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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-31 - Orange Coast Pilot' FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1986 M~sa firm caught in drug -mixup All but six mislabeled vials recovered after error leaves one woman in a coma By TONY SAAVEDRA 0! .. 0.-. .......... A Costa Mesa dru1-pack.aajn1 com- -pany-suspected in a mixup ffiat left ooe woman in a coma has suspended operations until it is determined how boxes of a potent diabetes medicine ~ rnisJnarkcd. All but six of the mislabeled vials In control Baltl Preeldent Jean- Claade DD..Uer denlea bl• ao•ernment lia• been oTerthrown./ Al Coast .. distributed by Medical Mart-Medpak were recovered Thursday from pa- tients who received the pills from two waJk-in medteel clinics in Oranaie- County. . Still outstandina were some boxes issued by the AmeriCare I clinics in La PaJma and Oranae. The viaJs were mislabeled as the Reagan, jets pay tribute to crew Memorial services for astronauts extended to Crystal Cathedral ByPAULRECER ·,.,.., f I ..... SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -In the grassy quadranJ!e where NASA often honors its tnumphant astronauts. an estimated I S,000 people -includin' President and Mrs. Reagan -Joined grie-ving relatives today at a memorial service for the fallen crew of America's space shuttle ChaJlcnger. infection-fightin& drua metro- n.iduolc. but they act.ually contained tolaz.amidc -a medication that lowers the amount of supr in the blood system. A sudden drop in blood ~upr can be fat.al or send a patient mto a coma. "Anyone given (tolaz.amide) is closely monitoreaDy a pJiysfaan. a person takes it and doesn't know it, the side effects can be severe," said Stephanie Thomas, of \M State Depanment ofHeaJth Services. A 41 -year-<>ld woman was hospital- ized Tuesday after fallinf into a coma attributed to ~ills she beheved were to treat a bactenaJ infection. . Doct.ors at Mullikin Medical Cent.er in Artesia said the woman as expected to recover. State Food and Dru& authont1cs issued an alert Thursda_y and were searc ana for tiie mlsSina p1Hs todaY. Health inspectors were invcsugat-ina the year-<>ld Costa Mesa firm that prcpack:qes bulk drugs into rnda vid· uaJ vials to be dispensed by doctors and clinics. Stephen Monon. vice president of Medical Man-Med~. said the com- pany would participate in a full anvesti.,tion of its operation to determine "if the buJk d~a was delivered to our plant properly labeled or if human error was 1n-vQ)v " -..... S~te and company officials were ponng over the firm's records. per- sonnel, procedures and inventory, Morton wa. ""No conclusions have yet ~n made after preliminary anspecuons. he added. "You bet we've voluntarily suspended operauoos, -said Morfoa. who didn't know how loQ& the company wou&d refra10 from dis- tnbuuna Pf'CPIC~ druas. "We're doina a very thorouab investiption aodaslonaas1t tam to1et it done we will JkuL'." About 1,000 pills packqed by the company 10 October-~ believed to be anvolved ID the m tshap. They were put an amber-tinted, rectan&U1ar plasuc boxes labeled to contain (Pleue eee llJXUP/ A.2) Moriarty gets7 years in prison r Fireworks mogul 'driven by greed' in mail fraud case By SUE MANNING • 1 ,,,._...., LOS ,t.NGELES -Former firc- worlcs magnate W. Patnck Moriarty, the center of a conti nuinJ 1nflucncc- pedd II ng an vcstigatton. was sentenced today to se¥Cn years tn prison and ordered to forfeit $3.4 million he received from the saJc of a card cl ub. Two sculptures, valued at $2"4,000, have been dedi- cated to the city of Laguna Beach by two Sycamore Hiils de- velopers./ A3 Callfomla As ''God Bless America" and "My Country 'Tis of Thee" and "Battle Hymn of the Republic" were playca, President and Mrs. Reagan walked among the tearfuJ family members. hugging several mourners and ofTer- ina comfort to others. .... pl a Preeldent Re.