous rtJCCUon by
SDG&E's board of directors was
anqounced one da) after Edison
otTeTCd to up us purchase offer b~ S50
million.
In a prepared smemcnt OO&E
president Tom Page said the long------v""" ~fits of combantng._oper-
auons Wlth the Tu~on utaht)
outwe~ the shon-term g.:iins of
becommg part ofSCEcorp. the parent
company of Ediso.n.
"The board has decided DG& E
should rtmam an mdepcndcnt com-
pany pursuing us stratega goal~ :ind -
controlling its own dest1n\ :· Page
said. • ·
Edison serves aimost 4 m1llJon
CU$tomers in southern and central
,_,_ ___ CaJifomaa SDG&E.. has -milljon
customers in San Diego Count~ and a
pon1on of south Orange ount}. Had
they merged, the new utiht) v.ould
have CO\cred a 54.000-square-milc
area, making it tffe nauon's 1argcst.
Howard P. Allen. SCEcorp chair-
man and chief eJJ.ecutive offircr~ satd
it was ··unwtievable" that DG&E
had turned down the offer." hich will
remain open unless rescinded b~
SCEcorp.
On Jul). 26. CEcorp offered to
exchange mote tbanS:? ballaon wonh
of stock for SDG&E. Two "CC"ks ago.
the Los Angeles-based ut1ht) upped
the purchase offer b) $100 malhon.
With Wednesda' 's announcement
that Edison wouid pa) ano1her $50
million. the total deal "as wonh 1.1
bilhon. which Edtson offi aals said
was SI billion o'er DG&.f's bool
value. . .
The buyout
cond111on that
offer came with the
DG&E drop its plan
OTC UPS & DOWNS
....... I EntrnoMeHr ? Fifft\OifMnS l 1:1omeUnt1vSL 4 Etmlf'I wt S H•UMrman 6AIMT~ 1 C~st\ I ltnHCtSv 10~~fn~ 11 u Enre o 12 nt 1w
13 StnnMlnr1 •• "•lrfdHoOle 1 lntetteron
t rt: \T~P s
rEnr ~x im"c,.rnsc> .-no. .. ~,.
. ~ contending the merger vio13tes antt-to .?'~rge Wtth .the Tue on uttltt}. trust law, a spokesman said.
Its ttnbehevable that 00 Auomey General John Van de
minq,cment and board ~f directo" Kamp's basic argument in the suit tu~ down SCEcorp s :c.-rgcr filed Thursday in U.S. D1stnct court
offCT. All~~ said in the nucn 1s that merging the two chain wou1d
statc":lent. ln our JUd~m~nt. 11 1~ reduce competjiion in the food mar-supcr~or to an) offer .~hat DG&.E l'i kcting industry in California.
cvCT lilccly to rcccive. The merger a<>t antitrust appro\ral
. Allen said the bu)OUt \\-Ould ha' e from the Federal Track Commission
1ncrcasedSDG&Estockd1vuknds b} on Wednesday, but California regu-
11 percc~t. He said an SDG&E lators opposed the deal.
merger with Tuscon Y.Ould decrease Reprcscntatjves for the lrvinc-SDG~E·~ 'al~e b} SI OO m1lhon. ba~ American Stores Co:~ have
Edison s onginal offer in J ul)' Y.a\ prcvaousl} said the merger would. in
made only one month after the tY.O effect be a boon to consumers utiliti~ were locked in 1t b111cr turf bccau'se gre ater efficiencies could be
war over the right to provide sen ice achieved.
to South Laftun~ _ _ .. te Th\1™1a . o\mcrican ~forts
Echson o 1cia ) tned to persua c released a sunemcnt saying 1hat
the Laguna ~ch C'at~ Cou~cil 10 Amencan and Dublin. Cahf.-based
lobby t~e.CaJafomaa Public Uultues Lucic) y.o.uJdpress fora speed) end to
Comm1ss1on for a boundaf) change the litigation. that~'Ould~haYe 111lo.,-ed Ed\.\On 10 The ~Thmncnt from American. serva~e all ofSouth Laguna. Thl· t\\O which OY.nS AJpha .Beta. said the
uuhttcs currentl~ both sen 1ce sec-anorne) general's legaJ acuon was
ttons of the c~mmumt~. expected.
The council balkca. hO\\C\Cr. and "Counsel for American S1orc has
affirmed its earlier clec1~1on to g.rant not )'et had the opportunity 10 fully
SDG&E a franchise after DG& E re' 1cw the pleadings filed b} the ~romjsed its ra~ "-OU Id (al!Jo a le' el auomc) gcnmLand ~Ubl$ llm haS-
at or below Edtson's. no further comment on the pecafics
. SDG&E charges 10. 7 c~nl~ per of the attome~ general's allegattons:·
kilowatt hour to res1dcn11al cus· a company statement said.
tomers whale Edison charge~ 8 9
cents. according to DG&E figures.
But iftbc uultt1cs com mt s1on grant<.
several ofSDG&E's request<; for r~nc
reductions. company officlah predict
that by 1989 DG&E "ill be chartting
9.6 cents per lcilo\\-att hour "hale
Edison's rates""illdimb 10 10.1 cent'
"Our board was skeptical abou1
Edison's ab1ltt\ to deliver lower
rates." OC.&E;c; Page o;.aid
Pqie also said the deal was re1ettc<l
because Edison had planned to la~ off
up to 1.000 SDG&E cmplo)ecs
The merger betY..cen DG&E and
T uscon would talse advan\agl' ol
SDG&.E's expanding cuslomcr ha~{·
and the Tu!.eon uultty' urplus 01
po~-er. Hov.-ever. ll as till )ub;rd 10.
approval b} the couns and u11lit~
comm1ss1ons and probably will re·
main an limbo for up 10 a )rar.
NYSE UPs & DowNs
NO sec;urllfft rrao1no oetow s2 are Incl· -uoecs. ,_, and "'centaee cna.l!iH!s are !M cflfMrtnOI belween ttle PfeVIOUS CI0\1"9 orlce ind Tnur~v·s 2 1>.m orlce.
UPS
ust °"' 2~ + • ]l,. + 3.
13l9 + I I~~'+ : ·~ . 2'. 6 2' • • 9iJ• I J
)411) 11 ...
S' • '• 2~ • 13 ,, 6~ + }• 11·~ l ,_. 30,, ...
3~ ~ 11'4 + ~ • + '• 12~ + ~ 4ta.. + l • ·~ + • A1Jt + I,\ 10 + If•
91-+ '• ~ + •
Pct. UD 11 1 UD 10 7 UP 1.1 UD 67 UD 63 lJD 59 UD S.9 8~ ~·~
UP SJ ~~ n UP 4.0" UD 3.9 UD 3.7
\Jo 3·1 UP A Uo ,4 UP 3.2
VD 3 1 Uo 2.1
Uo 1·6 Up 6 Uo .6 uo 2.6 UP 2.6
.
Board pledges $1.9 billion
tO save 14 Oklahoma sa:~s-,
WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal
reaula1ors arc continuing a rapid pace
of savinp and loan re~ues by pledainJ S l.9 billion to restore 14
railina institutions in Oklahoma to
solvency.
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
Chairman M. Danny Wall said
Wednesdalhis agcnc) v.ould merge
the 14 Sit s into siJJ. larger 1ns11tu-
uons and be&in efforts to sell them to
private buyen with a meeting today
with Oklahoma investors.
Through the sales. the agcnq
hopes 10 get back some of its
assistance, which includes S 1.2
billion in 10-)ear promissory no1cs
and $700 million an guarantee
apin" future losses.
In just two weeks, th~ agenq has pledaed nearly $1 0 billion to rescue.
tn addition to the Oklllhoo\a institu-
tions. 21 in Texas. five in Minnesota
and one each in Iowa. ldaho. Cah-
fomia and Tennessee.
Wall indicated the fast pace "1 ll
continue\>vtt the next monttt.-
.. We will be very acuve, .. he said.
He declined to provide details. but
the agency's spokesman. Karl Ho) le.
said pending transacuonr. an Texa~
and olhc~ mtes ·woold involve
billions of dollars more. The problem
.is greatest inthe.Soulb~cst..-\\luch has-
bttn hard hit by problems to the oil
industry.
In part, the agency. which got a ne"
board and ~nfus1on of cash hm rescue. which would make 11 the
summer, is merely '"hitting its stnde." laraest bailout of a single S&L.
Wall said, but he acknowledaed that Including the Oklahoma package,
the board felt prcssurtd to act quackl}' rcaulators have closed or merged 94
by a pcndina change in the way the S&Ls so far this )Car. compared with
federal bud&ct deficit as calculated . 48 for all of last year. Wall said he
Allhouah the bank board receive) planned to resolve the cases of 259
its money through an assessment on institutions this )Car and next.
the industry and not from the WalJ said three of Oklahoma's 48
aaxpeycrs. itsspendanJcounts toward Sells are anemp11ng to r~tructurc
tbcdeficil. ll\cmsclvcs wuh pnv:nc capital.
Effective at the start of the 1989 rather than government help. but if
fiscal yt.ar on Oct I. government th<>K efforts fail. they will be added to
1CCOuntants will count the bank the consolidat1on plan.
board's promissory notes as immed1· Polttacians and industry officials an
ate spcndina. Thus. any notes issued Oklahoma arc compla1q1ng tha1 the
befores><;t. I greatly ease the admm1~-consolidation will make at difficult to
tration s bud~t-balanc1ng burden. keep the institution an the hands of
The bank board was facing a state residents.
deadline today 10 Y..rap up neg<>-"If they lump them all into se'eral
tiations with ~he Robcn M. Bas~ huge paclc.age.s. Jt's hkel) the) 'll be
Group of Fort Worth, Texas. which 1 sold to out-of-state investon because
seekjna federal assistance to acquire we're a capttal-poor state." said
American Savings and Loan Assocaa-Michael L. Toalson. president of the
tion of Stocx.ton. Caltf.. one of 1hc ,(?klaho ma League of Sa' angs lnstttu-
nation's largest S&L . taons.
Thc.-board began nc~otia11ng \\ath Oklahoma conircS"sional offR'rr
the Bass Group exclu'il' el} on Apnl made telephone calls Wcdnesda)'
21 and twice has c'tended the morning in an attcmpi to pcr$uade
deadli~. Wall proma!>Cd an an-the bank board 10 dela) its an-
nouncement on Amencan toda) but nounct'ment unul after Congres
would not sa;y-wtmhcc..thc board.had returns from its Labor Day r«.!ccss.
1iruck a deal or "a 'i>lanning to Jot Taylor. an aide to Rep. Jam
eontin~ negotiations. ---fnhofc. R-Gkla . 1 lnhofc-and
lndustr)'. ~urces ha' c said bc1v.een other Oklahoma members of C'<?n-
$1.5 billion and $2 tn01on an federal gress wanted n greater say m shaping
money hlcely will be requ1r~d for 1h:11 the plan.
...,. .. -~ ~~:,~ i;··a
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Slne>e o I I Totllt • It. GvPlu o lUO II I> int< Sii o 11' I 1371 1111 ....-.r. Go~I -t I) t1' .Mi.{iU 7*• Im HtY : ' •
tnv 1 f..: 1tO: ~.,~1 §ui ntkK o IO O lO M91'T D IS 16 ,,,., • ..,, •• s ,, ... ,..., 12.lf Ml.
"'!;-14'!9 .... ,
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p-... . ·-. ... 1 ~ lo+ ,
II
Orange Cout OAll.Y Pll.OT/Ff1cfey. ~ 2, 1• * M
FRIDA~& CLOSING P.RICES
Dow Jones up 52 points
NEW YORKCA.P>-Thestock marketsta1ed
a s\rong rally today. inspired by new statistics pn
employment that suggested a slowing of economic
growth.
Before the opening. the Labor Ckpartment
reported that tbe unemplo~ment rate rose to 5.6
percent 1n 4.ugust from 5 4 percent the month
before
In accompanyi ng data that arc watched
espec1all) clo~I~ on \\-all uttt. the depanment
reported smaJler-than-<~pected mcrea~ in pa)-
roll emplo)ment.
The news v.1ls \!, 1dt"I ) set"n as evidence that arowth was slowing. rtdu<.·mg prospects for
hei&htcned inflationary prcs~ures and $ivin' the
Federal Reserve more leewa> in its CTedll pohcy
The figures got a rousing "'elcome in'the bond
market. Prices of long-term government bonds
which move in the oppos11e d1rrct1on from interest
rates. climbed more than S:!O for each S 1.000 in
face value.
The QQv. Jones a' eraie of 30 md.USlnals
Jumped 52 28 to 2.0~4 9 for tts b1oggest one-da~
advance since ll rose ~4 6~ pomu on Ma} 31 .
Advancing issues outnumbttcd declines b~
more th.an 4 10 I on the New ork Stock EAchange.
with l , l 92 up. 289 dov. n and 427 unchanged.
WH AT A ~ux Orn
NEW YORK (AP) S.O. 2 ftfW. • NEW YORK (AP) S.0. 2 ill ~~ tr""1s
27S PectinlJd 2t7 BU~ ml 1~ ==' 1~
NYSE Lt~DtR l
NEW VO'tK CAP) ...:.. S.lft, ' om.. NEW YORK (AP) -S.lft, ' P m FrkMy Price and net c:tl•~ of ttie 10 mo. st FrJOav prlce and ntt cna119e ot rM 1} most active American .&Ioctl EJCCfla'IOe Issues, ectl"9 ~ Vor~ SI~ E•~ ISIUH, tradiM-nationallv a1 more then s 1 treolne NlionaWv al mar. trwtn s 1 ....,,. vi ust CM. .....-"I Last R r=irCP l :j l~~ + ~ ~:t't.'PPe, '~: ·1· I~ la.
Kevstne.m 1, 3 .1: ~ ~iron 2, ,l ~· I EClloBav '3. 17l9 -1 • '2 •
WaneLat>8 260.600 9 .. 1,. K ' 11. -~ 1 ~ ~y Times 1 1= 2S't tt "'. 11li:IS llA +3l. antuekln I~ S~ Id -
orJmarTel 1 13 • + • Sol.ltnern Co 1"'4(), 100 I ~~rnMCN l 6''2 1•$t + • AmEiror 1,•S7,700 ~'" ~I •
relftOMra 107'700 l~ -'• Cit~ l,•ll1 ti .. ~~ • Amer .. r '·m· ,.,, , Union lee 1, l,j, • Pwfl~ Lt 1.l , lit, , Galo QuoTEs !"f'f?_~:s ~:fff• • Al~ ~
ME TALS Quaas
Natioll'sjobless .. rate
edges up in August
WASHINGTO!'< ("Pl -Th~ na-
uon's u.nemplo)mcnt rate ro~ 10 5 6
perttnt in Auaust a four months of
hmng booms on facto!') imcmbl)
lines and in retan lores camc-to an
abrupt halt. the go,cmmcnt ~1d
today.
In C.hfom1a. the Jobi~ rate was
S.6 percent, up from S.4 pt"rttnl
The Labor Ckpanmen1 said the
numbCT of .)Oblcss Amencans JUmpcd
b)' l26.000 to 6. SI. in 4'u.ust
v.h1k the number of tho with JC?t?s
rote by only 121.000 to 11 S. I 0.000.
~ 0.2 J>UCCnt.-.r point inetttse
from Jul)·s~1v1han Jobk ~tc of'S.4
pc-~nt followed • 0 I pc~nt n~ from June· 14-)tat lo~ of 5.3
~nL
Mott or the U11CRurd Jobkun
'Wal 5'1ffaed by ldult men. "'ith t~r unem~nt rate n11na 0.4 ptt-
ttntllf posnts to 4.9 pnttnl.. The
,oblnt ratt· •"'°"I "aduh .-omtn.
mean-...k. fell &om S.1 pnu1\l lO
4.1 pm:imt. tbt Labor Department
•ed. A ....... t~ of bulinttt
.. yrolh -wiakh man) tt-<MtOl9ttts
C'Oftllidtr a "'°" mieblc ind.ator or lM ec'OftOm)''I bMh.a. -~
119,000 llfW joM 1n A ....... ~I
..... die ~000 ·~ OM>Dtbl)' i~ •June Hd Jiit),
Tiie ... time .i.t C1~1'aa" un-emptoymftt raet ._ea b petttnt
""
was 1n Ma)
~ 1oods-prodoo ng side of the
economy lost JObs for the first time
~!nee last January, wnh employment
tn manufactunna droppma by S,000
after a 70.000 .i_ump m July.
TM Labor Ikpan.me-nt said small
employment pm.s in printiDJ 'and
pubhshma and aporH~lat.cd tnd~
tncs such as mech10CT)' •nd cl«t:rdl
equipment were more tha.n otftct by
9.000 JOb loun 1n textile and appattl
·cMlnt and smalkr dcchoes in wveral
other manufactunOf. 1ndustnes..
EmE>loyment m oil •nd ps drilh•
alto dcchn~ shahtly, but 1t rotie a
n'UftUICWe 3,000 JObs m con.stnac\ion.
On the tef'VI~ tde of the ICC>"" ':l; ~ monthh 1nc:rea1e1 aa letail
t b1n .. -80.0001nJQJyaao.t-
tk>wed IO JYM ll.000 MW ;°'911 a.
moalh. vinalty all I.ft poctt)' ~
OW:r reoeft\ hiP.,,.,. job ... ·~wed. lusiaaltcnim-..•
nt9C)ral)' ~ 6nM ..... -16,000.w ........ Cl•JFF .. ...
• .,.. ........, 191Cfl II fl--
dll D 4't dte:t:.::.:"~ 5 er • NIW .... I e ..... _. v--. ........... !ll .. l~td
will'9fdlr ....... af"C.':1 aaD .. '"°' .... .., ~-··~ ............. n.mm .•
A I r.k1•llllll--riliia• ....... JO.GOO I --la-.-;--,... ,..,.
'
OI•• CMll DAILY PILOT/ Frtay, Seplember 2, , ... __ PEOPLE.-----
., 'he Alleda ... ..,_,
HOUSTON -Sinscr J ... Dea-
""· who wants to ride aboard iM
Soviet Mir ll*lC station, is spending
thret days at NASA ·s Johnson Space
Center underaoina a medical evalu-
ation aiven to an astronaut appli-
cants, a apokciman says.
Denver, 44, bepn the medical
evaluation Tuesday1 and is paying
SI ,SOO to $2.000 for 11, a space center
spokesman said.
Av~tion Week &. Space Tech-
nolOI)' mapzine reponed recently
lhat Oepver asked the Soviets to
launch him to the Mir space station
after be fail~ in repeated attempts to
ride on the U.S. space shuttle.
But Carrie Oick. a spokcs""oman
for Denver, said the Soviet Unio n has
con&acted numerous Americans -
rrcm scientists to politicians to Den-
.. .., -about having an American fl)
in the Soviet space program.
''John did not approach them." she
said.
NASHVILLE -Singer BreDcla
Lee has sued MCA Records fo r $20
million, claiminJ she has not been
paid her share of royalties duri ng her
JO.year career.
In her Davidson County Chancery
Court suit she claims MCA failed to
~ount for sales, licensed her records
without her authonzation. neglected
fott'ian licensing and blocked her
attempts to make audits. •
Lee bqan recording for MCA's
predecessor, Dttca. in 1956 when she
was 11 years old. The suit stems from
y_ Mountain high?
Jolua Denyer
a 2(}.ycar contract she signed "1th
Decca in 1962. Her hits include "I'm
Sorry;• "As Usual." ··Rock1n'
Around ihc Christmas Tree" and
"Swect.l'lothin 's."
Brenda Lee
for h1m and his wife, saying he will use
his own money to travel "in a ma nner
most convenient for m )'sclf and m>
family."
Bono left fo r Deauville. France.
Thursda)' to inspect the organization
PALM SPRlN GS -The "bent of that city's film fcsti valr He. would
socs on" in ~ayor Soaay Boao'1 bid .. like Palm Spnngs to ·be host of a
to promote this desert city-only the similar affair. Unlike his previous
fo"'?er singer aJ'ld tele~ision com.ic trips when he and his fam ily flew !irst·
wont 10 by first-cla ss air travel paid class. however. Bono will fly business
by city funds. class.
Bono withdrew his request for the
City Council to pay first-class air fores LO o\NGELES -Lorimar Pro-
duction's l1wsuit aa.inst actress
Valerie &ar,er has bttn tnmmcd by
a j._ who said he saw no evidence
that would allow tM compen)' to ~k
punitive dam.,es from her.
Judie William ·1ioaoboom. the
retired Superior Court jurist who 1s
hearina the case. said Wednesday he
was dismissina Lorimar's allegations
th1t Miu Hari)er had committed
fraud. bad-faith denial of an existing
contract. and inducement by he r
husband. Tony Cacciotti. 10 breach
their contract.
Lef\ intact by Hogoboom was
Lori ma r's breach of ·contract
challenac apinst Miss Harper.
The actress and the production
company arc suing each other over
-Harper's dismissal one )ear ago from
the television show ··Valerie's Fam-
ily." which is now called "Th<.-
Hopns."
LOS ANGELES-'l'om JOHt' son
says the singer has recovered from
minor throat surgery with his voire
intact, and plans to begin rccord10g in
October.
Jones. 48. whose smok> voice and
ayrating hips have beguiled gro\A.n
women for decades. had a pol) p, a
smooth projecting growth, removed
from his thrQat Aug. 17 at Cc-dars-
Sinai Mcdieal .Cente~. sard, Mi rk
Woodward. the entertainer's son and
manager.
"The surgery was ver) successful
and he is now all bcttC/. There 1s
absolutely no cancer. His doctor said
he's never seen his vocal cords look
better." Woodward said.
·'StQpping.in time' not guaranteed
. -
DEAk ANN LANDERS: You
faiJcd to address a very imponant
point in your response to the teen-age
airt who had a phantom pregnanc}
and learned her lesson about the
responsibility (or i~sponsibihty) of
casual, unprotcded sex.
Her reference to trusting i uysv.ho
"promise they wjll stop in tune" is a
clear reference to the withdrawal
method of birth control (stopping
intercourse prior to ejaculauo n). This
·rs common among inexperienced
teen-qen. Apparently. they don't
realize that pregnancy can r~sult even
without total penr1rauon
You provide a great service to teens
and adult11Jike, Ann. but rfelt I had
to haul you up short for not zeroing in
on this important point. Teen-agers
are bored by statistics, bu1 "'hen > ou
sock it to 'em in plain language. the}
ttt the meuqe. Keep hammering
awaiy. -STERLING HEIG HT .
MICt1.
DEAR STERLING~ nuts fo.r lke
... _, ea.ll. YM're ahelately ript.
S&adstks dea't mua mad1 to teea·
.,en, PIUa lupa1e aM ...
.-seue lalormatioa It wllal alley
wut. Coat• me to lay It oa tile llne:
TM wtdldr.wal teelu)lqu Is ex·
tremely risky .... tlltoff wlto depend
oa it are almost certain-to 1et eHglllt. -....
DEAR ANN LAN DER : M) \\1fc
andl arc greganous people and "c
like to have guests o'er for dinner
parties and Sunda} brunch. But I'm
~nning to think "'e should enter·
tain our friends in the garage because
almost ev~r> time w~ ha'c guc t
over. something in the house ends 11p
missing.
In the~ast few month$ "e tia,·c-lost
an heirloom letter opener. a sterling·
silver cake knife and a small d od..
and an expensive bottle of perfume
d1sappe~ed fro m m) wife's dressing
table. Lilst week. after a pany. "e
d iscovered ttlat a g~st had "'aJked off
with a larg(framed original Currier
and Ives.
I'm sure-some of these things arc
taken, ...as. ..sowre:nirs-of ...a-. -pl~sant
eveniog. How do ~ou cope "1th thc-prob~m. Ann? -NEEDI NG
ANSWERS IN L.A.
DEAR L.A.: I don't have the
problem. My guests don't steal.
Since yours obvloasfy.do, J sugge't
tllal you pat away ,_n small _Items,
lock doors to bedrooms. and you
ml&lat also dlsereetfy inqalre among
)IOU close pals as to tlle..l4eatUy..of
potslble kleptomaniac In your circle. • • • DEA R ANN LANDERS: M} wife
and 1 both ha'e high cholcitcrol. la 1
night. she said she read some" here
that frequent so lo"eJ ... ~•he
cholesterol. .We ha .. e never he-a rd of
this before. We decided to as!.. .\nn
Landers. How about 1t? -ID.\-HO
INQVIRER
DEAR IDAHO: I checked witb Or.
Alltlaoay Gotto, a ·world-recognized
H"°ffty oa cltoletterol at tlae Baylor
Collete of MedJclne In HoHtoa. He
said die oaly way frequeat sex mlglat
~Ip lower cllolesterol would be If a
coaple ea1a1ed In tex INSTEAD of
eatla1 egs, cbeese, Ice creatn, liver
ud caviar. •
• • • DEAR ANN LANDER : Wh) 1s 11
ihat most su11-apd-tic gentlemen
don't know)low to make a diamond
knot? ·
I · work for a banking firm in
Manhattan as a blue-collar .building
cf'lgineer. When I ec impeccab~
dressed eitecutives \\ it h a slopp) tic. it
annoys me.
Just I a The ne"'scac;tc"r\ and
guests being intc-~ icwed on TV and
you'll see .... hat J incan . .\ well-mac.Jc
knot doesn't slip. It looks neat and
classy. Pass the .... ord. nn1e. These
auys nl!'ed to shape up' -OB·
SERVER IN N.Y. -
DEAR OBSERVER: Yoa're also a
mlM-realler. Ally man wlao ••ants to
lffn ltow to make a perfect knot can
ask th salesperson wtao sold him lais
last att'ktle .
Can.'t TV pitches De a little more fu.n?
I watch a lot of television. and I
have come to the conclusion that
models are not happy peo ple -
especially those who sell hair con-
ditioners and sexy perfumes.
They have a look ofhostile defiance
on their faces that I have not seen
sintt my daughter told' me that all t he
airls in her class pierced their cars
with an ice c ube and a paper clip and
they didn't get sick.
Every ttmc I see a model look into
the camera with a cold aloofness. I tell
myself here's a woman who put her
elderly dot to sleep that morning and
just got a call from her agent telling
her she blew the Revlon account.
Besides. her pantyhose are on
backward, causina her great pain. •
They defy you to like thtl r product
-or, for that matter. understand
what they're selfing. Perfume ads a rc
becoming so vague-. they're like mind
teasers.
I saw a woma n the other night
running alone throu&h the darkne c;
in Florence. She finally appeared
before the statue of David. dropped
her cape to reveal bare shoulders. and
God knows what else, and JUSt stood
there. I said to my husband. ··1
wonder what she's selling." He said.
.. Whatever it is, he isn't buying. ..
, Models have been an enigma to me
since tM days when I used to attend
luncheon style shO\\<S for some bcn·
efit. The room .... ould grow dark and
thespotlight would fall on a 37-pOund
woman who hit the runway like she
liiGjust coughed arter surgel). Ncr·
.
vously, she would h .. irl and fidget. her
head jerld ng from side to side. She
never made cye..,c-ont.act. Her sisters
who followed were th~ same. They all
acted like the) were-graduates of the
Sam Donaldson Charm School.
There are exceptwns. of course.
Chnstie Brinkle) hurls a round her fat
hair with a glo"'ing mile. When
Cheryl Tiegs sells cameras. she seems
to be having a good time. It seems
foreign models are the ones who feel
the thicker the accent. the .more
expensive the perfume -the more
they whisper. the deeper the desire to
keep )'OU~ underarms di:. Somehow
you know that when \OU buy a car
Catherine Dencuve drapes her body
over, you wouldn·1 dare put a sha& rug_
on the dashboard.
• s=-a
It doesn't take a genius to figure out
that·adveniscrs want their prtjducts
and clothes to be faJce n senousl).
They want them to set a mood for
seduction, m ystery and intrigue. One
simply docs not laugh durin~ a tryst. ·
Frankly, I can't get 1ooscnous o ve r
a protein fix fur my hair.or a skin the
size of a coaster. l love raisins that
dance and toilet scats that talk. and
I'm crazy for the commercial "here
the model is talking_ about the cost of
children's gym shoes as she knocks a
pair of feet off the table and drops a
pair of shoes into the washer. When
her daughter yells. ··Where ;ire my
pink aym shoes?" she grimaces. "It
must be prom night."
Come to ~think of it. sh.e. doesn't
smile either.
•
Testspo~s.knowledge on ·'O~clties
This will busy the boys at the bar:
Among North American cittes ,..1th
profcisional spons teams. how·i:nan)'
have names that end m "o"? Sa) fi .. e.
Chlcqo. Buffalo. San Francisco. San
Diqo and Toronto.
Q. Oonany human society eat h\e
animals?
A. Live invertebrates. ~es. 0)'ste~.
Oams.. The. c<iWfc. animal doe~n't
have to ~dnd. h just has to be mute
People eat livin11hin15. but not II\ mg
thinp that squeal when bitten.
lwm 02314 ID our Love and War
man's file is this excerpt from a
client's note: "lfa man. who speaks of
hit wife as his better half. mames
twice he's, done for. mathema1-
ically."
Q. You said a Florida doctor
n1med John Gorrie invented the ice-rnakina m1ehinc to make his malana
PlticftU mOft comfortable ID the
terrible As-lac:hicola heat. How
much did ~ ~t for it?
A. S.tidact1on. httle more. He died
broke.
Whit Emperor Ncro'a ~ther hkcd
IO do Wit nan down little ch1ktttn
..... his daariot.
. . ..
.That;.word "lord" s,ta n c-d out a~ A. The kind. that burrows. So it
"half\\o el'{d" meaning "loaf l..cepcr ... • woo·1 fill up 11s pouch whc-n u dip._ Q. 't ou ~a id a I 0 5-sccond fight in
Maine ~as the shortest boxing match.
Please note. Mi~e Collm knocked out
Pat Brownson on Nov.;.4. 1941. wt&h
the first punch. and that Golden
GIO\CS bout wa' stopped without a
Bade when the most 1mponant man · · •
in the AngJo-Saxon group was the
feUo w who guarded the bread suppl)
Q. Can a bab) cry before''' born"
A. Not unless membrane rupture
let a ir 10. A baby nttds air to Cl).
Bostonians art the 1ee cream caters
of the world. more so than any other
metropolitans. .
You know thott little knobs on
dttr antlers'! They're cal~ croches.
Q. How can bup h1bemate 1n
winter without freo1n1~
A. Some insects can drain them
bodies of waiter. Bloodstrnms of
ootheri contain .SO percent glyccroJ. a
na~ral antifrtae.
Q. At w ... t temperature " the ~mm in tptrm blnks •"Pt'J>ted to be
ltOrecr'
A. Minus 321 dqrttS F. In hqu1d
n1t~v
Q. How loftadOt'lthe averaee dafr>
cow lat1 in dull job? . Not .,,&e four
senons Mott bee da1na tum O\'er 30
prr"tTnt of their mtlkina '10fk e' t t')
)'Uar.
FBI researchers several years ago
concluded 1t "'as easier to buy a
handgun in the nited States than to
act :i library card. count after four seco nds. •
A. Noted.
I~ tht"ycar~B.C. or thereabouts, Q . Isn't S\\imming theoldestspon?
a wise man of Ind.a named SUtfata A If )OU don"t count foot racin'-
uS<'d the point'of a n~lc !O push•· Lib~nancavedrawmgsthatdateback
catai:act 3\\oay from the lens in a bhnd 11 000 )ean depict swimmers. man 'C)C to let h&ht enter. It worked. ·
And is 1n the serons as the first known That game now played 1n the most
e)e o peration. countncs -I JO-1s basketblll.
Lot of prisons in England dunng
1he t 7()()'s "ere pnvatel)I owned.
The) ran on go vernment contracts,
Common pract1<'C ~as 10 chaan a
smsoncr. then charge him for talun1
the ch,ams off . "
Has the basketball whiL 10 )Our fa.mil~ done anything no1rwonhy
l11el). If not. nwn11on th11. Ted St
\41"1" 1n 1975 sank l,7CM con·
wcuuve free throws. .. "~for thOlt' 1wo top 1tnerah oftht
C1"1l.W1r. The South's Robnt E. Lee
frttd hit wvn ~ t~ Nonlt's
l'. Grant frttd his.
Q. Ho\\ old arc tho~ CluneK
"thouund·~ear cgs"?
"· 4l days.
Q. What'' "white aokl'':'
~. Three pens aold. one pen
platinum.
Wi,ct and children o(lhc mall~
have bttn known ~ "dtpmdtnts
stOCT aboul 1900. Earlter. thouah.
they ~ oftlaalfy daipaled II "camp foUOwen. .. thm a mpeciable
~.
0 . E'er hnnl of a.c'° foolbd tam ralfcd 1ht "Sl ... H •
• llldecd. ~World War II. In
1943. aJw PinsbuiP. Settten and
'-int,.._ wtth 1 .olut1on oh1hrr
nnnte and ftft at 1.100 dqrtts F. It
turns a 1dlcnr aoktm COior. ( tftl•nn
llD-whm an c•ptnmenter d1~
_......__ __ (0,,rt!cf ...... l~ dftJY lhoutftt It
idMI f'or t~1r purp0tn, f int st.ttntd sins depicted halos ' . • •
Most popular hem1 clK*n b)
redttmm of SAH Oftttn Stamps
rePQntdly art btdthmt.
Q. What ktftd of'l-enuPtel has an
upsiM-down po«h?
Philldrlpla• ~-to --Ont' tam to • In 1944. w Stttlm nd OlnlO Cift111Wt
Jouttd 10 rnakt anoditr C'alltd tht .. Card· Pins. • ,. . . ..
BJ IYDNSY OllAIUl .. ...., . ..,.. •• .,a
..
AIUES (March 21-Apnl 19): lnd1cat1o ns arc for a "lively" Saturday nipt.
Focus on popularit). social act1vity, lona-d1stance call rela1in1 to special event,
possible journey. You'll be asked 10 review entertainment p(ans. TAUR~ (April 20-Maf 20): .Be a~are of fine .Print, check w , le~~ and
license requirements. Lega ram1ficat1ons more important than onainal~y
anticipated. SomcoR"• may have inscncd a .. hidden clause." Scorpio
prominent. • . . . GEMINI (May 21-J une 20): C)cle continues high.JUdfment and 1ntu1t1on
will be accura\e. Member of opposite sex is interested 1n more than mere
nirtation. Take care with what you put in writins. Virgo plays role.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Major domestic adjunmc~t takes place.-
sale or purchase is involved alo ng with possible change of residence or manta!
status. Key is to be calm. cool. diplomatic. Libra figures prominently.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Define terms, rcc~ize spiritual values ~nd
"psychic income." Emphasis on ability to utthzc powcn of pen~11on
successfully. Member of opposite sc ' sars. "Your. charm is overwhelm•~".
VIRGO (Aug. 23-&pt. 22): Missed opportun!tY has .come ar<;>und -.n 11
almost deja vu. You get proH~rb1al second chance in relation to unique pro,ect. ca~r. reputation. promotion. Cancer, Capncom will figu.rc ~rommently:
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on commumcat1on. ~ucauon,
lanauaac. direction. purpose. travel. Check legal documents. 1nclud1ng
passport. Note: TaJce special care 1n handling of sharp objects .
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2 1 ): tress independence. creativity. and realize
that member of oppo ite sex is very much attracted. Focus ~n le&al
commitment.concern relating to marital status. Leo will play outstandmarolc.
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 2 I): Emotional responses featured, family
member is involved. fi nancial dispute can be amicably settled if you make
intelligent concession. There will be rapprochement, pro~bly over meal.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Look beyond the immed iate, accept
social invitationT You'll receive.$Urprisegiftthat adds lO wardrobe.Note: Keep
recent resolutions concern ing general health. nutrition. Gemini represented.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2(}.Feb. 18): Good news received concerning young
person who recently underwent emotional pressure. What had been
"perplexing" will be rcs0lved. You'll successfully revise material. -
PISCES (Feb. I 9·March 20): Emphasis on c uriosity, investigation,
detective work .. You'll locate object that had been lost. missing or stolen. You'll
have papers that prove ownership. Copyright material will be in your hands.
"IF .SEPTEMBER 3 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current cycle hiJ!'lights
dcalin.11 with public, special success with women, propen y transaction that
involves home and seturit>.
By CBAllLES GOREN
&M OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH
• "' 7 \) Q' 2
O_QI 3
•JCQJ9
WEST EAST
• A 10 5 .. J 3
\) '" <:;> 153 0 J 11 1 2 ~ 0 I( ' 6 5 •
• 10 6. 3 •• 7 5
SOVTH
•Ql6.C2
\J A K-J 10 6
O A
•A 2
The biddin1:
Soadl West No~ EuC
l • Pus 2 NT P ..
3 \) .... • • .... , ......... ..
Opcnin1 lead: Jack of 0
"Recently, we have shown several
examples of deceptive plays that do
not need to be elaborate to 1ucceed.
Once in a while, however, a player
must weave a very tan&)ed web if he
wants to trap an opponent.
It is difficult to fault North-
SOuth for reachina an inferior slam.
As.little u thtjKk of apada instead
of the queen-jack of clubs would
have made the venture.. sound
indeed.
Weat led the jack of diamonds,
and the only legitimate way for de-
clarer to hold his trump. losers to
one is to play an opponent for a
doubm.on ace of trumps, then lead
throuah him up to an honor and
play low from both hands to the
next trick. The technical name for
this maneuver is the Obligatory Fi-
nesse. However. that wasn't possi-
ble here, but declarer succeeded in
pullina the wool over the defender's
eyes and so came home nevertheless.
As the first move in hi1 canvas of
false ima1es, declarer covered 1he
jack with the queen. East put up the
king and declarer won~ Next. be
cashed the ace of clubs before lead-
ina a low spade toward dummy's
k.in1.
Let's move fnto the West seat.
from that vantqe point, ~larer
had played as if he bad a doubleton
diamond and a sinaJeton ace of
clubs. He was now tryiq to aet to
the table with the kin& of spedes to
act ri~ of his diamond loser, or los-
ers, on the aood clubs. West wu
havina none of that, so he shot up
with the ace of trwnps to try to cash
the ten of diamonds. Finis.-
--~-.·
A~SI
1 Together
5 Ol9cards
10 Hwd llquor
14i~tftle
t5 "'-·TV,
*· 11 Awamp
17 Electrode
11 Wood
19 Footteee
-*'\Ill
20 A.-ncoln
21 HOrde
22~agea
24 CelUc garb
21 cat'• kin 2TFOOd -
t19¥orlnga
29 Birds
32 Doorp-..
33 Vendftlonl
34 Intent
35 Ovit
31 Outtlnee
37 Tower city
31 Aecent: Pf9'.
31 Subeltema
40 "'°'"" .. lllrucbn
41 ......... .., Ory lend
44 EUc:tloM
-~ 41-mlll
41Cokt~
49 Snatch
52 "thahka __ , ..
53 Obetruct
55 Hither se a.tore O.vld
57 Pllaae 58 -~
59 EbbtKnMP eo Sc:hol9'9
81 Emperor
DOWN
1 PufMe
2 GIMt
3 !.,-:C= to
4 Owned
5 Stings
IT ....
7 Vortex
8 Metrtx
t F1ah
10·Kffchen tool
11 eon.tent
tt.'•tton
12 Scent
13 Celt ...
21 a.v.rao-' 23 Oebor end
P9r0ft
25~ 21 SoolMI'
27~
28 Inc.com UMr
21 lrwer1ed "v"
30~
47 Turttlah
regiment
41 Dier
50 M9lody
51 C8lty
54 Water body
56 Toque
..
by Bii Keane
"Company's comin', so don't forget
to use yourmanners."
by Brad Anderson
.-
DI TBS 8LSACllSR8 by Steve Moore
r ~ l 'f·l...
I r
I ,
BLOOll COU!fTY
ARLO AND JANIS
00 'rW ~ ~T 11.-.e. IT ~~ SIX Ot:tocK 1
.. ·orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Fftday. September 2. 1988 All -
by Jimmy Johnson
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
gp/, llS ~"Tl> GET
lHe. KIDS OFF1b .
c5Ca:XJL,FNNIE ITS
6eEN ALDNG-
SMMER '-
, SHOE -by Jeff MacNelly
"Forget the fly!"
'<ES, SIR .. SCMOOL STARTS
NEXT WEEK 50 I NEED
SOME SUPPLIES ...
OARPIELD
THE 1'ROU6L f' WITM YOO.
