Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-21 - Orange Coast Pilot,.. C.plauano Valley 27. Corona del Mar 7 Coata Mna 0, Loa Alamitos O Tuatln 21, ltriile 7 w Unlvenlty 21, L~ Billa O . o.., .......... .., ....... c... Pat llcQratJa c••> and Sean Tarner dra& C.platrano Valley m,Ja'• 0.'fid ~ford down after e rambled for , ...... I . Chil porno law creates problems New l~slatlon forced pedophiles underground BJ" IU<JlAllD T. PIENC?IAK . ..J mcnt etrort more daffiadL Commcrdal smut dcalcn c»-<ided they dida"l need die mt nd 11apped lina kiddie ~ de hard-c.ore pcdc). let .1'.111 sank deeper uno · wJ,at ~ ... uwa1.u l:UIT 110101 f-RIOAY '~~ PlEMBER L1 l'ifq ORANGE COUN TY C ALIFOR NIA 25 CENTS You'll find the a..at auto buya along the Orange Coaat In toctey'a Auto Piiot -PegeC1 Upper Bay cleanup gets nod Sediment panel gives city green light to hire engineers for dredging project By KA.RENE. KLEIN Of .. .,.., ........ 1be first step toward removal of thousands of cubic ~s of silt from the ecoloaically sensitive U ppcr New- pon Bay was approved Thursday by a Ferraro joint committee on sediment control ID the bay. At a meetin1 of the Newport Bay Sediment Control Eiecutive Com- mittee, approval was panted for the city of Newport Beach to seek an enpneerina firm to dredge silt from the far reaches of the Upper Bay. A $3. 7 million budget for dredgj~ a second portion of the Upper Bay, below the site of an old saltworks dike, was approved at lhe meeting. The sediment control committee is composed of otlicials from ~ Coun- !)' of Ora;!\~. the Irvine Co., the Department of Fish and Game and the cities of Irvine, Newport Beach ind Tustin. AftC! the '!lee~ meµJben of the committee, including Jack Patnell, Ftsh and Game ~ircctor ind As- semblywoman Marian Betge5on, R- Newport Beach, toured the be&: San Joaquin Manh and San · Creek, a freshwater stream that feeds the bay. Don Simpson, a city consultant on the project, said that the engineering bid for the drcdlina job woUJ4 probably be awarded~ mid-Nova. bcr. The ectUil drcdsin& procal would beain either iD November or by M~h I, dependi!_lJ OD the rainy sea.son this winter, Sampson aid In the noi1herty end of the u~ Bay. near the intersection of Janli bor'CC Road and Eastblufl' i!j. between 1.S0,000 aod 800,000 (Pleue ... tJPPSa/ -~------------in oc, Cops tie 4 to r-efund A Costa Mesa shutterbug has snappe4 hie way to HawaJI./ A3 · Callforilla Marvin Gay Sr., accused of k11Nog alnger eon, may. oet oft Wlthlllt~lng a day In Jal[f'4: -· ·GM, au'iOWorkers reach tentative contract agree- ment./A7 World Death toll at Beirut em- bassy annex reduced to 'about a dozen.' I A1 'People Sophia Loren and Brigitte Bardot -sex sirens of the '60s-tell what It's like to turn 50./87 Sports . Costa Mesa High'• foot.: ball team earns a moral victory with a 0-0 tie with Los Alamitos./81 Entertainment Julio Iglesias, world am- bassador of song, Is com- ing to the Pacific Amphitheatre for three nlghts./Weekender Basin ea A Costa Mesa firm an- nounces plans for Santa Ana's largest hotel de- yetopment./85 INDEX . Auto Piiot Bridge Butletln Board 8ualneM Cafffomla Newa Clalllfled Comtea croawotd Death Notleee Help Yourtelf HorQICOPe Ann Lenderl M"'uel Funda NMIOnllNewl Opinion ~ PubMc Notleel AelWurlrttl =Ml{Uta T~ ,......,.. WMtMt WOftdNewl. c1-a 810 A3 B5 A4 C.-7 810 C7 C3 88 ce ea 85 A4 A8 87 A3 C3'"4 Weekeoder 81 ... ee ea WMkerider A2 A4 pledges - victory · Hundreds greet Dem VP candidate, others picket 8)' JEFF ADLER Oftfle.., ......... Democratic vi~·1presidentlaJ can- didate Geraldine Ferraro tbil mom- in1 wound up two days of campaian- ina in Oranae County -the dead center of Reapn Country -vowing the Mondale-Ferraro ucket would defY the pollsters and win California on election day. In her last of three local ppear- ances before enthusiastic trowds. Ferraro broke from her Pi'Cparcd remarks and asked about "'° blue-collar wortcen ptbercd at Santa Ana union hall whether she was right in strcssina the war and peace wue as the most important in the campaign. The answer came back, a resouod- ina chorus of "you're right; you're ri&ht" from the audience, most dresSed in T-shirts, jeans and basieball caftit Ferraro momentarily stumbled when she bcPn her 10.minute ad- dress, mistakenly belicvina she was in Los Angeles after being introduced by Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley. After comparina. ~pie "in this city of Los Anseles to urban resi- dents elsewhere in the country, Fer- raro quickly recovered and noted that she was "dcliJhted to be in Santa Ana." Ferraro told her audience. full of blacks and Hispanics, that she and presidential candidate Walter MQn- dale opposed the Simpson-Mazzoli immiaration bill riow before Con· pas because .. it invites discrimioa· lion apinst Hispanic-Americans.'' She said immigration reform is necessary but it must be ac- complished "fairly." The fairness theme has been a recurrent one in the Mondale-Ferraro campaign. Tumina to the war and peace i.>sue, f erraro said th Democratic ticket is committed to obtainina a verifiable bilateral nuclear weapons freeze with-· · the Soviet Union. "We need a leader , to stand up to the Soviet Union. but Oeralcllne Ferraro add.re Hee UC Irrine • (Pl .... Mel'ERRARO/A.2) UDl•etaltr• Club Tb.nday da.rl.DC her City dwellers fear attacks ·by coyotes on children, pets . ROBERT Police have killed slX redators fn past two weeks ...coYO /A21 r.ipoff "l;'hree-year scam involved $250,000 F In pllf er:Cd goods : BJ TONY SAAVEDllA ! ., .. cwr,......,. d Two men and two women in Costa Mesa this 1'CCk are · to be core membeh .of lbe "~ Lcuvan sa.. .. a rini of allcpd addicu that ls bcl.icvcd to ba ' pilferred u estimated $250,000 ~ ~ from ~ dep9rtmcot· ~ since l 981, POiice pld. • For three yctrs the lf'Oup * ~ied a complex team for obtaiDi tD&casb refunds OD stolen, alterina receipu and~ depar\lnent stol'e offi: sai Jbey've alsO connected the poup to- otbcr sbopliftina cases over the :l five~ F.ullerton Detective Jae ~ •'ho is bcadiQI Ille M &RIC CoUAty U:ivestiption. said P'OllP WU apParcnUy dubbed m. (Pleue11eeQOAllTBT/~. f Dangerous ; mosquitoes nearUCI J . • JI d • ~ n b s n • fj f\ a c c a f n n a Ii n c h d > > 1· fl • 4 I l c I d s c ' c r r a l t • f J ra ti 0 • \ ¥ tJ .o a c b ft 1 F 11 b 'ii 1 fl d c ft l J1 A ti p roperty tax bills going out· Irvine Co. hit.byhuge boost &yrJ FF ADL R Oll!r e&d '1 1Thc bad news for Ora c County ' pert)' owners into the maal ,.i~y. .;p?at's when the first of about '~.000 propeny tax bill . will bt pbstmarked, county Ta Collector- • T.rcasurtr Robert Citron nnounced ursday. ~· Citron satd hi$ office expect to j:QJ_1tct more than $906 ma Ilion for the ~'2Cl.) separate agencies that rec:cive p~ perty tait shares. The 1984r8S l 909$0lidated tax biU repttSents a 12 <~nt inc~se over 1983-84. , • .r. L ·"" Tr"""" ! CONTINUED s TORIES ------- - - 1 he county's t &ax ycr, the lrvanc Co,. will be billed for about $46 million 1n propeny taxes up from the S 17.8 million the giant 1 ndhoJclin company paid la t ~r. Citron id. However the Irvine Co. ha ap. pealed us 1984-85 a sment. which was ~valued af\er the company was $Old tochahman oflheboard DOnald B~n. Citron id tbit if the Irvine Co.'s ru ment i no1 taken into ac· count, the total 1984-.SS tax bill has incrcued by_~J!ly 8.S percent. · Also, the l906 nulli"on the county cxpccu to collect docs not include t:FER RARO c ·AMPAIGNS ••• •1.FromAl With the wisdom to sit down and n~ouatc." she said. r: Ferraro also said that if eleclcd, Mondale would halt the covert war th~ U.S. 1s waging 1$llinst Nicarauga, which she charactenzcd as being not tdo secret, probably illcgaJ and "ocr- tainly not suppQrted by the American pie." Ferraro. who was accompanied by husband John Zacc,aro. spoke be· neath a banner proclaiming "Wel- come to Santa Ana." Amid the sea of blue and red Mondalc-Fem\ro signs, one sif> asked, "How do you spell rebef?' The answer "ReaGONE" delighted Mayor Bradley who Polllt· ed tt out for all to sec. Ferraro was preceded to the podium by Mondale's son, Willilam, who characterized the Reapn re- efcction efl'ort as a "happy talk campaign.'' He accused the president of operatmg in a "question-free z.onc." Ferraro began her Orange County caGlpalgn swing by_ addressing. an crowd of about 350 mostly white upporters who paid $50 each to proclaimina ••Catholi~ for Ferraro" while others hoisted homemade signs that carried slogans such as "'Ferraro. NOW and for the Future" or :·orange County Loves Fntz and Gerry.'' An equally v oup of anti· abortion dcmonstrato , numbering about 1 SO, picketed Fe · n what must now be a familiar siJbt the Democratic nominee. AntJ-abom pickets have dogged Ferraro's cam- paign. trail at vinually every appear- ance in recent weeks. Besides signs that carried pr. o-life slogans, the prote ters chanted "Shame on Ferraro." The two aroups were kept separated by UCl campus pohoc officers. In her remarks, Ferraro touched on the campaign themes she has stressed this week as she criss-crossed the country in search of votes. She called the 1984 election a referendum on Ronald Reagan, war and peace, the environment. the Supreme Court. education, the EquaJ Rights Amendment and bud&et defi· cits. . .. atlend a reception at the UC Irvine "I don't believe the pollsters and qJ.rn~s Thursday. ~c New York _ _pundits," felTll'O said to cheers from QO~woman prom1 to sen the assembled throng. "We're going RonaJd Reagan. back ~o the rancb" to win C..Lifornia and we're going to ov. 6, a, promise national Pollsters bnng1thomcwithuswhen we win the say Ferraro may not be ableto keep. _ White House Nov. 6 ... ·~For e~mple, Pollster Mervin D. . . FieJd said Thursday that President On the war and peace issue, whaeh 'Reagan is running ahead of Walter she h~s emphasized lately in ~er Mondale by an electoral vote of 484 campatg.n appearances, Ferraro said. i to 7.) ~ "We live in a dangerous world. We Besides the ~rtisan crowd msidc UCl's University Oub, several hun- dred supporters gathered outside the haTI to greet the first woman ever named by a major political party to the national ticket. ··we're h.e~o let Ge")' Ferraro know that () nge County as not the eonscrvat1ve bastion that Ronald Reagan bell vcs, •• said Tim Qrpcntcr, of the Alliance for Survival, who helped organize the . qioicome. ' Many suppQrtcrs earned pro- fessionally printed yellow signs need a president who believes more in the human race and less in the arms race." Turnmg to the env1ronmc1\l, Fer- raro called for the clean up of toxic. waste dumps and chided Reagan, suuestina he ••stop takina polluters to lunch and start taking them to court." Ferraro also reminded her au- dience that 1t is the president who makes appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court. "We need a Supreme Court to make sure govern men I stays out of our homes, out of our churches and out of our synagogues." The Democratic candidate also said if' tax hikes or budget cuts are more than $22.S nullion ln sup- plemental tnxcs btll an June to rerum propcny owners. scoond !lupplcsqtntal taA bill ".Vl.11 be pt ilcd an November, Citron also ad. The fin.t installrnenl of the prop- erty tax is due .no later th11n Dec. IO, the county tax collector Poi111ed out. Citron said he txeett to collect about $7 millioh wiUun the lirtit Weck af\tr the bills arrive. "On Monday morning a i u ual, we expect a tineup of peq~waiting to pay taxes," he said. needed to control runaway bud t deficit • they should~ applied "fair- ly." Amona those attending the evening reception, where women out- numbered men, were former Cali- fornia Gov. Edm d Brown Jr., Lt. Gov. Leo hy, Rep. JcrT)' Patterson, r en Grove, Irvine Counetlman A&J1ln, Laguna nel!C&-1.,j~cilman Robert Gentry and county Democratic Chairman Bruce Sumner. who along with Pat· tcrson mtroduccd Femro. California Attorney General John Van d~ Kamp, Santa Ana Vice Mayor Dan Grisel, Sen. Diane Watson, D· Los Angeles and state campaign Co- Cbairman Art Torres attended the Santa Ana event. Patterson said Ferraro's presence in Orange County was "charging up and electrifying' local Democrats who arc outnumbered by Re- publicans in the conservative-voting county. "h 's exciting~ to sec so many women here. Shc"s opened up the system," Gentry said. · Denny Friedenrich, another sup- porter, said "~pie arc genuinely excited about berngf\el'e: You can fc~l the elcctricty." · After delivering her remarks, Fer- -raro visited briefly with supporters outside the hall, shaking hands with those who could reach her. Then, she was whisked away to a private $ J ,()()()..a-plate fund raiser at the Ncw- Port Beach hornc of Democratic activist Howard Siegel: where cam- paif\ aides said they expected to raise aoout SI 00.000 for the campaign. Ferraro spent the ni&ht at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. Followmg her final county campaign appcaranoc this morrung, Ferraro returned to New York. Ferraro's visit to Orange County was the first by either member of the Democratic ticket sinoc the national campaign moved into high gc r . President Reagan chose Mile Square Parle in Fountain VaUey for bis aiant Labor Day ca~paign raUy. ::COYOTES SCARE COAST RESIDENTS ••. 1 FromAl ~ . ' Neighbor Jim Bnnk said be be· They were here first and we Oliver said Mother Nature inter- lievcs two kittens have been dragged probably messed them up from their cedes when people try to kill off ft. -away by coyotes from his house next territory, but I don't want them to eat coyotes. "The coyote bitches come door to the Bradys. all our pets," she declared. into heat earliCT and have pups at an "A family with a baby lives down Some people in the nei'1tborbood earlier age and have more pups to a the street. We've told them to be wamedthcymighttakeact1onintheir litter." Oliver said he bebcvcs ex- -careful," said Brink, a fraud in-own bands if the county doesn't act. tcnnination etTons will result in more veat1~tor for the Orange County The extreme measures. they hinted., and more coyotes. Distnct Attorney's office. included shooting the animals or · . . · · Bnnk said he can bear the coyotes lacina meat with broken a.Lass and He satd only .two coyote bites ha~e · hr · h 'Id I'. th been recorded m the last 25 years m , tnight, particularly when pohcc and t owing 1t into t e W1 area 1or e Orattge County while there are about fire sirens sound. "I Jc.ind of hke the coyotes. 4,000 d<>& bits each year. sound out there," he said. "It's better · But Joe Oliver, the county's chief "Last weekend, rattlesnakes bit two than screcchmg brakes. animal control officer says that "My daughter Stacey saw two shootin'5 or traps or other forms of people in the county. But there hasn't -coyotes (about as big as medium-crad1cauon probably will be unsuc-bccnabigclamortogooutandround sized German shepherds) in the field ccssful. up rattlesnakes." recently. The} were so skinny that .. The coyote has been on this earth Ohver wd animal control officers their bones could bellainly seen and for cons and be will be here after the respand to coyote sijhtinas when they she asked 1f we coul go feed them. I Last man has d1sappcatcd," Oliver pose an immediate threat to people's told her no way:· said pets and property. But the s1ghungs Brady. who locks up her two "He is adaptable and to~gh. He havctobepQsitiveandthcrebastobe Boston bull terriers Bonnie and utilizes every skill, of which he has a reasonable chance of success of .. Queenie along with her survivinacats great magnitude, to find food sou roes. trapping the creatures while not Buzz and Clancy at night, said she has And he recognizes tasty tidbits like endangcnng young children or pets ~me peeved at Orange County small dogs and cats that run throuah before action can take place. ~imal Control peofle for what she his habitat." He said be doesn't believe there's . flauncd was a lack o response. "Maybe the bot~ weather has been a Positive identification 1n case "4 "They (the coyotes) have been m diminrshcd his food sources and Jte's of the alJeged attack on pets on he field ever since my husband comina to lower areas to hunt. "But Harwich Lane in Huntington Beach. (lames) and I moved here five years we're con tantJy building in their ··Mrs. Brady's cat could have been '..a.so. I've looked at them through my area. Whf should we be surprised to eaten by a German shepherd or run >-binoculars. see tl\em . ' over by a Mack truck.·· --ra:, • WE'RE LISTENING Just Call What do you like about tbe DaJJy Pilot? Wbat don't you llke? Call tbt number at left and your meanie will be recorded, truscrlbed and dellvered to Ute appropriate ed.ltor. Tb same U-boiar an1•erl11 service may bt as~ to record ltUer1 to tbe editor OD any topic. Coatr1b11tora to ..,r Letters column mast Include tbtlr name aad klepbooe a.mber for nrtfkatJOll. No clrcoJatJon uJI , pJtaae. , 642-6086 TtlJ • •bat'• o your mlllcl. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Put)h her Roeemery Churchman Controller StepMn F. Caraio Pro uchon Mon ger • Donald L. WUll.m• Circulation Man g r 1 Clrcu-.uon 7i14/M2""'"3 Cla111fled advertlttng 714/6'2-5871 All other department• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 3JOW 'I ~....._CA "' ~ , CclUI VOL. 77, NO. 285 Sunny skies and cool breezes • f1 ... " H eo 11 11 Coaatal n G2 '" GO ... .. .. n 12 ., eo Ok u u OmaN " H °"'* . .. .. hllftOprloOt• 1CM to ~ " 11 ~ 10& :J :::::r .... .. n 41 ~()r n u ltr~ " 61 =City a M fl A n 41 AkM'lOM .. .. .. ....,..,. u ltl It Pet• T '""'9 ... 10 .. w u •C11r 7t Ndonli w~ '*""• l'fOM U$ °'°' OI C-o hr\Mlonlo ... .. Tides • TOOAY ~low • 1:08 P.lll ~high ~~pm UT\lflOAY 2!01a111. •::st.," l:t.4pm f.Up m Sllr1 Ml• IOdey al e.11 pm, ,._ latutday tt • 4 1 a m. Ind Mlt 419 111 et UOpm MOOll 1tt1 lod-at 6 CM p 111 ,._ llMOt)' at ~ M a "' 81M1 wt. eo-el 145 PJI\ 11 71 u n 11 • h 71 .... ... 18 71 .. 79 .. ll 11 62 FalrOMkl 47 'WOo ,. ,,.,...,.. ... • Otancl ""*" 41 OIMIF.ill .. H.nford• 12 H9lent 67 Honolulu 53 Hout1on 50 lndlanapolte 41 JldltOn.Mt 6& JfdtlOlh'llle .. Jun-.1 41 K.,_Clty 5t l.uVaoaa 41 lltlle Rodi .. ., 112 Sall OllQO ., n .. .. 17 II ... ,,.,,.,.. IO 11 'Pl 4$ S... Julr\.P "-.. ... JI •• St lie...,. 16 ll n 41 S.ttll .. .. M S3 siw::. 11 u 72 41 ~ 1111 .. ... to 71 SpOll ..... IO .ai eo .. ~ 19 ., It .. TQ9ella 91 10 It se Tuc:itOn 14 to 11 I& TUIM 13 ., 66 4L w~ .. 5' 17 61 Wlllll!ta IO 61 .. 12 .,......,,. 12 N w~Oot 12 lie es .. IO 50 n 61 82 61 · SuRF ff £PORT Temperatures 87 55 ·-.. Le 1.0CAnotf• omcno. Albany es 63 Eztended Hlltttlngton 8-:11 poor AlbuquerQ ... es 5e ,.,_ Jetty. Hawpor1 :::-.: Anlenlo IS 55 40tll 8'r•. Hawpor1 Attenta a3 5t Some -lei low dOuOI ~ ll>d t2fld 8t1-. Hawpor1 llllr100f Atlantic: City 71 16 rnoftllnf llOur• 01'-IM ...., • Ill 9elbOllW .... Awtlrl 80 M poor Beltlm«• 14 t1 tfle7Qa-lhe~~-to ~~ ...., IMtmlngham 13 55 die low 10s Inland va'9)'1 -l'lllCI poor eo.~o low 708 w ... ~ u.12 Saddlebackdean 'drunk' at time of ex-w·ife's murder By STEVE MARBLE Of IM D.., Net ltalf An Orange County college ad min· istrator was drunk when he allegedly broke into his former wife's El Toro horn~ armed himself and then killed her when she arrived, the man's attorney said. "There's no doubt he was qutte intoxicated," said Ron Brower, a lawyer . representing Donald EmiJ Dawwn, 45, an assistant dean at Saddlcback Community College rn Mis ion VieJO and a foriner· police- man. Dawson was arrested Sunday morning outside his ex-wife's Toledo Way home. Sheriffs deputies said he was tand1ng near his wife's body when officers arrived. He gave himself up without resistance. A memonal service for Dona May ·Dawson, 46. a longtime nursing instructor at Saddlcback College, was to be held today on the campus. A scholarship fund has been established by the colfege for Mrs. Dawson's 17- year-old daughter. Dawson allegedly broke into his former wife's home early Sunday and waHed for her return, according to Chief As~t District Attorney James Enright. He did not say where she had been. The ass.istant college dean was armed with two guns, several boxes of ammunition, a set of handcuffs and ro~. Enright said. He saicfit ippears Dawson fired both guns. Mrs Dawson was hit b~ a ix bullets and died at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo shortly afterward. a coronor's deputy stated. Brower said a sobriety test given to Dawson two hours af\cr his' arrest indicated he bad a blood..a.Jcohol content ofO. l 0-the level at which a motonst is presumed drunk. The attorney speculated that be· cause of the delay in administering the test, his client probably had a much higher alcohol level at the time of the slaying. Dawson could face the death penalty in the shooting because of the special circumstanoc oflying in wait. Enright said. The prosecutor said there ap~ to be ample evidenoc that Dawson intended to kill b1S ex- wifc. ~ Brower said the couple bad. a "tumultuous" relationship. The two divorced in 1982 but bc<:ause both were employed at the same colleae campus, their paths did cross. reports indicate. . "There were a lot of p roblems over the years and substantial pressure for a long time," said Brower, who described Dawson u being deswn· dent and deprcs~ during an initial Jatlhousc meeting. Dawson was a Polioc reserve in Santa Ana until earliCT this year and previously had been employed as a policeman in Long Beach and was an Orange County Sheriff's deputy for several months. MOSQUITOES FOUND NEAR UCI ••• From Al Gilbert Challet, manager of the Orange County Vector Control Dis- trict ·•eut people really don't have anything to worry about." Vector Control is the county agen- cy charged with controlling mos- quitoes, flies and rats that have the pQtenttal of spreading disease. · Challct said the jllncsses that may be c;arried by mosquitoes breeding in the San Joaquin Marsh wildlife preserve arc St. Louis encephalitis, which affects people, and western equine encephalitis, which can affect people and horses. · Challet said the viruses can be fatal . to 20 percent ofits victtms, those who have weaker ~istancc -u!iually childttn and the elderly. "But a normal person between say, t 8 and SS. who is in good health would have no problem at all," Challet said. He also pointed out that no human cases ofth1s virus have been reported 1n California over the past five years, an~ said no fataJ California cases have been rei>orted in at least 10 years . Cballet said the mosquitoes carry- ing the viruses are found more frequently aJong the Colorado RivCT, and said a person taking an outing on the river would be more likely to contract the viruses than someone staying in Orange County . Ev1denoc of the eooephalitis vi- ruses was discovered in chickens kept UPPER BAY CLEANUP OK'D •.• From Al )'ards Qf silt would be removed in the first drcdsing phase, Simpson said. Carl Wilcox of Fish and Game said the Upper Bay should be 13 feet deep at hi&h tide when the dredging is comple-ted. The dredging will also cnlarie the water-<:ovcrcd area in th~ upper pon1on of the bay. excavatina several yards of barren. salty eanh that now nngs the udal pond. Dredgma spoil~ and silt that is removed from the first phase of the pro~ectwill be deposited on the Irvin• Co. s property cast of Jamboree Road, according to Tom Nielsen. lrvme Co. president. He said ·most of the silt dredged from the Unit l proJCCt wiU be added to the property, which the company refers to as Site A. Silt drcd&ed from Phase II will most likely be piped out to the harbor and transponed from there on barges where it can bcdumpcdatsea, Wilcox S<tld. The aim of the dredging project is to preserve the nature of the 752~acre Cj:Oloaical area that makes up mo t of the Upper Bar.. Wilco.it said. B«:ause of extensive' 1ltation that cloucd the bay during the storms of the wrntcr of 1982-83. he said. vc talion is en- cr°"ching on the mudflats and prcvcntina the free flow of water in caged near the manh to serve as "sentinels." A chicken ..f!lttten by the discase-carryina mosquitoes produces anti-bodies. The disease ts not fatal to chickens. In humans, however, symptoms re .. semble those of influenza, incJudina risina temperatures and bead and muscle aches. For victims already an poor health, 1hc viruses can cause permanent brain damage or death. Emphasizing that there is little immediate hazard, Challet said v~ tor Control has intensified its efforts to control the mosquito l)<>pulation in the lrvinc marsll area. He said an aerosol spray is used to kill adult female mosquitoes, which are rcspon· sibl~ for spreading the viruses. the area. The salt marsh vegetation chanp tbe_ environment in the Upper Bay, which 1s home to some 30.000 migratory birdst water fowl and gulls, he said. The bards suffer when the mudflats, a habitat increasin&ly rare along the California coast, disappear. "Jn another two or throe yean th area would be completely tocked in with veaetation if nothina is done, .. Wilcox said. Nc~rt Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart said she remcmbetcd the Upper Bay m the l 9S0s, when it wu lartei enough and deep cnoup to permi1 water lciing and rccTCat1onal boatil\I into its far reaches. QUA~TET LINKED TO SCAM ••• From Al f The suspen were anatcd ~ they took a foracd receipt to a J. Penney store 1n Costa Mesa and tn to refund two tolcn dresacs for S 182, Pctrunc\11 10 the group 11 kno for a com(>lcx S<"lm in which cxpcn ive item is nolen and computcr~oded taaisaltercd to ab a lower price. That ta& as then put on maJlcr ttcm, uch a 1 pair ohoc Series n stress to start Monday Dr. Chris SChrin r, 11ccnsed m~, famtly and. child counselor, will bold an ciaht·ICSlion scncs of workshops on 1trtsa manaacmen1 ataniQ& Monday. The 'ons wiU mtel each Monday from 7!30 to 10 p.m . tbrou&b Nov. 19, with the exceptk>n of Oct. 8. The worbbo.Pt will be held at the Ora~ Coast Usuwian Unive1111lst Church; l2S9 Victoria St., Costa Mesa. For enrollmein dnail • call 64S.SS97. . Lecture on 1>1mdneu met Ruth Dunn, student 'and volunteer at Braille lnititute's Ora~ County 9>mmunily CCnter, will Jpeak _.._ _ _.....to iflklenu of·Rqem Point Retirement Home;-19191 Harvatd Ave., Irvine, on Tuesday, Sept. 25, at 10:301.m. Dunn, who is lcplly blind, will •,PC.!k on her experiences with blindness and the KTVioes offered to the bbnd ofall qes by the Braille Institute. PrOarams. offered without charJc, are funded by sifts, donations and bc:Quesu. • Cdll Library to celebrate Friends ofNewpon Beach hblic Library invites the community to the 25th tnnivcrsaty of the Corona del Mar Branch Library, '420 Mari&old Ave., on TucsdayiSept. 2S. A tea ia planned from 2 to 4 p.m. in the adu t readina section of the libr!rf: Special guests will be the chatter memberi of the Fnends. former library trustees, and memben of the city council. Free lecture .chedUlecl Neysa .\Vhiteman, M.D., will discuss Premenstrual ~yndrome on Tuesday, Sept. 25, from 7 to 9 p.m., at the Deerfield Parle Community C.enter, Irvine. This free lecture is co-sponsored by St. Joseph Hospital of Otiaae and the City of Irvine's Community SCrvioes Depanment. Reservations are required by calina 66().,381'4. Ch•mber .checlaleta meeting• Tlie aut aeneral meeting of the Corona del Mar Clamber of Commerce wilJ be Tuesday. Sept 25, at 7:30 aim. at Sherman Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. ~ Continental Breakfast will be served and Tom Tolman 'Of the Newport Belch Police DCpanment Will present a proara.m on "Shoplif\in~" The Mcichanll' Mixer for mber will be held ~uClday, Sept. 2S, fiom S:30 to 7: p.m. at the Oasis, comer of Marguerite and Fifth, Corona del Mar. Judy O'Shauabnessy, recreation supervisor for the City of Newport Beach, will be in charge. lnfertlllty lecture .chectalecl Michelle Beck Balke .. marriqc and family therapist spetjalizing in infertility and adoption counscliba. wiU lecture on "The Emotional Effects of Infertility" .on Tucsdar, SCi)L 2S, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at UC lrvme Medica Center, Room 2114, Library Bldg. 22, in Orange. The free lecture, .. ItftAll Worth It?" will cover the 20 question most asked by infertility patients. For reser- vations, call 779'-2010. · Lima Bean Fe.t Sunday The Fountain Valley Historical SOciety is sponsoring its annual Lima Bean Fest on Sunday, Sept. 23 at the city's Mile Square Park Recmation Center, Brookhurst Street at Heil A venue. The event, which beiins at noon. is a major fund-raiser for the society. The main course f catures lima beans.; which were widely srown in the area before it was developed. The dinner ts lima beans cooked with ham, com bread, colc slaw and peach cobbler. Soft drinks and beer will be available. Tickets arc SS for adults, $3.SO for children, age 12 or younicr. Tickeu are available from members of the historical society and the Fountain Valley Firemen•s Association. Women~• worbhop .checluled Thousands ex cted for Oct. 4 event at museums, restaurants IJ LUlEN E . KLEIN °' ... ._ ......... A umquc bltnd ofbusiness, ,ovrmmcnt and the ans )J due for ns 'Keond annual airina next month an lhc fonn of the "N~n Salute to :the ~rts ... . e Oct. 4 aalute, • combinatiOn an ow, concert and tJ pen), was the brainchild of ~t l'.Genc SamJ>1Qn and Novell Hendricbon, N~ Beaeh Caty Ans comm1141oncrs. last year. Sampson. who is this ~· ans com· 1SS1on chairman and prtsidei;it of the <ml'\JC Coul)ty Ans Alltancc, sald the idea behind the satuic was a brand hew one. .. When we went into n, we had no idea what wc>Wd happen. Then 4,000 1?'°.Ple .showed up -it was pretty excuina. The cooperation between arts and ilhC pnvate sector, long a goal of ans com· missions and museum boards, has been modeled by N~n·s procram, Sampson said. · .. We started asking for cooperation from all the bia local corporations and we didn•t set any turndowns last year," SamPl()n said. The ~.member stecrina oomm1ttce formed last year is ••stiJt aoina strona" this Mesa shutterbug · snaps his way to Hawaiian trip BJ TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. ~,.. ... Q ick. .. •1 think that I ah.all never aee .... . Amateur photographer Ron IUplan of Costa Mesa prnses the shutter releue on bis camera and nabs two rou.Ddtrip tickeu to Hawaii IS arand prize winner in a pboto ·o.1r,...,......,,....._ • ..._ contest spon10red by ·the California Angels. • LJDDe Schuette bun't titled her tree-llke entry In the .. Tubular Art" ahlbltlon at~ Beach lluemn of Art. More than 7& mantna tuba tra!Uiformed by Callfonlla artlni will be auctioned by the mueam'•· Janlor Council at 7 p.m. Smlday to benefit yoatll art educational PfOtl'&IU· Click, apin. Kaplan wins a 35mm camera after placina second in a recent competition sponsored by Canon photosraphic equip-ment. Another click and the 2S-~~1d ~ byist takes an honorab&e mention at the 19'4 Oranae County Fair. i ~ trik .... m more ·~ lhan aood. ., san D "ney prepares 1.or s e ~g~:~~~t~~wi= ~s negotiations break down ph2n~tsboot. .. Kaplan took .up Pboiopaphy two YearJ By tbe Associated Presa not disclose the details of that offer. ago IS a diversion, 10rnetbina to do 1n .bis Rolh said employees 1'ere expcctec1 to spare time. Now tR·s packina his bias for Talks between Disneyland offacials and report to work at the amusement park thiL Hawa~i, ~unesy of the ADlds baebllll union representatives over "Wage increases · momina. Telephone calls to union offic:iils orp.nuallorL . for more than l,800parlcemploycesbroke abour the Possibility of a strike went . Kapl~n'1colorpbotoofanAnaclp1tcbcr down early today When the union leader-unanswcml. m-mouon placed ahead of the estimated ship declared an impasse Disn~ officiils Meanwhile, Disneyland officials SOO amateur photographs subnuned from said. ' · prepared for a strike. Clerical workers were the Jtfay 27 camera day at Anaheim Park spok~man Bob Roth said the talks beiO, trained Thursday to run the amuse-Stachu!"l. ended at 3:30 a.m. and no new discussions ment park if necessary. officiaJs said. Dunna the ~ual event. fans are were scheduled. Uruon members voted by 97 pe~nt allowed to take pictures on the field before He Mid Disneyland offered workers a Monday to authorize a strike rather than .~ pn;ie and from tbc:ir 1eats dwios the .. substantially modified" offer, but woWd accept a three-year wa&e freeze. . pme. . Saddleback College South will conduct a work.shop on women's business ownenhip this weekend on the Mission Viejo Campus, today throu&h Saturday, sponsor- ed by the Saddlet.ck Assoctated Student Body, Saddle. back Women'• CCnter and the U.S. Small Business Administration. Alma Vanasse of the Women'.s Center. said the Workshop wiU offer an o'Verv1ew of bus mess and financial management skills for present and potential business owncn. State Senate ~an di date Bergeson raps M(fJndale By JEFP ADLER Reagan-Bush campai~ .. to share with you timing was c:Oincidental wilb Ferrato' Questioocid aboUt her feelinas ~ Of ... Delr,......., my dissatisfaction with Walter Mondale's visittothecounty, ~nactnow~ the_~ woawa ever~ by a~ . flip-flop on the Grenada issue." that "others th1np are going on today political party to tbc national ticlUt. Cost for the twt>-day workshop is $9S. State Assemb_lywoma~ Marian. Callin& the Democratic presidential (Thursday)anda&ooddealwillbecomina Bergesoncommentedtbac .. itwupGliaive Bergeson, a Republ_ican candidate fo r the candidate's cbanac of position on the out simultaneously... forwomenjustuReq;ua•aappointmeMof state ~nate, took tune ~ut from her o~ Grenada incursion "blatantly political,.. Ferraro arrived in C>ranae County on three womeo to his cabiaet was poli1ive b ~..-;.....=-==~cam~~ Tbu~y to involve herself 10 tbe Newpon Beach Republican charged Thursday with scheduled appearances at a women." 1 presidential pohtJc~. . . . Mondale had succumbed to .. what the fund-raiser at UClrvine Ibunday and in 'fbe state la~er addeCS tbal; ;.abc On• day ~at ~10CJd~ WJ!h the •r:nvat latest pol!J show to be a popular posiuon " Santa Ana today. be~ves a~ Will~~ prilideiit · Friday, Sept. 21 of'Dc~ocrauc Vl~ presidential candidate She called Mondale's turnaround a Bcrseson llddect-ber sta~t on w or VJCe ~t lll her~· . Gerald~ne F~nvo. here for her first "deplorable euinplc of political game-Grenada issue was timely beic:aute Mon-She als0 said fmvo's candidaq idded· campa1an s~na through Otan&e County, smansrup with our national security." dale only announced his new position on • .._aood deal of maerest to a ~pat,P, abat No meet1qa ldedaie4. Bergcson said she had been asked by the When asked Yihether bet statement's the subject earlier this week. oukt have been lackluster without at.• PoucE Loe ·Scroungy bandit holds up service station in Irvine An Wisbavm mu wearina a pink and oranee shin and c:anyi~ a revolver. held up aa Irvine pa stauon late TbQnday and CIC&oed with an . undetermined amount of cash, Police aaid today. Coeta .... A man wbo allqedly ,drove bis car throuab a red liabt in Costa Mesa Thursday, hiuina a teen-qer i~ ~he cto11walt. wu analtld on suspeqon of felony bit and nan after be returned lO the acene. GrcaorY Alben Cbava. 2'4, of Cona Mcu was in custody this mornint in lieu of SS,000 bail. The victim, Shanna Waler,_ 1 . .s! was uaasponed to HQ9-I M~orial Hos. pnal in Newpon .~ where she wu treated fOr cuts and bnaites and ~ after the a a.m. accident. Police Aid Cbava wu drivina at an atimlled 3.S mph ea1tbound on Victoria Sueet when bis car hit 'Walktt, Who had JUSt catered the croawalk vnth her bicycle. • • •• F'.ive women·1 uits, valued at S 1,525, ~ reponed 1101eft 10me- time bctween IOa.m. Wednadayand '0 a m. 1burlday It \he Hama and Fruk ttoft in me South Oout PW.a. The m~• auab wm dito0vered darifta 1 Clluy iaven~. • • • A*"° and tpeU.cn, worth SlSO. • ..U 11 1 Piek •of cipretta. were rcoottcd stolen from • !home 1 n the - Tbe bandit approached an attend- ant at Campus Gu. '460 I Campui Drive, sbonly after 11 p.m. and fon:ed the employee to open a cash drawer, Irvine poliee said. No shou ~ fired and no one was injured in 2500-block of Duke PlaClC. A rear window acreen had been pried off to pinenuy. B-tmcton Beacb Someone entcrtd a hotne in the 7000 block of Baypoint through an open llidi~ window and 1tole $400 in calh and Jewel}. • • Thi•ves MOie 7 in h after enterin, a home ln the 21000 bloct of Broothunt Street throu&b an un · loeked &ont window. • • • Buralan ran11eked closets and drawm and Git. S600 m jewelry ft'om 1 home in the 20000 block of Sandb&r. • • t meone 11oae 1 :1300 .3 caliber Rvolver1 Sl,600 in.'"1dry ind SI 10 in cub rrom a midtMe in the 00 b1oCt or Hatford . . . ,. A woman OCCUP1nt an the 00 bloek oflrd ueet was awakened b_y a man Who was 1ouch1na and ki her. • L the holdup. The robber was described u bein& in bis 20s with wavy dark hair and havina several days arowth of beard The man appucntly left the area on foot. • • • Thievessto1cStOO inJcwlery in the 20000 block of Coast View. .. one pried open the trunk of her black 1980 BMW, which was parked on the 17300 block of San Luis Street. Damqc to lhe vehicle was estimated at SI 00. The propertly loss. estima ted at $710, included a camera, tennis racquet and clothin&-• . . Someone pried open the front door LafaDa Beacb A bicyclist. Scott Rohm, 26, of Irvine. suOCttd a possible broken femur in a bicycle accident in~·o1ving a vehicle late 'l'hursday afternoon in the 300 b~ of Nonh Coast Hilb· way.' He •u transponed to South "" C0&5t Mcc:lical center for trca~L No ctwiea were filed. ,. . . . .. Robert Mc:Cutcben. 37. was ar- rested for drivina under the idueocc of alcohol Thursday a1\mxJoti at Broadway and Beach Street a.ada.eld in lieu of SS 000 bail. to butalari.ze a home on the 17000 . block of I.Os MOdelos Street Tburs.-1 • · • } 13 t ~·l r ffY5:.eio in:l~jewctry wonh rv1ne g1r , ,. $ ruU-1\. :A resident of an apanment on the b , "b dl · • ~ ~ 10200 block of Slater Avenue re-y car a y In urcu ported Thursday that someone bur-• ' &)ariud his bro I'll 198 l Honda Civic • station wqon, parked in a ca.rpon. A 13-)ear~ld Irvine airl was criu- The loss included stereo equipment cally 1il\i,ured Thunday when. w worth S4SO. rcporteGJ)• rode her · eydc in front of • • • • t.. __ .. Somt0n0 bWJ)arilcd a bome on an ~·na ear, sttu0~ -t"" the 16400 block of Sandalwood lOSSC'd into the roadway, authonti Stttct. 1 resident rcponcd Thunday. rtponcd. . . The loss indudtd a diamond nd 1sa Jones ndt~ ~ bicycle .... ,. · · ..... s 1 066 · the flovo of traffi on lmnc sa.,.,..ue nna l w • • nter Drh-e near CUlver When tbe 3:10 ~.m. acadent occurred. traffic in~ • ton id . . A car driven by Danid ~ 25, ofSantaAna stNck the1 ... ilt ia 1bt intersection. POiice l&i4 Hcmandel not Cited. ttr 111 I \Old poliee tbe drivu bad a.,.... tilbt When the youna sb1 appeared in ilat intencction. J na Nsbcd to w~ edical Ccnttr in ia Ana WMft Rmained tbday. ---- A• Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Friday, $ePtember 21. 1084 Soviet sub adrift near Japan TOKYO (AP) - ., .belli tic-mi 1le ubmari e ~ '· polled in today wlth White moke pourin from its tern. 26 hours after it was first n drifting • in the Se of Ja~n. the Defeo A,gency reported. " A Soviet ship s n trans· · ferring water to th ubmarine, " !lpparently to put out fire. id ~ Hironori Miura, a Dcfen Agency 1 spokesman. ,1 • A Japanese Self Dcfen~ Force .,., plane spotted the Golf II class • submarine and a Soviet Natya I class minesweeper about 2:30 p.m. (l0:30 p.m. PDT) Thursday, he said. . Twenty minutes la.ter, smoke Mtunl 1d the move southward puzzled Defen Agency st ff, who thought .. it would be n tural for a ubmarine with a fire on b<>archogo home as fl t a PoS ible ... toppe<! romi~ from the ub-Miura 'd the ubmarinc·s cap- m nne~ conning tower. ih'b!1)y tain h d not a ed for sistance &hereafter, the submarine fromJapan submerged, perhaps to cool off the · , . body of the vessel, he id. · '.fhc Asahi Sh1mbun. ~C\\'>paper The submarine also had . sa1dThursdaythatManhmeSafety ubmergt'd and then resurfaced 1 o Agency .experts speculated that the hours C'atlitr, Miura said. subl1)1!JDC was dam~ ~y fitc and The ubmarine wa~ accn today !hat tf at had !lO~ been cxt.mgu•shed, about 40 miles northwest of •ts nuclea~ m1ss1Jesoould have been Okino hi ma, a duster of islands off launched inadvencntly. the west coast of Hooshu, Japan's TI)e newsJ>8.l>C! qu~te4 Hideo main island. That was about 16 Aoka. .whom it tdenufied as an miles closer to the island than the aut~onty o~ defense matters, as location reported Thursday Miura saying the carcumstances &uggested said. ' the craft had submersed to ~I Qff SoVlet S.......rlne lltlng He said the 3.~ton ubmarine ~d prevent~ fir;e from spreading to moved northward late Thursday, its nuclear m1sstl~. but then turned south this.morning.. --------~ .. --.------------• · CONSIGNMENT MAKES ·~~SE Fer ~. llsorl•I...._ 1eJW I lelltr Red Sea mine blast • > sparks new search . SAVE IP Tl 11% • .. 1 IDnY WOii Flllllll I AOIEll••, ' ~ .. ~.~••n ti't If. ~ : :,•=:,. ltt\~~\~~ • By ....... ~ otS\I.~~ . SECOND PERFORMANCE Consignment Boutique, 2119 Main St., Unit 7 . Huntington Beach Located In BeautlfUI Sea Catt ' v111-oe Shopptng Center-comer of Main & YOtktown 960-4021 -Tuee.