&an and Nancy Rea&an lead HODaton. In the back row are Kathie Scobee, the famlliee orthe Challencer utronaat. u lln. June Scobee, Richard Scobee and they arrlTe at today'• memorial eerrice In Allaon Smith. U.S D1stnct Judge Wilham Rea ordered Monany to surrender to begin has sentence before noon on Feb. 24. He ignored defense requests that Monany be sentenced to public- serv1ce work "He 1s the author of his own problems," Rea said. addtng that the hum1 hauon Monarty has suffered ts ansuffictcnt punishment for the en mes. New Supreme Court jus- tice hints some death- sentence rulings may be re-examined and af- flrmed./ A7 Nation Reagan to call for the most ambitious overhaul of the welfare system .. since the Great Society. sources say./ M Sporta The UC lrvlne basketball team holds off Utah State, 89-79, In PCAA action. /C1 Date book Bowlers are having a ball In the alleys along the Coast./Pege3 Bualneaa 011 companies are gear- ing up to fight restrictions on offsho~ oll explo- rations this year ./C5 INDEX Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Fun & Games Horoscope Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Publle Notaa Sport a Tetevtt6on Weather A3 CS-6 87-9 ca 86 Datebook C7 C7 A6 Datebook A3 82-7 C1-<4 OatebOok A2 A formation of military jets streaked across the cloudy sides, with one jct missinJ from the traditional configuration 10 honor of the fallen astronauts. "Man will continue his conquest of space, to reach out for new ~oals and ever-greater achievements.• Reagan Search contlnuee tor ahut- tle wreck99e. P99• A4 said in his prepared eulogy. "That is the way we shall commemorate our seven Challenger heroes." Dr. William Graham, acting NASA administrator, spoke of the faJlen astronauts. "Their courage and dedi· cation represents all that's best in each of us, and in America," he said "The Challenger crew took somc- th ing from aJI of us aloft on Tuesday. Their dreams of discovery arc our dreams." Also this morning. hundreds of mourners attended an ecumenical memorial service in Orange County, school children observed a moment of silence and personnel at Edwards Air Force Base watcN:d the televised memorial fro m Houston. Archbishop Roger Mahony, along with clergymen of variou~ fa iths, Joined the Rev. Roben Schuller and 800 mourners in Garden Grove's Crystal Cathedral service. "We pray for eternity for those whose sudden and tragic death brought us together today," said Mahony. "The yearning for space reflects our inner restlessness that cannot be confined by atmosphere o r constellation." (Pleue eee llEllORIAL/ A2) Golden Bear shut, but off{cials hold off wrecking ball By ROBERT HYNDMAN Ofltl9o.llJ ......... No more conccns will be held at the h1sto nc Golden Bear in Huntington Beach, following the eviction Thursday of the nightcl ub's operators. A federal bankruptcy judge denied an 11th-hour bid by the owners to s~y open an addiuonal month so they could raise money to pay olT crcd1tors. The 60-ycar-old building on Pacific Coastjiighway, however, will be t.cmporarily spared the wreckina baJI w1t.ilc city officials and Historical Society members decide if the buildma. or iu facade. can be preserved. The niahtclub, an Oranae County landmark, lies in the path ofthl' city's redevelopment effort. It is taraeted for demolition to make wa} for an ei&ht to 12-story hotel. Robcn Jacobs, the attorney representing property owners Roben Schwanz and Gwendolyn Tubach. said Thursday's eviction no taet" sbouldn 't have come u any surprise to Richard and Charles Babiracki. the two brothen wbo hive operated the niAAtclub since 1974. (Pl--Me OOLD&l'f/ A2) Self-defense class restores order to rape victim 's life Instructor not only gives defense Ups, ut supports her students In recovery Three and 1 half yean 110 Sue Chandler's life was a meu. She bad just been raped and her emotions~ numb. She c:lidn't care If &be lh·ed or died. She was on ll"&ftCl_ulUJen or drunk mott of the day. Often 1be wa1too1e&red