GARFIELP, I~ YOO THINK
'1'00'AE HUMAN
TUllBLSWBBD8
" ... 8lJT l W~D A 1lOU.AR BU LIKE THE ONE
YOU GAVE MOM ... WITH A 5 ON \i I "
A 6000 PEN. SOME
~CIL5, AN ERASER,
SOME NOTEBOOK PAPER ..
f ·l
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
1 u01'1A PO
. SOMETHINCS
A&OOITHIS INH.RIORITY
COMPLEX
by Kevin Fagan
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FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. 1988
Evenpiace-ktcker
Sperle has TD pass
ln 34-7 rout of BC
NEWTON, Mass. C .\Pl -Quar-
terback Rodne)' Pctte and the~
ranktcrSouthrm Cal1fom1a Tro1ans
let the Boston Collrgr Eagles do the
talkina.
So. on thr1r first mp rast sincr a
v1cton at Pm in I Q'?4. P~tr and h1
tramniatcs let talrnt pro\t' itself.
.. We heard all .... ttk the) "ert' png
to ~tufT us." Prete $31d T hur$day
night aftr r trading ' C to a }4. 7
-ro~o"cr BC 1n a 1988.-0pe
Frustratrd 1n a ::!3-1 '? loss "'1uch
rndcd a 10-game "inning streak last
Sept. 19 in Los .\ngele~ BC \ o"ed
\<t'ngeancc in a reno\.ated \lumru.
Stadium before a packed crov.'d of
32.000 fan~.
Thr T roJans. "'ho used t}le victor}
O\ er the f,aglrs as a springboard to the
Pac-"I Ochamp1onsh1p and a trip to the
Rose Bowl last season. s1mpl)
pounded BC into subm1ss100 1n a
rr.n ionall) Cele\ 1~d m1r.match.
Peete. a fifth \Car senior \\llh
enormous taknt. ·said thr Tro1ans
.. talked a bout .. BC comment . ··but
v.e'rc not a team that puts e' e~ thing
up on the bullrtin boaro:·
He bumrd thr Eagk~ ''1th t\\U
sconng pas~ of morl' thJn 50 'ard<,
in the tc.amf ti~t met'tlng tn ht,ltlf"\ .i
)Car ago This time ht· wo~ J '>honn
route
Prete completrd 12 0 1 I 'I pas"'-'" tor
173 ~ards and one tou~hdu" n in
leading t:SC lO a 21 ·ll kad bt-IOH' 8(
scored on a 60-~ard pa'>'> pla~ lrom
Mark Kainpau~ to Tum \\ addk JU'>t
before the half.
Indeed, the TroJans do not. The~
JUSt put things up on the board that
counlS. hkc thr scoreboard. P~te. one of the nation·!> prem1a
quanerbacks at a school noted for
producing great runner;. p1d.ed' apan
tM BC<kknse
Thrn, Peetr bJL on I} ot I ~ pa'>'-CS for
98 yards 1n the second half going
Eagles hurigry.f or win·s
Estancia lacks
reputation. but
h opes to surprise
PREP OUTLOOK
\\CCds and \\'}It ID mai.c the hr<,t b11e.
but the al\\ a~ s outgoing and upt":at
coach. after wml· prvJdmg. finall~
n.'$ponded ·
By ROGER CARl.SOX -Let's put 11 tha., \\J~ •• he ~1d
..., ..,.. ...,.. ..., ··our .J.,id '4anl-10 "m that\. 1hl.'
Es\,_anc1a High tootball lt'Jlh lohn d1ITl.'rence bct\,el·n \\tnncn. and
Ltebengood "'ould hl e \ ci: muc·h 10 loScrs ..\nd the' I the o pros111on 1 :ire
havt one and all bt-heH' 11\ JU't going to be in a "ar ..
another season for tm F .igk., -hut Estancia\ '-ophomorc-dominatcd
no one an the ~a \IC\' Ll'J!!~c ,., squad of · ., "cnt ::!·b. but among
gotng to be bu"ing that ~those losses "ere such se&hacks 3\ 3-ll
E'el)One kno" \\hat' lx'\.·n going 10 ·a \'1e\\ Leagm· l'hamp1on (or-
on the past t\\O ~ears as he l\Jc, tried 10 ona dcl Mar and 12-.. tu ( IF-bound
pick up the Tu un. as "ell JSJUM a b-0 def1cn 10 3
p 1 r c e s a 1 .iron& Saddkbacl. ck' l'n at hal fttml·
Estancia. and till. it's 2-1 for_L1cl:IC'ngood in his
most evel)onc .\\O-)car tour at [srann a nnd hi.'
1s ~ell a"'are admits the ob' ious: .. It hurt._:·· hl'
there are going s:11d. "Good a sets Jon·1 ''ant 10 c,1a~
to be l\>ur "1th a losLng program. but I can st•c
thr ee .) ea r 1he future. The coaches ha' e hung 1n
starters and there v.ath me and \\l1rked hard. The
six two-) ear kids are coming.
starters in the-··Theones,,ho"ere,,1thmc "hen
Euln' hneup. • ...._ I came ha'e \\Orl-.cd hard and ther~·
What's m o re. there'<, Jn ob\ 1ou are no more e'cusc' ltk" before
hunarr factor. We're proud of1h1 team a nd llS "or!.
TM seniors haq~ l\\O 'a"1t~ \ 11.-ethic. \\c·rc going to battle C\Cf')
. torin an tM past t .... o \l'ar.. and v.cn.' m1 nute.-bl."C'3~..C \\C'rc 11~ of lo ·
1-9 as frnhmen. The JUn11:irc,. a "ell ing. ·· ·
ha\'t' a 2-8 record tor their effort in Of the 10 scn~m on the squad. ~1 \
·11. ~ "ere on&inal .,ophomore "1th
Don.t look for the Eagle' m thl· ( IF Laebcngood on the '1'-fl ..,quad De p1te °'' 1s1on VI prcsea .. on rankings. abundant e\pencnn:. the Eagk arc
the) ·re not there. and Ltl'bcngood h:i' sull ~ouni and donunated b} Junior
the answer. pla~ers.
.. Our &eague 1 1he tl>U!,'fl 1n lht' , L~f some 30 JUmor~ return "1th confe~ntt v.1th tour in lhl' I op 10 stan1ng credentials. and a ~q:·nth.
and I think the~ forgot .ihou1 l nah'r-quanerbacl. Dan l l'l-.cr. 1 con-
Stty. Us:t The) ·re nc' c1 going tu p1cl s1dercd a retum1ng '!.l3rtl'r ''1th ma.Jor
Estancaa. not \\llh t~o "HI" m t\\O C\pericnce a 3 -.ophomore punter
years. I figure the raix·f\ "111 p1cl u' and oumde hncbacl-.cr.
last. E'el')onc el<,.: ha'\ the rcpu-L1ebengo00 ~ts to u1t JU> 60
talion." for thc--opcne-r against o ta Mesa
liebengood ....,ould hi.\' 10 .. 11 m the Sept. 9 at Orange Coast College. but
Estancia
Eagles
ColOn Cardinal anc Go•C
LHoue Se• View
17 rK O<d Le•oue 0-S Overan 2·8
Offense 1, Oefenw 60 Hffd C'Olcn JOf'ln L'*1t'fll~,..,.,,o,..ooc.,...
Staff Bill Oennv oet coorc.,,ator
offens1Ye line) Rene Caoe1•ero of·
~s•vt line. <lei ne To"" F s,.,er
(119"11 encs def encs Guv Olguin
(runnono l:Mtd<s ) Aoam wa~bvr~r
(rec .• <let 1ac1oes
tftlS~
Fri., S.01 9-Costa Mesa (QCCI
Fri., Seot t6"-Laouna Hills (MV I
Fri, Seot 23-Los Am1oos IGG
Fri .• S.01. 30-Laouna Beac~ ,OCC>
Thur1... Oct 6--0ranoe CNewp0rtJ
Fri , Oct l•-Tustin• (Newooru
Fri .. Oct 21-CdM* (Newoonl
Thurs .. Oct 27-Unrversllv' ·(NH)
Fri., Nov . .-a1 Newoorl Harbor•
Fri., Nov. ll-Sad<ltebacit· (QC CI
• LHOue o•me All oames a1 7.30
-rea11st1call~ 1(s a 4Q:man ~uad \\1th
20 sophomore set for Junior' arsm
dut\. ··1 feel .... e can pla~ "tth all of our
non-leagur opponent~ .. <,aid
laebengood. . •'The~·~ alL good l)PP..'Ol'ntt ,md
·"'ell-roached. but our Jea~m: J.S much
tougher than our-pn-<,ea,lm I I.no"
that."
.\ ~ear ago h" f agk' .-oulJ nt"t
three touchdo" ns in Ii H' kagul'
pmes as the ~a \ 11.'\, ., J'rk'no;.:"
pro'ed "onh~
Herc's a rundo" n h' r-1.,1\1l•n
QUARTERBACK -l l lc-r .1 ~-Tl
17()...pound nght-hamkr. lco<h lcad-
erSh1p and th<' t'tlue hip "ork t"th1c to
the program. a' \\Cll 8' an .1rm which
eonunucs to de' elop
(Please .ee EAGLES/83)
overhead onl) to com plement his
powerful gang of runnrr~ who hit the
line S3 tames for 229 of the Trojans
502 yard,s.
Owner of a doz-en U C passing
records. Pectt 11ed another "1th his
)7th career TD pass to Gal") Wellman
JUSt before BC's onJ score.
Has O\erhead wizard!") pla~cd a
pan in each ofl' C's other scores. He
later said he suffere-d a cramp in his
throwing arm for a "h1le BC ~ver
no ticed There "as no cramp 1n has
St)lt'
-1 don't think Rodne) Peete pla~ed
an) dafTerentl~ than he did last ~ear."
BC Coach Jack BtckneU satd. -He asa
pat pla~rr He got the ball oft" just in
time evei: 11me Our defensh e hne
JUJ1 Nmldn'l g~ to him-amt he
displa)'ed a great shon passing
pmc·· •
lJ (""as so dumma11ng that It on l~
had to punt once "hile holding BC 10
253 total yard~. inctudmg 65--onlhe
ground T he :r roJans ran off 87 pla~ s.
30 more than the Eagles.
Junior Aaron Emanuel. a backup
fullback.scored iv.a touchdowns. the
first on a shon run "1th the gamr JUSt
3: I 7 old. the ot her on a pass lrom
place-kick holder Chm perle.
Sperle. a product of Fountain
Valle~ High School. 100!. a high snap
on a I 9-~ ard field goal attempt m the
third quaner and fire-d a pass to
Emanuel
Quin Rodnguez booted field goals
from 33 and 3'> \ards 1n the first half
and Lero\ Holt· added an insuran~
to uchdoWn on a ~hon run m the
founh pcnod.
USC Coach Laf'T) m1th felt his
Trojans played -prett' dam well.It
Area players head for Europe· )01
f EICUsOI
. .
&ck ei; McEnroe ousted
by Aus sies at .U.S .. open \
Estancia 's Pi nckney. Newpores Peterson
to compete In pro volleyball l~~ ... es overseas
Two former amt Pl"CP.' olk:) ball prod..mare~nca dtffettn• t)pc of
cbampiomlupaftcr kadJna the .
......... Youna Un1,·enny fD$0·s
duitmm to a third coUe11ate club
division national ti tit last sprins.
El1Mcia'1 Doua PiMkney. the son
olloftlbme ara coech GeofF Pi~ Jr .• and Newpon Harbor's l.aM~IOftatt ~to Europe
to becolM the fint Americans to play a. dw Europmn pro lelllUftalona wi• fonner IYU teammate and
T..U. ~ ~uct Pit Lindahl and IM4~n Dutt) O\·orakof
~.ry. •amec1 ~11.CIF --.m I 91Jat HartJor. and
L.itm111 win plly for the Ma'•
lplill-lft ltl 12\h 'lfti'of c•=:·~•r.,..,whohdped dlll toaCIFaitk, •lll "'8> for
I ...............
Yell)t ' wlUcta ascatchu_won
11 HW91t)IWinbropt.o&ru s:::.· wlaidtN9" from~ ..... ,\a)ril .... th .Wfuro-
,.-ntmpldblll1111llftrrdw 1ftdt-
............. l)ilS. ,,.~ .t.ic'h Doui't
brothcrGcorit Plncknc~ Ill ts ncso-
tiatina. wiH include hue~. a car
and aparvncnL
0
Former UCI standout Wa\ nc E~.a firsMeam all PaC1fic
Coast Athletic AUocaatton ti.slcttball player• wason. is cxated about rqMM'tlda to the ~n,er Nugrts
rookie camp later this mon1h. • EnslsUld uid ht ~h the N uaiets
WftC ionest With hem all alona-•d1•n&
him hr woukl be thclrchottt 1n the
thinhouftd of the dr1ft 1 fa cn\atn
...,.Swnnouv1ilabk. 0-iaht 8(),d
WM..ad the Numrts ftftt fort~
arA *option ~ft for •
IOatleftd fOOkttcamp.
llaYCd will in 1 rookte tour· "fNtMbdwNusi~tn Tt"\a~
..tierdailsumawrbd'ott ttt1• lil*blMU.barPtnin••th the Llllin ........... laltn It
.....,.... Mlr,fftW>Uftl and~\ tftl
~--clayolpnn~tp1tb Dlti.,. we·R ........ tht o""""
.,..., ...... dltfina,qUld
rilltl._,,· E111dallluid -..--~thf) •-.ntN
•
to 5tt me more '" n I.and ol disappointed\\ 1th thl' Ut.1-.el". I gues ..
the\ had t hegu~ in min<l the'
y,anted 10Stt ld1dn·1 1hinl.. I had an
opportuntt' ·•
01hrr l I pla~cr on the ' B \
front th1~)rar anclutk Roh
Thomu>n." ho 1gned a ne" guJ ran·
tccdrontract "'1th Ph1l.tdelph1:i. ~'Ott Brook~. "'ho 1s tin1 hing h1 ~a.-.on
•1tfl Fmnoot the \\ orld Ra~kctball
Ltque a 6-foot-U nd un~tcr lc.tgue.
and w11lattend a '\8-\\amp.11 c1thl.'r
Portl.lnd. {)(troll or\Ph1laddph1.l,
and Ben McDonald. "'h sc stoci.." 1th
theGolJcn tale\\ 3ffltW• a pf".'.US to
hl\trunou1allhough hc1">h l..l'h to
SCft'"thsomt'team
Tod Murph~ andfohnn\ R,lgel". whopta~rd,,,1ththe < R\ \IN n)
Pltroonnnd ~ 8 \ (le' cl.tnd Caval~n~ll\ ·h l.l\I •:ison
hlwc hc9dtd •0Spa1n hl "ic.'tl. th~1r pro
~bell tCwtU!l<\, \\ h1k "C\ in. M..,e•1ll mum t ,,.n,,lhcr'>C~\On
an lvatl. •
0 ~"°" o4 C't'IC Rid.~ 8u1k-rof
Ocan VtCYo Ht1h h.11' pll\_'k."'d l~ ~ datlnat l (.I and v.111 ~
fteiblclO .. ) for the \ntcatrnttu
........ ~\)f('
Wltilr Etmmiact t~ t '[!TI r n"\t•
*'il"FM .... "."a<>nc.(\~h 8111
M ...... aidhcwoukthKt It>
COLLEGES
NEW YORK (-\Pl -T "0 un-c.han&ed ta tac:s and raised the level of
heralded pla)~rs from Down nckT mr_p.me. ''
put Sons Beder and J ohn McEnrOt' Cahill avenged a stra1ght-stt loss to
down and out at the l . Opt-n Becket' at a pre--Wambledon grass.-
Thursda~. coun tournament 1n June
Bed.er. hobbling on p;unlUll) ~re Slowed b) a bh ter on ht Jeft foot
fort, was booted from th<' toum3men1 and swclhng on both fort. Bc-ck.er •u
b "u.strahan Darren ah11l. t>--3. t>--3. no match for his 22-~car-0ld oppo-
6--2. an a second-round match nt the ncnt. ataonal Ttnnis Center 1 .. What cani )OU do" It's tht U.S.
McEnroe. a four-umc Open "'an-Open and )OU ha\c to do )'Qur best."
Mr. 111>as eliminated b) Aus.sic-Mar~ tht t .. o-11me 'Wimbledon champion
Woodforde. -5. 4-6.. 6-7 (3-1). 6--l. sa14. "h 's JUSt tha1 my best wun•t
LI · h h h l rl Sood enouah toda)... •
Q'" • 1n a 0•• l mate 1 at too ... nea > Th1rd·secdcd tefan ·Edbera four hours. It •'as MeEnroe·s first fh ~sct loss bweacd past Gu Foract of France,
at the Open af\cr nine v.1ns and his 7-S. 6--1. 6-3. while No. 2 Ma.ts
ttt0nd st.ra.taht t to \\ oodforde. • Wdiftdef P a dft fnMB ._.
•ho beat h1m at last month's an-la"')'l_ IC.e'1" Curren before pttv&al•
aid.an ?t"· i"t, . ~.!i. 6--2. ~. ~~.:_ --
•••• :&A I d d .. ..i. t s .......... M.1110\t ~ UH1;11 ~--m 1sappo1nt"' 1 n , _ m)' ..._. ..,_ 90 .. _ _... ........... -~.1 wa•--~. _...._ bnl." 51td McEnroe,~ 16th tCtd "I SK• .. -" -~ __,
fdt my ~oucy let me d0•1' and that .~~ ~:11 ~~ ~~
hu.n me a io.. I tlPttttd more out of , la .,.....1 ..a.y. Slefli Gral lilld m)wtf at tc end... ...:-WoodefOrdt said tr.c wai pk-a!C:d MattiM NaWTMaloVa ~ tato tk
"With hes ptay a~ falhnt behind two third rtMtnd t..11 foui9 1nded ,_
trts '°one. • 5"rivcr Wiii .,_. by $e ... '1 a
"If wu d.tff'tcv~ ,_ ou• t~ playcr lft tic Sovie1 o ... ·~ Gf'l(~·;e:•e..Ollllild ... wtdll the 9CMtt-lht ~ .. he MMt I M...aii 941'•'W ii
said ""The firM thrtt ()t "" wtm\'t toad-~n•\I but a~ that I , • (fln•-8&19t
·-
• ..
. .
r:t:or e Torontii rejeem K•n1•' ........ Chi
That wu \be wocd from .I.be l'Ol'OAIO Dto ea TORONTO-Noway. Iii ea~o
-c~.,;;;..;;;;;~...;;:d~=-==t~b::;.::::::;. -d •Pk la.rs on tht renewed bid by the Los h l • eae ays A ..... Kjnp1oswa1ChNHLdivision1. s OU .. We'd.be very much qaanst a move, .. Ma~ Leafs
_-... • General Maft11er0ord Stellick said ... I also thank moat
r.-•-Aaeeta ... Pren ofthe teams in lhe lcaaue would oppose it. b t t d
• . . ·~~ ·~ bttomina more and more ·~•re of e es e Milwaukee had Robin Yount playing II d1v111on nvalncs."
ceater field and DHmg at tht' same time. The NHL's board of iovernors mcett here next
Bolton had Mike Greenwell and Jim Rice week and the Kinp have sa1d they intend to pras for a
playina left field at the same time. move to the Nonu Division, while suaes1ina Toronto
Don't umpires read the lineup cards an) more? take Los AntclH' place in the Smythe Division .
.. They're supposed to read them." said Many The Kinas currently share the Smythe with four
Sorinptead, American League supervisor of umpires. Canadian teams -the Edmonton Oilers, the Calpry
.. 8u1 I think my 28 are now "'ell a"'are or it." Flame&. the WinniptJJets and the VancouverCanucks,
Last week, Boston Manager JCX' Mo~n's lineup blll would like to switch so they could play U.S.-based
lined two lef\ fielders. No one noticed unul late in the 1eam1 more often.
pme, when Seattle pitching coach Billy Conners Toronto's Nonis ri vals are' the Detroit Red Winp ~mined Boston's batting order and saw Morpn's the Chicqo Blackhawks. the St. Louis Blues and th~
masc:uc. MinnftOla North Stars. -
Lcf\ field in Fen"ay Par!. 1s coz) enough for one
outfielder, let alone t"o· but or course Rice was no1
stroUina before Fenwa) 's famous fence. Rice took his
turns at the plate and returned direct I) to the dugout.
But since Seattle was \\<inning the game. Conners felt no
need to point o ut Morgan's mistake.
"The scorel eeper noticed 11 after the game."
Morpn said the other da). "No one nouccd it during
the pme. not me. the other manager or the umpires.
Every manaacl"messc up the hncup at some time."
But on Sund.a) in Milwaukee. Manager Tom
Trebelhom got h1mselfin trouble "1th a capital "T." He
listed Robin Yount as the No. ba!W' a,nd lhc..center
fielder. The vcl) same Mr. Yount also was nominated as the No. 5 batter and the designated hitter. clearly an
ambitious af\emoon's work.
Trebelhorn had intended to make Mike YounJ the
desianated hitter but somehow he confu$ed tlte switch·
hittina Young and the right-handed Yount.
Af\er Young batted in the second inning. Detroit
Manaaer Spark) Anderspn took (Xception. Mike
Reilly. t.hc home plate umpire. hcld~p proceedings for
21 minutes of discussion.
Was Yount the No. 3 bane~ Was he the. No. 5
t.ttcr'? Was t>c both. and1f.so. \\hat \\Ould happen if he
was up while he also was on base? Yount has 204 stolen
bases in his career. but probabl' is a bit too sJow to fill
both roles simullaneousl}. ·
Af\er due deliberation. Reill) bought .\nderson·s
araument that Young, b) batting in the the fifth spot.
had pinch-hit for Yount. the o. 5 batter. That left the
status ofYounnhe-No. 3 hnrerup1nlhnTr.
"You can have all Younts in )Our lineup but then
they're all out except the real one ... Anderson said.
So Reilly ruled Yount "as out of the game.
Trebelhom. an off-season schoolteacher who should be
more careful with his spelling and penmanship. was.
well. upset. Afier funher d1~ussion. Reilly determined
ht had Sttn enough ofTrebelhorn for the a'fternoon and
dismissed the manager for unbecoming language.
· "I goofed.'' Trebelhorn said.
Yup, but so did ~he umpire:
Quote o f the day
Pat Joaes, football coach at O klahoma State.
which is facing NCAA scrutiny for alh~$ed
recruiting \"tola11ons. J<;>king about the situa_uon
at the Cowboys' media da) golf. tournament:
.. One thing that's going to be in,·estigatedBround
heTc arc some or these scores ...
' Slaman takes lead with 64
OAKVILLE. Ontan o -rG.\ eham-!I pion Jtff Sluman·s I th-hole birdie com-
pleted an 8-under-par 64 and ga,·e him the
lint-round lead Thursda> 1n the Canadian
Open Golf Tournament.
"I don't know "hat to sa~. Eight-under on this golf
course is pretty mind-bogghng." Siu man said.
One ofh.is pla> ing partners. .S. Open title-holder
Cunis Strange, also had trouble expr,essing himself after
he was forced out of the tournament he has won two of
the last three years.
.. "I've never had to do this before." Strange said
af\er back tro uble forced him to withdraw after 11
holes. ·
"I feel bad. I don't know whatto sa,, I'm
embarassed. I'm sorry." ~id Strange. who won the
Canadian Open in 1985 and again last year.
Strange was J I over par when he withdrew.
Sluman. who scored his first career '•ictory by
winning the PGA last month. did not make a boge~. d id
not have a "5" on his card and pla~ed the back nine at
the: Glen Abbey Golf Club in 31 . six under par. .
U .s . routs Puerto Rico, 11-1 .
VERONA. Italy-T > Grifflll's three-Ill
run homer in the third mn1n& sparked the
United States to an 11-l vicLor) over
Puerto Rico Thursda) night at the World
&Kt.II Champtonsh1ps.
In other sames Cuba beat Japan. 3-2; Canada beat
South Korea. 3-2: Nicaragua defeated Spain. 10-0;
Ta1wain beat Italy. 5-2: and the ethcrlands beat the
Nether.lands Antilles. 10-7. ~
Jim Abbott pitched a t"o-h111er and struck out six
u the Americans won their e11cht~~me without a loss.
Jesus rclit lanowas thCTOscr or uirto Rico. ~J. -
Ty8on will fight Bruno Oct. 22
• NEWYqRK-M1kcT~son1A.11l,fight •
Frank Bruno an a mandato~ hcaV\"dg.bt
title defense Oct. 22 instead of OCt. 8 in
London. the champion's manager said
toda~.
The switch \\<3j, made alter Dr. David C'luu
examined a hairline fracture in T's61fs right hand
sustained during an altettot1on on the strttt. '
A cast was rcmo"ed Thursda). the hand ~as X-
rayed .. ind Chiu .sa1~ "the fracture 1s heali'1g beaut•· ful~y. Cayton said. 'But he recommended th~ fiaht be
IWltChed from October lo OCt. n lo gh~ hand an
ntra two weeks 10 mend. T'* light dcfinnely WI-ill bc-lalld Oct. 22. .
..
Plratee expect to tum profit
The Piusburah Pirates. who lost S 11 • million thrtt ears ago. expect to make a $2
million lO sl mjllion profit thanks to a
substantial attendance increase and one of ~seball's l<?wes~ payrolls. The profit would be the first
11ncca pubhc-pnvatc group bought the Pjrates from the
..... W. G•rea~ family M1 October 1985. The
Galbreaths lost an estimated $20 million in their final
l'!'o ~rs of. ownership. A net profit would be the
Pirates f~t SLnCC they won the World Seri~irr 1971 ..
. A man with a police record was ,arrested on assault
charaes in what officials described as an unprovoked at~k on two Alabama football players, including star
taalt.ck llelllty B•mplarey, outside a nightclub in July. '.I'~ F. Teker, 2.2. was arrested Wednesday on an
mdtet"!ent returned by a countv grand jury and was
placed 1n the Tuscaloo~. Ala. tountr;ail in lieu of
SI0,000 bond. Officials said other indtctments were
returned and additional arrests ar~ expected in the J uly
26 aatack on Humphrey. Alabama's career rushina
leader, and Vutrlete D1Vl1, a lipcoaclCer ... Be
Normu4, an assistant volleyball coach at UCLA the
pan four years, has been named the head volleyball
coach It toyoJa Marymount University. Normand. 40,
succeeds RJdt Rosales, who coached the Lions the past
two seasons ... A field of 13 headed by Miracle Horse
was entered to. run in Saturday~., $60,000-addcd ~scond1do Handicap at Del Mar. Miracle Horse will be
ridden b~ry Stcvea1 and was assigned high wci&ht of
118 pounds forthe 36th running of the 1 1~16 milencc
for 3-ycar-olds and up on Del Mar's turfroursc.
Qlajuwon seeks child custody
HOUSTON -Houston Rockets m center Akccm Olajuwon. sued last month
by a former girlfriend who claimed he
descned her and their dauahter. is asking
that he be declared 1he lcgaf father of the child.
. In a lawsuit filed Thursday in state district coun.
018)uwon. 25. asked a coun to declare him the father of
Lita Spencer's ,2-month-old daughter. ·
lie al~o asked the ji_idge to grant him joint custody
and to decide appro pnate suppon payments.
Spencer filed suit in federal coun laS1 month ,
alleging that the 6-foot-11 Olajuwon broke a promiSClJ
marry her and later argued lhar he lef\ her for a taller
woman .. more likely to bear tall sons wonhy of his genetic heritage.··
Spencer asked a judge to bar Olajuwon from
leaving the countr) anct taking his assets with him
asking for S9 million in total damages. ·
T~c child is with Spencer in Washington state.
according to her laW)er. Richard B. Miller. Spencer is
living w11h her mother there. he.said.
Raiden release Seale, Wrl&ht
EL SEGUNDO -The Los Angeles EiJ
aaiders released two veteran reserves •II•
Thursday in advance of their NFL season-
opener Suriday against the San Diego..
Charaers at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
Released were cornerback Sam Seale and offensive
tackle Steve Wright. , ·
The two were released becauS( ro$ter sp0ts were
needed for pass-rushing defensive end Greg Townsend
and staning strong safet Stacet Toran. Townsend
returned from a 30-day sus~nslon for stl lance abuse
Wednesday while Toran ended a training camp holdout
Monday. 't
·Raiders Coach Mike Shanahan said that Toran
would stan against the Chargers and Townsend would
return lil bis position as left end in the pass-rushing
four-man line.
Televlalon, radio
TELEVISION'
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL; Dodgen_at New
York Mets. WOR.
4:30 'J>.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open third-
round matches. USA. .
4:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Pittsburah at
Atlanta. TBS. •
6 p.m . -BOXING: Harold Brazier vs. John
Rafuse, super li&htweightS'. ESPN.
7 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: USC at
Boston College (lape . Prime Ticket.
-1:20 p.m. -.
Grand Prix final from West Berlin (tape), TBS.
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Boston at Angels.
Z Channel.
8 p.m. -HARNESS RACING: 1988
Breeders Crown Harness Scnes. ESPN.
8 p.m . -HORSE RACING: Del Mar replays ..
Channel S6 (Prime Ticket. 10:30 p.m.).
11 :35 p.m. -TENNIS: U.S: Open high·
hahts. Channel 2. •
. . RADIO
· 4:30 p.m. -BASEBAL(.: Dodgers at New
York Mets. KABC (790). : '. .
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: San Diego at
-Philadelphia. KFMB (760).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBAU.: Bos&on at Anacls.
KMPC(7l0). ..
..
Gretzky agrees to extend·conti-act
INOLEWOOD (AP) -~upcr~tar
center Wayne Greuk~. acquired b)
IM Los AnJel~ Kings from the
Edmonton Olien last month. ha~
rachcd an agreement wnh the Kin~
to extend his contraC't pa t the tour
yan which Mre rcmamina. the
NHL kam announced Thursda~.
,Tenn1 of the contract •ercn·t
aino.nced. but tht K1np satd 1n a
MWS ma. that Gn-11k > ualat) •-a\ brint HKH•ttd .. commen urate ~1th
dw •ncnmrd cost of It\ int in
s..cJttnt C1tit0maa •· •
... am vrry plnsed ~ ~"t bttn •
_.. to terutt thi' commttmcnt from W~." Kinp Otlontr Bruce Mc Nill
•id. -1 t.bank it asaum both Wa)ne
1nd our fan1 of tM Kanat' dn1re 10 -~ hi,. Mn-ana ~tabfit.hn ;i tohd
foundlttOn for the tram·, IUC(~I in
tJtt futuft'.
• .. As far as addrn1mg the QUC'\lu>n'
-:r.
about ma,ing Wa)ne the highest·
paid pla)et 1n the ~aauc. while I am
not pr:ivy to what other pla)crs arc
receavipt. I would be txtn:rntly
surprised 1fhe is not,"
G~uky. 27. saptd a fhc-)car
contract with tbc Ol~n la$t summer
whadt ~porudl)' paid him abou1
S900.000 la1I ~ when Gret7ky
led tbc NHL an assists for the ntnth
ttra11ht ume and htlptd Edmonton
wen 111 founh Stan~) Cup cf)am·
piomlbp in five yan.
leforr dW t•lnliqn llfttlMnt. Gmay could haw become a ftw
,,...., witho91 C'Olnpnsateon after 1he
1991-92 tntOn.
Gnuky .. lndH to '"' K.inp Aus. 9 a1°"1 Witll .,..._.,.. Miu
Krushttnylk1 and Many Mdortet
laid lht nptl IO. drfftltnlWI John
Mtntr in euill• for mun Juruny
Canon. IM rilbll to wenarr Manin ~hnas. tht cfub"s top drat\ C"hoe«.
..
•
the n&hts to dcfenteman Crai1 Red-
moncf. three futurr fint.round draft
Pl(ks and cash estimated •• SI s
million.
.. , have bttn ntrtmel) pleated
with the manntr Ind f.limns Mr.
Mc. Nall has tree .. ~ntt the lradt ... Cimzky as sa)'ina en llw newt meat. .. IL I was
very happy 10 show my commitmmt
to the tam Ind tht peoplt of Los
Alllfln by ..,_;ns to I COftU'ICI
nltftlion lhlt will mp me hert trtell
-... ,.,, o( JI. ..
Ortuty will ... the 1911-19
_.. • dw NHL's ttaircl all-time
lllldi .. KWtr. ~needs 111 Point1 IO
..,... Oonlif ~ aacl tUi' O\'tf'
llW•JPOl.lnllitwNHL---. Oreuiy .... ~ bKoonv the ............ i ...... ~wit.b
I .dl6 end f9nb in ftOh Pll« on ·~
alf.time PHc'oritW litt with SU.
tn NFC Central
BJ JOE MOOlllll. ., .......... •
ThcChi~o Bears have theirsi~lS
set on a fifth straifht divisional title.
But this time, they re going to have to
work for it.
The Bears have brttzcd to the '
CenJral Division championship of
the National Football Conference
with vinually no opposition the last
thrtt years.
That was understandable when tht
Bears went I 5-1 in 1985 and 14-2 in
1986. Last year they were I 1-4 and
still finished three sames ahead of the
1-7 Minnesota Vikings. whose strike
replacement team was 0-3.
But this time, it could be different,
with the Vikings coming on and the
Bears fadinaaradually, Af\er winning
the Super Bowl' followin,& the 1985
SUIOJl, they have been eliminated in
the firstpmc of the playoffs in each of
the last two years. "'"'' ....... -The Vikinas advanced 10 the con-fe~ncc championship game last year
by eliminatina New Orleans and San
Francisco before losing 10 eventual
Super Bowl champion Washington
Redskins. 17-10.
Tommy Kramer will battle Wade Wlleon for tbe MlnDeeota
V~a' •tartinC qaarterback job tbt. HUOD,
Chicaao has a diff,ercnt look this
y.car.
PRO OUTLOOK interceptions were founh best.
Lindy Infante. formerly offensive
coordinator at Cleveland. is the new
headcoachatGrcen Ba). H1~miss1on
is to choose a quarterback from a list
that includes Don Majkowski and
Randy Wright.
Linebacker Wilber Marshall de-
fected to the Redskins and wide
receiver Willie Gault was rraded to
the Los Angeles Raiders. Walter
Payton and safely Gary Fcncik re-
tired.
season. If something happens. Mike
Tomczak and Jirn Harbaugh wi ll be
ready to fill in.
Tackles Jimbo Coven. Keith Van
Home and Paul Blair will remain on
the injured list when the Bears open
the regular season against the Miami
Dolphins SundaSt.
Neal Anderson led the team in
rushing and with Payton go ne. he can
return to his regular tailback position.
Even without Gault. the f'ece1vmg
corps looks good. Dennis McKinnon.
Ron Morris.and Dennis Gentry arc
back and rookie Wendell Da' is
shows a lot of promise.
The Packers' offensi"e line is
strong and they added No. I draft
choice Sterling Sharpe to their receiv-
ing unit of Phillip Epps. Walter
"Stanley and Frankie Neal.
Defensively the Packers allowed
only 300 points. fifth best in the
league. · Mike Ditka. whose 50-1 3 regular-
scason coaching record is the best in
the NFL in the last fouq,ears. doesn't
~dwell o n the loss of players. "I can go
to war with these guys." he likes to sav
of his available players. ·
Nor docs he seem concerned about
th~ threat presented by the Vikings or
the other three' divisional o pponents
-the Green Bay Pack.ers. the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers or the Oetro11 Lions.
Vikings Coach Jerry Burns will
have to make a decision someume on
whether his-No. I quanerback is
Tommy Kramer or Wade Wilson.
But Burns is enjoyi ng. the predica-
ment. He has alternated the two a~
staners in the pre-season games and
both have been effective.
There is no question about the
quanerback at Tampa Bay. Vinnv
Tcstaverde takes the spotlight. To
make sure. Coach Ray Perkins traQed
away Steve DeBerg. the team's lead-
ing passer last season.
To protect Testaverde. the Buc-
caneers made Paul Gruber. a 290-
pound tackle. from Wisconsi n. their
Aside from the injuries in the line.
the offense appears sound. Quar-
terback Jim McMahon is healthy and
did not miss a snap in training camp.
His goal is to stan evel) game this
The rrseiving corps. headed by
Anahony Caner and Leo Le" 1s. 1s
splendid and Darrin Nel on remain
the key running back.
No. I draft pick. i
There is optimism 1n Detroit.
mainly because the Lions won lWO or
1heir last three games. defeating
Tampa 8a). 20-10. and ..\tlanta.
30-13. but sandwiched a 17-14 loss to <
Minnesota in bet"een.
-·The improving defense. led b)
defensive linemen Chris Doleman
and Kcith·Millard. mo'ed up 10 10th
in the league last season and the 26
Two niOre NFL players suspended
~=--~-----Cincinnati's K mg:Smith fail ·
drugtests~ will beou t30 d ays
his shoulder still hurts.
In 01her news around NFL camps:
•Phoenix has brought in veteran cornerback Ron
Fellows for a possible tryout with other free agents.
Fellows passed tus ph~ical c..tamination here
From Tiie Associated Pre11 Wednesday but was not signed to a contract,
•The Denver Broncos placed noSe tackle Andrew
· Emanuel King and Daryl Smith or the Cincinnati Provence on injured reserve and re-signed defensive end
Bengals were suspended for 30 days. by tile N FL on Wah &wyer. . -
Thursday for failing drug tests. the 11th and 12th players Provence damaged the connecri ve tissue in his right
suspended for drug use since training camps opened. ·foot durinJ Wednesda} 's practice and is expected to be
They arc the third and fourth players suspended this sidelined four to five weeks. By going on injured reserve.
week. LawrcnccTayloroftheNewYorkGiantsandTerry Provence is ineligible 10 be activated for a minimum of
Taylor of the Seattle Seahawh were suspended earlier four pmes. .
this week. · • 8oW):er. a th'1.'f·~ear veteran. had been.waived by the
The 30-day suspension is usually given for a second Broncos on Mon~~ o~se and requires that fl player undergo treatment. The •In the Washington Redski ns' camp, defensive end
. initiaj positive finding doesn't necessarily have tp be Dc~tq Manley met with Coach Joe ~ibbs io discuss
released by the team or NFL. Manley's status for the season opener against the New
A third positive test calls for a lifetime suspension York Giants on Monday night.
which. if given. allows a player to ask fbr reinstatement Manley. who returned.from a JO-day suspension for
after a year. substance abuse on Monday. has been working with the
Meanwhile. teams prepared for the opening games of second team behind Markus Koch. Manlev wants 10 start
1he season. James Brooks says there's no question about apinst the Giants. and met "ith Gibbs to tell him so.
his status for the Bengals' opener against Phoenix. Gibbs. however. says he needs more 1ime to assess
"'I'll be there. unless I get killed," the veteran running Manley's condition.
back said. •TheChicago Bears signe<tfrce a~cnt Todd Krumm,
Brooks hun his right shoulder in Cincinnati's final who was waived by the Washington Redskins....ICrumm is
exhibition game and is listed as probable for the opener a 6-foot. 189-~und rookie from · Michigan State who
apinst the Cardinals. Brooks said he'll play. even though staned 35 stra1gh1 games for the Spartans. ---
~ ·Sports on TV for weekend ... '
TELEVISION
IOa.m. -AUTO RAC.NG: NASCAR Gatorade 200.
ESPN. ,
11 l'.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open third-round matches.
Channel 2.
11 :15 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers al New York
Meta. Channel 4.
Noon-GOLF: Canadian Open third round. ESPN.
l2:1S p.m. -BASEBALL: Cincmnati at Chicago
Cubs. WGN .
3 p.m. -cou.BGE l"OOTBAU.: TennesStt at
Georlia(rqa111t l l:30p.m.). ESPN.
4:30p.m. -WIDEWOllLDOFSPORTS:Channcl 7.
4:JO p.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open third-round
matcha, USA.
4:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Pittsbu .... ._ at Atlanta T~ ·~· ,
6 .P'.m· -COLLBGE FOOTBALL: Florida State at Miama, Fla., Channel 2.
6:J9A'-"·-DIVINO: U.S. Diving Send-Off to Seoul
(lape). ESPN. •
1 p.m. -BASEBALL: Boston at Anaels. Z Channel.
1 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: SAn Dieao Slate It UCLA.. Prime Ticket.
I p.m . -llOlllE AAaNG: Del Mar replays.
Channd '6.
11 p .m. -COLLBGE FOOTBAIL! Iowa at Hawaii,
Prime Ticket.