-sat. 1G-e; Sun. 1().;.3 Saudi Arabian passen er ship first victim of mystery explosives since last month -----""-CAJRO, Egypt (AP) -Three Lasalle was stiU searching wattrs off Italian mine-hunting vessels beaded the Saudi Arabian coast and would back to the Gulf of Suez today to probably remain there through the resume the search for explo ives in end of the month. the northern reaches of the Red Sea Egyptian sources said there were no after a Saudi passenger ship became injunes to the SS-man crew of the the first boat jolted by a blast since Belk.is, which was not carrying pass- Au&; IS. engers, but the vessel was damaged.' An Italian Embassy spokesman, The 2,l l~ton vessel, sailed back to who spoke on condition be not be Suez under its own power late identified, said the Casl*gno Thursday, sbippina sources said. Frassino, the Loto and the Cavczalle The explosion came as British and would return from a search operation ESYPtian demolition teams con- in the Su& Canal beqause of the tinued ins~ti~ a suspicious, reported explosion Thursday that "mine-like deVioe' found last week in damaged the Belkis I, about 20 miles the northern sector of the gulf near 1south of the canal. where the Belkis was struck. · .. The Belkis was hit as it steamed Egy'pt's defense minister, Field toward the Saudi port ofJidda to pick Manbal Abdel-Halim Abu...Qbazala up EIYl>tian Moslems who had com-said the device is of a type "unknown pleted i pilgrimage to the Islamic holy to our technology and even Western cities of Mecca and Medina. technology," and British Embassy The Italian vessels had been sources satd it appeared the mine had scarchina the Great Bitter Lake in the not been in the water long. southern portion of the strategic canal Egyptian officials suspect Libya since Tuesday after completing a and possibly Iran planted the mines sweep of parts of: the Gulf of Suez as to disrupt shipping in the Suez Canal, part of a multinational hunt for but they admit they cannot prove the explosives which have damaged 19 charge. · Jhips since July 9. . LiD)'.I and Iran have denied re· Canal sources said the three Italian spons1bility. -· vessels were expected to arriv.e at the The French Defense Ministry said port of Suez at the southern end of the today that French minesweepers in canal around midday. the Suez Canal and Red Sea will U.S. mine-bunting units ended continue their operations for a few their search of Egyptian waters last more days at Egypt's request. Defense week after a month-long operation in Minister Charles Hemu told rc- the oil-rich central sector of the Suez porters Thursday that France was Gulffailcd to tum up any mines. endina its month-long search oper- ... - NATION ---- MX missile on back burner after congressional accord Bz~ Viet envoy Bunker IJ011pltia11Ud BRATTLEBORO,· Vt. --. Ellsworth Bunker, who .....__...,...._._ was the U.S. ambassa'1or to South Vittnam in the ~!ter ~ges of the Vietnam War, was in. cntic1;I con.d1t1on tOday at a hospital where he was admllled with sh1ngl~. his daughter-in-law and a hospital spokeswoman satd. The 90-ycar.old former diplomat, whose career panned 3S yea~ and seven presidents, was admitted . to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital Sept. 13. 58id hospital pokesman Paul Stillman. He was. m critical but stable condition today. said night supervisor Marth~ Robef1s. He was appointed ambassador to South Vietnam ui 1967, servmg until 1973 .during th~ bl~!cst ~nd.most divisive phase of the Untt~ States partlClpaUon t~ t~c BUNKER Vietnam War. Bunker retired at age 84 aft.er nea<?tiatina the treaty ~o return control of the Panama Canal to Panama, and has since traveled and sits on the boards of various orpnizations. Pap smean sacceu lauded CHICAGO -A study published today shoWlnJ that Pap smears contnbuted to dro~ of nearly 70 percent in the rate of cervical cancer has finally "laid to rest' questions about the efficacy of the tests, a researcher says. The Swedish study. which followed 207,455 women for 10 years; found that rqular Pap smears reduced the incidence of the cana:~ by .ncarl~ 70 pcroc!lt among women who had at least one test in t!1At penod. I think thlS stud.Y la!d to rest, for once and all, the •-old quesuon, 'Are Pap smcan effecllve m reducing cancer of cervix?'" wd Dr. Cecil Fox, who worked on the research. "Yes, they arc." Slnger-soagwi'lter ~an dead at 38 SEATTLE -Singer-songwriter-'iteyc Goodman, wb9 was h<?spital~ last month with a "very rapidly" progressing case ofleukemia. bas died ofhver and kidney failure rcsultina from the _illness. He~ 36. Goodman, who wro~e the song "City of New Orleans," which was a .hi.t for folksiqcr Ario Guthrie and is currently on the country charts by Wdlie Nelson, died Thursday at University.ofWas~mgton Medical ~ter, a hospital spokeswoll?an &aid. ~e liver and kidney failure developed while Goodman was underaoang extensive treatment for the disease of the blood-fonnina organs. Suspect IJeld In WaslJlngton murder AUBURN, Wash. -Police arrested a man Thursday for jnvestigation in the death of a woman whose b6dy was found near the Green River, but they said he was not th., serial killer who bas struck at least26 times in two years. The 34-year-old man was arrested without incident at his Auburn home,at 8:40 p.m. and taken to the King County Jail in Seattle, said Fae Brooks. ·a spokeswoman for the Green River Task Force of the Kina County Police. Tbe man, whose identity was withheld, was "in custody" when the 26 deaths attributed to the ~led Green River killer occurmi dunna the last two yean, Brooks said. CALIFORNIA An Egyptian newspaper, Al· ation after 6ndina no mines linked to Abram, said the American warship the recent string of ex losions. !1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllilll•lilililiilliilliiiiilliliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Prop. 38 tied to 18 LOS ANGELES-Memories of the tremendously popular tax-slashing Proposition 13 of 1978 have been res~~~ this Year .t<? help its pro~nent, Howard Jarvis, ~s bis newest state m1ttatJve, Propos1t1on 36. lnvokina the name of Proposition 13 is part of a "coattail strategy, .. that J>n?~iti.on 3~ strategists~ usina to get voter approval of the new property tu lDJUallve on the Nov. 6 ballot. The measure would return an estimated S 1. 7billionto10me tax pa yen by ~tin· a series of court decisions that Jarvis claims have gutted • < • • • . .. • f .. oice Is Yours ••• Save 10.500;, on all upholstery furniture I Floorsamplea, stocked items and special orders are re~uced this week only. Shop early for best selection. From New Zealand this sofa group features unique engt11eeflng and comes 1n three different arm styles s399 Sola features 100% NOOI labnc reg S995 s349 l..olleSeat. reg S349 •299 Matching chair. not shown reg S549 " From JlafY. • Anlites ath&f Q10l4I s775 lMSUt. not SflOWn Mlhi rtO S~ Open Daily 10-6 Sunday t2-5 Customer Service Hotline (213) 548·1335 · . 3015 Bristo1 Street COsta Mesa (714) 751-297.7 •845 Sofa 75\\ !'I M able in a "10lc1 of ieath COlotl reg $1255 - • Proposition 13 s property ~ cuttina pis. . HuglJm payment8 to resume LOS ANGELES -A 0 aet well" plan submitted by Hughes Aircraft Co. bas been approved by Air Force contract managers who recommended:, that ~e Pentagon resume paying for Hughes• defense contracts, one official said . Hu~es and the Air Force, however, wou~d not confirm the report Tb~y. Amid allegations of shoddy workm~nshap,. ~e Pe';'tagoo stopped a~pUf?8 missiles from Hu&hes' Tucson, Anz., factlityl withheld $31.8 million in payments for July and hasn't acted on a request ror August payments th.it was submitted late Tuesday. Reagan'• environment record backed OAKLAND - A day after Democratic presidential nominee Watte• Mondale received the unprecedented endorsement of two major env:ironmen· w aroups, Interior Secretary William was in the same area touting PR:aident Reagan's credentials as a conservationist "It is repuanant to conservative philosophy to allow destruction of those qualities that makt America a peat place to hve -our scenic wonders, our historic landmarks, our cultura. endowments, .. Oark said Thursday. Spcakina at Construction Wes& 84, 1 meeting of developers, architects, builders and othcn involved in th• construction industry, Oark said that ifRcapn haS any bias, "it is in f.avor o conservation." Ford reCall• Callfomla can LOS ANGELES -Fo~ Mot~r .Co. is recalling 181800 _1981-mode passenier cars because the vehicle em1ss1ons may exceed Cahfom11 standard Included in the recall arc Fainnonts, Granadas. Mustangs, Zephyrs. Couaa.r. and Capris equipped with 2.3 liter engines. .. Tests have disclosed that th• emission levels of some vehicles may cxCeed the applicable Califom i1 standards," John P. KinJ. a Ford en11neering semce. man~r, said in 1 statement Thursday. The mspcctions and any necessary modifications will b done at no charac to the car owner$, the company said. Marrin Gay Sr. dae probation? LOS ANGELES -Marvin Gay St., who shot and k.iUcd his son Marvit Gaye, during an araument in April, will likely receive .. straight probeilon" an• avoid spending a day in jail for the slaying; bi . attorney prCdicted. "We baY every reason to believe that we can convince the court he should be J)llced Ol probation," defense attorney Michael Schiff said Thurlday after Oay, 7( pleaded no contest to a reduced charae of voluntary manalaua,hter. Su~o Court JUdge Ronald Gcorsc apProvcd the plea·barpin and set scnteoana fCJ Nov. 2. when Gay faces a maximum sentence of l3 years in pri10n. Gay WI ori&inally charaed with first~~ murder after be shot the 44-ycar-old so singer twice in the chest on Apnl I. WoR to Gunman nabbed near PrilJcen Amie BRACKNELL. England -Authoridcs y a man with 1 awtina piat wa arrtStCd as he talk~ Princess Anne, Queen Elizabeth It's only da-.ht durina a royal visit to a shoppin& pttcinct. British newspapcn Thilrtda quoted witn of the arrest as yin& he told the officen: ··1 wu i!>Jq shoot her." Police declined comment on the reports. Princ:eu Anne, ~ ~, not hurt 1n the in~t. which oocurted Wcdnesda)'. Police did not ideo_ti~ man. The • un tablo1d ttponcd that the pistol bad been convened to ftre la ell Police refused comment. Anne wa the carset for a aunman an abortive J 974 ki6nap attempt. FreD.clJ joamal&t captured PARIS-Soviet officials have told &he French telev aon station Anten 2 lhit one of the r correspondent taken prhoner after an 1mbU1h Afaham tan, 1 ah~c and not scnously uuuftd. lbe station' news deWtm fd today. n&ennc l id connpc;>ndcnt Jacques Aboudu1r 3 traveling th I aroup or Afal\in re Is wbcn lt was attacked y v Af&han aovemmcnt troops. wa1 ttt,1u~ in the boWder. Tbecutt da\e oft mcldcnt wa no1 reponed It said h11 rclca would bt puraued tbro 1ploma uc channel . • ~ l ' r r I 1 ' , , I ~ e CoN ll ~LH· s ~1.R H \ ---. L WS FORCE PEDOPHILES DEEPER UNDERGROU Prom Al child porn ·• R "These people collect and collect FBI Director Wilham H. Webster nd roll t. 11hcy: wap,'' 1d Daniel catl •• d nd unc subculture wnh L. Mihalko, a U . Po tal rv1cc p_ervcrt d ualrntcrcst focu angon ins~orinNcwYork 11)'.''Therc' children •• • a lot o( n out there, whcth r from h \\ s widely bchc six y ars ago Europe or homemade:• that child pornography \\U n multi· The effect oflhc new law is lready blllion-dotlar industry, with perhap apparent. Bakcua1d the FBI had 116 even organized crime involvement. "open cases," invcstipt1ons or pros· .. But when we staned to inve tlpte ccutions proceed in~ to the lrial tagc. we found there \\ere tarac cases. lots The Postal Service ha about 90 ~ of distributiun and lots of contacts active investapuons, said Robert D. between pedophtlcs-but not a lot of'-"· Joy, head of its child pom ma1tio money c:bangmg hand ," said Ken· branch. neth V. lanmn&, the FBI' expert on More federal indictment arc ex- sexual victimization otchildicn. peeled u a result of the rtew I w, To combat this "cottage industry," according to Baker, who e~plaincd the fBI worked wnh Congrc to that tn the past many cases were create the Child Protection Act of dropped or turned over to local 198<4. The new leajslatlon, signed by authorities when the commercial President Reagan in May, removes a aspects couldn•t be proved. provision that P.roduct1on and dis. • The nauonal effon ~in t child 'tributioa of child porn was illea.aJ sexual abuse is directed 1n large pan o{lJY if comme,.Pally &lisscminatecf. br_Lannina. who worb out of a small Now transaction5 involving child office in the behavioral science unit at pomO$f1phy. even sift giving, can be the FBI Academy on the Marine 1nvesupt~ by the F8~. and by the Corps ~ here, 40 miles southwe t POstal Service tfthe mails arc used. ofWashm~on, D.C. "The old law didn•t have the teeth A specialist m deviant sexual that we needed," said AMistant FBI behavior for 12 years, Lanning ha~ Director William M. Baker. "We focused on child sexual abuse for the think that with t~e new law we will be last four: very effective.'' . According to Lannina. child porn ,.. The upgraded law also increased and child sexual abuse &O hand in penalties for first offenses tenfold, hand ... The only purppsc for child from $10,000 to $100.000, in ad-pornography is pedophiles. Who else ·-ition to 10-ycar pri~n terms; in-wants this material? No one else crea~ the aae of children protected wants it. from under 16 to under 18; removed a .. Ifs not just a picture, like people requirement that sexually explicit sometimes say," Lanning continued. materials depicting children had to be .. Child pornography is the permanent lcplly obscene; authorized wiretaps, record of the sexual molestation of andprovidedfortheseizurcofprofits the child. You cannot make child and equipment used in producing pornography wit!'out molesting the child • 011ld pomQg ph). rnapz1M'S nd book "cncourn people to go out nd mol ch1ldrc.m ' ccordin to Dctect1ve Bill [)~onn of \he Los Angeles Pohcc Department' xuall) C1\l>l01ted child unit "Mos1 of them have Story 1inet on how peop1e have sue fully molested children." But one ch Id porn collector, intcr4 viewed after his Albuquerque, N.M., hOme wns spaded by local poll c. claimed he had never molested a child de pile his hfc-long hobbY. of collecttog printed material and photos of naked girls. ''Ever since I was a little lctd I've alwa~ l ked lntlc girls," Lee Skmncr td ... When I was 1 S. I liked little sirls. As I ~ot older my hkes stayed the· same. I stall like httle JlrlS ... (but) rve never been sexually involved with child-that'5 where I draYO the line." Skinner, who was not charged because possession of d'lild porn materials t$ not . a crime in New Mexico, acknowledged his part in an .. underground network" of ·people who trade child porn. .. I don't kno" tf at's a \·ery organi{ed network.'' Skinner said~ "People an wer ads in magazines. It's like trading baseball cards.'' A typical trading publication is Wonderland. newsletter of the Chi· caao-bascd Lewis Carroll Collccto~ Guild. A recent Wonderland ad read "private Lolita collector desires nude photos, magazines and home movies of teen & preteen girls. Will trade also."' Another promised confiden- tiality to anyone sending "videotapes of preteens and teens doiog anything nude.'' A ROBINSON'S EXCLUSIVE: THE AMAZING HELIA-D™ MOISTURIZING CREAM, DERIVED FROM NATURE ITSELE .. This famous Hungariltn beauty CTatm is {NMrm11uutically tested and composd of" . combin11tion of vitamins, proteins, arnirw acids and ot.htr tlmitnts dt'ri.Vtd from tht sunjl<r..ver. V1t 11 every morning under ma~up. ~ ewnzng ws " night crt11m. Notict hO'UI soon it begins to sofitn .znd smooth away wrinlelts and mro" tht tightness and tlasticity of your slem. It also helps maintain tht critical moisturf balanct, to promote a fresh, -youthful g/OU/. Seltct from three specialized formulas, for dry, norm11l or oily sit in t~. 2. 4 oz. SJ6. Meet with our Htllll-D11' beauty experts todAy tbTOugh Mondlly, Septtmber 21-24, JI -.m.-4 p.m., in Robinson's Cosnietu:~, 155. To order, caJl toll -free 1·800-345-8501. , Robinsons .. scd om h un U> 10 12. Th next f Bl uil Jll offer an cnurc 4o.hour cou on the u u The .cm1nars b ve been n 111 results cc dctCClJVi n loo m forduld porn nd u I b , ·1hey find u:· 1d UinnlJll. "'Wherever we'" c trained police rnd then they"ve conducted ~ ctave rnv 11 tton , it's been found. It's m b1 wn m It towns and med1um towns " Education programs a1 schools arc helping. too. "'This J no1 sex cdu • tion. 'Thi 1s et) warencss." satd Lanning. ''Whcrcnr ~mm IT being put an. the arc coming ou t of the oodwork ... One ould not assume child pc>m~phy doesn't exalt JUst be-cause 11 is .. not openlt sold anywhere m the United tatts, 1d Unmng. "Commemal dealers know the heat is on They kno they can make plen1y of profits from adult Potll<>- graph), so they fi ure. 'Wh) m s around ~th tlus stuff? The proflu doh•1 outweigh then "'Bu1;' Lannm added, .. we knC\\ those who were m .11 for the pcr- \1 ersion weren't going to stop •· Most commercial child oom a mugg1ed · from Europe.· \.\'iih the pressure on, howe"er, n great deal of the commercial child pom in circula- tion is new prints of old material. F<>r example, 1970s photo~ ofa prcc0tccn known as .. Sweet Patti" have been ·•reproduced hundreds and thousands of time ,"Lanning id. The same is true for filmed child porn. European 8mm tapes arc trans. ferred to modem videotape format, then copied repeatedly . .. Ri&ht now, videotape is the •in thina' for the ocdoOhilc... said · GEl£RAl EL£CTillC WHllllPOOL 19.5 CU. FT . NO-FROST REFRIGERATOR WHIRLPOOL 11 CU . FT. NO.FROST REFRIGERATOR 499ts • 11.7 CU. FT. DELUXE REFRIGERATOR REG . 879.95 LE$$ 2 REIAT G.E. 50.00 S.C.E. '50.00 .. NO-FROST .. REFRIGERATOR • LARGE CAPACITY 171 CU FT Aetrtgetalor t $0t CU n Freezer EnervY ..-1.wilefl hM>a cut QPef-'IJIO C09f ~..­ OOOI Storage-Ot>t alle1t l!Oao. •PllrtS W!fe racll: tor ,,.._.. "Uft mNUtore~ Otily JO t " In •fllte REGULARLY ........... $529.95 LESS REBATE .......... 50.00 G.E. 17.2 CU. FT. lo-FROST REFAlGEUTOI 549'5 WHIRLPOOL 1•.1 CU. FT. NO-FROST REFRIGERA TOI REG. '571.16 LESS 100.00 .479'5 HOTPOllT 13.1 cu. n. 21" WIDE REFRIGERAJOI REG. · LESS' I , 279 95 .. " . range Coast students score in nation.al Inerlt' cant~st must d\ nee to fin li I tandmg to ~rchman I')' h I Ht Aptttudc rcce1v1na 1hc recommend tion and quired ta become flrud1 t , and bdut holanh1~ onh $247 malhon conunue in the rompcuu n for bQut Tc t/Naliona1 Merh holarsh1p endorsement of thcu pon ;~Is and 40 percent of the finali ts will be noe the rst mcnt Pf\ m S,'500 merit scho1 rship, valued t Qu tlif)1na ~ t. The top scoms in confirm their earlier PSAT/NMSQT offered mcnt scholarship completed an 19S6 ovcr$20 million, h> be awarded in the each state rcprc ntina about one· ores on the: Schola ti Aptitude NMS ., nonprofit mzauon e I hem1fin hst are: pnna of l 98S. half of l per«nt of the pduauna 1 est. They also mu51 provide infor· whose ac1Mt1curc financed by more FOUNTAIN V AILEY: · 'fl'le 198S compcmion began last class, are named semifinalists. 'fo be mation about themselves, anclud1na than 600 indc~ndent sponsors, ·ountain Valley High School -~ fall "hen more th n one million con tdertd for merit tciholarships. school and community activ1tie and wnhout federal or ate funds. 1 he Otttchen E. Helfrich, Eliza • LO,: junioB attending some 18.000 sec-6Cmifin b must bccdn e ftnahst achae,.-cmcnt1, intcrcstJ, and coal . 198~ class of merit scholan to be l C Lo. ~conifer l. Loudon, ond ryschool thr:ouJtioutthenatton by documentina high acaaemic per-0'fer 13,SOO oftbC scm1finaUsts are announcedneJ!tspnng:w1Ujoinsome JennaferM. Yuan. took the quahfyma test, the formance throuihout high school, expected to meet the .standards re-4,000 others whp have received Los Amiaos High SchooJ -M ry ~=:;::;::;:;;;;:::::::::::::~::;::;;;;;;:::::;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~il auyfield. • HUNtiNG'llON BEACH: Buy ~ And Sav~ ! ... - Three Bookcases: s159 Fl seRv1cELANDT"~Sr ONE ST MICROCOMPUTER SERVICE • HARDWARE REPAIR • PREVENTIVE MAlNTENANCE • SOFTWARE SAl!.ES • SUPPLIES/ ACCESSORIES C RAY IN & ON SITE REPAIR ANCE CONTRACTS ~VAILABLE (714) 641-1024 Edison HiAh School -James R. Eckloff, Eric K. Gustaf~n. Jeffr_cy R. Sucharct, Matthew), Weaver. Huntinaton Beach Higli School - rautBon~ . Marina High SChool -JGnten L. Challman. Julian C. Cumminp, Eric D. Maddy, Kevin Z. Nishiminc, Guy H. Riessen, Roger C. Udwin, Celestine E. Woo Ooean View High School -Noelle A. Williams. IRVINE: Irvine High School -Lisa L. Gavitt, Valerie .L. Laurel, Arthur Y. Lee. • . .. . University Hiah School -Erik S. Andenon, Erika 8. Bliss, Laurence W. Chana. Patrick S. Chang, Call For Location Nearest You Christopher Martin Chu, Howard 2610 $.'BRISTOL• SANTA ANA 9270~ Colman, Michael C. Hennahane, 112 "d booktase. reg 3 IOr $179) Buy Ulm and llVI I Each ready to assemble unit measures 72#h x 30"w >< entlon Thi• Ad And Receive 10% Dtlcount Brian J. Holmes, Sheila M. Huettl, H=;;;~~;;;~~~~~~~~~;~~~;;;=~ Peter G. Miller, Andrew G. Sandor, Kenneth A. Schwartz, Jim R. WatCT- Danica Open Daily 10-6 Sunday 12-5 12#d Single bookcase S75 Also ava~abte in 16 • depth 3 tor St1t or S95 ea Choose trom three durable ltn1shes white. dark bulChef · block and oak. Extra shelves, cabinet doors and drop;tid are optJOnat accessories Aatmbly and dtllVtty 11111 3015 Bristol Street Costa Mesa (714) 751-2<Jl7 BEVERLY HILLS SAN PEDRO LONG BEACH .. DON'T .JUST GO THROUGH IT - GROW THROUGH IT! DM>n:e9 Recovery¥ Wotkshop SEMINAR FOR DIVORCED AND SEPARATED PERSONS OFALL AGES Six Thursday Evenings· Sept. 27 -Nov. I 7:30-9:30 p.m. ST.ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN C:HlJRC:H Newport Beach -St. Andrews at 15th St. · Across from Newport Harbor Hfch.'$20 Rq!stratlon For more Information, call 631-2885 9-S Mon-Fri. TAXPAYERS-VOTERS OF ORANGE COUNTY DO WE REALLY NEED ANOTHER FREEWAY: SAN JOAQUIN HILLS TRAN~PORTATION 'CORRIDOR? PROPOSITION A WAS OE~EA TEO 21h to 1 Congressman Robert Badham from District 40, Newport Beach, and the Board of Supervisors of Orange County. along with the Irvine Company. are trying to thwart the will of the people with Senate Biii 2527 and House of Representatives Biii 5504 without general public notice. These bills will allow the donation of the required right of way to serve as the State and County financial participation In the construction of new freeways. The fair market value of this right of way will be matched by 95 percent from the Federal Highway Trust Fund. How does this affect us? These bills, SB 2527 and HR 5504, will pave the way for the construction of the San Joaquin Hiiis Transportation Corridor. We feel that th~re are other transportation solutions.short of constructing new freeways and that our federal funds should be used for Improvement and repatrs of our existing freeways. Normally developers donate land, build, and pay for the streets and then dedicate them to the appropriate City, County or State. This 14 mile stretch of freeway woutd cost the taxpayers 341.6 mllllon dollara lncludlng the value of right away dedications. This wlU only help the developer not the traffic flow and will have tremendous negative Impact on the total environment of the area. If you object to this use of public funds to subsidize the lrvlne Company and other developers, please send the attached coupon to Senator Alan Cranston and Senator Pete Wiison. Supported by: • SpJglaaa Hiii CommunltJ Auoclatlon • Seawlnd CommunltJ Aaeocl1tlon • Canyon Creat Eat.tff Homeowner Auoclatlon • Broadmoor Hiiia Community Auoclatlon • Harbor View Community A1aoclatlon • Spygl•N Ridge HomeoWM(t AalOClatlon • Sterr• Bonita Community A1toclatlon • The Laguna Qr .. nbett. Inc. I OPPOSE SENATE BILL 2527 0 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 5504 0 Ne me:_~ Addre11: City: ________ _ Phone No.: .. I OPPOSE SENATE BILL 2527 0 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 5504 0 Neme: ---·-Addre11: -- Clty: ____ __,--w-------------Phone No.: ____________________ ....._ __ Plea .. donate any fund• you can to help fight the .. blll• to: 11 CJ t2 CJ SS D $10 CJ =-------·----------~ 12s a ~ ' _ ... ..,.. ..... ~ -. \ -'-f ~ I \ ' ' \ _ • Newport Hiiie CommunltJ AMoclatlon • HlrbOr View KnOll Homeownen Auoclltlon · • Cam~a V~w CommunltJ Auoclatlon • 8PON: Stop Polluting Our Newport • Senetor Pete Wll1on U.S. Senate Wa1hlngton, DC 20510 (213) 209.7543 D D .. nator Aa.n Craneton U.8.lenate W .... lngton, DC 20810 (211) 211-21• • 8PJ1laa1 Hiii Community D A•eoclatlon P .o. Box 4708 lrvlne, CA 12718 250-1171 I I \ Nam•=--------------------------- A d d r • • • =~-------~-.._-- ' man. Woodbri4&eHiJh School-Marco L Davanzo,,Chnstophcr ~. Evans, Jeffrey A. Holzhauer, John R. Middleton. NEWPORT BEACH: Corona Del Mar High School - Karl 0 . Goldstein. Newport Christian Hijb School - Scott M. Johnston, Marte E. Lewis. Newport Harbor Hiih School - Brandon 0 . C.arr, Barbara L Perry, David J. Revolinski. UNTAANA: . · Mater Dci High School -Marie V. Andersen, Richard Cntia Ashby, Robert J. Barrera, Yvette 0. Broussard. Timothy A. Gallagber, WiUiam X. Halloran, Greiory P Lombardi, Rochelle L. Ridd, Jeffrey L Salinger. · Fourj~in LB police Four people have been hired to fill vacancies in the Laguna Beach Police Department, according to Ouef Neil Purcell. · The four new police officert are: Harold Gri~old, 30, a reserve officer for the city ince November 1983, wlien he was graduated from the Criminal Justice Trainin& Center at Golden West College. Griswold lives in La1una Beach. Alissa Parks; 24, an Irvine resident, who araduated from Golden West in 1982 and worked a year for the lrvtne Police Department. She was also a dispatcher and reserve officer in Laguna Beach. Debra Halks, 27, a May lfllduate of the Orange County Sberifrs Academy and spent four months woakina at the Otange County Woman's jail before startina duty in U.auna Beach. She lives in Santa Ana. Joseph Dalu, 20, ofC\'orcss.aJune gra~uate of Golden West and ·a member of. the Community Beach Patrol in Laguna Beach. The Laguna Beach Police Depart- ment now employs 36 police officers, Purcell said. Blood supplies n~eded locall~ Faced with low supplies of blood, Pacifica Community Hospital and the American Red CroSI a.re cp- sponsoring a bloodmobile • on- WedncSday. The vehicle will be at the hospital's confcrcnce center at 18819 Delaware St., Huntinaton Beach. Houn are from 12:4'S to S:30 p.m. To make an appointment, call 8"2-061 l, extension 271 . £¥£1 FEEL UI£ YOU DON'T· FIT II? U you've lost Wfliht, Rehtt~ IS our Specialty UP£1T Tlll.OllR I ALTtlATIOIS FOi · IEI & WOllEI -AU WORK GUARNiTECO - ~17•¥ J _,Lebanon blast death toll cut to 'about 12' Reagan sends Secretary ef State aide to Investigate security-at annex BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP}-Rescue • had transferred af\er the emba sy was workers today broke off the scaich for destroyed in 1983 was considerro too bodies in the wrec e of the U.S . vulnerable to terrorist attack after the Embassy annex, but Amcncani re-Marine peacd:ccping contingent was moving\iocumcnts from the bomtx-d withdrawn. building found another bbdy -that T~e blast injured U.S. Amba dor of a Lebanese woman. Reginald Bartholomew and Bnlisb Authorities said the death toll from Ambassador David Miers. neither \Thursday's suicide car4>on1b attack senously, the source said, 'was sbarp'y lower than first reported, Bartholomew lef\ the Abu Jawdeh althouah there still were conflicting HospiuJ in a wheelchair today. with repo,.uon the number of dead. Befort stitches across his upper hp, a small the woman's body was found ttie bandage on the baclc of his head and a death toll was placed at ei&t!t br 12. · cast on his arm. He said his arm was Lebanese military investigator not broken. Surrounded by body- Elias Mousa had said thccuualtytoll, guards, he was driven to bis residence lbased on hospital and coroners' cast of Beirut. i rcpo!Ui was 12 dead and 72 wounded. Speaking to the American NBC One U.S. diplomat had said he· television . network, Bartholomew believed only eight people were killed said the bomber zigzagged through and 36 wounded. anti-vehicle concrete barricades after Earlier police report had said 23 shooting a Lebanese guard. Guards people were killed and 60 hurt when a fired at the bomber, and he slumped van filled with explosives blew up just over the wheel before the bomb went outside the an~x in a suburb north-off, Bartholomew said. cast of Beirut. · British guards who were wa1tin& for Before the woman's body was Miers outside the annex said they also found, U.S. Emtiassy Deputy Chief of fired at the attacker and believed they Missioo Stephen R. Lyne told re-hit him. porten at the scene that the search for One British guard, who spoke on Patty'• new bab y . Patricia Beant·Sbaw pcMa with new daqhter, Lydia Marie Beant-Sbaw at lfew aa .. en hmpltal. aiby wu bom Wechae.day and wetched 5 pounda, 8 ouncee. Both are dot.nc well. • DAILY PiLOT/F Consumer cost8. jump 5 percent Clothing, food catch the blame forsharpri W SHING'fON (AP) Con· un).Ct.epnccs, $Uf&lng at thcu :steepHt clip ID four month • rose O.S percent in Augu t both food nd clothlng became · ificantly morecxpcnsi\'e, Fot th first two-third or 19 • inflation i runni t n annual rate of 4.2 pePCCnt. light detcrtorouon frOm last y~ 3.8 pcrccnL MUclloflastmontb's n was ttnbutcd to higher pnccs for food - up 0.6 percent., lhc most since Fe~ -and d othing -up 0.9 pcrc:enl, the most 1noe March 1980. Housing prices rose 0.6 percent, their '$CC!Ond bi pan in a row. Gasoline pnccs fell 0.9 pc~nt: That decline, however, was only half the July improvement and helped explain the steep overall increase. While the Auaust pin wa the ~tecpcst since April's 0.S percent 1ump, Labor Otpartment analyst Patnck Jackman said the new in· crease was likely to be the steepest for the rest of l 984. ..Most people are expcctin infla· tion for the year to run at 4.S percent to S percent. I think this will still be the case." He Pttdicted that. for: the victims was over. condition he not be named, said he "We have accounted for all Ameri-fired five shots and saw the driver cans and foreilJ! service nationals. AU slump to the ri&ht, apparently we arc doini now is removing preventing the car from reaching an classified material for the sake of underground parking entrance. If be security," Lyne said . bad been able to drive the van under E lderly showpreference for Florid Callf9mla, Arizona, Texas, New 3crsey next popular retirement spots ln nation Lyne put the final toll of U.S. the building the damue would have casualties at two killed and 16 been much wone, Bahliolomew said. wounded seriously enough to be "God knows, this was bad enough, hospitalized. A U.S. source close to but it could have been a hell of a lot ·the search said earlier that 21 Ameri-worse," he said. MIAMI (AP) -Florida remama years, but also retirement pay- cans were inJurcds ·rn .din .6wedashith·ogtoAn, ~c Pdentadaon the favOtlte delttnatton to many check.a. Another U .. o 1cial, who spoke 1 cntt c mencan ca as of the nation'• elderty whC> up-fh t's good news for Aorlda, on condition of anonymity, said ArrnyChiefWarrantOfficerKenneth rooted between 1975 and 1980 sautt Dr. Char ... Longino, 8 rescue workers had "found all the V. Welch, 33, whose mother lives in 1"' bodies we will find," but .. there are Grand Rapids, Mich., and Navy and inoY9d to the Sunbelt states, aoclaf gerontologl91 at 'hf Unl- peopJe we're not soing to find any Petty Officer 1st Class Michael Ray :.,: ~~~t~~lonal In-vertlty of Mtaml. part of." Wagncrr, 30, of Zebulon, N.C. Both "" .. "'9nt Longino directed the four- It was impossible to determine how were described as embassy staff The $825, ltudy, bued on person reMaidl team that com- many Lebanese visitors or visa appli-members. cenlU8 data from 1980, 1970 and piled and an~ the oensua cants were at the annex when the van The explosion was the third almost 1980, Mid an Mtlmated 2 mUHon data for the 398-plige r~ ex~ed, the souroc said. identical suicide bombing against retlfeM wtl move t>etween stat• entitled ·~ Retirement Mlgra- ident Reagan dispatching as-U.S. targets in Lebanon in the past 17 In ttta next 8ix years. buMdlng 8 uon Pro)ect:' , sistant Secretary .of State Richard months. ...-.. ·ftlNoo -~In __ , ty 'Tt...-Murphy to Beirut to conduct an on-The twin truck bombinas of US. '*••1 emer..,.. .. •"' ~-ngwy 1 '"' reieeeich team found that site investiaation. Marine and French paratroop com-ln'ltuenti8180dal aubg"roup -the -oldtir ln ... ate migrants are Although Reapn administration mand posts in Beirut killed 299 rAder American migr:Mt. . largely tndjpendent, relatlYely officials defended security measures people last October. Sixty-three _ AlthOugb other stat-. aUCh as affluent, and wouk:I ~ to at the annex against criticism that J>C?<>Ple, including 17 Americans, per-C8"fomia and Arfz°"8. wtU con-add much more to the ec:onomle9 they were inadequate, security at the ashed in the April 1983 bombins of tlnue to be caAed home by some of the Sunbelt states to which annex is "one of things we will be the U.S. Embas y in the Moslem of the new retlree8, Florida will they move than they .ut>Vact. looking at," said U.S. State Depart~ sector of the Lebanese capital. All r.,.,..,. the No. 1 drawing card of In flOrlda. for examl)te. LC>"'1- mcnt spokesman John Hughes in three bombings were claimed by hundreds of thousands looking tno estimated the 1tate•s un- Washington. Arabic-speaking anonymous • telc-f tam cUmate MostoftheAmericanstafThadJust phone callers on behalf of the shad-or a perate and ~0~ ~:=!~n: moved to the annex in July because owy terrorist group Islamic Holy ~ 911Wonment tli which ~.,,... ,.._._.. __. ""'" the old British compound to which 1t War. to. ·IP4tnd not only retirement below the national average dur- . Beirut blast tempers campaign talk By tJae Anoclatecl Prest President Reagan is off the carn- paian trail after denouncina the Democrats for taxes "from here to eternity,'' while chaJlcnscr Walter F. Mondale renews his demand for a White House plan tO cut the federal dcficiL · "Mr. Rcapn. where•s the plan," wu the hne the Democratic presiden- tial nominee was re~ting Thursday u be criticized the president on federal budaet deficits, jobs, educa- tion, civil ripts and arms coDtrol But the rhetoric on both sides was tempered by the traaed)' in Beirut, where a tcm>rist's swcidc wck- bomb apin claimed American lives Thursday .. Vice President George Bush, cam- paigning in Burlington, Vt., even offered praise for Mondale, sayi na the Democratic nominee was "acting an a most statesmanlilcc way in support- ing the president of the United States" in bis reaction to the attack. Mondale voiced "full support for appropriate countermeasures" that Reagan might take in response to the bombing and sidestepped questions about whether Reagan's policies might be a factor in the tcm>riJt attack. "I would not give these terrorists any excuse for what they've done." Reagan was following a normal White House scheduJe today with no political events planned. Mondale was holding a stratCf}' session with Hispanic leaders an Washington today before bcadma on to Montgomery, Ala., for hjs weekly foray into.the South. , Democratic vice presidential can- didate Geraldine Ferraro was in Southern California before hcadina home to New York. Bush was w!nding up a New. England swing with appearances 10 8angor and Portland, Maine. Reagan kept to his schedule Thurs- GM, auto unioil reach tentative contract accord DETROIT (AP) -General Motors Corp. and the United Auto Workers teni.uvely agreed on a new national contract today, with the union declaring that it had won its ftaht to protect members' job and the compeny catting it a "win-win" settlement. Union leaden called for an im- mediate halt to strike at 17 GM plants which had idled l l l ,000 of the company's JS0.000 UAW worken nationwide and co t GM an eiti· matod S30 million a day. But some local leaders id they would opp0se &0in1 back to work because of di: putes over local 1 ucs. HoW'I alter the agreement wa announoed. workers oonunucd to walk pkkct tines at l S ofthe I :7 plant . UAW Prcstd nt Owen Bi bet and chacfunion barpmer DOnald Ephlin issued a statement at I l: 10,Jp.m. PDT Thunday announcinJ the aarecment, but they td'uted 10 d1vulic detail " "It i an c ocllcnt sett.lemcnt that makes more ure than c r an hi tory the JObS of our 'UAW.QM mcmbcn. whale ptov1d1na much dcKrYcd tc0nom1c 1mP-fOvcm nas 1mmcchatdI.•nd 1n che ~&ht.ad," the union officials ad M Vace Praidcnt lfred Warttn, ~na later at a nc conference. said "there were two winners -the United Auto Workers and the Gen- eral Motors Corporation. I have never seen a better win-w1n sttu- ation." . .. Our customers will benefit from this agreement throuah increased. competitiveness of the corporation, as will our shareholders, suppliers and the many communities in which GM bu concentrations of facilities and employment," he said. Wamn said the company was .. confidcnl'' that the agreement would be ratified quickly bf th union's membership. Bieber said the 1 l-mc!1\bcf national n(J()ttating committee recommended rallfi· cation b.Y a 10..1 'ot The first tcp tow rd ratification tak place Wcdnesdi) ID t. l.oui when the UAW k.adttship unval the pccific terms to the union·• Cknttal Moton Counal. a 300- rncmbcr advi rt board of local union leaders. l\aufication vot ~ OM workers would O<XUr aftc"" ro ana would take about a . Both Bieber and Wamn refused to divuJacdcta1lsofthe~ unuJ 1t was pre ntcd to the oounc1J As to the 1.1 nk Bid>er 1 "We're 101na to be ld"·mna the t;;l uni n leadcr&h1p that want them co return 10" rk mmtd11tcl • " ' day, des'1itc the bombing. He cam- paigned an Iowa, where be visited a farm and a church picnic, and toured a factory and campaagned with for- mer President Gerald R. Ford at a rally in Ford's hometown, Grand Rapids. Mich. Although Mondale refused to link Reqan's policies with the bombings in Beirut, it was only Monday that Mondale had linked Reagan to the October 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine compound in Beirut where 241 U.S. servicemen died. He said then that the administration had so bungled its Middle.East policy that "in that swamp of policy confusion, we Jost nearly 300 brave Americans who were placed in a vulnerable position over the objections of the Joint Chiefs of Staff." At bis stop in Michigan, Reagan avoided direct mention of Mondale but said of his Democratic op~ ncnts, "Their ICJ41cy· to our children would be built-m tax increases that could only be described in one way: from here to eternity." He also Used a football analogy as he invoked his familiar rosy imagery of America under the Reagan admm- istration: "lsn 'tit arcat to SC( Amenca beginning to score touchdowns again?" ~mpaignina with the president be unsuccessfully challenged for the GOP nomination ei&ht years ago, Reagan sought to take advantage of Ford's home-state popularity. Ford "brought back our economy, began rebuilding our defenses," Reagan said of his old Republican rival. e drew a crowd of about 10,000 earlier in Iowa, where his way was paved by an announcement Tuesday of additional government guaranteed farm loans and deferment of some existing farm loans. Reagan said that Mondale's farm and econo mic proposal "would reap I haNest or hardships" for farmers. ·Mondale spoke to a union audience in Seattle, where he invoked the variation on the '·Where's the beef' question Mondale used so success- fully against Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado in the Democratic presi- dential primaries. Then it was to sugcst Hart's "new ideas" Jacked substance; this time, it was to demand a re ponse to Mon- dale's own proposal to cut the federal deficLt by two-thirds throu,gb a tax 10crease and pend10g cuts. "Todal I ask Mr Rcapn. wherc·s the plan. Where's your plan? ut's hear it," he said, SOUTH COAST FIT E & PHYSICAt' TUER P lmmedl•t• Reaulta DIRCtlE THllAIYWAY .,, .................... ... -'UVA ..... ... Tan to a OoeOer\ Brown .... _. ...... 8uld muKle dhout pumping "' "'*•uli ........ CMlftl -......L-. .... •C.... MOST lNSURANGES ACCEPTiED 545-3478 - EDITORIAL Teachers' action flies in the face . ' of school reform ~ ; Fountain Valley teachers are. acting like factory .hands. tHrowing their contract like · a barricade into the path of educational reform. · The teachers have gone to court seeking to halt the school dlstrict's new schedule, which lengthens the school day by as n)u<;h as 30 minutes and increases the school year from 175 to 180 days. · .. These extensions were not agreed upon 4uring negotiations, s the teachers are -at this time -unwilling to accept them. There is a consensus among educators in trus state that a nually declining student performance ratings can be reversed ~ an mcreased commitment to excellence. That bas been lcsgislatively translated into additional funds, offtred as iO~ntives, for school districts that increase their calendars. More instruction is only part of the packaie, but a key part. l We should expect teachers, as profess10~ to endorse this concept~ they have complained they have not been treated with ttiedignity they deserve. We should expect teachers to be pleased that their work is considered of great import and that the ~itional time will result in additional compensation. • We should not expect teachers to act like clock-punchers. ,,.,r If the teachers reverse the implementation of the new school ~lendar, they will have won a victory as a labor union -at the ~nse of their reputation as an association of professionals. .:· If the court does not ~nt. the teachers' demand, what .:·techniques will they choose 1fthey continue to press their case? ·:wi11 they appeal to a higher authority, pursue their goals in :megotiations or threaten to strike? :: The path they choose will tell us a lot about the way our :teachers see themselves. LETTERS -:B arbor Patrol's ,effic i ent ··~'response wins accolad e To the Editor: On August 15 while my 44-foot sailboat was docked in Newpon Harbor. the salt water intake hne ro m} engine broke and the boat was tloodtng and sinJc1na. A neighbor caJlcd the Harbor Patrol who re- sponded immediately. put a couple of f umps aboard and saved the boat 9'0.