lo lave berhoutc. ... thoupl the whole wortd would l\Op, .. lbe laid. Chandler (not her real name) said the attack oc:cumd u he wn •• walk.int to ber car. puted ouuide an Irvine hotel. Theatuder approeched from behind, forced her into her car aAd ntped her at Q,jtepoinL She spent four wetkl unable to ~t or~ until a friaMt told ber about a S6-yeu.old Ncwp0rt Beech worn.an _.ho aaupt a ldf'.defcn• dell for women in Oenlte Orove. Cbandkr atimaed -not knowtna whit to u_pect. Todax. it 1eem1 lhe aot mOft out of Ote di.ti than the e~cr ' Children affected by space tragedy By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of -o.., ..... ltaff Feelings of anger. hun and sorrow have been poun ng out of young people 1n classrooms across the country this week tn the wake of the Challenger space shuttle traged~ Orange Coast teachers a nd coun- selors are encoura$1ng students to express those emotions. too. and al the same ti me creaung oppon un1t1es to turn the traged~ into a learning expenence. Dr Bruce G1' ner de put~ 'iUper- tntendent 1n the In 1ne l n1lil'd · hool D1s1nct, !>aid 1ha1 rathl'r than organize a d1stnc1-w1de program e\· plaining to student\ "hat happened and how to cope with their feeltn~. teachers and adm1n1strators at each school dev1srd their o"'n method\. ranging from class d1scu~s1ons to wnt1ng letters to the ~tudenl'> at the Concord . N H . school where Chm1a McA.uhfTe taugh1. She "as one of 1he se' en ere" memher'I who died an the (Pleaae .ee CBJLDREN/A2) "Mr Monart} acknowledged he was motivated b~ greed.·· said Rea Monan} 54. who had pleaded guilt~ to seven mail-fraud counts. will be eligible for parole after servmg two \ears and four months. · Monan~ 1~ cooperaung 10 an ongoing tn\est1gat1on ofh1s anempts to 1nf1uenc-e le1t1slat1on and pubhc policies Monan) admmcd he promised C11\ of ( omm1:rce offi cials hidden mteres1s in hts card club m return for their making sure the club was licensed The illegal pohttcal con- tnbuuons were made when Monart'i". "ho then controlled P\ rotron1cs Inc. of .\nahe1m, was lobb}mg to ban local la"'~ against the sale of fire- works First freeway agency meet involves county, 5 cities Joint power s group to plan and finance two southeast transportation corridors By LISA MAHONEY OftNo.lly ......... Rcprcsentauves from five cities and the county of Orange met Thursday to form a JOmt powers agency to plan and finance the Foothill and Eastern transportation comdors. The new agency will play a role 1n the des1an and co nstruction of th<' freewa ys planned for the southeastern ponaon of the count}. wd Stan Oftehc. cxccutl\e director of the Ora nae County Transportation Commission. It also will handle financm' of the $516 m1lhon project, mcludm& the ant1c1patcd $250 million 1n fee~ to be colkt•ted on new dr' l'lopmcnt. o;a1d Oft~he. who will be thc agent:'\ director \.tembers of the 1oml P\'"'l'r' agcnn include five or the eight lltlt'\ to be affected b\ th<' com dOr\ .\nahe1m. Orange, San Clemente. San Juan C'ap1straho and Yorba Linda Orange Count\ 1s al~ a member !'('pre~nung unmcorpon1tcd area!\ along the path of the planned cor· ndors Thret.' other c1tie!> · In inc. 5antd .\na and Tustin -are expected to JOin lht' agenq an the near future Officials from all thrtt c1t1es attcndt'd the ThuFSda) meeting a~"'bb§cner\ Oftehe said In 1ne ha\ J ln-a1.h agreed to pan1c1- ra1e 1n lhl' 1rnnt Pl'"'er; agenc~ The .it\ ,1ant•d ,11lle1.1ing fee!