RADIO
ll:IS a.II)._~ aHEaMA · Dodarn at N~ Yori Mcu. KA8C.(790): •
•:OS P.111. -8AIE8AL&,, s.8 DielO It Plaila*tpMa. KfMl(160).
.. .JO .Po•· -aA-•"1 MllWll•ker '' Dediait. KNX ( 10'70).
S ll•· -oor1-~ Cal State ,....,_ • SOilada-.a IAMllMI. KMNV ( 1600).
6 J.111.· --·-NOIMU.: .,. Sta• •• LGilMBl5'ili.D'Z!(ll911.. ~
"lp.9'. -:;I"' -~Sin Ditl0Staaea1 UC'lA. Ka f9l0).
•
... ..
7 p.m. -BASEBALL: &Mon at .\ngcls. KMPC
(710). r I ' • ' • •
Sa1Jda7 -.
TELEVISION •
8,a.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open founh-round matches.
USA.
10 a.m. -PllO FOOTBALL: Rams at Green Bay.
Channel 2.
lOa.m. -AUTO RACING: NASCAR \\'inston Cup
Southern 500, ESPN.
IO:JO a.m. -BASEB~LL: Dodgrn at New York
Mets. Channel I I . WOR
l 1: I 5 a .m. -BA.SEBA.LL: ,Cincinnati at Chicaao
Cubs. WGN.
I p.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open founh-round
matchci. Channel 2. • .
I p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Seaule at Denver,
Channel•.
2:30 p.m. -GOLF: Canadian Open final round, ~~. .
4:JO p.m. -TENNIS: U .S. Optn founb-round
matcbn. USA.
6 p.m. -AUTO llACING: NA.SC R Summa 500
(lape). Prime Tl(~. t p.m. -llOUE llACING: Del Mar replays,
Channel S6 (Prime Tick.Cl. 11 p.m.).
RADIO
10 Lm. -PltO l'OOl'BALL: Rams at Green Bay,
KMPC,710).
10 a.m. -no POOTBAU. Miami at Cbicaeo, U.X(l010).
IOL& -no POOl'aAU.: Phoenix., Citlc:iuati,
KMNY (1600). • IO:JO Lftl. -aAIBaALL: Dodern at New Yortr Miu.. KAIC ('790).
IO:JO a.a. -&UDA11 ·San DicF at,...._
pltia.UM8(760). •
NOoa -IA .. A'I · Botton II~~ UTH (9.JO).
I P·•· -PltO POOTIALL: San Qleeo at bidlrl. kFI (6'40). XTRA (690).
. "
RAGLE& ••• ~.,
.. Ke·cr 1tay on the field all dar, if
yow'd let bim," Mid Laebenaood. • He ii 1 dropback quanerbaclt m our
tyttem. but he ~n do anythina. He
c:en roU out or drop back and his arm
it co= He can throw dttp and he ha1 quanerback savvy. He's
.,ina to be a aood one."
. Backup is provadtd b) Junior Ste' c
Hilben (6-0, 185). who guided the
90phomorts 10 an 8-2 record.
TAILBACK -Gary Burrow$ is a
tttumina staner and provides one
half of what is eiti>ttte<l to be a potent
1·2 running punch for the Eagles.
At S-foot-8. 165 pounds. he has the
quickness to cause l1cbengood to
compare ham with former Costa
Mesa scatback T}ler Riddell.
"He'saot the wheels. he can scoot,"
said his coa~h. "..\nd he's a hard-
nosed linebacker from the freshman
proaram who knows ho\.\ to htl.
"He's an ·1 wan't the ball. coach.
don't 11ve tt to Josh' type ofk1d. He'd
take it 30 tames a game 1f \\e'd let
him," said l1etx-ngood.
Kevin Thomas (S-11. 175). 011\Cr
Wright (S-11. 16S) and \n (amdo
(S· 1. 140). three more a un1ors. ofTcr ~epth.
Thomas rs'a stronger t~ pc. He'' not
as fast as Burrov. s but usC'i· his
blockers "ell. and has ga1n1.·d I:!
pounds si nce his sophomore season
FULLB~CK -Burro\.\S might ltlo..c ·
to have the ball 30 times a game. hut
with Josh Woj1k1e"1c1 (pronounced
Why-kav-age) 1n thi.' bat:ktic-ld.
there's not much chancc-of that.
A blue chip when a sophomore.
W0Jtk1ew1cz. ts the cen1erp1ecl' of
Estanc1a's game.
"I wish I had 11 Jo hes." -;aid
l1ebengood. "Hi.''s the most
coachable kid you ·11 C\ er Ii nd and will
do anything for )OU. He\ nl"(l}'i
there. never m1ssc~. nc,er 1:ompl31ns
and gl\'es us 110 percent C\Cr} umc.
··1 could stan him both \\3}'i {also
at linebacker). but at this po1n1 it's
ofTensc only. He's stronger. h.:3' 1er.
quicker and probabl> our fastest
back."
Woj1k1ewicz "cnt O'l'r 100 }ards
twice as a sophomore. $3in•ng 11 ~
yards. on 14 curie aga1n<,t Laguna
Hill,; and 102 }ards on 17 carries
against Saddleback.
Jack Pacheco. a rcturf'\1ng startc-r at
defensive end. backs up Wt1Jtk1c"'1c1.
RECEIVERS .....: Senio r Mark
Hanley. an all-league 'iafct). aldng
with up-and-coming Mike Aukt. 3
L60-pound jumor-. arc the i..c} s 10 the
Eagles' passing gamC' with lhC'tr pres.
encc at flanker and spli1 end
Hardey hns ti all -the hands.
attitude and ab1lit). and he\ the 1eam
captain.
··1 can't keep him off defcn\C.'
either." said L1cbcngoou ot his rnl-
lqe prospect.
··He's been getttng a lo t of lcucrs."
added the coach. ··but no one·, been
looking. no t" hen> ou 'n.· 2-. \\<.'call
him the.mailman. but ''e haH' to gt•t
the ball in has hands. He :ind 11
Borc:_n \.\eD1 to ,the R;iulcrs.' passrng
camp and-did \C~ "ell.
" ulet 1s a grc.•:tt tra\'."k man and
does he ha'e speed. He· a tl\·ak
receiver. and ma' be 11' Hanle' and
Aulet who are our best " .
O{FENSIVE LINE -Ma> l?c-iu
COLLEGES. • •
.. FromBl
summerschoolatOCC'tocarn ht'i
associate'sdegrcc and did not quahf)
to transfertoa NC.\~ Da\l~ion I
school.
.. Iro nically. his Cirstgame for the
StawolvcsunderCoach Ron .\beg·
glin will be against nattonal cham-
pion Kansas in the Great .l.laska.
Shootout. one of the pr.:miercarly
se159n college basketball tour·
naments.
~-·1o,,,,,.. •• .
,..,_, .... .._ Rl Wt.
Luis Alvarado, h-dt S· 11 21 O
Mike Aulct. w-ft.s S-11 160 Richard letend1, n-dt 6-2 190 Scott Boren, se<b c 11 16S Dave Bueno. wr<b S: 11 I 6S
Mikt Bunker. se-olb S· 11 165
Gary Burrows, tb<b 5-8 165
An Carrido, tb-olb s-7 140
Jeremie Chapin, oa·ilb j-11 165
Paul Oark, c-de S-11 SS
Chris Coons. c-dt 6-2 21 O
Sean Dean, rb-de 5-11 160
Chris Delatorre, lg-de 6-1 190
JefTDcsandro, s..qb 6-2 175
Lance Ely, k S-1 o 175
Bob Gilbough, og-ot 5-1 1 20S
John Godby. rg-dt 6-2 27S
Mark Hanley. fl-s • 5-1 l 170
Lenny Herman. tc-1lb S-11 210
Steve Hilben. ql>-olb 6-0 185
Jack Howard. og-dt S-11 18S
Brandon Johnson. olb-qb 6-0 I 7S
Juan M~nincz. og-dt 5-8 175
Craig McKieruan. og-1lb 5.7 175
Larry Mickelson. c-ilb 5-l J I 6S
Jack Pacheco. fb.de S-8 170
Dan Patrone. te-tlb 5-11 J 7 S
Greg Pierson. Qt-dt 6-3 21 S
Roben Rivera. rl>-s 6-0 I SS
Nick Romo, tc-tlb 5-l 1 I 8S
Mike Quigley. og-de 5-11 180
Ray Tavares. ot-dt 5-1 1 215
John Taylor. og-de 5. 7 1 SO
Kevin Thomas, dt-rb 5-11 17 5
Dan Ucker. qb 5-1 I 170
Alex Vazquez, se-fl-cb 5:.7 140
Marco Vazquez. sc-cb S-11 165
'Mark Westman. ot-dt 5-1 1 220
GeoffWinne.te-de 5-11 170
Josh Wojtk1ewtcz. l'l>-olb 5.9 I 7S
Oliver Wright. tb<b . S-11 I 6S
Jesse Wyman, ot-dt 5-1 I 2 15
v •.• ~ .....
Jr .. up from IOPhomores
Jr .• up from IODbomoru
Jr .. mumina starter
Sr .. retum1n1 suner
Sr .. transfer
Sr .. returnina letterman
Jr .. retumina staner
Jr .. up from sophomores
Jr .. up from sophomore
Jr .• up from sophomores
Jr .. returntng'staner
Jr .• up from sophomores
Sr .. rtturnina letterman
Jr., Teus transfer
Sr .. did not pla~ as Jr.
Sr .. So. Dakota transfrr
Sr .. rt1um1ng starter
Sr .. all-league in '87
Jr .. up from sophomo~
Jr .. up fro"l sophomores
Jr .• up from sopho mores
Sophomore
• ·Jr .. up from sopho mores
Jr .• up from sophmores
Jr .. up from sophomores
Sr .. returning starter
Jr .. returning starter
Sr .. returning letterman
Jr .. up from soe>homorcs
Jr .. up from sophomore~
Jr .. up from sophomores
Jr .. up from sophomorer,
Jr .. up frpm ~phomoa..,
Jr .. returning '>tanc:r
Jr .. re1um1ng letterman
· Jr:,. up from sophomores
Sr .. retummg letterman
Jr .. did not pl<r> as soph
J r .. up from sophomorl.'s
Ji: .. returru..og stance
Jr .. up from sopho mores
Jr .. up from sophomores
the general attitude of [s1anc1a's
offense. but when 11 comes to ttghl
ends. the) 're categonzed as offcns1' e
hnemen.
··we've got four returning staners
1n the offensive line:· said the coach.
JtlCKING GAME -\'t.l...:r a'i.'r-
aaed 38 )ards a punt 1.1.hcn a
sophomore. and M1lo..e Bunt..er and
Marco Vazquez arc in the p1c:tun: lnr
place-kicking dut~.
"That's Chns Coons {6·.:!. 210).
John Godb) (6-2. .:!15), R11:hard
Berends (6-2. 190J and Dan Patro ne
(5-11. 175) a111ght end.
"LUIS '.\J\arado (5-11. 21 0) IS the
onl) gu}' cup from the wphomorc .
and he ma) be tbe best of them . .\nd
the si'<th was a bad.up guard as a
Junior. That's Chris Ot:latorrc. We"re
happy with them.· The~ ·,c \.\Orked
hard 1n the summer and an' time \OU
have four of six bad .. and ihe lifth t'l
going to be gaod. and the SI\ th l..no"'s
the system .....
Liebcngood couldn't finish the
sentence without gcumg 1n10 other
possib1ltttes.
.Bob Gilbough. a t\.\O·\\a} lineman
at S-11 . 205. is a senior tra n<tfcr from
South Dakota and shO\\S promise.
There's also Junior Jeremie Chopin
(S-11. 165) and, Craig McK1ernan
().7. I 7S). as \\ell as Lenn~ Herman
(S-11. 200)at tight end.
Herman could indeed take O\ er
w1th thought of ~PUli PJtrone at
1ns1de backer.
Alvarado. mcufcn.Lall~ "a) a_full·
back on the freshman tl·am and
mo, es "ell for hts SIZC.
The "Ork in the summi.'r has
obv1011sh paid dn 1dcnds
· Coons~ a 110-pound t.:l'Ott.•r.' ha!I
added 25 pounds 10 h1'i 6-:? frame.
Berends. a 6-:?. 190-pound tad.le.
has added 20 pounds.
And Delatorre. a 6-1 guard. and
Al varado. a 5-11 tackle. haH' both
added10 pounds-
H1lben.1he backupquanertr.h.I.. ,.,
also a good punter. ·
Hanle) ma) assume punt return
respons1b1h11es and \\'011t..1c'' 1~1 l'r
Burro"' figures to handle the t..11.:i..on
returns •
OEFE~SIVE FRONT-.l.1' 3rac10
will be o ne of the tact.Jes, and tht.•
other ma) be e11her G1lbough or Ra~
Ta' ar". the latter 3 5-11. 21 5-pound
Junior. Flanking them at en~ arc
Pacheco. the backup fullbaclo... and
Kc\ 10 Thomas. a returning Jttnior
staner at 5-11 . 175. ..
Other poss1b1h11cs at end arc ~
latorre and J unior M 1lo..c Qu1glc~
(S-11. 180). Delatorre-couhJ J1'i..1
mo'e o'er to tact..le.
BACKERS -H ilbert and t amdo
ha'e the 1ns1de trad ... to The out 1dc
linebacker spots "'1th Bun I.er and
Chapin 1n the picture. as "ell
Another "'ho '' 111 get a 'c~ hard
look "'II be Brandon John~n. a 1-5.
pounder "ho 1 reahst1call~ the.· onl~
sophomor 1th a shot at pfo~ 1ng
ttme
Patrone and Herman an.· the in<,1dc
backers." 1~h Chapin aod \k i...1crnan
also a' a1lable Chapin can pla1. thl'
1ns1de er et11s1de
SECONDARY Hanle' ,., at
safct) and Junior QI" er \\ ngtu 1 at a
corner. those two arc Sl'I
Thc-other corner 1 a que t1on. but
Vazquez has the t.•arl~ edge o'er
Bortfl. ---
0
CatcherGre10'Hallor1n," ho hit
.377 with thrtt home run and 31 ;.;R~B:.:.1 ~~r...itt-
-..--orOrange-Coasrcotkgc la™
whileeam1ngAll-OrangeEmp1re
.Conference honors. was selel·ted for
the Canadian Olympic bascball 1c3m
which will play at Seoul this month.
O'Halloran, who is)ieadcd for the .
Univtrsityoflllinois next season. is
from De La Salle High in Ontario.
Canada ... 1987 OCC product Dave Sea• will continue his baseball
careerat Cal State Fullenon n 1
season. He bad committc-d 10 onh-
wntcma year ago before Larr)
Cochell moved on 10 Fu lie non.
Staton was drafted by the l'ittsburgh
Pjratcs this summer and ncarl}'
earned the firsl-C\'Crtrtplecro"n tn
theCapeCodSummcr League with
16 home runs. 46 RBI and a .)S9
M-erqt. He mmdl the batttng tttlc b)
lWQ points ...... McCa1111y. head
women's VQlleyball coach at the
UnivenityofLouisvtllc the past
three yean. was named the head
COKhatSouthcastern Louisiana. The
31-yar-old nat1vco (Cos1a Mesa
compi~a .. 9-59rccordat Louisville
afttteamil\I his bechelor's dqrtt at
CbicoStatund snv1n1asass1stant
coaCh at Kent State. Dunc C'o!llmun1·
tyColltgund louis,·11le. An avid
panicipant. McCanh) was namtd 10
the USVBI\ all-rq1onal Ohio Valle\
Leamio li86and~asonLht US\'B.\
rqional championship team in
Nonhem California in 198:?.. The
UnivtrsityofOttgon women's \OI·
le)'ball team w111 feature thrtt Ora nae
Coast am starters. mdud1n1 ~
shin freshman h1tt(r MilMlft A .. m1
ofWoodbridgic Hiah. fmhman
middle blocker o. .. a.n.m of
Marina andjumor(apta1n ,.__.
laJMofFounwn Valley, •·ho tu
third-year staner at sttttr after kid·
ina the nation an assist avcrqc as a
freshman and t.nhna kntt problems
a yearaao. Walle-on freshman middle
blocker AH Watlllu of Corona del
Mar High provides depth. Those
three freshman form what Volle~ooll
Monthl\ ratesasoneofthe 10~ 10
rccru1t1n1clasSt'S in 01\ 1sioo I ' ol-
le,>ball ... The Orange Coast College
spm1 squad took three trophies tn the
Un11cd pint i\ssoc1at1on Compell·
uon ~· nst -io other colleges. Mtdllele
U*llofHunungton Bcach.Qrls
1'a1mnsea and ltlm S.....lbm ·
~rein,1ttd"1ththeo1hcrtop 12
dan~ finalists to tryout lattrth1s ~car
for a pos111on as l 1S \dance in~truc
tor. DeDt PapuelU ofHunungton
Beach 1Hs '"'lied to tr) out for L' A
chttritadina instructor
Lynn ineligible for postseason
'
...
. .
Orange Cout DAIL y Pll.OT/Frlday, Septemt>. 2, 1918' ..
A ngels Par rish in 4-2 loss
Red SOx now j u st
one back of Detroit
In AL East· s race-
If Boston Manager Joe Moraan
made a habit of prcd1c11ng llome runs
for UUT) Parrish. doing so \\ouldn't
be a btJ deal.
Ounna Pamsh's first SI\ "eeks
w11h the Red So~. Mo.rgan said
no1tvnaabout h1mhttuogbome cuns
Un Ill Thursday 01ght.1ha11s. "hen he
foresaw the two-run homer thar
capped a four-run surge in the sixth
and sent the Red So,. to a 4-2 '1 tor}
over the Cahforn1a ngels.
"He must tx-ps)ch1c or something.
He told me I'd h11 one tonight." said
Pamsh. v.-hose t"o-out homer o ff
rookie Terr) Clark ga\e Bosto n a J-2
lead. "I think he tried to get the f{).
and-2) pitch a"a~. but he made tt too
good. Too much plate ..
The Victor} cut SttOn~plaee-Bos-
ton's deficit t.o one gam1.· bchmd the
Detroit Tigers. "ho lost 6.! to
M1lv.-aukee.
The two clubs square off again
1on11h1 (7:30)1n the second of a four-
pmrAscries at Anaheim Stadium.
..
The 8Cbedule ,. HQME
Tonlo11t-aosion. 7.JS om· *' 3-Bos1on, 7 OS-om *I 4'-8o'1on, 12-0S o m
AWAY
S;eot 5'-t{an"s C11v SOS om •
S.01 6--l<an~s C11v 5 JS o m •
S.01 7-Kan"s '''" S JS om • S.01 &-Tues S 3S om
• 011 TV Cnan~ S
•A• oames on t<.MPC 710
"It \I.as good lor me and good for
the-ctub:-" Pam5h said ot hi\ I 11th
homer. but o nh ht'> third '>tnl"\' hl· "-J!i
traded b\ T~;a~ 10 &l\lun \IO .luh 15
.. .\n~ 11me I get a , han1.l to hl-'l~ tht•
club. rm happ .. ahoul that .
·:He left the ball UUI (l\ i.'r t~· pljll'
10 Parrish.'' <. alitorn1a \lanJuc1
Cookie ROJH 51id. "It should've bcieo
a 2· I u me, but he madt that pitch too aood:r.:.
The win snapped a three-game
losana streak for the Red ox. who
were s-wept b) the ?akJand .\thletics
in their prior series.
With Boston 1ra1hng 2-0 on Wall~
Joyner's two-run homer in the lifth.
OwlJhl Evans led off them.th "llh a
s1nale ofTClark. 6-3 E'ans moved
around to third base on a pair of
tnfieJd iroundouts befo re :.coring on
Todd Bcnzinger's smgle
Pamsh follo"cd It\ 1th his homer. 10
left<enter field. Jod) R~d then dre"
a walk and scored as M1kc-Bro"n lost
Rich Gedman·s dnH to left in the
lights and 11 "cot for a run-sconng
double.
Wes Gardner 6-~. "ent fi,e 10·
nings for his first \"tcto~ 1n s1A stam,
since o\ug 2. He allo"ed SIA hits.
including Jo)'ner's 13th homer. and
P'e wa' to Bob Stanle' after Jack Ho""~ll's lcadofT s1ngle-1n· tht'~tuh
Stanle) then got Bro"n 10 ground
into a double pla~ and pitched httlesi.
ball an the sixth and seventh 1n n1ngs.
Lee m11h got the last SI\ o ut!. 1n
order. stnktng o ut four. for his :'1st
sa ve.
Br~w~rs-ga1n more ground
Milwau kee seven ·
games back after
victory over Tig~rs
From De Associated Pre s
After making up tour games on
first-place Detro11 in one "el'lo... 1he
M1l"aukce Src"er lx'he'e thi.'' are
• back 1n the Amencan League· East
race.
"Right no". "'-"re in bcttl.'r 'ihape
than we "ere 14 hours ago:· \ftlr
)waukee Manage! Tom Trebclhorn
(said after the BreY.ers bca• the Tigers.
~-2. Thursda) n1$hl at Ttgcr 'itad1um ..
· If \.\'e keep playing like a contcnqer.
prctt) soon we'll be':' contender ··
Make B1rkbeck and Chm 8o'>/O
\Ombined for a four-tuner and Rob
Deer's 1-.-.0-run single t..e) ed a Ii' c-
run fifth inning for the fotrrth-plal't'
Brc"ers. who no" 1ra1l tht: T agers h~
seven games.
"Well. "e·re chasing the lirc,1-place
dub nghl no"-" said Bosw "ho
closed the game out \\llh 3: 1nntng'>
of hitless relief "We kno"' "haH'e·, e
got to do. There's no room for t•rror ··
The first-place Tiger\ "ho hJ\C
lost caght of"1hc1r rai;t Ill. '>a'' their
lead ui the East drop to o~ game 0' er
thc_Boston Red So' \\ha he31 1h1·
* BM J.Vl S, Ringen 1
TOltONTO
.\ngels in .l.nahl'lm r hur\dJ\
B1rkbcck. 10-~ '-'ho d1Jn'tallt''' j
htt for 4z' innings ~' l' up lour htl\
and "alked one 1n ~ inntnit •
B1rkbeck 1s no'' -1 "'1th l·1gh1
straight nc1on~ s1nrt· rc:-turn1ng trom
the Bre"ers· Clas' .l. .l. .\ tarm l~uh j l
Den,cr of the .\men1.·an .\!.Mx.1a1wn
on Jul~::!.
""11ke pncht'd great I thought ··
Trebelhom said "He ha fllllhed
some super; games Tonight he "-<.'OI
1n a hum It JU'>I scemi.'d time to
change th~ngs l didn't "ant h> &•'e
the Tigers a chani."c to get :rn~th1ng
started.'"
.\fter Btrkbcct.. ga'e up a '''cHun
homer to De1ro1t's Lou \\ httalo..cr 1n
the sixth·. Bosio took O\ d
"Chns has a good arm
Trebelhorn s.:ud. ··He '>-lancd tilt:
season excellent. Hl''s comt• out ot th.:
bullpen 10 gJ\ e us wmc qua Ith
innings la tel} ··
l oser Do) le .\le,ander I 1-10 "as
tagged fors" runsande1gh1httstn4''
innings. The Tigers nght-handcr 1
"inless in his last fi, e stans going IJ.-4
since his last "1n .l.ug 6
Else" here 1A the .\menlc1n Lt'dguc-
Royals ii. Twins %: \!art.. (1ubtl/J
beat Minnesota for the.' '>elonJ llffil' 1n
the da\S "llh a nine·htttl'r and Jamie
Quirk 0knocl ed 1n l\\ll run\ tit ng
Kansas. CiT\16 tne < 1c1vn in ine
Mc-t-roOOmi-...
.Orhbl abrlllli Brewen '· r~ ,
• I 1 O Fe<~ncn o • 0 0 0 MILWAUKIEIE DETROIT
TIXAS
McOwtlci
Fletc~ ss
s.etra r1
oer~ 10
· Bu«r!le lb
M$tr•IV Oii
Kunlltl 2l>
·W 1lllnl'IOfl
8rowtr If
Eso• on
Pelralli c
SUndbl'vc T.._
• o I l L·• ano 20 o o o o .or 11111
• O O o Moseov ct • O O O McM1I01" lo • I 1 1 .,., .. ••• • lo
4 0 0 0 Wl"'t C I ~ 1 I Ltonl:fO 'I 3 0 1 I S~··oo<> ' l o t o GB• 1 ,-' 1 1 y °""' c' 1 1 I o L v"" o•
l 0 1 0 Mc:Gr,tt 10 l I 0 0 ~ r' t 1 1 1 OaE•~\ le
J O 0 0 8arf1t •d rt J 1 i I B•OC' ID ) 0 0 I ._emoo"
1000 LH C'tOr 3011 ~vtf'Of'\ t 000 NO•P\'
J 0 1 O Gruo.• lo 2 0 l 0 S..rllOll c • O O O Sa •I•' n 1 0 I 0 Lff ?I> y 0 0 0 GentM 2b • 1 1 0 B•o,•s 1"D
1 0 I 0 $vtu"' n • I 1 0 Pt" ' C'
7 0 0 0 T .... s JI 6 9 S T.._,s
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Gemt Wlnl'·ll9 RBI -LN C" I E-Mo' 'D' Svr..,-B•o.;.'e"s e-s..,,. L09-Tt llH 9 To•oMo s Qp..-.,i\ ... aui." 1 De1ro • i LOB-Y ...... ,"
' 16-Mc()ow.. Wll•ll. GBt Bi.f<"t t • Ot••o.t 4 78 -L.c>"••C: ~R-...,,. •a•.-1?
Hlt-Wh•lt I II S8-Mc0o""t 11' Gr.,oe< S8-V°""' 20 S-Leone·o B•oc• (101. McGrtff 14 8~ Sl If' H It Ell 88 SO
• " " lilt •• so ~·1141 .. TtJIH HoUllll L I HS
McMllrlr¥
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1 2·l 0 • 0 0 Q
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Second 0Wllll1. Thrd, Mtfrll
T-2 ll A-lO 294
•
9,,,11ee, w 10·6
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Ul!'lo.rfl~Ol"'lt' Q~ ~ '''
ono Beme•t ·~··o '-:xc
T-1 U .-.-11 I S?
Gub1cza. I "-"'. strud. out a clul>-
rccord 14 Twins on .\ug ~-to defeat
them. 4-I The .\II-tar Q£ht-hander
struck out eight and "~1ked none
Thursda'
... Kansas Ctt\ 100~ a .i.o lead with
three runs on ti' ch 11s in the founh off
Bert 81) le' en. 9· 13. making his 600th
carc-er stan. Frank Whtte. Quirk and
Bill Pecota each h11 RBI singles
dunng the inning.
The Twins broke Gub1cza"s
shutout 10 the s1,.th on a one-Out
tnple b)' K.1rb~ Puckett and Kent
Hrbck's third straight smglc. Puckett
added an RBI single m the cipnh for
Minnesota's second r\Jn. gi ving him
60 muh1ple-h11 ~f\'ICS this season.
Quirk's SC\enth homer of the )'car.
leading off the se"cnth. made 11 5-1.
BIH Jays 5, Raa1en 1: Jimmy Ke)
pitched a s1x-hmer for eight innings
and Ernie Whm homered. leading
Toronto 10 the 'tClon at Exhibition
Stadium. ·
Kc}. 9-4. st'rud, out fi,,, and
walked t""o before being relte\ cd b~
Tom Henke to stan the ninth. Ke)
ou.tdueled knuckJeballer Charlie
Hough 11-15'. "ho ga'e up Si\ hits.
four walks and Ii' e rans m 511
innings. held the Blue Ja~ '> h1tl(<is for
3'' innings until Wh111 1gmltd a
three-run rail} b~ conne-c1mg on a 2-0
ttch fo r his 11th homer
. ter n toe Inning. -rR.--1"="di-r[-=-eaClllilt
an RBT sfn&)e and another run scored
on the pla} as nght fielder Ruben
Sierra bootcd the hall for an c.-rrM
* lte¥11S S, Twins 2
KANSAS CITY MINNESOTA
WWis.llCI
S.•trt'" lO artlf 10
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G•ITll W M•<IO ~B· -W· M>n (61
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L.09~• c '" ) /!lo "MM>'• ~ 19-tlJ~IOt' 38-P..c•e'· H~-0...tr~ 7•
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U~ts~ ~DI"' J>O" F ••' ""'"''°' s.c-. Pawmo. T''-'O "ouno T-12• A-21 .. S
U.S. OPEN ...
From Bl
tht Netherlands. 6-1. t>-0. "'h1 le
Navraulova. seeking her rh1rd
straight O~n title. ou,tc-d Ell~
Hakam1. 6-2. 6-1 .
Shnver. who reached the Open
final as a 16-vear-old ..in I Q7,8. was
ehmAnated by l.c1la Mt"Skll1. ~-6. ti--1
6-4.
"This summer has lxtn one "1'.'0n-
unual goof-up.'' .aid hn1. er. "hose
only earhcr exit from the Open wa" a
fi"°"~ound lou tOJ.w~ Ham ngton.in
19 9 "In my two matches hf.JT. r'c.-
had some anxiet\ attacks hke r'c
never had before:··
lkcker's fttt ~ere spra~~ "nh a
frttz1ng subst.an« se' era I ttmcs dur-"'f. the match. but 1\ didn't help
Wheo I •as pu hing for a coupk
of shots. all ofa sudden the pam came
VCT) stron&)y Then I couldn't pla~
tht nut fCV.t points.." said Becker.
who withdrev. from the Canadian
Open because of similar foot prob-
lm\s.
.. All be had to do was hit the ball a linte away from tht center and I
coukln•t reach 1t I don't mink 1t wasa
difficult mat<·h for him."
Calull. ranked 33rd 1n the 1world.
said Bcdcr's 1{\J'Unts d1dn't detraCt
from htS VlCtOt)'
'"Some1une5, he .. .., f.IVU\I the
ilftPftlUOft ht -.5 onJ) totn& 50-SO.
INt to JM it alway lo<*ed like he was W)j ...... ht Mid.
Ired G•lbm.: who bat ~ Ul * foMJl ~at lul ~s ()pm.
-aothtr "'*' victim n_., .. 1lle No 1 I teed loll IO Jain. Y ...
fllNnL 1-6. M. M. 6-L
Allo .. vua. IO tM third road
W9ft .... 11d1d ............
Ne:. lO Hei1ri LecoMt md No.. 14 ~Owl ........ . .......... ~11••:r. .... w W1•1u•lf· r . 12 0 .. .-.wa1111r ..._ Amanalf In
::f'"7(4o7). 7"6(7~M.:~l:"M
estandln
WEST DIVISION w L Pee. GB
Oakland 84 so .627
Miftntsota 74 59 .556 9v,
Ka.nus City 71 62 .534 121h ~ 68 66 .507 16
Teu1 60 72 .4SS 23 Chicaao 58 15 .436 25' J
Seattle 54 80 .403 30
EAST OIVlSION
Detroit 15 58 .Sb4
Boston 74 5Q •. 556 I
New York 69 62 .527 s
Milwauktt 70 67 .511 7
Toronto 66 68 A93 91,!
Ondand
Baltimore 4.6 B6 J 48 _ 18']
Tbunday's Scores
Boston 4, AJlgels 2
Milwaukee 6, Detroit 2
Toronto 5, Texas I
Kansas Cat) S,,M1nne ma 2
Only games scheduled
Today's Games
Lll Streak a ... Awa~
7-3 Won 3 43-23 41-2
S-5 Lost l 37-28 37-31
7-3 Won 2 38-29 33-33
6-4 Lost I 31-34 37-32
S-S Lost 2 33-3.S 27-37
4-6 Lose 1 34-3.S 24-40
5-S Lost 1 29-36 25-44
2-8 Lost I 42-24 33-34
5-5 Won I 4S-23 29-36
3-7 Won I 37-30 32-32
6-4 Wo n J 41-30 29-37
5-5 Wo n I 32-33 34-35
1 l.S-30 29·39.
4-6 Lost J 29-37 17-49
Boston (Hur t 16-4) a1 Angels <Finle~ 8-12). 7:35 p.m.
C h icago (Reuss 10-8) at Cle' eland (Nichols 0-4). 4:3 5 p.m.
M ilwaukee (Wegman 10-11) at Detroit (Tanana 14-8). 4:35 p.m .
Tcus (Guzman I 1-t0)11t Toronto ( ueb 1-2-8), 4:35 p.m¥ _
KansasCity(Bann1s1er9-l 1 )at Minnesota (A. Anderson 12-8). 8:05 p.m .
Baltimore (Peraza 5-7) at attic (Moore 7-1 4), 7:05 p.m .
New York (John -6) at Oal..land (C'. Young 8-7). 7:35 p.m .
Saturda)"s Games
Bosto n at Allgels. 7:05 p.m.
Texas at T oronto. 10:05 a.m.
Chicago at Cleveland. 10:35 a.m
Kansas City at Minnesota. 11 :20 a.m .
New York at Oakland. 1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Octro1t. 4:35 p.m.
Baltimore at Seaule. 7:05 p.m.
National League
WE T DIVISION w L P c t. GB LlO Streak Home Away
Dec11ers 77 ·5 ,583 6-4 Lost I 36-31 41-24
Houston 71 62 .534 6• ! 5.5 Lost I 39-27 32-35
San Francisco 70 63 .526 71h 4-6 Won ·1 40-28 30-35
Cincinnati 68 64~ .515 9 6-4 Won 2 36-31 32-3 3
San D iego 65 b7 A92 12 6-4 Won 1 39-28 26-39
tlan 3~ ..J..J-bosH-~3 ~
EAST DIVISION
New York 78 54 ,5Ql 7.3 Lost I 42-23 36-31 • Pittsburgh 71 62 .534 71_, 3-7 Lost 2 37-31 34-31 Montreal 67 65 .508 II 4-6 Won I 34-30 33-35 C hicago 66 65 .504 11 1: 6-4 Won 1 33-31 33.34 St. Loujs 62 7 1 .4 66 '16111 7-3 Wo n 4 33-35 29-36 Philadelphia 54 78 .409 24 3-7 LO$t I 32-33 22-45
Tbursday's Scores
No pmes scheduled
, Todaf's Games -l>od~ers (Leal) ·15-l$J at Ne'~ 't ork (Darling 13-9). 4:35 p.m.
Cincinna.11 (Bro"'n1ng t3-5) at Chicago (Pico 5-6), I :OS p.m .
San Francisco (H ammaker 7-6) at M o ntreal (8. Smnh 9-8). 4 :35 p.m .
SSn Uiego<J. J ones 8-1 ~)at Philadt>lphia (Carman 9-9), 4:35 p.m .
Pittsburgh (Walt. 11-10 > at \tlanta (Gia' me 5-15). 4:40 p.m .
St. Louis (Magranc 2-8) al Houston (Darwin 6-l 1 o r Scon 13-4). 5:35
p.m .
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(al Nftr Yerll)
Mt#f'5 S.C... RMftd ~ Darren Cahill (Austrefla) def 8or15 Sec"er
IW8't -Germanvl. 6-3. 6-3. 6•2r Nied WOOd· l«IM (AuSlralt.) def John McEnroe IU S ), 7·S. •·•· •·7. t-31 4·1. Jelm. Y1eoe !Peru> def Ired Giloerl (U.S.). 1-6, 6-0 .. 6·A, 6·2 Ste4en EdOerA (Sw.0.n) Oet. Guv ~orr;iet !Franc;t), •
7·S, 6-I, •·3, Mell WiJenes.r (SweoenJ def K.-.ln Curren (US.), 3·6. 6-3, 6•2, 3·6, 6·3. Henri Laconlt !Frencal def aarTY MOlr (South Alrlee), 6·0. 6·•, ,.,; Mltoslev Me<.tr ICzecho•
Mllvelllel def. Semmv G .. mmelve IU SJ •·• 6· I, 7·6. Also advancing: AndrH Gomer !Ecue· Clod M9n's Flnf lt9Ufltd Sinlte5 Guillermo Pertr·Rplden tArgen11na) dei Ken Fled! (U.S ), 6·7, 7·6, 3•6. 6· I, 7·6 w_.. s.c...-•-.ct Slin91e5 Steffi Grat IWHt Germenv) CMi Meno<f
r I Netherrend5~ 6·1, 6·0, Merline Nevratllov• air fiv Ratieri'll tu S./ 1•2, 6·1, Lelle Me\11111 (Sov.er UnoOI\) def Pam $1\rlver (U.S.), 4·6. 6· I, 6·•. Gat>rlela Sabatini (ArMf!llM) def &evertv 8owu IU.S) 6·2, 6·0; Claudie Kollde·Klli.th (West GetmanvJ def ltef!Hlll Reoal (llelv), 6·2, 2·6. 6·4, A,.n1u Sencrle1 (Soalnl def Kim Steinmert IU S ), 6·2,
6·2, Zina Gem\OI\ tU SI det Ht14tn Ketesi (Cenede), 3·6, 7·S, 6·0 Also ecsvancino. Lame S.vchenllo (Soviet Union), Marv Joe Ferna~ti,
IU.$ ).
0..., SM ftsNne
NEW~T LANDING -• bOall, 116
·~ 1" .-lld oen 750 bOllolo 26 veuow1e I
" me<kertl, 7 roo f15h, 6 5'..io•n, l33 ~• o beu, 1 while Sta blln
DAVE"'S LOCKER !New-1 8ffcft) -6 oo.is. 1•1 •nolel'T .. 5 urod beu • roc:1< Hh
..
, .
II 00 I 20 6_.0
120 6.10 s .0
••
Time: O:ltol.
~ aucu._J,3_"'4L»e1Cl ~ ...... -EtoKTH •ACa. 3SO vare15 Cl'la Wlmlne Coov (Crdd 16 60 7 40 3 .0
KlollllOs "'-Oe (Lewis> A 40 2 .0
C•blt Doctor (Pilkenton> 2 40
Time: 0:11_.. '2 SJ(ACTA Cl·•) Nici s74.l0 NINTH •ACa . .00 var0).
''" F'-(Proctor) JollM Pollcv iCrffil«)
Aw-Azure (P1111en101\)
Time: 1)>10.19
31 00 1060 SIG uo 3.60
3.00
U UACTA (9-tJ oatd S1'5'0 ., DAIL y TIUPLE ll-3-9) oald \735 ao
Attendance: 3,95'
MulUll H9ndll MM..207
COLL•GE
Les AJem1te$ USC M, ...... C ..... 7
SC>et'9 .. Overten THURSDAY'S '-ESUL TS use 10 II • 7-J.C ( 1Jtll ef ...... ~ fT-"M) c 1 '•ST aAca. 350 verd5 aosron olleet o 7 O 0-Mytrlc S111 CTreewrel 2$.10 13.00 12.20 VSC-E~ 2 run IRC>dr19ue1 kick) lr.alll!l-Ew!'I 'tec:ttv"!!-----___ """' USC-FG ftoelrle~z 33 < ,------.--__,.... ...,..,__..uSC--fii.-ROdri.uer 39.-Cese Heene IFleuer'oel 7?0 USC-Wellman 3J oen fro(J'f Pttte !Alfholter Time· 0:17.93 pen trGfT' '""'•>
SOCCElt
c.-... "*' FAil W•ST CLASSIC
~ (at 011ca S• .. > S.....-~ .. s.c. c..... 0 S..llle·Paclllc SCMlno. Mcl.auonlln 2, Fair· <fllld l . Amof\M>n, Ruolo Goelle '9V8': SIOrrs I.
SoCet COl!e9e aoelle 5eV8' Ramage '' .._Mtlme: Sfttt1e~P1clflc, l-0 ), •• ,, 6·1, 6·•. Ge.~l-1• S.belitll (AretnllM)
Clef &everlV low8' tU.S..), •·2, '"· Oeuol1 Kotlcle·Kllscn (WHI Germenv> def. RaHHI• lt"91 lll•M. 4·2, 2·•, 6-A, Arenru S.~1 (SHln) def. Kim Sleinmet1 IU S ), ,.,, 6•2, Zina Gerrl\On (U.S.) def. Helen Kales! ICanede), l ·6, 7·S, 6-0 Alie> ectvenclno: t.ertM S.vclle!lko ISovlet Union), M¥v Joe Fernano.1 (U.$)
U llXACTA (2·1) i>eia S90.20 BC-Weddle 60 oau frO!T'I l(e~aul !Lowe saCONo •ACE. 350 varcis kid!> l'tlund9Y't lnlftuctlens
Tflllli SIM (Proctor) lo.20 6.20 (_60 U$C-Emenu.! 2 oen from Soerle IP•u •AS•MLL • A.nwrlcelh (Wlllla) 31.60 I• 00 felled) AnMrkM L.._.