&n sinking completely. For me this has been a repeated e pie of the immediate response a positive and courteous attitude that bespeaks good training and administration. My compliments to Harbor Master Lieutenant Gage and to Shenff Brad Gates for their management of such an outstanding dcpanmcnt. The )achtsmen of New· Port Harbor arc fortunate to have such a well-trained organization available to protect our lives and property. KARL 0. BERG HEER Santa Ana DeUnquenjU~twasoutoldate o the Editor: , I am writing to you most embar· tasscd and concerned. My husband's name appeared m the delinquent tax rolls published by your newspaper. The property listed was our fonner r9ddencc, which was-sold m June of 1 ~. Apparently, the new legal owners chose not to pay the taxes due irr Pccember of 1983 and Apnl of l~. In speakin& with the assessor's office it was substantiated that we Wl:tt., indeed, no longer the owners of rceord but because we were hsted as tflellegal owners in March of 1983, our name appeared. As a small consola· don, we were told that our names wbiild not appcaf in 1984. l>Whilc we do realize that there are many people who feel that using the ldir 10tcrcst rates and penalties im- posed by the tax collector is an astute bllSiness move (where else can you ~el ., r .. 10 percent money these days?), my husband and I arc not of that thinking. We have worked IODJ and bard to establish our credit by honoring our financial commitments to our creditors in a timely manner. Therefore, it is doubly' bard for us to read our name in this column. I am, therefore, asking if you would consider verifying the namc~that you arc printing arc indeed the legal oWllcrs of the property on the date of publication. Or. perhaps, if that is too time.-consuminJ. you would consider printing a ''disclaimer" on each column indicatin,a. that the names Jistcd were specified as the legal owners in March of the pnor year. In closing, I thank you forconsadcr- iog my rcquesL MRS. TIMOTHY LINDSAY Newport Beach i 03 households cry for relief rr6 the Editor: board claims that they are 1n no way 'When 103 Costa Mesa households responsible or have any control over • I, "Quiet," something 1s WTOng the sounds that come from the Pacific ~y Pilot headline, Sept. 5). Es-: Amphitheatre. Ned·W~t Inc .. own- lly ~hen you consider. the Costa ·ers-operators of the Pacific ~ Pohce Department will only log Amphitheatre claim that thcr. have oKc complaint per rcs1dent1al home no control and are not re ponsablc for per evening. Most homes have two to the sounds that the individuaJ per- fOur residents, which multiplies the fonncrs make "' .Ji\imber to 209 o.r 400 im1ated AsapassingthouiJlt, 1tsee-mstomc • residents ~hat hvc m that LS-mile that the Costa Mesa etty attorney olsc radius. My God. I 'h male should be fihng cnminal complaints • radius!!! Then too, it's quite possible of disturbing the peace with willful • l't for each of the 103 households intent of exceeding the sound limits call~. ~nother 103 were too set by law apinst the source of the td or d1dn t kn?w '!'hom to call. noise. the perfonncrs. and sue for If you can hear tt, 1t s too loud and punitive damages. mstcad of fihna a'shou~d call and complaut to the ~inst those who claim no rcspons1· .-.... ~ pohc.e. The ualy sounds that b1lity. eatc our homes comma from the aC"tfic Amphitheatre na&hlly ~nnot RALPH L. SIEGFREID 4nd wm not be tolenued. The fair Costa Mesa ~et 's have more Bill Harvey olhc Editor; of de pcratc hope at the end as the :j ust nlto wnLC you a hort note tu ff of which classic comedy 1s made. •ythat I aways enjoy Bill Harvey's So plea~ put my ballot 1n the box hsmn but che Sept. 17 example wa -more Bill Harvey! 1JC11 .-.1nncr. The gentle trusting LAURENCE L. OABOl.T -..::-"'"'~·recreattdanditschangctoa ort NewPQrt Bc~ch ORANGE COAST H. L. Schwartz UI l1ilyPilat " top tngyouhaveaplanforreductngtJ1ed cit. In te d, sayyou avenoplan butthatthedeflclt will mehowrcdu Itself. Then everyone will gtve you credit for beftJg n opttml t a11dfeelgo0djust byB<!eJngyoarfac . Boundless, cock-eyed optimism Is 6etter than a plan any day. · · L ·. ~alifornia poses dilemma f or the Mondale campaign Can he afford to concede biggest electoral prize? Ever since he won tho Democratic presidential nomination, Walter Mondale and bis campaign aides have wrestled with the question of what to do about the state where he was annointed. And as the campaign gradually heats up, they're stilt not sure, despite all their loud public rhetoric to the contrary. Monda!! bas spent large chunks of campaign and fund·raising time in California for the last two years, but was shocked when Color.ado Sen. Gary Hart swamped him in this statc'sJunc pnmarydcspite spending barely half as much money. California bas gone solidly for Ronald Reagan at every opportunity it's had since 1966, when the prcsi· dent first ran for 1ovemor. Has narrowest victory maflin was 520,000 votes an a 1970 ~-election carflpa~ Those facts were behind a con· trovcrsiaJ midsummer mC\JlO from Mondale's state campaign chief. L.M. Bovo THOIAS EUAS which recommended writing off Cali· fornia if the Democratic ticket is doin1 welJ an other states. This state -and the West in sencral -was almost totally ignored by fonner President Jimmy Carter in 1980, as Carter lost the entire rqjon in the Reagan landslide. But Mondale's national campaign c<Khaannan, Sin Francasco lawyer Duane Garrett, would rather harken back to 1976, when Caner lost California to Gerald Ford by le s lban 2 ~nt while spendinJ le than half as much here as bis nval. Garrett and national campaign manager Jim Johnson claim the California memo and its advice were instantly overruled because of co· courasina poll results and because of the image problem created when a presidential candidate concedes the biggest sinalc electoral prize. "We don't bclicvcwccan ignore47 electoral votes, almost one.fifth of what it takes to set elected." Garren says. "And what happened in 1976 demonstrates . that a Democrat can have a fighting chance in California." Garrett also notes that Reagan hasn't been seriously challenged in California s.in<:e 1970, when Jesse Unruh, aenerally considered a weak Democratic candidate for governor, Jost by le~ than a 6 percent marain. But Mondale's sorry primary showing both hc?e and in other Western states demonstrated he lacks any puJling power in lBA'egion. And favorite son Reagan wasn't running then. Yet, even in 1980, when Garrett says Carter -another Democrat with little popuJat appeal in the West -was .. nothing more than a distant flicker on a TV ktttn to most Californians," Reapn's maf'lin of victory was far less than the one rolled up by Democratic U.S. Sen. Alan Cranstov, then runnina for his third term. Now Mondale faces a dilemma; If he ignores California and the West, he gives Reagan an enormous leg up his re-election chances. lf he doesn't ignore the region, he spends money and time that might by used more fruitfully in states where the polls have shown he bas better chances. Tboma1 Ella1 /1 • Sue. Moalca· baud colamal1t o.a 1tate lnae1. Ba sque-ingin their discovery When French explorers first turned up in Canada, they asked the na1ives, "How arc you?" The natives replied, "Apaiz.ak obeto." Jn one lan1uage it means, .. The priests have it bcner." But it means nothing in any other tongue. It's Basque. How those rua&ed Basques of the Spanish penin· suli got here so early i' unknown. Q. Which is the correct pronuncia· tion of .. Celts" -.. Kells" or ··Sells"? A. Both. Greeks called them "Kchoi," Germans "Kelten." But to the French they were "Scites " L.M. Boyd 11 a 1y•dl~tetl colmnal11.. NuClear nightm{Jre equals doubtful industry finances. Report foresees grim future for util ities as htgh c~sts force plant cancellations WASHINGTON -The nuclear could find themselves in trouble. power industry -already sta&&eJing under enormous construction-cost The report idcntafied IS unfimshed sed b r. nuclear power planu on the danser ~~:cys :=,un be !~~pcopcdn~~~ys list. Sinc.e then, five of them have been canc:elcd. more cancellations of plants now Here arc the IO others that could be under construction. a boned; And utility customers unJucky •N H h' Se b k 1 d enough to be buying clcctnc1'ty firom cw amps arc: a roo an 2 (Public Service Co of New Hamp. the affected companies could wand up share). payana huge rate increases to rescue •GcorgJa: Vogtlel(Gcoraia Power the corporations from their sour Co.). investment in nuclear facilities. •Illinois: C'.airoll County I and 2 That's the gist or a closely held (Commonwealth Edison) federal ncy ~pon acen by my lTcJW: 'South TelU 2 (Houston a sociates Michael Binstein and John Li&ht and Power). D11Jon. It paint 1 &rim picture of the •MissiS$ippi: Grand Gulf 2 (Mis. nuclrar power industry's future. sa sippi Power and lipt). "The earnings outlook for ttte •Pennsylvania: Limcnck 2 (Phila· nuclear sector clearly is not encouraa· dclphia Electric). ing. •• the report notes WJtb undel'-•Ohio: Perry (Cleveland Electric). statement. "'Absent the unlikely •Michipn: Midland (Consumer emergence of strona derMnd and Power Co,). vqy large rate· hike av.proval scv. The shaky oond1t1on of the nuclear crif nuclear uulities W111 continue to pow r industry lS no secrtt to in· labor und r hi&h financint co ti, and vestors, Sharp droP.S in nuclear utll· caminp will saa... itt 'carninaa and the upectauon of The report warn : " vcraJ further adverse •Jttory dtd ions bankruptcies are probable af ~· hav~ sent the pnct' of ithc com- laton prohibit ut1htic from ramng panics' stocb down an averqc of20 rates enough to cover a lal'I hare of pcrc nt in less than a year. th4 ncclcd proj~1 tndesperalion, nuclcar powercom· But if the cndan#fcd utahtics a.re P!lnics have tum to their aC'OOun· allowt>d to pe the co t on to thctr • t.ant1 to minim1ic t.ht uuc tate of cuStomcrs and complete the j>Owtr their ,,arry carnmp position pl nts, they'll ha" c '° ra11e their ntcs t>O<>UttJ)ina dcvtce ... 1Uowancc for an)'whcre from 40 pcrctnt to 80 fund used dunna conttrut:tion," leis perC'Cnt. th rtPon predicts th company uppo accna ntQully f ·Jac1 . AIDEISOI rcsuhm& from the cost ofbuildin& a new plant-a suppo ition thit would obviously be untenable if the plant were not completed. The devitt funher inflates a com· pany's apparent mcome by allowina deduction of the int.trcst costs on money borrowed for the: construe· ti on. "More than half of all reported income in 1983 may have been attributable \0 t~ non.ash CttdiLS that arc permitted by this acc:ountina procedure. and thu actual eaminp have been 1rcatly oventatcd," another internal aovcrnmcnt repon warns. addina: l "lnfact,casheaminpin 19 3wcrc ansufficicnt to cover dividend PIY· mcnts for teveral nuclear uulitica ... • uch • development can be rrticu· larty damgina for 'income tocks hke clcctnc utalitacs, bcausc those who invest in such stocks u ually p~ce~at amponanccon the urity o( dividend Pl)'mCnts.•· Investors' demoftstrat.cd wenn s ior nuclcat utalit tocks tw led to 1 new wany. that the power rom pani wtll t um to the blnlcs (or their lont- lttm financial ntedl Jatt AM,.... J1 a .tyM#arH atl•m•l1I. JUCHARD COHEN colamnlat RICHARD CoHEI Do:ti 't insist on fi!ct~ Fritz To: Fntz From: Richard Cohtn Re: Your Message As you know, there's much criti· ciun here in Washinaton about your failure to enunciate a message. You are percei vcd as weak, bland, boring and lacking in l~crsh~ quaJiti~. What peoete are saym~ in essence, as that you re not Ronald Rea.po. Therefore, I recommend the follow· ing: Call a staff meeting and fall asleep. f of1Ct the name of a cl09C as· SOCtate. During a .. press availability," pretend you don't hear a question, aJlow Joan to stage whisper the answer and then repeat it word for word. Don't ask me why, Americans. seem to love this sort of stuff Make up some facts. Use anecdotes that an: more apocryphal than true. Say you filmed the liberation of the concentration camps end attribute the desegregation of the armed forces to a black galley band who showed heroism at Pearl Harbor. Ignore history and concentrate on myth, Stop saying you have a plan for reducmg the deficit. Instead, sa_y you have no plan but that the deficit will somehow reduce itself. Then every·· one will give you credit for beina an optimist and feel goOd just by seeing . your face. Boundless, cock~ed op--·- tim1sm is better than a plan any day. • Show you're decisive. Promise if elected to invade a small Caribbean island. Barbados would be a good , choice. Say you are rescuing Oaudct· tc Colbert from the peril of the rising dollar. · Identify yourself with heroism instead of; say, the AFL-CIO. Find a hero and say what he bas done is typical of aU Americans. Foract that what made him a hero in the first place is that he is untypical and amtcad talk about a return to tra· ditional values. Mention them a lot and ignore that they sometimes meant sexual repression, discrimina- tion apios1 women, child brutality and religious coercion. These are. mere details and we arc st.riving for the bia picture. Stop talking about fairness. Jn. stead, talk of cqu.al opportunity. That means if you have a lot, you set to keep what you have and have the chance to get more. Also make 1hccr dumb luck look like it was earned or deserved. We aJI know that beina born American, white and middle class is the best luck of all and that after that you have to really work at being poor. Forget about that, though. No one wants to hear it. -Pose on a battlefield. Most of the European ones have already been used by Reagan, so choose an Ameri· can one-maybe Trenton. That way you could identify yourself with George Washington, point out that the battle took place on Christmas Eve and hit the religious analc u well. Also don't forget that Trenton is in New Jersey, a swing state with t 7 electoral votes. Crack a joke about bombing the Soviets but be sure to do it off·thc· record. That way, the press will look sneaky and unethical for rcponin.a it, you Wiii appear victimized, and you still will be able to make the eoint that • you're unequivocally hostile to the Soviets. Most Americans are, too, and they will admire you aJl the more for It Be unreasonable. Say you'U never raise taxes even thou&h you must: call on Coo&f'CSS to cut the budict even thou~ it can't; ianorc statistics how101 you used the veto less thin even Jeny Ford. Lam but the federal Reserve ·Board for the tiaht·money policy that wruna inflation from the economy, insult the Sovieu and then s~t a summit mectjna; and talk of banishina Ood from the classroom -as if He has been banished to the hallway for c~wina 'um. Take no questions on any oftha Slow down. Take naps. Watch lots of afternoon television. Clop wood. Ride a hone. CUt out iudana. Use films for briefina. Show no intetlcc- tual curiosity. Appoant a Middle East ncaotiator every month or two. Train Joan to pu at you u if he had never seen you before. Dilate her eyes if necessary. When talkina to ethnic aroups, mention movie l\ars you ba c known, Rn&an cited .. ,ht beautiful Delores 0tr Rio" to •.2 aroup of Ha1pan1 . Say you knew her, too. Take no questt-0n1 on thi one, either. In hon. if you always do What Regan does; afttr 1 while )'in& .. what you u whit you ~.. ca•t sound lake I tbrell You mwn n l n 8Ut n'l ll~ efthu u • 1jNIC11 PedreecllnchNL W..t DIYlelon lltle with eome help from Dodgera. 83. Angels back·w: ere they started provides series BJ IUOllARD DUNN .......... c.. $ .... With protests providing a ·delight. the Anacb gained baCk ~around lost earlier 1n the week and are once ..UJl breathing down the nec:b of KanSa1 City as the only race left in baseball enters the homestretch. Mike Witt t<med his first shutout since August 13, 1982, as the Aqels pined a 2-0 victory over the l*lC- settina Royals and with the Split of the fourjPIDe xries, moved back to Within a balf-pme of the American Lcaaue West front-nmne:rs.. Witt was in control thf'Ou&hout, .. tossina a three-hitter without allow-.. It was really marted up. .. q • ina a walk. And by virtue of ats win catcher BOb Boone, referrin& to earlier in the day ovtt Cbicqo, controversy that suned wit.fl Orl4~s~ Minnesota is baCk in the picture, t.L .. And there WU too much writihl' •• , .................... c...... Pat McGrath (44) and Sean Tamer clra& Caplatrano Valley W,h'• DaYld Bam.ford down after he rambled for JUdaee. ti:ailiDa the Angels by a half-pme. on iL" Witt's ~m aside, the pme was .. Boone tooJc a loot at 0rta•1 bat pla)'ed under a double protest as both Monda} ni&ht and said it ~ managers claimed a batter on the funny. McNamara said. ... We~ opwsing team was usin& an illcpl · about it and talked about it, Sea Kings dig own hole bat wanted the bat out of tbc ball PJ!\C. An~I Ma~ John McNamara And we decided to cbcck it out lii8 lodgCd' his protest in the top of the stooe be wasn't in tbc linei.P" second inning, claiming that the (Wcdneaday) nisht. we did it io. i Royals' Jorge Oru had used an nif!?t." • And Capo Valley does the burying witha27-7win BJ ROGER CARLSON Of .. Dlltr .... ....,. · C.Orona dcl Mar High's Sea Kings dua a bole for themselves agamst Capistrano Valley Thursday ruaht - and it proved too deep to get out of as the C.Ouprs rambled for a 27-7 non- league football victory at Newport Harbor Hi&h. It was a night when little would go ri&ht for the Sea Kinp in their final tuneup, leavina Coach Dave Holland with not much to say except for the obvious: "Well, we're 2-1 aoina into league," said Holland. There wasn't a lot else he could say, because his team's offense sort of took the words out of his mouth With a performance a great deal less than what it'll take to contend for the Sea View Leaaue championship. It put the defense in hol6 with three lost fumbles and an inter- ception. It took Capistrano Valley just six seconds to score its KCOnd touch- down after lineman Sal Cassaro intercepted at the C.dM 23. Capo converted one fumble into a 44:-yard field aoaI by junior Eric Hannah, and another fumble n>- covery by Joaquin Alejo at the CdM 8-yard line was turned into David Bamford's second touchdown of the ni&hl Almost as devas1.atin& u the turn- overs, however, was an inability to convert on fourth and short yardage eartY in the contest ·· altered bat after he flied out to Brian l'\'e sot to look at it -I put it in Downing in left. someone else's hands .. said ~ In the bottom of the thin:I, Kansas .. I didn't wantto make' a bi& deal of it, City Managtt Dick Howser counttt-that's Why I did it when t did. ed by claiming that the Anacls' Juan .. I <lid it lbcD (in the scoond i.nnllW: Beniquez had used a doctored baL so it wouldn't effect lhe oUltome-or The bats in question were locked the pme. I d.idn•t want it to be ue to be examined later. ~nd a ttport controvenial, liU if bc'd hit a bo~ -will !ft made-unhe Amenan t.equc-ru.n or sometrun&..... ---.. , office. ~Me A1'GBl.8,-. In Mustang book. 0-0 is a triumph Underdog Mesans get great defense to stifle Griffins BJ CBRJS MONAHAN ._., .... C.1141 t 3 In the pme off ootball a victory is nonnally recorded when ooc team outscores the other. Not'° in Thurs- day night's Costa Mcaa-Los Alamitos pmeat Western Hiah. The Mustang defense played super- bly, and although Costa Mesa came away with oruy a 0.0 tic. it didn't appear that Mustang bead coach Tom Baldwin could have been happier. .. We feel like we woo.," Baldwin said. .. I don't like . the ue. but we needed not to get beat qai.n." -Comins in. the Mustangs •'Cle 0-2 while the Griffins were 2-0, and · Baldwin didn't fccl ibc Griffins were showina the Mustangs much respect. !l. 4t I juniors startin& on ddcue, com· • off a sophomore lQm that was 0-9,, Baldwin added. ... " The first quarter was ncarlr_ ~~: trous for tbc M ustanp as the Gri.lliJa:s. nearly took advantqe of two ~ piistlies. OD Costa Mesa's.first ~ from scrimmage. J.T: Snow ~-1 ccpte4 a pass. giving Los Alanllt4ll pouession at the M ustan& 36. r. , The Sea Kings were a yard shy at the Capo 24 and tried to ao to the left side on their fint series after gainina possession with Capo's only turnover ofthepme. (Pleue eee SEA IUKGS/BS) Capo Valley'• Sal Cu•aro (77) seroe In on the ball amidst Cdll'• offen•l•e line after It wu dpped to Intercept, meum. up Capo'• eecond touchdown In 27·7 Ylclory. .. They didn't exchange game films with us until Saturday. They were probably lookina {ahead next week) to Esperanza," be said. .. We were 0-2. they were 2-0 and we had seven On second down, linebacker ~t Anderson tackled Griffin ~f:t• terback Bruce DeH~ for a 10-yaid loss, one of Anderson s three , Two plays later, Los Alamitos • forced to punt. · · Miller, Favorite team up tO lead Trojans, 21-0 Uni quarterback, s three TD passes pave way for first Victory of season Special to die Dally Pilot University Hiah rolled to its first football victory of the season Thurs- day night. a 21-0 romp over Laauna Hills at Mission Viejo Hiah befOrc a crowd of 850. Uni quarterback Andy Miller threw three touchdown passes, two in the openin• half to wide receiver Mark Favonte and the third to Brld Amold midway throuah the third quarter. was perfect and Uni bad a 7-0 lead. .. Finally," said Curtis. ··v.e've begun to catch the balJs in the end zone. Curtis stilt basn 't forgotten the case of the dropsies his receivers had an that area apinst rival Irvine. • The short drive was set up when a Hawk fumbled a punt on his own 19 and the Trojans' Peter Pitchess re- coverd. When a major pen~ty sc:nt the Trojans back to the 28 on third down, at appeared as if the drive would boa doWb. Then Miller and Favorite went to work. · Uni•s second TD was also set up b} a Hawk turnover. With six minutes to go tn the half, Uni's Ken Bailey blocked Steve Youna'spuntattheHawk 16andUoi took over at the 17. Five plays later. Miller, on a roll out, fired a strike to favonte in the end zone. Ferrell's kick made h· I W. "We've worked on that pretty bard this year," said Curtis about the blocked punt. "Actually Scott Cagle was su~ in 17 attempts for lSS yards, Wlth posed to ~ tbe guy to block it. but Favorite haulina tn four for 56 yards. Bailey cot throu&h there Pf'tlY ni~ Fullback K.alaina Gobara was the ly," tM coach added. leadin& rusher for the Trojans Yrith 70 1nc final touchdown came on a l S-yards on 12 cames. . yard pass play from Miller to Arnold "I th!nk~ we dominat~:· ad~ who made a aood catch between two Curus. ·we ncc&d a po51t.1~e thing defenders. It culminated a 77-yard., goana befe>ff~e (~ Tro1ans ,are drive in 12 play . Durio& that drive, now 1-2 pnor ~o thci! ~ View Miller and Arnold teamed oo a SS-league opener with Estancia): yard pass Play that went for a TD. but .. This pme was a b. pan of our was nulhficd because of an illegal season. to get one under our ~lts. \' procedure. T&nalins with Estancia, however. .. AndJ. rcall) played well;' said isn't Curus' idea of a reward for Curt~. We're excited about that'' • gcttina on track. MiHer fini~ed with 9 completions (Pleaae .. TROJA.1'8/82) That too turned into disaster for Mustangs u the punt was fumbled and recovered by Jared Hjclmstld.. givina the Griffins a first down at Mustana20. Bruce McMoms gained 12 yarch around the left side, scttina ~ G riftins up with a first-and-coal at c.he 8. Two penalties pushed the ball t.:k to the 18. DeHoot was then ~oa the next two plays by AD<knon &tia John Cvtson. respectively, forcin& the Griffins to pve up the without any points. .. .. We need Andenon (on defa:i~. we need aJI the players." Ba.Id~ said. "O\lr line played well aaainst tbC double teams and it made ow.: • linebackers loo food." · The Musl&J:\&.' only rc&l tcOq.111 threat came on their tint • (Pleue ._ MSaAJ, I But the Trojans really didn't need all that scorina as their defense held the winless Hawks well in check. In fact, Lquna Hills was limited 10 juat 36 total yards in the openina halfand 113 for the pme. And the University defensive unit added insult to injury b)' ~iCki!'J offfour Hawk panes. Edlson-Bannlng battle· tops heavy nlght of football ·~ • The kids real~ pla~ a lot better and u a team, ' aid a satisfied University CoaCh Rick Cun11. ••Our ckfen~ ri&ht from the beain· nina. really hat them hlld. Our linebecten (led br, Todd Pearlman) really p&ayed ~II.' Umvmaty should have 1rored more but l 3S yards In penaltia helped bol down at leatt two drives. Curtis' T~ns &o.t the only PQtnts they rally needed will) 1:07 ICfhn the ~ .. quarwwhtn Maller~ wath his fivonte &afld, Favonte, on a 28-yarder. Favonte cauaht lht batl at dae 15, bouoced oft' a tackier and raced into the end :zone. Wall Ferrell's fint of three boot for the extra point ts the third time a charm? Edison Hi&h will find out tontght when the ChaflCR take on Los Angcles city power Bannina before an cxpeded capacity crowd at Orange Cout Col1egc. 1be Edison-Bannina battle head· lines a hea".)' ni,ght of prep football alona the Ori nae Coast with all pm scttina under way at 7:30. Here's a capsule look a1 tonighf s action: B_... (t .. ) v1. EdllM (t·t): - Edi .On's Charaen. with Keith Jarrett 1t quancrt>e(lc and Sean mn howina well .~t tailback. cntcn whh two vactorics und r their belt, Whale Bann1na'soption tyl Pilot open the season with a rcputa11on for v~ • .. illers stick to the g;round to stop Irvine; 21-7 ebster (207 yards) helps grind out sttn 's third straight non-league win .... c. .. ., ........ lflrvine Hi'&h's Vaquero didn't et 7 the number of the truck. that ran them • r Thursday niaht, it was number l and it was worn by Tustin Hiah's D,anen Webster. Webster ran through, over. and nd Jrvine for 207 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Tillers to a 1-7 non-league football wtn at Tustin before 2,000 fans, closing out tblir non-league schedule at 3-0. Irvine enters South Coast leaJ!ueplay next week with El Toro at 1·2. The resurgent Tillera, with new Coach Marijon Ancich at the helm. have already exceeded his and most others expectations. But with a start like this, he and his team won't be taking anyone by surprise. Ancich won three CIF titles while coaching at St. Paul High and looks to be molding another win ncrafter taking over a 1-9 team. Tustin didn't take lnline by sur- pnsc. Vaquero Coach Terry Henigan id before the gnnie ''I'm urc glad we're pl yang them in the third game instead of the eighth. With the imprQvement they've mnde already, they're going to be tough Thcy"re well-tonched nd won't beat them- selves." following the game, Henigan, now fumina. declined comment on his team's performance. It was true, Tustin dtdn 't bcllt itself. but the Tillers kept Irvine in the game with untimely mistakes thr9ugh three quarters. The Vaqueros took advan· tage of some early miscues to take a 7-0 lead in the first period on an 11· yard run by quarterback JeffBielman. Three-across seating. Full-bench seat. More corrosion resistance. New, re-engineered seamless, smooth-side strongbox with double-walled construction. STILL ONLY. •• $ - The score was set up by a rougluna penalty to give Irvine a first down at the Tillers' l S·yard line. The 6-2, 18S· pound senior Dielman bootlegsed around the riaht ide for the score. Tustin tied it on the firat of Websler's two touchdown , and then took the lead for aood with 2:16 rcmainina in the half on a 20.yard scoring connection from quarterback Pat Heprty to Kirby Piau.a fore 14-7 advantage. The Vaqueros, who moved the ball well most of the night, couldn't put t<>aclher another drive despite the efforts of senior running back Remy Rahmat\,\lla. The bulliah back around out 126 gritty yards on 13 carries to pace the Vaqueros ground attack and carried most of the off ens vc burden himself. Biclman added 42 yards rushana. but runnina the ball wasn't the problem for ITY1ne, it was an inconsistent passin& pmc. Dielman, wbo ufTered throu~ a touah same last week (9·for·25 with 3 i.ntcrceptions ,.apd 46 yards), had difficulty finding receivers and ended the night S·for-22 for 96 yards. He did find wide receiver Mike Henipn six times for 72 yards, however. Tustin put the . game away on Webstefs second TD •. a nine-yard bunt with 6:09 remaining in the fourth quarter. . _ I • More combined horsepower.and torque than any other standard pi~kup. Powerful 2.4-liter NAPS-Z hemi-head engine. More value with standard 5-speed overdrive 0 'lransmission. • •Mfr.'s sug. ret•il price excluding title, taxes, licen~ and destination charges . . . .If! ... . . . It's here. Now. The 1985 Nissan Regular Bed. It's more truck, but not more money. This tough, new performer is listed right now at an '84 sticker. So get more than you bargained for at your Datsun dealer. The $5999* Nissan Regular Bed; more truck, not more money. No other truck works so hard for so little pay. BB.T t:I')\ YOUASB.F '*' . -. -. • NISSAN AT DATSUN DEAL ERS -------~~~~~~~~~~~ .... ....__, . . . * Tu1ttn 21, ~ 7 kort IW °""""' trvki. 0 1 D ~ 1 T111tln 0 14 0 1-11 trv-81elman 11 run (Htnioen Ille") Tus-Wmllf J rut\ ~Welmtln kick) 'T'u1-Plut1 JO 111n from Htoarlv (Walmrll'I ltlckl T11t-Wmtlf' 9 rUft (Walmrln )JdU. .., AttenOenct: UOO INDtvlDUAL ITATISTICI .. u ..... lrv""'«•l'lmlluh. n·12'i ei.iman. 11•'2, Frank, 1•1 Tut-w.tnt1r. »207, Codv, 7 IJ HaQartv. 1· fOt•mlnfA' 1•14; Bldltr, foUowing Ttheir two defensive stands. As was the case all ni&ht, the Mustangs started deep in their own territory (they started only once outside their own 20), th1s time at the four. Costa Mesa QB Mike Shuck com- pleted five paS\CS and mixed some of his runnina to move the·MustanJ.S down to the Griffin 20, but a 37-yard field goal atlcmpt by Adam Beck fell considerably short. The Griffins matched Mesa in the fourth quarter, as they too missed on a field goal atlempt Griffin kicker Paul Park's 45-~rd try sailed just wide of the right upright. . With just 1:-02 remaining, BaldW1n could only watch as the Mustangs' great effort was nearly nearl~ de· strayed by, a second Griffin inter· ccption. Defensive back Rick Nen was responsible this time an4 Los Alamitos had a first 4own •t the Mustang 30. But as easily as \he offense had given the ball away, the defense got it back. On the Griffins' first play from scrimmaie. Mustang defensive back Sam Stro1ch stepped in front of a pass at the 17 to preserve Mesa·~ "win." * Costa Mesa O, Los Alamltol 0 SCere bY Quarten • Costa Mela O o o 0-.-0 Los A*nllos O . O. O ()--() Attandanoa: !OOo Cesllmated) INDtVIOUAL STATISTICS RulNnt CM-Tu.n, 6·.-0; Andenon, 10-161 AmrMnn. 4·6; S1v11tnkl, 1-6; Mo«e, 1•3; Shuck, ,.for- minus 2. LA-Mc:Morrl•, '-SC; Conbov, 13·4'; 0.HOOO. Hor-minus 4 ...... CM-Slluck, 7-lH 71. 1.A-o.Hooo, 7-10-1 S3 . RtaMne CM-<Strok:tl, 4·30, CtrlSOll, 2-2', Tuan, 1-1~. LA-Katnroff, 2·20; Snow, 1-1; Conbov. 1·7; McMorrls, 1·7; Conbov, 1·7; Ouarv, 1·~ TROJANS ••• From Bl "Every year, Estanci~ is tough in that first game. You know what happened to El Toro last year." The Trojans waded through Laguna Hills Without standout tackle Tim Bates (for the second week becau$C of an ulcer) and running back Shawn Noble, but both are expected back in the lineup against Estancia. *· UnlVenttv 21, u iei:1fRll•10 SCere bY Quat1W\ Unlvtr1nv 1 1 7 o-21 f-aguna HIUs O O O 0-O Unl-FavOl'll• 21 pan from Miilar <Ferr.ii kick) Uni-Favorite I i>an from Miiiar (Ferrall kick) Uni-Arnold 15 pass from Miiier (Farrel li.lckl Atlandana: 150 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rutlllne Unl-Gol\anl, 12·70; a.nlfmln, 11·•; Con- tr1ra, 4·27; Miiiar', S-7; Calclen, 3·2. Sllt>tfman, 1-for-mlnus·I. LH-Burton, t-46; Ga...,., 1l-for·mlnu1•10; Miiier, l·1; MMllOA.lr, 1-for·mlnu1·l. ft•ulnl t Uni-Miiier, 9-17·1, 11S. 1 LH-Guser, 10-29·3, 16; Htlm, 0-1·1, O Rectl'llne I Unl-f'avorlla, 4·56; Benlamtn, 1· 12; Hen· lrmllml, l·D r Amotd1 1·15, Gol\ara, 1·3. LH-ttklos, 3-~; L.tlllllm, 2· 16; Burton, 1·4; 'Miilar. 1·1'; Halm, h14; Young, 1-for-mlnus-I. RUFFELL'S · UPHIUTEllY, llC. F• n. •nt Of Yow Uft HU i-. k W>., ~TA llSA -SU.115' The Pros' Since 195 l &llllk\.. Non·smoker ~ uu1n 11suuc£ - J/...;_, .~~ Rates ' :i;, 831-7740 441 Otd Newport ltvd. *•PGftlMch,Ca. \ I Rose fines player, and It winds up costing Rose $60 From AP dlspa~ I ATLANTA -Almost CVet)'lhin& Ii went riaht for Cjnc nnati Reds player. manaitr Pete Ro . But wh t went wrong COit him JSO. -- He ran thrOUAh a "•top.. ian at third ba and wa out br. 10 fett It tlie'P.latc an the Jhird innin 'That'sSSO.'' Rose said af\cr the Reda' ..._2 victory Wcdncsdal ni&ht over the Atlant.a Braves. "That's the m time l vc 6ad to do that 1incc I became manaaer. I paad at to me but it'll really So to charity. I was just tooqsttis1vc.'" Otherwise, thina,s went fine. "Everythin1 we did ton~t med to work out," Rose ad. He 1>Ut Duane Walker in lo reptact Eddie Milner in center field when Milner came ®wn with a virus. Walker hometed in the eecond. . He used Torn foley·to pinch hit for winnina pitcher Jay Tibbs oee in the eiahth. Foley homered of reliever Gene Garber, sjvin1 the Reds a 3-1 lead. Rose doubled home Ron Oestcr in the third inning to aivc Cincinnati its second run, but then was thrown out by Braves center fielder Dale Murphy when he ran throuah third ba~coachJoe Sparks' hold sign on Dave Parker's hard 1inaie to center. "I chewed Prrker out for hittina the ball so hard," Rose aid. Padtea wrap up flnt Weat dtle The San Diego Padres rlin~hed the Ill National liaJue Western Division title Thursday, rid ma Ttm Lollai'• pitdiioa and three-run, second·innana home run to a S-4 victory over San Franci~. The Padres, who eliminated Atlanta with the win, wrapped up their fim title in their 16-ycar exi tencc when the DOdaers la&er beat Houston, 6-2. Lollar hit liss third home run of the ~ason off loser Mike ltnkow, 10-12, to cap a second- inning rally in which the Padres scored all their runs •• . In the East Division. Chicago's magic number remained at three over the idle New York Mets. u Jowy J\ay'1 sacrifice fly broke a 6·6 tie in the eiahth inning and Jim Morrtaoa collected two RB[ as Pittsbufah completed a threc·same sweep of the Cubs with a 7-6 victory. It's the second time this season the Cubs have lost four strai&ht ... Gerald Perq drove in five runs with a home run and a double an leadina Atlanta to a 9-3 victory over Cincinnau. Perry hit a three-run homer, ).tis sixth of the year, in the third innina qainst Re(h' starter Jeff RuHll. 6-18. Perry drove in the other two in the fifth off reliever Tom Bame ... AadyVuSJybbita two-runhomerunandrclieflCIC Bnace Satter added to his NL record with his 43rd save as St. Louis Cardinals edacd Montreal, ~2. BlnJrJe retain• Lu Vegu lead Nebraeka pair quatlonable LAS VEGAS -Lon Hinkle, again !I leavina tbc driver in his baa. compiled the lowest 36-hole score of the year and maintained his lead Thursday through the second found of the rich Las Veps Invitational Golf Tournament. Hinkle completed the first two days' play in 130 in the five-day, 90-hole event that is spread over four desert courses and offerJ St, 122,SOO in total prizes, the largest _purse on the American PGA Tour. After one round each over the Las Vegas and Tropicana Country Oub courses, Hink.le, a frustrated non-winner for fiveyean, stood at 11 shots under par. · Rookie Corey Pavtn has the second-best number, at eigbt·undcr par 133, after two rounds. - McEnroe &cores eaay victory SAN FRANCISCO -Top-seeded ~ John McEnroe beat John Sadri 6-2, 7-6 Thursday to move into the quarterfinals of the Transamerica Open. McEnroe broke S'&dri'1 nomially strong service two times in the first set, winning 6.2. But the left. hander had tQ strugg)e in the second set -both pla)ers held sttve unttl the tic breaker. McEnroe fell behind ..._2 in the tic breaker, but then came storming back to win ~he next five poi~ts, sealina the matoh on an ace. In an upset an doubles, the team of Kevin Curren ~d Steve Denton, third-sccd.cd and fifth.ranked orldwidc, was ousted by Gary Donnelly and Butch alts 6-4, 7-S. Nlelrro uye he may retire A Tl.ANT A -Phil Niekro the vet· Iii eran knuckleball pitcher who balked at the sugcstion that be retire last year, now uyt he may step down at the end of his current successful season willf the New York Yankees. .. I Jove pitching, but some other tbinp have aottcn in the way," the •S-year-old Nietro said. . LINCOLN, Neb. -Two Nebraska [iJ miters practiced Thursday despite in· c > jurici that have made thtm questionable II for Saturda}"s contest at UCLA. · Left offensive taclde Mark Behning (ankle) and winaback Shane Swanson (back). who both were bun in tut Saturday's 38-7 victory over Minnesota, partici- pated in the 90-minute workout but were not at full speed. "Behnin1 did all right/' C<>ach Tom Osborne said. "I think he felt better. I don't think he'll be 100 perecnt Saturday, but it's a situation where he should be available. • "Shane Swanson was somewhat better. We'll see how he feels (tonight) and Saturday." Cal Poly womenjom PCAA The women's volleyball program at Ill C.al Poly San Luis Obispo and the women's softbaU program at C.al Poly Pomona have been admitted to the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, the PCAA announced Thursday. San Luis Obispo wtll compete for the PCM championship this season. and Pomona will be ebaible for the women's softball conference title next spring. The admittance of the two as associate members of the PCAA women's conference follows a similar action earlier this )'~r in which the Uruvcrs1ty of Hawaii Joined the conference in seven womcn·s sport . Teleft8lon, raillo TILIVl8ION a p.m. -umM.t: Dodgef8 at san Frandioo, ChArinit 11. tp.m. -HIGHICHOOLFOOTaALL: valtnda w. Et Toro (cteeayed). . IWMO 7:30 p.m. -~= Texu at ~nget•. KMPC(110). I •. m. -MMllALL: Oodgefa at San F.r.ncilOo, KA8C (l~ ..., ....... ~ ..... Cd.II'• Cla.rta Warner raaa for yafdqe ba ~ Thanday'• non-1.,_ 1099 to ta~ ValleJ. •anaer ran for 24 y&rU Oil e&rrl• aad ecored the Sea JD.oe•' only SEA KINGS DIG OWN HOLE, 27-7 ••• From Bl But the Coupra rose to the oc-Hollan<i's Sea Kinas very casion and stopped Stan Turner cold much aware of Co~ lm<kncift - to rcpjo possession and then such as their .. fade pa , whkb bas proceeded to drive 76 yards in 19 thcreceiverracinadownthesidclines plays for their initial touchdown. where he is expected to find the ball at "We should have made that, .. said a cenain spot. And that's euctl) ~hat Holland of the short yardage play. "It happened on the &eCOnd period's first kind of set the tempo." • play-as CaU found Todd J3ei&htol The Couprs' tempo in that first down the left side. drive overcame two penalties for 20 To Corona's defensive Credit. the yards and a dropped pass as Nathan Sea Kinp limited the Coupn to 126 Call directed the winners the dis-yardsrushinaaod 112 pamna. bUt the tance, constantly bumina the Sea field advantase ajven away proved Kings with draw plays. • too costly. Four draw flays accounted for 27 Corona•s only score came in the yards and Cal pined t 9 yards when second period when quarterback he raced up the middle after fadina to Bobby Hatfield drove the Sea K..inp pass:· 4S_yards in Splays -with a 25-yard Bamford went over the right side strike to Brian Davison aiettina it from a yard out on founh down, and staned. moments later, Cassaro came up with Davision held on despite a solid his interception ofa tipped pa on jolt,andaftcra t~pantoTurner the final play of the fir5t quaner. .-at-the lS, ebris er carried three Forget tradition; Saddleback rolls Roadrunners top La Habra, 21-0 and are now 3-0 By ROBB MUNSON o.llJ ..... Cwr 11111 UllflAt Close aamcs arc a tradition when Saddleback Hiah squares off with La Habra in football. )Car. while runoina up a streak of 10 straight scorelcu quartcf'S.; Saddleback drove on its KCOnd possession into the La Habra end zone, mountina a 78-yard push in only seven plays, capped by Earl . Jones' five-yard score. Early in the second quAmr, the Roadrunners put toFthcr another long march, as a I ~yatd run by Jones along with a face-mask penalty put the ball OD the Hi&hlandcr 21. Glenn Campbell tan for 10 yards, Cook Passed to Chris Davis for I 2 more. and then Campbell barreled over left tackle for the score. Todd Maxwell's extra point pve Saddle- S1rai&ht hm~ the payoff from 9 > out after be Slipped a tad:le at the b ofscnmmqr. ....... CV-<d, ~ll-0 H2. UM-H•troeld. •1~1. m. a.. ,_._., •S . . . ........ CV~•. •·41, BeWdol, l· .. DeleY,'f a.mtorcl.. 1-6. CGM-Oe~ H1, Turiwr. •·40 W i-a ~ :i-~ IC.• l., llenldser reaches apJateau In 1982. Saddleblck held on to a 28-27 victory, stoppina La Habra from scorina on a two-point con· version try in the w~it?' seconds of the pme after the Hiahlanders had • scored a touc6down to make the back a 14.q lead. ·•1 thoujht that it would be a three or four-point pme toniaht," said Wine. .. I'm bappX that we didn't sive ANGELS ••• From Bl · "We wettn't tryina to pull any stunts," said McNamara. ..If the playct1 and Bob Boone felt somethint was funny, rve got to back them. If we:re wrona. we~u apolo&izc to Orta and Kansas City." Howsu's protest came in the next innina. But2 Beniquez feels he•s safe. Said Beniquez, 'They (the Royals) were all ptayin_a around. When t looked over (after sinilina), every- body was laughina in the Royals' duaout. I'm not worried because I know there•s nothing in there. "I started usina that bat yesterday because I broke mine the otheuiay and I'm all out of bau. The one J used tonj&ht was Rod Carew's:· Meanwhile, Fred Lynn's second innina RBI s1Dfle and Downina's solo homer in the lllth provided the only offense, and it was all that Witt needed in the crucial confrontation. 0 l've had better tuff this year, but u far u pitchina a whole a.a.me like that1 this is the best/' Witt said. "I don t care if 1 mi sed out (on shutouts) carher this season, 1 thank it'• more important &t came at a time hke this.•• The shutout almo t disappeared in the seventh snninJ. With Ona on fint.; Steve Bllbona drove one to the ----__,--.....