-on ne" 1.kq•Jopmcnt' alon[l the proposed trre"a ~ rout(''> 1n £:>et·emher Rut a pending kgal dt'>pute wtth lret'"a' oppont•nt' '" pre,cnung the mun1c-1paht\ from com pl) rng with requirement\ for Jl11n1ng the agcnc~ Each member mu<tt tum over fees colltcted to the agenC'\ hut lf'\tne's tee<, are bctng held in a <tpe-caal fund pending the ultimate r(•,oluuon of an anempt h' the ( omm1llt"t' of ~vcn Thousand I( 0 Tl to put the de- ' eloper fee~ on th<' hall111 T usun backed a"a' trom a com- m11 mcnt to 101n the agtnn Ix-cause ol a dispute "llh lntne o'er the alignment of1he Ea<ttern comdor lh { tt\ ( ounc1I will rC'C'onsader th<' matter in ....,arrh. Otkhe said (Pleue eee JOIJIIT/A2) FRED Voc£LST£11 Weekend warning: Focus ON THE Nrws defcnjt techniques. It al50 acts a a support aroup Levy as the suppon She 11 obt«ted wtth hclptna people "rd be an a mental snst1tunon today had I p t taken the clan ." Chandler said. Levy's three-hour cla meets onl}' once a week •n the even 1 np, but l.cry says she pend JO houn 1 Wttlt ouwde clw tcnd1na to her pupils' needs. She's .bid studenll c.11 her u 2 1n tbt mornina. she'• sptnt even1np (Pl••_ ... _, .. , • Slippery when wet The California H11hwa) Patrol warned Oranie Coast moton t Fn- day to dnvc wtth caution on ra1n- sJ1cked roads th1~ v.«kcnd. a the bo wers cloelu"' the Southland are expected to continue throuah Satur- da)• A mall cran wam1n1was1n effect for Ora~ Count)' boaters and hca'') urf -as expected at wnt-£ac1na bcacbci. accord1n1 to Nat1onal Wealhcr $(rv1cc spokesman Mark McK.mlt)'. CHP spokoma.n PauJ CaJJwtll t&Jd the number of fendtt-bcnders and tnju.ry traffic a«tdttau have ckclu~ sance tbc~orm am\'ed from tbt Hawau ara Wednnda)'. He sa1d people bave pen u9ed to dnv1na 1n thch1n "It'\ not too bad today:· Caldwell u1d. "It'' calmed down out the~ because people •~ ~t\Jng a httlc more acclimated w1th dn vsna on wet road""ay~ ·· In the la t 24 hours. COSll MCY accumulated the mo t ramfaJI on lhc Ora nge Coa ~ Wlth S inches. accord,. 1ng to the Orange Count)'. Flood Control Os tnct C'orooa deJ Mar recorded J9 inches. and Huntiftston Beach had a reedu\a of .24 tnchcs o( rainfall. bowers were eApected th11 after. noon tvm1na to thundenbowas tontaht thr'O\llh Saturday mC>m.IJlt. k1cs will bccoJM partly cloudy IPl1111-a.IPPSaY/d) } .. I I I I f MBllORIAL Rlfl'ES SALUTE CREW ••• .._Al bi Loa Aalftct Couaay, ICbool uttorwau &om the 24 succcufuJ Soace aaency spokesman John audeata obee1 •ed a moment or flilbts of the 1pece shun.le. Lawrence said e~neers and ttth· .ue.ieda.ismorn.inalnmemoryo~ Ouesta wbo accepted invitations nicians worlcina for NASA and its •vet UUOM&all. include two ac>vtmors, a 161-mem· contractors have been invited to .. Ub Cohambm. wbo IOUlht new ber coaaresaional deteption, 7S stand in the quadran&Je, awellina the rouw for new trade. the utronauta members of the diplomatic corps. the ellpected attendance to about I S,000. wae w::: new cballe.-for the children of the late President Ken· The center was closed to the public. ftnwe..•• · ~ MinaOoozaJez, oedy a.od key memben of the NASA 1n bis remaru, Rcqao said. "We wbolc sptnith dlll dilCUlled t.be tam wbo deNned and manqed come toeetber today to mourn the ctimter J.att bef<ft the minute of creation of the ibuttJe. I°" of seven brave Americ:ans, to lilcnc::e. Mote than 200 relatives of the share the aricf we al If eel and, perhaps The tribute at 8:21 a.m. coincided Cballcqer crew planned to attend. in that sharina. to find the strenalh to with the time teacbcr•in-spacc accordio, to NASA protocol officials, bear our sorry and the oourqe to look u~uut Ouis1a McAuli~ was to alo~ with about b&Jf of ~c semi-for the seeds of hope. deliver bet nationally televiaed ICS10n finabsu who .compe~ with Co!1· "The sacritfoe of your loved ones from the spececraft. cord. N.H., teacher Ohnsta ¥cAuhf-has stirred the soul of our nation and, The ~naer crew -~tt0nauts fe to become the first teacher an space. through the pajn, our hearts have -,Franc11, R. Scobee, Mic~ael J, NASA officials said all past and been opened to a profound truth: the Sm~lh. Judith A. Resnik, Ell~son S. present utt0nauts were invited, future is not free, the story of aJI Onizuka, Ro~ E. McN1Jr ~d aJona with auesu selected by mcm-human progress is one of a strua&Je OreaorY. B. Jarvu -and Cbnsta bers of the sj)ace qtncy qajnst all odds." MeAuHife, the 9Choolteacher-cboscn · to be the first common citizen-in- space -died Tuesday when