St Oldie IDlcMl'lcll5en) 7 60 USC-'Holl 2 rut1 (lt0dr1Qua1 klckl &AL TIMORE ORIOLES-$1gneo Pelt Ro" llmr 0:11... Alllftdence-32,000. II, ltlJrd bHemen, end 1au lgneo him to Wttl 12 •XACTA 12·3) Paid. 060 . .o. TEAM STATISTICS Palm h ech ol lhe Ftor1d• lnitrueliot..1 Laeoue TH•D RACE. lSO vero5 USC BC· Cl.EVELAND INDIANS-Termlneteo lllelt Perry\ Aneet (Oloerickset1I S 00 '10 J 60 Finl oowns 11 IS .. 1.ver ci.velOC>ment conrrac1 ""'"' WIUlemsPOrl GeraldlM -'-(L-15) 640 '00 ltulllel·v•r~ S3·nt 11·U of the EHlern LMeut E•tra EHV Chickie (BrootuJ 390 Peulno ?73 l tt SEATTLE MARINERS-Nam41d George
Time· 0:17 k ftetutn Ylrdl 7 o Zurew anl5t1nt •10 vice orasldent !or .,_~It S2 •XACTA 14·S) Patel $73.60 Coml>·All•lnl n -34-2 IS-19..0 -ooeratlol\s -'°""™ RACE. 550-ven:ts; Punf5 1·44 6·30 TORONTO &LUE JAVS-Rtcalled Douo LUCkle5t Kid (Cardon) 310 3 00 2 •O F~·LO\I l· I J·3 aelr end Merk Eichhorn, 1>itcner1, and Pet Stnoke Tna1 Thine CP•ulinel 640 300 ~lfles·Verds l·10 2·20 aoroen, catciler, from Svracuw o1 the Inter· ltetlel5 Georee (l.ew11> 2 tO Time of Posteulon 37~ 22 Sl 111111onel LNQ\18 Purcnel9<1 rne contracu of Time: 0:2U1 _ tNOCV1DUAL STATISTICS TOCIO Stolllemvre encl Fra'* W1115. Oltc.hefs. eno U IXACTA 1•·21 PlllO J17 70 • RUSHING-USC. Holl 11·16 Brown, 9•40, AIUl\ llllante. ll\11-lder, trom Svrecun Ac· ""™ RACE. 350 ••rds Erv1.,., l ·•I, LOCk•ooel, 11·32, Em.nu.I s·27. tlvateo Sit Cemouwno outfle!Mr, from the IS·
Fe51 An Fancv (CrteQerl • 60 3 90 2.80 '"""' l·l. &otlon COii.of: Fr-r, 3·39, Bell, elev dTiabltd 11,st Dulee Dinero (LacuvJ 8.20 410 LOve To Travel (Proctwl l to 13·2', Hldl5. 3·21, Toner, 1·3, St Pierre, 1·0, FOOTaALL Time: O:IJ n. Ir-. l·O, ICemllheu\, Hor·mln~ 3, Cner· • Hetl9NI ........ L-.U.
U IXACTA 11·11 Paid UUO. TY, HOt"·mln1n I, Power, A·lor·mlnu\ 16 LOS ANGELES RAIDERS-Waived S.m
Saturday's Games 12 vet1owta11, Ill bOMo. ·395 mac•er9l 21 Kuloln, 2 blue 51\arlU, 260 wnlre fllh Dodgers at Nev. 't ork. I I <~O a. m .
-12 DAILY TltPLI 16·•·1 0< I) oetd '20.0 PA'51NG-USC *'"'•• 7l·3l·7, 271; ~le. Seale, C"'nerbeck, and S1ev• Wright, o41enslve l-1-0, t lk>stori Co!lelle Power t· 17-0, .. r SIXTH llACE. JSO vard5 Kamoneus, 4·1-Q. 113, Hlells. l·•·O II . IKkle Aclivereq Gree TOWl'Mt\O, det~slva
Carols Chareer (Crteoerl • 00 3.20 2-'0 RECEIVING-USC: AHnouer, 1•1•• Get-encl, from • lO-csev sus-slon for SUOitence
Cincinnati at C'hacogo, 12:20 p.m . ™' wlft's trout ~nts
San Otego at Ph1ladelph1a. 4:05 p .m. LOS ANGELE$ -8ouqut1 C,itnvon Creek,
!~~T;~~ne~IO~P.t1t~:>> ll.tO ;.: lw.1111, NO, G-, N7; -Wellman, l·S3, abll~NVER BllONCOS-Plac•d Andr•w
Tim. 0 17 '° Ervlns. 2·16. a rown, 1·11; Jaek50fl I· 10, Provence, nose tackle, on in1ure0 reserve Re· Ernel\Uel, 1·2. lk>slon Colleile W1deli.. S·•l Cn leic L.Ake San Francisco at Montreal. 4:J5 p.m. a1vuSto. -Hemet Lake U IXACTA t•·S) i>e:cs '4S60 C~rv. 3·n , Hll"Ytrl, 1.,,, GllH. 2.17, Cnmura 51Qned Wall 8owver, defen51va encs 5aVUtTH RACE. 350 ·vard5 HOCKEY l·~~tl/¥--'l'f'il'll'l!"'ltl'-!1(_."1,, .. oife~ltfr"t-•-..... --9g .... ~9M-..I0-'1=1'.C-O-1-17, S..errlll, HI. Bell, 1·1 He~l~~~~ t-------.~· '~~r-___ _,_ ______________ s,".!! ·~HHJ.>INO -81Q Bea r .u~ ...
St. LOUIS at Hous1<>n. 5:35' p.m. s~.:::CS "i::.'. ~·".Ana River tsolllh fork), Nleollte IFloutroel 140 S64 ----a-r-tc.r--------'---NEW tl> 'Siin:WlC liO!L-
P~CFIC VIEW
•MOl'ttAL PAM
~wy ·~ C~ • Crematory
3500 PK1fl(; 11.-°''~ ~BMch
&.4f-2700 ..
HAM°"l.AW..· lllT. OUV£
MOf1u.ry • Cemetery
Crematory
1825 Goller A.wt
Costa MeN
540-555'
.. ..,. ...... ,.
2983 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA
Ml-l111
The. legal o.p.rtment at the
Olllty PMot Is pl11Hd to an-
nounce a ,... Mrvtce now avan-
llDle to,_ bu.,.11111
We wMe now S~ACH the
,,.,,.. for you at no •Ir• charge,
and ..,. you the lime Md the
trip to the Cour1 Hou• In Santa
Ana. Then, of couree. after tM
lellrch • ~ ......
yow tlcaUoua IMllll'I •• ,,.,,..
......,.... ..... U.CountyCaertc,
publMih once a WMll for four ...... ,......br ... and
then ... your proof of publf-
catlon .... the COUnty Ctertc.
rta.IC NOTtCE
p..._ atop by to file your
ftcttl....,. bualf-. ltetenwnt at
the Delly Plot leg91 Depert-
rnent, 330 Welt Bay, Costa
Maea. c.lltom6a. " you can not ltop by, .,..... call us
et (71•) M2-4321, ExteMk>n
315 or 311 and we wtl mek• .., • ..,.., .. for you to handle
-procedure br mel. " '°" Mould Mw M'f fur1her qJlllllN, .... cal U8 and ..
.. be MON than glad to~
C....:::.r'!' ,_ I .
Ameterlee (Pllllen10ft1 340 Wyoming U , BYU 14 Fllzeeratcl, c.nte<, to • mulliveer tontrect
rta.IC NOTICE rta.IC NOTICt Ml.IC NOTIC£ NI.IC NOTICE PlBJC NOTIC£
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CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220
FROM SOUTH ORANGE 498-8800
C .. Clt YOUll AD
ntEl'lltSTDAY
••!Id..... IMI ...... ...... II• e..ta... 1114 ...... ._. 1141 ~.... 1111 h•t• Cn11 ••trt C..U W llu
II ·= IRllY.... • ••• mt&L •BEAUTIFUL park, nit•. C&1IW hOU.. With llO m .. aa:. 2L llM ... 1IA, 2 carpottl,
IBR 2BA condo w/6*1. 2bdrm. tbat"· garage ..... & OCMn w . 38' ocean .. 1•. l8a, 2 tO' to beeetl. flp. gar, eLEXN 11A X/c COA&S. comm pool, fftg. d/W, •eetiBJlll Fam a din rm 1279.714. parking. I 1075/mo. 2"'88 condo. w/d, pool, flraplaoee, patlO, new lg patio +pvt deck. Adutt quiet, aetad tract ffplc. Cloae to bMC:h. 2
Avelabte 911 173_..999 epa. l1IOO/Mo 131-1153 paint I carpete. OCMn 11800/Wlnter 845-3330 N of Pt.a. '115<> w/moai occupant•. No pat1.
11t/Ml-s052/5059 ...... .... :~~I.:: ~~.w~!,j WHT Newport 38R. ud. 175-25IO, 841-1408 1125/mo l73-S33S .,..,....
•·•'--"Waterf918 a SttMma" eft 7pm 2131'56-8907 roofdeck, 11275 • II • On bMCt1 28A 28A, lg Sparkling CIMn. large 114 lllly(714P 60 0m -18R 28R a 11h&A or 2BR WHTCLIFF 28R, dbl~--==· dee*, frplc, fem rm, pr1 Garden .... BMutlfulty ~°""""-......... 1117 wi den Frplc w/d hkup •NOATH LAGUNA eu-t ege, ..,..,._., $1350 gete. dbl garege l2075 lendecaped ground•. :.C:&IXWWWf 2a; 2L PoOI ·Jae g., wl 09ftr' hOUM. 1Br 1ea. garage, llA"YfAONT Condo 2BR ._1-..a __ mo 213-IH-1~ Poot a spa, p.tlo9/dedca,
The PNdentJ9I
f .... 0. ......... t trNft tor ..........
.,.-. «.rWf'M._. ,........., KC~
ffr•u -t<C"°' "'ir.w ....... ._.....,. ...,, .. \ , ... MC' ... C"WC' ftV' ............ ,., ... .,.,~
.. .a .,. '"" 0...\-' ~ .u: .... ,. a7sO..s1o5o • MC. ..o ocean -. 11so. ~ 111&0 -.... gareoe or c:atp0r1. Sorry • ==~~5:=2:,:. pets. vatma 54e.2,.7 121-5225/W '97-74571H oceANFAONT 3BA, fp, 1IN Yearly Op1telra. ,_, •••• 1._•-e.-r-"°~pec ... 1.ct11••,.,---===t
x n x n ompletely remodeled 1 fr~th. S700/Montll 1 Bedroom ll80
Portofino modal"' dl<*:e 38R 2BA T famlty rm or den, dodc for 80' ~t. 173-25'4/ll en-1222/w --,,..,,....~.,._,A,..,CA,,...,..,C::".'IA..,...--:::Sunn-dusi-:;,t.---::-' 2Bdrm 1'i48a $795
,...,, ~·-.__ location next to green-"" bdrm. D/W, W/O, -y~ 14750 1----_,,...,_,,,~--,-Upper 28drM 2 .. a&O ~-~ .... •• -belt. PoOI .... ICftOOI. Lrg fnccf ywcf, ~ear g91age. 3 Bedroom. 2 Batll condo Wilitfr ... -..... •YEARLY S 11001mo• *"'· 188• ,.., x.. Ull f:lllll" Wll ~ "•...., • ,.__............... •BR 3V.BA .-+ 9ddttlon, ma• nopetaplMMS1276mo. wttll garage, A/C, pool • Deluxe 2 Bdrm, gerege 2Br 1 • Qule1 .,... COSTAMESA :.!.:,:'"'~;_':;::::..:;: $599,000. Great buyl .......... 157-2523or 751-2787 prhllledgH, pall ok. IUL1mU1·1• per1dng, atepe to tMly. iilii1~1;00;';"'°;1~n-:7; ... :2:-iiiil .....
.,. . . _., •.. ~
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,, , ..... -.. _. -worn i.tt c.it PATRICK Pteya A E.173-1900 '*DELUXE• S 1100 mo. 842-S.-te Ulm.lff -A9fs reqd. 875-3083 ---------:::...: ==-::• -.... TENORE 721-1200 or ON the polnt •Br 2Ba. CUSTOM CONDO Lowty 89d( Bay water mTll MITAL llllM • -
~ P~I • t..
~' •,' 'f .. Pt
··~: : ....
Prlvete Perty aeek1ng
ainglellory
retidence in
TIEILIFFI
Linda Pl.an prel'd. Present
cond Immaterial. Prefer to
redecorate/upgrade.
8'9PS 10 oceen, dbl g•r· Bur/M•cArtllur. St. -. SBR. 2BA, trplc, 2bdrm, 1batll, garege "c:,!.~•2:C,°: ::i 1 Wzalfleld
ege, w/dryer, no pet• Albanll 2BR 2BA. Dys -~ I I l2000/mo. Agt 722-8362 perking. $1075/mo. Wlntef rentel 875-0664 633-0405 Eye 731-7528 11 ... HARBOR VIEW HOMES Av8lable. . 111. 173_..999 Wltll tnpleca end gM·
CNtming & qule1 llm. 28R E'SIDE 2Br, 18a, fireplece.~ E nlt• i"ar 28a Highly upgraded. 1111111-505216059 :Y:5o ~':C,. location. Large~ In •
18A, lndry a carport Pvt large fenced yard. Pets litea. Luxury condo. 28r, Lite & brite. Near gmblt. LARGE brtte airy 1tudlo llMll IUl.n beautlful~ #ttlfl9.
pdo. tum $1•00 Avl <*. 13$ SAN.IA ISABEL den, 2 c:ar gar. Pool, tpa, ~/Mo1t7t!O-~ epartment...Y.w1Y-J:enlel. JSOC
9110-5/30 e73-1568 S950mo 845-0968 Avl9/7 tennlL Securlfy lef..:S 148 HARBOR VIEW HOMES $750/Mo +utb. Call Bob .,,... ~==·::rts.
--------EASTSIDE 2BR. Frplc, 2Br. 6*1. 28a. dbl ger . .,.ot55-2900, El75-0181 -LNM--ftr--lla.--f,,a.--28drm 18aS750 111.U IY TIE SU Wlh</dryr hkup, patio. No It~ ..... IHI Avell now. S1750/Mo 1yr COZV dwnttra t>Khelor Obi ger. 111ii~otrope. •1 lflllll
Remodeled 2Br+Studlo. Pett. "25/mo. 292 E. .Et&UsNf dQXRb• !NM. 213/373-9488 No kitchen. Steps t~ $1150/Mo Me-2087 COSTA MESA ~otl fi.:h-.::b Wht o:k 18tll Place llA. Open Sun •GATED COMMUNITY• •H.V. HOMES. SBR 3BA. weter. S.-50/Mo Incl ullls. -=-='=""'"~=~-=,..........,..........,... MJ•llll i~~ry. s121s1~~ ~ri'.; 12-4.54e..o1ee ••111t11 Neef eiem. echool. No i1e12u .. 2~1vm-o OCEANFRONT 1er dupli ---~-----
831-92"or•9s-o589 IUTW 2~ BEAUTIFUL 2BR 2BA pet1!LMM9mo&.S2150 ···· ........... :·~~~t~roo •BACHS595.GreatE••t·
Fnc:d Y.,.d g.r ',pie w/golf course VIEW mo. 720-1:MI * / No _.1 673 7787 lkte IOC1 Gar, cable avL .. , •r 2122 11250 Avt 9110 s:.a..8985 s1eoo. A1ao 1BR •veil et 1.91 NlllllllU. Ml7 mo. ..... • • Clean a cozy 1BR S610. •.......... •111-1111• ~ftWm"""i~NT'A~I S13es. Frplc, wet t>w, 28A ww --."m.. la... 1114 Gmblt w/BBO, lfldry rm. IL-Ne_w_p_o_rt.........,N..,..o_r.,..,tll-~V""lll,...a-s. 38R 3'hBA condo. dbl UITW mLD micfo, W/D hkups, 2 car Walk to Udo Shops . 9'ed'. iiePSt~·;;y;bMCll Sorry. No pets. 631·8'27
er.nd new. n9'l9f oc· garege, tap of the lini •II 1BR 1BA. din, k~tcn, nv rm, ger wlxtra storage, oen-38'· .~=:;Ii l•rr. patio. 910 W. Belboe &Nd. tBR """· encl. ~· evail EASTSIDE 2BR 1™5A, 2
c:upled. 3Br 2'A8a, mas-the wayt $2000/mo lndry, lrg pvt yar~. tral elf. All melnt. Incl. mo, ..... S800hN>-~. 6u.8650 ~-~:C, E. 2~::.: ~·.P91!°_:.. gamge' . •u2' !-376958
te dr1" wl retreat, -$600/mo. $~O r. Sorry. no P91S. &44-0SOI lBr 11'°° View pricing ~or 544-4294 ,._ --~ ..,
tutafully upgraded e2BR,, 2BA. frplc, deck, 5'8-7155. AvaH now. 28r28al1901h;... prtc Newport Flfst Aeelty
w/m any •menlJlea. w/d hkup, two blks to E/SIDE28R HOUSE Studio Sept to Jutf se!: .......... EASTSIDE2Br 2Ba2story
1495,000 * 759-7653 Ocean Blvd $1225/mo Walk to shops new 2 Bedroom. 2 Batll. oceen -Utlll Peid l75-3083 · A ""811. quiet complex. townllouae-aty1e. Pool,
673-5354 Agt catpeta, paint; eute & -.. 2 98'~ apeces, Stuc?!<> or 2BR 2BA "like petlo, oareoe. ~ ptts
-Tl IL_. •3Br. 2Ba. cleen. garage. ~11. ywd $850/mo No P911. $11 /mo. F« 0 S •2BRl2BA 1925/mo yrty. new w/balCOny or prvt 1790/Mo 84e-9039
Ouallty "G" ~.· 48R trptc, bltins, view, tl4fcks 221 Cebrlllo. Steve Info C811842-5'96 L~!~~· B~g 2tany2:~. 2 btka "°"' bMC:h. New patlO, trp4, PoQI, spa, !dry, E'SIDE 28r 1Ba upstairs
3BA. lltgh beamed <*!-()per\ Sat-Sun-Mon 12·5 682-3689/H 673-lSOOIW S28501m o. 6" .. 7699 ~~ ;'e~~18•r. pvt. HO pets. S550 Up• fraatl paint !n&y lac n0
Inga. lkvtiont•. ahulters. 112 PointMlh• LARGE 2Br 28a. enclosed Agent MC. VELMA 5'9•2U 7 .... $175i mo. 271 ·o· E W ldatt f• Salt C... ... Jiu 1111 mirrors. new decor A AQen\.675-8688 g91age. patlO. Built-Ins. 2BR 2BA condo w/Oell. .. IT Tll 111 *""Ill* 1&tfl Pl. ~52 rMI t>eeuty. Must Mii, 3BR 2Ba duplex. Large. Air condltloning. No pets Acron from golf course, LUXURY DOVER SHORE ~ furn/unturn. 18R Cottage w/pvt gar~ E'SIDE 2 lfg 2Br 1'n8a
..... , aYOWNER-S.veblgSSS!! "35.000. Call DENNE modern, reoac, dblefrpl. $895/Mo CaM832·5262 S1•1050nta1 An•.75-H~l,.' .. •6 yrly ~q~I~~· 2:.~~:~1:f l<Jtc:henlbattl.Lewlours end patlO. Alto 1·2 R Newcrptl/pnt,pallo,gar.
1111 Spectacular view of SODERLING 760-5000 encl .... ,lo & gar .... ,.~ mo. v -• • bett>er "50/Mo Y..,.,11 ....... w/...,. ,.., .... , d/w, S795. Avt 9/10 & 10/1 • ... al & lat u4 ~ft .--'"'", E'SIDE 28CI 1\98. Wkg COU· maculete condition. Gar-. • ( ...... .,. • .-....... oceen ,...t,. ,,,_....,., · ~ M.A.V $1.00/mo • S.-2-9918 pie. No pets. 266,._c Or· 2BR 2BA f\OuM, 2 car g•r· ._ Included. Leue 131-92" or 495-0519 e6ec stove. ready cable. 213 Cabrilo. 7~ 1
lllm llJ ~&en ~~~~new. 673-5e96 KE'/"'rFil9' .. / CHARMING 3Br 2Ba ho,,,. anga Av. $900/Mo +$400 age. Walk bct'I. pools & 12'00/mo. 6•0· 7781 LOOKING for good over BBO. pool & tpa. Good ' l.Am 1• 11A
Ctwm1ng Houae Meny · '\[\\'I .:'(T j'[\ 'I I ln Herbor VleWHills.Pool dep 858-3933 64~1078 tennis. S1100. Avt now. dayl.854·1174eves 30 tenant for nice 28R ==I t77T.2~~~ eorlvenlent loc. SSSS
Extfu. S395K. 203f l c.ta... & ape. s2700. Avail 911 E'SI~ 3Br 2~ duplex nr DOCKSIDE RE 722"9730 •NEWPORT CREST. 3BR twnhM nr F«ry. S1050 CALL 831-7376 MC. 146-8982 Lv M90 CYPfW St. 756-9162 Jllf REALTORS • Call Owner 760·9fS18 22nd/Orenge. N-pets, 1 •llMll ---2'hBA condo, 2 car gar. Avell Nov 1. 673-•866 . LARGE 18r. New carpet. _...... 11111 W:llTllm SPYGLASS JASMINE Creek 3BR, gar. $1000 Max-2 adults. 3BR 2BA, '.*" rm, pvt tennis. nr bell $1•SOlmo Studio Apt, cioee to Wld •Liil ... Complex tt .. lndry tac.
Greenbrooll'I finest SBR FABULOUS5bdrm.totel· tumllhed.$2750 850·•390,646-9036/eve PoQI, spa, grdnr ·LM 131·3189 {213>427-1136 & 1llop1. No pell. ,Come ... the difference. '550/Mo 82Q .Center St. -snullWlll• ~o.n +tamilyrm,..,.spa. 1y ,remodeleel wlttt Fr .• _..__._ ... --~i · · s1995/mo551-1900A-gt U75/mo ll')cl utile. comptetety remodeled. CoataMeM 548...a731 Orama, charm, style ... this X.lt cond! $3.0 000 doors, P•ned windows, ---H . ESIDE 28r 18a ept. $675 .... , 831·2•94 or e7S..3021 S..Utlful 2BR apt1. Pool, -~--..,.--:-:--,.,--
home lies It •Ill The entry W llMHI' tile floors tflroughout IULTlll 111· 1• ........... .... ... *IDTILI* Sue-3BR 2'/iBA twnhme. STUDIO. ye91ty. Perking. rec. room. laundry room. •2Br Lit• & Airy. Neer
flows Into an expensive T~ELLI RL TY 5.0-SELL entry, family, formal din-Cut• 2BR 1BA .Duplex. IULtm Ul· 1•. 2-5.br $900-SSOOO/mo. aot 2 garage. lndry llkup. Nr Patto. 210 441h St.. Ready for lnatenl move-SoCout Plaza. Quiet C\11·
JMng and .dining aree ~ & kltctlen. Pool. spa & ,..,age, lrplc, lg ~uo. Marti Ferguson 842 .. 7706 beh Si375 Agt 675-•91i-EntranC. off alley. $500 lnl Only SMO to "50/mo. de-MC. upper, IUndectl,
wnlctl soars 2 stories In BACK BAY 2'~Be. 2 Br+· tranquil ll111 view oe•enalda of PCti Lux condo1 nr beh, 2BR . utll tncL6l5-7MO + 1200 OFF MOVE-IN gar. $780/mo 845-6269 Might The kltcflen Is Unique townhouse. Pool, .831-1.00 ....... $799,000 S9'1S/ 675-,912 A 2'h8A 2 sty, frplc, pvt 3BR 2Ba fully furnlllhed, MW#llT-ES . IU .. IPTS
open 10 the dining room, tennis, )acunl. Call for -mo gt patio, w/d•ltkup, dbl oar wldbl. gar, ''o blk from NICE 38R 2BA single story f1LU IT Tll IU 530 W Wiison • PmW Lnmf .
entlancing the lrlendly., appt. Principals only. \\l\lt HI Hlf'l I HARBOR VIEW HILLS w/opnr .. All new! St095 sand, NB. Winter rental llouM. YHrly rental: Remo(jeled 28r+Studlo TSL MGMT Jog to beech. 2BR 28~.
Informal amblenoe The ,7...,9320, 842-8533 HO .. I ~ llM:. Furnl1lled 3BR/38A. 521-6'00 or 650-1206 $1300/mo. 721...Sl 13 Play• R.E. 673-1900 Houae Cftalm Wiit oak 722 ...,,.12 or •~2 1....... llreplece. sr•tlo, 1BR REAL ESTATE ' ' • ...., .,.. .. ...,.. /1 f I I I downstairs m•ter tulle E. Side 4BR 3 BA N S'peetacutar ocean vlewst NEWPORT HTS AREA 4Br I 38R 28& hM 2 blk1 to bch. Newport Shor .. •BR 3BA. fin. tile, berber. gar. Sony No Petit w o t, v ew. ecuu . ~omoomc>lett.._ •~t··~~m'•. kit, nu roof. ~A hea~ REALTORS large yard Avall•ble91131 2Ba ger lrplc dm rm Ger & carport commun lg !amity & living rm-On lndry. $1275/Mo yrly ..... y TIMBERS :;~1t::·8s~J>d
" ·-,... • ..,."" -· .. ft to lO/ll ONLY $l800I ~·...__or··ln &ou' I BBQ . ..,.,...,tennis 218 62nd the canal. New cerpet. 83l·92"or .. 9S-0589 """" en ICIMI arrangement for Nu lkylts, Ille . .,_ rs. Lg '* 72 l 8779• '"'""' .._ .,..,...._ 1BR lrplc cable pool a teeneger The lof1 dr•· i IOt, tr .... PP 6'6-8'73 .. ~Pets S !395. 720-15651 St. S 1325. 631· 7531 Ydy 12..150/mo. 675-WINTER 3Br & 28r aptl petio, gar: No pets. 399 MESA VERDE. Two-2BR
metlcally owrtootung the MESA VERDE •Br. 2Ba. ft.U llLllA I Ulll-IUl11Fll ~Nice 2BR 18A w/d ltkup W•t N9wporl-Stept to •••llT TlllAll 1145 w. 8:r: Blvd. w Bay St seas. l50-QS7 lBA. upper & lower. yerd,
llvlng rm glva this home' ffptc, new cerpet, P•inl a.ua.a l'UtlUIT 3BR 28A upper unl1. FfJ)IC. fncd yard 1 ~encl gar~4 bell. 38R 2BA yrty. 2 car 38Rl2'"'8A, eonoo. gar.. See alt~ ,sat, 9/3 -·-m1gar.:1rk"o~y Pl= ~ecJeJ •.u:Uement 12 t9,.900-By ownet. _ deck. w/d hkup. garage. ~ On EutSlde ~fil garage. Jae. AV! 9/ 12. $1050/mo 845-9219 or call 1 iv. msg _,.._
-1279,000 ~759 MA~Y ANffMcGUIRE No P•lt . Avall now 857-2523 °' 751-2787 1 ffeCJO/mo Bllr 642·3850 •• ~INTER RENTAL Lg 18R 2BR 1'MIA Twnhae. Ffpk;, 75.l·IMl3.or ~J9: 711-l 1M HARBOR REAL TY $1600/MO 2• 1-0608 Agt Oceanfront new custom furn 11 he d · II 0 u 1 a ger, ywdl patlo, lndry rm, -.a••t1-
CEOf~~E Fl.KJNS 337 Relrnes Princlpe11 ~ 6'6-6770 ta... 1 2114 lndry rm, frplc. dbl ger· _... turn, cable TV, 2 car gar. J~~~;1,0or ';7~1 30"i1~11· 2e17 Orange -2Br w/gar, yd, ,,.. crpts
0PEN HOUSE SAT. 12-3 Offic:e 673-4•001 TRI level 2Br. 3Ba. den., 11111 .. 112 ~o. 3BR 2BA, fully S . qufet IOC. $145/mo. . _._ -
• fi lO\ll'':-..\ only. •Br ," 2 '1t 8a. VILLA B•lboe penthse J'*S8RtwnfiOUM ege, ale, pool, spas. PENINSULA YEARLY ~pett.Utllapd.Winter .. .. TSLMGMT 642·HI03 25M0renge"E" .... S695
" 1190,000131-1693 2~...__ rvodec sec gate' w..ta 81'M frpic .... 110 S1~50/mo 1yr -security t~.R 1BA. ~ .. & 12.00l mo. 673-6607 Cfta ... • MU 25 BRAND 3 .... 2,LB 838-'120 Cell 1·5PM lll.illOL.,. .,..,~ ,.. · . , ·.,, ' ' ,... · rater enc e a re q 'd ..-upper gerage ..,50 new ..,. "";:•+=:n~iiiiiiii:=~--J r-~-:===~==== oomrn poo11. wlk to bctt. very n1ce 322 Ogle=E 721-0935 s.8•1923 .ti •Lg ·adorable 28R· 2BA, ·mm LAG. bri9fit. bi8U1 § -.pta. AttecNct-dbl-< _ ... Pl~1 ~~ llac• 1111 1279.900 642·2134 Agt 1980/mo. 6'7-75.0 * &pm'evall 1011 ffptc:, 2 car gw, w/d, MITILI ..... 28a nr bet\. Surd!. trpt, 11050/Mo +MC. Micro. 2Br 1'Mta w/gw, crpt1.
We'I QIW.you the down in .MY I; CWlyon HOUM Lela ler lalt 1400 • gt•t loc, lg patio. St200 CAU 8'2-3150 Bllr w/d,hk.up, gar. No pet1. pvt patlol, w/d l\kupa, drpe, bltlnl, fncd patlO •Br. fem rm. no kit. fluge , .,...~llJlll •---L zi•• •2 •Gr•t 3BR 2'hBA 2 $1250/mo '* 675-4991 oar-door opnrs. 2110 13$-4120~ 1-SPM
bcflO for• lh•re of own-lot, quiet cul de sec. BIG CANYON ~WlU lut. -• -atory. Nr beach. Gerage. SPACIOUS 3Br 21/iBa OWNERS COMet ETELY Tllurln St, OM. Agt M7 Vlctorie E .... S720 ~· Yf & inake.,, tl\a "'91K. 759-1397 ,_ aBAi 2BX new carpet, new frplc, ~•frig. S 1350 mo. townhouM, very private. FU Ii' NISH E 0 z 2 BA 150-S 118 Open d•lly IELICITilft
m .. ", pym 1 we are uat aveileble ~ course Tl .. llU paint 1ntc>Ut, fenced y•rd, •Charming 3BR 1BA turn Pool, atlch gar. No pets. townhouae apt · l 'hBA 12·7 or Weekend• 11-e a a~ec. You receive *PllfllT-• lot. Premium \118W. ...... Fer.... . grdnr. no peta. $12001 llM on Penlnaul• Pt. 11350/mo * 8'2-0576 trplc, encl patio: 1 blk to EASTSIDE 1BR 1BA. W/D Newt'/ lumllfled tingles. ~ ::.~.::S~t M~! ·~R 3BA. 3.000 a/f, 2 RV ..,lllWlf •E" Flreplace·veulted oalllngs mo. 111+ lest+ sec. W/D, gwege, big patio, SPACIOUS. Family home bMc:tl & thoPs 11500. "kup, new crpt & paint. 18r oompl wlpttone... TV1-
957-6002 ~ E Wknd1 acceaa. 2 frptca. 9·2'° Ill SIS0.000. 494-8230 ' ' 8'7-6041 M·F. 7 .. 7 or ll050/mo-Wlnter only. LEASE 4B 3Ba laml"' A_....•t1on"1 accanted. enct g•rage. No pets pod-pal'king. Re8a. wkly
•••• .,T7
·...:;.. RY ~\2.~.~5...J:;~T · HORTH L•g.Bch 180• :~~; !,k:tf001 984-6988 af1er.9/wknda VIW IEITILS rm. frrks~· S2 150/m;;, 31M9Matguerlt•~"eor .. pluu, SUS/mo. reteal150FFw/ad 11tWk ~ Oceerl w lot on Cemden 28Clrm 2'hB• s 1070 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 842-8221 or ~333 ona del Mar. 173-7183 157-2523 or 751-2787 2080 Newport Bf 842·2811
CIOM to beach 38Clrm. 2 Vacant Duplex lots. Place Clo9e to Emerald Me W 18th St 8'2 ..... 905 lut . ..,.... 21fl
2BA Up And 28drm. 2BA 8alboe P9nln.-S275.000. ·=-;,...,. 000 '160-808• HUNTINGTON H .... RBOUR 'Down Bullt·I . IY ..,.,.,, • "
~.etc. $378,500 , ua1
1IClll 1Ln iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-I ..... 1575 •Laroel>atioa & yerds W •Smallpetok IJ .... 11 ... 1Ml M,_IUITT 39 ACRE renctt alt•. NW •Carponawl ttorage
tBA. 1 ml IQ oc:Mn: aome vtew. AIC, 2 car gerege,
S1348 Ag1 213-434..g731
mt lJl8 Attzona TrMS. mountain •Pool ..... ...... I ~ upvreded 2BR 28A --.. St3.eso With easy Ill mm IPTI 1niM 1144 '°' the di9c:rimln8ting. ....._ 11s..9408 eoo w w 1LSON ituRtte ROCK.
1275,000. Call Lynne ll!n!::~ 1111. .a.Ml-2MI Walk to Univ Hlgfl Sctll. ~ 760-5000 m!5r"T."T'Of"'! RlWtllde 3BR 2BA. y.,.d w/grndr, nr M...V I ........ for equity In 18A condo located '" • s 1290/mo. 646-1086 KUIFlla .. N9wpor1 Beach hOrne quiet wood1y Mtting 38r 28a. formel dining II,_ llft
\t'\\'I ::l.,1'1 1~~ X. 11 5'8-0217 ~~ trplcpo'.oi W~DIP':u~~ room, air oond. Clo9e to 1BR a 6*1, 28a 2-atyaxec
RE "ORS~ W ......a 1125 tmmed' $750.., $500 MC swim ctubltennll courts. town."lOtne. FP, wet bar. AL• ' •-e50-713e or ,32 .. 1166 · s1..oo 261-87nwk deys, w/d, 2-c.r gar. gated
ING CANYON CASH fOf your R.E eq_U\ty or 8S4-0733eve/w-«ldl. comm. PoOI & spa on the 1m SOPHISTICATED Any condition even II in TW0-2Br 18•. 1982'B' UTC-OXF~D COURT bay. W81k to Balboe Ill. ...,.,... ... ..,.....,-.._..__I AemodMed , bdrm with forecioaure ltouM $775 or 1954 N9w J.M. Peters 2BR/2BA 12200/mo '* 2.0-1752 ******* f--a formal ............. '*<7 "12•~·2607* 'A'dplx $725 -MEYER BIOC 0 r"'----llllllf••--·-r -~"' .21-.CaloL.54.~ oondo,1Jp,.QerJ>OQ!.1P•~ ANY N __. 1'oc:ltlw&-poar& IPC ~-. 39Slm Adults, no pets [Oll9ly 2Br. deli. 2'Aaa, on
Lg 48R 38A. blrght a •try temporary fMllng wftll •BRITTANYWOODS -Wert 955-2800 I golf OOUf'M. 2 08f g.arage.
entertainer'• dellgfll akytigtlt9, tex1ured ltuc· a /cm. Townhoma. 3Br 2.Ba Home 759-0685 . 759-007911995
Very 1peclou1 wllh co wat11, Ari zona S1•00 mo leeM Avail. "°""''game rm. Lg poof llegatone a berber ;iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiZiiliil;Z 1011 831·2•18 631·9295 size yard & OCEAN carpeted floota I p4anta-
VIEWS & Mrene canyon tlon aflu!19r· •OCEAN VIEW LSE·CdM 2BR 18A. frplc, ywd. ,., .. Mttlng~ Must see 11111 131 .. 1..oo $175'000 l3500/mo. •BR 2'hBA •g•. SH5/m o. 1 98 one. ,A VALUE at ..... . ' Kenwood/18t'1 St. Bkr.
I 1. ~ ... '0 0 0 I c •I I 'HOUM, 3-car ger:remod. Sher .... Cotltlow 831-22•2 .. • ~Ml HI H0'1 ... AR80R WOODS·NB " , PATNCK TENORE UO~I' '-· Walk to Newport Cntr •EASTSIOE .,BR 18A, n1·1~702 A;4 REAL EST4T£ 28A 1BA, attllChed gar· garage, W/D hkup, 1
ip, 2.'lt'S new! S1195 mo AdUlt. ~pets Sl50l mo ~A80R VU HMS--'N8 Scotti 548-~ 1
3M. epa. new crpts. City ·-_ .._vu 12500/mo ~ -~YVIEW TERRACE-NB •BR Tri-level Avail
r.L-L'H..-S comm. Ne8I' new tmmedl 11800/mo Incl
l'lome, .18R 2'MIA, 2 yrs lendacape/pool 1vc -·
. Men111Lyn c hRt::alty
11111111-•E•• ''SW ..
UNJtt•1• lpect8CUW MtOng the spec-__, • 8drnf. 7 frpka, t Baths, .,.,. '°°"'· ~ ~oom. llbfery & we.ght '°°"" IOOO ICl· n_l3.eH.OOO
111 ••••
Sell v-,,.,,,.,.
e.. Gl11 ......
Ml-5671
for information
... & surprisingly
ow cost.
old 12150/mo. Blitr 545-7508 0.ve, Agt
111111 •MWS•T 3BA 1'~BA tt• Enci yard. ...... ~loca=~ ... ...... II• Nopec112t-ten
A1AN 38R. frplc, garage 38', dbl g.aJage. 1erge
.,. btk to the ·wet« l•rd Avaltebl• nowl
IMOOl!WO. W1n11ar only 1195, no pets. ~7
t2t ........... 1.. Lii Apll
..
.
Cbnfireht
----~
0
0
for
Day
HAS RETURNEDI
Back by popular demand. D 1mes-A·Llne w rlf run Friday, Satur·
day MlC1 Sunday rn 1rs own ctass1f1Ca.r1on In rhf! Classified Ads
S1nct rhts Is• spec!M offer. we have• Thursmy noon de~
and as~~rMnt for ill~..lbJ,U,Lope.n.JAAI povM•'pl't)'-~---=-i.,---=--~aav~ ertiwrs for ~rchMldlse not over s I SO fprice must be listed
NAME
ADOftSS
CrrY
AMOONT ENCLOUO
lMts ------1.
in adj and no abbrrvi.tlons wil be accept~. All ads will run
Friday. ~tUfday and Sunday. There Is a 5-f1ne minimum at 20C
~r h~ . . So 'fOUI low cost DllM'l·A·UW .ct11 only... -u :oo.
DEADLINE: Thursday noon '
l'RKI: S-11~ m1n11num .,-.days • 20C pf!r hnf! = SJ.00
• All ad\ arf! prf!pa1d by coming into the Oalfy Pilot to
ptacf! yoor ad or use the,cqupon bf!low
• Pnvate pany mf!rcnapc11sf! only ads No com-
mf!rclal ads. ~ts. lfvestoclt. produce or plants
• 'E«h It~ musr be pt'ICed '" ttw ad with no rt ems over SISO
MAfl TO: Dlmn·A·Une
Daily Pilot
330 West 8tiy Stteet. Cosca Mesa. CA 92626
Dittly Pilot hours
Moncttiy·Frtd_..y 8 00 AM Co S.00 PM
STATE ZJP
DATU TO INN
1.