__..._ _____ pme close. Last year. La Habra scored a fourth quarter touchdown to take a 7.,6 decision. Artists, Sailors roll; showdown Tuesday Newport Harbor and l.quna Beach hiahs set the staae for an early Sea View ~ague ~rl? vo!leyball showdown with conv1ncsn1 vactones Thursday. Newpon Harbor traveled to Saddlcback and made quick work of the Roadrunnen with a I S·l, 1.5-2, 15-2 romp. . Senior middle blocker Annie McCray and junior outside hiller Laura Power enJincercd the easy victory, the Sailors· second in as many Sea View Uaaue outinp. The win set the stage for a showdown with La&una ~ach on Tuesday night. The Arti ts are also 2.0 .in tcaaue play af\er dispo ina of Estancia, Ts-12, IS-9, IS_.. Outside bitten Annette Juptner and Valerie folcy alona with setter Brook Binley sparked the Artist victory. Foley's fine servina with the firsrpme deadlocked at 12-12 sent LaiUna Beach on to victory. Corona del Mar needed to rally from a one-same deficit to tay unbeaten in Sea View play after two outinas. The Sea King.s turned aside Woodbrid&e, 12-lS, 15-4, IS-8, IS-6 to hand the Warriors their first loss in loop play. Standouts for CdM included freshman back-row specialist Ann Marie Moise and senior outside hitter Brooke Hcrrinaton, while senior Stephanie Noonan·s plal at the net also proved instrumenta . In I South Coast League aame, Irvine whipped San Clemente, I S-6), IS-2. 8-IS, IS-J·behind the pla) or middle blocker Kris Roberts and outside hitter Kari Delson. The V1qucr05 arc S-0 overall. In non-lt"ague action. E.dison im- proved its record to 3-1 with a bard- camed I S-12, l l·IS. 9-1 S, I S-1, IS-13 victory over ho t M1ss1on VieJO. La Quanta survived match point in the fourth game to score a dramctic victory over host Marina. The Aztecs ~ored a S·l5, 7-IS. IS-7. 16-14, IS-9 victory with the help of seldom-used Jill Kame . , However, it was a different story Tilursday night at La Habra Hiah. as Saddleback decided to break tra- dition in pinil\I • 21.() victory over the Hiahlanders (2-l). . The Roadrunners (3--0) mounted a fmt-half attack behind quarterback John Cook, while the Saddleback defense held La Habra's explosive runnint back Chuck Weatherspoon to only 34 yards in the openina half. "We had an excellent offense in the first half." said Saddlebad Coach Jerry Wine. "Ourdefen,e played weU allpme." As for the Roadrunner defense, it has allowed only one touchdown all · deeptst ~n of right-center field. fortunately for Wm. the ball may have been held up by Anaheim Stadium's thick 11r as Beniquez cluab. t it at the wall for the innina'• . final 10Ut. . • them any points. Two plays after their seco11d touch- down, the Roadruoncn bad the b&U apin, as Jones illtcrceptCiCI • la Habra pass and ran the ball 1 S yards to theHipla.Dder 20. four plays later Campbell scored .n. this time from ooeJ·ard out with S:24 to '° in the secon quancr. Saddleback amassed 200 yards in offense durina the fir1t baff, while Jones connected on seven of nine passes for I 03 yards. On offen!C, Jones carried the ball seven times for 60 yards, and de- fensively. he came up with two interceptions. Sailor girls race .. to tri-meet victocy Nc~pon Harbor Hiah's airls cro country team used the 1-2 fin1 b of Magpe Henson and Butfy.R.abbm to win 1b ~ason ~~.ncr in a thrce--way 'meet at Irvine HltJl Thursday. "ff it•s dunna the day, that ball's N rt e b h in t 84 d b t 18 4 ~k·~~·!~~.~~tC~.~~h~~, ewpo ar ors aq> · e u ,. - Evenwiththclo Howsersllllhk Kansas City'• chances. ''We're ull i ~ hape," he id * MIML lllOTll -Oii IN! dolAllt orotett C.-... ft' 1M Ml COfdroveny, ROY'M llMntW ......... Mid "I dldfti Ille IN toUl'lll ef ...... lcit 11'1 fill, h Ml MIUNtd e Dlfle t ......... H Aft9ll ~ .W Md...,. ~. • lfl IM IVt .._ " lftt •t 11 ...,.,. Mltl, H MYI •~"TM llllett l'f!IAI 11t ........... Wfltllll M llOur1 for MY1Nne ~ .. , ... tt!Kt ....... ~ ~-IN~..,......,_. "I I'** wt .. w1ft. I 'ft Mtft e lot of lleMl*I 9lld I 111 _. ~ n I fMI .. ,.., IN trnn111tn le wtn. VW1 efl our .... 1 .. .,., M M Mlt WI .-w1ft • • If ~ CDf"'""'",. Oft 1M AMell' COIPll .. «* frfM'll ..... IN tlr'1 two to IC.llMI& CltY ''Tiit ...... "'"" ._,.,,,.., ........ Md (Wlle!I .,. ~,_.. IMt ftlt ftrtt two MelMI C»vlleNl T"9Y ~..., ~ f*I\, •!Id fM'('w '-' Cllllld eld .._. ~ eiut hY Ml lk ... _... '*"' " , . 'f t•M in.... fOt I Jnrft ..,,.. 1MI ~ II 1111 teilltftl w II DIMW 1..,..t11u~._ ........ ~~·~------__ ..... ________ .._.~----------------------------------------.-.----'..---~-------~-----..-. .. i MAJOR L•AGUE ITANDIHGS A"*1c.lft ....... WUT otYt$IOM w L i-ct oa .,. 1• .!13 n 74 .~ID \'.t • 11 1S "°1 I " 11 ... '"'-70 U .. I I ., .. '51 '"' 6S " 4)0 l2't) Ast OIVl510N " '4 MS as 61 SS 131"1 n •t .543 ts~ II 70 .5.16 16'/'J IO n 52' 11 " ., m n 1-i ~.Uk.. 62 " -,. 11 ·_, dMslon title TIIWMeY'• lant .,_. 2, KenMs City 0 Mlnnftote 5 ChlcMO 4 ( 1J \mln911 TOt'Ol\lo 6, Mllweuk• 4 hlllmoft lS, lollOll 1 Ofliy N"'9t ICfledu!M Tlda'l's o.n... Tt•H CD•rwln 1•11) •I A""9b (ltomenick 11-17>, Cnl MllwtukM ISutton 13· 1 H · et Toronto (Ump 1·7>. (II) New Yoo. (MOii!~ 3·3) ti DetrOit (Wllcoa l7·7), In> .. Bolton (Boyd 11-lOl et 8tlllmoft (Devi\ 14·1), Cn) S..trle (helllt 11·15) tt CllQ90 (Dotson 13·141, In> 0.11.land 11.Al!Vf«d 0-01 ti Kt nMI' Cit'!' (l.tibrtl'dt 10-n. en> ci. .. t1anct tSclluln 3·51 •' MlnMSOt• <lutcher 12·91, <n> ..._ Sttul"llllY's GtmM TtxH ti Aneeb Mllwtot<M •I Toronto Ci.wlen<I ti Mlnnnota ~ Yorio. at 0.troll 0.kltnd ti Ktll\H City Boston at Btltlmort, (n) S..ttle ti Clllatoo. In> Natt_., L•tue WEST DIVISION W L Pct. GB • 11·S.n 0.-oo N 66 .SU Atlant• 76 n 4'1 101i"l Houston 76 n .4'1 10~ Ded9ttt 75 71.. -"° 11Yi Clndtlflttl 64 It .411 221') s.n Francisco '2 '° G 2A IAST OIV1S.:>H Clllce9o 90 62 IMw York 13 70 • PMedt!P"la 11 n St. I.outs IO n MontrMI 74 71 Plltiburvh 61 15 11·c:llnctltd dl .... 1on tllle TIMlndlY's Sewn Dedttr\ 6, Houston 2 P11t$buroh 7, Chieffo 6 San 0.-oo S, San FranclKO 4 Atltnlt '· Clnclnnttl 3 St Louis 3, Monlr"I 2 TtdlY's Games 71..; f\') to IS'la 22\o'J DM9lri (Vt'-nUlfit 12·15) ti Stn Frtnclsco (l.tllltv I• 13), Cn) Pllli.dttollla CK00'1Tltn 14· 13) ti Pit· lsburoh IC.ncttt.rl• 12· 11), <n> Moolrul (Schatttder 7·5) at N-Yorio. CFerntndtt 4·61, lnl Chlctoo (S.notnon 1·4) ti St. Louis (1(99Slllre 4•S), (n) ClnclnMH (Soto 1S·7> •• Houston (lh•n 12-10), (n) AtLenlt (Mahler 11·91 et Stn Oleoo (Thurmond 13·7), <n> Stturdll'1'1 Gtmn OMetrs ti Stn Frtnclsco Monlrttt ti Ntw Y«k Chocago at St. l.OY11 Pllllt4flphla ti PtltM>ufl)fl, (II) Clnclnnell ti Houston. (n) Allentt el Sen Oie9o, (n) AMERtcAN LEAGUE An9lts 1. Rovab t KANSAS CITY CAUf'C>aMIA Wilton cf Sfltf'•dn rl Brett 3t> Or1• dll Otoro" 8elbol\o It> Whitt 2t> ,., Sltuoht c • CncPCll U nrhtll urlltll 4000 8en!Qu1rf 3120 4 0 I 0 Ctr-It> 3 0 I 0 • 0 0 • Wllfono 2t> 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 LYM cf 4 0 1 I 3000 O.C:nalt> 4000 3 010 Oown;no" 411 1 3 0 0 0 Ptllls cf 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 RtJksn dh 3 0 I 0 3 O O 0 Grlcfl 2t> 2 O O O 8oonec 2010 Sctlofild SS 2 0 1 0 T...U JO 0 J 0 • T..... '11 2 e 2 Sc_by...._ .Unus Clfv 001 000 --O c.tifwnl• 00 t 001 oox-2 Gtme Wlnnlno R81 -Lvnn I 10). E-Grlch OP-Ktnws City 1. Ctlffornla I. L08-KtnMIS City 3, Cellfornlt I. .2&-eenkiue1 HR-Downlno (21). $8- RtJtctuon <n S-SChofletd, BenklUeL ~ "ltElt •• so ICMUtCltv Gul>lcH I., 11:>-13 S 2·3 6 2 2 3 4 Hu""'9nn 2 1·3 2 o o 2 o Ctlftmlt WlllW.14•11 f 3 0 0 0 7 T-2:20 A-32.m NATK>NAL LEAGUE D9d9en 6, As1ros 2 LOS ANGIL.SS HOUSTON St• 2t> • A~nu Ltndl'a rf AIT\lufto" Gutrrtrcf Broek It> Scioscl• c Wlltttild If MldndOd Riven 31> H•rV!tsr D Tettb n r 111111 S 1 I 0 4 I I 1 3 0 I 1 1 I 0 0 4 2 2 0 S I I I 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 2 2 • 0 0 1 ) 0 0 0 Ooran2b Puhl rf Gerner 31> OIP\no o OSmUho S.mt>ilo P ~on Cr111 If GDtvls 11> Band Alllbv c CRtnlcts ss Rvano SOltno D ftldlrdt on CtlhOun o Wtlllng31> U 6 I 6 T9tals Scor• by '"'** urb ... •ooo 4 0 I I 3 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0000 0 0 0 0 I I I 0 4010 4 0 I I 4 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 3 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 l4 2. 2 Las A,_.. 011 000 040-6 Htusten 000 001 001-2 Gtme Winning R81 -ftlvert (1). E-GOevit 2, CRIVTIOlds OP-Los An· OllH 1 1.08-1.os Anoelft I. Houston S. 28-Andtrson, Su SF-Anderson ti-H It Elt 98 SO LtsA""'°' HerV!l~W,10·1 9 Htusttn • 2 , 0 s Rvan L,12·11 I l•l I I 0 I I Soleno I 1·3 1 I I I 0 Calhoun 3 O O O O I OIP1no I 1·3 • 4 I I 0 OSmotll 2·3 o O O O O SaMOilO I 1 0 0 1 0 WP-O•P no , S.mt>ito T-233 A-t.603 lknoQuer cer-1.vnn Oo"'ntoo O.Clnces 8ro"'" Grld'I W11fono Scon•tf'I Narron M1t1tr It• Jtekson Pettis Boone Plcck>lo Schof..ict Tt\omts 8ufleSOl'I TttM Aneel averaees 9ATTIHG A9 It H HR 331 SI 113 e 311 " " 3 , "' 13 136 23 SOl 61 136 21 50I 74 13S 19 132 11 35 ' l30 57 " 11 2'6 30 " 6 14' 14 " 4 142 ' 3S J 2' 4 7 0 41S 62 113 22 371 SI '6 2 '21 37 17 3 117 17 14 1 372 3t 71 4 2J 2 3 0 4 2 0 0 .,.. 6'S ,. 1.U IUM Pd. 31 .341 30 .302 '71 --" .271 IO .266 20 .26S SS .261 33 .257 IS .2'7 ls' 246 1 .241 7S .m 2' 221 31 .2'11 ' .205 21 .1'1 2 .130 0 000 621 .252 eptember 2!. 1 A T,.numeriell twrnament (at SM f'rMCba) StctM .... SiMlft -ffF'* "Bred Gllltr1 (U.S) dtl lttmesh l(rbllnen (lndla). H , 7-6, Ellot Ttltseller (U.S.) dtf. UWton Ounctn (U.S.), 6-t, 6-3, 811 Scanlon (U.S.) dtf Peter Flemlno CU S.I a ... 6-3, 6-4; JoM McEnroe CU SJ def. John Seclrl ( u.s ) ' .. 2. , ... f'ntlt..W~ ~ DtP•lmtr·Stmrrw Gltmmelv• (U.S ) def. Ptul ~Eric l<orllt (U.S.), 4·6 7·6, 6-4; GllN OOtllltftV·8uletl Wtlt1 (U.S.) def Kavin Currtn·Stave Otn· Ion (U.S.I, 6·4, 7·S Hlth sOMI tllrt• UntwnltY 11, Celtl MtN 7 SNltl Tucke< ICM) def Corlmen, 6·0. dtl Abe, 6·3, def. Wrloht, 7.5; 8trmore (CM) won, 6·0, 6-2, IOst, 2·6; Vtn Scovoc <CMI lost. 3-6, J-6, won, 6·4. Oeublts Petmer•WtllH ICM) losl lo Brenda· Mitter, C>-6, loit to Kreu...-CarlllOl'I, 0-6, lost to Rooers-Meetdt, 1·6; Wulf-Olano ICM> won, 7·5, losl, S-7, 2-6, Koot·l.tr.on (CM) tosl, 4·6, H. H MewMrt HelMr lJ, SH••ietr S ..... Newcoml> (NH) def, Gltn11e, 6-4, dtl. Ntrtn, 6-1. dtf•Ulled to Trone; Stbtstltn (NH> lost, 0-6, won. 6·4, won, 6·2, Htsktl (NH) tost, 4·6, 1-6, 1-6 0.-... 8tker·Weisht (NH) dtl 1.t-Nvle, 6·2, dtl Trtl\·l.I, 6·4. dtl. Trtn·Nouoen. 6-2. McGrtth·SnYdtr (NH) won, 6-4, 6·1, 6·0, Poslth~lldrus (NH)"'°"• 6-2, 6·1, 6•2 W11Ar1dtt ID, Cerw dll Mtr I ~ Scott ICdMl IOsl to Sleomund, 1·6, '°'' to W1 .. 1t, 4·6, def. lvev, 6·2; Mellos (CdM), IOSI, 0-6, 0-6, 6·0. Krucll.tr ICdMI lost, 2·6. 1·6, won 6·1 0.-. Ro~·Rowl>Othtm (CdM) IOSI to Qutrltro-Vtn H", 1-6, lost to Plltm· Brown, 1·6, dtf Wtno·$i)••t'I', 6·2, Dtllon· CtPrtlt ICdMI lost, 2-6, won, 7·6, 7·S, Ho,,H-Wood (CdM) IOll, 4-6, won, 6·2, 6·3 ·~ 11, Mttw Del s ~ Pri.tto IMO) ct.f. Sltlltt"Y, 7·6, lost to Goldl>troar. 4·6, IOSI lo Jollnson, 3-6, 1.AYeltt (MO) lost, J·6, won, 6-3, 6·1; Ftrrtll IMO) loll, 0-6, 0-6, 0·6. DtiulMs s. Sc»lnntr·Akln (MO) l<Kt to l(Jrk·She•. 4:.., loll to ~llh·FtlllOOld. 4-6, lost to Slmmons·AlllSOl'I, 2·6, Fltmlne<lmlnl lMOI lost, 1·6, won, 6-4, 6·2; L SPlnntr· Burltt IMO) tost, 2•6, 2·6, 1·6. -La__. 9etdl IS, Estlndt J ,...... L.ffCh (L8) losl IO Vtrvtrlnl. 2·6. def Richardson, 6-3, def, HHllllOI, "°'• Wllltlla (I.BJ lost, 2-.. won, .,_I, 6-1; Cot*.tv (I.Bl kKt, 3~6, won, 6-1, 6·0 Oeutlets O Suol·Ttul (I.Bl won l>v Cltftult ovw Frildt·8r'bwn, def. Kot-·Htndrlcks, 6-0, d9f .i.trtn·Mktdltbroo&. 6·2; w. Sutl· Ntvtor CLIU won, 6-4, 6-2, 6·3, Ttrbed· Golchttln (L9) WOtl 1>v dtftull, 7·5, 6·2. c,.... coUntrv HIG" SCHOO\. 90YS Cat !MM Hltll) 1n1111t U, ,..,... V...., M N-.t"8~S7 1. Brown (NH), 15;'11 2. R1noel (FV), IS:SU; 3. Reid (I), 1':04 O; 4 Black (I), 16:09.0t, 5 Gould (FVl, 1' 10 0, 6 McMiiian (I), 16:19 o. 7. Poltnd (ti, 16:23, I l.tmon (FV), 16 25.o; f l(IO&ttr (NH), 16:26 0, 10 Knos IFVI, 16"210 Glm ~ HMW 21, trWlt 4S f'eumatll v...., " 1 HeniOn (NH), 18'02.2, 2 lttt>Oitl (NH), II 0) 0, l WrlOlll (I), 11'°6 0, 4 L.azo INH), 11 44, S Schlnter (I). 11 52 0, 6 Morris (NH), 1"7 o, 7. NoulOkos (I), 1' 21 o, I .Allderson (NH), If 41 0, f Crick.ell (NH). 1'..57.0, 10 l(tMv (ffV), 20'07 0 Deep ... lllNnt DAVIY'S LOCklR (~ ... di) --42' •noter• stl llotllto, 16 '1'tllo#t11l, • celico ben, 22 Ynd beu. • slletPstlaed, 35 rOCk fish. MIWl"ORT LANDING (Naw...n a.o> -'1 •noltn 172 l>onllo, lO t>tu. • vdowftU, 5 rock fish DANA WHAltf' -116 •noltn 125 bess, '3 l>onlto, 20 'f911o'#ltlt, 6 roek fish, 12' l'l'leCkartl, 1 merlin, 26 "*">shffd. I doradO, f scUloln, 1 Mrto : .:/ Lu LOii H It ~tyPtV • atleflal Ml tl>ontlo Jlm81alr O.rvMcC«d AndY ... n rtaCOW!et Dllflb Wttson Ml t Nicolette JohnC~ WlllleWOOd Crtfe Sto!Sltr $(Oft HOdl VlcJOf lttOOlt4o Ed Flori l<e11Grwtt MJ 1Govt Donnie t4•rnmoftd 011Ve8arr Hutittt Gleen JodltMUOd Jim Sltrlorli GeneSouen Gery Ht1!11et'9 9 Kratten Bruc.t F-.rier W•vntLtvl JOhM'I' Miier l.M tll ltOOtt ts Mtt'll .... :t 900 E1ttwooct Ml!tSmllh 8trrvJMct.el 01111 F«smen Don Poolev Ot11Pohl Bot>TwtY Jerry Ptlt Gffroe Bums Brell Ul>Otl' Howtrd Twitty 'f <Hlv Slt1s Ltontrd Tl'IOl'ru>son RuuCochr•n Htl Sullon PtYM Sttwtrt Garv Koch JtvCudd Mtrlt McCumt>tr • Tom Purltar Scott Simpson Stmrnv Rtdltli ludflV Gardrltr GervPIM6 Pet McGowan 8oOOv Cltmciell Htltlrwln TN>mtsGrey Ron Streck Chlo 8«* Mlkt McCullouoll KtnKtlltv 0.A. Wt<brino 1.arrYMIH JtdlRtnner RtJCC.ldwtl Oii Chi ltodrltluei John Adams Gll>bv Giibert Boe> ""'1ronv GtYln i..wn.on Ptt l.lndwv Dave StocktOtl l.M Eldlr Joev SlndtUlr John Mttleffev Tom Jeflklns MllltHolltnd 8ruc:t Lletzkt BrtdFtKOn l.trrv Rinker Rt'!' FIOYd Tom Kitt Jim Colbert Boe> Glider 8111Stndar JC SllMd Ken Brown Ronnie 8Le<k Otvld Grtl\tm Merk O'M.etrt w.c. O'GredY Stevt Lltbler Bill &<lllon Vtnce Heafner ltooer Mtltl>ie Jim Gtlltolltr JOhn FOUQht Mlltt Putnam Rtlotl l.tndl'um GilNIOl'Nn 811 Glasson Jim Ktne Tim Slrrn>Son Merlo. CalctvtcCll•e Kfllh Ftrous Ctvda Reoo Geor .. Arc:htr OtrenctRost Allen Mllltr Peul Atlnoctr Jtv Don Blake Ptltr JteOl>Mn Mtrk Ht'l'es Dick Z.okOI ~OICadlt 8o08oyd Scott WttklM I.• Rll'Ultr Tom LMtmen Woodv Bltckl>um OtVldPeof>lal Griff Mootl'I' 8obbv wadklns J..iMJtchtl Jim Thor11t Toml..emort Mike Sl.llllvtn Tim Norris Ptttr Oosltrhuls 811Gtrrell Mat1t McNulty Otve Edwtrds T.C.Chtn Jil'llOenl lton Pelton Oen Hatldorson Mika Reid Al G.ibtrvtr Fttnk Conner Curtis Stranoe AoamAdams Rick Oeloos JICk Sortdl•n KtMv Kno• JlmRtUllO Grier Jones John Htmarlk Ctl Pee1t l.HTrevlno Mtrll Wiebe Mtrtl l.vt MlktPKk Jim Neiford Pllll Hancock LouGrtham Bobby Nlclloli Wtll'I' Armalrong Dave Elc:helt>eroef G•rv Krueger Tommv Veltntine Bru8rvenl Mick $oll Curt Bvrum Jim JamieM>n Frtnk Fl.lllttr OougTtwtll Lvn LOii • t MW!it Clements .. ArM 91ff rewhs • 1JO 63-10-W 66 61-tJ.c " 134 •• U-1>4 "·6S-134 11 64-m 6'·'6-m 61·6'-131 '9 .. 7-IU. 65-10..-IU 61•66-11$ 6S 70--lU 61·61-IJS •9·67-134 70 6'-l:U ... .,..,,,. .. ..._,,. 69·71-1'6 10-66-136 1G-66-136 '6·11-131 61-"10-1).1 66·71-137 66·11-lJ7 61~1)7 ,, .. S-ll7 10-...-13' 70 61-131 7~lil .,.,,_,,. 7S·U-llt 70-6&--131 10-..-t>t 73·6S-.-131 '4·7rl1JI 13•66-lJt 70·•9-13' 74·'5-13' 6t·70-llf 71·61-13' 70·6~13f 67-72-139 6M0--1J9 6t·71-l•O 67·7)-l<t() 6t·71-140 6'-7t-140 67-73-140 71-6f-140 67·7)-140 70-71>-140 70-70-140 61-n-140 6t·71-140 .,.,._141 6'·72-141 . 67.7.-141 71-10-141 73·6t-141 61-1.-10 71·70-141 "·72-1'1 70-71-141 70-71-141 70-71-141 61·73-141 61-73-141 71-10--141 74·67-141 71·71-142 71-71-142 74·6t-142 n -10--142 71·71-142 72·70--142 74•61-142 73·6f-142 70-72-142 72·70--142 71·71-142 71-71-142 67-75-142 '9·7)-142 61-7.-142 61·76-142 67·75-142 61-7.-142 70·73-143 71·72-143 61-:lS-143 72~1-143 71-65-1'3 n -11-143 11-n-143 61·75-143 69·74-143 70·7)-143 73-70--143 69·7-143 70-1)-143 69·74-143 72·71-143 73·70--143 7'·6,_1'3 67·76-1'3 72·71-143 69·7t-143 72·72-144 73·71-144 71·73'--144 72·72-144 70·7 ..... 144 74·70--144 7S-70--J45 73·72-145 7S·70--145 72·13-14S 72·73'-14S 72·7)-145 11-1.-10 70-7S-14S 72·73-145 73·72-10 75-70--145 73•72-14S 71.7.-145 73·73-146 76-6t-1 .. 12-f.-14' n -1.-1"6 70·76-1 .. 73·73-146 7'·70--1"6 7HS-l4' 71·75-146 71·75-14' 74-n-1" 72-7 ...... 1'6 n-1.-1" 7'-n-1" 75·72-147 10-n-141 1s-n-w 72·7S-147 71·70-W 73·74-W 72·7S-147 75•72-147 72·75-147 n -1.-1•1 71-76-147 72·76-1'9 n -1r.1" 7s-73'-'141 77 71-141 •• 7f-14' 73 75-141 76·7)-149 74-75-l•t 70-79-149 76-7)-14' 76·74-lSO 71-79-150 7S-76-1S1 73.7 .... 151 19·72-ISI 71·1C>-1S1 11·1--1~1 LAGUNA 9EACH GOV ASSOCIATIOH (1t Oen""* Gett C.WS.l A """' 67-Art Mlchtl; 6t-Abtl Gonit .. s, Gtor .. FOWier, ~ttok ElfltrldOt, Lou Clim, Ed Se4lmel' Ouc:k Crow ........ 65-JtmtS Whitt; 7t-Frtnk ltoul, JoM Mclltwine; ~. Ha• c ....... 6t-Otl Ctnflttd, Wtll Nvt, 6'-0ld Ewtrl, L" 8tktr, IEmll Ale•tlldtr; 7~obert Vtn Cltllvt DNIM 64-Euoeoe artnet; ,,_It, ~•ton. I Wtll.s, l.ou KIWI 7t-John Mli. ........ ..-Rlc:lltrd Pttenon; 61-Ellloll UllOI\, 10-1 Grev. . . Les Alamltos TffURSDAV'I RSSULTS ( .......... '"'"'"' "'"""'' 'utST litAC:I. One m It pee-. ont111t Pr111Cltn f<lrnr> '1.40 uo 3.40 smaner lCHfl> •20 uo C.Pfr& ~ (Maktlll 1,00 AllO re(llCI Leah Cht I , ltldl ll hat, SutleG To It. 'T", 'TtQwllemocklnob<trd, \al L•dY, OOOllttPUO Tlmt 20~ l/1. U XACTA <1·21 Ptld M0.0. SKCOND ltAC:fJ. One mllt trot $1140.llnO MUKtl ICllH> H.00 11.0 640 M$ CW\!..,. (WI latMI UO 4 to 8t~n CGregorv) UO AllO rac:eo. $ OU. C>tll Glf 1. Jlffv s ttC>lll, Hunten ROM, Ktltlle Marlltnlo'v. Flbtlift ISM Time 1;01 ti S. Sl llXACTA Cl II otd MS110 TH•D RACE, One milo NCI, JOhnnv Goycflo IKUlbltf) A 40 2.IO 3 00 BllY RC ICt!O!ll S.10 3M Gemtartl COesomtr) 2.0 A o rtcecl Tlmerons Sllt4ow. Wero Drlvt, Folltd, Pete< FlaW\ Atld'ts ltosarto, 'Tlwrmel lHt. Ttmt HS n IXACTA 12•S> oald $36.0 ,OURTH RAC:I. 0!1e mflt ~ca. Cl'Mlwwtr (Vt ~m) S.IO 5 00 100 Prl~• OOl!tr CCroo!ltnl 7 IO 3.to l.Otd Almtltunl lWlllltms) 3 60 AIM rectd Jtl Fuel Brevo, Somtth1"9 Ftnc:v, ltovtl Stier, P•PM 8tnclit Time 21'0 41S f'lf'TH RAC:•. Ont mite oace FIOl'a Otnlct (Pltrctl 7G.IO 19 40 t 20 Matrh1 (O'Dwyer) S 40 3 00 H•v Tootsie (Mtrctltl'ld) uo Abo rac:ld: Roytf Marv, Trett Yoursall, GI GI Roektt. 8th• Chtlult, Andys Mtv· ttarr Garlend. Time-2:03 4/S. Sl IXACTA (4 7l oald MOUO. SIXTH ltACI. Ont mllt otct. SCorolo (Mislo.ell) f.20 4.00 3.IO DH-Mesler Will (Kutbltr) UO 1060 DH-Orne Charles CO'Owvwl 3.20 s.eo ""° rte»d Phoenl• Jack, Scolllsh Bo'I'. Krtlttl'S PoPt»Y. Rou•don, Reo.n lltd. SUvtolant Time: HO U IXACTA (1-6) .,_Id 111070. Sl IXACTA (1•1) Hid 1.)4 20. $SVINTH ltACE. One milt NCI Tinker Tint lll:vMN«) 7.40 5 tO 4.20 Emtrtld <>urine !ToMf' .. u> :•A 3.0 Mn ltobltt W (McC41rty) • :I 00 Also rtctel MMoen H , Frosty Gin, Pollution Solution, C4"h Plu$, HIOfl Sottd, Cloudbuiter, Time· 2'02 llS. Sl llXACTA 17·S) Nici UUO. llGHTH It.ACE. One mii. OtCt 5'1ck. CGrundl'l • 10 20 2.IO UO Arnn Pelt IP•lentft) 2.40 2 to Whllt SMI Louie (Trtml>lty) UO Ano rlCtd· Mtlltst Hunter, FIY Man Fly, Hite/led To Win, Skle>Ptn l.ttdtr. AccomollCt. Condlos Sltf, Time 2'00 2/S. • S3 IXACTA (2·1) oald 13360. NINTH ltACI. One milt trot. S.n'I' Ster (Plano) 61.60 15.20 9.20 TtOI (Trtml>lty) • 60 5.00 Sito Bowl (Grundy) t .40 Also rtctd. Moon Cloud, As Always, Lady L, $fleclel lnlertsl, Sllvt< LoOf11. Time: 2:02 1/ 5 Sl EXACTA CM) oalcl MOS.30. t2 i-teK 51X 12-4-1-7-2-11 oelcl M7l60 with 30 wlnnlno tickets Cftvt l'lorsesl Carrvovw l>OOI s 14, 153.21 TENTH ltACll. One milt oac:t. Ltto Yttr IParlltr) UO UO 2.40 Andn Llllv I Pierce) 3 00 uo 8Yt B\'t Scoll'I' (Ma•tf) 00 Atso rtetd: ToCld1$1\ Dalon. C'mon HlllblllY. Rlctl N SobV. El T«rtnto. Ho"'d'I' MIJtl, StOkH Time 2'02 'l IXACTA C2·7) otld S2040 Alltf\dtnce 4,Sl3 p~ THURSDAY'S ltESULTS (lltl tf ll·dlV f4alr mtl'ltlle) A .... ALOOSAS f'IRST ltAC8. 4 'J furtonos Tot Tto N Time CBurns) uo 3.20 2.20 Whiskey Moon River IBotol 4 20 3.00 Run On Gin IOcllotl • 60 Also r8Gtd Go Brlohl Chick, Bio Dettt, WlllY Color Too, Double Adobe. Min Cvnthl• LM Time .SS 215 u IXACTA (7·61 paid snoo QUAltT8RHORSE5 SICOND ltACI. 350 verd•-Jull A Orm Awv <Svll 134 90 39.60 11.10 MY I.est Girl (8r00ks) • SJO S.00 Ne.lit 8UMV (Htr1l UO AIM> rtctd: Best Actor. Al>CICllOS Mllolc. RH Ftclor, Blllv 81ut J .. ns, AIT\i.ll M:tn. lmt CltUY RtciutSI. Time 17.k TH•D ltACli. 400 Ytrds Two Notes (8ardl 1.60 4.20 3.00 ltlolll lttsoonM <CrttOt<) 3.AO 2.40 Brockmeyer (Gilt) :UO Also re<:td Tloff' Te Miu , Le ROM! Mott, Wtltav, Kio Deluxe, Go Jutnlto Go T lme 20 02. U EXACTA Cl·f) oald SSIOO THOltOUGHBRIDS f'OUllTH ltACE. 6 furlonos. Princess Ovne COhartsl uo :uo 2 10 Jon1M (Black) 5.40 300 MJu Or•eon Fiver COrleoe) :uo Also raced: Hloll THltf', GMl•nt, MJH TIOll Christi, JtllSCO Ster. LadY Above. Time. 1:13 l/S f'lffTH llACli. 1 1116 milts Poodth 0'-1 (Ht nMll) I 40 4.40 3.60 8ot1on Tom 10.~lllol 3.40 :i.oo TrtUerll (Smith) 3.40 AIM> rtc:td: Prairie Sllltk, Ster Coun. tncrtdrl>lt Prince, E •elusive Run, Suc:cns $teller, Time 1.47 215. S2 DAILY DOUBLE (S· 1) oeld 517.IO SIXTH RACI. 1 1116 mites. F« Jtvt>frd (010dl) 100 3.60 tlO Plckln' Rtlnl>Ows COllvtres) 2.10 2.60 Mttoronda (Domlnoutt) uo Also recld Mr Boldt"Ultlno, Unlvarsatllt, Or. l(umacrou. AncfV's Coov, Gallant Mltll Time I 47 315 SS IXACTA (Ml oald SSOOO SIVIMTH ltACE. 6 fUf'tonos Htvlno Full (Htnstn) 3 20 3,00 UO Ch•o Saver IC>ttotdfllol 3.10 2.60 Ha1>0v Generation (Pacfroit) 3 00 Atso rtct<I: Hlrtd Mtn, The Bio Biro, Klnoclom Ktrrv. Curious 8ftu Time 1.11 1/S. llGHTH tlAGE. 6 furlonn Prftellt • Toast (Lmnc:) 10 40 •to 3.AO Air Alert (Ht~) • 00 2 . .0 Run Stros (Mentl 2 IO AIM raced Down Rtll9t, ContMI, Comic Nurn«o Uno. Skv Tower. Time: 1;11 llS U 8XACTA (4•1) oeld S1"00. NINTH •Ac•. 6 futlonos. LtCllll B~rv 11.mt>CI S 40 1 IO 2.40 Son Of Chief (Ori ... ) 3 40 3 00 Pl11 Mv Potkll COomll\ouft) J.IO Atso rec.Id. Secret Pt'l'ment, Emottontl Trtll, Orlvl"f Fest Tlmt· 1 11 3/S U EXACTA (5'61 Hlcl M2SO TINTH •AC8. 6 furtonos GOiden Mlntlr91 IOIOdtl Jf IO 13.70 S 40 Im An Act (Smith) '20 1 '° O.oot Bey CMllGM"l 3 00 AIM> rectd Mardi Soeed. Luckv ~m. lttJtino Pos•llon, ltrler, S.trunlus. Time. 1.11 411 IS IXAC:TA CHI Nici S43S50. .. Waterpelo .: HIOH SCHOOL s.vtlC..&tT~ Ntwll*f Htf1Mr 18, S..t 4 SOl!ort I 1 0 2-4 1ffwri«t Htfbelr 7 5 2 .,_II Ntwoorl Hatbol" tcorlno I.Aw.on 4 • l!Olot 2, hNclkt "/, TllOmPtOn 1, Stanltv I, O' Oontld 1, l>enWt11 1, Moll tll«l*'Y 1, Pfuo I, Dtll>tv 1, Mlhl'Ntt o 1, St1wtr1 1, An«tmt') I f'auntlln v..., 7, La..-9Mdl 6 Ltount BHCh ..:... 0 l 2 r-4 Fountton Vtfltv I 2 I r7 l.HUl\t 8MCh SC()(tl!O: Htnn 2, Gilbtfl 1, Antr• 1, Fraser 1, Dtnlets 1 Founttin Vellev sc:ortnt Nomur• '· lturek :I l.atlU'lt hidl 12. Ott i-vt1111ts 10 Oos Pueblos 2 2 1 S-10 uoun1 a .. c11 ' 2 2 .-12 Ltoune aaacn acorlne: Yt11tl'd s. H•hn 3, Fruar 3, Gllbllrt 1. knnv H•a ,, Mtrtna 6 SUMY Hiiis 3 1 3 1-t Mlrln• O 1 1 .._. Mlrlna KOrlnt Wtrdt 4, SNnovlcll 2. MtrtM 16, Dena H .. 6 Dent Hiits 2 1 1 t-6 Marin• S 4 • 2-16 Merine scotlno: Wtrdt s. 1.•tMll 3, SNnovlch 2. BUdm•n 2. erotlle<on 2, FrtnU 1, Mllnnkln t. C.-dll Mer 11. Daat Ha. I DIM Hilb 0 0 0 1-1 C«ont cM1 MM 7 l 4 .-11 Corona dtl Mtr scorl119· TrlPOll l , Story 3, Sc:nrotdw 2, F .. 2, Hammond 2. Otdl119 I, Wesner I, 1.lkl"• 1, Harvey 1. Harmoft 1. SHty. NFL NATIONAL CON,llltlMCE San Frtnclsco Allan It lttml NtwOrlttM Chlctoo Detroit Grwnh'I' Mln~ol• Tt~a.v West W LT 3 0 0 I 2 0 I 2 0 I 2 0 c.trtl ftc:t. i-fl PA 1.000 ,, 71 .333 IO 12 .333 '7 61 .33:1 65 7' J 0 0 1000 70 21 I 2 0 .333 71 75 I 2 0 .33331 60 1 2 o .m sr 11 1 2 o .m•" li•st Otllts 2 1 0 667 SO SI NY Gi•nls 2 I 0 667 70 64 SI 1.oult 2 1 0 667 94 64 PMtdtlOhoa I 2 0 .333 '3 61 Wtillintton I 2 0 .333 71 N AMEltlCAM CONf'EltliHCI lttldtn Kt11sas City S.110..oo S..lllt Otn"t< Piltsburoh Clavtltnd ClndMali Hou'ton Miami NewEnoltnd NY Jets llldltnaootl• 8ufftlo West 3 0 0 1000 74 " 2106671471 2 1 0 667 JO SI 2106671755 2 1 0 667 44 6S C8ftlrtl 2 I 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 ••st ,., 74 61 ooo • n .000 62 '° 000 49 '° 3 0 0 1000 " 41 210.6676'61 210 •'71360 120 333t271 0 3 0 .00041 7' ~Y'IGllMS ftfms •I Clnclnntll (Clltnntl 2 ti 10 t .m.) lndlontOOlls ti Mltml (Channel 4 ti o.m.l GrHf'I Btv et Otllts (Channel 2 ti 1 o.m.> H01.11ton ti Atltnt• MJnnuot• ., Detroit NV Jets ti Bufftlo PlllPIOrvtl ti Otveland SI. Louis •t New Ortttl\t S.11 Frenc:lsco •I fltllladtjpllle WNhineton •• New eneten<1 Clllcffo ., S.. tti. KMUJ City ti OettVW Ttmoe lay •t NY Giants ~Y'• Game St'1 Oleoo ti ltaldln (Channel 7 et 6 oin.) • Ram• stltllttcs ~by,..,.. First downs Vertis ruslllno Y ar ot Ptsslno Total ytrds Pun15 Penet1i.s Fuml>lff·lost Rushlno TOs PtU•ll9 TO. Old< tr.oft KtmP Crutelltlatd Ellt(d 1 Ferreo•mo Toltlt ()pp Fen19amo Ktmet O•Clo.tOOft To1111 Oot> 7 24 13 17~1 lo-47 27 ) 7 TEAM °"""""' Items '2 316 ,,. 1114 16·39 s 22·174 10 2 4 INDIVIDUAL RulhMe 40 356 370 726 16·•2 s 11· 165 3·1 1 3 Tell Yds Ave TD 71 2tt 4.1 1 l 33 110 0 ' 30 60 0 1 4 40 0 4 0 0.0 0 " 356 42 I " 316 u 2 ....... i-A ..C " Vdt TD " 2' I J17 1 17 ' t 127 \ 1 0 1 0 0 " • 10 "' 2 112 11 2 •so 4 ltfCllllltne Na. VII• TD Elllrd I 1t 0 Dickerson 7 '41 O Drew Hill $ 16l 0 Gumen .. • w O Otvlcl Hll 4 34 0 Furner > 17 O Grant a U O Brown 2 11 1 J McDOnitd 1 • 0 Crutcllfltld 1 4 1 Tottlt ,. 444 2 Oot> 11 HO • Othtr 'tRdttt. Punline -Misko, 16 "°· ., $ ••• Kickoff returns -Drew Hin_, 7•2U evo .: Rtddell. 3'117 Punt returns - Ellard, 10 U evo tntlf~lons -lrvln, 1 11: Orttn. 1•2l cou.•G• ~AA ~ ov..-WL.l LT N Las V '. 01 O I 0 0 n#t.e SI " ,I :I 0 CS ,Ulltfton 0 0 O I t I '""'° St 0 .o i I 0 0 hdlk 00 110 Lallil ,IMctt SI 0 0 0 :I 0 UtttlSI 000 02t New N\tltlco $t • ' • 0 , 0 ,.,...Y' ...... Cll ltalt F..-.m>n ti COiorado St •,1,.ono leach $1., et FrttnO SI., Cn) Ntw MIJtlCO St. ti Drake, (ft) Sa" JOM S ti Sttnford Wlchlta IC. •t ~ L.as VfOM, lit) ,..,me 11 Horthtft1 Atl1ona, lnl •-wnotet to11tlfltfl(t! ..,..,. TOTAL O,,IMI "'¥tr .,.. 1'D Gl't'not. LB St N2 2 ""' 211 swtentv. ,,9no .st JOI t Men, CS FtAwton 57t '3 m in lll Uf (\lllllMfl\tl'll, UNI. V U2 5 tPMll, Uteti ~. Ill l RUSH .... ltlaY9f' TCI Y41L TD Ltwla, UNL;V .J2 1't 2 Ave. "·' 7U MtcklY, i-1dtlc :JI 144 o 700 ff1 5'.7 Jonft, UNI. V 2' 140 0 Tllomal, Fr.no I 42 11t I Ltwh, C$ F611tr1on n 170 3 ,ASSING """' A"··C:·f TO ftct. v-. ~~~~'"~. ~~~~ : ~ m Geynor, Llllt. • IO-S.·4 1 675 .a Allln, CS FJlltrton eH3•1 , .sll Ml • Cooper, "HMS Sf·23•l 4 .)90 115 • • 9'ECllVINO "9yer 9'K-v-. TD 1.0d<tll, LB SI , 11 116 0 McOontlci. $an Jost SI. 14 165 O WllhtrSPOOll, LB SI, 9 CJ I Piiis, CS fr11'*1on e 137 2 Smith, S•n "OM St II 160 I I.a France. UNI. V t 103 0 Gladntv, U,.I. V t 17 a Hltt\scNelKWH (ntft·....,.l CtltlslrlflO Vtlle'I' 27, C«Ont Gii Mtr 7 Coat• N'tlff o lO$ Alemlloa O Tvstln 2/• trvlne 7 Unlvtr'SI y 21, I.HUM Hlllt • St~t>tek 21, I.A Htbra 0 El Modtnt 21, PIClflC:t 14 L.otrt 'I'/, Garden Orov• o Futltl'lon 3', KIMtdV 14 tOMIGtfT'S GNMS (7~ .-U ...... ) FOWlttln Vein t i MIUIOll Vltio BtMlfW vs. Edlton et OCC H~llnoton 8..cll tt New1IOt1 t'!tfl>OI' StNltt •t W..tmlnsler Estt~ el Sen ClerNftta Otfll H s at L.a9UNI 8Mch Senta J.M vs. Meter Del at s.nte Ana Bowt Woodtll'ldoe el San MtrCOI (7;AS) N\arina vs. Foothlll el Tuatln El TOt'O tt VMtndt Ol'll'IOt vs. Kat• •I I.A PUN Pft CanYOll at CllaffeY LOf'I htCh Wltsoft vs VIia Pm •I El • Modtfta Ana!Mlm vs. Trov •I FultrtOft 8!'M·Ollllde •t ltowltnd Mtonollt al 8utftt Ptrk lolsa Grandt vs. Stvtnna ti Wtsltf'll Wtsllf'n vs. Rtndlo AJamll°' ti 8olw Grtndlt Mtonolla at 8utnt Ptrlt El Oclrtdo vs. Sonort ti I.A HMM'• Ct"'*' at SI. Paul Bis/lop Atnal at Colton JSllllGP MonlDC>l'MrY ti Strrt Plus 'X •t Ptrtmount SATUltDAY Stnl1 An• Vallev II Lovote Oc4an View vs. CYPl'tSS tt Wtsllrn Es••nu Ys. Lt Quint• ti aotsa Orendt SuMV Hiiis vs. l.cK AmltOS el Gtrdtn Grove Wwnen'I .... _... COU8GI So\ltlltl'n Ctllfornlt Collttlt def. West· monr. 5-15, 16'-lA, ls-t, IS-10 HtGH SCHOO\. S..VleW ....... Uount 8Mdl def. Esttnele, 1S·12, 15-t, 15·4 NIWSIOrl Htl'l>or def. Stddllbadt, lS-2, 15-2, IS-2. Cdront dal Mar def. Woodbrldee, 12·15, lS-4,1 IS-I, lH. seull C:.Ut '---' lrvlnt def. Sen Cltmtnle, IS-6, 15·2, 1·15, 15-t ............. Edi.on clef. Mlulon Vltlo, 15•12, 11-15, t• 15, IS-1, 15-13. i.,e Quint• ct.I. Merine, 5-15, 7· 1S, 15-7, 1 ....... lS-•. Oil.ANGE COUNTY TOUllNAM8NT ~.,. ......... (e1Wwt11.._ Hiii!) , •.m. -CorONI dal MM vs. l.t Quint• '1.m. -El Toro YI. Woodbrldtt t t.m. -,,...,. Del vs. Eattnela 10 a.m. -w .. 1m1ns1er vs. lrvtne ,. e.m. -fffwport .... .,.. Orlri9i 10 t.m. -Mlulon Vlelo VL Fountt lft Vtltv 11 t.m. -Garden Gro-H vs. Marina 11 a.m. -Eclson -. &..--Nott: s.c:onct round t t "°°" at 1 l'.tn.; Mmlfltttlt •t 3. CQNOletlcwl flnels •t 4: ~ and third oe.c.. et 5. ' ....... (It las V .. H) eantemwtlohts -Grit ltlcNt'dson IVounostown, Ohio) cleC. Htrotd Ptltv (Fort Worth, 'ftll.) (Note: ftldtat'dlaon QtO• '"'" Nonh Amtrlcar! Bo111nt Faowa11on c:hamDlonfllo l. l Sports OD tel~vision, radio for s8.turday' Sunday TELEVISION 11 : IS a m -8 EBALL: Oakland at K.nsas C11y, hanncl 4. 12:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: kt v<. l CLA. Ch nncl 2. 2 p,m, -R: Hunpry v . Muu:o 1n cxh1bi11on played u . 22 1n Hunpry, Channel 34. 3: 0 p.m. -BOXING: Richie :tndoval \ • F.d r Rom n (d la) dJ. Channel 7. •·30 p.m.-RUNNING: f·ifth venue Mile, Ch nncl 7 ( I ~m. -8 K 8C(790). e I p.m.-BA EBALl.:Tcxa at A I ,KM (710). 1 p.m -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: U at mona t. KN (1070) 7: 0 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: long Be ch St. t f're no l., KEZY (1190) Sunday 10 11~m Ch nn I •• Tl-~L VlSIO PRO FOOTBALL: Ram at Cm inn t1. Noon -BASEBALL: Texas al AQaela. Channel 7 I p.m. -BASU.AU.: Dodlers ll Sen Franatoo, Channel 11 . I p.m. -PRO FOOnALL: Grttn 8&7 ll O.ba , h nncl 2. l p m. -PllO FOOTaAU.~ lndtanapohs 11 Miami, hanncl 4 RADIO 10 a.m, -PRO FOOTBALL: Rams at C1oanoat1, M (710) oon -BASElllL: ~c.u II Anaels.t ,KM ( 110) 1 p m -I Al&IAU.: OodJCrs at ~n Franrito0 KA (790 . t COMPLER "VIE COMPOSITE TRANIACTION8, Everyon_e's afraid of the fede al defic Experts say new tax system needed: or historic proportions.'' d the Commhtceon Develop ngAmcrican Ca_pitalism, national value added tax tops the list The Conference Board concurred. BJ JOHN CUNNIFF ,,, ........ ....,... NEW YORK· -Even 1s the economy prospers you can hear it evcrywbere -a ~nistcnt, ~a. bauntillJ ivoice.that says sorneth1ng's fg!:ef,ve if t~e budget deficit i~n't Pro8peritr. it says, cannot urvive deficits. It 11 the voice of banken, save.rs, borrowers, candidates, blue- collar worken, executives. Re· ·· publicans, Democrats, and even the president whose bud2et it is. BJ .JOY DEB ANTHONY W,.-..c.wu $1 • I We're still 1inaina hymms of praise for free enterprise, says Harvard professor Georac Cabot Lod&e, even lhouah the so-called .. invisibfe hand" of the market place is no longer operative. What we should do now, he saya, is rcelace the old individual- istic ethic with a .. communitarian" spririt Jn other words, if the old ideolOI)' no lonacr fits, don't w.car it Speakin1 to WeCan, an orpniza- tion of business women, at ·the Newport Sheraton Hotel Wednesday niaht. Lod&e called for a weakenina of anti-truat laws and a holistic ap- proach to community problems.· Jo informal remub durina the wine and cheele hour. Lodae spoke of his new boOk. scheduled to come out in November, entitled "U.S. Com- petitiveness in the World Economy." The ton ofatateaman Henry Cabot LodJC and a professor at Harvard · Business School who once lost a Senate race to f.dward Kennedy, Lodac araues that free trade is a theoretically fine view of the world but impractiCal in reality. But the deflcit, AU S 174.3 billion of it for fisCal 1984. siu like a rock 011 the White House lawn, adding another la)'Ct to the national debt, wbith in four years lias risen &om just over $900 billion to nearly Sl.6'trillion. .J Two more organiutionS: both cl imin• non·panisanship, dded their vou:es Jo the commentary this week. .. The failure of our palitical leaders, executive and lcaislative, to confront the problem ... has brou~t us to the verae of an economic cnsis If we were on a desert island, he says, we would desip an economy along free market lin but the real world is different.. Many economists, like Nobel laureate Milton Friedman. woWd disqrec, arauina that free trade is prac:tiCal as well as Jood theory. Lodae says he views Fried- ·man's role as a healthy one, because someone n~s to remind us of our ideals. We also need men and women who take our mixed economy for what it is and lJ)' to adapt to the 1ovcrnmental controls already in place. Without significant reductions in the ize or prospective federal deficns. id &ta Solomon, \he U.S. ceonomy cannot expect to enjoy prolonged prioc stability and ex pan ·on imul- tancously. • · · In effect. both grt>ups saad the budget deficit should ~, just as the)• have said bef orc, ana just 1s hun4ctd of other organizatio.ns have also urctd. · But the more· interestinJ -.nd per: haps far-reachinJ su~tions came from the committee on capitalism. which believes that moving the rock UP s AND DowNs If you protect an industry from foreiJD competition, Lodae said. you give at an incentive to innovate. Why? Because, he :explains if an industry - weren't assured of sufficient demand NEW YOIUC <AP> -Thii.followlnv list · d · 1 .. t. ~ ..... th shows the Ov•r·the-Counter an a vancc, at m .... t never uave e •tock& ·~cr:n•• ttlat have 90f19 up will to brin& its products to rna.rkeL =c'=.'~ F.t;!!ni~orth.t...~y bes.d on Lodae qrees with thOtC cconom-No aecur~dlne 'beiOw d or 1000 isu who say that consumers beMfit in ~f ~ ,,.,~,~ cha""' ar~t"­ the absence of duties or tariffs tacked · gm~r. .~~..,!~, :sr:cr DC'~• "' ontothe&oodstheybuyfromabroad, ~, · but he adds that political reali~ics l ~N~ .Lfl +2~!'f2 u:ct. make completely free trade an 1m-S 1 un I ,U Up democracy,· there will be special rvn ,,. 4Y. UP nrJc WI ~.. -UP • c:ICmtt 1 Yi l~ Up possibility. As Jona ~s we have. a I 's '-l H: \ i 1 ~ 'l\'a 8: Costa Mesa firm p1rans G~ ~ : ~i ~stor 1: \"J Up S~nta Ana hotel proiect !' wt~. 1: ~ ~i ~ let ml• ~ UP nd 11,. UP Robert P. Wanninaton, founder will inclUde five lo<t&ina facilities and ~ Up and president of the Robert P. two restaurants with an additional ~~9 214 t2 H: Warmin&ton Co, of Costa Meu, has hotel adjacent to the complex. cw~SI' s fV• l UP annouced plans for an $18 million The "22-acre development will be Mui un odOw\s ~ UP joint Yenturc hotel project with located between Oyer Ro d and Sta~meP, LfJ~ • ~~ Qulity Inns loternational. Grand Avenue, borc!erina the Costa rr 5~ 1- The venture, announced Thunday Mesa Freeway. Theprojectispartofa mr~t 21-i: = ~ at a reception in Santa Ana. will threo-tiered lie~ system Quality f, ~YJ "" consiat of two hotels - a 177-room f nns has develo that includes-me nfr~ " 1~ = ,... Quality Inn Suites and a 132-un.it budget-priced mfon Inn Suites ~wt m~ = ~ Comfort Inn Suites. The company and the upscaled Quality Royale • --1~ projecu that the 46,000 1quare-foot Suites. The venture calls for the ~. = :l Comfort lnn Suites and the 76,000 Warminaton Company to b_lliJd the naim .,,. -,,. square-foot Quality Inn Suites will be hotels and for Quality Inns to provide op 2~ -= completed by the 1prin1ofl98S. the reservations sy•tem and market· l~ -'; The ntio three-story hotels arc ~· _ ._ companents of a $SQ..million com-uality Inn Suites' caters to travel-lf4 = 11h plex, called "Hotel Terrace,.. nd is 1111 ousiness people. •. I _ '• the WJe1t hotel developme t in &ch Comfort Inn Suite is approx-:::;::. "~ SantaAna•s history. iniat.cly 30().squatt-fcetand includes _ ._ Hotel Terrace. •hen completed separate livina and sleeping areas. '' -~ 1 lr'l -1 .. Ov l R THl CouNTER 642-5678 - Put a Jew word to work for you tn th .. Daily l'illl 1 J will require a restructured W 119h~. Accordant to a committee p_apcr. 11 is now clear 'that neither pobucal nor economic circumstances will allow a solution on the spcndana de alone ... and that aome new form of tauuon on consumption must be tried. .. r:o 1mqine that an addttional $200 billion per )'Car of pendi~ reductions can be made is wishful thinking -a dangerous excrctse t . this point/' the paper tated. But, said the authors -Albert . Ullman, former chairman House W•ys and Means Committee. economist.l\l~n Sommcn, and R .. ·Keith Marn·n. dean of the SchoOI of Business, Fairfield (Conn.) Univer- sity -it is also unrealistic co think that the money can be wrung out of tttc present income tu 5ystern. How. therefore. would they man· MU TUAL F UNO S - - --- • qc What to date hat been un- manqeable? They td mphfy and reduce ancorne wes. They ould apply a sptndin& hmna11on, ba5Cd on 1 ~n pcn:entW of the na11on~1 total producuon of loods and Irr· vices. And they ould add the consumption tax. The prcosc nature of the latter tax wasn't 1pcc1ficd, except 10 AY that It should be 1 value added tax -a tax rather. than an eXC1SC tll. • The authors ma1ntaan that obtain· ing revenue in that man~ would be fat more pr<Sductive than ihc current ineome tax .l)Stem, which mey say encourqcs counterproduaivc econ- omic bchavi«, 10 wu: ''l!M hidl rates enrou1-qe us to On the • ... • • • llDArS CLOSING PlllU - - Dow JoNrS A~·pu1 i) - NYSE Lr ADFRs I_ --- - WH AT AMEX Dw Nt:.W YORK (AP) Seo. 21 AMEX LEA DER S Due to tranamlUlon prot>=- lems In New York, tc:>day'e Ustf ng Wiii not appetr In the Dally P.Uot. - Got o QuoH\ . That·san apt description ofbotnbusin ssand busin ss p ople along the Orange Coast: To keep track of where companies ar gotng and which peopl are helping them get ther .just watcl1 ·er dit Lin ' -v ry day In the Bu In s Uon of y9~r · llilJ Pilat · · " COAST .~eopl Sophia, Brigitte turn 50 · ·sos sex sirens split on attitudes about milestone They were the sex sirens of the '60s. One earthy and exotic; the other vulnerable and kittenish. Now, SOpbia Loren and Brigitte Bardot are tumina SO. For Loren, the years have been aracious. She referred to reachina her half-<:entury mark on Thursday as ••a won- derful thing. You are bOm, you arow older and there's nothing wrong with it." ForBardot, the years have been awash with tears. She is reclusive and deprCsscd. ac- cording to various reports. "It's really tou&h to age ... It's halfacentury. Welcometothe senior citizens' club," she said in an interview with Paris ..__ ____ _ Match last July. The French actress was a Seductive sex kitten, •hose perfect body, cascade of blond hair and dark, hauntina eyes became legend after sbe made .. And God Created Woman" in 1956. After that; she made about 40 other films before goinJ into retirement 11 yean 110 m her native France and devoting her life to the defense of animals. • Now, Bardot usually bides behind sunaJasses and seldom shows her face in public. Her birthC!ay is-Sept 28: on her last one. she tried to kill herself. She said she lives simply today, .. no makeup, straight hair, with the lines on my face. You'll never see me in a aold lame dress again .... " She said she has never considered cosmetic surgery BARDOT for her wrinkles: "Even as a grandinother, I prefer to be aliv~ to say what I have to sly, than be a mask of reinforced concrete.'' Loren, who starred in .. Two Women," bas· just published a book, "Women and Beauty" (William .Morrow&. Co., S l 9.9S)t hasa new perf\,\me for Coty and a flew made-for-TV movie, "Aurora." The book, she said, is more than just another beauty- fashion tome. "I want to give the reader a mature look on the qUalities we all have inside, like warmth and wisdom andintellisence.''sbesaid. "lt'sreallyabookaboutmeand retlects what I think and whit I feel about women and elqaJlce." • . Thou&h '11e is considered one of the most beautiful women o( the 20th century, the Italian actress doesn't llf'CC. "I never considered myselfbeautiful or alamorous." abe wd. : PAPARAZZI l --- - - - WO \5 . . ns . .. • . " CoaSt DAIL V PILOT/, ANN LANDERS• TVUITINGS• GARDEN91G• . .... ........... ., ........................ Vice prealdentlal candidate In countY · · Geraldine Penaro eaten Weetin Soath wbere Jen.nlfer Smltll. 7 of SI Toro lent Cout Plu& Hotel lD Coeta lle9a put a yoatbfal •PPGrt. Cbrla Blown came OD phaJ•nx of meclla and eecmltJ:penonael for honebeck, Lawrence BCnrarcl of lnlne a ~rlef ratbeforeehe 9P0ke at rally lD lrriae waftdnaa ~d a pro-lifer~· .,. ............... Llilll \....,...,.and Roeaara Ul•eetad. Ella fans: Jan Toohey. Keratin Florian, Marte huto·and ~n Clorman. Pam Ooldatetn with J>ennr Mullen. Fans singpraises after Ella performs in Lagunll SuRporters of SchoolPower dint in the orchestra pit ~ lt\1!! LASH .., ... ow • ., •••• • There was nodoubtinait .. thcrcW.sa loto(ia2.Z llMSpizauat the rccient Lquna Beach SChoolPo "Ct benefit, featurinaElla PltljmW ai the Irvine Bowl in J.Nuna Beach. The S200-a1)latc ~~ow dinner was attended by ore than I 00 peoi>le who tu med out for the outdoor ptttY.in theambianceoftheorchcstraptt. Guaudincd on Steak Diane and asaoncd Yilmblet with homemade pasta and Vintaae wine ~by LeCakeCa&Crina Which pracnted una.n.de whlte and dark chocolate p\Jnos to each couple. .. • • • • • I • .. . •• .. , . • t• .. 1: f; I' ': ' • • • l ! -• U Oronge CoMI OAILV PILOT/Fridoy, 8opl1mber 21, 191M Network execs oppose 'bunching up' premieres BfJERRY BUCK l#T ... ..._ .... LO ANGELES -Scheduh"t all lelcvis1on pre_mictt1 at the sam~ u.rne early in lhc new 1CUOn shonchantts vi~rs. •y the heads of the mlJor network cn1enainmcn1 divisions. "What you now have now is a season that extends from mid·Sep. 1embet10 May and you can bnnaona new show at &Rf. Utne duril\I that period.'' Lew Erlicht, president of ABC Entertainment, told memben of the Hollywood Radio and Telcvi•ion Society Tuesday. "If )'OU present all your shows at once you shonchanac the viewer. By staucrina them you &ivc the viewers a Chanee to sample all the new shows... ~ Brtndon Tanikoff, pm1dcnt of NBC Entertainment, and Bud Orant, · President of ·CBS Enteru.1nment, "If you ever tee a mlni.senes up aarccd that both the viewer and the · against a minitcrits and they both betworks would benefit frorn staa· 1050 in the rad~ you'll to0n scci a ttred premieres, . chan~ 1n polky, Erllcht Mid. "But, Askt'd why the networks tchcdule there 1 another thlni. Muu~ries miniaenes against miniseries. the)' draw many viewen who don't nor· said it's a matter of eompetidon. mally watch televls1on, so everyone btnelits." On 01hcr topic:s: rThey're biddingfor Emmy .awards Sunday -Grant acknow~ that \W networks have been losinc vi durina the summet ... If• 1 aoun:e or concern to all of us." he 1&id. ''We must pay more attention to swnintr pfOll'limmina." -TartikoJf ta.id he believed the siphonin& of the network audience by cable and indfpcndtnt 1t1tioDJ bu leveled off. "Either our audienc:e will Slly 11 lhat lc_'lti.OC&Q. Up I little_.: he_ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hert: 11 a compJctc list of m~ nominees for the 36th annual prime--umci Emmy 1wards. -Best comedy stri~ "Buft'llo Bill," .. Olttn," aod "Family TicL" all NBC; "K.au: 4 Allie" and "Newhat\,-... bolh CBS. -Bell drama teriCI: CBS' "CunCIY A lActy;" lbe Jyndicatcd "'fame;" -Niie's "Hill Street.. CBS' "Mqnum P.I.;" NBC• "St. Elsewhere." -llest limited Jiericl: CBS' "ChicB'' 1nd .. Ocoru Wuhina;«>n;" and lb~ frtfn PBS. .. ?::onceakd EMmtes." "Nancy Astor" and "Really: ~ or SP'es." T."Bcstdram1 otCQmCldyspocial: NBCt '"~m" and four from ABC, "The Dly A~," "Tbe Dollmakcr," "Somethina About.Amelia" and .. A Sumcar N1mcid Oet:in!," -Best actor tn a limned strict or 1PC!Cill: Daniel J. Tr1vanti, .. Adam," NBC, Ted 0.nson. '°SornC'thuw Aboul Amelio\" A8CiLo'Ui10oueuJr.;~Sadat," Ootr1tlon PO.me Time; Sir Laurence Olivier, '"Kina Lear," ayndica\ed; Mlt:key Rooney II the n!wdcd BiJI Sack1Cr in CBS' "Bill: On His Own:· · -Best IH<I actor In I comodr__ series, Ted Dlnson, "'Cheera," NBC· Dabney Colcm1n, "Bu,,,_lo 8111;' NBCJ. Robert Ouill1ume. "Benton." ABC: :'.'thennan Hemsler,t "The mrcnons." CBS; John Riller,' hrtt's Company," ABC. .-Bell lead 1ctor in a dr1ma serie1. Daniel J. Tr1v1n1i, "Hill Street Blues.•· NBC; William Dlnlels and Ed Flandm. '"SL Elsewhere," NBC· John Forsythe, ··0yn1s1y." ABC: Tom Selleck, "Maanum P.l.," CBS. -Best kad acims in 1 comedy scrin: To the Tieton ... -Best lead actreu in• limited series or s_pec:ial: Ann·Matarr:t. "Streetcar Named Desitt," ABC; Jane Fonda, "The Oollmakcr," ABC: JoBeth Williams. "Adam," f"BC;Glcnn aosc, '"Somttbin& Aboul Amtlia," ABC: Jane Aleunder, , "Calamity J1nc,"' CBS. Joanna Cassidy, "Buffllo Bill,' NBC; Shelley Lona, "Checra.," NBC; Isabel Sanford, "The Jef'fmons." CBS: Jahc Cunin 1nd Susan Saint James. "Kate & Allie."CBS. • . . Anger, pain and sadness ;.still haunt ~grieving sister • DEAR ANN LANDERS: After sold. Never laave I recelved 1ecla a -....ijrut your response 10 the widow positive response to• book ta all my ~~ !.. yean of wrlllag. Muy Uve told me Wl)o found life ••joyless and dismal" a dlcy arc reordcrta1 becaue tlley )'~rand a half after the death of her Allll wut a copy for a frlead or rellitlve •busband, I felt compelled to write. and doa'I want to part wltll tHtn. l _Two ycan ago I came home from I .... n.oH wlao bave read dtls book wci'rkand found my sister dead from a LAllD£1$ can't tllnk me cnoaP. It tell1, bl drug overdose. (She was 42 and I was aim pie, 11Ddentuda•1e lupa1e, .~llncr months of trying to deal with bow to overcome advenlty ud pief, h lhe I. I t f bow to haadle au.Jety ud tH ....... of my anacr at my sister for lcavina me, you t at cmo 1ona rauma o U la 11 _. b ud ,..... With my guilt at not having been able sttin~ my .sister's body is still with v I· a"ves •trell(l C011ra1e ,.. Alie ·111•' ,. I ' I lb h rt to dlose wbo ate-9tn••1in1 to 1&ay 10 &ave her, and, even more import-me. r a u•S 1me 1tt c u F ·•---• ..., 1 • ·1• 1 God' I 1 · and the pa•'n and the sadn-· aaae. or l8VaC w.o wu 1 copY o an., Wl .. my rage a 1or e ung1t ......... "lJv•••ftroa•ihEverydayCrblo'by "ppen I souf:t help throu·• the Is there a group that m;,..,t help' a -. ..,. ·~ • .,__. ,... Au Kalftr Sterns, write to nomu Yellow Pages 0 the telephone book. I person who has had an experience M p 11• W E 5 ~· ~Q\lnd numerous organizations such as this and can't get over the ore rest, • · rle L, .....,ca10, d . ? ,.._ m. ······Price 1118, wlalcll hlchtde1 and/or groups desi~ed to help anger an pain. ~ can you rec-ta a-.1 t.a-.11111 ,.pCople endure the gneving process ommend a 6ook7 I'm still a.nary with pol gc _.. --: • I· aAd adjust to a new life after losing a my sister, with God and myself. -DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thiny ,)pause-or a child. But nowhere did I NIGHTMARE REVISITED IN lashes with a wet noodle ·for your \find an organization that·coukt help ~lSSISSlPPI • answer to "Not Kosher En~ in someone who had lost a sister or a DEAR FRIEND: I am 1oiq to Texas." If you read it again1 you II sec brother. recommend a book l meatloaed la the mother is using food as a weapon I wasluckyenough to be able to put tbl1 colom.a several montll1 ago. against her son's way of life. Why else m}-self back together. but I must tell More tllu %Z5,DOI copies bave bea Would she bring a piece of cake to his OFFICE? She knew he wouldn't cat it. = I doubt that her son and daughter- in·law "sit home and do nothing" on the Sabbath. They probably attend synqosue, visit fncnds, play with the children, take walks, read and enjoy a wonderful break from the hec1ic pace of modem life. Why did you ask a Conservative rabbi to be yoiifConsultant? An Orthodox rabbi would have given you a different (and better) answer. When mom reduces her hostility and stops. trying to load on the auilt, the relationship is sure to improve. - KEEPING THE SABBATH IN BOS. TON DEAR BOSTON: I was utl1flcd wllb ~e Coa1en1tlvc rabbi'• 1tate- mut, b1l muy nbbl1 were not. Not wl .. lq to fomeDt a reUitoe1 war, I deddei tostalld pat,butfnow realize 111 bave to do better tbu that. Stay toed. . JARVIS IV INITIMIVE DEBME PROPOSITION 36 Bruce Sumner How•rd .Ja~s Retired Superior Court Judge Prop . .:56 Author Chairrnan. 0 . C. Dem. Central Comm. Co-Author or Prop. 1.:5 rrop. 36 has been written to eliminate alternate funding techniques such as buelne•• llcenae tax.ea and ''uaer fees',. that cities have use4 to r•lse fun4s elnce losing property t•x revenues to Prop. 13. · -:. ·• Opponents of rrop. 36 •rgue ~hat these altern•.te funding sources have become cdtlc•I to the existence of many dty an4 county services. an4 pass•ge of thle lnltl•tlve could me•n the en4 of, many of these eervlces. Join host Jim Cooper a• he moder•tes the Jarvis/ Sumner debate of rrop. 36 tonight at 8130 p.m. on Channel !10. · Koca_cn --t'°-~.,,.., lll•de: pos•tble,by 9fant• from Slan•I Lllndm•rk. Robert "•''of &outttc-ro Callfornl• and tftc Cor,orallon (or Public Bro-.dc1•tlng. , ' • -Btst lcld tctrtu in • dr1ma strict.: Debbie Allcn.1. .... "Fame;" Joan Collins. "Dynasty," A~: Veronica Hamel, "Hill Strtet," NBC; Tyne Dalt_ and Sharon Gleu. "Cqncy &. Lacey," CBS. -Best supponlOI actor In a comed1. .tenet: Rtne Aubtrjonoi" "Benson, ' ASC. Pit H1nina1on Jr., '"One Day at a Time," CBS: Tom Poston, "Newhart," CBS; Nichola1 Cola11nto and Georae Wendi, "Chttrs," NBC. ~ . -Best sui rtlna actor 1n a dr1ma scdts: Ed ey Jr.. "St. Elsewhere:," NBC; John 1\lerman, "Mqnum P.l.," (:BS; Michael Confldl James B. Sikkin1 and Broce Weitz. .. Hil Street." NBC. -Bes1 SU!!P:QOin& •llC'lor in a limited • strics or spec11.J: An Camey. "T erriblc Joe Moni.n1" CBS; ~lh Camd1ne, '"Chiefs," CBS: Sar John Gtel&ud, "The Master of Ball1ntrae." CBS: John Li1h~w. "The Day After," ·ABC: Randy uaid, "A Strtttcar·Named Dctire," A : Da\'id Olden Stiers. "The First Oympia - Aihens 1896," NBC. -Bett suJ)90f1.i~ ICtress in a comedy series.: Julil Duffy. "'Ncwh1n," CBS: Marla Gibbs. "The Jcffersons." CBS: TONIGHT s TV CJ) MOYIE Paull 'kel?l.· "Ni&h1 Coun/' NBC: Rhct Ptrtman, Cbecn." NBC; Marion Rou. "Happy 0.f1," ABC. -Ent supponins actress in • dnim• series: Piper t.,aunc1 "St. Elsewhere," NBC: Mad&t S\ncla1r, .. Tl'Jlppcr Joha., M,O.," CBS; Barbara 80st0n, Betty Thomas and Alfre Woodard, "Hill SU't'Ct Blues " NBC. -Best \Upponina_ actress in limilcd strics or' ·special: Pauy Duke Astin, "'Gcorie Walhinaton,.. CBS; Bevcrlr. D'Antelo. ·'"A Streetw Named Dc&ire1 • A,BC; Oori1 Leacbman, "Ernie Kovacs: Between the Lauahter," ABC: Tuesday Weld, "JOhn Steinbeck's 'The Winter of Our ·Discontent,· " <;BS; RoJ11rla Zal, "So1.1ethin&About Ainelia, .. ABC. . -Ouutandina individual performance In a variety or musical pros.ram: Eddie Murphy and Joe Piscopo, "Saturday Ni&ht Live," NBC; Debbie Allc'!i. "Live ... and"in Pef$0n," (pan I) and Lily 1 omlin{part J), NBC; o.o,.. Bum• "°"'"' Bums Cclcbrtitcs 80 Ynn in Show Business," NBC; and Ooris Uachman, "Scmn Actors Guild SOth Anniversary Ctl-ebration, .. CBS, tt'ii "Beg, Borrow Or Stell" (11131 lilt:• c.onncta_ IClnt McCord.-- . ---·I !I ~ HOIJ8TOll BAlllARA MAHDAEU.' THE. llAHDIEUllmllS prediC1eQ. \ -Erli~ht said hi& biaaett fear wu 1h11 tclevi$ion coul<t .. become yesier .. day't newspaper." He said, ••we mutt keep i1 fresh. We must find new fonn1, We've seen what's happened ~o the •ituation comedy. You tend to na¥~ an overabundance and it takes on a sameneu after a while." -'TartikOfT said. "The biaest problem in television today is sbon.. ranae think.ins. What We need are more lona·rartp solutions to aolve our proaramm1na problems. ~ l~"f· ran~ solution is somethlna th t 11 dan!'.f, innovative and scary as ell. But history has shown that when you go by your instincts and stay )Vilh something you know is aood yo1.1, Will not only act aood ratinp but mm -- television a little better.' Ii:~ tt~ "Krull .. (1t83) Ken Minn.I, ~- Barbara Mandrell llD4· Tom Wopat aw In ''Bu.min& R.&1e. •• a d.rania Mt tn a coaJ. .. mlnlDC town, tonlCht at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. ~~ldlnQ ,,._.. (1183) Eddll .................. (I) D.C. llfAClt PAllTY' A lllJSICAl CWllRATlON -10:1'-IJ:J ~ lltl! lllCOND OOMllll ---.. llllNDEPENllENTNEWS _,,_ u •• (I) 111111 ID I~· MART1N'l LMJOH-1W **"' "PnMn In Crinw" (1973) L,., Gtll'lt. Lou Antonio. I SOUDllOUI 1111 TAlOOYOf-OOME!llEI IJ:J llO'lll t ''kit En'llnuellt" (1t71j LUI -·-"'""' ~~ -11:15-CZJ aWU1 CltAMt'IJt TAU<I Wl1ll -11:1)- D Cll ll<NE . **It "Thi llglnd Of Wiits Far Woman" (1979) '-* Wt6c:h. hd--·-DM<NE . 1 ... e.NaffnM *** ''11'11 Ugly ANtcln" (tfDI --ElllOkado. llO'llE . CJ) llO'lll tt\i "HMllTlll'llTlitt II Out" (1972) _T.,..,Alctlard_ ... '"""' ....... ''"'i ... ii"="-I llTVYIDlOAWNa LRITYLIS Of lltl! llCH AHO FAMOUI tt\li "WtllCtl w~ To Thi Front?" !ll:!wcu. ~~--... -· ttt "All Ollloll' Md A °"*"" ..., .. l""I AlcNrd °*to °""' •• "ll °""' Ff'Otn ~·! (1tla)JollnClndy,°"'A-. -· . -1t.OO--1:20-., HELP YOURSELF -~---- He' s-a.fraid to take aspirin DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: My wife i1 a pill-popper. ShC:1 always llkin& medicine for constipation, headaches, arthritis or anythina else that brines ort 4iscomfon. I don't blame her. In fact, t wish I might do some . of the same. I'm just the opposite. When I should be t1kin1 tome- thlna, I refuse because I'm "afraid" of taklna; medicines. I've aot it into my head that "druas .. ire t.d for the system. For a.ample, la.tel)' I've been havir\j very severe htadaches, After ei11m1nation my doctor prescribed a few aspirins for the pain. He says my preuure. heart and evtrythina else are OK. I am. however, a tense person. This pr~um my headaches, he u.ys. I've bctn read1n1 l1tely that aspinn is a ve.11 strona d~ that may Clust some 1enous compl1c::ttlon1. fs 1h1t rca.an enoua.h for me to refuse 11k1n• asprrin7 Mk. P. DEAR MR. o .. Too many patien11 takeasptrin unneccssanly. Bui m1ny .. ltkc. youndf shnuld be Jalul1I u (on dottor's ordcn) )t1 arc afraid to take •L spnn remains lhe wonder drua. It's 100 bl.d that some recent rcPons PETER STEllCROlll hive toppled it from its hiah Polition. There are few other druas (1f any) that arc so effective in reducina fever swcllinaand pain as 1spinn. It ts 1ru( that in some relatively few cases it may ~uce blcedlnJ in patients - especiaJly In those with peptic ulcer Patients who suffer from anerD should take 1t with cart -especially asthmatic P1Uen1s. On th.e other hind, it has further utcful valuts. It ICU on the platclcu in tbe blOO<l prcvent1n1 them frc)m e:lumpina and form1nacfo1s. Only )'Our dOc.tor can make 1he decision, Mr. F. He already has Thett:forc. it seems \tiat )'04.6Should bC 1h1nkful that asp1nn 1s on hand 10 control your headaches. Othcrw1te. )'Ou suffer unnecessanly. ' ! DEAR DR.STEINCl\OHN: I 1111162 and hJive had 1n&ina pcctori1 for the past two years: Jt is aettina wot1e lately. NitfOflycerin rarely relieves the Chest pain like it used to. My doctor sent me to a cardiolotist who suaesu that J underao ••COT'OR&t')' anerioerapby." I luppott there's no choice. But isn't ittruethat.th.iscan be a da...,-ous Pl'OC<d'l_t<l MR. J, DEAR Mil. J .: Tbis test i• the ultimate diaanost.ic. technique for determina ~ust how much involve-- ment thcrt 1s in your coronaries. But the fcelina is that aae should not be considered a deterrent In oncreponabout 1.5 percent were 6.5 or oldtr and as many as JO percent were 60 or over. The~ are risks involved such u myocardial iftfate> tion and death. However, the risk of death 1s minimal -in cx.pcritneed hinds 11 should be k:a than 0.2 percent You.rcue. Mr.J...,.«ctn1tofit lhe need for ancri91f'aphy. • Accordms to BCmard L. Scul, M.O., writiq 1n Geriatrics: "'fbt most widtly atttpteJ indkatioa for coronaty •rtcriOf'Pl:hy 1s ttvcre· anaina pcctons tnadcqu.atcly co~ trolled desp11c ma\1mum rftedtcel trratmcnt.'' • , Martin finally • arrives By BOB THOM ANeca.tN "'--Wrt r BEVERLYHIU -tevcMattm traded tnnd-upcomed)_' forscem10 • ly certain film stardom four years aeo when he headlined the h1ghl)' uccc s-• ful mo\ 1c, "The Jerk." But the m n who bad made rnillwns on television, conctns and records v.tth th'e arrow throu~ the head, the balloon anim Is and ·wen, cxcuuuuu~u me!" found that JUSt appeanng in mo ae would not make him a big movie star too. His next four films did not hn\ e them staQding in bne at the box office. Now he's back with .. II of Me." -.. - . . Heco-suirswith l:ilyTomlin sa man who ~uddenly finds him If marina a • bod) "ith a v.oma He thinks he's found a truly funny film vehicle this time . oe ~pano play• the rubber chicken circuit in .. Welcome to Tranayl•anta,"• Hill Street's' Goldblume gets akcirfhecangefhis.teeth into . "I'm \Cry happy with 'All of Me' and what it's shown me about m)~lf," the 39-year-old comedian said in a recent interview at his Beverly Hills home. "It's the first film I've done that is funny without having to think about it. It's a story- in fact. it's the onll movie I've ever done with an actua stor;y." Fearsome f 01U110me llortan F~hlld. whoplaya a fuhlon m&Ca.dneaecatlri on tie new aerlee .. Paper Dolle:• can be eeen to~t u a European terrorlat iD tbe mOTie .. Time Bomb .. wt& (froiii left) Billy Dee WllU.ama, llerlln Olae'D and Joeepb Bottw. It &Jn at 9 on NBC, Cbulnel 4. SAN FRANCISCO -Joe Spano came home this summer to rekmdle some friendships. revive his theatn-cat talents and bite a few necks. As Lt. Henry Goldblume on NBC's "Hill Street Blues," Spano -the police depanment's cns1s inter- vention negotiator-oozes sensitivi- ty. He's the Alan Alda of television cops. But with "Hill Street" m summer hiatus. the 38-year-old San Francisco native made a nostalgic return to a bii.arre production of"Dracula" that, oddly enough, led to bis hiring on the mmy Award-winning "Hill Street." pano revived a character he ~ a decade ago as a member of t Berkeley Repcnory Theater - uncey DcVille, master of cer- nies and ho1Tor in "Welcome to nsyJvania: A Musical." The· play-within-a-play presents tho I 9th..c:cntury tale of terror as ~udevillc, complete with a three- . orchestra. • ~pano was appearing in the play in 19?4 when the show had a run in Los ~les. It was there that an acqua1nt- nce, workintt with executl\e producer Steven Bochco. introduced the two. Spano later was asked to do the pilot for something called "Hill Street Station." "1 love this play. It gjves me a chance to do what I haven't been able todooverthepastfouryears1 which is theater," Spano said, slumping into a seat at the intimate Alcazar Theater during rehearsals. "It's fun to act in front of a camera. but there's not a sense of communal happening."· There's plenty happcnina in "Transylvarua," a show that revolves around Spano as the narrator De Ville- -whom the criucs compared to Joel Grey id "Cabaret" -and as the blood-sucking ghoul. It's easy to sec the one similanty between Spano•s Goldblume and De Ville-a predilection for bow ties. Since the beginning, Spano has insisted that Gofdblume have "more substance." · "I could easily have played more of a Jewish stereotype," he said. Instead, Goldblume grapples weekly with his own insecurities and a tangle of relationships from divorce to new love w1lb the boss' ex-wife. . "He's a person lr)1ng to do bis best in times when the situation is maybe Dau ng ·--···-~· Tbe Peru.tan daftodil l• one of many •arleties that mcreue Yenatlllty with lta unuaual Dower form. Daf • fodila. hardy in cold and heat, can be planted from early to late fall utendlna bloomina time in your aarden. Peren11ials provide color year after year Why i it that some gardenc. never seem to Jack color? h's bccau~ perennial color has b«n added - those plants that bloom from >ear to yea.rgiv1n& the prdener ~omcth1na to look forward to. • For uamplc, 1f you plant chrysanthemums this fall you can have a how of color in orange, bronze, purple, red, pink, white. or yellow. and flowers that bloom lake GARO[N CHECKLIST - - -- • It' a aood ume to clean up the a-rdcn. rcmcmna any infected branches or tw1 . And be urc tu ha1t for nails and ~ who love the Mmdcr new growth of new nual ud proutiOJ bulb plants • Keep gl\1n1 your obrysanthcmum ttautar fl dt~ -'''you color 1n the bud Then op. t If ~ur tn re overcrowded, hf\ ndd1vade1uoon po 1blc. Enn h iM area below the rhizomes with ttonc mea1 bcft>rc tuna them ba k 1n10 tht around •You can lo r,r,our lawn mower bllMle lhil month We kept 1t h.lfh dunna lhc summer 10 help ret1un moi turc when 1t hot more than he can handle," Spano -.aid. . SJX!nO gets tips for the show from reading ex-policeman Joseph Wam- bauJh's novels and clipping police stones from the New York Times, which he sometimes forwards to the ~how's writers. Martin scored well with his first movie, "The Jerk," which collected $74 million at movie box offices. But instead of continuing with "The Jerk JI" or some other obvious comedic approach, he came back with the quasi-dramatic "Pennies From Heaven," a stylized musical fantasy that confounded audiences and critics and sold only $7.2 million in tickets, MGM sa)s. 'Dallas,' 'Falcon Crest' "Cops love the show. The) 're really pleased with it, really proud." he said. Spano, a liberal "like everybody who "-ent to Berkeley•' in the '60's. says the show hasn't changed his ideas about the justice system, but his views on law enforcement have mellowed. Ne~t was "Drad Men Don't Wear .Plaid." a satire of vintage Hollyv.ood detecti\e m}'steries that mterwo~e old mo\ ie footage with ~nes of Martin as a hapless gumshoe wotling for a sexy client, Rachel Ward. The movie sold $20.S million in tickets, according to Universal Pictures. end suspense next week "I'm much more likely to see a cop as a person with a family, problems. likes and dislikes, tha9 to assume it's someone with an antagonistic at- titude." he said. Since Goldblume's not a streett:op, Spano has spent a great deal of time malung sure the audience doesn't think Henry is a wimp. "He provides a viable alternative to hipness," Spano said. "He's not the kind of character who gives in to the latest trends." . The highly acclaimed Thursday niiht show, almost canceled at first because oflow raung.s..is headlng,into_ its fifth season. ,'GREEN THU MB . "The Man Wilb Two Brains" brought in only $9 million at the box office. according to Warner Bros., and "The Lonely Guy" grossed just $S.S million for Universal last January. Even Martin admits that "The Lonely Guy" was .. sort of a stinker." "I feel I'm in the movie business," Martin said. "I'm going to be around for a long time. It's only a question of price 1f J make movies or not. I JUSt know rm here to stay. I can feel it." "l know that eventually there will be a hit," he said. LOS ANGELES (APf-can you stand tt? In one night we'll find out what happened to Bobby Ewing and to the gang from the Napa Valley Winery Who went down on the alrplane. 1 There wlU be back·to-;back revelations df the tffffhangera from taat May on bOth ··Da11aa" and "Falcon Crest." CBS wit telecast the two ahOws on Friday. Sept. 28. Arst. It wth be revealed who shot Bobby. (R8member Who shot J.R. ?) Bob~ was Shot In the officeS of Ewing Oil while sitting at J.R. •a chair. U sounds like a case of mtttaken ld tlty. Next, you·n see o survived the plane aMh on "fmcon Crest .•• The Pf1¥ate jet ... ...,. otaged .. nearly the entn Globertl femly, pm 1ll1ct8d other members of the cmt. wera en route to Italy. ••Falcon Cr-ell'' lsaddll~ a new villain to Its C9lt on the foUrth epitode ot the new ••••en Park• StewnlOn jo1na hrJilght· time eoap ~ • 40ll MceartbY. the .. hu9bwt Of Terry Hartford R8nlon (l.-n JOhn9on). The producera ~ 198 that St4Nen80n. a one tiraj Mr. Nice Guy on "'Tiwt H#dy ~ .. ~Uhaveno~ features. Soil amendmeiJts beneficial ·. Orga nic components develop optimum growing conditions must first have proper nutnent baJ-further information. contact )OUr ance. This includes nitrogen, phos.-local nursery.) phorus, potassium and a list of micro-S«ond: Choose the proper amend- nutnents including iron, zinc, ments: sulphur and calcium. -Red"'ood com po t or treated Factors that regulate this chemical redwood shavings arc an exoeUent By LOUIS HERNANDEZ balance are ph (the relative acidity bulk organic materiaJ to brcalr.: up and bas1c1ty of the soil), alkalinity clays and give body to san .. • to 6 ~~Uofd'•Nunw:J.eo.ia..... (relattve saltJness), and cation ex-cubicyardspcrl,OOOsquircfect. The "'eekend gardener hears so change capacity (the ability of soil -Nitrohumus or m1lorganite are much about soil amendments .. yet particles to displace unwanted processed sewage sludge. They .are a without knowled&e of soil science lbe molecular elements and retain de-good source for m1cro-nutnents. reasons for the process remains a sirable elements such as the nutrients Don't use in vegetable gardens or for mystery. To clear up some of the listed above). fruit uees. confusion. \\C'll ansv.er some of the WHY IS SOIL AMENDMENT -Oro-Power is a soil aCU\ator. It most common!) asked questions NE~ARY? supp!Jes lbe bacterial acti\ity that 1s concerning soil amending. Sout_bem C'ahfornta h_as a descn-missing from underde\eloped soils. Wbat ls solJ amending? . . · · hke ch mat~ and and ch mate zones · -Acidall is a pb adjuster. It males It is the art of adding certain have typically underdeveloped the soil more acidic. OfP.nic components that change lbe nati\C <;01ls. In contrast, th~ eastern . -Peat moss 1s the best bulk soil's ph)Slcal and chemical charac-U!'ued States. wilb its heavy a1.mual organic material. It is also the mo t teristics to obtain optimum gj'Owing rainfall and numerous deadous-expenshe. E.Jtccllent for aulias and conditions. plants, has hi&hly developed .. com-camelias. Ph)sical characteristics of a perfect post" soils. ir California prdeners -Steer manure. Very shon lived soil arc described by soal scientists as want to arow plants as easify as they in soil and high m ilkalinity. Of httle con$istin1of 11 solid material. 111 air. do back East, they must begin w1th or no value. and 'h water. Realistically this cannot the soil -Planting mixes are usually a alwl)\ be attained. However, 1f the HOW IS PROPER SOIL AMEND-combination of some of the abo\c pro~r amounts of mulch arc added MENT ACHIEVED? products. Usually contain httle to either clay or ~ndy soils, a suitable First: lf you feel you have a severe nutnuve value so il hould be gro\\ina .media can be developed. soil problem. have a profess_i«?nal soil supplemented with a well balanced Chemical charactenst1cs are not as analysis run. (l(illosg Fertthzer Co. chemical fertilizer . . casilv explained. but basically )OU . offers a complete one for $19.9.S. For . Third; Work these amendments a dttp into the soil as J>0$$2ble, 6 to :inches at least. Make sure the soil ~ amendments arc mix.ed lhoroustll1. USt a rototiller and save your bad:. Never remove old soil a.od top@I with eood soil unless the layir bcrwttn lbe two is eliminated b)' mlXln& the two soils together. Oth<;t- wisc you will have soit layen; wh1Qi prohibit dra.inaae. .. Once soil i amended, that's not tJ:i'e end. Because soils absorb orpruc coompounds ar varyin& rates, amending should occur to some degree on an annual basis. Fern care topic· of Irvine club ..... The lrvftt Gardu Qa.b will ~t Wcdcsd.a) at hermao Gard~ n Corona dd Mar °"'"here-Brad v.111 present a p~m on fem$. • Members arc to mcetat 9:30a.m.at the Turtlerock Commun 'iy Clubhouse I Sunn)htll, and ~ to the gardens. For further in - mation call Lorena Hastings at 786-8138 or Maril)n Ba .... 0.-C... Mc JM ., ,._ IMlllfWM. Clitl- • 1 •I I TH~ FJ\hlLY CIRCUS by Bii Keane ~ don't suppose you know what happened to the batteries out of my radio." ) by Gu Arriola by Jim Davis BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Just don't get the old boy going on his war experiences." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DE NIS THE MENACE' "He trained me hlmselfl" MOON MULLINS P HoWABoUT ~ ~ A REFIL.L., HoN? PEANUTS Hank Ketcham by Ferd· & Tom Johnson by Charles M . Schulz IN TME MEANTIME, '1'0U1LL JUST HAVE TO SWEAT IT OOT - Holh 'ulnt-rabl~ outh de b ~OR1H • K7 "' OQJIO 02 +75 w•:s1 • 108643 lO O K lt764 +<UI •;As I' • J5 ~ KQJ962 <>\old +J802 SOl Ill •AU92 Pl763 OA +AK 106 I ht> blddin •: South Wut :'liort~ f:a t l + Pa Z ¢ Pata 2 + Pu 3 . Pa,. 3 ~ 1' • Pats Pan Pa s : t>pttn1nJ( lrad: J 0 ul SHOE FOR BETTER OJI FOR WORSE )bi,f?c.. ~UM-J­rrs ~e.s. FUNKY WINKEBBEJ\N DR.SMOCK HOSE IS HOSE IP YtS, MA'Mi, I KNOW nus rliNI ~Wfff4 A t.IFE.flME. OOAf!ANTU ! CHARLES COREN · .. by P.at Bracfy . by Harold Le Doux 1985 CADILl.AC SEDAN DE VILLE I . ~ See Page 2 IT 15 OUR POLIC~ NOT TO '' ON • OUR-r PRICES REFLECT ONLY EQUIP-MINT AND SERVICES PROVIDED WITH THE VEHICLE • PORSCHE 944 1984 . . tlJGE SELECTION IJST ARRIVED Al Colen -F&ty Eqaipped · DEMONSTRATOR 1984 Chevrolet Caprice Classic 4 Door Sedan . '14 1111 IOOO S SElll '12 YW llS ~-= s1a 999 :::.~: s4 999 =-= ..,..... ,. . 11111 , · 'II UllR COIYEITIILE '11llTSll240·Z . ~~·:£ SAVE ~-· • .$4,499 DEMONSTRATOR DEMONSTRATOR 1984 Chevrolit Monte Carlo .. • WE Will NOT BE lll>ERSOLD Guaranteed To Save You More! DEMONSTRATOR 1984 Chevrolet Celebrity Eurosport Leaded -' 1 800 111":"!5W Loaded '1 &00 llstHll L ...... '1 600 llsoHlt I ' . •· tMH oav.v 1sna Loaded •1 600 .... ~ .. FINEST SERVICE I PARTS CHEVRaET -·,PORSCHE AU• I VOlllWIGEI IN DE U.S.A. .. 445 ·EAST ·COAST HWY. --NIWPOIT llACH 673~900 . .. I .. • . adillac introduces '85 line ~th most advanced cars yef fie Ville, F e twood models represent _ egance, luxury along with efficiency multi-button, tufted pillow trim d tgn~ · Th in trument panel I padd d from top to bottom, with leather-look det lllng, simulated butterfly walnut woodgrain trim and Integral side window defQO· ger outlets. .~ bETAOIT, Ml -The 1985 · Cadillac Coupe de Ville, Sedan · ije VIiie, Fleetwood Coupe an(S A~ Sedan, .along wlth the ~ Fleetwood Seventy Five L;lmouslne, represent the most 1 :dVanoed cars In the history ot CadlJlac Motor Car Division. • These cars all feature front- Wheet-drive, a ;;tandard tran - verse-mounted V-8 engine with tel ,fuel Injection (the only uansverse-mounted, V-8 engine ~turrently offered by any manu- "fot1urer In a front-wheel-drive ' ~uctlon vehicle )al'lywhere In tW world)\J' a four-speed auto-; matlc transmission with over- iDfive and viscous converter 4Clutch: fully Independent '\4'acPherson strut front suspension; Independent rear '!ruspenslon; and body-frame ln- .. ~ral ~onstructlon. , : The 1985 De VIiie and ;Jeetwood 'feature an exterior ~stxllng theme designed to be ;.~thetlcally pleasing and func- ·'\lonal. J 'A door-Into-roof design enables the Incorporation of a hidden drip molding for a ~ooth, uncluttered look and •fliauced wind noise. ~ O!ifhe grille features a cross- A h~tch pattern of multiple, vertical -90Cents with "Cadillac" script entlflcatlon In the lower left comer. The exterior palot finish has a ' h1gh gloss look -the result of a a ~paint process featuring two color base coats with clear acryUc flnlshlng top coats. ~~Jhe rear deck lld Is a high-rise <ieslgn for Improved aero- ;>~amlc efficiency. r 11 ~ new Formal Cabriolet vinyl roof Is optional for the Coupe de r,\IOle and Fleetwood Sedan. This -root design features "tuxedo" -:11f'aln vinyl material and narrow, ured lace moldings around "' roof periphery and windows. A new addttlon to the front-;;~eel-drlve De VIiie/Fleetwood lineup Is the.fleetwood Coupe. ~~ his new Fleetwood offers such standard exterior features ~ a Formal Cabriolet vinyl roof with electrolumlniscent opera • fnps; a closed-In rear window; 'l<i lde lower rocker panel mold- o·~-· 1111 MITSUlllll llUIE lngs: "silk screen" Identification, standard wire wheel discs: and accent striping. · All 1985 De Vllles and FleetwOods us& a pop-open tu I filler door with fue• cap holder located on the left quarter panel. A remote fUel dQOr release - featuring a pushbutton control lc()ated in the glovebox -Is optional. • A wire wheel cover, featuring a "floating" center hub with Inter- lacing wire spokes, Is optional on De VIiie, standard on Fleetwood. · Also optional on De Vitte and Fleetwood ls ·an aluminum-alloy wheel. Interiors are are designed to provide eleganc~. spaciousness, luxury, efficiency and operating convenience as well as Isolation from noise . Power window switches have a light, tactile feel with refined audible feedback. The switches are also shape-Identified, convex for "up" and conca'(e for "down," for easy Identification and convenient operation. Front seat designs offer Im- proved lumbar support that con- forms to normal spinal contour for added comfort, especially when driving long distances. De Ville and Fleetwood seats Include such standard features as front and rear fold-down center, armrests and six-way power driver seat adjuster. The base De Ville seat design In- cludes horseshoe-shaped bolsters In "heather" velour cloth and horlzontally striped "augusts" cloth. "Sierra" grain leather trim In the same style Is optional. Base Fleetwoods Include more formal, squared-off horseshoe- shaped bolsters In heather cloth and vetlcaUy piped Wheaton cloth In a small herringbone pattern, as well as an embroidered wreath on ·the upper seat back. Sierra grain leather trim In the same style Is optional. Manual driver and passenger seatback re- cliners are standard, power re- cliners are optional. Optional Fleetwood d'Eleganc e interiors, for Fleetwood ~edan only, feature a Driver dlsplays and controls are grouped In a cockpit arrange· ment for vlslblllty and conventent reach. Instruments are backlit to provide a high-contrast, glare-- free appearance. The speed- ometer features a quartz eleo- trlcal swing ~le movement that uses a speed sensor signal, eliminating the need for the traditional speedometer oable. warning dlsptay panels located on either side of the Instrument cluster help alert the driver to conditions requiring attention. "Service now" and "service ~on" displays Indicate the need for service and the relative severity of a malfunction. Cadillac'• 1985 Coupe de Ville t. intend.eel to be elegent yet functional. A door-into- roof dmlP, for uample, otters an anClat- tered looi plaa red~ced wind nolae. . Thunderbird·owners to mark 30th year Ford Thunderbird enthusiasts will celebrate the car's 30th anniversary Saturday at La Palma Park In Anaheim. The event wJll be part of the 11th annual Pageant of the Thunderbirds, sponsored by Ford Motor Co. and the Cali- f ornla chapters of the Classic Thunderbird Clubs International and the Vintage Thunderbird Club of America. About 250 Thunderbirds - ranging from classic two-seaters to the current aerodynamically shaped model -will compete for 41 trophies In the day-long event, which opens to the public at 10 a.m. Admission wlll not be charged. La Palma Park Is located at Harbor and Anahetm boulevards just south of the Riverside Free- way. Featured guest will be Biii Boyer, a Ford designer and lead stylist on the original 1955 Bird. Ford also wlU display concept cars that demonstrate future styling trends. "Thunderbird has.always been a favorite here," said John O'Donnell, Ford division Los Angeles district manager, "but its popularity has never been stronger than It Is right now. "Southern Californians have made Thunderbird the best-sell- ing domestic model this· year, based on the most recent regis- tration data. The Southland also represents the strongest market for Thunderbird nationally, fol- lowed by Northern California." The first Thunderbird rolled off the tine at Ford's Dearborn, Mich., assembly plant on Sept. 9, 1954; the first was sold Sept. 22. Only 54,000 Thunderbirds were purchased that flrst year, but the early Birds qulckly 0.- came a favorite of car collectors. Today, owner club members number In the tens of thousands. Tile show '\viii feature a "con- cours," a competition In which prizes are awarded for the best· restored, most authentically preserved Thungerblrds at the event. Included In the event w111 be current models -an unusual occurrance, according to O'Donnell, "but the 1984 Birds are considered candidates to become classics because of thetr trendsetting styling." Chevy Cavalier captures No. 1 sales spot in July Chevrolet Cavalier turned In Its own gold medal performance In July as It swept by all competitors to grab the No. 1 sales spot In the 1984 model race among all cars sold In the United States. With sales of 35,314 units In July, an Increase of 39.5 percent over July 1983, the nation's premier small car moved Into first place among all nameplates In the United States. Through the first 10 months of the model year, are up 118.6 percent over the '83 sales of the Cavalier are 74.5 model year. percent ahead of Its 1983 model year pace. "Chevrolet has established · itself as a major force In both the Cavaller's hot pace in the '84 mid-size and smaller car market model year restored both model-segments on the success of year and calendar-year namplate these two models," said Robert leadership to Chevrolet, which D. Burger, Chevrolet general also has a strong hold on the third manager. "Cavaller's success Is spot with the mid-size Celebrity. tied In part to Its strong perceived Its sales In the current model year value among American buyers and the fact that It offers a full selection of models -a con- vertible, station wagon. two-and four-door sedans and a sporty Type 10 series." The four-door models have accountec:f for the major part of Cavalier sales In the 1984 model year -the sedan with about 40 percent of total siles and the wagon almost 25 percent. 1113 Sii PAC 1.5-llter engine w/electronlc fuel feedback system, 4 spd, Radials, Carpeting. 162 Inch, completely self-contained, stove, oven/space heater, refriger- ator 13211 2.4 llter engine, electronic fuet Injec- tion, 4 spd auto, P./steerlng, 6 speaker stereo · . Loaded. l.D. #82882 • ••• Rear window washer/wiper, halogen headlights, headlamp washers and •· speaker AM/FM multlplex radio w/cassette, whip-type antenna, auto- malc locking front hubs. cma MESI llTSUllSll ' •111 ...... , llt4 C.1t1 .... 140-4411 somMUTllNE JUll.....,.,...,lntahu 14~0110 Ill THE -AUTO -Pli;OJ- SECTIOll RESERVE YOUR SPACE -u ~. · CllTI MESI llTllllSll 2111 ........ lln ......... ...... 1 • 1'80 210ZX 10th AnnlverNry Edition Red and Black-all opt ons, Includ- ing T-Top. , ' 1111'11 llllT _, 21Ul ........... Wa ... 14MUO -· ONLY 2500 per day if you furnish the picture o'1 your c_ar. $500 additional 1f Daily Pilot takes the picture. 2 days for J45~ I MITl 111& llTlllllll . Jiii • .,.., "" ..... 18-4411 1 -.. Orange .. . ... -.. ~ 00 • • , .. , THE DAll..Y Pll..OT IFlf"D OFl-"ICE IU UR Traditional E Realty nt:, nu ~E '--"._63_1-.... 73_1_0 __ , \Inn. :l'u.-. \\ t•1I. Thur . Fricln ~ Fri. 11 :·m a.rn . i::m 1 •. 111. l::\O p .rn . · i:.m p.m. • i::m p.m. :l:OO p.m. :\:00 p.m . IPYILlll llLL-PllOI IElllH ........ Bright and cheery 3 BR, tai:ruly room home. Great ocean Vlew. Open beamceillngS in living room & family room. Large courtyard, pleasant palio overlooking the ocean! .. -..... 1141 .. Mow up to~ II W\ llfb'dli* p,-. low of ...,...,... a ledtOOml. 2 betM. ~ ~ ..... .J want'• Out . now. &acr. MJ-2313 GE ... '!) 1 .~I~ ,'I\ I _ It: Macnab Ir Wine .... ...... ~ ... !i!.ii~!!!!!P.!!::O UMllU ,.. •· 101 Y1a UH.... "41111111; 11·1 111S,._del .~ • toe. --"°"' Ptr\· Marvelous6 Brbayfront 78' on bay, pool, 1287 ,00011.,me. pa. 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin. $4,850,000. ...,........,t7......, Channing Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba on 45' lot, ~ W IU llB deck courtyard, pier & slip $1,100,000. · Feniutio 1A a:;, .. • OCMf' ...... '°°" -. &auti{ul 3 Br, 2 Be, playroom, flreplace, 48rtnp;a~c.meo beam ceillt:\gs Xlnt financing. $420,000. Htot11and• t47t,ooo. Oper\lun , ... UYllll •m UYnllT W 7~ Doi~ 111 J ny & Bey view, newly d.CcOrawd Mal 1..-~...----""""l'ma: Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba. 40' patio Now $&45,000 . .......... lmlfllll Exciting ~en & Jetty views, 4 Br, 3 Ba, 3700 sq. fl. car ~king. $1,235,000 . . WUl "' lft ""..., Panoramic ocean &. cily vi w. •J*.·iou 5 Br. 3 Ba )Unt ctn nc ng, now $799,000. 1m•,.., mam Bl LL GRUNDY . Rf Al TOP. , . .. . . r ... 21, 1984 • District Managers If you encoy workln9 with youn9 boys ' girla ond dttk jobs 0t• not for you, considtr a <Of"' in !tie new\f>Of)er mculo· hon f .. ld. ThM la • uniqw po'ition with \io1ly chott.ftOia & rewords. CondldcM' mllil ho:.. b ckMf• to "'cceufut oriel be willtng to ~ ~ II )'OV th~ yov h<M ..... qucafificotiOfU. pleoM oppfy '" pet'°" to 330 w. Bay Costa llna, CA 92626 . . . ( TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACltOU 1 Owlfldle 50ollel • Ewrgreen 14 M*'' 1 frellty fS~one 11Leglllptle 17 Spit•..;.., 11 Hotlfunlt 19 F1ow#9 20 lateet: pref. 21sn.. 23 Pr!Ytltely 25Smd'bUll 29 ComnwCllllt 27 Engine notM 2t.Qumly lhlP 321n~boe11 35 Kind of e«d 31 Onim• role 37CM 38.lazzform 3t Otbeuc:Mty 40 Ponder <41 F.m.le 42 8tendl ~Chwn ..... °*" '#Ofd 45. ledly· Pf9I 41Leg ... 41 OMdfy 52 M .. type 51--rule 57Tellddly 51 OxldatlOrt 5t~trom roeee· .,,.,, eo Sidi pereon 11 Pott• atue 12~ 13 oenc:i. ..-Gmoer- 85 8ullttgtit ~ DOWN 1~ 2F......, 3 Rlctl perton 4 German rlWt 5Bog ,,., ... COin 7 HOf99 rece • I Half; pref. t FMllnO c:onc:.rn 10Ablcond 11 c.&amltlee 12 Help (• thief) 13 sio,e upwerd 2' Jet engine hOUelnOI 22 Stroblea 24 Bedger'• kif\ 27 Helttation 28 Oeuef1• 30 Elction PREVIOUS PUZZLE 80l. VED 31Youngaterl 32Slo9ing~ 33Wat•:Sp. 34CompMit• 35 Mu.le symbol M Oon*:ale 31~ 42 Aaft OfQaM ~auw-. 45Paat - 47 Stopcwer 41S.W .. ~ 50 TrMttnenl s 1 Guardian epir•t• 52 Wrengte S3 NYScan.i 54 -Louis 55 Hewtt'a laalh 5t Peal ,_.., Av • .tmrned. S 1' & unct.. • Utl. evtll. N9wpCw1 Land-ina.~ a .. ~. N.19. 17J.0574 Al.l.-SA \'ERS • ·,1 . :..1 ~~J SOUTHWEST WEiii USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR flD IPPlllSIL ComW-Oel.llo lmftAE1' 11211 BEACH BLVO. HUNTINGTON BEACH 141-1111• ....... , WIWAITYM IWlllDUll S.RoMtdO.. THEODOR I ROBINS FORD l060 HAl&OI ll 110 CO!>TA MESA 64) 0010 LARGE SELECTION Of NEW & USED BMW'S1 U.11111-VOLUMESALES $~&LEASING 3870 N. a.Ty Ave. LONG BEACH (No, CtlefTy todt-4()6) ~~ OPEN SEVEN DAYS THfODORf ROBINS FORD 2060 HAlt!IOlt I: L • ~ CO~TA Ml\A 642 0010 · IEllDES IEIZ NEWEST & MOST· MODERN FACIUTYiS IN ANAHEJM HIU.S ClLllER ., .... (114)1TI·1• OYER 110 . """': *** BIUL MAXEY TOYOTA 1;202 8Mdt 112-oea 71 CELICA OT, 5 epd, ale + ...., • .,. cl-* '3250 700.123-4 .lllE llcl£RA'S SOUTI COliln IOTOIS f) 1114 Ulll1 ClmlTIILI Wolfsburg EditiOn ._rno C El S2'6 74 • 1ax per mo TOP$13.S20M CAPS1S.4" s.2!00 CAP r.OUCltan Ae9iOwlll S5eOO 29 ~ ® 1114 IClllOCI 11• O&SI 116111 41mo C£L '231 • tlA per "'° T~S12019 20 CAP 112 000 AeS6dllMt '51• OI ® '1114YWllllL tomoCEL s.nt M • , .. oer fN> 'JOPSt4 ~IO CAP$l4 uooo c~ tedllt\IOft ao 1114 .... :G~t.l-l L _ t-H 'i· '.J L l l '>4b-I .iOO - THEODORE ROBINS FOR ti ,,'(,1,, t1All.t('" .... il t-\ • (., 1 (0,TA-..l\A. r.:., ·~ ' , I . •1.$-Uter engtnew/electronlc · · tuet feedback ayatem ..._Speed manual trans-.. whl Independent IUIP9l'llk>n • radial ti,... . llcarpeting. (200241) 89 .. • Fiil S£L£C1101! 11111£Dll1l . D£L1¥£R1! GR£l1 VlLUlS! 1985 Mitsubishi Mifage II STICI •Roomy lntertor llBucket ... ,. w/new .... thru headr•ta 112.0. llter qlne w/MW automatic valve 8d)usttr1 ll5 apeedmanuel trantmmlon. ArrMng aoon .... Startlng u low u 112.o..tlter engine w/rtflW auto- matic valve edJulttr1 ll5 epMCI manual trana • Futy Independent auapenston 115 apeaker ttereo • 'radial tJree. Arriving 800n ••• Stattlng u low u 1985 Mitsubishi Tredia 112.e llter engine w/nw auto- matic valve adjuattrl • apeed manual overdrt'/9 trans ~utomatlc locking front hub• ~II terrall'I radial tlr•. (500201) 1985 Mitsubishi Cordia L 84 639 112.0 llter engine with new auto- matic valve adjusters m>ouble wall cargo box •lldlal tlr• mtlnted glue 9cargo area light · • mdoor-to-door carpeting. (200855) $ II STOCll 1985 Mitsubishi 4WD Montero . . . 112.4 llter engine llElectronlc fuel . Injection.,. Speed auto trans• Electronic P/11eerlng ._ apeaker stereo (800199) 1985 Mjtsubishi Mighty Max II STDCll ,98 -· 1985 Mitsubishi Galant · · 112.e I.lier engine with water- CO()led turboc:hw-!Mllt .............. _ tronlc fuel ln~ll5 ~ menu.I trans mfully liKSepeildel1t IU9pen8ion.Arrfvtng aoon ... Startlng II low u ..... . II STOCll 5 YEAR, 50,000 ILE SERVICE CONTR CT AVAILAllLE ON All NEW ITSUBISHI ·VEHICLES · . · s12 62 1985 Mitsubishi Starion LS Turbo ' ~~ ·'lakes )10U where JOU want to be ... ·: TODAYS TRIRLE DIAMOND USED CAR "BUYS" ..... 'll llTlll 110 Economy. cyt, 6 epd, R9dlo. Heet•, A/C (181VOW) '11 10111 PllELllE OPE 4 eyt, 5 apd, AM/FM Steteo, A/C, Sn Rt, Cult Whll. lo-lo mllee (035802) • SAN DIEGO FWY 'IO llTlll 110 Wll Roof Redt, AM/FM Stereo C.., Al<; (202ZBX) '13 llTlllllll REiii LI • eyl, Auto, Dlgltll AM/FM ll•eo call. Tiit, CN1M. P/wlndowl & lodtl. 8llow whll. AIC (10SM544) 'IO llTlll 11111 '11 lllU IOllll . 