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* * now! 723'"'°413 F.Llg. dllbldlhel. 1tove1 FOUND a,., Per••. t Ind. No peta 545·•855 NEWPORT BEACHfront duplex 3Bdrm. -2b1th. vcty Edl9on Plent. Hunt·
•EASTBLUFF Twnhse furn. & gar. 20-30yrs. _Jngton 8Mch 53&-0334
Apt. 38R 2BA. 2 Cir ger MIF, N-smkg. Avt 9112 FOUND tm111 Bleck end No pets. S 1025/mo yr lse S4751Mo 862-5712 Trey whl1e MM Dog. vicinity &44·1010, &-5 Mon..frl FEMALE. Non-amoker Sprlngd1le & West-1 •wmTlllYUllY* 28r 181 CM apt. Across minster. +i8 on 8130
•mTIU• from occ. $370/M o 892· 6746
38A 2BA c:,tv $1600 241-0595 Alk tor Loni FOUND: Young M bleck &
38R 28R ft wntr S 1550 FEMALE rmmt wwtfed to gray Dog. Shepard mix,
38R 2BA wlnl8' $1150 lhr 2br 181 apt. In N. ~t SUfgery, vlo SA
28R tBA winter $875 Legu.na $537.50" dep,_ll Country Club. 54~94~2
18R tBAWlnt• $695 util 497-0119 LOST: Blk fem T~ Poodle~ WIP,_DJIH FEM. n-Mnk snr S. Coast No tegs. NEE MEDI·
111-IHI condo, pvt. BA, encl gar. CATION. Vic CDM-UCI'
"'d & pool. $425• $150 Mason Per1c. 6/30. $1000 1111!.' le ..... oep Incl urn 556-4255 REWARD!. 720-1346 I
28r, 1 • MWty decor· Fem P<of. tBR avi ;., great LOST FEMALE Himalayan
1t9d. wld, par1t S1200 38R hM. Nr bch ldel'J C~te Point ~I on
Yrty. (714• 850-2575 lltuatlon. Must Mel Only 8127 v!clnlty ~ewport
3BR 28•. frplc. peflO. 1375/mo. 673-3093 ~ f~~%1.i~~
M'Wi)' decor. steps lo LUXURY 1p1 2BRl 2BA I water 209 4 lst St So. Cou1 area. tennil & LOST L9dte1 suit, beige.~
1 Ol mo 650-305 7 91 D.N. Evans. 11 5 I pool M/F n-smkr. $5'25-piece, tit, 213·869-5985194'-6914 1th last s•S--0870 Reward S 100 Call
I Teressa 714 673-0300
38A/2BA upper 1Jblk/bch Male 10 lhr Costa Mesa --------
edulta, cov bale. frpl, home. Own ball\, n/smkr ..... L"'
endtl. ldry. g.,. no pell S4 O O + u tll s . C 111 1 Go6dn R9trielter. red m•le.
S1275yrty 546-6433 631-1862 btllecoler. 645-3865
. .
OTICEl>F PUBLIC HEAAING --
-..
Notice la h«•Oy given "'" Ille C11Y Coonc11 ol ine C1~of ~ Beach woll llold • put>loc l\eanng oo September 12, 1984, 10 discuss the PROPOSED USE $1.200.000 IN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
BLOCK GRANT FUNDS FOR FISC~L YEARS 1989-1994
The pubfic: Is 1n1111ed 10 appe., and be neard regarding tl\e a~Ollel ot a loan appllCltt<>n 'sut>mltted 10 the
U.S. Department ol HouSlng and Urban Development (HUD) f0t S 1 200 000 TIMI IOln -•a be rec>11d OV9f
ttle ne111 al• ~ 1n 1ppro•1ma1e1y equal payments ut1ng Ille Ctly's Community DeYetopment 8lock Grant
(C08GI No 'f::'., funds Of special taxes would be reqweo to make tl\eM PIY!"*"IS Pr~• °"' the loan would be usea· as partoal parmen1 t0t Ille ~chue of a small pffv11e scnool ana
gym 10 be convened to a community pentar a nd w1U enable ecqUISll of a 841e '°' a low-income l\OU!Ung ,.,,1laprnen1 (843 W 15th St . Cl No 636 031 lli1s actM ty 1s eons1sttw11 with two ol IM live ob,ec:tlves
edopt9d by the-City Council on April 25 1988 for IM use ol CDBG funds
1. To rnelnt9in 8l'ld e11pand lhe~~ental l\Ouw\Q attorc111• tO low ancs ~ate l\OuMt\olds
wlttlln the 90f'll'l\U"1ty
2 To prCMOe recreatt<>nal lac!M.es IOt IOll.er ~areas
The projecl is alao conStStent wolh US Oepar1men1 of HUD national o•ogram oo,ec:1"'es ol prov1cton9
lncreued houSl~unai.s and oubl-c seMces -" NOTICI 19 rt FURTMIR OtVUll that .. .a public hearol'lll wiQ be held on tile 12th oay of
September, 1H8, at tile hour ot 7 JO p m II\ IM Cou.ncol Cl\Wnbers OI the Newoon 8eacn City Hall 3300
Newpot'1 Boulevard. Newpor1 8eec;h Cal•l0trna al wn<t> 1•"'41 and pi-any af'CI all C>efl0'\5 internted mr, •
IOPMI' and be hMtd 11\e<eon ~11 few add1t1ot\11f intormatlO!'I sh<Md be d.reclea 10 M• t:raog Bluel! SeNOt P1~ C.ty of
Newoof1 a.en Planning C>epanrne<\t 1714) S44-J225 pr'°' 10 11!9 pubhc l\Mf1ng w..-I . ~ Ctty Clertl, City of Newport lleaclt
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday. September 2, 1"8 , 87
OUM&ECOIST
DAILY PILOT
Part-11me ASSIS11nl DIS·
lrlCt Advisor n.eeceo Sat·
urday Sunday and Hol· ldays 3AM to 11AM Must
be 18 or over valid drll•·
ec"s ·ho905e current in-
surance. good ClrM ng re-
OOfd 57 00 per nour gas
m ileage Call Roger
Starkey Tueeday tllru F=rt-
d•y 642-~321 Ex/ 205
PllTTI• Early mom•ng newspape• defiYe!')' trve In Coste
Mes. dealf.ot. 5600 rno
Gall 646-2•32 '~P'T'
A P•trlck
fE NORE
L • .• ,.
Ftf &, f CJ.AS
...,11111n
AMI Estate lrrieetment
fl(m In F..nloft l9'end
M90• a brigh1 lndMduel
tp enewer phonee & Plf·
form other mlec. duties.
Non-1moklng office.
GrNt benefits. AIAc fOf
Chrlelel, 844-1860.
Severi! po11t10M •vallat>le
1n 111 areas of O.C
D.L WEAVER
TEMPORARIES
7 141547-0550 100%FREE
With Potential
to $1 ,000 PER WEEK
lnsure<:i Van. Wagon. or
large Sedan Is Required
CALL MA. STEVENS
(213) 4n-3163
-..
Mot.Or Routes
.·
available in
Westminster
Huntington Be-ch
Fountain Valleyo
NO COLLECTING·
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
anu proof of insurance
Call 842-144.4
~sk fo r Jo a nn e Cra ey_
If you re 10 or Older
car~1er JTI•Qht ~ 1ust
thts" coupon or catt
available now'
a 1ob as a newspaper
your size Just send tn
6'12-4333 Routes are
l e son1ebody. It a
DaitJ ,ilot carrier! r-W7"d"7ike ;:; ;~-;;;;;-;.~~:1
• 1ng a Daily Pilot cam~r I
I Name I
I Address I
I Phone 1~ 1r • I
II ~ Te· Tiit W, Net -!
lll I &,, St I L----~~.._~~2'2!-----~-J -
.. ..,IUlll
Auto. ve c:yt. pwr/a/b.
mllMOe.' cust0m wheel..
tit• (1-381) 19.995 ..............
~.., .....
1 1 8MCtl Blvd -M~..oe31
79 CHEVY CORVETTE
Super' sharp. must ...
Now Sl.999 (451413)
Ray Fledboe-HoncM
k'vlM Auto C.Ot111
l30-7eoe>
'Mmnt.DU 1982 NISSAN 280 ZX la. 111
loeded, T-tops, new pafnf, ~ _,. -..1· 'b ~-· a /C XLNT condition, $6200 ~. "'7 " ,. ... ., ' -· ,. •
•131-3851 • .llt (5-200) "· 795
msunMB
4 c:Yt. pwr/a, cass. AIC.
{7·322) M .995 ..............
~ .. , .....
1 1 8MCt'I Blvd
142:()131
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln MPr fury
·""1't •i•rt-> I t .. ~ 1
e,,.1 111 Mee• '.4, '-"30
...............
~ ...... 1 1 e..lti Blvd
M2..oe31
f\1111111 vn111 HI 4 cyj,. f!M/s/b_, caia AIC,
Utt (7·304S) $9,995 ...............
~"' .... 1 BMCtl81Yd
842-0631
THEODORE
ROBINS
fOP 0
. '1 AW., ~ •
( .... -. ' f ... .... t ~ .t, ' : , ' I ·-· -.a.IUll
Loadedl Pwr equip! Lilla
nwl l-tt.995 f~EUMt-
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln M Prcury
~'lf; Harhor 81'f\1
Coe I a Mee• '>40 '>830
•UlllLIWUI Loaded w/pwr equip Incl.
IMther equip, $12.995
(2£MW'31) .
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln M ercury
.. ~ .. --M!''"""' M • 1
Coet• Meu '-40 Y>lC
.. UlllLI 1IWIUI
Loaded with powel' equip
lie •2GRA35e
111."5
JOHNSON & SON
llnr.oln MPrcury
2"8Lt Hprh-nr B1v j
Cnet• M••11 '-'<· '.lllO
doing ~ a · OOing bullMM • OOing bulineee •· OOing ~ •· • dolnQ bulirl99ll a: . dolnlll aa: doll'll bulll-. a: • dolnQ tMlllf..a eai dolnQ bulll-. •· doing bualNll a ; WHERE THE WILD AZTECH ENTERPRISES, BALDWIN MORTGAGE CONSIGNMENT CON-MARSHALL DUFFIELD O.JI. PATRICK & AS· .. flGRATEOACCOUNT· THE TRAVELING MAC RICH MARINE ELEC· MISSION MANAGE·
THINGS ARE. 580' Anton 472AbbleWay,Co.taMna. COMPANY. 1M11 Hale All· NECTION. 38t E. 17th TRUST dba Padflc M..a 80CIATH. 14252 CulYlll ING SOLUTIONS. 2211 t7llleourtnevi.-Hunt: 'rRONICS. 2120t Sallor1 MENT. 1937 W119tmlnater
INd . eo.ta Mela. Cehf Callf 92927 enue, Irvine, Cliltf. t27t4 Street #I. Coeta Meaa Propertlel& 17th Stre9ts.lf Dr 8uKeA-467, lnrine, Callt Martt118treet Suite 108·560. ~Blec:tl. CalN t2e4t Bay Ln,. Hwitlngton BMc:h, Aw .. Garden Gro\19. C.llf. t2t26 MlcM!eMollnerF,.y.472 Vllleoa Propert-. 16811 C•lf.t2t27 8tor9ga,670W. t7thStr• 92714 •. IMN.Cllllf.92716 , .,0· I<....:.. 1718 .. cailf.t*4S 12644
1<9'11 Sean Pf/fry, 125'2 Abbie Way, Cotta Mesa, H,ie Avenue. lrvtne. Cahl Shelly· 0.. Holcombe. 84.llteC<t.CostaMeM.Calet o.nlelPatrld!Cottello.24 ~ ChaurlQ Gr•~ "'· _,., v Aic:NrdO.Welll•.21201 BTV.tnc..aCallfomlacor· Lor ........ Garo.n Grove. Callf 92927 92714 11100Weatcllfl,,15, Newpor1 t2t27 Hwneer, IMM, c.llf. t2720 507·\4i Ac8dle. ee>rona del COurtMy t.-, Huntington lalicws 8-Ln , Huntington poratlon ·
Callf.t2Mt , . ,_.,~Frey,472 hldwln Building Com-1 8Mctl.Callf.92MO Flret American Trull ...,..Y9119N9C-..0.24 Mer.Celf.92125 .... ~.12649 lllech.Calf t2t4e Thia buslf\MI la con·
JotoM.-igo.2520\/rstr Abbla Way Cotta Mesa.1pany. 1eet1 H•Avenue. Thls ,bualneae 11 con-Company, nEE of '1h• .......,,lnine.Callf.t2720 TrecyLymHul9tt.2t~'A ~~I<'::;,,.!:!" Thi9 !lu•neaa Is con· ~by:aeorporatlon
Dal Oro. Newport Bhcn Calif. 92927 llWle, Calif. t2714 ctuct.ca tit: an ~I Merthall D. Duftleld LMno Thia lltualnesa la c;on-~tatu hlboa Island. lleedl eiMt ... ,..on Cluaed t.y: ~ lndNtdual The c•Q.!strant. com-
Callf taeec> Tlllla bllalnee• Is con-8aldwln ~s. c_,.. The "9glstranl com-TN91, Fnt American TNll cM:Md by· a ganaral pan. Celt . • · . TM registrant com· ~ to 1r-..ct bueJ.
Thie bu9ll)et• Is con-Cluctad by ""9band 8'lCI wile f()f(U, 111 t' Hale ~llenU., menc:ied to tr..act bull· ~. TTEE of the Out-nenNp ' TNI lllutineN I• con-TNI ~ Is con-"*'* -to IY8nNCt bull· ,.. YnOer the flc:tltloua
cMcted by: • f91*al '*'1· T"• r99lstranl com-IMne, Oalff 92714 • .neee under the ftctit10u1 llalcl Community Pf°'*1Y Tfle raglatrant com· dldld by a ganeral part· ~t.y:~tandwh ,_ Uftdar the flctltlout ....,_. nente °' ,,.,_ ,..,..,. "*'* to lfanMC1 tlu• r..-~alnees 11 con-~ -0t W-TN91, 2tti San Joaquin IMftC9d to trlNKt buel-......, a r•g • ren com-....,_ name Of' namee ~ allow on Auvuet 1t~ ·
Tiie registrant com-neee _,., Iba foct111<1u1 OUC1ad by • gerwal 911'1· Mated llbo¥e on Sept6tnber Hiii Ad . Newpor1 Beedl. ,... under the flc'lrtlous Tiie registrant com· _..., _.::. "::-c11cttt'::; llled allow· on January t. tlll •• ,,_.., to traneect built· ~ name °' n1me1 -nartNc> t, 1.. Calf. Meeo ....,_ ,... OI NfMa ....,.., to tr8"Md buel-,_ ttll PU Pflong Voong. ~
,_ llftdlr !fie flctitloln lllleCI abo\18 on August a. Tiie registrant com-SNlyO "*°""" TNI buaiMM Is con· ...... allow on AuguS130, ,_ under .,. ftctttlOua ~ebowe,_ .. !':,~ ...._..Dew.Ike dent
.....,_ name or n1mes 1.. ~ to tranMCt butl· Thia SIMement WM flled duc'9CI by• • buail'8ll tnm 1111 .....,_ ,.,,_ or namee -on --• TNe ......,_,t w11 llled "* ........,, -flled
lllled allow on NIA f11McM!e M Frey neee under • the llctl"°"a _..... the County C..11 of Or· T"• re9l11rant com· 0... P. Coelelo ..... ....,. on .llJlt 2t. ttel Donna K.Q. ~ ~ tM County oi.t of Or· wWI ~ ~-
Joto Merengo Thie 9tat9ment wa --fried ~ neme or nlmft .,.. COunty on Auvu-t 10, IMi'll*I 'lo &anaact butt-'TNe llala ••" Wi8111iir ~ Grw TIW ••••rent wee tlW ... County-Of\ A.,a\ 10. 119 County on Auguat tt TNI lllllll••ient *Ill Ned _.....the County Clertc of Or· llai.d 1boW on July 28, llHMI 1911 neee under the fictitious _.the County Clllfll Of Or· TNI ..... wt ... f'lled ..... the County C*91 of Or· tt11 1111 ' ...,. .._County ce.tt of Or· anga County on August to, Sherri w Whltfleld, Vk:e ,_ ~ name or namaa ... County on Augult n . wlfl ,. County c..tt of Or· .,... County on AuguM to, ,_, ,_ = County on Augiiat 10. tlll Pieeldent Publilflad Or ... eoa.1 lll1ed lbolle on NIA 1111 :I: County on Augiiat 10. ttle Pullllafl9d Orenta coa.t Putlllhed Or ... c...
... a NMllMO 0ranoe ~ ~":. .. Cc::'~.::-o111~ =r.= tr~·· 29
• :1 ==:.:~ °":: "' ....... °' .... c... ,... ......,_. °' ... ": =.::tr~·· "· ~~s.p,.,,.. 2• •. ~ltff had Or9"g9 Cont Dally Piiot August 19. 29 .... County on July 28, F-tae .-the County Oertl of Or· 019r PllOt ........... I , t . "-Ulflld~ C09ll o.11r Npe Augu1t tt. 2t, r..,.10 M64 = P110t Aufll91 1t, 2e ..... rlber 2, t . tN8 1911 anga County on Aueuet 10. ti. H . 1111 D11r Nie 1t. 21 • ..,......, 2. t . tlll
_..,.. 2. t , 1tll ~1' F·615 Pulllaflad .Or-."= ftlUC !!!JC( ,... ,_ f,411 18'1-t. , Jtll ,_.,. F-807 fWllC llmC( ftlUC Mme(
_,,, --PWlJC MmC£ o.11r PlcM AU011M 12. 1t . H . HClllBJl-1 ~ Or ... Coe1C PmJC mllCE ,._ -·-HCnnow -·· _ ...... 2, 1MI ..... RAW o.llr PllOt AugllM 11, M. _ _.. ......................... ___
F-514 ,.... ................ ..,, ....... 2. t. 1• ._, ------------·~=======;"'° FIO..__,llllM ~':! .. ---------1 .... ....__ F«ll PICllY-•111118 -na,_-r ~-'1ACl,IC ORAPHICl.1---------
,... ........ .,..... are 'YNA CARAOONNE '7U Molw ......... •H . ..... ----I'(' HCnnlUa• 111111 C.. ..... c.M. N117 1--....,. ....... ......,,.....,--. __ OlillGA PA .. TNEAS M C C U l L 0 C H ..... eTA~ .,__ llGMa, 411 lryaon CaralM LIOJd. ,300 c.lt. 11111
... ~..,., .. 11a ~O:.:·':tt.~ Tile ....... panona .......... c.. ...... c.. .... •• ,_ IU~T. 11IO AlrweJ ., .............. .....-a~.~-Adlllll Awe UA. Coeta ~~c.llomle •7IO '-""'18'11dl.Callf . . ... ~. ...., ,..........,......,. ........ cw ...... c:.lf . ...,111Jll\.e.lr.MllO .... Cllt.-...... c.11.llllt .... -.. con. iiilO ......,,lllech c.iit t2MO All.AN PROOUCTIOHI, Qlne Cortlnl, ,121 .... .._.. ..., .....,f\rlMnlM ... 8 ._,. T:-llr. 1104 TMll ......,... ii con ....... t.y:awpor9110ft
J. ThofNI ... ~t. i• ~-:-r.,~car~::.=· IOll • I07. T--.. ~· ~ ~. CIM TMI GI'...,., eofl4· ,, I 2 F ... •• .... ..... .-0. ..... AM. Ml&;?ll • Corw dal ......... 11141\<1dual ~ ':.9'~ c.!~
............ _., N9w• -' ........... , 9'ecfl . ._.. -'1///lf'I, ti -a.. Clurt, ................... Cll-Olll. lfNI .... Giii. --T... r .. letren, COM• ----...,._.1..c.lt t2'e0 oi:-=·c ~ ..,. rc11r1 lan4fau. 1uo ._.,....._Cllf_ ..... ,.,, ...._a..., ....,C ,...._1111 D••14' or .. n, 170• .._...ta ww..,... =----... ...._
__."' ,.,,.._ "'17M L" Arcoe L......; ...,~Wlll•lflli,IOM · ---.c-...... Celf ................ ,. =r.: ...... Cell . ....., ... •111. C-... ;;ua .. Aw..C...dal -_.., tN tlcNlcM __ ._~, .. ---
..... .,.,...CoroMdel • -· ... I01, '=a... ...... .., -.. c.t .. ......,, ..... CSll.-.... Cllt.... ....... .... °' ..... ----.... c. _. 'T:·c.::;:"1a con-....._ Cllf.~ TNI .. llllW Ill oon-..... Cllt.-.._ • OOfto n. ._..ow le eoft--Tlll9 ..,....... la con-_,._.onN't/ t, 1tM .:-:--,....._......_,
TNI ..-... le con-_.., by et 111111 ....._ le ton• ..._. W. • ..... ,.,,_ NI ...-• ...._ ..... 'r: a ...... , ...... 'r: • ...... ,.,._ ..... 'r • ..... .-rt• C.... Uorf ,_-:r "9. W ~a ..... 1*1--·a 91'* ...,, ................ ,,... ...... ........ -M'd "fte ,.....,_. .... --.... Tiii •111 ••II W lled .... ~~ .. Or ...... ·-T·-f f'8 r~ant COflll• T ... r ... atrant Cfft• .fae ,....., ... HM•_..., ............. ftte f9119traftl COM• , ... r ..... ranl CO"'• ..... ColMeya..OlfOr· ~-• Tlte. reg11trant com-"e reg ttrent com• ....., • .,.... llulto ....., .. .._. ......... • ._ ._.. -.., ... __. .. .,_ ...._ ....., .. .,._. .....,, ... ~on,....... tO, ._ _ •-..... ti,
...... totr8"MCtbuel•...-cttotr-...ae'llM6-_ ...... ......,._....... -------.... _..., ......... _ _............... -,_ _..., the lletltlCM,.. ....., "-........._ ..._ ,_,.. ...,. ..... ,_ • ,... ~ .._ ., ,..... .., -.. "' Mlf --._ ., ,..... ..._ ...,.. or ..._ ,_, ._
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..... ~on Jvly ts. , ....... IMiile °" ...,,emtier ---.._. •· Clttlilll. Celi-'· -,.. ()air ,... ;r-"· "· = "" L7."ti. "· •. _,,.....T..,. '·~""' .... c. ..... :•:"!'~ ....... ec-.. ----~ .... ~,....., ... ,...., ..,. .. 1 .......... , .. ,. •11 .. -.... Tiil •1 Mll W. lllilcl T:a ..:+"*........ -nfllrailt W flld Tlllit 11 IOA .. ... Y19 _, -... ftll SI -... ft9 ·=· .. ... Tiii I :•I W ..... ______________ _.;.._ __
..-.. °"'"'¥ C111rt1 °'Or· ...,. .. 1-.!!'C: .. °' """ .. a.., C1ert., Or· .... c..r a..• Or· ... c..r°"" "°"' • ~~Ollll • °'" • .. 'dlltl .. Or· .... o..wr an ot Or· = CeW11r on~ tO, ~-.... a~ = C..,., on Mlllll 1f, :I CNllr ... Alllllll 10, • 011i111J • ... 10, ~ -.. tt. .a.-, 8ft ..... 10, f.'I c..e, on ..... te. ~= ~ ~ r ~ ~ ~ ~
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' '. , ' J
l
DWl' PllDT ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE ~4/:N0.36
I
.I
I
,
Oilendar
BM TW T F a
1 2 3
-4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1112131 4151617
1819 20 21222324
5-?027 2a--29--30
ticket. Knott's is the nation·s most
popular jndcpendent famJly theme
park with 165 wild ridt"S. shows and
attractions. All shows are 1ncludM in
the admission price. Other entcnain-
mcnt includes the Wild West Stunt
Shows, can can shows. old 11me
melodramas and a vis11 "1th noop).
K.non's Pa~fic P•vilion features 1wo
exj_pordinary aquatic n11ract1ons
-'"SpLtshdance ·•:· a dolph1n/sra
· lion show and .. Snoop} 's di\ 1ng
dogies.''a first um~8:nJ where pcr-
JQonancc_ Knoll's our themed
_ areas including Camp Soop). a Sl\-
acre wonderland themt;tt 10 the Ca.
High Sierra and featunng the all new
.. Snoopy's Animal. Fnr nds ho":·
• Admission pritts are $1 7. 95 for AMUSEMEN'TS adults and Sl3.9S for ch1ldn:n l-11.
senior citizens SI 2.9S. For add1t1onal
i11fonnation call tl\e 24-hour Knou's
Line at 220-5200.
BALBOA PAVD.JON, 400 Maio LOS ANGELES CHILDREN'S
St.. Balboa. Cat.alma Passenger Ser-MUSEUM. 310 Nonh Main trec'i.
vice provides service 10 Catalina.· Los Ar:iiciles. Open Wednesda> and
Adults $22 and child (I 2 aod under) Thursday. 2 to 4 p.m. and S;lturda)
11 round trip. E>eparu 9 a.m.. and Sunday. I(} a.m. to S p.m.
ani'fes melt at Pavthon 7 p.m. "Hand5-0n" parudpatorv Cn\trOn-
liarbor cruises daily~ 4S minutes: ment an which ctuldrm agcs-Tl\'O lo
adult SS. child fifty ccntsi 90 minute twelve, learn b)' doing. Eighteen
cruise, adult S7. child > t. Brunch penna~ent . exhibits. Month!) pro-
cruiseSundays 10:30a.m.AdultsS20: pmm1ng includes a vanet\ of art
, ~<:hild (I 0 and under) S 12. Dinner exhibits. performances and work-
-CtUisc on Monday evenings. 7 p.m. shops. Admission: '4 per person.
Adults S2S; child SIS Rcscrvarioos infuts under ~ultsf~ n
required, call 673-5245. Wednesday and Thursday after-
ClllLDllEN'S MUSEUM AT LA noons. Groups must register in ad-
llA.BRA 301 South Euclid St~t. la vance. For 2" hour infonnation. call
Habra. Musical Express, an exhibit of (213)687-8800.
music and dance every Saturday at llOVIBLAND WU MUSEUM,
-noon. Free actmission .th paid 7741 Bach Blvd .• Buena Part:-Etvtra
museum admission. For more infor-is a fea1ured replica among the mation. call (213) 905-9793. ~Y elaborate collection of movie
DISNEYLAND, 0 1313 Harb<>r iand television memorabilia inctud-
Blvd .. A'naheim. Disneyland otrcn ina li~like replicas of more 1han 200
more than SO attractions in seven renowned &tars. Daily 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
themed lands. including 'SW Tours" wi&b Fri.-Sat. open until 9 p.m.
and "Captain Eo.·· Park hours are 9 522-11 SS.
a.m to midni1Jn Monday through MVSEUll OF NATURAL HJS.
Friday; 9 a.m.IO I a.m.Satwday and 9 'IOllY AND SCIENCE 2627 Vista dcl
a.m.10 midniahl Sunday. Disneyland Oro, Newport Beach. Open Tue1day
information: 999-4565. throu~~turday. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.~
-----~ agay FA.RM 8039 and ~~)' from noon 10 5 pm 1
' Beach ~vd .• Buena Park. Knot Cs ~~mimon ts $2 for adults, and SI for
Su.per Sw Ice Specuculf r 1s here! c:h11dren over six. Metribers arc free. The&litterinclkatif!&ext~vapnza is Museum exhi_bits iric:lyde a w~e
presented four times on Saturday and array of manne mammal fossils.
three times weekdays through Mon-Nauvc American displays, an insect
day_ Price is included an admission zOo and photo g;allcry, mineral and
f1ctt•l•1 St5 per cowple uu.~ pH peuonl
Calli 710-~'1 7
4 Dilly Plot Dtllllook/ Fttmy, 89pllftlber 2. te.
9 ._ . ' •" eJ 1 I yt C 0
shell displayi, buuerlly c0Ucct1ons
and chilClrcn~s hands on exhibits.
Also cducatfon.il programs. docent
tours.. lccluttS, fcsuvals, a library and
special activities. For more infor-
mation about e:xhibils. programs and
membership. call 1he museum Tues-
day through Sunda) at 640-7120.
OLD WORLD VILLAGE. 7561
Center Ave.. Hun11ng1on Beach.
S~alty shops arc localed 10 tht
village that features the charm of
quaint European \ 11Jages wi th cob-
bled ~ Jan1~m~h1 nJ-20-
murals of t:.uropcan scenes p:11n1ed
on exterior walls 'b) liuropcnn artists.
898-S 111.
QUEEN MARY. Long Beach
Harbor at the end of the Long Beach
Frecwa). El.hibns include special
etTect sound and light sho"s in the
Engine Room and Wheelhouse re-
enacting a near-collmon a1 sea. and
an ex1ensive World War II dtspla)
depicting the "Queen' ~ acti vc role as
a troopship. Daily I 0 a.m.-6 p.m.
(213>43S-3SI I.
RAGING WATERS 111 Ragrng W~tcrs Drive.~ Dimas, Hours are.
IO:a:m. to 9 p.m . Monda) ttvough
Tile deep end .
.......... ,._at Wate19• DlYe-ID llOTle Tbeater ID
·Thursday~ Friday 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
and Saturday and Sunday. 9 a.m. to
I 0 p.m. Enjoy 44 acres of fun. sun and
excitina water rides. Admission is
S 13.9.S bcfott 5 p.m. for adultsLS8.95
after 5 ~-· for children inc:bel. SOS'before S p.m . ...:iandr.....,$~6_,,.9 ... S-
after; with frec admission for children
under .. 2 inches. 592-6453.
~ S-D .. ~f tlae ere.tare•• 8bcnn at 4.U today
laaDI•• S. tlala paae. _ ---•
SANTA ANA ZOO located at Pren-t~ Part. 1801 East Chestnut Ave.,
rm Kftr. Hours a~ IO a.m. to
p.m. with la5l tickets sold at 4 p.m .
Admiuion is S2 for adults: 75 cents
for children . .,cs 3 to I 2 and scn1or
citizens. Chi&drcn under 3 and handi-
capped arc admi~ free. 953-8555.
SAN IUAN CAPISTRANO
MISSION, J 1882 Ca mino
Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano.
Fatwa Sena C'hapel. California's
olde&t buildina, the ruins of the Great
Stone Church. soldiers barracks. beautiful Jl!lnlens and IWO museum rooms with anifacts from Native
American and early Spanish culture. 0.~:30-.m.-S p.m. 493-1424.
WOllLD 1720 South Shores ROid. Mission Bay. San Diego.. Sea
World features seven major shows
and dozens of fascinating marine life an 1800s style crafts village and a
exhibit&. Shamu, Sea World·s star Roarin& Rapids white water adven-, lier Whik. ~orm5ln1 e argcst ure are o e _ .
whale. fac~l11y in the w<,>rld. SPRUCE GOOSE._J.._Q.M Beach
-dolphins.trained .sqls and sea hons. Harbor at the end of the Long Beach
OUtf'.S and a walNs also pctform 11 • f~y. Howard Ffu&hes' all-wood. spec1~ shows. . Th~ arc four 200-ton flyina boat majcsticall) aquanumS" featunna hve sharks. sea benhs for visitors to view the inside
life and frcsh~ter ~ from all .over of the world's largest clear-span the~-Tbiny spec~ educauonal aluminum dome. A variety of dis-
exh1bit1 are also •va.1lable t<,> ~a a&a)'s including· modules 1hat 'show ~ortd aunts. One pncc _adm15s1on C:r•updetailsoffascinatingarnsof •~udnaJI shows and exh1b1~s. Open the plane such as the cockpit. tlight
daily, 9 a.m. 10 11.p.m. until Labor deck and wina interior featured.
Da)'. Free puk•oe $19.9~ for-a:dult'l.-stt tMQuttn ary ts11ng or more
Children 3-1 I. Sl4.95 and children informauon. 10 a.mA, p.m. (213) u~r .3 arc~· $23 pany pass allows 435.3511 . unhmlled v1S11& to Sea World after 5
p.m . all summer. Guided tours and UNIV~ ST~IOS. I QC? Uni-ridcs arc extra. Group rates and 12 VC!'51l City PL Universal ~1ty. '!'
month pass information. call IMided tram tour of On1vcrsaJ s
(619)226-3901 or 826-7213 or famed .420-actt back lot and the
(6&-2)838-06()0.. -.fnlel'Umm~t ~tet. ~hich -ka--
turn five ltve iho~. ts otTered.
lllEIUIAN UBRA.RY AND GAR-Admimon pricn are S 17 .9S ~ith
DENS. 2647 Pacific Coast Highway. children qn 3-1 I at S 12.95. Senior ~rona del Mar. R~. cactus. admissionSl2.S0.(8t8)S08-9600.
nuaJ ·~ns.ndan ndorch1.dft chon-WILD ftlVERS 8800 Irvine Center
servatory, 01 po s a 8 &• 5 op. Drive adjattnl to Irvine Mt-adows Daily 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. A -· ... _ fli m.,..1t.-1rc o ers over 40 e11citjng
SIX FLAGS MAGIC MOUNTAIN, waterndesandattractions.Groupsof
Mqic: Mountain ~way exit otT 20 or more can take ad\antage of ______ ..._....___,~.._--~ltttl~Me-+,o.1~""9:-M.i~tt.~89---JNitd Ri~ · ·
rain.
Gllendar Continued
.BINBLEB
FrldaJ
SINGLES MINGLE PARTY each
Friday at Promises 1gl11club. '333
W. Coast H1gh"'a). in the To l.a1 Bani..
Bldg.. Newport Beach. 6 10 10-p.m.
Open to ages 21-55. S6 ndm1\ ion
Fr« hors' d'ocuvres. door pn1c~.
dancing. Sponsored b)' \he Meeting
Connection. Cill "-· Bruce Gle::ison at
894-·l 777 mom1"gs. 846:8.i40 after-
noons and evenings for morc'1nfor-
mation.
TEMPLE BETH .EL INGLES
ACTlvmES South Count) Reform
con~tion begins a s111glc~ com-
in~nt. H1&h Hol) Da~., ac11' 111e<;
plancicci. For more informauon. \311
the Temple offi~ at 364-·133:!.
PA-aENTS WITHO T PART·
NBRS <>n111t Coast Chaptt:r ~6.
(custody not required) offers nc"
friendships. vaned ac11v1ucs. canng
people. G uest card~ a' a1labll:.
S47-r600 or 5.f6-578 for more
1nformauon.
PARENTS WITUO T PART-
NERS Huntinglon Beach Chapter
595 hosts a free oncnl3J1on for single
rcnu. CAii cttapt(r pho ne 898-}Q75
1----f<M' mtttinJ locauon and add1t1onaJ
mcmbcrstup 1nforma11on. Mcmbc~h1p in Parents Without
Panners 15 open to dl\orced. ~par
ated. widowed or neHr mamed
rents o flivin& children. CustO<h of
c c r re t • n"on-
pro~ t. non•scctarian. cducattonal or-
pn1zation. PWP -provides a pro-
aram Of social activities. d\SCUSStOns
and study aroups for singlt' parents
and their families.
PlllME OF UFE SINGLES s1 ngles
ovcr45, meet for T.G .l.F. 5 10 7 p.m.
at Coral Tree Loun~ in Grand Plua
HC>kl. 2726 S. Grand Ave. Sama Ana.
For racrvations and information.
for a.Labor Day housepan~ in S3nta
An a at 2 p.m. Membrrs S6. non-
members SS (Steak Oull Reser-
vations must be made h' ~turda'. 836-8744. . .
Tue.day
BOWERS MUSEl'M l~G LES
FOR mE ARTS holds a month!\
meeting at 7 p,m. tn the Edu a\1on
Center. Bowers MuSt'um . .!(1()1 '
Main St.. Santa .\na. Po1lud. d1nnl'r
and guest speaker t.llking on fanta~)
(ace painting and $('Ulpt1ng.(u-.l 1l> S.i
fo r .members. $6 for non-mcm~r<>
Call 964-0911 for more 1nforma11on
SWlNG AND BALLROOM DANCE
CLUB Learn west coast '" 1ng. fox-
trot. walu. samba. Lango and all
ballroom dances at the lrvme Hilto n
Zot Room at 8 p.m S6 or SIC) J>('r
month. Dance a\ C) p.m For more
information. call .i9.i • .cr93 . .
WedDadaJ
PRIME OF LIFE SV.:GLES dinner
at Papa·s Pan~ . .!109.i 8each 81\d
Hunungton Beach a1 4 p.m. For
reservations and 1nforma11Qll. l'Jll
836-8744.
WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP. singk'>
over 4S. men for d1nner at 6:30 p .m
at Ftsh Compan). Los >\lam11os. < all
521.-587.5-for rcservJiuons and 1nfor-
mat1on.
NEWPORT BEACH SAILING
SINGLES a club for non-smoking
single sajlors with or w11hou1 a boat.
age 21 and older. Meets the first and
third Wednesda) of each month at
the ttuntingtqn-Beach Inn, Pacific
Coast Highway in Huntington Beach
7 to 9:30 p.m. Meeting begin<; ~ith
drinks and hors d'0<uvrcs in the bar.
followed by a mecttng a nd ac11v1t1cs
at 7 p.m. Social hour follow., \he'
mttting. Cost 1s S6. Call 673-301 ~for
recorded info about club a 11v1t1es.
LIFE ON YOUR OWN singles ·55
and over, rn«t new friends in a "arm
suppo rtive atmosphere e'er~
Wcdncsda~ 'to 4· 31l p m lor i1 'anctl
program including dinner .ii IOI.di rr-.taurant'>
and a monthl) pot lud. 0:1'" Scrimr
Center. 800 ~1arguentc 1 S1h anJ
Marguer11c 1 Corona Jd \IJr
644-3.!45 F.R.1.£...N.D.S. a s1ngk d~"-·1at1un
for fun and gro" th. meets t'al·h Wcdncsda~ p m \ll m1Jn1gh1 1n th•·
Zo1 Room In ml' H1hon. I ~'Ii.JO
Jambort't' Road. Ir' 10\' rrce 'akt
parlong. adm1~s1on 1<. $:< per rll:r'•'n
Get 1n for half-pill<' 11 ~ uu hnng J
fnend, get in frt'l' 11 'ou hnng 1'·\(' h~ calling 1163-31 I I . n tl·n,1on ~ 1 I l
aficr 5 p .m. Fr<.'t' )-month pa'>\I\ c
membership b~ aw:nd1ng.
OASIS EN I OR CE:'\...TE R
SINGLES meet \\t.'dn<·..Ja,., 'ti' .t
p.m. 1n Room 3
Coffee and tea from l w • 11, r ri
follo"'cd b~ a c,penal pr11~ra m
Thanday
TANGO. DISCO A1':D BALLROO~t
DANCE CLUB \.1ect~ <"H'f\ I hur'-
da) at 8 p.m. at ~31\ \\ -1 ~th \1 thm.·
blocks south of '<'" pon Bh J in
Costa Mc.-sa SI q month Ice\ Learn
the lat~I dance'> follo"l.'d b' J J.mu.:
or other acll' 11 l{"S each "'ect.. For
~more information call 49.i.QSQ '\
A.S.A.P angles .\'SOI. 1duon of Pro-
f~s1onals mttl C'\CI'\' Thu~:i' ~l."
ning 6 pm to 11 pm :u d1ffcrt'nt
locations ~mall group nc1,,orl.mg..
personal in'troduchon!.. hot and cold
hors d'<XU\ res. S~.x-1al. dancing. m1\-
ers and pnzes <.all· each 'H'et.. for
location and mfurmat10"4165-MHor
760-0451.
Frlday
COTTON CREElt R~ AURA.1''T AND SALOON 7148 EdtngC'r Hun1-
ington Beach l ff h:'ndl ~hn.,. · L \"I
the Good Time\ Rull'' I U\'..JJ,
through Saturd.:t\ tfllm ' ~I• r n
'41-142"'
COAs;H HOt: E ''I' -< an11n1•
Capistrano. \an Ju.II' < .1p 'Iran•
pr~n\~ F1reho\C.' .1:1.! thl "".imr
Zomb1~ 1on1ght h•r tt• ~<'t -..11,' anJ
dinner resena11on\ ,atl J1,1, •. , ... 1
Conccn hot lin\' .t<lh-\'12
DL'KE' ~O TALG I.\ 'IGllT·
CLUB m th..: 'c"' pun\·r K, "1rt
Jamboree Road '•'"P.'rt H,ad• prc~nh ll'lc11ulJ<·11J~··"I""'• ,'
'"'p.m.1o:d m n1ghll' ''••Ill '\u' tiJ'
and ~onJa' '" '"'''' d1.1111.,· Classic band~ "'ill paturrl'\ Ith , r ~. '
greatest hi t~ frt•m "t ,., .. ,J < '" h ""' "1olh." t\l "I \\.mt (,, 11 .. 1,1 \" 1
Hand ." Su11c J nJ I h, """ 111,·an'
arefeaturrd r-.44-1"1•1
FOl 'R 'EASO~~ HOTl::L "'"
'e"' pon c ..-n1<·r l>r 1', ',"I" •fl
Beach pr..:~nt' \IJ1,,n, \rd,n'
!>On,&S and mu\I\ 1n th<· < •n ..... " .11 •r
Lounge \hmdJ' 1hr"u~h I nJJ• ''"
pm. and ~turd.i' t> 111 ' rm
THE WHITE HOl . E R,•,tau1.in:
and Ta,em. 'JO \outh <, J\I 111.:h
v.a~. Laguna &-a,h pr,· ..... n1' I"<
entenainmc:nt anJ dan, in~ ii t'.hth
49+8088
SUNSET Pt:B IM>'' Pal11i, ( 1•J't H1ghwa~. unset lk::ilh 1•tlt·r, I"
c.ntc.ruun.mem ~' t'n mgh15 .it "l"rl
Tonight and Saturda'. l h,· I un.-r'
9:30p.m.10 I 30 a m '":·lll2,...