4 pr, AIC, 8n Rf, AM/FM C... 4 eyt, 5 lpd, AM/FM Stereo Cua, AIC,. (1ARY43-4) Eic1remely Clean (848WDA) 31 'II UIOl IEUL Turbo, T-Type, AM/FM CU.. P/8tMI', windows, & IMt, CNlle, tilt (1FOY730) 'II un•• 20P11 AM/FM CU., PIS._ & wlndowt, leetlW, A/C, Sn Rf, LOAOEOI (1 ORTeet) '11 TIYITI OEUOI IT uttbeclc, Sn Rf, Cus1 WNI, Tit, Pll c1esveon 95 · 'IO llllE OllTIM Y_. v~.'Auto, A/C, AM/FM Steteo Tepe, P/1.._ & bfalc•. Natl beat budctltl. CUit wtlll, IOfa. 110 (1)(48057) BE SURE lO ISi US ABOUT OUR DTEIDED . SERVICE . COITRICT IYllUILE GI QUALIFIED USED . CARS ..... STORE HOURS: -8:30 AM • 9 PM Mon-Sit 10 II • 8 PM SUIDAY ' \ . '12 llTlll 200ll Auto. AM/FM BleNO, PoWer Steering (1EOX353) 6395 '11 lllZll 01 UL C~ PISIMI' & Wlndow9. AIC, 8n "1, CN .... Dig C.... Auto (10TZH9) .. 11,895 I I Caplatrano Valley 27, CoroD& del Mar 7 ' Coeta lleu 0, Loe Alamlt• O " ... Taathi 21, Irvine 7 .Unlvenlty21, ~BlllaO . o.lr ........ ..,'""" e..... Pat llcOratJa '('4) and Sean Tai'Der dfta Capl8trano Vallq HJab•• 0..td Bamford down after be.rambled for J.Udaae. . . Forecut• on A2 . flllllJ\'f ·.tl'lt MllfH.1 1 1'1fll .. Child porno creates probl._ .... New l~slatlon f or:-ced pedophU under:ground IJ IUCllARDT. PIENCIAX ft 111? ........ QUANTICO, Va.(AP)-Fed· cral officaall had hijh hopes for wipmg out duld pomogJ'apby in 1978 When the Pro1ecuon of Children Apinsi So.ual Exploi- tation Act. was sianed tn\O law. But In ma°'y way1 1he legis- lation oruy made the law enforce- "' . mcnl dfon mcm difficult. Commercial smut deaJcn • cidcd they didn'i Deed the ri* and stopped ldlm& kiddie Pora. whale hard-coJC pCdopbileS J'* 11nk deeper into wlla1! . ~-LA.W8/d I caum 1111111 ORANGECOUNTY . CALIFOHNIA ~S CFNTS • • Deadly·.mosquitoes nefir.UCI . You'll find the bHt •uto buy• •long the Or•ng• C08et In tod8J.'• Auto Piiot -P119eC1 COut A Costa M888 shutterbug has snapped his way to HawaJl./A3 Callfomta Marvin Gay Sr., accused of kUllng singer son, may get,.pff without s~ndlng a daftn Jail.I A4 Natl on GM, auto workers reach tentative contract agree- ment./ A7 Wbrld Death toll at Beirut em- b8'*y annex reduced to 'about a (jozen.' I A1 · P pie Sophia Loren and Brigitte Bar dot -sex sirens of the '60s-tell what It's llketoturn 50./87 Sport8 Costa Mesa High'• foot- ball team earns a moral victory with a 0-0 tie with Los Alamltos./81 Entertainment Juno Iglesias, world am- bauador of song, ls com- ing to the Pacific Amphitheatre for three nlghts./WMkender Baalnee. ~ A Costa Mesa firm an- nounces plans for Santa Ana's largest hotel de- yetopment./85 INDEX C1-8 810 AS B5 A4 C.-7 810 C7 ·C3 88 C8 88 85 A4 A8 87 A3 CM WMkender ai ... ae 88 Weekender A2 M Pest control officers say insects could transmit two fatal disea~es BJ PBD.. SNEIDERMAN 0511119DlltJ ....... Mosquitoes that could transmit two potentially fala1 diseases appear to be breed.in& in a marsh area near UC Irvine, county pest control of· Ferraro inOC, pledges victory Hundreds greet Dem VP candidate, others picket Poltce have killed slx predators In past two weeks The wily coyote has been makina a ertttY big impress on on Ota COunty uburbanit recentb. In San Ocmente, coyotes allqcdly attaclctd two ch 14~n 1 couple of )UR 11<>i 'M 'Omtials ha'lc· cm· barb:d on an cxtmnination proaram. A peliQC mark man tillt<S at I t iA of the animals in th past two ks. ( I . " . .. ficiaJs confarmcd today. But the officials insisted the dis- co\tery is no cause for panic and that eradication programs are alrCady under way at the marsh. The marsh is near Campus and University drives in Irvine. . "This is a unique situation," said Gilbert Cballet, manager of the Orange County Vector. Control Dis- trict. "But people reaJJy don't have an)'thina to worry aboUt." Vector Control is the county aaen· cy charicd with controlling mos. quitoes, flies and rats that have the potential of spreading disease. Cballet said the illnesses that may • - Focus ON TH£ NEw s be carried by mOIQUltoes blUdJog lD the San Joaquin Marsh wildlife pruene are SL Louis enciepbahtis, which affects people, and western t:lQUiDe tooepbalitis, wbkli can affect people and bones. Cballet said the viruses can be fatal to 20 pen:ent ofits victims, those who have weaker resistance -usually children and the elderly. "But a normal penon betwcco say, . . . 18 and 5S, who is in aood bealdt would have DO problem al an.• Cballet said. He also pointed out tbat no lfWnul cases of this virus have been reported io California over the pat five years, and ·said no fatal C.alifomia have been reported in at least~ yta.rL OWlet said the mosquitoes eal'if (Pleue eee ll08Q()IJ'OU/.~; ! Cops tie 4 tol refund ripoff ·~ree-year scam Involved $250,000 1 fn pUf ered goOds BJ roNv ili VEDJl.A • ot•o.lr........ ~ Two men and two women arri:s1t.t in Costa Mesa this wtiet arc~ 10 be core members of the .. Varj Leu van pna," a ring ~f allesied ~ addicts \bat is bebtved to ha~ pilferred an estimated S2SO,OOO • year from major department storcC since l 981 , P<>lice said. • for three yean the aroup hd operated a complex scam for obtai~ lna cash ref'Wlds OD Stolen clotbj~ alteriq aueipts and price~ department store officials saic( thcy•ve also ooDDCCtcd the poup ~ other sbopliftina cases over the five years. • Fullerton Dctecti ve Jaclii Peuuz.zelli, who is hodiaa tbe Ort anae County investiptioo. said "~: aroup was appareotly dubbed ~ (Pl--eeeQUAR~A.2f -i .. roperty tax bi1Js goi n g o ut; Irvin.e Ca. hit by huge boost .. The count)''' l ~t wpnyer, the Ir.·ineCo., WJll be billed for bout $46 million in (>COi>n:l> taxes, up from the S l 7.8 m1lhon the giant I ndholdina company paid last year. Citron said. However the Irvine Co. h s ap. pealed its t 984-~S as ment, which was revalued after the company was sold to chamnan of the board Donald Bren. Citron said th t 1f the Irvine Co.'s rea ment is not taken 1nt0' ac- count. the total 1984·8S tax ball has increased by Ol!l)' 8.5 1_>ercent. Also. the $906 million the county expects to collect docs not include ~"ERRARO CAMPAIGNS ••• ,.f!omAl to stand up to the Soviet Union. but .,.,.th the wisdom to sit down and n~otiate," she said ~ .. Ferraro also said that if elected, . Mondale would halt the coven war .the U.S. is waging against Nicaraup, which she charactenzed as being not too secret, probably illegal and "~r- coainly not supponed by tbe Amencan people." . Ferraro, who was accompanied by husband John Zaccaro, spoke be- neath a banner proclaiming "Wel- come to Santa Ana." Amid the sea of blue and red Mondale-Ferraro signs one s!fn asked, "How do you speli relief!' The answer "ReaGONE" delighted Mayor Bradley who point- ed 1t out for all to sec. Ferraro was preceded to the podium by Mondale's son, Willilam, r wbo characterized the Reagan re- 1 election effort as a "happy talk f campaign.•• He accused the president of operating in a "question-free :r.one." l ferraro bqan her Orange County • (:afllpaign swing by addressing an l ~wd of about 350 mostly white ~porters who paid $50 each to " ~nd a reception at the UC Irvine • Qlltnpus Tbunday, the New York .... congresswoman promised to "send ltonald Reapn back to the ranch" ov. 6, a promise national pollsters '8lf Ferraro may not be able to keep. ~ t'For ex.ample, pollster Mervin D. f:'aeld said Thursday that President ~gan is running ahead of Walter Mondale by an electoral vote of 484 to 7.) Besides the partisan crowd inside ' UCJ's Un1vers1ty Club, several hun- .. dred supporters gathered outside the ball to greet the first woman ever named by a maJor poht1caJ party to ·t~ national ticket "We're here to let Gerry Ferraro know that Orange County 1s not the tonservauve bastion that Ronald Reagan believes." said Tam .., Carpenter, of the Allianct for •·Survival, who helped organize the ·.welcome. , ,Many supponers carried pro- fess1ona1ly pnntcd yellow signs proclaiming "Catholics for Ferraro" while others hoisted homemade signs that carried sl~ns such as "Ferraro, NOW and for the Future" or "Orange County Loves Fritz and Gerry." An equally vocal group of anti- abortion demonstrators, numbering about 150, picketed Ferraro in what must now be a familiar siJht to the Democratic nommce. Anti.abortion pickets have doagcd Ferraro·s cam- paign trail at virtually every appear- ance in recent weeks. Besides signs that earned pro-life slogans, the protesters chanted "Shame on Ferraro." The two groups were kept separated by UCI campus police officers. In her remarks. Ferraro touched on the campaign themes she bas stressed this week as she criss-crossed the country in search of votes. Stle called the I 984 elccuon a referendum on Ronald Reagan, war and peace, the environment, the Supreme Court, education, the E.Qual Rights Amendment and budget defi- cits. ••1 don't believe the pollsters and pundits," Ferraro said to cheers from the assembled throng. "We're going to win California and 9.'C're going to bring it'home with us when we win the White House Nov~ 6." On the war and peace lSSUlJ, which she has emphasized lately m her campaign appearances, Ferraro said, "We live in a danaerous world. We need a president who believes more in the human race and less in the anns race ... Turning to the environment, Fer- raro called for the clean up of toxic waste dumps and chided Reagan, suggesting he ''stop t.a.k.ina polluters to I unch and start taking them to court." Ferraro also reminded her au- dience that it is the president who makes appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court. "We need a Supreme Coun to make sure government stays out of our homes, out of our churches aqd out of our synagogues." The Democratic candidate also said if tax hikes or budget cuts are needed to control runaway budget more th n S22.S mdhon m up- plemen tal tau bUkd :in June to cen.am propcny owners. A second supplemental tax bin v.1U be mailed in November, 1tron also said. The first installment of tnc prol>' erty t "' is due no tater th11n Dec. l 0, the county tax collector pointed out. Citron id he c P«ll to C;ollcct about $7 million wittun the fint wee~ after the bills arrive. ..On Monday mornan as 1s usu l, we ell.OC\!t a lineup of people waitin to pay taites," he said. deficits, they should be applied .. fair- ly." -. Among those attending the evening reception, where women out- numbered men, were former Cali- fornia Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy, Rep. Jerry Patterson, 0-Garden Grove, Irvine Councilman Larry Agran, Laguna Beach Councilman Robert Gentry and county Democratic Chainnan Bruce Sumner, who along with t- terson introduced Ferraro. At the Santa Ana event, au ding were California Attorney Ge ral John \Can de Kamp, Santa Ana Vice Mayor Dan Onset, Sen. Diane Watson, D-Los Angeles and state campaign Co-Chairman Art Torres. Patterson said Ferraro's presence in Orange County was "charging up and electnfying' local Democrats who are outnumbered by Re- publicans in the conservative-voting county. "It's exciting to see so many women here. She's opened up the system," Gentry said. Denny Fncdenrich, another sup- porter, said "people arc genuinely excited about bc10g here. You can feel the elcctricty.'' After delivering her remarks, Fer- raro visited bnefly wtth supponcrs outside the haU, shaking bands with whoever FOuld reach her. Then, she was whisked away to a private $),()()().a.plate fundraiser at the New- port Beach home of Democratic activist Howard Siegel, where cam- paign aides said they expected to raise about $100,000 for the campaign. Ferraro spent the night at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa Following her final county campaign appearance this morning, Ferraro returned to New York. " · Ferraro's visit marks the first to Orange County by either member of theDemocratic ticket since the na- tional campaign moved into high · iew~sident Reagan chose Mjlc Square Parle in Fountain Valley for his giant Labor Day campaign rally. _SunQy skies and cool breezes Coa•tal ~Ides TOOAY 1 Otpm 70.pm IATIMOAY 207em . t3tem 154p111 7 Stpm lklfl MU lod1y 11 I II pm - s.tUtday at I 41 • m end •• tOeln •• llOpm Moon ... , today .. I 04 p m , ri.. 8eturctty •• 3 38 • m and Mt• 11ge1n et 5 46 p"' Temperatures HI Lo Alt>e/>y 15 13 Al~ 15 61 M*llo a 65 AU.U a 6t AllenUC City 71 65 AutUft eo 15 8Altllnore ... ,, llrmlnOf\MI &3 66 Showtt• ·~ ,_,,,,., Snow Extended 71 12 15 •7 a " Ya .. 11 ... u " ,. 12 .. 67 .. &3 f6 60 11 .. .. 55 7t 64 .. .. 17 &I r, :: 15 ~ eo ao 12 51 12 61 17 55 ._ OOMtel low dOude ~W>CI momWlg 1'0ln ofherwtM IM• WI ttie 70e-IN~ l'etlllflt up lo .,.. low tot lnlelld Velley9 lowt mill eo. to low 70. LOCATION •czt Huntington 8..:11 1·2 ~Jtll7'.~ 1-4 40tllltr•~ 2-4 22nd St~~ 2-4 BllllloeW 1~ ~a.di 1·.2 SM Clemente 1-i WrA« l*"P M-72 Sw.l cllrec:t~ .. 11 n 11 ... ... 12 u u 11 .. '°' u 10$ '° 7t 71 :; = 11 .. 77 .. .. "' a " IO It ... 70 1• • ..... 13 71 .. .. 15 11 .. ,.. .. t1 .. .. " .. .. .. '° 43 .. 12 .. 70 ... '° 13 u .. . '° .. 12 .. OlllllC:TtOM POOr tlllr~ llllr~ lllr11QOd poor POOt poor Saddleb3.ck dean 'drllnk' at time of ex-wife's murder By STEVE MARBLE by the college for Mrs. Dawson's J 7- ctNo..,,.oui.tt year-old daughter. An Orange County col e admin-Dawson allegedly broke mto his istrator was drunk· when he allegedly former wife's home early Sunday and broke into bis former wife's El Toro waited for her return, according to home, armed himself and then killed Chief Assist.ant District Attorney her when she arrived, the man's James Enright. He did not say where attorney said. she had been. "There's no doubt he was quite The assistant College dean was intoxicated." said Ron Brower, a armed with two guns, several boxes of lawyer representing Donald Emil ammunition, a set of hatJdcufTs and Dawson. 45, an assistant ddn at ro~ Enright said He said it appears Saddleback Community Con~ -in -Dawson fired both guns. M1ss100 V1eJO and a-fonnettpOlice-Mrs. Dawsoo was hat by six bullets man., and died at Mission Community Dawson was arrested Sunday Hospital an Mission Vic:.10 shortly morning outside his ex-wife's Toledo afterward, a coronor's deputy stated. Way home. Sheriffs deputies said be Brower said a sobriety test given to was standing near his wife's body Dawson two hours aftef bis arrest when officers arrived. He gave indicated he had a blood-alcohol himself up without resistan~. content ofO. I 0 -the level at which a A memorial service for Dona May motorist is presumed drunk. . Dawson. 46, a longtime nursing The attorney speculated that be- instrucror at Saddleback College, was cause of the delay in administering to be held today on the campus. A the test. has client probably had a scholarship fund has been esUlbli~cd much higher alcohol level at the time of the slaying. Dawson could face I.he death penalty in the shooting because of the special circumstance of lying m wait. Enright said. The prosecutor said there ~ppears to be ample evidence that Dawson intendc4 to kill his ex- wife. Brower said the couple· had a "tumultuous" relationship. The two divorced in 1982 but ~use both were employed at the same college campus, their paths did cross. reports indicate. ··There were a lot of FOblems over· the years and substantial pressure for a Iona tlme," said Brower. who described Dawson as being despon- dent and depressed during an initial jailhouse meeting. Dawson was a polioc reserve in Sant.a Ana until earlier this year and previously had been eml)lo)"ed as a pohceman in Long Beach and was an Orange County Sheriffs deputy for several months. METHANE GAS 'NOT DANGEROUS' ••• From Al · methane gas to be burned off or released into the atmosphere. city's permit. But it hasn't accepted trash since the l 960s, he said, although an area east of the site is still receiving inert material. ~COYOTES SCARE COAST RESIDENTS ••• ... From Al Thursday the state Wa te Manage- ment Board notified city officials they had one year to reduce unaoccptable level of methane gas that has been produced during the proc.ess "Of trash ' dccayina. · BlJt money for the project, which is expected to cost about $1 50,000, as expected to be set aside in the 1987 bud&et. Vincent said he believes the state will give th.e city additional time to get rid of the ps. Waste Management Board officials, he said, believe the dump site is still operating and repartedly are threatening to pull the Vincent said the level of methane gas in the field between the Central Library and the police shootin1 ranac . and the Golden West mushroom farm 1s not sufficient to cause illnC$ The dty plans to build athletic fields on the site as part of the sprawling Central Parle system. · , 'Neighbor Jim Brink said he be- Caevcs two luttens have been dragged away by coyotes from bis house next poor to the Bradys. "A family with a baby lives down the street. We've told them to be ureful." said Bnnk, a fraud in- vestigator for the Orange County r51strict Attorney's office. ,, • Bnnk said he can bear the coyotes ~t night, particularly when police and fire sirens sound. "l kind of hkc the sound out there," he said. "It's better than screeching brakes. "My daughter Stacey saw two .&oyotes (about as big as mcdium- med German shepherds) an the field recently They were so skinny that their bones could be plainly seen and she asked af we could go feed them. I told her no way." Brady, who locks up her two 'Boston bull terriers Bonnie and " Queenie along with her surva vma cats Buzz and Clancy at night, said she has become peeved at Orange County • -.i\nimal Control people for what she claimed was a lack of response. • "T~y (\he coyotes) have been 1n )':!he fi~ld ever since my husband -\James) and [ moved here five years i aio. I've looked at them through my , l)inoculars. JI - ., . .,, ' ., WE'RE LIS TE NING Just Call 642-6086 They were here first and we probably messed them up from their territory, but I don't want them to eat all our pets," she declared. Some people in the nei'11borhood warned they might take acuoo in their own hands if the county doesn't act. The extreme measures, they hinted, included shooung tbe arumals or lacing meat with broken slass and throwing it into the wild area for the coyotes. But Joe €>hver, the county's chief animal control ·,officer says that shootin~ or traps or other forms of eradication probably will be unsuc- cessful. .. The coyote has been on this earth for eons and he will be here after the last man has disappeared, .. Oliver said .. He is adaptable and tou&h. He utilizes every skill, of which he has a great maanitude, to find food sources. And be recognizes tasty tidbits like small dogs and cats that run through his habitat." . "Maybe the hot weather has diminished his food sources and l\e'~ commg to lower areas to bunt. But we're constantly buildioa m their area. Why should we be surpnred to sec them1" Oliver said Mother Nature inter- .cedes when people try to kHI off coyotes. ..The coyote bitches come into beat earli er and have pups at an earlier age and have more pups to a litter." Oliver said he believes ex- termination efforts will result in more and more coyotes. He said onlf'two coyote bites have been recorded in the last 25 ~ in Oranae County while there arc about 4,000 d<>& bits each year. "last weekend, rattlesnakes bit two people in the county. But there hasn't been a big clamor to go out and round up rattlesnakes.'' Oliver said animal control offic~rs rcsponotocoyotestghtangswben they pose an immediate threat to people' pets and property. But the sightings have to be po itive and there has to be reasonable chance of success of trappma the creatures while not endangering youna children or pets before action can take place. He said he doesn't believe there's been a positiv.e identification in .ca1e of the alleged attack oo pet on Harwich Lane in Huntington Beach. "Mrs. Brady's cat oould have been eaten by a German shepherd or run over by a Mack truck." What do you llke about the Dally Pilot., Wbat don't yoa like? Call tbe number at left aad yoor meuage wm be recorded, traa.crtbed and delivered to Ult appropriate editor. The same U·bour aa1werblg 1tnl('e may be ated to record letters to the Hltor on any topic. Coatribu&ors to oor Letters·column must lnchade their • name aod wltpbbne DDmber for veriflt'ttloo No circulalloa calls, please. Tell 11 wllat'a o yoar mind. v,; -ORANGE COAST Circulation 7141842-4333 Cla11lffed advertlalng 714/6'2-5178 Alt other Mpaltmenta 942-4321 Da111 Piiot Delivery • It GuarantHd Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Publisher AOMmary Churchman Controller Stephen F. Carazo .., Production Donald L. WUll1m1 Ouculatlon ....... Mnn gr MAn f • • • MAlN OFFICE 3!0WHI o.~ I Com CA M1~ .odrt!U 0¢• 1:.60 Cci5t1 t.• VOL. 77, NO. 215 A· pokesman for the board said there is potential dangci'"the gas could cause an explosion. Vincent said the city plans to build collector wells that wall allow the MOSQUITOES FOUND NEAR UCI ••• From Al . ing the viruses are found more frequently along the Colorado River, and said a person taking an outing on the river would be more l.Jkely to contract the viruses than someone staying m Orange County. Evidence of the encephalitis vi- ruses was discovered in chickens kept caged near the marsh to serve as "sentinets:• A chicken bitten by the disease-carrying mosquitoes produces ·anti-bodjes that can be detected in the animal's blood The disease is not fatal to chickens. In humans, however. symptoms re- ~~ble those of influenza, including ns1ng temperatures and head and muscle aches. For victims already in poor health. the viruses can cause permanent brain damage or death. Empba izing that there is hule 1mmcd1ate haiard. Challet said V~ tor Control has intensified its eflorts to control the mosquito population 1n the Irvine marsh area. He said an aerosol spray JS used to kill adult female mosqwtoes,which are respotJ- sible for spreading the viruses. fn addition, pellets are being dropped into pond areas to kill mosquitoes in the pre-adult larvae st.age. Finally. so-called mosquito fish are released to consume the mosquito larvae. •. Challet said the viruses are be- lieved to ongjnatc in wild birds that visit the marsh area. Adult female mosquitoes pick up the virus from biting these birds, he said. Then. the mosquito may bite a human, inject- ing a small amount of saliva carrying the virus. He also said the mosqitoes carrying the viruJes generally travel only a mile or less from the breeding are3. The pest control oflkial id tra- ditionally his agency ha only had to tJUt lhe Irvine marsti rca thrtt times a summer to control moS:. qua toes. This year, because of weather conditions that have created many isolated breedina ponds, five treat· mcnts have been required, Challct said. He id cooler October weather 1 also ly to help reduce the mos-- QUtto population. Challet noted that the encephalitis evidence detected recently marked the lint time Vector Control o fficiala have found signs of mosquitoea carf')'ing this disease io Oranae Coun· ty smce the agency was founded fo I 947. Although encephalitis has not been a problem in California, Challct said about 30 cases were reponed in Mmnesota last year, and others. includin& some fatal cases. w~ reported in the Missi"ippi River Valley during the mid·l970s. OUARTET LINKED TO SCAM ••• f?omAl ..Van Lcuvan a.an.a" over the year by pola~ and department 'tore tceunty official who noticed that many of their hopJiftina uspects were u,ana the name "Van Leuvan."' "Van Leuvans. were ttang ar· re ted and then rearrested. They paucd the name b~ gen in& married or people Just took at on," Pctruuem said. The group is suspcc ted of co lice ti na an estimated SS.000 a wfck from ib refund scam at various major depart· ment store in Oran c. Los ngel • n Bernardino and n 01~0 coun· tac , 1a id Petruuclh. He ddcd that pot cc bchevc they have adentHkd ever) one in lhe group though ad and names h tcd by the u ts on refund rcc:c1pt w re often fal Thu • 1he u5pccrs eluded uthonu~ -until Wcdncsoay when C ta 1csa pohce mstcd four people dC5CT1bcd os ahc mo l Cta\e members of &he nn Urothc Ronal Fredcri V n • .. The uspccts were anestcd atler they took a forged ttceipl to a J.C. ~nncy toro in Cosla Mesa and tried to refund two stolen dmscs for S l 82 . Pctruuclh said the lf9UP 1 know-n for a complex scam in bk:h an e"pcn 1'<c item is stolen and the computcr-codrd &agiultettd to sho a lower erice. That Lil& lS then put Oil t mailer uem. such., 11>1ir ohocb he int1pcn ivc item s then purchased, but t~ rtteipt will :lhow then m and the stodc numbCt oftht onaina1 Item. That receipt i then changed to th original prioc and brought ck to lhe ore With the :tolen mcrdmndi • for• cish refund. Pcuuuclh Aid group mcmbttl Mt o en loud and obno:uous whtn dcm ndrna an 1mmCd11tc rt:rund. He added that mcmbctl or the up M \'e tt<'ords of narcot ddil-:tmn and arc believed to atill be u i~ dnJJ5 h i alto bchcved that they hate the booty from the fartrr)' refund ' C&pt.trano Valley 27. c eea 0, LOii Mimltoa O Tutln 21. ltv.lne 7 Unlvenlty 21, L~a HUia 0 ~ .............. '"*4~ Pat llCOrath (46) and 8eaD Tarner drq Capletrano Valley Jll.Cla'a 0.Yld Bamford down after he rambled for · ,..., .. e I -- .... You'll find the beat •uto buya along the Orange Coeat In today'• Auto Piiot -PegeC1 1nva . A Costa Mesa shutterbug has snapped his way to Hawaii./~ -X<-:-:~~;:;.:=:::;:;:::;:;::~;:;::s:::;:;!::::::::::::::;:;::~< Marvin Gay Sr .• accused of kllllng singer eon, may get off without spending a daylnJ•tlM Nation GM, auto workers reach tentathf contract agree- ment.l A7 Death toll at Beirut em- bassy annex teduced to 'about a doztn. 'I A7 Sophia Loren and Brigitte Bardot-sex sirens of the '601-tell what It's llketoturn 50./87 Spotta CostaM Hlgh'afoot- baJI team earns a moral victory With a 0-0 tie with Los Alamltos./81 Entertabililent Jullo I~, world am-· basaado~ of song, la com- ing to the Pacific Amphitheatre for three nlghta.IWMkendei' Baameu A Costa Mesa flrm an- nounces plans for Santa Ana' a largest hotel de- ~etopment./85 .. . c1-e 810 A3 85 A4 C'4·7 810 C7 C3 88 ce 88 85 A.ii A8 87 AS C3-4 WMk~ 81 .... ae 88 WMktirider A:.. A4 Ferraro atUCI, pledge$ victory Hundreds greet Dem VP candidate. others picket By .IEFP ADLER or .. ..,....... Ii Democratic vice presidential can- didate Geraldine Ferraro ttrou&bt her campaign mcsace to Oradge County -the dead center ofR~ Country -and vowed the Moo le-Ferraro ticket would defy·the po sters and win California on election day. Addressina 8'11 enthusiattic crowd of about 3SO supporters who paid SSO each to attend a reception at lbe UC Irvine camput Thursday the New York congres&woman p~mised to .. send Ronald Reagan back to the ranch" Nov. 6, a promisl national pollsters say Ferraro may not be able to keep. (for cxampl~ pollster Mervin D. t:icld said Tbutsday lbat President Reapn is runnin,a ahead of Walter Mondale by an electoral vote of 484 to 7.) Besides the ~san crd\id inside UCI's University Oub, se•eral hun- dred supporters plbered outside the ball to greet the first wofuan ever named by a major politic81 peny to the national ticket .. We're here to let Gerry Ferraro know that Oranae County :ls not the conservative bastion lbat Ronald Reaaan believes," aald Tim Carpenter, of lbe Alliance for Survival, who helped or&1nize the welcome. Many supporters carrltd pro- fessionall.Y Rrintcd yellow sran• proclaim1ria 'Catholics for Ferraro .. while others hoisted homemade sians that carried '1opns such as .. Ferraro. NOW and forthe Future" or"Orange County Lovet Fritz and Gerry ... An equalJ)' vocal sroup of anti- abonion demonstrators, numbering about I SO, plCketed Ferraro in what must now be a familiar si.Jht to the Democratic nominee. Anu-abo:'tion pickets have dogcd FCrrar~m­ paian trail at virtually every ap~­ ance in recent weeks. Belidcs sians that carried pro-life 'lopns, the protesters chanted (Pleue eee J'BllRAllO/ A.2) Geralclbae Ferraro add.reeaee UC lrTIDo'a· Uillftftlty Club Thiand&J d1irlnf her City dwellers fear attacks by coyotes an children, pets Police have killed slX predators In ~st t.wo weeks I /A2) Ch.l<f: porno law creates problems Bf RIOHARDT. Pl 11'111aa..1Prw .... OUAN'.nCQ. VL·(AP}-Cd- eraf offimls had hiJb hope for wiping out duld pOmoSt'BJ>hY 10 1978 when the Protccuon of Children in t SeluaJ Exploi- tation Act wa igned into law. But in many wa)s lbc legis- lation only made the law cnfol'Cle- mcnt effort m0re difljeuh. Commercial unut deakri do-· c1ded they didn•t need tM riak and stopped sellina kiddie ~ wh11c hard-core ~ jutl aank deeper into what (Pleue ... LAwa/Aa) f IRIT 1111101 uitoes ars Pest officers say Insects could . . transmit diseases BJ PBD.. SNEIDEBMAN ............... Mosquitoes that coWd tran . two potentially fatal diJeaa appeal'." .. to be breedina in a marsh area nat; UC Irvine, county pest control of. ficials OOnfinned today. p But the officials insisted lbe dist oovcry is no cause for panic and~ (Pleue eee ll08QUJ'l'OD/A2 t CMGops ~ link four t to refund ~ ripoffs Three-year scam involved $250,000 in ptl(er¢ jgoods · BJ TONY SAA VEDR4 ............ ...,. . Two men and~ womeil arrested .. in Cosia Meta this ftict are~ to be core members of tbe .. Van• Leu van pna. ·• a ring__of a.Ueaed drui! adaJcts Wt. is believed to ~Vei' pilferrcd ID estimated $250,000 a year from ~ lteputment store( since 1981, police said. • For three yean the aroup ~ operated a COii\~ scam for obtaiM ina cash refwids on stolen cl~hl • alterina tt.eeipts and price cap. ~­ department sto~ officials said: they've al.so connected the p-oup t<f.r other shoplift.in& cases over the~ five years. Fullerton 0 tectiv~ Jae Pctnl22clli, ho is beadina the Oft angc County inves!4a-tio~ said thC poup was apj>arebtly dubbed t.hO: .. Van ~uvu pna" over the years polioc arid depanment store securit 1 officials .who noticed that many o their shoplifting suspcctS were usi the~ "Van ~van... ~ ~van UU\/&nS ~ 1tttina ·ar.:: rested and then reams1ed.. Tb passed the name by acttina mamed ~pie ju.st ~ it on." ~ S&ld. The group is SUSPCCted of · an estimated SS.000 a T.-eck from i CPleUe ... auAJtTST/UI . I Summer·and hea both ·Winding up I 1. , l • • .. --, roperty tax bills going out; Irvine Co. hit by huge b oos t ' By JEFF AD~ER ., .. °"",... .... c. Tbt bad news for ~nae County r P,COpcrty owners goes into the mail today. !•1.-:!'Ml's when the first of about t ttYU.000 propeny tax bills will be , prosunarked, cburu_y Tax Collt:ctor- Trcasurcr Robert Citron announced • tl>cunday. ·d h' m -,t 1tron sa1 11 o ce expects to -;.collect more lha!I $906 million fot the •2.03 separa1c agencies that receive ,.property tax shares. The 1984-SS ;SOQsolidated tax bill rc~nts a 12 i.11)CftCnt increase o~cr 198.J..84. 1:"hc coun1x'1 la~t taxpayer, the more than 522.5 million 1n sup- Trv1ncCo., will bcbdJed forabout$46 plcmcntal taxes billed in June to million in property ta.x«, up from the ccruin propeny owners. A tee0nd $17.8 million the &iJnt landholding supplemental w bill will be mailed company paid last year. Citron S&ld, in November, Citron also pjd, Hbwcvcr: the Irvine Co. has ap-. pealed its 1984-SS as$C$Smcnt , which . The first 1n~tallm(lnt of tbc proe- was re-Valued af\Cr the'company was erty tax 11 due no1ater th&? Oct. '°* sold to chairman of the board Donald the county t.al collector ptuntod out. Bren. Citron said that if the Irvine Co:"s reassessment is not taken into ac~ ~unt, the total 1984'85 tax bill bas 1ncrta$Cd by ~~ly 8.5 l?Crcent AJso, the $906 milhon the county expecu to collect does not include Citron said he expects to collect aboutS7 million within the first v.eck after the bills arrive. "On Monday morning, as is usual, we expect a lineup of people waitina to pay taxes," he said. ; F E RRARO CAMPAIGNS AT UCI ••• )romAl · _ · , 1 Shame on Fcriaro.'' The two groups :. "'F,~ kept separated by UCI campus :po:hct officers. • :-· In her remarks, Ferraro touched on the campaian the~cs she has stressed i'this week as she criss-crossed . the country in search of votes. 1 Sbe called the I 984 election a "t-efcrendum on Ronald-Reagan, war and peace, the environment, the Supreme Court, education, the Equal 41tights Amendment and budget defi- cits. .. , don't believe the pollsters and pundits," Ferraro said to cheers from the assembled throng. "We're going to win California and we're going to bring it hon1e with us when we win the wrute House Nov. 6." On the war and peace issue, which she has emphasized lately in her campaign appearances, fC1'1'8.ro said, .. We live in a dangerous world. We need a president who believes more in the human race and less in the arms -race." I Turning to the environment, Fer- raro called for the clean up of toxic I-waste dumps and chided Reagan, ,. suggesting he "stop taking polluters 10 · lunch and start taking them to court." Ferraro also reminded her au- dience that it is the president who makes appointments to the U.S. Supreme£oun. ··we need a Suprtme Court to make sure government stays out of our homes, out of.our churches and out of our synagogues." The Democratic candidate also said .if tax hikes or budget cuts arc nccdcd to control runaway budget deficits, they should be apphed "'fair- ly." Amang those attending the evening reception, where women out- numbered men, were former Cali- fornia Gov. Edmund Brown Jr,, Lt. Gov. Leo McCanhy. Rep. Jerry Patterson, D-Garden Grove, Irvine Mayor Larry Agran, Laguna Beach City Councilman Roben Gentry and county Democratic Chairman Bruce Sumner, who along with Patterson introdu~ Ferraro. Patterson said Ferraro's presence in Orange County was "charging up and electrifying' local Democrats who arc outnumbered by Re· publicans in the conservative-voting county. "It's cxcitina to sec so many women here. Shc't opened up the system," Gentry said. Denny Friedenrich, another sup- porter, said "people are genuinely excited about being here. You can feel the elcctricty." .. After delivering ber remarks, Fer- raro visited briefly with supporters outside the hall, shaking hands with whoever could reach her. Then, she was whisked away to a pnvate St ,000.a-plate fund.raiser at the New- port Beach home of Democratic activist .Howard Siegel, where cam- paign aides said they exPteied to raise about $100,000 for the campaign, Ferraro spent the night at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa and was to address !community groups at a Santa Ana union hall this morning. Following 1 tbat final county campaign appea:r- •ance, the candidate was scheduled to return to New York. Ferraro's visit marks the first to ,Orange County by either member of theDemocratic ticket since the ·na- •tional campaign moved into high • 1gcar. President Reagan chose Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley for bis giant Labor Day campaign rally. f COYOTES SCARE COAST RESIDENTS •• ~ :~rom Al . Neighbor Jim Brink said he be-~ t4eves two kittens have been dragged ~ away by coyotes from his house next l!-doorto the Bradys. ~~ .. A famil y with a baby Lives down f_ the street. We've told them to be ;;: .careful,'' said Brink, a fraud in- vesti~tor for the Orange County Distnct Attorney's office. - Brink said he can hear the coyotes t at night, particularly· when police and fire sirens sound. "I kind of like the ~ sound out there," he said. "It's better than scrccching bra~. . "My daughter Stacey saw two Coyotes (about as big as mcdiUm- sized German shepherds) in the field recently. They were so skinny that 1,tbeir bones could be plainly seen and .j ~ 1he asked if we could go feed them. I ' told her no way." Brady, who locks up her two w Boston bull teniers Bonnie and . Queenie along with her surviving cats Buzz and Oancy at night, said she has become peeved al Orange County -•,-:nimal Control people for what she claimed was a lack of response. : 0 They (the 'ioyotes) have been in the field ever s""mce my husband '(James) and I moved here five years ilf,O. t've looked at them through my binoculars. They were here first and we Probably messed them up from their territory, but I don't want them to cat all our pets." she declared. Some people in the nei'11borhood , warned they might take action in their own hands if tbe county doesn't act. The extreme measures, they hinted, included shooting the animals or lacing meat with broken glass and .throwing ii into the wild area for the coyotes. But Joe Oliver, the county's chief animal control officer says that shootin~s or traps or other forms of eradication probably will be unsuc- cessful . "The coyote has been on this canh for eons and he will be here after the last man has disappeared," Oliver said. "He i~ adaptable and tough. He ,, utilizes every skill, of which he has a . 1J'C3.t magnitude. to find food sources. And he recognizes tasty tidbits like small dogs and cats tha1 run through ... "his habitat." ". "Maybe lhe hot weather. has 1• •-diminished his food sources and he's coming to lower areas to hunt. But , t 'fC're constanlly building 1n their :·. 111rea. Why should we be surprised to J .~ h ,.. .•'.~-sect cm . .. Dllllr,.. ....... .., ....... ~ Claire Brady holda ber cat, Buzz, •urri•or of a coyote attack In Huntington Beach. OHver said Mother Nature inter- cedes when people U')' to k.ill olT coyotes. "The coyote bitches come into heat earlier and have Pups at an earlier age and have more pups to a litter." Oliver said he believes ex- termination efforu will result in mon- and more coyotes. He said only two coyote bites have been recorded in the last 25 years iO Ori nae County while-there are about 4.000 dog bits each year. "Last weekend, rattlesnakes bit two people in the county. But there hasn't been a big clamor to go out and round up rattlesnakes." Oliver said animal control officers res~nd to coyote sightings when they pose an immediate threat lo J,>COple's pets and property. But the s1gh1ings have to be positive and there has to be reasonable chance of suc:ccss of trapping the creatures while not endangering young children or pets before action can 1ake place. He said he doesn't believe there's been a positive iden1ification in case of the alleged attack on peu on Harwich Lane in Huntington Beach. "Mrs. Brady's cal could have been eaten by a German shepherd or run over by a Mack truck." • • Sunny skies and cool breezes· Coaatal Tides • tOOAY ,_., .. ......... l.otp.(11, 7:<Mpm • • UT\MDA.Y 2:07 L"', ·-··-"' 1·5'0.111. J•Up.lll. Temperatures ~ .. ·-.. " --.. " _., " " ..... " .. .......... " .. -· .. .. ... ._. .. .. .. __ " .. Extended 11 62 16 •1 " .. " u n " .. .. " " .. " .. .. " .. n" .. .. " .. .. .. " .. " .. •1 y · .... .... " .. " " 17 66 ao... --IOw C6oudl ~Sid '"°"*'II IMlln ~ '* In ll'le7o.-.... ~·~upl0 .... low lo. lnlllnd .......,.., -ttlld ea. to low l'O.. LOCATION .... ~8-tl "' ' ...... ' Niew90l1 '" ---'" ---'" -w-<4 --"' hn °""*"'• ,., w .... 191111; 116-72 $"'911 dlrkttoft: - .. " .... .... " n " .. ,, .. .... .. " == .... •1 :: J: .. .... "' .. .. " n" " .. " .. .... " .. "" .... .. " .. . .. ,. n" :: : .... .. " .. .. .. .. .... 11 ... .. u .... .. .. .. ,. .... " " .. .. = =. ----... _ ------- Newport takes a first step toward cleaning Back Bay By l{AAEN E. K~IN Of !foe o.itr ""°" lteff The first step toward removal of thousands of cubic yards of silt from the ecologically sensitive Upper New- pon Bay was approved Thursday by a joint committee on sediment control in the bay. • At a meeting of the Newport Bay Sediro.en1 Control Executive Com- mittee. approval was granted for the city of Newport Beach to seek._ an engineering firm to drcd&e silt from the.far reaches of the Upper Bay. A $3. 7 million budget for dredging a second ponioo of the Upper Bay, below the site of an old saltworks dike, was approved at the meeting. The sediment control committee is composed of officials fr.om the Coun- ty of Orange, the lrvioe Co .. the Department of Fish and Game and the cities of Irvine, Newport Beach and Tustin. After the mectinf. menlbcn of the commiuee. including latk Parnell, Fish and Game director and As- semblywoman Marian Berseson, R- Newpon ·Beach, toured the bay, the San Joaquin Marsh and San Diego Creek, a freshwater stream that feeds the bay. · --D:on Simpson, a city consultant on the project, said that the engineering bid for the dredging job would probably be awardq.d by mid-Novem- ber. The actual dredging process would begin either in November or by March I, dcpendin_J On the rainy season this winter. Simpson said. In the northerly end of the Upper Bay, near the intersection of Jam- bQrce Road and Eastbluff Drive, between 7 50,000 and 800,000 cubic yards of slit would be removed in the first dredging phase, Simpson said. Carl Wilcox of Fish and G,.me said the Upper Bay should be 13 feC:t deep at high tide when the drcd&inJ. is · completed. The dredging will ilso enlarge the water-0>vered area in the upper portion of the bay, excavating several yards of barren, salty earth that now rings the tidal pond. Dredgina spoils and silt that is removed from the first pha.sc of the projcctwill be deposited on the Irvine Co.'s property cast of Jamboree Road, according to To"'. Ni~Jsen, Irvine Co. prcside.ot He said most of the silt dred&cd from the Unit 1 projCC\ will be added to the property. which the company refers to as Site A. Silt dredged from Phase II will mpst likely be piped out to the harbor and transported from there on barges where it can be dumped at sea. Wilcox said. The aim of the dredging project is to preserve the nature of the 752..acre ' ecological area that makes up most of the Upper Bar.. Wilcox said. Because ofextens.ive siltation that cl<>IJCd the baf during the storms of the winter of t 982-83, he said, vegetation is en- croach in& on the mudflats and preventing the free flow of water in the area. The ~It marsh ycgetation changes the environment 1n the Upper Bay, which is home to some 30 000 migratory birds. water fowl and 1Uns, h~ said. The'birds suffer when the mudflat$, a habitat incrcasin&Jy rate along the California coast, disappear. "In another two or three yean the area would be completely locked in with vcgeta1ion if nothing is done," Wilcox said. Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Han said she remembered the Upper Bay in the 1950s, when it was large enough and deep enouJ.b to permit water skiing and recreational boating into its far reaches. Lawyer says dean drunk at-t ime of ex-wife's slaying A.n Orange County college admin- istrator was drunk when he allegedly broke into.his former wife's El Toro home, armed himself and then killed her when she arrived, the man's attorney said. "There's no doubt he was quite intoxicated," .said Ron Brower, a lawyer representing Donald Emil Dawson, .45, an assistant dean at Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo and a former police- man. Dawson was arrested Sunday n1oming outside his ex-wife's Toledo Way home. Sheriff's deputies said he was standing near· his wife's body when officers arrived. He gave himself up without resistance. A memorial service for Dona May Dawson, 46, a lonatimc nursing instructor at SB.ddleback Cbllcae, was to be held today on the campus. A scholarship fund bas been established by the college for Mrs. Dawson's 17- year-old daughter. . MOSQUITOES ERADICATION BEGINS ••• l'romAl eradication programs arc already underway at the marsh. The marsh is near Campus and University drives in Irvine. "This is a unique situation," said Gilbert Challet, manager of the Orange County cctor Control Dis- trict. "But people really don't have anything to worry about.'' Vector Control is the county agen- cy charged with controlling mos· quitocs, flies and rats that have the potential of spreading disease. . Challet said the-illnesses that may be carried by mosquitoes breeding in the San Joaquin Marsh wildlife preserve are St Louis encephalitis, which affects people. and wntCT'tl equine encephalitis. which can affect people and horses. Challet said the viruses can be fatal to 20 percent ofiu victims, those who have weaker rtsistanc.c -.usually children apd the elderl,. "But a,_"normal person between say, 18 and S5,l who is irl_ good health would have no problem at all ," Challet said. • He also pointed out that no human cases ofi,h1s virus have been reported in California over the past five.yean, and said no fatal CaJifomia cases have been rcponed in at least 10 years. ,1 Challet said the mosq_uitoes carry- ing the viruses are fotlnd more frequently along the Colorado River, and said a person taking-an outina on the river -would be more likely to convact the viruses t'han someone staying in Orange County. Evidence of the encephaljlis vi- ruses was djscovercd in chickens kept caged near the marsh to serve as "sentinels." A chicken bitten by the disease-carrvina mosquitoes produces anti:bocfics that can bt detected in the animal's blood. The disease is not fatal to chickens. In humans., however, symptoms re> semble those of influenza, including rising temperatures and head and muscle aches. For viCtims already in poor health, lhe virulCS can cause permanent P.rain dama&e or death. Emphasizina that there is Utt~ immediate hazard, ChalLet said Vee> tor Conlrol has intensified iu efforu to control the moSquito population in the Irvine marsh area. He said an il.erosol spray is used to kill adult female mosquitoes, which are f'HPO~ sible for sprcadin& the viruses. ln addition, pellets arc btina dropped into pond areas to kiU mo1quitoes in the pre-adult larvae scaae: . Finally, SO<.alled mosquito fish are relcued to consume the mosquito larvae. Just Call. 642-6086 What do you like aboul the Daily Pllol? W.bal don 't yo·u like? Call the number al left and your message will k recorded~an1crlbed and delivered •------------------------------------------- ,. ' ' .. Dell" Pllol • De lffry ) I• QuerentMd _, ,...,., I! ,,,., <lo J'IOI, ..... .,.,,,,,_!!. '•, ~)OOIJI ~i:Mll0<•1~1 " etia fO'i/I COPT ,...., No -• .. ¥0., .... ......,.,. ' " ,.., • 00 r'Cll ,_..... '°" •I COPY 0,, 7 e Ill Colli Del"'~ 10 1 m tl'4 ,-COl'l'f ... -.. -.. " Clrcutatk>n , .. Tolopllone .... " -· t)rengeC.0..., ' -:.. ......... -I \ A to the approprlale editor. The same tt-bouranswertn1 service may be used lo record let1er1 to the editor on any 1oplc. Conlrlb•tort ta. oar Letter• column must Include their 1ame aid telephoae 1umber for verlflctlloa. No clreulatlon calls, plea1e. Tell us what't'OB your mind. ORANGE COASl Daily Pilat H. L. Schwarlz Ill Pubhsher ..__ Ro1emary Churchman Con1r0Uer Stop~•n F. Cerezo Pr0duct1on Manager • Donold L. Wllllomo C1rcu1auon Manager j ___ __. Clrculatlon 714/142...u33 ClattlfJed advertl•lng 714/M2·5e78 All other depertment• 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE lJO WMt !M,> S. Co4J• ""NI C'-A ... ... •ckll-DI» IMO °""I """-• CA 926J'ti CAt¥•t 1M3 no..., c., ~ c.o..-, ,... ""°' 111or• ...,.11., __ or,.. -"• or ~ .. .....,,. ,,....., .... , tit ~<>\Mad * loklll .,... -,,. e:et¥1Qi111- I -l---- 9.,!,Jf}RTET LINKED TO SCAM ••• refund scam 11 various major depart· mcnt stores in Orange, Los Angeles,'\\ San Bernardino and San Diego coun- ties, said Petruu.elli. He added that Police believe they have identified everyone in thearoup though addresses and name. listed by the ~uspec11 on refund receipts were often false.. Thus. the suspects eluded au1hori1ies-until Wednesday when Cost& Mesa Poli« 1rrc11ed four people d«Cribed as the most active mcmbcn of the rtna. Brothers Ronald Frederick Van Leuvan. 36. and John F.dward Van Leuvan1371 both ofTorranct: 11 well u V1ck1 Diane Selby, 32. of GardCTI Grovs. and ucann Mane Adamson, 29 or tornncc,arclnOrangeCount)' J11l awaltin& am1&nmcnt on Al least one charac each of commcrcaaJ bur- ~ary. , I Petruzzelli said police believe there are at least two more aan1 members, both females, who &<> by tl\c name Van Lcuva.n. Police expect the cha"F,' aaainst the 1uspect1 in custody will climb as stores begin to submit ~ports 10 local police aaencics. So far, the rin& has been connected to incidents in B~. FulLertO!Jt Cotta Mesa, Garden Grove, Muntinaton 8clcb, Orlnae an(! t..:quna Hiils fn OranF County; Whittier and Tomnce:tn LosAn&elcs County, Montclair in S.n Bernardino County and areas of San Dicao County. , "As every minute J0CS by it acts biuet."" Cotll Mesa detective 8111 Ellwood id. . The u1petf *er"C an-cstcd after 1bcy took 1 foraed rcct-1pt to a J. Penney 11ore Jn Costa Meu and tried to' refund 1wo1t~k-n d for Sl82. • j Pe1ruuelli said the aroup Is known for a com~lex scam in which an expensive 1tem is stolen and the computcr~odtd taa isalttrcd to show 1 lowcrericc. That taais lheo puloo a smaller item. suc:h 11ap1irof10CU.. The inexpensive item is then purchased, but the receipt will sho"N the name and the stock number of the original item. That rcttipt is then chanaod IO the oriainal pric:o aod brouahl back 10 the store. with the stolen mcrchandise, fora ash refund. Pctruuelli said aroup tnembc;n a~ often loud and obn0Jtou1 when dem1ndin1 an immediate rt.fuod.. He added that memben: of t an>"P have reoords of narcotics addiction and are believed 10 still be usina drup. It 11 allo bclicvtd !hat they bare lh• booty from lite r • ......,. • rcf'u • ---~-"------'- / j ' J l . .. Piiot Weekender/ Friday, September 21, 19M Julio makes first county appearance Week of supe~star shows starts with Anne Murray and ~atlin Broth~rs Co ta Mesa may be &ettina '°me the world, a di Jockey b cuemg up a we lcom c cd olcr daytime Julio lglcsaas trackforair play, He has tcmpcniturc5, but three hot niJl:nnrc performed more than .l, 100 live npcctcd at the Pacific Ampb1tbcairc concnts and is the f U"St and only When J uho Jglcsiti performs there recipient of the Diamond DiK' award, ncllt Thursday, Friday and S,.turday. honoring 1,260 1)14llnum and &old The inttmationally famed enter-record awards worldwide ana ialcs or wner will sina-and that's putting it 100 million albums. mildly -"at 8 p.m. as pan of the :The story of his n~ to stafdortJ.. Cbmlcr Series seems to have been taken ftom a The Spanish·bom IJlcsw will movie script. come to tbe county after two other Julio, who turns 41 unday, tint sure-fire successes: c~ada's Anne gamed notoriety as the goalie for a Murray perfonns at Irvine Meadows professional socxcr team m Madrid. at 7:30 toniibt and TennC$SCC'S finest Hebtcrattendcd Cambridge Univer· -l..arTY G:uhn and the Gatlin sity as a law student, W>th aspirations Brothers -entertain at 6 and 9:30 or entering the diplomatic corps. But p.m. Sunday at the Crazy Horse in in the mid~'60s. an auto accident left Santa Ana. him critically injured. dcbll1tatcd for f\.Cry 30 sccondi.. somewhere in almost two years. . .{_ ~ . . Sympho11y aiins for excellence South Coast's first season to explore instrumental music personalities By SCO'M' BAYS vibrates together much hke the 0ttt1e o.11r,......_ double reed of an oboe. Only the /t 1s not the music. nor the· M>U~d is . amplifi~d and refm_ed musicians nor C\Cn the maestro thll throu&h ~as beautifully crafted m- ma.kc • rruly ~t orc~ra -it is trument .. inst~d1hc1rcombwed dedication 10 The switch to the oboe 10 the ~~t ex~Jlcn~. that clcYatcs musicians IJ'll~t: was probably the la)t. musical into arti<rs. ·dC(mon Granger made o~ impulse. _From South Coast Symphony's Currently serving as mu 1c director 'Dedication to Excellence' and conductor of the South. Coast brochuTC. Symphony an qos~ Mesa.~ 1s. not a John la!!)' Granger was 7 when he mat:\ prone to imuonal bchavtor or started his personal push to ucel-deca ons. . lcncc ith the oboe, the conical The symphony open 1ts 1984-SS woodwind that sounds like 1 lodi&n seal<>n Saturcla.) at the Robert B -'"· '---nd A-n • •• ~ Moore Theatre on the Oranae Ooti1 f~~~f~~~~cr a tS Om; mrsuu.en College camp~s .. The: 8 p m. con~rt '"The 0~ is the instrument that wdJ feature d1st1ogu1shed Amcr:ican most ~uods hke the human voice." mczz_o-soprano. M.arvellee Cariap, be Y) today ''The vocal chord an~ 10cludc Ravel s Mother Goose, · Suite, Mozart's Symphocy No. 4 J 1n CMajor, thc"Jupiter."and Les Nuits D'ete by Bcrhoz.: South Coast Symphony will per- form five con<:ens ttf1• o;eason featur· ioa such guest artists as "'1olini t Kathleen Lenski. the Mladi Wind Quintet. celh t Peter Rejto and pian- ist Mona Golabek. And the man at the podium will be Granger, the clanMtisL ... '11 performers need public ap- proval, pubhc ancntion and, there- fore, we're w111ini to work for it." Granger said ... A lot of worlc &OQ into a perl'onnancc like Saturday niaht. h's milch hke an •~bet&. aoept the audi~ only secs the tip above water." Granrr contends that a listener can te the inner self of tM 6S mu icians by the waycacb plays his or her instrument. ~nc~·· no hid1na onndf When playing an 1nstrumcntt he said. '"That's .,.hat't so difficult u .> Conductor. ot oruy arc you. 1n thcOry playing 'the instruments up OD that podium, but upencnanaaDme ~rsona.titiC$ that come thn>ufl.!. 'Yet. it's up to the conductor to urufy and tell the orchestra. •oK. lbil is wbat I believe t.bc c:omposcr meanc.·" • ... _., .... _o !i?D8P' committed hinitr.lf U> ..,ou.u -·~ ....,er conductm at an international WOf'k. Dun"& has ~hy convalCscncc be began composing onaanal ~,one or which won the top prize in :>palm's prcstigiou~ Bcll.ldorm Festival in 1968. Four rcan later he won the Eurovision Song Contest and his rccordswcresetling1n Lat1nAmerica, Europe .• Japan and the Arab c:oun- lnts.. This world ambusador or sona is fluent in seven IJnguqcs and hlS first rclcast for CBS Records sold J million copies each in Spanish and Italian and a half-million more in French. His newest album is •• 1100 Bel Air Place California:• ••• Anne Mumy claims she ''simply docs wha& she does" but four Gram· my Award&, 19 Canadian Juno Awards. seven and two platinum records prove that she is not only highly prominent among her peers, but also widely celcbrattd by her fans. Her newly rcJcuc:d .. Hean 0"'1' Mind" was produoeid ~ Jam Ed Norman who hu teamed so success.. fully with her on previous awa.i'd- winnina oombinations or her rueful ballads and spunky pop pieces. The album's tint 11Q&Jc will be a duct with Deve Loain"9 .. NobOdy Loves Mc Like You~Do." The tune was writteft by James Dunne and Pam Phillips and recently performed on the soep opera. "As the World Turns." Typically the ~vious Mur- ray/Norman oollaboratioo, "A Little Good Nc..vs.." rauhed in two No. I ~-~"Ju.t Anolber Woman in l.Ove .. and the title sona-her fourth Grammy and Oaree Country Music Auocution nominations. · Her pCrbmanoe ICbcduie.lso has indUded DumerQUI television ap-~aca. especially her three speQals, usually featurina C.anadian locales. • e»-holtcd tbe Country ...., ........... .,, ....... Barpl8tTay8ooil T• aad M...,..W'1olm 1'--relaeane foreo.tlaCout ~1·• Ont eeuoa open.er 8atmday. Shop at the Loma Liada University wheft Herbert Momllcldt. lbm tbe new dinaor ol the San Francilco Ordmtra. "" ....cbh• 'fer new &alent to study under him. axty , c:ondueton C8Cb hid IO manutes to perform b' u.e wro. ......... '*Ired out beea&llC • ........... ~forlblttYlltol ~-T,....18) Music Awards thu year with Wallie Nellon. • • • ThrccCountryMusicAwardswent to the Gatlin Brothers in 1979 ... Beu AlbUm'' for .. Straight Ahead;· ··ecst S1~ Record" for -·Au the Gold an Cahfomia .. and .. Best Vocahst'' 'to l:arT)'. Variety magazine crc<Sau the Gatlins for "an honest delivery, no pretcntions. When Lany does 10scn any narrative, it is laced with humor. direct and quite expressive in line with the tunes be writes with steming · eff ortlcssness ... His talent 'Ind expertise run counter to the currently cute. bum- alona fOdder on radio. Jack Hunt, country music columnist for the Chicago Tribune. sa.id, .. His bes1 soncs -'uch a '".Brok.co l;ady," .. rvc Done Enough Dyin& Today," ''Bitter They Art, Harder They Fall" and '"The Heart" -are obviously in the mold of Kris Kristofferson and Mickey Newbury, fcaturina alliterative lines of almo t Sbakegpean:an rollaDd power." MasterS' essence restored NeW1>9rt Chamber Orchestra starts with four concerts By MARGE BttETn ~.-C.u C a I The melodic overture of Mozart's ·•Don Giovaruu" will mm t~ debut scasol) for the Newport Chamber Orthntra that opens Oct. ~. As Ora.nar County's ncwcs1 pro- fessional arts cosem~ the 3 s. member orchestra Will emphasize masterworks. offer world-class tolo.isu and perform each of its four subscription cbnCICl"tl 1n both thf Newport Harbor High School and ()press Colleac thcaacrs. Appcannf as soloists dunnf th orchestra' tnauaural season wall piano virtuoso Ltjlh James u.r an October, soprano Maunla Ptullips- Thomburgh in January, I 98S, harpist. Olrrol Mctauahlia in Apnl and pianist Leonid RimbrO in·Junc. "When you , ltrform works by Bach, Mozan a11d .Beethoven with the 11:zc of orchestra for which they were compOscd. in the kind or 1n11mate tettinain which theyweredetipedto be he.atd, there is a wonderful direct· ncss of communacation," u1d Con· ductor Steven WiahL ."This kind of transformation in whach you reel at one wtth the com~ and bit hlne and~ "· for me, the meaee of tile musical experience we~ oftierina." Wiaht ilso aerves u mulic dntctor of the FitA Melbodisl Cburth of • COA1Maa. R. DWltnt F:'tteltOaf:, ~dent or the Qrchettnlloerct AilociatK>n, said tha1 ticau lft ~ at .SI O per petfotmaacle or S30 for all four coaeetts-Tidr.lta fOr AUdents and aenaon will be S5. Seaton 1'Cted are available by writn1110 P.O. Boa 3507, NewP<>n leKb9l663 or by Pboo••~.SS64. TidcelS ic. a.pe coaoeru may be ~ 11111~ tbebu office or at Tic:tetMMler outlets. -Calendar Fri .. Clem' ml CW'DCJCSI' C"U 8M•W. ct rt u cuttartM· enteabdw 1D La Palme re:.taurant. ~ NcajJOo'tt:r. 1107 RGed. lkwpmt Bmdl. Yon. • 7.itp.L 6"-1700 . .. ~ l.OIJQD•• ...... 'C"ta the PbdbanDonk''• n..J Hollywood Bowl concata ~and ...... ow wUh noltnllt Mfharla Martin and pamau Jd;J kabaoe and Cbla Cbou. 8:30 p,m. l~.:-54°°· c:p.1 •• raitaunml reuures ct , •• 1ectiid119 ~ dinner. 1\lea...s.t. rrom 7 p.a. ~ Ncwp111to. 1107 JalDbaree Rmd, Newport Bmcb. 844--1700. CIDm llAC& dlera a.y Wrnfnl on tbe plaDO T\ac8...s.t. 8:30 &:;i antdnt«ht, Reuben ·a. 151 E. ttteJiway, Newport 8mcb.. 875-5790. COUb)' TD DOO-W.&11 ansaa perform rrom 8:30 p.m.• l ;30 LDls wJth Happy Hour cnteatatnment 1iom 5-8 p.m. t.onWlt only. CDsy Hane. IMO. BroiikhoDow. Santa Am.. 549-1512. ·LADY GA'IUll a 'JBS GAn.IR 80i&m appear In one llhow aS 8 p.m.. M the Gretk· 1"batre In Lm A,.a..1213) 41~1062. Jaa l'IAJU8'I' ma.LY IA"'_. ap- pcan Tuc:a.-Sat.. 8 p.m.·mfd- ntghl. eano·a. 2241 w. Cout Hlgb-wa!i.:'"*port Bw:b. 631·1381. aYDm •••aJOTr reatwa dght hoUra ol ainUououa Uwc jUZ ~~-~4:1~,::: plCICe JIU2 PIP· perfanmng contaa-porary and pap adectklm rram 4 :30-&30 p.m and U."Mk:bad Jor- dan Tno'' pobm&qcUodard. lAtln and conlt:mp)fuy Ju:z from 8·30 p.m.· 12:30 a.m.. 18000 Vea Kannan. lrvtnC. 720--0330 Gm. 8U'IT8 appcan n Cafe 9 l LlllL. 858 $. Caul Belch. 497-5404. PlllU.IN and h trto In an cx.duslve cuo•xnc•nt. P'rt..S.l. 9 p.m.-1 a.al •. 'l\les.-nun. 8:30 ~m.•12:30a.m .• UbrwyLounee. The Newport.tr. 1107. Jawbone Roed; Newport Beach. 'T1traugb Sept. 15. 1'44·1700. ~-.--WAYD WAYD pla711 t.bc ax· 3hoM and note. aod UC& !!!!••••• .. 00 the kcyboanl. 9 p m.· l :30 a.as.. Cale Udo. 2900 New· .port.:w'..a~e::r:~~: lure c•_.,..l and 1.at1n JbZ. Wed.- SM. ~30 p.m..12:30 Lro.. Copa de Oto, 833 Anton, CO.ta iilca. 662·2672. 8TDllAlllS ATD a nmame and tbe ... Pdae Td9 pmonn Thuna . ..sun. ncalJ:ICll. Roo'• ln ..... 14&4 s. CoMl ....... ,. ~ 8mdl; U7.:.t871. • iy_,.. •• ....,~ jl&I:& ~ P'Tt • .sat. 8:30 p.m.-1130 Lm., flod'a 5 CI 'clod 18281 PadOc (m.t ;!if~ 5unlld Bradl. ln-ddtnlte.. 13' 592-2051. .... peodoi ... Jall plaDO TUet....S.t. m:-ap.m.-l a.m. NlePOlt 17. UU5 E. 17th st.. Senta Ana. lrideftn•e. 547.9511. Tm -n.g•u,. guurnr&' pla711 from 9 p.m. l.Dddlnttdy at Johnny' ... 2250 &. 17th St.. s.nta Anf.·~. '1'1111 SL~ 1'11-.sT SIUKI" la ~ by wdl·known Etna ... ~ Aaroa ....... bl • lift canttrt o( nmtQlk: rock 'n' roll. 8 p.m. Oalden Well ODllf# f'GNISI D. 15744 Goldrll Wm St .. ltunttagtan Beach. 83 .... , ,,,.., 88(>-8378. ARRS lmDAY r tuml at Ow: lrvtne Meadow• Amphllheatr~. 7~2000. TD a ......... .--.wy pdfona at 'nlC Solndrifter Wat. Sat. Haun f'rt. 5-l. 9 p.m.-1 a.m •• Wed.-Tburs. 8:30 .. Ali I IWWW acma" Ill the Cair- talD CaD DtDoer 1"bc:Mtt. 880 ltl ca.mo Real. 'IWUD. ~ aicept :::;rc..: .. wuytrC oiltatD Um ()ct, 28. e.:.1540. . • • al the Newport 1bcatcr Art.a Center. ISO I all! Dr1ft. Nc:•port Balch • .....,. and Satur· da19 at 8 p.da. tbl'OUl(b Od. 13. 631-0288. "TBS aaaT l.IT1'LS WMM* *>A& m m.&8'' at the Hartequtn Dtnnr:r Pia~ 3503 S Harbor etvd.. nta Ana. c:~ ~ t lhl'Ough Sun: .. Le .... A'IWl ......... MllW ._ ... la pracnted from 7-10 p.a. In the caflfomta Roam at the AINlbdm Conw:nUan Center. 800 W. KMdla Aft.. Anabebn. 999-8900.· ..... ,,. 1'm .-JAL Aili ... ..,_ Am ...... fmbna ...._,... c:ahl· .............. !'luaday. Ffl.-s.t.. 11 a.a-8 p.a..~. 11 LID -6 p.a. 850 s.n ~ Dr •• Newport ae.ch. 759-1122. Tllll LU'!' OllSAT &miM&a cauw ~ the ""Connora.nt" laura Newport Harbor from 7 to 10 p. 111. Diners •~ entotalocd by a Canllc:aJ muetall rnuc'-hr $30d1nntt ~ phone675-1481. TBS co•T• ..... ••T I &'GUii'.. Annual 0prn Jurted 6bow rontlnueiJ through Suoday In Plot~/ ~ • ..,....., 21. 1"'4 • Pop fans he~d for 'Air Supply Russell and Hitchcock to perform on neon bridge at Mesa amphith_ea_t-er- Air SUpply -described by Billboard mapz.ioe as .. one of the mo 111cCesdW pop poapa oft.be ·90s .. -will be mllin& thrir only Los A lcs- an:a ~ this year wbco t.bey perform in coaca1 a.t Pacific A.mphitbcatre IA C.om Mal at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Graham RDlldl pd RQSllCU Hitcbcock. the eott Of Air Supply. ha~ •m.....,CiPt Top FiVe silJl)c$ and four platioum albums -.. l...o&t an Low," .. o.e Tbal You Love, .... Now and Forever" and -Gn::alt5l Hn.s"' - liDol 1980. tut ya:r t.bey wa"C oae of Ollly five poups that J)n)ducal two platiowa albums; Many of \bole bits anc:l 1e>np from their next album to be rck:ased early neat )air will be JJl'CICfttcd at tbe coocat. llu.dl and Hi1Cbcoc:k met while pc:rfonniaa in an Austrahan prodlllttioa of'""Jcmsamst Supcntar" and fint appeared in AJDc:rica as the • opcncl' tOr Rod ~·s 10U.r iD 1971. Their top siaslcs meed ftom .. 1..0ll in LOvc"' in l I to last year's .. M•ki .. Lo..e Out otNotb.ina at All. .. 'Tbellll!C far dais ya:r'11bowissbaped likea bridle that as lined m neon and appears 10 bl ia mid-air. AirSuppl;Y'1l984toarbasbeea10 vc in t.be far East and Caucta and c:Omc:s co Oraaee County from a molt rc:c:att dMeS ia PUa1o Rico and f1orida. . .. We iDcorporat.c su~f-~ li&l:tt and sound systems as ~I as topbistic:aledlMCrtccha.o&oo."Ruadl d. "'But~·rec:arcfuh t • I dfCcu don't <lctnct from « ovcnhadow the music. We doo 't qnt people co leave sayins. 'Wbat a ptttty li&l:tt &bo'lt'!' We want ihcrn to 1C1· their moacy"s Worth ... Tickets are availabk at TKtctron TcletrOn and the am 1 tcr biol ofl"ICC. • / I . .. . PUot Weekender/ Friday, s.s>tember 21. 19M the Jewel Court at the South c.out· PluaM II. TBS ll'·TBS·'lfATSa UUD BOAT aaow. part oe the ran Newport In-The Water Boat Show, runs thf"OUlth Sunday at Lido Vil~. Mott than 'SO qualUlcd yacht btollcn are participants with boat.I on vtcw ran«· tna from 20 to l 00 ft. Newport Beacfi. 84.50 adult admtulon. Fr1. 11 a.m.· 8Ul1Rt. Sat . ..Sun. 10 a.m.-.unaet. 673-9360. Sat. Cluelcal TBS 80VTll COAaT 8YllPllOftT l9 hosttd by Orange Coast College tn Ill p~tte Ovc-ooncert aerte1 wtth mezzo eoprano 'Marvellee Ca.rtaga. cartaga wllJ pnf'orm Ravel's "Mother Goose Suite." Berlioz'• "Lee NuJll D'ete." and Mozart'• "Symphony No. 41 fn C Major K551 Juptter.'' 8 ;pm .. occ·a Robttl 8 . Moore Theatre. 270 I Fatrvtcw Rd .• ea.ta Ma&. $15. 810 and 88. 432-5880. oasoo~ C01£111AK •. att Jl"rtday '"'JA1ma LOOOBaAJlf conducts the Phllharmonlc's rtnal Hollywood Bowl concert, -=e F't1da~I Ung. TBS 'lfDf& ~ 9Ce P"rtday 1~ IU.C&. ~ Fnday usuna Country TBS DOO-W..ui •nwaa. 9CC fn· day u.unc. Jau PIAJQST Jl&LLY LcllAIEJl. at cano·•. ett Frtday listing. 'If A YlfS 'If A YR& and 1lIC& SIDtll.llAJlf, ace fr1day uaung. Jm1lT VOLOU play• the! piano tonight and Monday. 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Ron'• In laguna. 1464 S. C489t H~fty, ~na Beach. 497-4871. ta CZDiB&R, ~ Frtday II ting. C01'nl.SY PBJLLIPS, see Friday llaUng. ' DdVST TllA TL0a. Thuraday and Saturday nlJlht•. tnddlnltc. Max· well'•· 317 Pacinc Coast Highway, Hun8:i::t Beach. 536-2555 R DO'lflf and hts tr1o, ace Friday II.Ung. . • 8.DLt.T ~u • TltlO, ace The 8oathem Callfornla In-the-Water UMd apo feataniil aulltJ ~---ed Boat 81aow at Lldo VW.,e tllla weekend .. yaclata n8fac lnm 30"'" eio 100.:I• aad 1Ullqae amoni boat eboW8 iaattonwtde: Tbe • 830,000 tO l •lllton frcMia 50 .......... Frtday.llslfng.-•pcctaJ guest.I The BuaBoya and al9o 8T&PBA.1'1S ATU a PJU&l'fD8 Bang ~ana. frvtne Meadows and the R•tll Pr'loe 1'114>. eee Friday ' Amplaltheatre. 740·2000. . ll ting.• Ala8UPPl.Yperfonnatnthetronly GSOllG& 80TT8. ace Fnday list-l.09-AngeJee area appearance at the Ing, Pactnc Amphitheatre, 100 l"alr Dr .. DAVID UJIOJT performs from 9 Costa Mesa. 7:30 p.m. $15 ruervcd, p.m. tnddlnJtdy at Johnny'•· 2250 E. 68. 50 lawn. 634--1300. 17th St .. Santa Ana. 83&-6658. noamaT. we Frtday usung. .J&rn&Y 0880a1'S appca.re f.o.. Pop night and Sunday at the Unlvel'M.I CTifDJ LAUP&R 8 .........,.,.,,. wtth Amphitheatre, I 00 Uotvuaal City Pl .• Clhn aastwoH '"•""'°"" c•• SMWI at U 1H l ltt t :IO 71aa a. H itt ~~··" ..,.ft.a .... (Ill IHOWIAT t.114 .. )108 l •I• 7 41 10101 ..-..--Untveraal City, (213) 980-9421. ~ :HOWS AT U :H Cl a 100 7:H t rl0/ 70MM STADIUm a ' 'I' • • ' 1111'¥mll•MTMS .... .., ...... ... rill''I (II') IMlllMIA .... 6Tll9 ......... T ..... ., .,._.., """• c .. ,. .. r.,,.-111••• et U 100 J 1SO Tll• LAil lbrfltllt•t(N) 1100 7:IO A 10100 IN 70 MM 14itWeJU(l2J;~.\'fH::.,...... ) :::le:c.'t'i~::, ~.,. 1 ·i::-:,==~,'100 T ..... ..,.. ... ..., IHOWI AT l 10\°11to 1t 1~41 a, IOiOI) .... ,, .._, • to1IO aultal•t Artlf (") ORIVE llfS Cllilft11t Ullll• 1Z fRlE U.._ •~J0,..1.U ~ 1:31W ...... ODIO AJll'D lllLL, ett Friday 1 .. ttng. LAl'ICS IALLINO, .ee Friday ltai· Ing. WA'Tlft TOlllGU&, ett Frtday llat· Ing.· TllS p ARA nca. att Friday Ust1nc. Theater ".&Jn"TllllllG ooa·· at the Cur· taln Call Otnner Theater. See Friday llstlng, "BAil.RUii" at the Newport • ._.TO• A IUCClllrVL. llODY·llAKIRO aaw PV9· • ... •• Lam to prodUce arid martret a boOk, ~ wtth prtntets. royaltlCll, COPYrWJt• and whOleealfng ror othen. o:sc:r a m.-1:30 p.m. Fu 825. Qokkn We.t Oollf'le Admlnla· traUan~ •• Rm. 138, 167440olden Weat St.. Hunlln8ton Beach. 891-3991. "GllTl'lllO ACBD mm aooa ..,. WRD." A atep-by"*P ~ from the ~ fcka to aeet._ the chlldra\ '• boOk In prtnt. 8 a, m .·4"" p. m. e24 fee. Ooldm We.t Collemlt Adln&n· liltraUoa Blda .. Rln. 208 •• ~ .... OOld· en We.t ·SI •• Hwitfncton Beach. 881-3991. ''TW.AC& Yooa FAlllLT na.•• Lam to dWt a ramlly ~ In -~ ... -~:prceam ... 12 to adult. e.30-"l·1:30.-.-: ... :-;e1a .1ee. Golden We.t eoue.e•Bt*naa a&dlt.. Rm. 208. 15744 llolden Weal Sl., HunU.ncton Balch. 891 "'399 l . wmL Of' PmSIO>elllP, for aanaaa over 45, meet.a at the 00· Broectw:l Dell Jn Orance for dinner •I 7 e.:n.~· IUlllllRO roa mu .. 'Take control al your nnanctaJ future. 9:30 a.m.-noon. 810 fet. Golden WC9l Coi1* Bualneu Bid«.. R.m. 108. 16744 Goidrn Wat St.,liunUngton Beach SSU-3991. Ste. TllS LA.IT GUAT DIJflUa C811m olfera a ex>clclail ctulM f$7,501 wtth piano bar rrom 2 to. 4 p.m.; dtnner cntl9C (832.50) from e to og.m.andnl&htclubcrulee(810)from 1 1 p.m. to 1 un. 675-1481. TBS COITA llEIA AaT LSAOUS'I Annual Open Juned Show. eee Fr1day U.Ung. AltODeO .. hdd bytlae A.-octatlOn ol Deputy Marahal'• ol Onnge County tn the OranMtand Arena at the Orange County Fatroounds. 100 Fair Dr .. c.o.ta Mesa. 820 per famUy pre- .old. 751-3247. TBS AJnRJAL ARnQVa 9BOW AJll'D &Al.&, ~ Friday ITatna. TBS oaARG& COAl'I' IT. 81l!1Aal> 'JA1'CISU DOG 9llOW I• held today at the eut end d the carnival &oc at the Ora1* County P'al~. 100 Fair Or .. Coeta Meaa. 751·3247. TD 11'·TD·'lfATita Ul&D . BOAT_,.,,~ Friday U.Unl A OUJlf IBO'W II praented at the eo.ta Meu hlrOounda. 1 t>0 Fair Dr., Oo9ta Meu. fl a.m.·6 p.m. 83.50 adm1..aon, under 12 rree. 751·3247. "llTSl'ICAL VlllOll9." a muHI· media performance by Carole earoom.-.. combtne. vi .. 11rnaces. text and mualc Into a layerCd nar- rative act In real time. Praientcd at 8 p.m . tn conjunctJOn wtth the curttnt exhlbttJon on cUaplay at Cal state Fullerton. The llliJlery will be ~none hour before ana after the ahow. 83.50 admi.tOn. CSUP' VfeUal Arts CCnttt, 800 N. State~ Blvd .. l"UUetton 773·2037. "VIOLA. TIO• or BUMAJlf ...,. ,... ... ,_ u .... two-day conreftnce tJie 8outhtin caufomta Soddy at t~ BeYerly • WOl focUa on a ...... OI h11man = P'or reeervaUon lnfor· lMUon, '213) 886-l&M. Sun. • PSID&mTSWOll And The ~To, SIMI>'' arc pruented at 2 p.m. at-~ 00&'* eouw. Featw. the hdftC a.uet. Robett"'B. Mooft Theattt. 2701 P'alrvtew Rd .. Coeta MeM. h ~. M at the door. 432-MIO. TBS WOIW COMT 'ftlO per· fonna foll mUIJk: rrom 8 p.m.·mtd- ~ ~ 8Uadaj. Oaplatrano Depot, :l8701 v~. San Juan C.~13·~· 'l'D·OAn.m _,. • .,,.,..1•w--• appear in two Jhowa •• e and 1 .30 p.m 825 adml•lon', Crazy Horee. J 580 BrookhoUow, Senta An11 M• I & 12. Jaa -~ ' -~ . -··--.,.,_ \ ·• • • •• • • •• • •• . . . ' e • I i ~ . •· - - .. •• ~ I I I I I ~ l r • Calendar JAZZ IKCORPOltAftD perfomui at l :30 p.m. at the Meadowlark Country Club, 16782 Graham St .. Huntl:nctc!fl Beach. TB:& OOLDEJll &AOLS '1AZZ BAJO> plays at the "Amtrak Depot," 3·7 p.m .. San Juan Capistrano. DANUL ST. IU.llSSILLB p~ the saxophone and J01' OAllDJ(SR pcrfonna on the piano. Jazz and light pop for easy Ustenln4 and dancing • •·8 p. m.. AJexa:nder • ltallan res· taurant. 1565 Adama Ave .• ea.ta Mesa. Indefinite. 241·0123~ LIDO JAZZ ALL STARS • ._8 p.m and 9-J 1 p.m .. Cafe Udo, 2900 Newport Blvd.. Newport Beach. 675-2968. GltOROEllUTTS,aaxophone,and ST A1' BIUCCKB1'JUDG&, piano. ~ p.m".Cano'e,2241 W.CoaatHJghway. Newport Be-ach. lndcflnJte. 631·l38 l. STSPBA!IU ATa a P'llm!0>8 and the Ratla Prlc:e Trto, ece Friday listing. .JEUY VSLA8CO, av~ takntcd musician. host. a weellty "Jam" aesston from 5 p.m. at the SwaJJo .. Cove Lounge ln the San Clemente Inn. TB:& GO.LIAM OAJUU• JAZ/I. QUARTST, 7-11 p.m.. 1nddlntte: AJJsfo'a, 1870 Newport Blvd •• eo.ta Mesa. 642-8293. .JACKDA1'D,3·7p.m .. lndeftnlte. Rusty Pelican. 2735 PadOc -Oout Highway. Newport Beach. 642·34.31. .. 11151(111 ._.ac..--. 114s1•s11r•t6 -. -- • SO COAST PLAZA • TOllM COtTCR u,.,..,.., ·-1SI 4114 CM-1 .._ ... US. I IO ltlt .-.1J) 10Wii CCNT lit ~·.:.::..... fl~ f~ 1SI 4114 ... 1111rtr•t"J1 10iii CfNTCll mall' sl£•O II,.,.... •t ...... SM!r (PC) ·-'" ,. t• ... ~SI 014 ... 1w. '"tu ... '-ID 154-811 m•..,. ....... "" HO.HQ.It• TOWN C£NTEll UClUSM: ltCAGODT I I 1 .. hlll "aDllll ti:" (I) • WESTMINSTER • 11 -600 UO IOOC l~l '114 SOUTH COAS I --5'4 1111 SOUTH COASl STtWl lllWll ...... "MlCf .. (PC) -.. fn6• IOG.1"9 ~ 1111 Mflllllllrl 61~ a• HO SOUJH COAST .._ ao • • ·-wu•_..ftl -~ 1111 IJS tll ... -.. = --:-n CllhA WUT ---.,. l!l!> CiiiiA WESI ~ ..... 1"' ....... n1 m~ ClfllMA MST ...... , .. '-""" nl}tn Cii(MA WlST -.. _...,, atl 1')$ :..r•l JOIU~ ........ lJ) ·~ ~ llPtUml'" CJ) ln UI a• It• ..... ,_.,. ,. •MN.llU •WCJl fft 11~ ti~ 11 IS .... ni.r. 11~ t Ii • HUNTINGTON Bf ACH • 1u'111Gf0ii ...... -" .. ....... ... ---·) IA 61~ a 15 10 It ._Ta.n 11~. tlS .._ ....... ..., Ut ...11111" .... ,, us ltJI • GAROf N GROVI • • COST AMlSA. Cll:MA Cfll ou. .. ' -,,, 4141 Cfl'MA CTR _, -,,, •141 SOUTH COASI •1 ._, eu...... --ft) ....... , .... 11\ltlS ....... tMilll& talS MAU t'f 1': ,., .. lo ._...ft) ........ •ur..••tft 16Mtll llltf• .... JI~· l AQMA *1SIMU sroi ...... it r .. 1o IZJI -111 • r N ••i..11 U UlUlUI, 7ffll •• ,. , • l._ MUS lllMl .__ ,., ............... ......... t•Ul•lt.U{ 1'1-Mll .. • ••• _... u1.,,. Cl ~ ... f.l 111 .. ., ...-..-... ..., Sii sue i!S. lt1' SADOtllAClt '' ..... "'" .. sa1• SAllOlEIAU If'•• IA ,, ..... \II sue SAOOUB~CI( 'r •·· • ....... Sii \lie SAOOtCBACI( '' '•• ... ...... ,. !ill wt SADOUIACl .... ,. I ln ttl ~I~ .... ... ., ht 11\. ttt. 11:1~ ... n.n1At2' --·Ill ___ ., l11Ui.lot '°* ... Oon1;1t.tlD • MISSION VIE JO • YIJO TMN 10 •••I• 11 ··~· uo'"° WllO lP.11 , •••••• h , .. ~. llO "" ViJO amt ··-" ... .. ·~ ,.., .. c.... ,,., IU 110,1.0D.1 .. .,~ '1Xl •• !0111 ft IO MAl l ·• ... rr 1P1i1 n ...... uo i•a C.......••~ ..._..... ... 4'~ 1110 I • Ill Jt3' VllO ~l S'lllll ut .. t• • .,, ... f:. i\@"I~ ="'-~-~1444 1&.tt5 Etti ...... ..._ ~1'44 J .. .· . aA09 llAaTlll80llf AND Ta Ui i W e.cTIOR. afternoons. Old Dana Point care. 24 720 Del Prado. Dilna POtnt. 681·6003. STUDIO CAPS feature. an after· noon ~ eeMton. JOO Main St .. Balboa. 675-7760. OOaDOll LIOllTl'OOT appcare as part of the ~ Beach Pop Music P'e9Uval. 7:30 p.m. ~ LaQ.una Ca· nyon ~. ~ ee.ch. "'t25 and 820 Uclteta thriJu&h 'nc.ketmuter or '""'-Sound Spectrum la i.....-Beach. YU, "'1th Jon Aridenon, Chrl SquJ~. Trevor Rabbi. Alan White and Tony Kaye, perform ton!Btt at the lrvtne Meadows Ampfilthcatre. 7.0-2000. oaoovs TITAl9; afternoon• at Baxter's, l •346 Culftt" Dr1ve. lrvtne. lndcflnltc. 857·2103. .JU'l'il&Y 0980ml&. .ee Satur· eta~«· TP90 ........ Dami 8AJlfD appears at cano·a. 2-6 p.m .. 2241 w. Coast Highway. Newport Brach. 831-1381. TD RIGB 80Cl&TT 8A!m pct'· forma jazz clu.tca. to~ In J>OJ». no.tat«lc melodics. and fresh eounde at a '?'"ea Daner at 3 :30 p.m. Turtle "THE NEW PRINCE OF HOLLYWOOD~' • :-::DR4f ~':s =BAQ( = 634-2553 •c.Tl IUl 546-2711 *fmf• tM1IY 96H307 IUI HI 891·3693 EDWARDS SO OOAST PlAZA F•Y FOUR PAQ~ ttWAY 39 DA.ft COSTA llJA ~.EDWARDS MESA 646-5025 *.......,.., • DOLrf 8TIMO ~ .... ,, . ._.. . ~ ... .. 7 Calendar Rock Community Park. #I Sunnyhlll Dr .• lrv1nc. 83 admtsmon. 660-3643 0 A.NllW GOSa" at the Cur- tain <:all Otnnd Theater. See Friday llltlng. -"TBS asaT LITTLS waoa&llOUU DI TltXAa" at the Harlequin Dtnne-r lllayhouw. ~Fr1· dal' listing" . BOPPOLA" al the Grand Dinner Theater. see Friday listing .. "ID811ST" at Scbaaflan'• Weal Dinner Playhouse. See F.r1dav Usttng. ••llAJt OP LA llAJfCBA1' al tfie Fon.tm Theater, ·Yorba Linda. Stt Friday listing. "SAIRT JOAir' at• South Coast Repertory. Ser Friday II una. 1"ilma --:siPAJtAT1t TABLU .. ts ahown as part of a David Niven fllm et'rica. Niven wqn an Academy '-ward for best actor In thla Olm. 3 p.m .. Colden Wiir College Community Theater. 15744 Go~n West St .. Huntington Buch. 2 general a dmlasTon. _895-8378. • SlDCles~ ....... ~---~~~-wmL or ntD!Q)8111P. for ~Ingles over. 45. meets at the Brickyard In Oran2e for brunch at l l :30 a. m,.624·3327. 11198 AlmlS'8 BIO BAl'fD 80Ul'fD Dence Club gatheni tonight for free dance lesM>ns by Candi Davts. 7-8 p. m.: and Rusty lttfAlns play• for your dancing plcaaun:-;from 8·1 l p.m. Lafayette liotel. 144 S, Llndtn, Long Beach. l213) 428·8780. Etc. TD LAST OHA1 DUUIER caUIS& oflt'ra a two-hour Jan brunch (8J 9 .50) anaa6 p.m. dinner cruise (S!O) ol Newport Harbor. 675-1481. C08TA JUaA A.RT LEAOmt•a Annual Open Jurtt'd ~how. att FT1day lLatlflg. . . A GUii saow. ec:c Saturday ust1ng. A BOLLY lllJ.L BOUS& TOUR la held tOday at the famed tum-of·the· century home looatt'd high on a bluff above Avalon Bay on Catalina Island Tau,.. art scht'duled from 2·5 p.m and last ~5 minutes. 85 donaUon. Foe bOat tran portatlon Information. call 527·71 l t. Df·TB&-WATEa USED BOAT asow. ace Fnday 11 una AJOfUAI. APrnQUU MOW AlfD SAi.&, ~Friday llsllrll( llUllA.N IUOBT8 81tlllll't.Aa. att Saturday u~ung. • '1C!'lll IJRAI ---a \'l:DCIAI -=am Cl:.'€nDEI Thirtj1li inches of dynamite! That'• Little Charlie Char.auua. Anton.la Boyoe, one of the lntrl&'ain& "charac- ters • wbo roam Knott'• Deny Parm entertalnh>.& pesu. Mon. Cluetcal oamo•T COLEJIA!I, ~c Frida) llatJng. country CJIAZY BOISE hqgt.a a Monday Night Football Party with h0&ta Jack Youngblood and Ertc Otcke1"90n. and abo rame prtzca. 5 p.m ·1:30 a .m .. 1580 Brookhollow. Santa Ana. -549.1512. KVaT YOLQR&, eec SIUuntay u.t- h\.s UDO llAZZ AU. 8TAD perform from 9 p m.·l s30 a.m . at care Lido. 2900 Newport Blvd.. Newport &ach. 675-2968. DallY OSLTUUIAR, Inger. gultarplayer.9p.m.·I a .m .. BlueBttt Cafe. ·107 2Jet Place, Newport Pler. Newport Beach. 675-3333 • DaDee CDIOSTllT plays Top 40 music for danctng from 8 :30 p.m.·mtdntght. Cloee Encounters. 21022 Orookhurat, Huntln~ton Beach. Indefinite. 968-9800. TD warm U111011 llAJID per· fonnafrom8:30p.m .-h30a.m.wttha Talent Contest also befli« held and cash priUa betng awaraed Crazy Hone. 1580 BrookhoUow. Santa Ana. 549·1512 Jua PIA!fl8T DLLY Le11Ama. ett F~'tt llatlng. LIDO .JAU ALL ST AU, .c:e Monda~tstlng. DA llA.LEIGB. 11tt Monday llstlng. . COIU'UY PBJLLIPtl. ICC Friday ll~ CZOfB&a. see Friday ll5t.lng Pop TD F A!IA TICS, tee Frtday list.Jog. A 0 8WDIO CONIDr lllGJ!IT" & 91-""' fcaturt'd cvny Tuf!9day ntglll _.._-=._es _____ -~-Happy Daze. 17927 MacArthur Blvd. oaANOS COUNTY 811'0LSll lrvtnt' 250-1077. 9C&D. an event for:Stnglcs. features LAl'CE 8.ALLIRG, 9et' Frtday list· clubs, organization , spec~ sttvtccs tog. and educational programs available NATIVE TONGUE, Stt Friday for§ingtcs. ,7-10 pm. Westin South tng. ~ H&ef, Ot'ilU ··U•<L,.-•. •'*•it-~---~~-=-:~~=·"' admtssion tndudes door p11zc5 nnd Theater free parkl~_:.~sorcd by loca1 com· m~~~rioft W&Sll PAJU .. features event.a to welcome new and rccumlng studentB. Food and lnlor· matton on campus organtzaUon.s arc avaUabk:. )0:30 a.m ·2 pm. UC trvtnc.. Un1vtt81ty Center loweT patlO. 856-7244. Tues. Clualcal GBD llACK. ~ Friday llatlng. "A!ll'.lJ[UiG GOltS" at the CUr· taln Call Otnner Theater, Stt Frklay listing. "801'JPOLA." at the Craild Otnner Theater. Sec Friday Ustlng. "SADff JOA.Jr' at South Coast Repntory. Stt Frtday Ust.Jng. Worbbops "UADIJ'tO J'OR 'SJUOnBKT AND UlfDJtllS'I' Al'fDll'tO." Thia Col · leg~ for Kids program for agea 12 to 17 ts dcslgned to provide greater rCadlog comprehension. Begin• today. 3:30-5:30 p m. $30 ftt. Colden W College Ad.ministration Bldg.. Rm 136. 15744 Colden West Sl., Hunt- ington Beach. 891-3991. r----COUPON ----1 I RENT A VCR 1 _.. I ..,.-ollUOlf l'IC'WAfS,..... e-----... ..,._ i 2 MOVIES FOR t1 J Ff\. Sal. ' Sun Md $.3 00 11.:\\"Slltt; \T ID~tt (IN THE BAYSIDE PHARMACY) 1016 BAYSIDE DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92662 760-0113 ., 1'1191UM er.~oc;;.s~ I ·---------------l VHS ONLY • VCR RENTAL AVAILABLE NO MEMBERSHIP FEES • ALL RA TINGS HOURS: MON thiu FRI 9--7:30 SATURDAY 9-7:00 SUNDAY 10.7:00 I ' "I I ,. • Calendar •..-r.Aa'l'DIO YGUa OWJll ---Jll'E89: Locate ln Hutc -Repent ln Lctatre. •· nrst tn a eertes ol lecturea desJgned to help people lnterated ln opentnga amall buatne.. 7-9:30 p.m. 84 eeeston. Golden We.t ~ Rec Ed Blcf«,. Rm. 203. 157,44 Ooldcn West "St.. Hunttn&ton Beach. 891-3991. WBESJ. or J'IUBJQMUllP, for singles over 45. meets at the Cull & Cleaver In Fountain Valley for dinner at 6·30 p.m. 524-3327 Etc. . "OIUS!fTATIOll W'&SK rADt&:• see Monday Usttng. Wed. Claalcal GED llAC&. sec Friday lJatln£ Ga.GORY COi SNAii. 11ee Friday llstJ - · ~ WD1B C&U ••, 11eie Friday listing. • Coan try -'--ICARSR llADLSr8 COOWl&Y llUSIC 8llOW Is hdd inddlnltdy at Marcd'a.8 p m.-mklnt«ihL 130 E. 17th St.. c.c.ta Mcaa. 646--3666. TD WUTSJlR UlllOlf BAllD ap- pcara from 8:30 p,m.·1:30 a.m. wtth Free & Easy Dance LcaeoM by Ron & Donna from 8-8:30 p.m, Abo a Mr. <>range County C.owboy C.ontm 18 Ruff Hewn at Al's Garage ... The fottlEW ot rue Amaioon wea Hel9 'ftl819cba 1001. cotton pleated tD.JS8fS and lhofts.JQp It at~ 0 100'I. cotbl madlOs oan'l> .wt. ~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND • NE\WORT BEACH • (714) 644-5070 " . • I - Lel!Aaa• " ftC ...a.T. Publlc RdMIOOe 0.- n!dlM' for a..ldren'a Hoepltal ol Or- anfCOounty .... Oft ''MyWOrd.'' a coauneatary 00 ldta. ,...., fall-.. ~..=-=,.,~· Room .. AMllW oc:mw· at the bu-Thu,. ta1n eau Dinner Tilalter. See P'rlday ~ • tf RENT ANY TAPE ANYTIME 0 • ~ T JOlft OU~ YIDCO (LU& new I CLllMll•llSlt•flH . FIH MOVIE PISS .. bill,.,._ Of Ewry i .... ••TidlttAelilmf•E--.TeViMeC-W ' • • Calendar Cl•--1 oasooaY COl.&llAR. see f7lda1 llaUng. TD WlJU CltLLAll. ace Frtday llSUng. • osn MACK. aee Friday list.Ing. Coalltry TD WUTSUtJllflOJll llAIQ) per· forms from 8 30 p.m.·h30 a .m. Alao, • the finals of the CoUntry Dance Contest Bi? held tonUlht With th~ grand prize of a Cart6~n Cruise being awarded. Crazy Hone. 1580 Broolthollow. Sftnta Ana. 549·1512 Jaa TOii lleLAm, sec Wednesday llal-1na. LU CZDIMR • .ce Friday lLOJUng. DORA GAIL a DUAM, 11tt Wednesday II Ung Davl5. 100 Fair Or .• Costa M 634-1300 lflC& P'l'ZOW. singtt. guitar. har· monk'a. 9 p m.·1 a .m. Blue Beet Cafe, 107 21st PlaC(', Newport Pier, New· port Beach. 675-3333. TED a DUY, att Friday llstJn.g. TBSP A.RA TJC8, ~ Frtday listing. onto A1'D BILL. sec Friday ttstt.ng. LA.RCS 8ALLDfG. att Frtday II l· tnJ{. RA T1W TOJlfGUS, ~ Friday list· In . Dance TBS TJlACY W'KLLS BIG BA!m, foryourdanctn«il>l'asun:. 8:30-11:30 p.m .. The CallTomtan. 18431 Sol Chica. HunUngtoo Beach. $2 ad· mlsalon. 846-1347. BALLROOM DAJlfC11'G. 8 pm.• midnight. Dance lcason!J 7 ·8 p.rn. Alao door prtzcs. Mt"8.dowlark Country Club. Graham Street. Huntington Beach · PllotWeakendtt/ Frtd.Y, s.c>t...U. 21, 19&. t of thCi\.IJOlt-provoklng humor. 8 p m. Hamilton and the rest of the Ice N~rt Harbor Art Museum, 850 caped east, I ec.heduled for Sat. San Clemmte Dr •• Newport Beach. 5 Oct. 20 19 fee lnc:ludee roundtrtp members. 67 .50 non-members. transportation on a deluxe motor· .. SOLO LIVIRO WITB STJ'LZ." A 759·1122. C08Ch which departa Orange Coast four-wttk lecturc/d!~usskm with "'ADVE1"'1JRU IN RATUU College at 10:3C a m.andretumsat 4 topt Including "~rung a Oon· WRJTDtG'" with Charles Hllltngcr, pm.RCJVstraUonck:adUnc Yn .Ool vttSaUon nd ICecptng It Gotng." veteran Loe A des 11tn1cs 1slaff 5. 432·6"527. · "Verbal and Non-verbafCommunlca· wntcr, begins at 6:45 wtth no-h "IOGBT OP TBS ll.AllQUE" auc· tlon." "Lonely. Alone or Splo:· and dx'ktall andconttnucsthrough7.15 . tlon nd bell t .planned . by the .. Llmcmnce. Love or Addiction." Led pm. wtlha meeting and pro,tram. The Newport Harbor Art Museum on r., by R09alle Kfoury. M.A. 61 O tndMd· Anaheim Hilton Hotel and Towtte, £1 Oct. 27. Hosted by Bulloclta Wlbhtrc ual orkahops. 7-10 pm. through Capitan Room 777 W. Convcntton In Fashion Island. ll features more today. Promontory Potnt Clubhouse. Way, Anaheim. Free achn1Ss1on. than JOO nattonally ruognlttd and 200 Promontory Drive W.. Newport 750-4321. cmcrgtng artlsts iho have created Beach. 644·Q375. TBB' LIDO POWER A1'I> &AIL· masu to b«': aucttonf'd off. The masks BOAT SHOW bcglns t~ and run wllJ be cxhlbUed bQllnntng Oct. 4 t SiDClea . through Sunday at Village. the m ucm. 52:'50 per pttSOn •. 80CC1t98POL a Ta SSS FeatunngmaJQrbWldersfromaUovcr Restt\-attonsmay be l1)acje by calUng Amertca anef' a number of J>OIJ'llar 759·1122 STJlA TEGm&: Feeling At Ease -overseas de'atgns. this show has be· A Ta.A VltL·STUDT Cl.AU to New Easily." Combat tress th~ rt:· h la~ fall h h laxaUon tcchntquea arid fttl more at come t e ln·l c-watcr York ts :pru;cnted by t c FUUcrton eaae with life. 7:30-lO 30~m. SB fee df pta~C'h b!a and small on the Collt;ge Fine Art Dq>artmcnt. Bill West . 673·9:J60. . Gtasarnan. who t ches lntroductJon Golden West College mmunlty "OIUltl'fTAnON YEEK PADUt.'" to Opera classes. guides the partld· Ccntn-. 15744 Coklcn W 1st:. Hunt· ~e Monday listing. Thureday also panl.9 lo stx mUSC"ums. lhrec operu. lngton Beach. 89l·3991. fnitures the UCJ ~l ChoCr at the two Droadway ahows. two concerts • llAa& 18B&LL Al'fD TBS IUIYTIDI 8SC?IOl'f, evenings. In- definite. Old Dana Point cafe: ~4720 Dtl Prado. Du1a Potnt. 661-6003. ll.IClt SDIUIAJ'f, ett Wedne.day llatlng. lttc Fine Arts Concert Hafl at 7:30 p.m. and also feetures a half-day Man· Theater • hattan city tour. Prc.otrtp class "Aln'T1111'G OOU" at the Cur· DAVID TBOllAS. at ng· AdY&Dce Blllln& aessloM att Jan. 7, 8, 9, 14. 15, 16, DAllVSY Ta.A YLOa. sec Saturday llstlnRr--· er/aonawnter. perform new material from 7-lOp.m. with thetnpoccumna ta.In Call Dinner Theater. See Friday which lncorporates a ttJ~IJJI slngiJlA. AK ICB CAPADlt8 llCUltSl01' to Jan. l 8·26. 8716 tncludcs •Ir ~ PIAIOST OLLY IAMAmll. -see F'rtday llatlng." 