COURTHOUSE REST Al RA~T .:
Hutton Centre Dr" t'. \..inu \na
pre~nu Nathaniel Jam \hJJk111n 1n
the bar and gnll Thur<ida\ through
Saturda~. 30 p m 111 I a m .1nJ
John Allen dunng lun, h 1n th\
Librar)/Garden Rth•m \h1nJa,
through Fnda~. fh..: <. ountwu,, ''
located o nc block oil tht' ..,., rr,·l'"'J'
West on Mac .\nhur l\h .! 1n the
Hutton Centre For 1nt1irma11on ,Jll '
S4()..8615.
&!SS, THE CLllB ~~!<°' '\'"l""n
Blvd. in Cosu ~tC"IS na,hin~ light<..
m1h'ors~nd a huge Jant' 1l1\('r '" t·
call 116-8744. WllE&LOJl'"l"RlENDSHIP Mcct ~~~~-""=-~~~~~~~~~~--====-~~~~____;=-~~---!"--~~~~~~~~~
for T.G.l.F. a1 5:30 p.m. at lhc
Embusy Suites In Anaheim. For
information. call 521-5875. .. ........,
.1'.L.Ul.T. bas a Labor Day Cel-
cbratton and hn)c~ 8 p.m. to mid-
n'PL Call 647-1682 for all infor-
mation. •
WBEELOF FIUENDSRIP Snwes
4S and over, meet for d~ncr at 6:30
l»·m· at Revere House in•Tustin. For
1nfonnati0Cl and ' rncrvations. call
S21-Sl7S.
PIUllE OP UFE SINGLES meet
for dinner at La F~. 2845 I Marpcri~ Parkway. MiuiOI\ Viejo ~---l..'~a RCICP'alioM and i.Uor,
ma1ion. call-836-8744. r
NON-lllOUNG SINGLES of America. (N.S.S.A.) mttts every Sat-
urday at Btn\ky's. 7CJ79 Center Dr .•
nna to the 405 F~y and Beach
Blvd. Huntinaton lkach .. Mttli .. 6
IO 9 p.m. S6 fOr non-members. Sl for
mcmbcn . Door pr11cs. hon cronvra. 146 1440 or 2A hour ~vent
botline.194-8932 .. ·-·, ..... PLlllT~ams bqin at 7 p.~. in d9e · 1lllilr hoppina
Ccater. ll05 Main SU'etl. Suite 20.
Hunli.,.iqa Belch. Donation " S3
and hC daild ca.re 1s available. Call
647'1621 for more information and
to lefvc ~---wa&a. OF FJUENDISlllF S1~
over 4S meet for brunch at '1 1 :30 a.m.
al OrallF Co. Min1ns in Oran~. For
information and men a11onS: call
S21·5'75.
Ml '71'
PmllS OI' LIPE SINGLES meet
Thousands of dollars in giveaways!!!
September 1,. thru 6
Free .. llCh Acee•• t-shirt
with any S15.00 pUl'chase
Free key cf\alns
'with anr pwchase
shins or \horn Tt\."" .. ~' .sr.-S' l<•f Jll
sho"s. Door-. upc:n at I'm ( Jll
3J..l 160
THE HOP pr.·'>t'nh th< •<><•k'I
"Hopp'·· Huur in !••'-' n ' -pm
tonight and '\.itunJJ ~ "th•t \u~u\t
'•&ht'> .. 'tarnng T •n' !{,,,,.ni a
tnbute to "'-ril D1dmn~J a! -\o p m
unda' the Ho p lcaturl'\ lh<' ·· Rn11 ... h
ln,asion" ""h Rod, 'V11vnJ Big fkn
tS~ 1..ll\t'f lhargc • JOJ ' .lo'<J
\tonda' "RU\.t.. .\wunJ th•· c '"' k
a h1\tun. .ir' r<1<.k .:1nJ ro)ll T '"'' ..11 '
pm 1s :,,.,.,.r,h.:rg::• \\vJ "'"n
te\t "'-1ght l all tor 1kt:11I' I "ur<.d.1\
Dan1.c' D.in,.·· DJn11.·' •"It'• ·111 •• '·1
('harge 1 ' --J Hrnokh1.ir.,t I •unta n
\ Jlln ._.,., \-2 •t>n
TH°E HOP :•11.:.: \k1, ... r R,.,,.J n
l.Aguna H11'' pn·..,...nt' :n. '"-, r.11 ''"
and "'" H••PP' Hllu' H..1rl, · · • -
pm \lonllJ\ 1rrolUl.!h rn1.la I ulldl
at 11 J m t riJ.i" ~' 1,· ,, .;. ., ,.J, h
munth "t1h ·< ln 'tJt;!• ..1:lJ ', 'l'
JO.: ~ .iturda~ P.Jr' J' 1h, H11r ..11
night !nng ~Jn<: ~-· ,•,rn,,·
und~' .... r.1 ' ~, ~ ..., .... "" '".: t•ur \"~\hear. " 'h•· !) .. r \I l~r R11..
Band .md t· •!1• -r ., "nt I " r..: s~l c' «'lt' \I •nJ.J. 1 "":J I ..1~
da' R<"-i.. \-•un.! : 'l< 1 "I. 'he "
\\ cdne-.da' J.idht•U'<.' R , i,., r' I\,
IU p1e~c ru.. i.. • "'-"'"'' ~anJ l ._.ur,.
da' \rat' l ont<''t' « '-1'.t,...-
THE 'C ROW1' HOl 'E ~~i-.1-2
South Pa,ifi, ri1a,1 H11:h".i' ""uth
L..agun.i F r;rn ... R1" .Jn,l l n ..
pcr1orm Tut: .,.1;i • 1 h r.,ugt '\a: u r Ja' "'
p.m lo ;r J !"'\ Alu<' \Jcp1 1'
featured \unda' JnJ \I •ni..lJ' .11 io. I•,
p m ~Qi-.5--i or -lll'-'-2l'>~tl
JERE'.\11A H'~ RE~T .\l RA'T
-~CIWILI
l&llELS uu
SEPT. U
..... 11
111
llSEIT ... .. ..... ,. ··-Lii
Dlilil'V Plfot Oat~/ Friday. September 2. 1983 I
,.
8901 -warn~Ave.ar Magnoha an
Huntington Beach present h"e enter-
tainment Monda) through Saturda).
8:30 p.m. to I a.m. in Jercmiah·s
Lounge. Lhe Jazz happ' hour Moh-
day through Fnda). 4:3<> to 7 p.m.
Complimentary buffet, no cover or
minimum. New outdoor patio dance
floor. 21 and over. Tonight. Linda
Roth. For information. call 848·~66.:?.
REVERE HOUSE 900 W. First t ..
Tustin, presents Al Abbott. "ho USt'S
baby grand piano. drum machine.
bass pedals and synthesizer to create a
on man band. Dancing !Sfn-
couraged. For rnfonnauon :ind rcscr-
vations. call 543-9319. ~
NIGHT MOVES 59()1lWamcr A \.C.
Huntington Beach. concert info line: 840-0208. • .
a.hlrday
COACH HOUSE 33157 Camino
Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano
presents ·Toni Childs tonight. For
ticket sales and dinner reservation •
call 496-8930. Concert hot line:
496-8927.
SUday
PACIFlC AMPITllEATRE Dion-
M Warwick and Bun Bacharach
tonigbu t 8 p.m. Tickets are available
at the.Pacific.Amphitheatre bog ofJkc
and at all Tickctron locatio s. For
more---rr\ onnauon a-nd to chaTgC
ricfcts by phone, call Telctron at
63-4-1300. •
LABOR DAY PARTY The Ri&ht-
eous Brothers· Hop, I 8174
Bcook.tulrst. Fountain Valley, pres-
ents .. Rock Around Big ~n". the
· British lnvl5ion with British hits
.. from the 60s. Showtime is 8 p.m. SJ
cover. 963-2366.
COl1llTllOlJIE BESTAURANT. 2
Jtutton-CCnrrc Drlve, nta o\na.
p~ts The New Ink Spots in the bar
and gnll w11h 2 shows n1 8 and 9:30
p.m. The Courthouse is located one
block off the 55 frcewn). We~• on
MacAnhur Blvd. 1n the Hutton
Centre. For information. call
540-8615.
way.' Laguna Beach. presents live
entertainment and dancing nightl}
494-8088.
THE COURTHOUSE RES-
TAURANT presents tht' ho\\ Case
Singers. Oh<' block off the 55 Free-
way, west on Mac.\nhur Bhd. in
Hutton Centre. For informntion. call
540-8615. Yl.U.A NOVA Richard Fauno-s
piano srylings ·Sanda~ through
Wcdntsday. Open ~aily 5 p.m. to 2 Tae9day
a.m .• 3131 W. Coast f-l1ghway. New-COURTHOUSE RESTAURANT 2 pon Beach 642-7880. • . · THE WHITE HOUSE Restaurant Huuon Cent!'C Dnve. Santa ?na.
an Tavem.·340 SOUTh Coast ffi~n-:--~senu ptansst l~nc--E?astte-r"ftt\e way, Laguna Beach. presents hve Libra~n/Gardcn R<?o~ Tucsda)
enteruinment and dancing nightly. throu Saturda>: beginning at 6 p.m.
494-8088 • The ounhouse ts located one block
SUNSET PUB t66SS Pacific Coast off the SS fr~~a)'. West on
H ighway, SunseJ ~ach, offers live MacAnhur Blv~ .. in th~ Hutton
entcruinmcnt seven m&hts at -.-eek. Centre. For informa11on. call
Bill Lynch lno from ) to 7 p,m.: 540-8615. .
Kindred Spirits 8 p.m . to midnight. ~UNSET PUB 16655 Pacific C~st
592-1926. Ht&h~y. Sunset Beac.h. offers live
cntcnammenrsc"en ntghts at ~eek.
tlODdaJ _ Toni&ht Judah Starr 9 p.m. to I a.m.
592-19l6. END~ SUMMER ·JAM Free FACEs NITECLUB 18582 Beach
concert hOSlcd b}.-KllS-FM at the Blvd. in Huntinatoo Beach. Blues
Pacific Amphitheatre. noon to 10 Ni&ht. Show time is 10 p.m, 21 and
p.m. The Jets. Kool & The Gang. over. Admission at tht door 1s $4.
Jeffrey Osbo~e and Breathe. D.J. Call 964-22t 1 for1nformation.
Jazzy. Jenna1~ Stewan and more CANNERY RESTAURANT to-~t ~ will appear. For ticket night Wednesday and Thursday. the
.tnformu 1o nL ca I KllS FM Mark-Guerrero Duo. 3010 Lafaye-ttt Ql3)466-~38 1. .-· Ave. Newpon Beach. U5-577f. ..-~NSET-PUB 166~5 Paetfic-C~st -concen hot rtnc:.A~8927. -Hrpway, Sunset Beach, offers hve
ent~nment seven nights al week.
Toni&ht a Labor Day Party with The
Rcaular Guys S to 9 p.m~ 592-1926.
LOUIE LOUIE'S 16 70 Ncwpon
Blvd a1 17th Street, Costa Mesa. Free
~mission. Must be 21 and over.
64.S..S448.
TBE WlllTE BOUSE Restaurant
and Tavern. 340 South Coast HWI-
Wed1H1llay
JEl\ElllAB'S REStkURANT.
8901 Waer Ave.at Mapolia in
Huntinaton Beacn present five rnter-
tainment Mon<tay through Saturday,
8:30 p.m. to I a.m. in Jeremiah's
l..ouflF. llDllClt'S UP$TADtS LOUNGE
..
..
prcscntS Shenna Hope and Manin ex\. 778.
Mead 8 p.m. to 1:30a.m. Wtdnesda) 808 BURNS RESTAURANT
throu&h Saturday. 'Count(). C'aJun. fashion Island. Newport Beach. pres.-
Blues. Juz and showtunes. I 8t'20 ents Darvy Taylor and Ron Donath .
Von Karman A Ye. Irvine. 553-1305 at the keyboard and piano in the
TftE WRITE lrOUSE Resunrtant-loun~ tonight and Saturdays. For
and Tavern. 340 South Coast H1$h-reservations. call 644-2030.
way. Laguna Bearh. prcsenh II\ e DRIFTWOOD LOUNGE :! 1461 Pa-
entcnainment and dancing nightl>. cific Coast H ighway. Huntington
494-8088. Beach presents the Swingers Tno
SUNSET PUB 16655 Pacific Coast with songs from the 30s and 40s
Hi&hway. Sunset Beach, offc'rs live Friday and Saturday. 8 p.m. to
entertainment SC\1en nights a week. midnt&)\t. and Sunday 2 to 6 p.m.
Tont&ht. Brave New World 9 p.m. to 536-1 421 , ask for Dnftwood Loun~c.
1 a.m. S'JZ;t926. --VILLA NOVA SingcTfp1an1M
Ceasar Frazier performs ~ variety of Tluanclay j~ and rhythym and blues Thursda>
SOUTll COAST PLAZA SUMMER throuaft Saturday from 8:30 p.m. 10
CONCEAT at Town Ctnter Park I :30 a.m., Sunday through Wcdncs-
prcscnts Marilyn Walton wi1h blues day from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 a.m.
andothcrf'avoritcsbc&inninJat I 1:45 Richard Fauno'scasy listening piano
a.m. For more informauon. call stytina. 1131 West Coast H1ghwa),
Joycie Kina at 241-1700. Newpon Beach. 642-7880.
SUNSETPUll l66S5 Pacific Coast CAFEUDO.SOt 30th St . .._Ncwport
H..... S n . h 11:r 1· ~h. 675-296&, prcscntflhe Ton) a.,.way. unset ~ac . o11crs ive Guerro Sextet from 8:30 p.m. to I
cntcnainmcnt seven nights a week. ·Liil. $3 cover charsc.
Toni&ht throu&h Saturday. Plan~t 10 JAZZ CLUB ROOM at Ron's in
9:30 p.m. to t:lOa.m. 592"1926. l...q(Jna. 1464 South Coast Highway.
Lapna Beach. cocktails & hors
,eqzz d'ocuvres a nd recorded jau music
Monday through Friday. 5 to 8 p.m. •
497-4871.
Pitday ....... y --. ™TU RESORT 1104-c~ a.m9 .:>01 30th Street.
Jamboree Road. Newpi>rt Bc:ach. Newpon Beach. 675-_9~8. Luther
presents Friday evenin11azz concen s lfuabes Quintet 8:30 p.m. to I a.m. $3
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. each Friday cover charsc.
~ Sept. 2. in the hotel's new amgh.itheaue. The _conccns f~ture
the sona stylina of Stephanie Haynes
cl Friends and are free 10 guests and
k>cal residents. Picnic. baskets •
bevtt111C5 and blankcu arc a vailable. for more information, call 6:44-1700
...... ,
..-ORLEANS JAZZ CLUB of
Southern California monthly mttl-
ina 1:30 to 6 p.m. at the Huntington
Beach Inn. 21112 Pacifir Coast
Hiabway. Huotinaton Beach_ ~t
1111 ..... .,.
-~A[-lfDGMY MIN OUT,... ,,., .. , ..... , ..
..... 7MIUJ .,,
OOUY HDllOr-~
OGffJ MIN OUT ,,..
I 1IO I·»·-I:• ll ... DO&.•••'-A NIGMTMAll ON U
snaT• lMl D11AM MASTR..,
11 o , •s • o •·•J , .. , •-• DOHY Sft __ _
SnALING HOfllll ~I ..
1<00 J .IS St» r 0 10 ..
., .......
-cw.v IUiut;ii ... iAS1:ii-;;oocCi-ii;i.ari'ii1 iila .;;,;-,
. COCXTMlfr NllO-M .... 1 hJO J-JS s ........ . --••••all a aw A,_ UWD WAlllA 1111 .... ,, ...... , ... _
' ... ...... ... -..is ...... ..,
. .'b)I , ....... "" ....
.... .. .... -.. '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~--........ ~ .......... , ...... ~"··-'••u-... -.-&a --,...,....,. _10___ __.....
....... H S PM 1-............... "°' 10 "°'"'
IOIJlT -™ DE NIRO GRfDN
~Ma.LI ~ ..
U.-Hlltllll ,..,, . ~ ••w .. a•ccu.1111n1r..-. ......... .,,__
9MA VA._11
\-cfl>;.~"f ..,. '!I01' •
CGeTA llUASA EOWA"OS ~T'OI. .MO •a.i ..... (()WAN>!>
sa~c•ac" M•MaO
~ -.it;
'IA.U:ATON e .. 1.tCllllO
.._ ....
ftlllt4'1DS WES~
U01
LA IMMA ._..MIA MM; 4Mt.
FA5"1CN MAlf,j 11..,.CE
SOV""C '*'°1 ·~ l•) .,, Cll>JJ ... ,_ •
LA~ Pt.C"oC
11.tlGIFIC HMll, ' °' GAT(VfA~ ~ .. , )#Jt}_
lliJr:..:t1
sl&n arc Dec Woolems and Beyond
Repairjazrbands. Mecung 1:ropen to
the public, $4 admission fee. Mem-
bcn pay membership scale. sign in
musicians admitted frtt. For more
information, call Hall Rumenapp.
(213)393-8070.
CAFE LIDO 50 I 30th 1 .. Ncwpon
Beach. New York Jav Connection
8:30 p.m. to I a.m 675-2968.
llonday
CAFE UDO, 501 30th t..Nc" pon
Beach. Wayne Wayne. Bob Moore.
Gary Wing and Ernie NuneL. 8:30
p.m.=1 a.m. 675=2%!. 1:-•
Tueday
CAFE LIDO 501 30th St. e"'pon
Beach, Diana Durie and Wa,nc
Wayne GJ\ sax and tlutc "1th I nit'r-
secuon tomght 8:30 p.m to I a.m.
675-2968.
WeclDeeday
. LE MERJDlEN HOTEL 4500
Mac-Anhur Blvd. Nc"pon Beach. "u J aZZ' Oub" featuring "orld class
jazz an!)~ _$j)Othghtcd "ee~l> in the
four story Atrium of the Cafe Aeun.
For more informauon. C'31l 4 76-200 I.
extension '3 1 IJ.
CAFE LIDO.SOI 30th t.. cwpon
a•a• fJl Amerkmi ... -.....
...
;· ' ' ~ • I
--,-~·-.... ---... ~" ~~.· ' ' . . .
.. _
Beach, presents Jackie R)an. vocalist
with Larry Nash, Ro)' McCurd~.
Doug Webb and Bnan Brombcrg8:JO
p.m. to I a.m. 675-2968.
Tluand&y
CAFE LIDO 501 30th 1.. Newpon
Beach. presents a special guest tonight
8:30 p.m. 10 I a.m 6 75-~968 or
673-5056.
JAZZ PACIFIC a non-profit or-
pnazauon to prescf\e and ~ncourage
lave JllZ mttts ever) Thursda) at 7
p.m. and as open 10 1au mus1c1ans
andjau buffs.. For 'iorc information,
call Dr. Charles Ruthcrfor at
432-5819 or BiJI Scott at 642-7648.
Friday
COACH BOUSE 33157 Cammo
Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano.
presents The Swamp Zombies. rock-
abilly. folk. cajun and punk at 9 p_m
tonight. For ticket infonnataon. call
496-8927.
!!1!!119......_ .... ~" ~--·=-·:::..°"9' iilail"": .,..,. ..... ....., ..,..., ·-...... --.__._ ...... .....
•-:-........ ~~ .... AW WWWIWI• . _..._ ... '--~ ......... -a..-... ...., ... 'HM .., ...
•-._... ....... www1m1•
_....._ ..... 0.. ... ---~ ............ . -.au ...... ---....... .... • -
Newpon Frce"a) D~er Rd e"\11.
Santa Ana. presents the Charlie
Daniels Band tonight and Tuesda~
two shows nightl~. \all 549-1 51 :! for
ticket 1nfonnat1on and dinnl·r rcscr-
vataons.
THEATER
"CINDERELLA" b)' the .\mencan
Childrcn·s Theater at the Anaheuh
Cultural Ans Center. 931 N. Harbor
Blvd., AnahCJJll (.75 1 ·503:!), Satur-
..
Elizabeth Ho"ard's C urt.i1n ( all
Dinner 'theater. 6QO El C amtn(I Rl'aL
Tusttn (838-1 >40). do<,tntz. J>l.'r-
formanccs tonight through \unda~ at
varytng cunaan tames
TENNESSEE WILLIAM ONE-
ACfS an the Studio Thl'Jll'r ut'< >r.ingc
Coast College. ( <H lJ \ll'<.a
(432-5880) Fnda~ sand '\a1urda"a1
p.m .. unda~sat ~pm thrnugh '><:pl
11
EiC.
Brunch C ruises. Saturda\ and \un·
daY. IOa m 10 noon :ind ·1 \0 to :l .JO p.m J()t"{) Lafa~ettt' .\H 't"V>Pon
Beach For morc in1onna11on call
675-s~r'
CAFE MOZART fea1ure' clas'>1cal
piano 'Wed. e'ening. :ind piano or
guttar. pop. and c;ho"' tunl's
Thurs.Sat C\enings .\II mu~ll' 1<;
performed dunng d1nnl'r -\lw IC-a-
turcd IS mUSll di Sunda\ orunch
319~:! (amino (ap1~1rano 'an Juan
Capistrano 436-0~ I:!
days and Sundays at :? p.m .. C'xtended Friday.
throu&h Sept. 18. -
LAGUNA POETS ml'el calh F-n at
8 p m at the uguna &a,·h publit•
hbra"'. \(IJ Glennt'' rt' Laguna
Beach E' ef\onc: 1s \.\l·ll·ome (all
"I ()(),I DO" at the Southampton MAGIC lSLA~D rl·n·nll' "f\\'n IP 494--9550 or ~9+-t!J~s •
OVER EATERS A:'\01'\YMOl'G
"C'komC'\ nc"comel'\ 10 more than
90 met>11ngs hl·ld "'l'e~I\ Jl lt"-Jllon'>
throughl)Ul nran~w < •Wnl' There
arc nod1et'> ll>e~ordut·~ onh J de<,1rc
10 'ill>p c:aung ('l1mpur.,1,C'h For
more inh1rm.11tt1n ,all th.-(. enlral
ofli~l'. 11~52 C1.lrdl·n (11<1''' Bhd
Stl' 11 ' (1Jr,kn<•r"''' Jl ::>"'4-l.4.40 or ~~11.~111-
Dinner Theater. 140 ~'e. Paco. San the public for the ftr<;t 11nw pn" 1Jn
Oemente (498-7576). \h·dne~~s patrons 11>1th the be,1 in n•m,·d,
and Thursda}'S at 8· 15. Fnda~ s and mag.sc and ps~ch1c ta kn; l>inna JnJ
Saturdays at 8:45. unda's JI I 30 sho"s '-'C'dn~a~ through "Jrurda'
and 8: 15 through Sept. 11 from 6 pm Children Jrl· "dl"ni. I<>
"JUNG LEAR" at thl' (JrO'C' brunch and sho"s ~undJ' tn•m" 11
Shakespeare Fe~uval. 18252 Main a.m. Magic Island 1$ lcxatl'J Jl ''' ~
St .. Garden Gro\t~ (6Jf\.7~1Jl. Via Oponoin ~e"'ponlkJ,·h \Jh·
Thursdays througtf Sunda' s at 11· Jn dated or valet parking Dn·" " ... k
until Sept. I 7. rcscn attom requm•d h 1r r''"'' ·
wSOCIAL SECURITY'' at the vauons and 1nlormJ1111n '.!II Saturday
Grand Dinner Thc:iter. 7 Frt"dman 675-0900
Way, <\nahe1m (77~-77!0). nightl~ CANNERY RESTAl RA:'\T k"j· ORA:\GE COl :o-.n ~\\AP ~EET
except Monda~s at \3f)1ng cunaan turcs Champagne upi)l'r < ru1w' prC''K.'ntl·d "' T d-Ph1 l-n1apn~~
umesthroughScpt.25. cvcry Fnda). 7:. pm 10~ 'llpm each \aturJJ' and \unJ.i, tn thl'
"111E SOUND OF MUSIC" Sunda>. 5 te 7 pm .. C'hamp.ign,· p.1r ang lot u1 th, Orange
iiiiiiiiiiii~ ......
''BY FAR THE BEST
OF THE SERIES!
Balances wit and gore with
imagination and intelligence."
-'\t?, --~ -a.; ~JS .v .. ~ELES TIME S
"THE BEST AND
BADDEST FREDDY
OF THEM ALLI"
-3 .. '1a·~$ 51'10\'VTt~.iE A" THE MOVIES
.. A GOOD TIME AT
THE MOVIES."
-To,., Green USA TODAY
... ~ -AMkL tk ~ -· ..,..,_ t-lllUf,...,,. • I ... I _.~• ---•"I 111511TM11 OI BaSlJllT • Ill ..... lllSltt' C...,. ·--LU.• ... ti ........ Slfftl ,_ ; ,.._ ......... 9C1 m. .. • $. ITU._ • '-• llOloWI I QUI_. OlllO wml ' .... c_. .. Cl.IA SAM ..... ......, c.... 11t•ciilill9 •.., llt 9'1M __,.,. --•.....,. 11 lllAll llll5Wll m sari"'°•._...,_ !Mt 11119 • i.. -,.._."i-•n•MCll1M.1U1•....,.)i ..,llllllll ----~ ---~ r: ~---=,..._..., • ..~ww•FNC• 1R - ---NEW LINE aNEllA --·-...,.•-••--... • .. • -. ,.._ • ... • • -· ·--
.... A U.A •AEA MAAKETP\.AC E sn--.
9"9flAPA-U.A. tilOYIE9 •UllNA .. AAt(
•2-4993 coeTA .... A liOWA~ .....
NOW SHOWING
COSTA .... A
U .k SOUTH
COAST VILLAGE 540-0594 ,
•l.TORO IEOWAAOS SADOt.£9ACilf. .... ...,
PoutltTAI• VALL•Y FAMILY FOUR
~ ....
307
PU&.&.aRTOM
AMC FULLERTON 8 M2"4000
OARCHIN OftOY• EOWAADS WE.T9AOOK
53C)-4401
-~ IEOWAADS
UNIVliASfTY ....... ,,
LA-ADA PACIFIC G ATEWAY
Sif3·Ul l 1
O"ANO• U A CIT Y
CENTER
634.;191'
ORA-•
AMC • ~A..CIE MAU .
7
SANTA ANA
EDWARDS HUTTON CE NTRE
M2·22M
w•STMINST•" IEOWARDS
CINEMA WEST ,,_...., .......
ACCSPTSO POR TMtS
o.ity PUot Datebook/ Friday, September 2. 1988 7
1
County Fair Grounds 7 a.m. to and over. For more
4 p.m. Admission is fifl) cents for information. caJI 957-8686.
walk-ins. Orange County Fair· SCRABBLE is played Wednesdays
JrOUnds information phone number at 6:30 p.m. in the upper-level
1s 751-3247. COfnmunity room of Glendale Feder-
GOLDEN WESTCOLLEGESWAP aJ Savings, 24221 Calle de la Louisa.
MEET ~ a.m. to 3 · p;m. w11h free Laauna Hills. Call 586-2378 for
admission and free parking today and further information.
tomorrow. Space fee 1s $1 0 on CRJBBA"GE is played on the SCC·
Saturdays'and Sunday:; or two spaces ond and founh Wednesday of each
for $10 on Sunday. with p-roceeds mo nth at 7 p.m . at the Oasis Center.
from the swap meet going 10 campus Room VI, Slh St. and Marguerite in
clubs and Ol"g.'lnizatfons. scholarships Corona del Mar. Call 644-4138 for
building, Main Sticct al Yorktown
A venue, Hunti!:IJ.lori Beach. Call ,.
960-2729 for detials. .
. FARMERS MARKET sponsored
bythcOranceCounty Farm Bureau is
held every Thursday in the main
parlcing lot of the Orange County
Fairgrounds from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. Call 751-3247 for more infor-
mation.
and communll) service proJects. For additional information. •
additional anforma11on. call LEADS CLUB Costa Mesa chapter.
898-2389. The swap meet IS held in a group for women in business. meets
· lheparlcing lot located a11he~ntrance CVffY Wednesday morning al the Pr;idaT
of 1he college a1 the Golden West Countryside Inn in Costa Mesa at --TRA-"""CY-WE--U.S-B-IG BAND Laber-
Strcct traffic hght between Edinger the comer of Redhill and Bristol. Day weekend dance tonight 8 p.m. to
and McFadden Streets. Meetings are from 7: IS to 8:30 a.m. midnipt at the Ncwpon Beach
....__ ... _ For more information and rc~r-Marrion Hotel. 900 Newpon Center
• •-7 vat ions, call Jenette Perrault at Drive. Admission is SI 0 per person.
JOIN THE HARBOR SINGERS A 53&.66 I 2 or Jeanette Thompson at Reservations not required. For more
non-profit group of women singers 892-5930. infonnation,call (213)598-1429.
who perform everything from Bach 10 LE MERIDIEN HOTEL 4500
rock are looking for new members. ThandaJ MacArthµr Blvd, Newport Beach.
The group meets AD CLUB OF OR.ANGE1COUNTY .. An Evening of Motown .. each
every Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. at holds a weckJy socu1l even1 beginning Friday with the S1onebridge Band
the Presbyterian Church of the Cove-at 5:30 p.m. at Maxic·s. The Red Lion from 7 to 11 p.m. 476-2001, extension
nant at Fairvie~ and Adams street in Inn. 3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. 3113.
Costa Mesa. Performances are also Free hors d'oeuvres. fu.n and __,'lBE AM&&IGAN IN'f&R--
-avaiiat"c. For more information. catt -netWOrtinr'7l'l-3S2S. ---NAftONAL DANCE CO. presents a
Dee Cox at 962-1680 or V1 Green at E·Z SPEAK TOASTMASTERS swing class 11 8 p.m. ~h Friday
BALLET PACIFICA Annual llo9daJ
Alfresco concert features CindcreUa
under the stars at the lrvine Bowl, DUSl:'S ENTERTAINMENT
Festival of Arts Grounds, 650 ~una LOUNGE at
0
the Newponcr Resort ~
Catlyon Road, Laguna Beach. Tacket presents a s~ial
prices range from $6 to $20. Prior to Monday Night Showcase with com-
the ballet. an alfresco dinner will be edians from tbro9ghout the Southern
servied at Iivoli Terrace. A separate California area performing. begin·
price of $18.SOincludes the dinner ni!'f at 8:30 p.m. Dulce's Monday
and a preceding reccpuon. For rescr-Niaht Showcase has no cover charge.
vations, call T ivoli Terrace at The Newponer Rcsort is located at
494-9650. For more information and 1107 Jamboree Rd.just east of Pacific
to charge ticket orders for the ballet, Coast Hiabway in Newport Beach.
call Ballet Pacifica at 494-7271. 644-1700. ext. 575.
LE MERIDIEN HOTEL 4500 THE IMPROV features three of
MacArthuT Blvd., Newport BCach: LA's belt \nown comedians c('ery
''Dancing in Newport .. Stonebridge ·Monday niP,L Docus opco at 6.:JO
-Band wit.If a variety ofbigti:lnd":lnd p.m. For information and d inner
BroAdway from 7 to 11 p.m. each reservations, call 854-S4SS.
Saturday. For information. call
476-2001, extension 3113. TtaeedaJ
SmadaJ. THE IMPROV prC11Cnts three side·
TEA DANCING Red Uon Inn. splittiaia acts each night Tuesday
3050 Bristol S1rcc1. CosUl Mesa thfOUlh. Sunday.· Showtimcs and
prnenu Barbey Olson and his 20 admission prjces are 8 p.m. Monday
piece orc_hestra cvef)' Sunday after· ($3); Sunday. Tuesday throu1h
noon throuah Oct. 2 from 2 Thursday. ($6): 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.
to 6 p.m. Admission as SS per person. Friday and Saturday.
Free valet parking. Tickets J.l1af be ($8). doors open at 6 p.m. Dinner ts
purchake1 lfl all\lan~eantle ho1cl gin served nightly.
sbop.Formoreinforma1io n.callElda Wed .....
Barry at 642-7348. . . -~•q:aJ_ 897-0587 evenangsaod ~eckends. meet.~ Thursday al 7:30 p.m. at followed by a 'dance social ·rrom
"ed ... Seachff 1lla&c, . 9-10:30 p.m.; al itterbu& class each llolldaJ SouLAPFth Bri~ol. N~y .. ~~B. 021~ llllH J 21 ~Main Street, Hun~angton ~ch. Monday at 8 p.m.: and a ballroom .. ~-.,... .. ~11 ··o
THE ORANGE COUN'rY SKI Bet.i.nners welcome. For more 1nfor-and Latin class cacb..Wcdnctday at-8 IUa'l1N a TONl',S-Swing Dance ·Ray a,.,ears hrougJ! Sept I. a.ua meets the first and third mauon, call 842-2016 or 842-8149. · p.m. S20 for seven lcsson9. 6SQ..3048. O ub meets at tcveral Orange County ln-t762.
Weanesday of every-month at the . SCllABBLE Is played every Thurs------=-locations. Dances, dance contests,
Costa Mesa Country Club. AfC$ 21 day at 6:30 p.m. at the Home Sa vines &atanlaJ danc:e trips, play outinp, ~ach ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:..iiiii~iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~ii perucsarcsomeof I tbc activities. Dance lessons are offmid be&innioa to advanced, AP'Ae&..,. ·
ballroom to 1-ina. For times and -..... ~---
. . ,?\ MAGNIFJUNT STORY
. -OF CHALtENGE .AND OF HOPE ... EXTRAORDINARY."
~'lWO THUMBS UP."
-~l&IMlll
"IT IS WITHOUT QUESTION ONE OF 1l:lf.MOST
SERIOUS, LITERATE, COM~ AND DEEPLY FELT
RELIGIOUS FILMS EVER MADE, brilliantly directed
by Martin Seo~:·
-o...11 ~LO!; ANGlllS HllWD CXAM4Nfll **** "HIGHEST RATING. AN EXTRAORDINARY ACCOMPLISHMENT.
'The Crucifixion is the strongest such scene of all
time, and may be the movie scene of the ear:'
~~tM
"ASTOUNDINC...A FILM Of PRODIGIOUS
POWER AND FEELING, with a towering
performance. by 'Platoon'~ Willem Datoe:'' .
-""'-Tr~ l'lOf'll Ml'ICl.ZN.
"A MAGN!FICENT MO~E. A richty beautiful, great
work of movie· art. The performances are
superlative:' -
-Moel-'~. lO!> ANCllllt ~y MWS .-
'•
EXllSVE ORAJC.ECXXJNTV~ENT
*Al At-l:.f J\ ~~ Ar'C:;-1 · Ml --·tUl·tal-7;9-teil -I· Ml·l··~•·UI /"\JV"-IVII'UJ.._r~ TIB ·Ml9·Z:"·Ul·t:41 -·--·11'·4:41-l:tl ~ ..... ,... .a.u.a. ~ · ••NCIBPa•-'" r ---·IM--·atl ;:Jr"\l,lnl'VW"\ "?IC'VAl\I .. ...._ --a i
8 o.11r PlaC D lllllctdlJ Fftdmf, lllptlmHr 2. .. -. . ......
locations. caJI 840-3518. LAGUNA~ Atm.JMN CON'.
CDT in tbc Irvine Bowl Saturday, 5eot. 10. 7:30 p.m. Sbadowfax plus Joimn_y Mori and friends. Tickm • Sil.SO and Sl8.SO, ava1la~ by
pboM, IS1-16S3 or at Sound Spec-
trum in l..quna Belich or Ticket·
Muacr, 740-lOOO.OnSaturday.Scpt.
17, tbe reunion of Honk., who
provided tbc soundtraclc for a whole ~lio. of Soul.hem California iwfen in "Five Summer Stones"
plus Tbe Scdusions with emett
Corty Carroll. Tickets art S 14 and
Sl6. &oth concerts benefit Save Our
Sboces -l.quna Canyon Con-tervancy.
~8daJ
-COSTA MESA QUICUTEPPERS
a senior citizen square daft« group .a expcrieheed square dance cou-
ples to join them. The Quic:bkppen ~ reaularly every 1tuarsday, 10
Lm. to noon at the downtown
community center,
Anabcim and Center Sts. in Costa
Mesa. For more information. calJ
S4S-S669.
IUCK OVERTON appears at lhc
fmprov throulh Sunday.
ftDC DIPIU>V presaits three Side· =lllll acts each ni&ln Tuesday
Sunday at 42SS Campus
Drive, Sui1e 138, lrvinc. Sbowtimes
and admiaion prices arc & p.m.
Monday ($3t, Su~.J. Tuesday ~l'tiiii1day, <l6t 1:30 and IO:lO p.m. Friday lad S.tulday, (SI),
doon opea .. 6 ILlft.. Dianer is,lrrwd
... dy. Pllio~isDOWavWlablc for 1111 .... Fridlf ud SMMnlllJ.
..._ ..........
UNITED WAY SANDCA.Sn.E
CONTaT in Seal leKh Sepe. 16 to
l I. Tbis event will include an award
for the bn1 Oraqe County rcprncn-1ation in honor oT the county (eftten·
nial celebration. For more infor· malioft. S~S883.
CBNTBNNIAL GOU' a.ASSIC
Fony IOlf counes lbf'OUlhout Oransc
County will bold qualifyi .. rounds
fbr, die Tounwnent of Champions thrOuP Oct. 2S. Tbe 1enaa1 pYblic is
iaYilld IO ..,ucipaie. For more idlrmation. call Troy Liadquia 49).6921.
' \
Molly Rin__gwald' s 'Fresh Horses' won't end happily
_NEW YORK (AP) -A Moll~
RinJWald movie without a happ1
cnd1na? Who would go for such an
idea? Molly Ri,.paJd for one.
dies," ''The Breakfast Club" and and1u&h school detenuon room~ that Larkin break) up v. 1th ht) tiJnll.'l' to
-Prctty in Pink".. she v.ould 10-provufed the dramauc bad.drops for be with Jcv.el.
variabl)'. overcome seefll1ngl~ hope-Riniwald's earlier mo,ie~ "He's afraid of hec Shi.'·, dan~l·r-
into bed "1th her ..
Rang" aid !Ml1J Jcv.el 1s !)ltrJCt~ to
Larkin's breeding and education
She calls "Fresh Horses:· wh1~h
opens this fall, a .. vcrv dark story
about two very d ifTeren·t people. I t"s
like a love story \bat was doomed
from the bqinning.
lns SOCtaJ and personaJ odds to end ~angwald pla}s Jcv..el. a poor and ous. He d~sn't c.-'lactl\ l..nov. v.hat
up with the boy of her dreams. troubled g.irl from rural Kentuc:I..~ she's about." Ringv.ald '..aid l.'\plJ tn·
"She~ him as the hght at 1hc end
of the tunnel If she can JU'>I get her
foot into the door. \he'll Ix· 0 1\. \hi.'
gets out of th1~ hornble II fc ~hl" ~Ix-en
leading To hl'r ht"s e' c~ thing that
shl' v.ants to bl: ··
But the young actress ai. an\lou) to who accadcntl)' meets Matt Larkin ing her character's app.:JI
move on. (Andrew McCarth\'). a 22-,ear-old "She's ob' 1ou~h h'ed a 1111. The
"In the Hughes films. C' Cr} th mg college senior. The· tv.o arc lmmedi-first thing that cam·e o ut of her mou1h
sort of scratched the surface and an} atel~ anractcd to each other and is that her stepfather 1ned to chmti
"There's..a lot mort la)crs and the
character goes into a lot more depth
than the other characters I've done.··
Th~ other roles made the 20-
year-91d RinawaJ<i one of the' mo)r
popular YO\.ln& actresscs of the I 980S.
-fn the trio of films she made wub
time you had a problem n \\a~ JUSt ~-------------------------------------worked out." she said. "lt'c; nice for
director Jpbn Hughes. ~Sixteen Can-
those movies but the} v.erc lake fair}
talcs. always happ~ endings ...
"fresh Horses~ was directed by
David Anspaugh r·Hoos1ers"). Orig-
inally an off-Broadway play. 11 is far
removed from the world of pronu
._rfHE Pl~REST BASEBAI~t
\l()\.lf <lF THEM ~.\LL!!!
' ' • ' • I \ ' \ I t ,_ I ~ f ~ • : ' ' • I • . ' '.' l '
.. ' \ . ' . ·. ! : ' .. : '. ' ' ; t ~
IBE ~ SIORY __
OF ·IDW 1HE NATIONAL PASTIME
BECAME A NATIONAL SCANDAL.
a-CA..... 9' ..... .......... ...._..... ----~ .... ..., .....,
wwwowo•__. ..-.-.. wwwswww•• ..... 0-.Clllm ...... o-._ U. lima ..,...,,. .... ..... -_..... ........ .....,-..,,....,,,....,_=-~ .... ..... ...... ...... ..... ·'"'--
lea thompson
from the author of 'the mila~ro bean field war' . ..
luRashaas
john nichols' .
the wizard of
In 1944, the
heart break of
World War II
was no match
for the
shenanigans of
Wendall Oler ...
A SKOURAS PICTURES RELEASE
VfRGl"VISION and AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE 'THEATRICAL FILMS PresentatlOl"I
A PHILIP PORCELLA PRODUCTION A JENNY BOY/EN FILM "THE WlZARO OF LONELINESS"
. Based Of'I the novel by JOHN NICHOLS
Starring LUKAS HAAS and LEA THOMPSON
JOHN RANOOLPH. ANNE Pl10NIAK. DYLAN BAKER and LANCE GUEST as JOHN T
MuSIC by MICHEL COLOMBIER Produetion Designer JEFFREY BEEC ROFT Edl1ed by LISA DAY
Otrector of Photography RICHARD BOWEN Screenplay by NANCY LARSON
~ional Wftften ~teriai tunltSMd by JENNY BOWEN Execuhve Producer LINDSAY LAW
Produced by PHILIP PORCELLA and THOM TYSON Otrected. by JENNY ~N
::\~l 't.IM..~ ""Pl~,.,11 .. oe.i ,,...,..'"Y" ,.., u-·-·-· -. ..... ... .. .... -.......... --~-cir.--._.,
NOW PLAYING AT EDWARDS
TOWN CENTER CINEMAS
751-4t84 COITA MESAAAYI DAILY AT 1:15 3:30 5:458.-0010:t5 _.._,, ............ ..... ..... '*-..... ~a... l.!14W'~~·-~-~~~•t
~~-~~·~~~~-~--·~ ~------------------~~~--------~-------~ o.My PMot Detebook/ Friday. September 2. 1988 •
,
I
•
AGitic -. ~·
UnbelieVably 'Betraye~'
aw 1:ect
Driver /Muldu
We.lllUalaer
DeameBome
UG'I ~ Stwleat H•U.SC-~
••Betrayed" is a vivid, ch1lhng.
ckpiction of,.the pttjud1ced auiludcs
and lifestyles in this Land of the Frtt.
It opens with a biting radio broad------....,..asr b an obnox-
ious talk ~how host
we're au too fam-
iliar with, and con-
tinues capsulizina .
1988 right down to
the presidential
campaigns on the
TV in the back·
ground. It's all un-
comfortingly real.
which m a kes
watchina it especially movi ng and
s-inful. Beina set in the Midwest. it de-
..auoys-my -dlamy vision of ll\e..
wholesome country life. Gary (Tom
krenacr). a handsome young widower and ptlc father who can't
even shoot the family horse. mttts
Katie(Deborah Wingu)an attractive
but hard-to-set seasonal combine
driver. Just as they rau in love we find
out that be is a member of a rasciSI
orpniution and she is an under·
cover FBI .,ent trying to break the
ri'Jbcir love is blind until he insists
on takina her huntina with the good
ol' boys who are after .. black meat."
Sbe is IOl1l between her duty. her
COCllciencie, and her bean as she
d i1COvers the horrifying truth about
prej\adices and the evil capabilities of
the aown. the Bureau. herself and all
humankind. While little Rachel steals the show
with her antics and
blunt explanations 1' :."~"had:C.u~ il\j realizina how weU
children are tauaht
their parents'
ways. Any hope for
the future seems•
loll.
The curtain
doles on a tiny
mittened hand deftantly waving
~ to the wailina country tune
Mamma said the Pistol is the Devil's llilbt Hand." .. Betrayed" wiJI haun1 me for a Iona time to come. J)cfinitcly
a film everyone should sec.
The political
'Blue· :Velvet'
By SOREN ANDERSEN
~ ..........
Amber waves o f grain.
Grandma's Pot roast. Family
camp-outs in tbe woods.
.. Betrayed" is full of those
IOfU of heartland icons. But
· insiad of symbolizing bean·
land values rike openness and
trust and neighborliness.
they're all pan of a tapestry of
deception.
In this movie, out where tht
pain is bcodina in the breeze
and the folks ~ drivina their.
eickupa to the Fourth of July
fi~ displa~, a bum(J'.tr
crop or hal.tta 15 nounslilna
alonpide the whcaL Down on
the &rm, Grandma's Pol roast
is the ambrosia• of assassins.
And deep in the woods., families are tak.i~ taflCL practice.. with •
submachine suns. .
During those weekend out-
inp. they're learning to despise
tbrir fellow man. and to kill
him.
.. Betrayed" is the "Blue Vel·
vet" of political thrillers. "Blue
Velvet" clip below the surface
ofsmall-towa life alld discovers
~and unspeakable lusts
~OD Main Street. .. Be-
trayed. set amid the wheat·
~ of Ncbrub, lifts up the
bedrock of America and finds
fear. ncism and murderous
falt IQuirmin& underneath. But where .. Blue Vdvct"
views its d.isooveries ~ . the twisty prism of O.vid
LYDCh 's wry and pervcne wit.
.. 9ctrayed" is filtered throu&h
the cool analytic talent -0f
Fracb director Costa-Oavru.
.. Betrayed" is a PoliticaJ
tbriller about an FBl IFDl
infiltraled into a racisa pua-
military orpnization dearly
~uemed aft.er The Order, and
at's told as wautly as ··z, .. Cos1a·
Gavra' maslerpiece of the
du'iller ~-h's an i1Rlictmen1
of an evil belief System -wbitc
1Upmnacism -and ifs uo-.,.n., in ibowina bow that
system warpa those who
tlPCMl9 it. Aad 8nally, it's a
piC1ure of great humanity that
refuses to utterly demonizc the ~suit ponrays~
Their acu are monstrous and
come acrou as such. ~ut the
pct"RCtrators of those acts arc
not presented as inhuman
beasts. The. aenius of "Be-
ua)'ed" is in the way Costa-
Gavru and ICTQCnwriter Joe
Eszterbas ("flashdance ... = ~") make these
seem so ordinary. They
all be the folks down the
bk>ck.
The rw:ists in '\Betrayed"
love .,their kids -and 500lhc ~ JQ.. Jleco..witlL bedtime stories about ridding the coun-
try of blacks and Jews and
othen deemed to be un-
desirables. They love their
country and have scrYed
proudly in iu anMd forecs -
yet they believe to their soul
that tt\C place is being run and
ruined by somethina called the
.. Zionist Occupation Govcm-
menC-Coaa-Gavru and Eszterhas
are careful not &o make blanket
condemnations. Their Middle
America is not inherently racist.
ln11ad, they're saying that
when decent eec>P!e become
fearful -of IOSlng their h<.'mes
or liveliboods. or of what the> ~ as the erosion of tbc values
they pew up with -they can
too easily fall prey to those who o&r the limpk eJtplanations.
You ctttainly can't miss the
point of ''Betraftld., tt but the
pictutt is an)'1hifti&ut preac~~.
It's ID' -a flleSUIC bot 11 s
imbeddecl in a crackling good
~ycd" ofren no· easy
answcn and ends aJnbipaously.
hs final ICCDe carries a dual meu'tien The iceds of hatred
have scattered far and wide. and it will be the next
~tion -toda~·s kids -who will dctennine whether or
DOt the teeds Oourilh. 11 's an endiam thaa often hope even as
it dliDs J9U to the bone. an
al......, brilliant coda to a ltUDaial picture.
Only Winger ls aotco_alaset;J la ·~tra;yed' Our ratings
• :Ii. .... ~
. .
• t
..
• •Mr .. _ ...
-~
IUJI JI
precedes music and dance fes tival
BJ LUI.EN M. REED way over to the Performing Arts ...,_Cu: o , 1 Center for the 2112 hour show. w ............. _ fc According to Moon. the intent of • ener -was an pnme orm this, the first of a bo.-A-for conllnu-Saturday .niabL He_was ...a most ~--~s host, mccti~ and grttting in& tradition of annual fesuvals. was
With all the waniuh o ne hopes Orange to showcase a variety of ethnic-
Cowatians are known forlhroughout performers as well as ··foster fnend-
the world. shjp, brotherhood and internauonal
Escher, as chairman of the Orange undcnt.anding through the unl\ersal
County Offitt of Protocol. was onlv lanauase of music and dance."
one of n\any hosts Saturday night a·t A num~r of guests brought their
the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel _ ethnic h~tage to the. l'O rcfront.
the site of 1 pre-performance reccp. dorining costumes from their coun-
tion for the lntematJonal Mu!lic and lriC$ of origin. In some cases th~ O.nce Festival. Oranac County guests appearing
ihe event was held in celebration more foreign that the consuls. a.p
of\be Ora"nac Count)'. Centennial and G_alt looked eyery bi.1 the Scotsman in
co-spontOf'ed by the Directors his dress kilt.. with Olri1 Pr.es-
EmeritMS of the Orangr ounty--dP!mmed.rcssinga.uypu:aUylialian
Perfonruna Ans Center and the as his ~me sounds. .
Protocol Foundation of Orange Fest.wal produccr~and president of
County. · the Dirccton Ementus) R•~ Oja"
Joinina·Escher at the microphone was ~ot to ~ Sttn at the pre-
to wek:oinc~vn_ from 42 recq>tJon. .Instead of partying. she
countries were Protocol foundauon WUl'f'ePllJtng for the exrravaganza to
Prnidcnt lla,, LH Beratlty, follow. . . · Protocol Offace President Mary Pl1nn1n• for the event began 15 .i-. president of the Directors lflOn~s J>t:lOr to the c"."ent, and she
Emcrian Tea. .... ~upcrvisors -was ~rwnly not going to allow.
,._...,and Banteti Wle4er and anyth1na to happen in the final hou r. _.._chair .A..ellarie.... Some $60.000 was donated to
·-......-. · un<'enmtc the festival. tncluding
"Wctho~ti\wouldbewonderful m~or aifts from Jolta alMf 0-..
-since members of the dip lomatic Creu 8M Je...rte 8M HantW
corps were invi1ed to the performance Seaentrna. Rockwell International
-that we have a link reception for also pre$entcd Mary J--. with a
t.bcm ... bavc some food. allow them check for SS.00010 aid the event. The
to meet some of the Oranac County Pan Pacific ~rformin4Anssponsor
communi!}' , .. and make it aQ ex, cd the Kore.a n Oass1c Music and
perience t;Ued first with fd lowhsip Dance Company.
and then with culture,·· said Ballin. Also participating in organz1ng and
stiU speakjna -llh an aiccent from her plannina lbc sLICttSSful event we~
naafveGemiany. ...,._.. aa.Jrn, Stewart Cue,
Followiaa the rtctpt.ion. featuring eana,. Cliarley, Lawrace and
buffets of hot" pasta. chilled fruits and EleiM DJsart. Geerae M•. BeBJtt ~ and decorative putri~ llW, ~J <*'ta. ~ Blad,
tbe 200 or so attendees made their Felida a....,, Ma1J C..ta, Camille
8-D Klea9tra check.a Otat Italian attire of
Clute and Roee PreadCla~o-
A• .. •rte Ballln treefll People'• Repabllc
olCJa•oa .. -....sor Ila Ya&hen and wife Ji
Cla-Zoo.
Del9r ,_ -----... Kilted Bath and Lynn Galt with ...,Y and
Weeley Jonee.
Werner ICec.ber (l"iCht) claat8 wltll" llaniett
Wieder aacl llorrocan Coual Geaeral
AJMlelbalr S.O.cL
Dennis Conner draws-crowd at Sduth Coast Plaza
Stars and Stripes
captain promotes
seafarer clothes
stood a rephca of the Amcnca·s Cup
provided by Ted T~rner. skipper of
Courase.ous and winner of the 1977
I ' ci\ec1oor toa room at the rear of the
statt opened and out came-a smiling _., .....,..._. ... )le hatt met
Conner and had an autOlfllphcd
BJ VIDA DEAN poster •
... ...,....... The door opened apin and out
. -_ <*M the man the poup bad been Thelbopwajalnmed with people. awaitiftl. ~lllr. aPPfau~ and ffie .. ~e·~ ~-tum up the air con-au~napenybepn. di........_ said o.ftl a.. owner of MOil of lbe pnu ~vcd an 8-
Naubal m South _Coat ~ by-10 pbolo of lbe Scan and Stripes nitre"'!' DO bis 1aJe tn ~ ··-. skitper. He autop"apbed. ptctUtd • aw IDl*je.leol were ?tleetfna our said hello ad lbe lint moved quieily die sponswar on the ncbaad a few ~ · · -=~~~rity Prtm a. ~f.Huntington w~'f.,....c-.-eosbow =.:=.s~~~=.!3.'S:
... ~ ailor wllo brouiltt the ~t alo.i two T-shirts~ Alnmica .. Cap b9ct bome lat -· ._.. r-~ ...Wo-.t b · · ...... !r. ..... fi'omSa~ "'.-~no.~ ~v y sipina. ... . --..... on 1he lboulder. '° Tiie =-'1'lley Cooner was "'-"ni a navy bluer ~ -... dri . bi.lie ud llKts tbal luld becil dcsiped by .. Al of'~u-;! m 0.. .._.., ol Nautica. which ::W laaw a ~a .S: Of19111*SCPaoreanda New Vert ...:...~ -llOftllMyear. -~ llflMSnDCC. Na..-. the official I ·!~Iller ;, ·11e·1 beet = "' .. lbe America':~p ........ liill Glllla-• r Tbe 1. n.e ll-)'C'a(-dd Olu bas
lillillllaaw.,clostolMllM*ol o ·a ed all ollbe docha-lbe crew ......... ...._ Ws-.od by. wil...., on land. .. lf tbey are not in -. ......... ...,abieet
........ ___ ............
.Jeff Ka 1pl (left) ... Seaa ....CMI la
..c.p'' .... ...in. wltla Daftd Clla. Dw•le C.... ••tacrapM Ulrt for Prta ......
me 'Waler, ~ will be weanna the
Nautica label. aid Chu.
.. ... We madC: Kirts and shins for
wives of lbe crew and will provide
cvcntappuoel forlbeSan Die&<> Yaeht Club boen1. America·s C up commit-
tee. mfr and volun1Cen.
.. , ~ ttue American sports-
wear. I like fvoctionaJ drswts with
simple si1bouetJa. .. added Chu. who
~ up in Taiwan and came to the
U.S. as a studertL Last )Ur Chu
optncd the SCP store and one lo New
Y ort. His &.beJ sells WOftdwidc.
How docs [)plnis Cooner fed
about fashions? -1 don•t know as
much about fashioa as I would hk.e ••
Ille said. .. lul I feel DtOf'C comfonabic
in casual pr.
... daotllb.I 1 .Jbould be a httlc
bmal 10Ciay," added Conner. who wore a dral slrirt and ~ with bis
navy blam-.
1
o.tly Pilot O.tet>ook/ Friday, Septerftbw 2, 1981 11
..
~""""T-------·
.. . 'Hot to.TrOt' Out of running·
Enaless Summer concert
aimed at II?an.Y social ills •1 JORN ROOS
........ Cell 0 f I
By JOE BALTAKE
lllClllWIJ .............
First. Pee-wee Hennan.
And now. Bobcat Goldthwait. ~ Oops! I'm sorry. He's no longer
.. Bobcat... but simply "Bob... The
name change, I suppose. 'oes along with the crucial change he s made in
his schticlt.
A few years ago. when Goldthwait
first hit the club scene and staned
makina movies ("One Crazy Sum-
mer" aod "Police Academy 2: Their
First Assignment"). he was a lot hke
Pee-wee Herman -glonousl} weird.
.His language was a series of in-
decipherable noises.. shrieks and
animal sounds. from which a ~
cognizable word or two would emer2c
every now and then.
ing he's still trying to seem crazy but.
you ·know. in a more normal. kss
threatening way. His verbalizinf is
now a matter of a scratchy whine.
And the results. needless to say. arc
thuddingly unfunny.
The new, unimproved Bob Gold-
thwait is on hand in "Hot To Trot." a
talking-horse comedy that harks back io "Mr. Ed" and, before that ... Fran-
cis. the Talking Mule.-lt's still a
funny idea. and Don the Horse is a
real cutup, councsy of John Candy,
who supplied his yoicc. But Gold-
th'Wait! He's something else -and it
isn't good.
But. apin like Ptt-wtt (an "Bag
..._ ___ __,.Qj) Pce-w " he's_ada_.Qted_!l_!S
rouune for the maanst~am -mean-
He's playing str.11ght-man-1n-a-suit
here (believe it or not). cast as the
black sheep of a stock brokcf:lgc
family who's trying to do the nght
1hing by entering the family businc ~
but whose effon.s arc always messed
u b)'. Don, the horse he unwmtn optea. -----
..
ii DI
• • Diiiy Plot Oateboolc/ Fnay, September 2, , ...
'1
·-
Goldthwait makes a killing in lhc
siock market. thanks to Don'sad~.
and the two of them move into a
swank penthouse apanment that
fairly smells like money (and whose
elevator, in fact, continually plays a
Muzak version of "We're in the
Money"). Don, of course. ·confuses
the maid and anyone else who drops
in ("Hone! What horse?" Goldthwait
tends~o ask his visitors) and. in the
movie's best scene, the horse throws a
aig and invites a lot of "pany
animals" -literally pany animals
(toats, ducks, pigs, dogs). · .
Viri,inia MadSfn, as an office
colleague of Goldthwait. makes a
plcasina comedian, but the rt."St of the
ca.st -C:indJ Picken. Jim Metzler.
Tim Kazunnsk)'. G11ben Gottfried.
Buck Henry (in a cameo) and panicu-
larly DabncyColeman-behav~liki
~s from ''.Alli.ck Qf iu>uL
Pe.oplt.""
Twlcve co~med musicians and bands will donate their time,
talent, and energy this Labor Day as participants in the Endless
Summer benefit conccn for Actors&. Entenainers For Kids.
Themepconcco-fcaturingavarietyofpop.funlc., rap.and R&.B •
styles of music -takes place at the Pacific, Amphatheatre from
approximately noon to 10 p.m. Monday. Among the acts scheduled to
appear are the Jets, Jermaine Stewan. Jeffrey Osborne, Kool & the
Gani. Eddie Money, DJ Jany Jeff. lnformation Society, Jane Wiedlin.
and Brenda K. Starr.
A national non-profit organization founded two yean agooy Elise
Kim, Actors and Entenainers For Kids reaches out to help children
afflicted with chronic illnesses, substance abuse. welfare dependency,
AlDS. and other social, physical. and emotional problems.
··we plan and arranJe forgroup'recrcational activities as well as for
athletes and stars to v1s1t kids who arc hospitalized." stated Dori
Paluso. the special events director for the Los Angeles.based agency.
hWe att al50 active an Al OS awareness -and prevention programs
within the local communities and high schools.··
Tickets for Monday's benefit conccn -which cannot be
purchased -arc being made available throU&h KJSS-FM radio's·
request line. Callers can win a pair of tickets eacfi minute by phon1n1
21 20-1021~ ---
TOlltllllll«
COCKTAIL OU
UJUJUM1•t1t
* ....... u
TUCKER (PG)
,,. J•tll'Jt 7·41 tt.lt
•llNTllAlll DI II.II ITllUT 4 (II)
Pl• utnl• .. 1111
* llOltll T ll 11110
MIOlllGHUUI (RI
u 1u•1•1:Mtta
A FISM CALLED WAHAIRI
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"* •• • IT WIU MAKE YOU OOllE Ol'J OF THE THEATRE CHEERING." ---·--
--.-... -
AFllHCALUD WA•DA(ll)
11\n C9CllfAll 1111
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all~c\~I,
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A lllUllc recepdoa f• utlat 00 ar.ftl will be ..... from
a-9 p.a. labuday at tlM LA
Collectloa. 1148 Soatll
Coaat Bl<way, L.,_.a 81aclt. Atioft la Illa ......
ftDlteel.mal City ... Tiie alaow
OODtla-tllroqla Sept. 25 •.
Gallery ··
openings
Lewis gives
telethon
peptalK-
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Jel'T}
Lewis. who's spen1 a lifeumt maluns
people lauah. was deadJy senous as he
faced 2SO local 1ckvision per·
sonafoics from c1tin across Amcn~a
-key pla)'et'S in this year' Labor
Day Telethon.
"Whal probably pul me 1n""lha1
hospital five ~cars qo was saying
goodbye to those little aianis;· said
Lewis, referrina to his 1982 double--
bypass hcan suqcry and the children
who've been lost 10 mU9eular dys-
1rophy in the 22 yean he has been
ra ising money 1hrou&h 1he t~ctbons
10 fl&ht the cnOl>lina disease. •
The local TV hosts. rangina fTom
rookies to 20-year ve1crans. were
141hemd at Caesars Pala~. where
final prcparauons ~re underway for
ttte telethon ttus weff.cnd, TMy spent
two days mapping matqy for what
has bcoome "the" tele1hon. Lewis'
annual dfon for the Muscular Dy\-
1rophy Association.
Lewis.. the consomate showman.
understands the impact of 1he local
TV hosts 1n htS labor Day entertain·
ment utrav ... nu. They orchestrate
th r I S·minute local cuta-.a's each
hour on some 200 slahons. dubbtd b
Lewis his "love Net\loOfk ."
Last year's telethon rai~ a rttord
$39.021,12.l The annual TV events.
which bepn in 1966 and feature
arrays of stars who par11cipat\! :lt
Lewis· behest. have r:11scd
$44).182,370.
This year's show is scheduled to
run from 6 p.m. Sunda) unttl 3:30
p,m. Monday.
.. Your work .has produced some
tremendous inroads this ).car:· Lc:wl~
told the local TV hosts.
"This is my o ne shot al thanking
you:· he said ... We arc No. I ~ausc
of your dcdicauon. Tbis year our
rcscarch-and-i-ucnt~rc budget was
over SI 00 million, thanks to )OU ...
He praited the hosts wbo have bctn
With the lekthon for as long as 20
years. and ht promised the firsl·
timers. "Tis W'lll be the first da) ofthc
~t of your life."
U'W\s l'Jidcd the local TV hosts
throu&h an emotional 1hrtt·hoor
prc$Cnl&tion of some Po•~11ant taped
prctcnl&tions for this yttr s how and
tntroductd stveral vicums and t~1r
families.
Paul Miller, director of the how,
said his hope wu thal "someda~" 1'11
be able'° say I dircclcd lht last Jerry
Lewis Telethon.··
SineerTooyOrlando.o ncofthcco-
host1.. wpd &be local hosts to make
I 918 "one more year bcner than the
last year, so·wt can get closer to that
final year."
One or the af\emootl's more dra·
matic moments came when the local
# h0$ts lft'Yiewed a sqmcnt on s1nger-
comedian Dennis 0a). who died th~s
summer of amyotrophK' lateral
aclcrosd, more oommonl) known as Lou Gdlna's Diacue. ALS as OM of
40 ncuromutc\llar dise~ fought by MDA. '
~ video qment includts okt
black-eact-wtu~ footaac of Day *' sidettck ~ the I.ate J~k lknn~. As some ot tu. IOtlP play in 1hc ~Day talks of has ho~ for
beati .. medi-..Andtwo ofh•~ 10 · c:IU...,. ,._,bid 1ar1 as 1hq recall me fi..a moa\M of their fatbtt', hfc
.. , could 111r ii in his~ .. tatd son
Tom ~Nalty ... Kc was afraid. I was
lhid. eoo. a~ .. ~!! him." ...:'.:t:r'~ tn axnon
·1 .... ~ did cou'4 fir Mtt to 'I ......... he laid, Ml wish
myd9d-1Mre IO tiftl. ..
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•
Deity Pilot Oatebook/ Friday, s.>tember 2. 1988 IS
r • .,._
..
Out On The Town
.__
.......... JN ... ..... _. ..
VllE'S
270 E 17th St
COSTA MESA
722 ....
mooKL"' PlllA .. se
1235 E. wn.,.,lel Hwy.
PlACENTlA ...,..
:i~J
OF-THE WEEK
The lotus ls an exotic end elegant flower.
The Lotus Is an exotic and 9'egent restaurant.
Located In the Harbor Shopping Center In ca.ta
M... the Lotus restaurant Is <>*Md by the hlghty-
euc:cesstul restaurateur Ryan Tsang, whoee· wtler
endeavors. Lotus West In Los Angeles arid Lotus W•t,
Brentwood. were widefy ecctalmed by the Loe Angee.
Restaurant Writers Association end the C8'ifomla
Restaurant Writer's AssociatlOn es well es numerous
put>Hcatlons whoee business it is to judge the many
•ling places thrOllghout the area. As a result Tsang'•
Lotus West In West Los Angeles earned the highe9t
Chinese Three Ster Award by the Association.
The tradition for excellence has continued right here
In Cott• Mna_where d.lnecs can experience the
pleasures of • gourmet menu which features Mandarin,
Shanghai end Szechwen cuisine. Locally, the Lotus,
eat8bished In Novebmer 1985, exhibits • Restaur.,,t
Writer's Gold Award.
As etegant as Its flower namesake, thit Lotus Is
decorated In "gentle", subdued colors. A large Nit
water aquarium filled with trapical fish highlights the
entryway. Only one wall, facting the door, Is a reminder
that this Is a Chinese restaurant. It features golden cutout
Chinele char_acters In precise rows against a red
bedcground. t -
Sof\ lighting and mirrors reflect gleaming black
dinnerware on White linen.
Back in their college days in Taiwan. Ryan Tsang,
studying . architecture. and Joseph Chang.and elec-
tronics engineering major. became close friends. This
wu at Chung Yuan Qhristian COiiege of Science and
Engineering. Neither wouJd have guessed that tl'ley
would someday be involved In a restaurant ventur.e
together In Costa Mesa. California. ·
The erchltect, Ryan Tsang came to the United States
and soon-game up tile Idea of :deslgnfng buildings and
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ bridgel to realize his dream of owning his own -restaurant. It was early In 1979 that his flrat one, Lotus
W•t was opened in West Los Angeles.
Joeeph, the engineer. moved on to South America In
the lnpott-export of electronics equipment. Since he Is
fluent In MYef'al. tanguages--Chinese, Spanlsh and
Engli9h-he wu first called upon u an Interpret• at the
~Embassy. He got into cooking for the embaldsy
galas and soon ... in demand as a chef In his country's
embaales throughout South America In places ltke
Argentina, 8olMa, Venezuela and Peru.
And. along the way, Chef JOMPh learned not only
the many IUbtle hlcts Of Chinese cooking but he
mMtered the art of fine European cooking • wett. He
..,... tpent some yeers In Baton Rouge, Lousi8nna,
where he became expert tn Cegun cook.Ing.
In January of tNs year, Ryan Tsang opened the Lotls
Exprw, a food cor.c111ion et Fashion lllend, Newpor1
Beech. With Chef Joseph In charge, the Exprw hu
•ttrKted a large nunmber of reguler costomera for lunch
..:ti day. \
LOTU89EEF
1 ....................... lb ..... .......
...... ··~•lbll .. , ....... ""'91) MAWADI ......... , ... ... , .... ....,, .......... ,..., ..... _ ..... ._a11ar,..._...., uuc. , ... ..,_ , ... .,..._ .. ..... , ......... , ... ....,,
a ... .... ...............
h. a waltler at tM Lotaa re.taaraDt. will
111'11 IDt a ...,.et meaa to .dbaen. Tile
,_. ..... t ta located at 2300 Harbor BlYd.,
eo.ta 11-. ln tlae Barbor Sboppln& Center.
Lotus Express will continue. but Chef Joseph has
now turned his attention to the Harbor Center Lotus and
just this week completed plans for an unusual buffet
luncheon. officially scheduled to start Sept. 8. It will be
unulUaJ In that It will combine some or the best of Cajun,
French, Italian and Chinese dishes served'1n true buffet
style -tllble clOths, chafing dishes and silver. No ste.am
tables here! · .
At least 20 different gourmet items will be on the
buffet table daily. Although the recipes come from many
dlfferent part•ot the world, the blend has been carefully
planned. On~ ff8Sh herbt wlll l>e used and the deuerts
and breads wltl be made right.In the Lotus kitchen.
The buffet Is reasonaJ>ly priced at S--.95 per person
and wtll be Mnl9d deity Monday through Friday, 11:30 to
2:30 p.m. Sunday, a champagne brunch for $7 .95 wtH be
Mrwd from noon to 3 p.m.
Currently, Chef Joseph is makJng plans to include
some EUC>PeM dishes a well as different Chinese
favorites • dinner specials every day. Diners are
encour9ged to ask their wallet about thele.
Upon '9qU8St, the Lotus will omit ell MSG, corn
starch, -. • oils or .. tt from the food.
The l.otU9 menU al90 lists thi hot and spicy Items to
alettdlners who prefer their food a bit more mild.
Maggie Chang, Chef JOMPh's wife. la the maNger.
s~ that r~•tions be made by calling (114) 54 1.
The L"otus, located at 2300 Harbor Blvd In Costa
Mesa, ls open Monday1hrough Saturday for lunch, 11:30 a.m. lo 3 p.m. Monday through Friday for dinner, 4:30 lo
10 p.m. and Saturday and -Sunday from noon to 10:30 p.m.
SEASONING' , ....... ,.d .....
1-.111111111..,trc , ....... ,, ........ ...... , ... ,.., ......... ., ... ....
,~ .... -.......... ,,,,.,.~
~ "'9 beef wtth the marinade lngtedienta.
work with '/OIT tngers, toes well. Let stt for half an hour
and lhen,C091 with com starch ..
.._. ol In fryer unttl 350 degtw. add beef and
deep fry for 20 eeconds. Drein beef, ... " ... tor 20
•conda, ~ wne rnethod8, trytng two more times,
until c:rilpr .
In a hot wok or tklllet (350 lo 400 degrw). mix the
-..celngl ... 1ta9tirring occ9oi191ty untll wnt "**· ... .......
In a hot wok or tkil9t. quickly..,.. the orange peel.
dnemon and dried hot peppel' untlt the peppel' tuml
dertc Md rG'I CM lfMI the •ome of tM or.,. .....
Add 111Unlng Ingredients (mlced ginger, gmrlc and
onAon). add tNclcened -..ce. add beef. toes eeveral
..,.._ and " II reedy. s.¥es four.
Out ' Town
Together again: Bardot
and Larry, Moe and Curley
' Some columnists attend the open·
1ngs of new and 1mpon.ant art
exhibits. Otben appear at premieres
of MW plays. Still others are out and
about with the paparazzj at some
benefit society ball.
Uncle Don readers-nm an onl>
from the black velvet matador paint·
by-numbers collection hanging 1n
their front room •nd the only play
they recognize is Tinker to Evers to
Chance. so he attended a ver}
important prcmic~ only for those of
us who tum on channel 5 al noon ori
Saturda}'S:----
Walling patiently for the
premiere's st.an, your Unc stood near
•a darkened, curtained comer. James
Cagney on his left. Briginc BardoL
Cl~r. on has nghC -;a. prethora of
guards, dignitaries and hangers-on
crowded the·arca.
The celebrity host amved. the
presentation began. the cunams were
withdrawn. And there the) were.
lifcsi"Zcd. carcfull)' carved jn wax. the
UncleDon-
Stooges afinonado and-longtime
radio man Gal) O""ens '':is the
master of ceremonies . .\Isa prescn1
were Moe's daoghter. hes grandson.
the sculptor of the e~h1bn. and. of
course. a host of n1.~~paper people
(they berng the pnmar} rea~on l 'ncle
DoJ\ removed hJs "allet from h1~
back pocket.)
TIJere they were,
llfetdad, care.tally ·
-CM?edln ..., tbe
ma8nfficenttrio ...
Larrp, Moe and
Carley._
magnificent trio. Not Mannv. Moe & The exhibit is a classic tooges
Jack. Not Huey, Dcwe)• and Louie. pose. Moe. with a loo"k ofrctnbu1ion
Not Breshnev. Jlrndropov and in h1sc)es. has Lari") 's hair fn hes right
Gorbachev. But those standard hand while the left is attempunga two
bearers of class. s tyle , and fingered eye-poke at Curl}. The
slobphistication: Larry. Moe and perfect set. adapted from a shon
Curley. · where the boys \\Cre-allegedly re·
They're the newest exhibit ai the decorating a room. looks hke an
Mov.ieland Wax• Museum in Buena interior design job done by graduatc-s
Park. ,_ · __ o_f_the Braille lns111utc-.
The sculptor 1nd1ca11.·d h1.· "orkt:d
from many 8-b~·IO~ to get 1he
expressions nght Th1.• l 'nt 1'>
surpnzed Curle} could Iii 1n an g.
by-1 0 Ma~be they used :i "•de-angle
Jen~ He said t~hardest..part of do1 ng
the exh1b11 "as picking the proper
body pos111ons, Larr.· being the m ost
difficult Stooge to seulpt because of
his "rubber face ··
It all appeared pre1t} sleek to l rncle
·0on.
Gar) Owens and Moe's dauj,h_ter
and g.randson had a good ume posmg
for photographers in the exhibit.-
Owens. in particular. doing his
fa vom e Stookes sound effects and
· expressions. Gar) Owens sounds 1n
real life JUSI like he docs on the radio.
tooics· fhe-saffie hc'l11<1 ·mi'l'tnn ltn.·
"Laugh-In .. days.
A star on Holl)wood Boulevard.
An exhibit at 1he Mo' 1eland Wax
Museum. fao clubs. T·sh1ns ... 1hc
Curle} Shuffle.·· Showmgs oft hear 111
year-old shorts on TV. Book~ about
them. Talk o(a possible movie. What
could be possibly be next for the
Three Stooges? A postage stamp.
Yeah. that"s the ticket. Use it and that
envelope would be guaranteed to be
lost. folded. spindled or muulated.
eerfect for sending quarterlies to the
IRS.
Here's mud in )Cr c~e.
Nyuck. Nyuck. N~ ud ..
' ' The Three Stoocen ;are captured in wax at the lloYieland
Waz llU9eUID in B~e~ Park ..
'Ballet Alfresco '-·will climax Laguna f es ti val season
As per tradition. Ballet Pacifica wtll
officially close the Laguna Beach
Pageant of the Masters/Festi' al of
Arts season with 11s annual ''Ballet Alfresco" Saturday night. ' •
This year's "Ballet Alfresco" will
consist of an .. Alfresco dinner'' at
Tivoli. Terrace at 7 p.m. (w11h
reccpuon at 6) and a performance of
Scriti Prokofiev's "Cinderella" at
adjaccot Irvine Bowl at 8. "Ballet
Alfresco" 1s a fund-raising ewnl
celebra1ing lhe Stan oi Ballet Pa-
cifica's new seasoi1.
"Candcrella:· Prokofie, •s second
successful ballet. follows tht" fam1har
Charles Perrault version of the oft·
told fai ry talc. Lila Zali. founder and
recently reured director of Ballet
Pacifica, d id the choreography and
costumes. based on the original 1945
production. Kristi Moorhead. a
SUSA• SEAFORTH HAYES
• 0 ITMRING ..
THE .. ~ ... c:c>mqY
aY
--AmMWMR••N
a1•tlW 9' MCIC ..:H
MICHAEL
RYDlYISll '
Ballet Pacifica veteran. will dance the
title role. with Lee Wigand a~ the
Pnnce.
The lnme Bo\\l 1~ loca1i:J on 1hi:
Festi'-•al of '\rts ground) a1 t.511
Laguna Can}on Road en Laguna
~ach. For uckets. call •494-7 ~ 71. f oe
rescnat1on~ to the rcccpteon anJ
dinner. "h1ch ari: not endud1.·J in thl'
price of the ballet uckel\, c;1ll r 1\ <'It
Terrace at 494-~6 ·o.
• • • Speaking of the end ot 1h,· ~um mer
·ORANGE COUNTY-
€EN~ENNJAL
IT'S ORANGE COUNl¥'S tOOth
BIKfHDAY
. AND YOU'RE INVITEl>
--'1._.::_.:: .-.~ • • •
Celebrate the Spirit
. ~889-1989 .
season. there arc \ttll a k"' lr1.·c
summer sene~ out lhlTC w f'>ll llll h~.
Tonight at the :--;1.·\\porwr lh·,on·,
httle amphnheat<.'r lhl' ··Freda' f ', ..
ning Jazz .. sene<, \~tnd' ur "1th
Stephanie Ha~ nc'\ and fn,·n,1' 1 hL·
Ne"poner Reson ·~ ""'·awd Jl 1111-
Jamborre Road tn "'c" p.1n lk'J lh
.\ double bill uf B1i DaJJ, <1nd
Papa Doo-Run-Run "111 l">e pn·-.cntl"J
(Pleaae eee PLAYERS/Page 17)
Look for details as each major event nears,
. and "Celebrate the Spirit!" For up-to-the-
minute inforuYtion on Centennial events, call
859-4000
Dally Pilot Oatebook/ Friday, September 2, 1988 * 15
"
...
--Dining out with Judy·-----------------------------------~-------..;..._...;_ __ _
New cause for excitement in downtown Laguna
1 mLssed some of the action at the minutes anyway, after a dnnk 31 the-unauine wnh clams an fresh cuhnarygif\ to Laguna ~a h v.111 find
new Sorrento GnJk in Laguna Beach bar-which was noisy and buS). tomatoand cream sauce($ 13.75) "as a ..-.,y to put more eye appeal 1~to 11~
Saturday nighL fist figh t reponC'dl} Don't wear white hncn - or aood eoou~. but not as good as the list of entrccs. the mo'>t cxcmng of
broke out 1n the bar earl) in the anything that stains -1f )ou're • super-prhck~ chicken ($11.50) which seemed to be nb-c)c steak v.nh
e\en1ng when a rowdy customer~ plannma to have a dnnk at the bar of JUDY which came with a side of rosemary home fries ($I S.50) and the dt~I>'
asked to leave. the Sorrento Gnlle. E' crywhere. polcnta that could have passed for pointin1 garlicky chicken.