115.~1~·rFOLA .. at the Grand DlnnCT _l>Od_..._TY_. pa_n_torn_i_m_e. sto_rtes_._a_nd_a_bl_1t-...--view __ 1ec __ 101_u_ng_cha __ m_pton_ ... Sc:ot __ t_porta __ t_1on_. _dou __ bl_r:_occu_pa_n_cJ_' _hot_et_ Theater. Stt Friday llsllng. llOllJllS :•OWN and hla trto. ace Friday usung. OOID:RS1' PlllU.IP8. att Frtday listing. 9'1tPllAln& AT1t8 a PIUBM>e and the ••U. Prlc:e Trio. see Frtday llsUng. "IDSllET•' at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhou~. Stt F'rida,Y ll ting •011Y SISTER &ILUJlr. at tfie Coeta Mesa CMc Playhouse. Sec Friday IJsUng. "8AIJIT JO.AK'• at South Coa t Rept'rtory. Stt Frtday llstlnR. "SUGAR" at the Sian Clemente THE PORT THEATRE 673-6260 M Of' ... I •• A .. S••'• 'oc Pop JVLIOIOLUIAS opens hJs 3-nlilht show at the Pactflc Amphlthealrc tonUlht. Special guest tar lS Mtchael Community Thcatu. S« Friday ltst• ------------- ln«'l'OP. OIRL8"' on SoUth Coast Repertory·a Second Stage. Sec Ii;;;;;;;;;;;~ Miirn Silver Jubilee Tour Northern Sinfonia of England Program mcludes Mozart's Hom Concerto No 2 and Seibe(1 Nottumo for Hom and Strings . . Tickets: $9, $7.50, $6 • Charge by phone weekdays, (714) 856-6617 For further information, telephone (714) 8*6379 Sunday, October 7, 3 p.m. Crawford Hall, UC Irvine ... Richllrd Hickiix, conductor Barry Tuckwtll, horn soloist I \ : No other newspaper. br:ings you mor.e · of your city council, planning commission school and college districts and county g'?ver_nment than the llilJ Pilat ,_ THE GREAT WORLD CRUISE OF THE QUEEN ELIZABETH 2 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21-8 P.M. ·Admission $3.00 PETER & THE WO/J & ENCHANTED TOYSHOP Featuring Pacijial Ballet Sl/NDA Y. SUTF.MJJER 2J!2 P .M. ·M~ion SS Ad\-ince; S6 at Door SOUDI. COAST SYMPHONY Marvelle Ccirlaga. ~euo-Soprano SAnlaDAY, SlP1lMBEa 11 8 PM -•Reserved Seats SIS. S10. S8 JOHN WILKES BOOTH SATURDAY, SEPTEKBER 29 8 P.ll. -FIIE ilTS 119 •Admission $6 Advance; SG at Door SLEEPING ·BEAUTY R£D POPPY BAU.ET CMc Baltet of Southern c..llf. SAnllDAY, SlP1IM.IU 29 7tl0 P .M. -•,• tr' 1' • SS Alhlftca; S6 • Doow . LTD UNLIMITED Modem & Tap Dance FRI & SAT, OCT. 5 & 6 8 P.M. -•Aanmaon S6 ~ f1 •Door ORANGE COAST COLLEGE R•rt 8. Moore Theattt · hirview &: Arlington, Cost1 M " TICKET INFO .. (714) 432-5527 Call for 1984-65 Schecls~ ~ A«cpctd F« lv:M1ln Ticket ·o~ ~ b Cl'lllcnn. Gold c:.Cls IScnlor\I ' • ' .. .. . . le Pilot Weekender/ Friday, septembet 21, 1984 Calendar accommodatlona, and a low co.t museum. opera. theater and concert package. plua city tour. Triple oc· cupancy ts $664. 997-8844. BlllOOS CtJJQOJllQBAll AUTO-~ llliS&Oll. 250 E. Baker St .• eo.1.a Mesa. Ant~ecarsclrca 1912· present. 9 a.m.·5 p.m. Wed.-Sun. 546-7660. DANA WB.AJtl' at Dana Point Harbor offers half-day and thrtt- quaHcr day aportftabtng trips. 496-5794. DAWY'8LOCJ[SRaJeooffersdeep sea a portrtahlng trips dally. 673-5245. DlSRYLAND. 1313 Harbor Blvd.~ Anaheim. ''Gospel Night" Is held tonight from 8 p.m.·1 a.m. a nd fea· lures Shirley Caesar. Rev. James Cleveland and the Southern Call- fomla Community Chotr. and the Clark Sisters Advance Uckets are 812 presaJe or 81 5 at the door. Also. "Donald Duck's 50th Birthday Par- * ~ • , t 00 ·.~ •• ~ Q). ~-··· • >< a.:> • ~ • , t •(In ill Ill*'' 11vt not bich in price: NUC>n· able (09~ m..Uied ed~. ade" ta ~nted at noon and 4 p.m. Saturday and Sundar.. Tomorrowland ahowcaae. the new 'World Premiere Cfrcle·VlaJOn." featurtng the 360· dqp'tt films "Wondere of"Chlna" and "Amttlcan Journey.;: Senior Fun Unlimited Puaporta available to guests 60 yea,_ ol age and over every .Thunday a:nd Friday. Hours Frt. 10 a.m.-6 p.m .. Sat.-SUo. 9 a .m .·9 p.m .. Mon.·Thura. IO a.m.-6 p.m . 999-4565. DOTTS Blt-T l'AIUI. 8039 Snch Blvd.. Buena Park. Tuesday and Wednesday. Sept. 25-26. guest• may enjoy watching the taping Of the "Pat BOone U.S.A ... show In the Cloud 9 BallrQom. Abo featured at the Park Is the excitement and color of the Old West with Wild West Stunt Showa. Cancan dancers. authentic stagcci>achea, and narrow-gaUJte trafns In Knott 'S Ghost Town. "Studio K" offera a Video Dence Party each Saturday. Ltve performances or Jim Turner· a "The Country Music Star ol the Lawrence Welk Show:· Jimmy Sha nnon'• "Ireland'• Lovable Maal· cal Clown.·· and Antonio Hoyoe' "11\e UtUe Charl1e Chaplin" are featured. Knott'a wlll be open Mon.-F'r1. 10 a .m.-6 p.m .• Sat. 10 a .m.-11 p.m .. Sun. 10 a.m.-8 ~.m. 220,.5200. LIOl'f COON RY 8.APAaJ, 88Q.O lrvlne Center Drtve. i..,una Hills. Two new lion cubs~ on Aug. 26 are on di.play In the baby anlm.&1 nul"Kf'Y. The new acuon adventure enter.tatn· ment center. aurroundt'd by a wann tropical aetung. offma thr1lla to the excitement of new r1dca -Sahara Maze Track and Kylaml Slick Track. For nautical adventurers. Ju.n41e Tube Bumper Boat and Shilnafcc Rac:erBoatOeeta havebeenexpanded. Cruae on the Zambezi River, view unique antmal exhibits. and take a hike through hah nature trall. Opens dally 9:45 a.m .. last car admitted 5 pm. 837-1200. · TBlt LOS ANGELES zoo,-5333 Zoo Or1ve. Los Angeles Yun Yun and Ying Xln. a pair of ,Pant pandas on loan from the. People'• Republic '!' "IOUJIO" CN ""' 11 1&1 • ammlll ,.~ tlO ..... • ere> 11IO, H~. 1030 "IEI OAMf' ~U) 12'30. lOO. 5'30. 800 1~30 .._If M alllTllT" 1111• llaJl 17 ai • AlllTDI 1• ttS, 4 .. 6•\. I 4t Jtlt , PACIFIC DR VE· "ID DIS' (PC.lJ) NS "Tll-. llllD" ~U) ... UUlt ... (PC) I PUS '1Wl[ .... (l) ORANGE ~ 11t41U4 .. 1~ .... _,..,, ... w. * * SUflU •AP Milli fwrf SAT. I ..... * * I ... I '•~ :. ', 1 , •,' • ~ ' ' Put a Jew words to work f<?T you la HABRA .. ~f<•h t -...U....:~ ! • j MISSION ~"CPI) PUIS ....... .,. _. (I) WAR NtR ur. · .iJ. ,1. "".'A r1- ta..•...-.··--~ l .... .__. 1 ... •=·-· Ill ... ., .. in the llilJPilat .. , 642-5671 JUna Remy vm, OD loan trom Mad•me T1awa4'• Wu llueum In London, may be 'rieWed at Ballock'• Wllehire at J'uhlon Wand ln Newport Beach tJaroaCh 8aAday. -·-YIU) E.dMrds ~Twin ~--(7t4)&1CMID80 -LMl----IUCH--:i ....... ~Miiiii;;:'Tii11iii.ati:i=M Edwlf'dl South Coast Edwwdf Udo 487-1711 485.QZO wtSftiiiiiiSTER , Edwwds CiNrna West 881~35 t '· Calendar. China through October. can ~ eeen rrom 10 a m .. 5 p.m. dally. (213) 666-4650. TD PA VILIOlt QCS&N of'fera tour cn.tl9C9 ol Newport Harbor. 9howtng the homes ol John Wayne and other pcraonaltttca. from the Balboa Pavtllon In Newf)l?rt Beach. O.Uy every hour. noon through 3 p.m. 673·5245. 8AW .JOAR CAPlaTaAJlfO M"'l IJlll. 31882 Camino Capistrano, San Juan Ca~. Callfornaa·a oldeet bulldlng. Nauve American and early S,.nhih culture exhibited. 49:M424. MA WORLD.1720So.ShcftaRd., MJaaton Bay, San Otego. The luahly landlcapcd martne park featuru the ARCO Penguin Encounter. a 87 mtlllon exhibit that hOU8CS 400 pengutna, killer whale Shamu. Sea Woild'a top entertainer, and eca IJona and dolphtns. A acenlc akyr1de and PSA Skytowtt ride for a panonuntc view ol MisaSon Bay t.sotrcm:I. Daily 9 a.m.~. (619) 224-3562. 8DUIAR LIDAltY AJQ) 0.All- DS"8, 2847 Pacific Coast Highway, Oorooa del Mar. Roeea, cactus. annual gardens. an orchJd conaenat.ory, kOI ponds and a gift &how. Da:tly 10;30 a.m .... p.m. am PLAOa llOvm.AllD, n 11 Beach Blvd.. Buena Park. An elaborate collection of movie and tclevtston mcmorabUQ Including life· like repllcas of more than 200 re· nowned atara are featured. New ahlblta Include carol Burnett, Mr. T ·11 and Ronald Reagan. F1' t. I 0 a.m -10 p.m .• dalfy 10 a m -8 pm. 522·1154. UIUVSUAL8TO'DI09TOUa. l 00 UntYC:nal City Plaza. Untvcna.I Oty. A a!Ulded. bdltnd-~-ecenes acunaon ihrOVgf\ Hollywood's blMt:st and bus1est movte-TV comJ)ltt. 9 30 a.m.-3:30 pm. daily. (818) 877-1311. TDQVDJllllAJlY AJlfDIPRUC& oooea,loclltedatthcaouthcrnmoat-------""'--------------.:.._------------------------"'---........ ..--------------------------------------,-------------;..... Point of the ~ Beach Freeway. Hours 10 a.m.-6 p.m. dally. (213) 435·3511. lt.AOIRO WAft ... 111 Via Vttdc Or1ve. San Dimas. The targest water· or11.'nted amuacmcnt park west of the RocklC9 features the wave cove. kiddie pool , two speed alldes and four serpentines. New acuvtuea Include The.' Dropout. Rampage. and Raging Rlvl.'ra (the ·longest Inner tube water r1de In Amenca). Mon.·Frt. l O a.m.· l O p.m .. Sat.-'Sun. 9 a.m.-10 p.m. CJoeea Sunday. 592·6453. IAJlfDmGOZOOA WILD A!011AL PARIC. San Otego. New operaung hours arc In effect. Zoo houn dally 9 a.m.·4 p.m. with gueata staying on grounds until 6 p.m .. throuah Oct. 28. Animal park houra 9 a.m . ...{' p.m. With gucsta staying on ground unUJ 5 p.m.. through February. (619) 231-1515. I a.m.-3 p.m. W:::A ..... ORANG! COAST COLI.EGE SPACES $10 • 432-a.G .... .., ............. . BARGAINS GALORE/I AIU cuarc1• ADllHtON •MMNm . . ed~J1n~ ·,,, .•• u•.f!R ! , R.1 ., . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. " ... ... .~.· S1AATS TODAY w:wwwa =c..-......... l!!!I!!'-... -........... ....,.,.._ ,, ......... "''''······-i: .... . ,, • • t • • • ~ ............................................ .._,.~-....... -._ ........ _ .................... .... • - • 12 Pilot Weekender/ Frtday, September 21, 19S. Galleries llUSEUllS BO'WEU lil'OS&Ull, 2002 N. Main St .. Santa Ana. "Refl~Uons:. Pafnt- togs of Jerry Wayne Downs" features surreaUallc work• by the Costa Mesa artist about technology's effects on mankind. Runs Indefinitely. Houra Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 pm.. Sun. noon-5 p m. 972· l 900. LAGOKA BEACH MUSJttJll OP AllT, 307 Cliff Dnve. Now ahown Is "Callfomla Contemporary Artists 22." New works on handmade paper by Cathy Morehe-ad, and mixed media lyrical ab<itracllons by Barbara Weld· on· are reatuttd. ~ showing are "A.~te of Color: Works on Paper·· from the Hlrshhorn MuaaJm and Sculpture Garden. whJch conalste of 32 abstract and repreacntatlonal gouache and oU palnUog . water· colors. and colored pencU drawtnas by American and European artists "from the late 19th and 20th centurtea. and "California Htstortcal Artists I: Mabel Alvarez and Elanor Colburn." featur- ing two htahly significant figurative palntera wfit>K careen reached their peak In Southern Caltfomla during the late 1920.. Both throtA«h Sunday. Tu .-Sun. • 11 :30 a.m;'4:30 p m. 494 531 GALLltam& TH1t APnllROOJlf GALLERY, 503 Park Ave .. Balboa Island. Spc:ctal· tzJng In "emet21ne artiste" Sandra Decis. Karen rrwerabendt, Joy Pat- terson. Drawings, patnuncs. and Moonprlnta. P-ermancnt South· western Art comer wttb a ~lccttoo of New Mexico pottery and aculpture. Tue$.-Fr1. 2·6 p.m .. Sat.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. 675·8675. ART18't'80ALLERT, l I Monarch Bay Plaza, South Laguna. A one-man show of oil paintings by Wayne Forte. nauvc Southern C8Itfomtan. i. held. Through SeP.t. 30. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m .-6p.m .. Mon. J-6 pm. 661·9352. CALLIGllAPBIC ARTS, 2219 Main St .• #37, Hun~on Beach. Ortl1nal artwor,kd and pr1nts by sev-uaf regional andlntematlonalartl ta. tncludfng callll{raphy and handmade paper ptecelt. Chinese brush painting and watercolore. lndeflnlte. Mon.-Sat. 1-5 p.m. 960-5775. CAL STAT& nJLLSRTON, M Jn Art Callt-D', 800 N. State College. Recent work.a ol 37 young alumni are exhibited. Through OcL fO . Mon.•Frl. noon-tp.m .• Sun.2-Spm. 773-3347. CBAM>Lsa GALL&RT, 7745 Herschel Ave., La Jolla. Featuttd are the 90ber and dartng landecapea by Patrtck Tobtn of Laguna Beach. Wed.· Sat. 11 a.m to 7 p.m .. Sunday 1-5 p.m. CBRISTIA?f TBOMASOA.LL&RY. 1001 W.17thSl.,SulteT.c.o.taMcsa. An exhlbttlon of abstract ~lptural figures rcatua1ng the work ol Annie Healy la featured. ~ abstract otl ~nllngs by John Badger: lnddlnlle. Tues.-sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. COJlfT&MPO AllT A880CIA TIOJlf, 332 Foreat Ave •• #22, ~na Beach. The opening orthls new gallery 11 held Saturday Trom 10 a.m.-5 p.m . 497-6727. COSTA IBaA ART LEAOtJB membera Gloria Weber. Ira Dobm. and ROKmary Pankretz dlaplay their watercolors at G~ndale ~ Sav- ings offices In f'aahlon Island. Orange CO&st Savt~ at Adams and Meaa Verde East to Co.ta Mesa rcaturea palnUngs by Alyce .Richards. Crace Mcrjanlan·a paintings arc s hown at the Costa Mr.sa Civic "Playhouse. John Genis show• his artwork at the Mesa Verde Library In Costa Mesa. Through September. 'tBlt &DGE, 212 N. Harbor Blvd .. Fullerton. Recent work by Kay Whit· ney arid Jan Taylor Is shown. Th hOct. 12. Tun.·Sat. 11 a .m.-4 THE COMEDY HIT l40U'VE BEEN 1MITDIG FOIL '"ALL OF ME' IS A SIAPSTICK. HIPSTER HYBRID OF 'HEAVEN CAN WAIT AND -rOOTSIE.'" _.,.......,nOPU~ . . "Lily Tomlin gets laughs and poignancy from her character ... and Steve Martin vaults to the top of the class ,with his brazen, precise·performance. This one goes In the time capsule." _.._.. C..... TDIR JU6AZDIE '"Steve Martirl and Liiy Tomlin are unified ln'thelr Jove of comedy, and generate an explosive joy ... they're a perfect match." _ ........... war wau:a ~ STEVE MAR11N ·LILY TOMUN AU.6FME The comedy that ptOYea that ooe"• a crowd; STAIRS TODAY •"AU of Me' whips up a delectable batch of •lapechtick madness ... Steve Martin la spectacular." _.._._ .... PIAY8CW llA&\llQ BREA COSTA MESA LAGUNA HILLS Edwards/ ,.._ VlfJO UA Movies Edwards Cinema Sanborn Laguna Hdts EdwardsMmic>n 9904022 540-3102 -Mall 7~11 ViejQ Mall 495-6220 BUENA PARK IRVINE LA HABRA ORAN&E WHTMtlmR UA Movies Edwards University AMC Fashion Square Cmedome UA Twin Cinemas 952-4991 854-8811 691~ 634-2553 895-5333 COSTA MW Edwards South Coast Plaza 54~2711 OIWllE Stadium Drive·ln 639-1770 ueamr.~ 1.n tbe Lower Deptba" by Robert S&ncba la ,part 0 •• hlcano" ~blt al Santa Ana eonece. READ THE FINE PRINT. YOU MAY HAVE JUST MORTGAGED YOUR UFE. .. I I . I I . l .... • I J I ~ ~1 I I l I ,._ • 14 Plot Weekenmr/ Friday, s.ptember 21.J984 p.m. 871-5862. &LIZAl.D& GAU.UT DfTSR· ffATIO"AL· 384 Forest Ave.. No. l 3A. t.uuna Ek ch. The Gallery features "talln·Ammcan Corporate Art wtth Armandina Lozano pres- enting p&lnllnp In pastel, Vernon Terry exhibiting eculpturea In cast ~ment, broMe and alabaster, and Antonio Steinhardt featuring Pho- tqp'aphy In color and black aricf whJtc. Through Sept. 30. ifuea . .SUn. 11 a.m. Aftermath•• le 8hown wtth a collecUon to 6 p.m. and by appolntment. • ol Vietnam related won. by 17 497-5303. arta.ta, J)rtmarlly from callfomla. GI.ORT BILL. 416 31at St .. can. 997-6720. . nery Vlllaae. Newport Beach. Paint· laVIRS nJllS AltT8 CSJn'Sll. too by c'.rloria Bradc90n featur1n& 4801 Walnut Ave .. Irvine. ··an the ·:Sttne.t ol Newport'' are uhlbfted: Form ol FumUu~" a fl:l'OUP exhl· Tues.·SaL J 1 a.m. to 5 r·m bttlon al functJonaJ and· non·func:· GtJOOltllfll&DI OAI SaT, Chap-tJonalc:ontemp0raryartfumltureand man Collc«c. 333 N. Olawll. Ora~. other effect• ol lhe homc~eeented "Since Vktnam: The War and Ita through drawing. and cw larte ''This y~~~:h~Sy~t§!!n! '' ''Mozart's greatest hit ... Mozan comes raucously alive as a punk rebel, grossing out the Establishmcnt ... a grand, sprawling entcnaintnent~'-Tunc • "A sumptuous musical cpic ... a love story, a drama of revenge and the sfory of a young musical rebel felled in his prime!' -DaviCI Ana>n, Newsweek , "'Amadeus' is unequivocally the grandest epic ever made about the life of a great composcr ... brimful of imagination, complexity and. sublime art!' ., • ¢' --Bruec Wi.llia.rmon, Playboy '! .. A stunning motion picture!' -BobThomas. Asaooated Presa "With 'Amadeus' director Milos Forman has created what might be one of the best movies about music ever made ... But best of all... we have here a picture that providcS .. sustcnancc, a story with aftershocks and repercussions!' . . .. -Chru Hodai.fidd. Jloibn1 Stone . ' ... EVERYTHING YOU'VE HEARD IS TR.UE ... SAliLZAEl'-'TZ --PETER SHAFFER'S AMADEUS .MU.OS FORMAN- F. MURRAY ABRA.HAM TQ\l HUtcE EUZABElll BERRIOOE SL~ CAUJ..JW *1\0 OOTRICF: CHRlSm>E EBER.SOU JEFFREY ,P.CS CHARLES KAY ==: MICHAEl. HAUSM.AS • BERTIL OHL.Sn: ,=: Ml.Ra>l.AV CJ.iDRICEK .::= NEVlUE MARRINER '=PATRIZIA\'().; BRANDENSTEIN -TWYlA THARP~--": PETER SHAFFER -.. SAUL 7..AF.NTl -.. MILOS FORMAN ..,.OIGOl'f ..:-i-·-· "''4\1SIO!I• .. -~-, __ .. ,,_ _____ .. _ ..... ,.~lCDLOI;· .• ~ EXCLUS IVEENGAGEM~NT r-===~~=======N~O_W__,;..:..PLA~Y~IN~G===::.:::.;;:::::.:=~~==::::::::: EDWARD NEWPORT CINEMA UA CORONET NfWPORf 81'.' CH 17141644-0760 W~'JWOOD '75·9"'41 WED THAU SUN-12:1'5-• 7:00-1000 DAILY· 12:35-3·45· 7;00-10;15 ..._ _________ ~Hs ... no ... 10.-CXJ(DoL.ev..,.... ·six TUCK ...._ _ _._ ______ _, .. llCale .aalpture. le ehown. Al80 on exhtbtt are "Bnice ttouMon: AF ~ ... ma Dana.Id SUtherland'• .culpture. ?hlblt enUtled ''OracleL" All OUUCI' No¥. 10. Mon.-Thuna. 9 a.rn.-9 p.m • Frt. "9 LmAJ p.m .• Sat. 9 a.m.·3-. 652-1078. DCl -Ul91 QAI IRT. 484 l<.' CO..Hwy .• ~Beech. Aahowtng ol two contemporary aurreali9t•. John Mllholen and Clfff'W .. mann. whoee ~£MUNS I wwb lllmtratc tbe complex todlltY ol the 1980'• .. featured. '!l'h,.. Oct 25. Al.90, Rtchard Maly. ,.,..-ear- t.oonlst teacher. r.tUl'M h ........ arid watercdon. Dally I 0:30 a M.;a p.m. 494-5597. JlfS1rPOa1' •ACll CITT 11.\U. OA1.&.&llT, 3300 'NeWport Bhd .. Newport Beach. Vincent 1"ar're.ll exhlblta otla. acrylic. and tQk draw· toga. Al.90 Jama L. 'IihOmpilOll'e ~·,.~ ---..... liCJll'.. ~ • ··==-~ -----W' -'39-8710 •JtE• llWl 963 1307 STMJUI .__,. fMaY fOtAt .... 821-.4070 -~l-0655 W PAllll i.W COW--~ CllTl IUA 919-4141 •I.Miii lllS 768-'611 CDWMDS CIU4 COOE.R £0WARDS/SANUN lAGtN 11..lS MAU * 1'11£Sl.HTED .. DCUY STEREO "THE BEST HOLLYWOOD MOVIE OF 19841" ·J HOO.man Tl>e Villege Voice "A tough, engrossing detective thriller~' • Jud1ttl cnet. WOA-TV I · 1!' n -r': ~ ---' • Il J. _.m --~ ·-ce=n-..... .. ~ ......... ---.... ,,llSO raE MlWll Oii-if PWUIATlna • ...... 9!'>2•993 UA MOW.$ I 111111 lllJll ,,_ IMI I ll TCllO~l­ lDWAAOS SAIXXEBAU ll QO llD Al llOCafflO .. t COSTA IEA 91MIU EDWARDS CN.IM CUfT£R -llllll8I» Al MIMI:$ fOUlffAlf YMID 962 2481 f~TAW VALUY DR-If lOIWfAI~ \ U._S2l-lill SllO GA Tl'WAY 5 SA.twfQ.Wlln OU.'34-25Sl <XDM' OllNM a SA IWJ SMTA MA 540-1«4 EDWAllOS lllSTOl •TOtAt~ ElmlS?P 191 393~ (OWNIOS CNIM MS I •PtMSnl A I DID JllSl 'Echoes of Silence ~ Philip Trager, a lawyer who found beauty in build.inas. will exhibit bis architectural pbot011'3phs at Oranae Coast College, startin& W~y. Traacr passed the Bai -cum in 1960 but became an independent photograpbef in t 966. He bas rcc:eivc4 many awards for bis an includina the Book ofthC Year Award &Oft! th~ American histitute of Graphic Arts. He also received praite from critics. ··So sreat is bis passion for the buildings of Manhattan that he even finds somcthina to love in some burned out windowless slums," said the New York Times Boole Review. Included in OC'Cs exhibit are photographs published in Tracer's books, ''Echoes of Silence .. and .. Philip Traier. New Yotlc:" The display may be viewed in the Photo Gallery on the campus at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. weekdays throu&h OcL 16. Gallery admission is by donation. NEW IN NEWPORT OLD IN TRADITION •ddition to an extraordinary ction Of a la carte dishes, we iJvite you to savour• 7-COURSE DINNER FOR $24.50 . .. •• G&llerles eculpture la ehown. nuou.ot Oct. 3. Mon.·Fr1 .. 8 a.m .-5 p.m. 528= 1258. OAAla l8KIOlt carra. Corona dd Mar. Richard Muy. a.rt19t-<:ar· toonlal teacher. ihoWa hla worlul Saturday only during their 7th ~ nlVttSary. 9a.m .·4 p.m AWARD WINNING RESTAURANT ORAJfO& COA8TCOU.SOS Photo Oellery. 2701 Falrvtew Road, Co8ta Mea; ftllllp Trager'• plctura show· inc his peulon Tor the bulldi,. of Manhattan are on display through Oct. 16. Mon.·Fr1. 8 a.m.·5 p.m. and 6-G p.m.. claeed Tue9day evening. 432·5039. FEATURING OUR EXTENSIVE MENU \ OllAllG& COURTY C&lft'KJl POii CORTSllPOllAllY AllT, 3621 W. MacArthur Blvd .• Sp. 111. Santa Ana. Three Southern Callfomta arttsta are featured In .. Metaphyalca and Sym· Sunday Buffet Brunch Unlimited Champagne • Sea Food Bar Hot & Cold Entrees • Dessert Table · AJI You Can Eat 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Adults Chlldren Now Serving COUNTRY STYLE •a. 95 under 12 •4.s Children WKter a No Charge SllllY$199 IRllCI Early 8'rd Dir.ri1en 3:30 to 6:30 Complete Dinner lnduduig Soup and Salad, & DM~rt •S.91 Includes Beverage Well Drink or 8etK ..... to l:tl Pl M&«Mt1 1712 PleCentla CoataMeu Lunch Buffet M·F I 1-3, 13.95 Dinner Buffet M-Th 4-8, •S .95 I 7502 a.«11 11/vd, 11t Slllt~ Hclntlngton a.«11 842-5505 THE COUNCIL OF 'l'HE NEWPORT-HARBOR ART MUSEUM ~ntiques ~lfn&t • 1984 September 20, 21 , 22 and 23 ThurSday, Friday and Saturday · 11 :00 A .M. until 8:00 P.M. Sunday 11:00 A .M. until 5:00 P.M. SPECIAL EVENTS Adrnialion: (indudet C.taJo,) ••..••••.••.•.••••• Docent Toun; <indudlns aidmiuion) •••••••••••••••• Each l.Adure: (do. nOI indUde admielion) • • • • • • • • • • • f'ive Ledures: (does not include .tmiMion) •• ~· ••••• ,· • ~ Hiitbot' Alt ~~ Show 850 s.n a.m..te Drift Newpqrt 8MCh. CA 92660 7~1122 s 5.00 $10.00 s 6.00 $25.00 ,. - ·. •• . ... • I ' • 'Anything Goes' when it comes to songs, dancing But Cole Porter's whimsical musical ts worth dusting off at Curtain CS.11 T11 TITIS Of the vintqe Am~n musical comedies, in tbc pre-.. Oklahoma" era Vt')>tn story was subtervient to sona, ont of the most enjoyable 11 Cole Port.tr'• whimsical shipboard sap .. Anythina Goes. .. However corny and clicbed its cha~ may appear to today's audieoocst it possesses a cenain musty charm and merits an oc- C8$ional dustin& off if only to il- lustra1e the ptOpCIS of the ~ duriJl& the past half-century. 11li.i it receives ~y at Eliz.abetb Howanl's silly little ditty by the comic lead. Curtain Call Dinner Tbca~ in Howard Pat1en00. a nlbber-faccd Tustin. furuayman who plays _tbe beoip Director John J. Feroli has in· poptcr Moonf.ilce Martin. comm.au .. --------.. stilled a brisk. jazzy J*% in his his ·molt larceDoua Kt in a sbow-production and utilizes the &a.Jans of atc:aliDa niabt with a hiJarioua reodi-SIJPER NATlJQl llENUS. Nt1t•Nll! tltlJdou 1.orrp ,,, '*YA/JU /talthy for IMcll tuUI "'11Mr! . GULLIVER'S COMINQ . <THIS 'PALL c.All New C[)j nner CMenu II> '¥rime Wibs of t:Beef ......,... asBNTIALI : .... i -· ·.· -. , r. H rHPR ; I ,. . • ' • . -i ! ~ ·1 1 1 oo fewer than five cho.reopapbcn to tioa of .US usually is a throwaway supervise the myriad dance aumben. number, '"Be Like the Bluebird. .. h's Some a~ ovmtooe. but they're the cberry oa top of a riotous faithful tot.be period. pcrfonnance. Portcr'ncore always is the primary Wben one thinks of .. A.a~~ motivation for visitina the show. Goes.~wevcr. one envisima 'Soap like "You're the Top." .. It's Mmna bdtin& ber numbers off'tbe belOvely," .. FrieodShip," .. , Gtt a ti.ck . Joy Matthews, in tbe Kick Out of You" and the title tune · Mmna.o role. ~n:ac;bet the 1*::k are certifiable daisies -yet the wa.Uwilhberpiano.:barvocllscytdp. hi&hli&htoftheTustin production isa ~-RU.~ 17) Champagne _ . 7..{'--.. , Sunday Brunch ~~--}·--• EnJoy Our Full·SCTvice In the Mtd1tttranean Room 10:00-3:00 pm ~R'l'ERDOL .-HOTEL_,. 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine (714) 833-2 770 \{)ppo$nt Or1n1t Countv Airport) Newport'• Cannery Village JAZZ NITESPOT! @felido Jaza • Jus 9PM-1:30 AM 'f • c I .. 'PM-11 PM ....... LUNCH 11 AM.aPM DINNER 'Nlshlly & PM '° MJdDI .. Galleri WE PIK>lmU YOU ·ooooc ... 111 FOOD LUNCHES. QNNEA8. 'TROPtCAl COCKT .U..S. 8AHCJU(T f ACLITIES, CATEflNQ, FOOO TO 00 ~1~'tl SPECIAL DllCOUNT ONFOODTOQO Royal Ambiance India's Finest Cuisine SEPTEMBER SPECIALS 'A Off thru Sept•m* 30th, All LuncheOns Dally SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH $7.ts• ~ti//~~ ROYAL KHYBER Cuisine of India 1000 Bristol Street North, Ne,,.;port Beach (714) 752-5200 •nm. 5'pl. JOtli. Boot your boli"•~ ,.nws b NnqMn• nov.t WORLD PREMIERE Piiot Weelc~/ Fridey, September 21, 19&4 17 BELL A bcndit performance of .. My CAllAOdD-AuditiaM for the • •• SisterEileen .. attbeColta Mesa Civic cpmedy .. Cbipotr~,_.. will be hom..,e 18 Playbowe Will be ,ivca Oct. 7 at 4 bcldl\M!ldayat 7:l0p.a.81dle0olca but otberwi9' lhe'a ao~us and p.m. for tbe Harbor Arca Adult Day McsaCivicPla~661 Haalihoa qwteefrectivcin..a.Jowakey. Catt Center-•. procccds Will be used St.. Colt& Mesa-..clirecior Pali Michael Wl"Ctl, as the peripatetic for impedwawnl& IO the co.n~ TambelliDi will cast IWO naen and suitor of a proper EaaJishman'1 cent home. Which provides a~ lhRe'WOme&iDVlf)'UllMt~for fiaDoec performs 'with bounce and peotic proaram for elderly the abow, Which opens Nov. S.::.bll -encray, while Jonelle Goddard a» people .... call the center at 543-9331 6SO-S269 for additional infor- cecd1 in doinc all that'• demanded of for ticket infonnation. mation. ... her cbatacter, lookin' lovely, u the r-"......._~'-"=-==-:=--:.:.-----==;;=.---------- object of bis affcctaon1. J. Kelly Poorman enac:u the bemused Briton splendidly, while Danette Holland pulls out all the stercotypi?1 stops as . httcnon's binssy moll. You11 &et a kick out of .. Anyt.bing Goes," which is as Well prele1'Ved as any musical of its era. Performances continue ni&btly except Mondays at varyinacurtain times lhroLl&h Oct. 2& at the Cunain Call. 690 El Camino Re.al. Tustin. Call 838-1540. BACUTAGE -Chapman College paduate Mic BcU rctum1 to his alma mater Saturday and Sunday for.two · ~ormanoes of his one-man show 'Artist With a Conscience: A Portrait of Paul Robe$on" .... Bcll, a pro- feuional entertainer who was a member of the Fifth Dimension for three~ will perform at a p.m. and tickets rnay be arckrcd at 997~25. FETIUCCINE WITif SMOKED SALMON Delici.lte ribbOn pa~a with smoked s.almon, blended into Cl :wlvdy sauce of b~tttr. O"Nm _ <ind Italian che-escs. Plus your choice of a mixed'green or orange <llmond salad. CREPE ST. JACQUES AND SPINACH·SOUFFLE CREPE Our seafood d · combinfd with a savory Spinach Souffle Crepe. Plus your choice of a ~xed grttn or orange almond 5.llad. VEAL SCALIOPINI PARMIGIANA Breaded vta~ scallops sautero, tJlen topped with Italian tomato sau~ and Provolon ·, "' Romano and ~n chttSeS. Served with a vegdable, potatoes and your choice of a mixed green or orange almond salad. . .. \-\k'vt dropped the pncc of delicious old world cOOking.To just S6.95 for tiny onr of these d~t dinners, any night after five. This irresishb'le ~won't be around loop.. So.visit us &000. You11be5poiled after rh is. : South Coast Plaza (714} 556-1225 . Un1ver 'ty Towne CmtC?r, San Diego (619) 453-6616 Offtr good after SPM. Don't nnss our ae!ig}ltful Sund.ly Brunch. .. .. 18 Pilot WW.fittdel/ Friday. Septembet·21. 1984 "BEH/Nlf THE SCENES" with • lrllii c.,11111 Restaurant Account Eiecutive '. Picks of the plays 0 .AAiiBINO GOBS." tbe COie Porter muatcal, la on .. at tbe ,_ ____ .... ________________ ..;;. ___ Curtain Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real. Tustin (838-1540). Performances a~ given ntghUy ex- cept Mondays at varying curtain lime& ~Oct. 28. """ .... i,; Theatrf', 7 Fft:edmaD Way. Arlabebn (772-7710). 'Perl~ wtll be gtven !lightly ~ Mondays at varying curtain tl1DC18 througJ> Oct. 28 ......... ~ Pictured ii Big Al froln .. Ars Diner" inside Tiie Bop, Bill Medley .,ict Bobby Hatfield's (The Righteous Brothen) new 5<rS/6CTnught-dub. Al serves the best trui geis, bot~ chili and fries in America. The Hop is located~ Fountain Valley. Call 963-2366. ''BAJllQJll. •• the musical bk>- graphy or P.T. Barnum. la being pracnted al the Newport Theater Arb Center. 2501 CIJff Or1\'e, New- port Beach (631 ~0288). Per- formances will be given Fridays and Saturdaya al 8 p.m. th~ Oct. 13. ..... ., .... . ''TBB B&ST LITTL& WllOllSBOUS& DI 1"ICXA8. •• a country-flavored musical. oomptctea Its run at the Hi&i'lequln Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-5511 ). Closing per-- formanccs a~ lonl,ght through' Swl- day at varying curtaJn Umes. v .,... .,... '"TBS P••MW:W'S DA1JOB'T&ll. •• a poUUcal eomedy, ta on .iagie at the Hun~ ae.ch Playhou8C. Main Street at YorktoWn AYmUC, Hubl· Jncton Beach (832-1405). Per- fonnancea are gtwn Fridays and Satwda~at8:30th.ro...gh0ct.13 . .,,, .... ~ ""l'BS ODtLa DI I08." a comedy about two elderly ftdu8Ce. la betng preeent.ed at the Garden Grove Com- munity Theater tn EMl&ate Park. ~ at. St. MUil'•· Garden G~ (897 ·5122). Pafon.anc:a wUJ be gtven Fnda}'ll and Saturda~ at 8 :30 ~ Oct. 6 wtth Sunday maUnea ~-23 and 30 at 2:30. •"llAJI O.L&M•.cBA,,. the Don Quixote muelCal, wlndl up dli9 week- end -the Flin.mt -'l'bmter. 4175" Fairmont Blvd.. Yorbe Linda ('779-8591 ). aomt« palllii lllMMn are tonight and -SillaUrdliya at 8, Sundayat2. · ·"lfl'-&a&sam."a~ abouttwo~tnNewYOirlt. opene 1.hta weekend at the ea.ta likMCtvtc~881..........., St.. Collla Meea ~ ..... fonnaPC.'Jel wtll be ~ ,,,.....,. through~ al 8:30 untJI OCl. 13. . •<JaBM"&T." an Arabtan .1'11«.hts 0 llOPl'OLk •• the musJcal bto-musical, open.a this wcetteiif . at gi:aphy of Jimmy Durante. ts In lta SCbesUan'a West Olnner Playhouse. world pmnlett at the Grand Dinner 140 Ave. Ptco. San Clemente ~-------~--------------~---! ,,.cf.. · 2· f .OR : 9i tbe .$ of. i ~~~\ < -.~f---<~ : ,,.,. I I I I 1. I I I I I I I I I I : I I I I I I I I I Choice of ten fabulous entrees including · , prime rib and fresh fish. ~ . Seating on first come, ftrst Served basis on 2 for t nights. · Otrer good on Wednesdays.~ Md F~ S·7 P.M. tfWii 9-28-84 .... ............ -Excelkot. ....v..,, - Very good. ,....,,, -Good. t' -Nol 90 good. I ..__._ __ lililiii.._llillli• I : CONCERT ••• I PromNe2 I competition," a......-ruailc:d. .. People Mr'C theft. Who bad IDOft I experience than I did.'" . I Fortunately for hilft; BlomllCidl I wasn't looking for cxpaience but I talent. After oOnducb the dtird I movement of Brabtit's ?aura= II ~~~~~other cities of Europe. I -rbc WbOle existence of music is I IOrndbiDa you can never pc:rfect. .. ·1 a,.., said. .. You·~ aewr atilfiCd I with younelf. There's ~ ..,.. W.. IDCll'e. nae ic:Dcc tri1h I Blori:lstcidt WU in~ c:oollal I ~apeaieuce," I Six ~ MD Cinusr 11artat an I ~t ~ lnitialy, be lulda't I lDtelided at to pow 10 sncx:Odullj, bUt this year will be South CCIMl t Sympbooy's tint as Colla ..._., I retident ordalrL I -rbis city bu .a.own daat ._ ~ I Decdcid and Milted. .. lbc ~ said. .. ~dle ......... I ever, will be a bij putol.a .-.... I ifwe~Jo.IUIYlveman..ec.oaay. I Tbei'e's aiDia& to have to be a re-l ed~ ottbe public 09 Wnkd I muac.. To help on that 1COre a WOfblloP 11 wi~ be bdd every Thm"lday .._.., pnor to tbe on:belua'scoacert, wtiaoc I a,.., wt caJIPllUCI will tive a I behind-the« c 1..:a IOot at die ;n>-.,.. &oma mlllicila•spoiatolvw:w. ~ttbe'faYtr.I; aeeca. lmr'9tk difraence belMICD a otioe ud a darine1."~n9•ll ,......., ... s m••••*Mta, ,.-.-..me. ... IK>t WeeKenoer/ ,.rlUll)', ~'"'"""' '•• 1ov-. •-• • • • ov1e reviews ADVSJllTVm 0. MJCllA&OO Mac Rauch 's scttpt. directed by W. O. ~~.a::· Rat~ PG. Undoubtedly the ... Richter, contain numcr6us cky rangat movte o( the yur. combfn· and imaginative scenes about alien -idCnCe-CICUOD...pulp...advCnture. "Invaders who may trtggcr the de· eatern and comedy dementa. atructlon o( Earth. The only thing nd90mC Peter Weller Is the tllle mtsstng ts a cohttent storyline . .,... .,. haraclcr. an expert brain surgeon. DDA'!&CA.Pllj: Rated PCJ-13. A hystclst and rock guitarist who htghlyl11!ncu1ngpremLsc:what1fyou cads the colorlul Team BanzaJ. Earl could enttt and part.Jc:lpate In eome· THOSE CRAZY SO's -60's DAYS ARE BACK AGAJNI ' Featuring fampus Al's Dlnert :rtie COOiest 1-fapPy HOllf ltl Town -Mon ,f~I 4.7 p m ' Dancl'lgl Uve ShoMl-&tny DJ's & Como• Open n1tctf -JOI" the ~ Don't mm aw 12-plece . HISTORY OF ROCK & ROLL SHOW ~ fearurrng JASON CHASE t~ l'loftCSI shoW ln,townl" Every Tuesday 8 p.m. one dse' dreams? After a fine st.art Involving a reluctant lelepath and a university ' sleep lab. "Oreamscapc" degenerat~ lnto a tale government con ptracy mm. It's ttdttmed. though. by an aclttng climactic battle tnsldc a President'• nightmare. Denni$ Quaid and Kate Capshaw tar • .,....,...., .Now you can get fresh in ·eosta Mesa. That's because there's a new Fuddruckers.,in towi:a. And everything at Fuddruck.ers is fresh. ' · OUr bwgers are made with fresb,grourid steak. In ~)'>ti can watch our butchers cut forequarters of beef and grind them into huge hamburger patties. Then we cook'em anyway you want-rare, medium or~. Our buns are fresh, too. We make our buns from scratth ml bake them right before your eyes. And to top off your ~r, we give )00 truckJoads of fann-fresh lettuce. tomatoes, pickles and sweet onions that you can pile on to yullr heart's content So, if you'd like to get fresh , come on over. NobQdy's as fresh as Fuddruckers. .. ISSS Ad&ms Av~ blt Halbof BIYd SrxJth off l-4ffi &o AdMns' Within~ Mes. Venle ShcJWil18 Center.comer ol AdMm and Hatbot. • .. ... ..,, ... c. ,. . .,. • Pilot Weekender/ Frktsy, S9ptember 21, 19~ DIDIARA JOiia AIU> TD Tai-trytng to rid New York ol gttoeta. PL& OP DOOlli ~ed PG. Ham.on Mumay'• constant wlaecracb are Ford returne tn a worthy follow-up to hlla11oua. and Stgoumey Weaver, "Rakltts ol th~ i.o.t Ark." The film whoee aii-rtment la haunted. P!'O\'ea haa trademark LUca.tlUm vtrtuea: ahe'• more than an tnteUc:ctual let" thnlllfll non"l8lop actJon. colorful lady. 'nle ultimate mon.ter that eetUn,gs and lltatc-ol·the-art effect. finally attacke New York la too funny and etunt work. lt al.lo has the to gJve away. v .,......,....,. TD llAltAT& ~ Rated PG. A predlctablecrowd·p for anyone who'aeverbeen picked on by a bully. Ralph Matthlo pla}'8 the new kid at a Caltfom1a .chool who becomes a target of teen marttal ~ expetU Nortyukt "Pat" Mortta play. an CC· centr1c custodian who leada Matthto through eome olfbcet -Orate train· Ing. Mo11ta and MacchlO gtve nne performancn. and director" John Avtld9en puUa tM right emotJonal ab1nga. u he did In "Rocky.·· .,,,.,,,.,... tryt"' to ave thta world from· a mlNIOn lo revive the a.&e Mr. spock, i:nyater1ou1 all·conaumlng force. whoee body wu left on the wwtable Splendid apeclal apecia.I efTect.e. Solid Oencala planet. They &lilo mmt fKe a dlrectJon byWolf'gan&Pcteraen("Du band of bloodthtrpty ltl1n&ona. Fans Boot'') ...,.., ...-ol the aenea ~ lave t[ ............. ~&Am• Rated R Semi· TIOBlaol'Sr Rated R. The beat • . _.,, -cunt Eastwood rum .. nee ·'The autobtographleal mm atarring ~ar-Outlaw ~ Wlde8 .. and • grftt tamaUe Prtntt u the talented but n.e yam ..L. ~ .Eutwooct edf-ttntered leaderofaMtnncapoUa :::.. the Otrty ttanj mold by "funk·rock band. The nlgJ\t clu,b portraytn& a more complex New performance accnee and Prince• OrlcaN cop wtth two .-.n• da~· eoundtrack an: a knockout. But .1~"9 th · -•-a •Illy mdodramaUc tCT9 at home and a tute for ktn y Lucuftlm drawbacks of ahallow OUllLJRSi Rated PG. These little characterU.aUon and etmplJaUc plot· creaturea atart out cute but eventu- ung. Dtrector Steven Spielberg ellil· ally tum Into dangeroua mltchlef lfully mlxee the llumoroua and ecary • makers who wreak havoc tn a am.all momenta, especially durtng a town at ChrUtmutJme. Bringing the marvelous opening nightclub scene. Gremlins to vtvtd llfe ts an amaztng The more vt9lent 1eenee may be too (eat In thts Spielberg-produced film. fnghtentng for younger children. directed by Joe Dante ("The Howl· .,... v.,... Ing"). But Dante &nd screcnwrtter OB08TBUST&R8: Rated PG. A Cbrta Columbwl have eo much fun fl rat ·rate conte,mp0rary comedy wt th wt th the Orcmlln• and wtth lr1butea aupertor apcctal effecta. Bill Murray. to paat movtea that the human Dan Aykro'yd and Harold Ramis arc etorylJnes arc left aadly undeveloped three bumbling parapsychologists -Entertatnln,s( but fo'l{cttable . .,... . .,... TBS RVSUJllDUfO aroaYi Rated PO. An enchanting children'• film that wtll hook a lot of adult.e. too. Ba.rttt OUver play• a boy whoe8Capea ht• r'eal-world troubles (the death of his mother. harassment by bullies) when he begins reading a book about the magical land of Fantaala. Another boy (Noah Hathaway) I ere • ......., • • cncountera awar from home. He'• atoryllne Involving the .atar • on tbe trat al a Mdl•tlc killer troubled p&renta aM hla rocky ro-DOW mancc wtth a m}'8t"10u• woman who eeenui to know the det~lve a (Appolonia Kottt0). Prince rans wtll little too wcU. Richard T'Cle a ecn pt iove It Othere may not .,....,... . has a few holes, but the fllll·blUng 8T Aa ft&& m _TD SJtAllCB end aequencea wtll keep .;ou too POR 8POC:&J liltS•d PO. Admiral engroesed Lo notl~e . .,.....,. "- Ktrk (William shatnet) and his agsng .,....,...,......,. -Excrllent. .,....,....., -'-- atdektcka mllat eteal the damagccl Very good . ..,.,... _ Ciood. v -Not so 1tanshlp Entrrprtae In a daring good. . . American THE BARN ~n. Lunci'I M-F 11·2:30 Dinner M-S from 5 PM Happy Heu M·F 4:30 to 7 PM. Sun. Champagne Buffet BrUl)Ch 10-2;30 Entet1ainment & Oencing. Banqoet Facilit• 14982 Rechll, Tustin 730-0115. THE ORIGINAL BARN FARMER STEAKHOUSE -The original Feetunng display txon.. 1ng Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11·2. Dinner • nlghtty Moo. ·Fri. from 5 p.m., 5at. & Sun from 4 p.m 2001 Harbof Blvd . Colt• Mesa 6'2·9777. HAMBURGER HAMLET Famous verla1y of hambUrgera, saloon steak aandWiches. IObater bllque, omon IOUP fondue and cherry c:ot>- bler. Lunch & dMWlf from 11:30 M-Sat.. Sun. 10-10. $pedal Sunday BrMl!tut. Great b8r t happy hour. 1545 Adame at Harbor, Costa M-... 648-7392. HARBOR HOUSE CAFE Establllhedalnce 1939 Cln'*ett• 25 vatiet• S.c:ed 24 hoUra. Sand- wlcht9. 30 vanet•. Heated garden pati0 dinnat tenl'ed f>.10 PM. 3415 7 Coat Hwy, Dane POll'lt (71 4) 496-9270 A*> 1634t-Coast Hwy,, &JoM1 Beech. (213) 592-5404 PARADISE CAFE San FraflCllCell style. Fresh filh and pasta. P1t10 dining. Lunch M-F 11-3 Dinn« Moo.·Sat. from 5 p.m Happy Hr. M-F 5-7 Wed ladlea nltt 50$ wel dfinkt from 3 p.m. Banquet facihtlta. 600 Newport Center br.. Fashion Island, Newport Belch. 644--1237. POOR RICHARDS "klTCHEN Breakfast, lunch. dinner PatlO dining with ocean view Modest prieae. e..r/wtne. Famed for a.lgiian Wlfflta Open daily from 8 AM. 1198 S Coast Hwy In VIiiage Fllll'e Malt Laguna Beech '497-1687. Chinese JADE DRAGON 6z.echw1n & Mandam ~ ot ad China. HOit Wallace Ltle. Chef Yr Chen. Segant dining LUAch. Dinner. Sat & Sun Olm Sum (Chintle T• Cat<• Brunch). Banquets, a.. & Wine Reaaonabie Pnc•. 12100 S.ch Blvd , Stanton 898-8933 OR NGE C OAST RESTAURANT DIRECTORY Continental AIRPORtER INN MeclMnanwlRoom Continental lunch M·F 11:30 • 2;30 Sun. Brunch 10 • 3 00 Dinner from 5 30 Happy Heu M.f Entertainment & Dancing 7 nlgl'ltl a week. Valet Panctng Banquet Fee li1iea 18700 MacArttu. IMnt 833-2nO CAFE LIDO Newpott'• Cannery y, ge jaZZ spot Cozy etmoaphert Amtriean. Italian & Contlnefltal menu. Lunch M·f 11·3 Dinner nlghtty 8 PM to midriight Entertainment nightly 9-1·30. Sun jazzMellOn 3-7. Ample parl(tng. 2900 Newport Blvd . Newport Beach. 676-2968. MARCEL'S . Y .... lllaroaL Dancing Wed. lhru Sat. night• to Buzzy B<»t. 9 00 P.M. to 1:30 A.M., Top 40'1. Live Reggae l\ltfY Fri. & Sat from 9 30 P.M. Bici<gammon. Happy hour 4-7 P,M Come aee our. brand new ioolt. Serving sandwiches, 90Upa, aeafood and crOtSSentl. 130 E. 17th St, Costa Mtea. ~6-3666. RIVIERA .. Continental. Chef Richard Btron* 11nce 1970 lnhmat• Di1'11nQ Lunch 11:3CJ.! 00 dlnnef from 5 PM. CloMd Sun & Holida)'ll Banquet room.. 3333 S Bn1tot, Costa Mesa 640-3&40 French BORDEAUX 100 WlneS Sliver Aw81d W1Met. lunches Tues..·Frl. Dinner M·S Closed Sunda)'ll & hollda)'ll. Oft Bnatol and Randolph (between Baker and Beer) ltlen leh onto St. Clelf. 768 St. Cler, Colt• Mell 5-4()-3&41. LE MIDI New lf'I Newpoft, old In tradition ~ Franch Provtncall dilhas Charming dtoof end etrnotpheire ol the South. the Md of France. Luncti and dinner Tuea. thru Sun Extenalve ~ Calif. and French wtne t1 3421 VII Udo, Newport Beech. In plaza neat Huot* Ma11ta1. 675-4904 Italian DON.ATEW'I The original lince 1973 Now open In • our new location ServtftQ our famoua pizza •nd puta Dint In °' take OU1 IM30 Warner at Busherd, Fountain Valley Behind IN Sillier 963-596S .. MARCELLO& Family owned Eatablllhed lillOa 1973 Pastas, veal, pizza SpeclalizlnQ lo Clopplno. S.. & Wine Mf"YICi Salad bar. Lunch Mon tlw fl1. dinner 7 nlghtl. week. Sonday Brunch 10-3 p.m. 17502 BNoh Blvd. at Slater. H\#llington a.ctl &42·5506. Mexican Mt CAIA .X.CAN RESTAURANT OUf food• a trip to Mtxicol Eat. llrlOI ..J 1972; Open daily from 11 am. kw ,!Unch & dlnnef. Cod<tall Enttrtan- ment Wed tlw Sat. ~ti In the Booo Room. 298 E. 17th St. Cocta ....... Cal 645-7828' TRl!I AMIGOS For Restaurant Directory Information, · call Brenda Caponera at 642-4321 Ext. 262. . . . A pie~ for peoplt who appreciate good Meiucan food at aurpfillngly tow pricte Open dally 11 • m lunch & dinner. 0.Ny luncheon tptela ... Danc- ing Thin.. f:l'I. ' Sat. 10 p.m. 10 1:00 a.m. Top 40'1 muelc. Catering 2200 Harbor 8IYd K Mitt P1ar.a. Colta Meta. 642-8274/8278 Natural/Healthy PU FANS "Naturdy" c:ooMd foods. from pen-- cakea to etepes to steeXI An ld¥e0- ture In netufal eating Open Sun. ctwu Thin 81mto 11 pm Fri & Sat.Sam to 12 midnight. VIM/MC Catual Mod-- el'lla Prices. 3050 E. co.st Hwy .. Corona del Mar. 640-1573 Seafood & Steak BUCKBEARDI ' . H•rty a.et Entr ... & Seel~ Lunch 11-3 00. Dinner from 5 PM. Heppy Hour M--F. ExtenelYe Oyater Bar. Two bloCks aovth of John W1yne Airport a33-0080. THE CANNERY F•tur• fresh local seafood, aesrem beef. Looch, dinner. Sunday bruoch and ~ brunch, harbor crui9el Ent~t nightly and SUndly 1ftemoon. L~ food g&). ley. Hia10t1c waterfront lendma11t In Newpoft'• Cannery Villge. 3010 Lafayette 67f>.5771. RUSTY PELICAN .. Freeh teafood and Iota 01 It Nftpofl Beach • ~Unch, dinner, Sunday brunch. OverlOOks Newport Bay. 273S W. Coast Hwy. 642·3'431. 1Mne • Lunch, dinner, happy hcM. 1830 Main. 545--477~. TALE OF THE WHALE open 7 O.ys. B~faat 7 a.m M·f . Lunch 11·4 M·F. Dinner 4·1 1 M·S. Sat & Sun brunch 7-4 Oyster bet Fn , Sat .• Sun. Banqutt fdt• up to 500 Ent1t1uwnent Wed.-Sun. Panoramic bey view, 400 Main St., Balboa 67~ THE WAREHOUSE Fresh S-tood & lntemattONI Cuisine.· Wattrtront dltllOQ Chet CNlrlet Kalegilll lunch. Dlnnef. Sat & Sun. Awatd Winning Brunch Beno queta & c.terlng. Oyatat Bet, Enter· • tainment. Lido Vllage. Ntwpof18eec:tl 87~700.