According to the story. the cus-you'll be confronted with \encrs undcm><>k,ed cornmeal mush. though S.rrH&• Grille, Col'.er of •-~-··---;;---_:to.mer threw a glass.at the bartcnde.r.... arrying trays laden with aJasscs o f l' ...... 1£1lAll my companion assured me that ........, _. Glaaeyre. Lapaa
heaved a clay pot across the bar and red wine, saucy pastas and oh'e oil-"911111 polcnta as sometimes served this way. BeeS. • .,_.. ... Diuer aiglllly. Ex-
------
generally created havoc. One of the laden saads -an} of ""htch 'could Not in my house. at 1sn·1. cellea& tenice. CftaLlve, ill&eraU.1,
chefs came fl ying out of the 1.att'hcn easlly land in ~ur lap. The re taurant To me, it's wonb a little e\lnt1liQl-fl'ftll ~ts make ., a Nllpll-
and held the guy do"'-n. as small. theaaslcsare narro"' and half At the moment. the charm of the surrins to end up "'llh Polenta firm atJleCalifenlacwlsi8e. Uvely e,..,,,
Open only a few W'C!Cks. rrt'nro ofOranie Count} is cu~ntl) rf)Ul& appcu:tcrs outweigh those of 1hc enoush to shcc and use to sop up jestllllc fer s,.ce at llaar MIO 1e die
ha.san airofexc1tcmen1 -ma) l>Moo to cram it~lf into th(' 1>31h of the entrttS. The menu_changcsn1ghtl). i.o sauces. The sauce fOtlhc ch1d:en v.as fa. Decer a eleaa mix ef Sotnll-
much excitement. that night -:ibout Wllltcrs and wailrcsscs. Ifs J~t I.his this imba1anct tS bound to "-Ork atSClf a romp an a field of, CT)' good, JUl>t-. wesaen/T~ widl plnty of Ira·
it that more than.compensates for any side of dangcre>ucs. But ifs fun. out in Jlmc.. SOrrcnto bu)' 11' produce harvested prhc-bulbs. It olTSt"t the , ..,..... la fer 1ood meat11re. Major
culinary flaws the kitchen hasn't had Much more fun than r ,c ever had from C hino's. a San Diego-area slightly undercooked bard, which was ~t car41. Partill& i1 'lfitere you
time to work ouL in an empty. cavernous restaurant -purveyor long _),he choice of Wolf-otherwi~ flavorful and tcnMr. -eu ti.. U. Reservatioa1 rfk.
I can probabty 'gi,e >ou dozens o f which as about the most dcprc !>ing gang. Alice an<t the r~t Qf 1he· In A1tnerousportionofcustard). un-.-·a•1•. Ml a few LaWes are
reasons to~ry this place right now. not environment I can think of to cat a · Crowd. runny crtme brulcc did n1ccl) for a•~ fw walli-1111.
the least of which 1s the ~rktjn meaL _ A tomato cxua,apnza "1th buf-<ksscrt. The rntaurant was out of • • • ---
Ta.sh1on show put on b) :tn upbe.at. Sorrcn10 Grille's food 1s tn1crcst-fa1a mozzerella featured a tnum' irate lemon Rlnln&uc pie. . A JOB WELL DO.NF:: The Orange
vivacious dientele that has ammcdi-irlj. w1t.h a menu that smacks of the of yellow. o range and red to matoes Sorrento Grille hasn·1 figured out 1f Co~nty Unit oft~c .\merican Can er
·ately accc:ptcd th.is pl:tcc as llS 'el) Ahcc Watcn school of Post-n:tturellc fresner than you can buy 1n a i t wants to be open for lunch )Cl: ~aety ~utdad itself. unda) night
o v.n. grccn-1humb cuisine. ~permarket, and the u~usal sprankl-more)Jhe-pity. I'm chomping .at the . ~Ith a dinner at u Mendacn .fcatur-
By the time the fellow was subdued Waters would probably sacnfice ma offrcsh ~al ($3.7)). bit to go back. t want to ti) the tuna-tn& the Southern California Les
Saturday night. the kitchen v.'3s her mesclun lcttuccprckn to acquire I was much morcJUtcd b)>' roasted carpaccio with wasabi creme friachc Toques Blanches c~kang 1cam
runnina 20 mmutcs behind. That. of the lttnd of staff ~to's panners-peppers (yellow. &Jttn and red) aD<f(S6.SO). the ltahan sausage soup v.1 th scfteduled to compc1c 10 the Franl..-
course. was I.he-reason the manager have been fonunate enough to find -anchovies layered onto thick laces of peppers and polcnta ($3. 75). the fort. West Germany, Cuhna~ 0 1) m-
told us it would be a 40-m1nu1e v.aat at least two of whom came from the homemade sourdough bread. chicken caesar 'salad with garlic pies in October. Those attending "ere
for an unreserved table instead of the madly successful Five FtttJUSt down brvsdteru.cut mto thrcc-founhs-crouaons ($9 SO) and the •-arm treated to a ratt and ansigh1ful
20 minutes wt:"d been quoted o~erthc the street. inch shccs rubbed w11h tnplc~xtra smoked salm~n with ·greens (S 7 ., 5) aJimpsc into I world of dcmon-
1elcpbone. Sorrento, .,..e·d been ad-Fivcfce1'scustomcrsarcdoubt~ vifl,inohveoilal}dgarlic, thenanllcd ·-· strauon cookin& many people m.·,cr
vised. doesn't reserve all of us tables, · (indina 1heirway to Sorrento. too. bot to an oil-permeated finish (SS. 75). It's All were specials from the appcmer ac• 10 Stt.
so walk-ins can usually bc accoinmo-oo!h arc very busy and the close lbis kind of simple, beautiful du,h that menu the night we were.there. The Camauon Com pan) 1~ the
dated. This I like. proximi1y of·cach to the other .wall has aiven California a reason to be And rm bopin&. in ume. that tbl!> team's major sponsor. Much of the
Surprisingly. we got our table 1n 20 probably increase business for both. proud of the cuisine bearina 11S name. busy. buzzing. adrenalin-infused n.ew (Pl--eee JUDY /.-.,e l T)
DATE NIGHT
AT PERO'S
SATUAOAY ~Nt~ 5:30-10:00
COMPLETE DINNER
FOR TWO
Baby Rack of Lamb
~.~~:-~~I =· °T.:f:o· •n• ~--m"9 So11p 0t FOR 2 Seled
2221 North Main • Huntington Beach, CA • Seaolltt Village
P£Q®' 980-7784
BRINGS BACK
THE
SIDJ, DllUM MD
ON SUNDAY AFTERNOONS
... .
E mf)ty stages wil~ fill next week
Suddcnly1fsScptember,anddon·t re1um visn to the Orange Counl)
ICt the calm of this Labor 0a)' Performing Ans Center. Sta) ang
weekend fool you. The thcatncaJ lb~ Sei>t. 25.
f1oodptcs arc about to open. J Another heavy wcekenctof openers
The only new pme in town this • is in store for Sept. :?2 and 23 when "-C
weekend is a proaram of Tennessee ~t .. Company" from the-Ncwpon
Williams O{'c-aets at Oran~ Coast TITIS Thca1er Ans Center. ··BiJoxi Blues"
Collelc, but it'f the provcrbaal tip, of at Oranac Coast College. "In Pcr-
an ic:icbera that Includes 19 new mgc ~tui1yThroughout the Universe" on
productions arrivana dunng the South Coast Repenof) ·s Second
month. Nearly half (caght) of th~ Boom Boom Room" at Santa Ana's -.S.. and "S~nd By Your ~s.
will ao on the boards next v.ttk. Way Off Broadway Thea1er. Boys" at 1he Garden Gro~c Com-
Tbat week, which will be addtcsscd Amvins next Friday will be .. The mullity Theater.
further in Sunday's column, "'•II sec Crucibk" at South Coast Repertory. Thal hardy pettnnial "South Pa:
five shows openina Thursday -~ .. at the Westminster Com· cific" drops by the Grand Dinner
"How to Succeed Without Really munity Theater and an on&inal play .. Theater ScpL 17. while another
Tryina" at the Laguna Playhouse, "A "Randyville," a1 Huotinaion Beach's ••Biloxi Blues" socs up at G<>Jden
fua•y Th1111 Happened on the Way Unicom Emparium:: -Wat COiiett-SC~ 30. sharing an
to the Forum" at the Costa Mesa After this tadal wave. the following opmina ni&ht wilh the Ahematnc
Civic Playhouse. "No Sex. Please, week is ~rty quiet with only a new R~ Theater's K'ason opener. we·~ British-at the San Clemcn&c ooeedy ... Tbc Wholt Hair.·· 101na on "Ghosts. •
Community The8te:r~" y au IM ....._at tbr ttarlequin Dtn~ Tbc local onsla..,u d()C<jn't dis.-Lady-at Elaz.abrth H 'sC ·n PllyhcMm Sep&. 13. A week la1er the sipe~ with the endint ofSc~tember,
<::all Dinner Theater a -the tomiaa musical '"Cats" ,.ys a brief either. Waitina in the wtn15 for '----------__;;_ _____ ....;;._ ________ ___, opminp in the fim -.ct ofOctobtt
are ~And a Nilb1inp1t Sana'• .at lhe &m Thea1er ... lafJC Window on a
Small Wortd-.a (he INiM Com-
mwrity Thcaler, "TM Plrai.es of
Peuaact" by the Bra Thcat~ ~ ... Ta11cy·1 Folly" al Orantc
Cbat con. (runn!"t in ~rtory
witb"'TlefifthofJuty, 11>inaupthc
nnt week) ad the oripnaJ musical
"Hold Oa" at Rancho Santiaso
Col •.
• ••
PoP Mus ic
Only B.B. King sang the Qlues at Michael's de but
It was somehow both fining and
inappropriate to -sho"'case blun
guitar legend 8.8 Krng at the grand
opening ofM1chat1') upper Cluh m
the Dana Point llarbof
o\ former jau-rock d rummer tuui·
C'd club owner. 34-\car-old M 1~ h:id
Zanet.is mititatcl\ ii fricndsh1.p wtth
King l'bourseven ~e;irs agcr-:n1tn-
nov.-d~funct Golden &Jr in Hunt·
1ng1on Beach. So when \.i 1chacr~ "3"
read) t.b luck off their ('(mn:rt ~n'-''
said Zanct1s. then.· v.a' no om: d-.c ~
v.ould have considered for the g.rand
opening gala.
W1th citollC hors d'ocu.Hcs. J.
variety of tasty dinnerw11d pll'nt) of
wine and champagne. last ~..:..,
early show was a blacl -tic. S75-pcr-
11cket benefit for the Dana. Point
Chamber of Commccc The d~}
affair. held an a spacaou~ hall that
o"erlooks the scenic harbor. created
an atmosphere ofc'*ncc and one of
~pect for a true R&B ongrnal.
8ut~9on't th~ lush 1ntcnors-and
auracti\lC testaments to succe!I S\ m-
bolize the anfitbms-of the blues~ t
ttmC$. the fanc) surro undings rt'•
sembled a las Vegas r.howroom more
than a na&(lt club. I couldn·t help but
wonder how ~ng felt as he looked
JOHN
Roos_
out among thtl trn"d Jnd ..av.
hundreds of v.dl·t<~h· form.ill\.
d~sscd v.h1te fol l.s tn an~"' rd.it1.· to
!><>ngs hl..<' .. "I" I '-•!'~ fl>•.' !llt1i-\ ..
and .. Bad Luck oul ··
This v.a!> a<, bag a m1,m.11t·h a' thl·
T yson-Spinkl> demohuon
Ob"1oush av.arc of 1h1.· 'l·nut• and
pre\ aahng a"tmo~phcrc ~ing flKu\l'd
his sho"" on pro' 1d1ng mn1otl~ 1.·ntl.'r·
uunang bu1 less chaUen8tng ma1~n-a._
drav.n from a career that \P:\ll\ more
than 50 albums. £,en '><>. lhl· h~·,ear
old M1ss1ss1pp1 nat1\c "a gra 1ous.
good natured performer "ho ha~n·1
lost much of his gu11ar master\ OH'r th~ )'Ca~. .
King's ocras10MI fluid ancf 1.·x-
pmsavc guttar leads stall dipped and
soared though a "ane1' of tc\tured
sounds Has famou~ G1b-.on guitar
(nemed ··Lucille") elunda1cs his dis·
t10l tl\C ~t) k -one thJI l I 1nJ purr'>.
hov.I\ or JU\t plain ru1.i.., Iii.,· 1C:v.
OlhCr\
l>unng a ,uupk ,,, nldknt m-
strumentJI numlxr' lw J1Jn 1 plJ\
his belo,cd ""··stnn~ J' mm h J'>
can:s' 11 H" '\tanging ri th, 1111 \ ,.\ l'd a
gamut of l·motiun!>. J)Jrt1<.ularl~
throughout a blul'" t'IJllJd '3lkd
.. Ho" Blue Can You l•l·l' ·
-Then• Y.J'> no .,hnn.i!(t ul 'tLJd~ ·
!>uppon from Kang·.,~\ ,·n·mJn bacl..·
ing band Led b~ l.c~ buan11.,t Lug,·n..-
Camer and thl· lien horn '>Ct11on of
James Bolden (trumix·11 Fdg.ir S) n-
agal. (saxaph6nc:J. and H B . ._ m·phcw
Walter Kmg (saxophnnc I lhl'~· J311~
m USlltans pla~cd \\Ith J /CS.I) '\Pini
and pro\ 1dcd light en!>~:mhk v.orl..
~~;. concert \enuc. \lllhaer-. is
targeting an upscale. oldl·r 1 ~5-plu-.)
cro"'d. Their September hool..mgs
include a mixture of 1a11. rount~.
oldies. and mainstream pop t 'ix·o..-
ani concrts: Ramsc) u:v.1s C Sept.
Fnda}, Saturda) a nd Sunda)),
Charles Falcscher (Wt"dne!ida\ 1. Earl
Thomas Conic) (Thu™13) and ~copt.
9). Chet McCracken !Sept. I 0. 11 ). the
Assoc1a11on (Sept. l·H. Tamm)
Wynette ( cpt. 15-1 "'). Lluk
Anthony ( Sq>t. I h I the 'ith
Dtmcnsaon ( ScpL 211. C..Jn Pul·l..l.'1 t c
Sept. 22. 23.). }CIT) Yak I ~:pt ~.i.
25). and the lkllam\ Brn'> c-X·pt .•111
The a\cragc till.Ct pnu• " i.lround
S:!O
AUDITIONS SCHEDULED FOR SYMPHONY OPENINGS ... JUDY •••
rromPacel5
from I 1:30a.m. to 12:45 p.m. pt. 14
as the final offering 1n Trammell
Crow Compa.ny:S "Lunchumc on·
ccn Scnes" at the comp:m) ·s Park
Place in Fountain Court. 3333
Michelson Drive 1n lf\1ne.
And over at Laguna Beach's Blue-
bird Park. Pandemonium will create-
euctly that from ·s-6 p.m. Sept. 11.
This stccl-<Srum band wall close out
the City of Laguna fkach· scnes a t
the puk. which as o n Crcs trcet
bet""'ccn Temple Terrace and Blue·
bird Canyon Drive. · • • • The Pacific Syt'n_phOn ) Orchestra
will conclude its first full summer
season at Irvine Meado "" s
Amphitheater Sept. 10 \o\tlh an all-
. ' .. ' ... ~ . ·~ . , .......... ' ·"'
. ==·l!I I
Tcha1ko,sk> spectacular \'1ohn1st looking for compcll.'nt pla~er) 10 JOm
Sheryl Staples, who soloed \o\llh the their ranks.
UCI S) mphon) among other or-
chestras thlS past ~ason. \\Ill be Saddlcback. S~ m phOn). addle·
featured 1n the Vaohn Concerto 1n o back College s orcheJtra. "111 hold
Major. Op. 35. S)mphon)~ No. aud1t1ons from. 7 10 10 p._m Wcdnes-
Manor and the-omntpotcn · 81 _ day 1n the band room ol ;ap1strano
Overturt' round out the rogram. Valley High School. 1at _630 1 Via
which will be conducled , Keith Escolar m M1ss1on \ t<'JO T he or-
Clark. Fireworks round out the chest~. under 831T) • ah erman·s darcctton. 1s open 10 an~ l'ommunat)
member. college student and high
school JOnaor or senlQr Call
731 -5439.
cvcnang.
Collqc·s Bcnca Hall I R()(1m 12 I .11
333 Nonh Gl~ll trttt 10 nrang1.·
The conductor is John Ko\hal. "ho
also conducts the Orange ( ount'
Youth Symphon) Call qcp.~4 1 -1 l•r
997-6871.
Aud111ons for the 'a nutn :0.\01·
pho n) v.111 be held from Q J m .'i pm
Sept 17 a1 the s.amc lknl'\l Hall.
Interested mus1c1ans fwm lllth gr.1Jc
through college should 1.·Jll <J" I·' ' -
The orch~tra's offshoot. thl· Orange
County Youth S)mphun\ Junior
rromJ»aee 16
foOd wa!> donated b) pun,·\,1r' u~-<l
b) the chel\ o n the tl"am Jnd I>•
generous.. j)('Oplc pa1d S ~-, t'Jl·h It'
taste a mult1ple<our..e d1nnn 'ul·
m1na11ng tn a de-\scrt lantJ" ol pc·111
fours ins1dl!' a ho' madl' ,11 1h1.• pun.· .. 1
chocolate
Research works. Unhke the other 01her aforl.'men·
uoncd sencs. this one as not frtt. But
you can still p1c01con the former Lon
Country Safan groun~ surroundmg
the amphitheater before th(• 8:30 p.m.
concert. For tickets call 97 3-1322. • • • Speaking of orchestras. )C' cral arl.'
Chapman· Symflhon~, thr L'Ount~ ·~ Orchestra. under founder-1. 1lndu~1.ur
oldcsl resident orchestra. wall aud1-' Roben Freil). v.111 aud111on .hllh
taon community member!> from 7 10 through ninth grade~ at fkn,·a 1mm
10 p.m. Sept. 12-13 in Chapman 8a.m -6 p.m.Scpt :!4.call-,11-114 \
SOUIHftN ( .. L I Ot NIA tlSIAUt ""' W ••flU S••Yll AWAIO Wl,..N(I
. ...
( "IC> \!:I~ 4 COl.tM' 1.1·""''~
luesoay fr•o.t7 ~ JO l 'fX ., gr.1 .,
• l•t~· ~nl w nt" '~·
• f Mt!"1PGI "~ ~
• (c!Sul!I E ~9d11Ct
S....et specials St.ts
9040 E Co.tst H•CJ"""IY Cort>nc1 ~ Mar CA 9262~ < 7l4) m QOO('
Good for parties of 8 or ~ss Of'ty. J*a~
-ble
Rf"<'"••· """''"nmnwndtird ,,4 b4 .. 'f'dC'
ti l, W ( .w~ H09hw .... ~ S.•h
·~,"""" ... ~Blvd ""•lw b.\'-
o.ity Pilot Oatebook/ Friday. September 2. 1988 11 ,
.... l
..
•
"
..
...
OutOnTheTown
Top balloonists ride the wind at Reno ·
r •• ..
~ . ---.. --~ --..,.
By DONNA AND RAY 01T compeiitions in the U.S. bump oftht landing, a little JOit tha ...,,...c.11 • • t Even the races are fun to watch. brinp you back 10 reality and te
The early morning sun was begin-This r,car they'll include "Hound and finna.
nina to spread its colors over the Hare (all .. balloons fo,t.low a l~ad In addition to the tethered balloo
Sierra Nevada range as we drove into belloon), Target Drop (ballooni~ts rides, the festival grounds wyl hav
Rancho San Rafael Park just north of drop bean bags .15 c!ose to a ~;s1&-. foodandsouvenirconcessions.ach1I
downtown ~eno. _ _:. _ nat~. ~t as possible) and Key cook-off and an an .exhibit. Musi
SoOn . t rca er. we saw the Gtab (pilots try lO grab car keys will be provided by local grOUJ)$
belloons. more than a hundred of attac~ to the top of a 20-foot pole). , ·
them, ascending together into . the Allow enough tame to arrive at the ACCOMMODATIONS
briatnenina sky like magical, multi-perk about a half hour before the The best hotel value on Sept. 9 wil
colored lanterns. momingascrnsions, You can wander be a room at the La Quinta Inn. 4001
We fint viewed-this spectacle. amona the aiant balloons a'nd set a r,farket St. (800-S31-S900). near t
which marlcs.'lhe opening of the Great fim-band look at how they art lteno airpon. -
Reno Balloon Race. a couple of years inflated and launched. On that date. the La Quinta hote
llO and have looked forward to it You will see crews unfolding the aroup is celebrating its 20th an ............ ..-r 51·..,..._ ltis· always .... ld the balloons. laying them out · on the_ . b ffi . h :i:;m;u ,_ .-. u... d. nd th ,,,,_,.uaJI fil · navcnary yo enna eac room an It •«ktnd after labor Day. poun a · en ... "."' Y 1 hng :ZOO.inn cbain for the barpm rate o
Betv.un 6:4S a.m. and 7 a.m. next them wfth warm air wuh the help of S201(or one to four people). The mn
Friday. Saturday, and Sunday.the la:ro fans and pros-ne~s bomers. ·will also be providina special s11acb
balloons will apin ascend en massc · ~ ::f:" most of the ba loons, .onc:c beveraan. and drawinas for doo
over this "Digest little city in. the anfla . take on a convent1onaJ prizn. All the evening's profits will t wor1d. .. Also, on Salurday and Sun-shape, tbctt arc a few special-shaped
day momin•c the .. Dawn Patrol'' structures,, often created by _la_rge to the Malec-A-Wish Foundauon . ...., t: d non-profit charity wb,osc pu~ 1 (specially equipped balloons wtuch corporations or .. a vert1sang to~nt the special wishcsofchildrc
launch an the dark) wiU start their . pu~. • . . ..... ha 1·~ th · II ucent at 5:45 a.m. These· interior-lit.-' This y~r s. entnts in the latte.r wno ve l•C· rcatening' nesses.
balloonsappearasgiant stained-glass catqOry Wiii include Mr. reanut. a Other good choices in Reno IO
windows hanging m the dark, pre-Ray-0-Vacbattery,anda Disneyland elude:
dawn sky. Believe it or not. they're charactc.i;. . . '•Best Western Airport Plata Hole
mcmthanwonhgettingupthatearl y If you ve ne~er tned. ballooning. (1981 Tenninal Way: 702-329-1001
to tee. y~u can sa.mple It here via a tether~ with 270 units. from SSS for doublet .
.. Watching over 100 balloons ndc. It. wall only take rou up, not · ascend over tbe city is spectacular," away, since the balloon 1s leashed to •Baily's Reno (2500 E. 2nd St.:
says Candice Pearce. race executive the aroun,d . . 800-64S..S080) with over 2000 rooms.
director. "It can't be described in As you~ acntly. floattnf above !he ~en restaurants, and a casino. from
words: it has to be experienced.·· Earth. you II feel hkc you re. ha!lg1ng $60 for doubles.
Durina the remainder of each day from a cloud by some mvmble GEn'lNG THERE
oftheevent, I IOofthecountry's best thread._ B~t. most of all. you'll notice A ~umber of !l1rhncS. 1nclud1 balloonis~ will be vying in var*>us the ccne silence. Once the pilot shuts Amcncan. Amenca West. U Air.
raccsfor$10,000inprizemone),plus on: t~ propane flame. th~ sense of . and Unit~ fly from John Wa)ne
a Caribbean vacation and a new • quiet is almost overwhclm1'?g. Airpon to Reno Cannon Inter
automobile. When your balloon and attached nauonal, gencraJly w11h a slop or t\o\-O
If you've nevcrwitnesscd a balloon ao~ola. ~the. wack~r basket that enroute.
event, this is a good one to auend, you ~ ndant n~) be&in thr1r descent. Via automobik. take H1ghwa) 395
since u is rccoptZed by professional the pilot will instruct you to ~nd nonh from Los Angeles. past Lake
"balloonatics" as one of the top your knees to prepare for the slight Tahoe to Reno.
SOUND
OPtlUSIC
CLOSES
SEPT.4
PllOfll9SIONAL
ISOADWAY MUSICAL
WAlT'Ell
SDVED taAlS
nsERVATIONS (714) 838-15"0 ~.,.. ...._ ___ · MO B. CAMINO UAL. t\JSTIN t26IO SDVICE
TOURISTS •••
l'nm .... S
Thd yar, 1onatime s-rt1cipaf!tS
C1poct the crowd to return to its tnditional size and shape. _
Al Walkabout veterans recall it, the
event IOI off to ~ unauspicious start in 4tbe late 1960s when a wedding
Pif1Y JO' out of hand, attnctina the
attamon of unsympethctic l>Olice ofticen who 'escorted seven o( tbe_qi
to jail. In protest, some fellow
Llpnans launched a "Free the -----------------------------a..-Seven" movement and, per-~~~~-LMW ~--• W~ .... i ._paiamanoryofthcweddinaperty.
. · · A watd Wini• •"rite to the annual drinking spree. Over the yean. howver. the ~ ~• ~•• 1r1u~ lhnnbti111aacl wavi111thf0Ulbtown ~ ~ I ~ ...._: ~~ took OD a different air and the
W••lrehoo,at 6ow .is foeuted on com-. • J.il•t• • Diaur e ~ memcntiaa the end of the tourist ......
lt"sacelebrat.ion wt.ow motivauon
Will ccnaiilly be around i>r yan to come.
• I
OlitOnTheTown
STEAK & BEAFOCXJ CRAZY HORSE
STEAKHOUSE
THE ORIGINAL BARX-
FARMER STEAKHOUSE
\'t"-' Tht') ~ lhe •mitinal Famou•
fur their uoe-an<J •· haJr pound
l'orlt'rhuu't' 'lt'Bk) and featurin11
dr•pl.i} hru1lm1C Proudly "*" rnii:
fur 11i )ean. Mo' 11tg and grov.•m11
"ith Custa Mesa' Ne.w lucallon m
Harbor C'en1er "''"''"open" Off
Wil•1•n hetv.N,n Marshall 's end
F.dv.11rd' Thealer. St-n•ing M-Sat
11 a m lo d11~1nic. Sun !l-dosin11
:! 11111 Harhur Rhd , C'c~ta Mf'~ ..... !f;:;
BOBBY McGEE'S
Our huuk peClahy is_ makin11
t-\ .. r} mt>al a ~~cral 11C'<'11~111n' y,~·11 v.ant a front row Mat for th!'
f,.,ocJ and tun at Bobby MrCH.
"iif'rt' I hf' mf'nU (t'aturtt fe\'Ofllf''
IJlr~ pnml' n b nf bffr au ju • uni\
the finftt •'••lahlf'' fresh fish.
l 'SOA d1u1re Heak:.. lobster. and
n•mb111atwn dmner ... Every entrt'e
mdudh '"en fre h bread, frl'sh
'ei:1:111ble. &nd 1 trrp tu our award·
"inning i;alad har .• and after dm
n~uu can dance and romance an
tht' W!'3t Cobt' most n c11rn11
nrghttlub Por a mg ht on 1he lO.,..,n.
ur an}llme, makt 11 8ptt11I wtth
tht-magic. In Ntv.pon &ach. ;-!NI
F.a,l Coa t H1ichv.·ay. For rP..t'r
\Dllun call f';l41 6i:I t.;iwi
THE CANNERY
This hi111oric -.altrfront landmarlr.
in Ne-..pc;rt'1 C'annf'r} \'tllagt' feii
lures fresh lucal 11ufood and F.a .. 1
ern beef Con,istently ~vod ~r
'ace, open for Lunch. Dinner, Sun -4.
Brunrh and Champagne Harhor
CruiMt. Entert.tinment. nightly
and Sun. arternoon~ Enjov tht'
lounge food gallery-superb flam
r h<••der! 3010 Lafa)tllt 67f>.s1n,_
.
\uuntrv d1n1n1: >A1th ,la"'
Au1htnt1<' "''°"tern dt-t·•,r ft•
1auran1 ilnd '81•M•n fc:atur1n~
pr1mt' nh. ftt"h , .. ,lf, .. .d,. and
lht'1r (am<IU' pan •dUI~ >lt'8k'>
Lunrh ~lun F'rr llinnl'r re~r
'•Iron~ gu11rantl'W I lam IDlf and
h''l' mu-i•· an tht ~alu .. n lher Hd
fo:x1t/Nev.1>41rr f',., -;11r11~ An11
17 141 549 1512
REt:BEN'S OF NEWPORT
This is the original and has been
serving Newport Beach for 25 years.
Their specialty "' seafood and
"leaks. Chefs pe<'1al selections daily
• aod fam<•U!-for" their brOlt!lted
chicken, too'. A beautiful waterfront
view of Newport Rav tnhances the
atmusphere Perfect tor -bus1n~s
l'ntertaining end romanuc dining.
Located Ill 2!'>1 E t'oa.st Hwv .. New-
port. Resen·au1m<> accepted. Phone
6i3· I .'l0.:.
THE REX R t:STAl'RA~T
!..outed on tht" oc:·unfrunt 11.rn~
trom tht . t>Apurt Kf'arh pier. The
flex is tht' Orttn~e \,1<1•1 ·~ mo>I
txclusi\·e seal1icocl n·-111ur~nt \\.tll
knllwn for tre>·h Ha "a1111n
gourmet fi,h <>ell'cl1on" and
ptt1alizang in •'Atl'I ( hannel
1-.land ab11l1•nr. lt'ndPr \'Pal ann
prrme met1I" 1 ht-Ht-' Ht'>taurant
I• thf' cho1Cf' "' l•>t·ol• 1h v.ell S•
\I 1tors. Reup1ent ul tht pre~
lij!lllU' Tra\l'I H11lid11\ a"ard
ra~uaJ •elPl{ant <llllrt' ~unda~
Rrunch. dinnn ('all r>7:. '.!fiAA fur
rt-en ati"n' \· 111et parloni:
AIL LOFT
Sari l.<•fl Rar 6. lonll lt•aturt>--
<>tean """' drnin1e "1th lhr
empha<m< on •~h ~ • ., .. od o~~tt'r
bar. hu l'ntt'rlMnml'nt ·'"l!htl~ in
t he har 11rt-11 Optn fur dinner,
niichtl\' frum ;, pm \\ t'l'kend
huul' tr .. m 111..10 11 m Fabul"u'
Sunda\ Bruni h L•>tall'd al 411(1
P (' H_" in l.a~unn Bf'o1h
TALE O f THE WHALE
~:xpenenc-t' a step b11t k rnw liml'
l" J µldlt' "her!' \uu can dinP at
'uur "" n Lt'bure 1::.nJV) tht ru-
mun• r u( uld :-.:ev.purl v.1th 1 pan·
uram1, ba~ 're" l::xc1le your .. ,._t', '"1th their 1,en..al1onal i.ea·
lt •<tl .md trad111unal fa,·onlltl'
Hr .. ul.taq -.i m ~lttn · Frr .. Lunrh
11 I ~lun Fri . Oanner 4 · 11
~lun. S111. Sat and Sun Brunrh
7 I. O~~tt'r Bar Fri . S11. & Sun
llJlllfUl'l fac1li11e, up to ~ 400
\l.un M • B~lbloa 11:·1 46.1..1
TREES
Nest.led in the fore-st behind the
P ort Theatre on Pacific Coast
Highway in Corona del Mar is
T rees restaurant. Secluded as it ii
on a side street, thOM who have
disco"ered it ha,·e found Orange·
County·s most charming and
unique American cu1s1ne.
S hrouded an a aoft put.el decor.
matching table settings, candles.
fresh nowers and glowin1 fire-
places set the &eene. The intimate
dining rooms. piano lounge and
full bar. ~wround a n.tural atrium
with living trees. The modem
American cuisine is prepared by
creative Chef RUSlell Armstrong.
H is lovely wife. Abbey, ii the host·
ess. T rees menu is a limited but
interetting variety of international
navors with choices from home·
made pasta. fresh grilled fish and
steaks. veal. lamb, Oriental
t hicken and salads to absolutely
exotic desserts. Dress as casual but
dressy.
Rtse1Yat1ons recommended (714 )
6i3·0910-Open seven days a WHk.
Lounge open 5 p.m. t-0 midnight.
440 Heliotrope, Corona del Mar.
I TAU AN
\'l~:"l u:·s
Thi' '"''' Italian lt".d prt-1"''' d frnm thl' lrt',hl'•I 111i:r .. 1h· • l•
11 .. 111i:. nu prt-.t'r' .Ill\"'· '"11 •11-tr
ur I'\• to" lat· l),.n..d "' \ 11 r it
Col.;'nd f1'8 t1I Bruukh n I '1111
\\ urk• lamuu:. fur ha\ IO I! I h.-
lie,1 1'1Lu m Or<1n11 .. ( "'II '' t ••
fht' (·rut Prua Hunt .!7P r -,t
St 1n 1-. .... ta ~le..a :.!~ •1:• I
VILLANOVA
A beautiful bay view crMi.tl lM
romatic sett.inc that haa made lhf'
Ville Nova a ··special lund or
place" fM Oftl ~ yu"' Superb
cuisine from Cenual and Non.h-
em Italy served an Old World
charm. ~teoaive wme list. Om·
ntr nightly. Piano bar. f'uU menu
til 1:00 a..m. 3 131 Wf'~ COB!lt
Hwy., Newpon Beach. fi42-:i880
IVEXICAN
Ml CASA
Their food is like a trip to Mu 1rn'
Ho.pitaJity g06 hand in hand
with their motto, "Mi C-11.s.a "'Su
Casa,'' or my house is yoUT h1•U-'t'
Established since 1972 il°4 no
secttt friends enjo)• d1nfnc ht'rt
Open daily from I I ll m 1 .. r
Lunch. Dinner and <'oclrta i..
Entt'rtaanmenl Wed.·Sun nights
m tht' Burro Room. 291' E. r:1h
St . C<>11ta Mesa. 645· 76~
GR • .\~O Dl :"i:"iER THEATER
lmprp l\·e d1nan1: and pr"
'""111nal prudu1·11un' art' 'urt' '"
;;Ii-LI•< <'lt<'h llmt vou "'" T.h~
t'\l rJ••nlinarv huff et uftef' rna•t
lidr"n ol llt'~I. i:la1t'd h11m "1th .1
fru it 'llUll' l;~·r111a, h1rktn "•th
Jlt'.h hf'• and 1£l111t' and lhl' \lah1
. -1311•.• TD ORANGE COAST ·~ J_!'F~· -~I -...., /. 'A;0 ~ ..... l -~ ~-!.~ !~ /. ~ ~~-~~ ~ . ~ .. ·f:S f ~ q_~ ~~ ~ a,staurant .. ..::t ~ '$~ ~ '3 . "' ~·
MJ~RTEf. INN HPUL Atthu' lrvmr '-2 II Conunen1at S9 ~Sll~ $4 7~-8 9~ Sb ~·SIO~ from Sl Oll .. •
DfJ.~!-&!X. .. , it ...... pon ..... 1461112*
~ ....... S.-af...-..:1
SP"WOllW\
II 7$-$15 II~ Sl ~·SIO~ S4 ~·S10~ *
~ ... 2ff.011s Amf!ncan from $4 11~ from 13 9S Sil 95 from S2 75 . 4.30-7 •
••••"l'UL llll A GlllLL· H..W•1 1 .. Amttkan t6 95-11 2 95 $3115-17 00 IJn __ __. t ... MMI M1·3000· "115 $2 00~00 4-7 . * . Df.f.ANN~ ·-"' ~'7s-sm ~.,. Sl2~·Slll" $4 11~$8~· Sil 75·SH" 4-'30 •
CIR, ·-..... -. .. _ ... ngA!lfOlJSE __ ,,.,..$49 112 ~ $9~-$169~ $39~S995 Hobda)'S 5-7 . •
[J!I ~ ....... 8Mdl17MICM f'rt'nrh from SIO from~~ from Sl5 so •
N\~t~o;r_.....,.. .. ,..h M47"°S h.oh .. n '"'"' s~ "~ fi'umU ~~ 'v.'..t
,_Ill.CM~ c.-...._'*"1QI M<>l\•n A t.,, t arh
& .. ..,.. .... t~\'1:; !l . •
.. fll~l!°t!\!."., ·~RILL 5f.~rud $4 9S SH 9S ~OS SH9S ~~,..
-~,I ~'\~!!.!...., llofl~ \fol? ...... ,. .... " s~ !I~ S11 11:1 s. ~· "> ~ .SI 'I 1 .... ~~ * ,
-... • 1119' Na w t:Sft:t ~~~ from StOt!I $4 95-$9~ J.0\ StOSO «J0.7:00 * .
:Jiii ...,., -----....... ... . I,
~11!.!~Y-, ,;..,~T Fr.-b • ' ~·· ....... ~S.u•d•> uo .. ;;00 • _, .• ~'··cf 114 l:\ . .
~ . -
\1 •t .... t nrd th .t p t"J "id flt ..... 1 11 t
I ~ , , r lt·t1 J•, uu dnd 'rt-am .... t
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P l.J\ • n d11' t:r;nd llinnt•
11 , t'•"' -ti ,, ... d v.1th1n tn;· t,rt1nr1
II 1, 1 \1 .• r..-rr .. 1 I H. 1 .. 1 \\ '" . '
11.\RU.~l I~
D l ~~t.f< TH l::ATf.R
~ ·\, r\ .... r.,mrr \..:t r• tl't° t'Xpr-c t .. d ,,
1 .. •r· ,,,.,I lo\.., .s , .. 1 ... hr1h I ht
1 ht •', .. •·I It, .... r Ht1pt lt•U .. nu·"I ..
"' • h I• I' pr -du.', .. ,,. Ill t1n t-ll'~tlnl
1lr.11 .. .,• t:Jt 1 ht: ... , rumpt , •• , ..
It .: It~• f1, ,.1 !r.. ~ ,, ... , t1o1.tr •n
I~ t t '' n \..c-1 1:1 ! 1 .. h d1 ... ~t""'
''J_'l.U. ....al.all .... · t.·-t",J.h}t" ... ctnd .. I
l • It .... t f'... t "•t ""'l,1, t11H1 ........ 1
1 :•1rh 1~ l ,,tt"' .., "·1"t''' .r t'ii:: ..
,t .. •, .. lh• t .,,flr ., ft1rrdP , ..
·'' 11 •• ~,.. : ·r ,, .. \ 1 11 ri1n11\~ 1 ht' Ii ' , ! LJ• iit--\4 r.$l~d i1r \ t•,.
'•I r,. !ll"" ""'"' ~ •h(" -l
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J ~H tiJr l __.u • • ... , ,. . .ttto..! "'' \
11 .• r' r ', ·,, \· 1 • 11
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ONE OF A Kl\I:>
Gl~o·~ o~ THE HILL
Alm•"' , 1 •• ' \I,-.• 11 1n ,,~
'h•rt !:h1,1 .. U\1°rm•r t· .. n 1-r'
f ........ ,. t Jr l•J h H H:r .. t.1 '' •n•
t1•1t , .. , .. ,.t,1rdn' t""'"~ r 1r h\ 1
I , • .. ' I 1.1 "·" .. ' .. n I h .. u2 r I h.-\
.. , f\t rll .. •ll\ itdi.cUl .tt'Ol"' tht \ i j ...
11lh r " lur,:t \.Jftt"t\ .d .ith~r 1lt>rn ..
11n 1Lt 1r nun1 ~n•·\A f' 1•r
H .. n, .. 1 l·•~i .. nd irwnd ' ... ,
\ ~ I ( t If ai "' I f'lt ' I rt"' t \ tf • !
Olt I\ i ~ • h .. m phJ"I' If ~ iol o I
~uut ~· , .. 1 11Jl•lt" µr, r ... • 1• .. : t11
h. H ""~ •nlrr,.. .. r na.: n"·'~"n .. ._.,
: '~ p tn t•1d h\f" rfllt>rtltlnm.-n·
\1itn 1hr 1 '"'.i' tr •m ~ \11 pm
''1lurd,n \\. .... ,,ndrt\ hrt-a\..rn ... 1
rr .. m 1.1m 1 ,.J·~d.,,~,~F 1-tn
~lrt·• \ •'"'"'~•\It .... -:t t .11J t1\n 1-·.n
ti r r, .. t 'f\d\h ""' d,rrcth•n .. 'r
"'h.th '' r "'
-~NTS
~ ~ ~ !o.I °" ~ $' Ci~-~ ~ ~~ 4'r 0 ~~ ~ ~ ~ ~$ ~· ~· r.."' '4f ' "4,1 -Q. ..
• • 10~ • .
• •
• up \ti
lio.•l
• uplO * 75
* *
•
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• t.:\.,TO •
~ •
-
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..
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• -
• .... IL STAllll --··---.o·---:=-•==·
Deily Piiot Oatebook/ Friday. September 2. 1918 ·.
LOOSE ENDS ~· --10 C ..... -°" -l a OlfllMCI The AHi Chuckffboo
MCA .......
c:.,....... 6537 Tilp9ngl ~ 8llld '!::: ...... -... C1nt1119 tl035 E "3rd SI
c..11-. . • t83S Newpott 8llld cw--6927 M-...,,,,.
............ ... ,.,. ... ,.,. .... ...... .,..., .............. "' ............ .........,
La v••• .
........ Jllf .,.....
'°'""' Adlim9,,,,. ...... 17531C.... SI ....... • .,. ............ -c.11119
i20t2Vtaury .. ---~ • -N 1-1 ,_ __, ,
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