their ship ellplodcd without wamil\& 73 seconds after launch from Cape Canaveral. In the days since, NASA bas begun --alf"tXhlOJtiVe 1nvHtipttonllfrolhe accident. and -from schoolrooms to churches. from the stock exchange to the floorofCongress-the nation has mourned the loss. Callina, the crew mem~rs bl. tJ:>cir tint names, Reagan said: Dick, Mac, Judy, El, Ron. Greg and Oliista. your families and your country mourn your passing. We bid you goodbye, but we wiU never forget you. "For those who knew you well and loved you, the pain will be deep and enduring. A nation, too, wiU Iona feel the loss of her seven sons and daU&hters, her seven good friends. We can lind consolation only in faitb." National Aeronautics and Space Administration technicians worked into the night to install television camera towers for the national broad- cast of the outdoor service. They set up 1,500 chairs for invited guests who sat near a duck pond surrounded by the modem black glass and white stone buildings of the Johnson Space Center. The wide promenade near Mission Control has been used often in the past for ceremonies honoring GOLDEN BEAR CLOSED .•• From Al he benktu~n pcndingsitroeJ\-prit When-itleytOSTfheir lcue, so this has been aoina on for several months." Jacobs said this momioa. __ "We really feel we've done this in a kindly way. The order aUows them IS days to remove what they have in the building and we told them ther couJd take cvcrytbina cllcept the four walls,'' he said. "We re also entitled to charge them storage on their possessions, but we've waived thaL" The-S..binckit-had asked for an additional month so they couJd pay off crcditon by •taain& benefit concerts featuring artists who have performed on the Golden Bear stqe. But Jacobs said insurance problems prevented such an opportunity. The buildina, be said, is unsafe and an earthquake could be especially danaerous to the club and its patrons. "They offered to aet additional insurance, but the liabilty far eJtcecds any additional o~rtunity they might have to come out of their financial difficulties,' Jacobs said. The Babirackis could not be reached for comment this morning. Jacobs said neither be nor the property owners oppose delaying the demolition of the buildi~ but added that the nightclub cannot be used safely in its present condition. The Golden Bear, OraDfC County's oldest nightclub, bas hosted hundreds of top-name rock. Jazz, blues. folk and rcgae acts over the past 25 years. Performers includingJimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan, Linda Ronstadt, Mu.ddy Waters, 8.8. King and comedian Steve Martin have appeared on its stqe. In recent years, the club has presented such promising local acts as Lone Justice, the Blasters, Los Lobos and the Untouchables along with more established names. JOINT POWERS AGENCY BEGINS .•. Prom Al Santa Ana officials are in the 1pprovaJ process and should be ready to JOin the agency March l, he sajd, Irvine Mayor Dave Baker attended Thursday's organizational meeting with the mtention of asking fora rules change that would allow Irvine to join the agency while its legal battles arc being resolved. Of\clic said Baker raised the ques- tion before the meeting and was told that each city council would have to consider an amendment to its fee collection aarecment with the county to accomplish that. .. It's faster just to wait," Oftelie said. A few months delay in joining the agency should not hurt the city, he added. But Irvine's legal entan&lements couJd last much longer if COST has its way. COST is in the process of asking the state Supreme Court to review an appeals court ruling that tt may not petition to bring the de- veloper fee question before Irvine voten, said Fred Woocher, COST's legal repl"C$Cntative. Even if the court declines to hear the matter, the city couJd be hamstrung for at least four months. If a review is granted, a decisipn could be years away, said Woocbcr, an attorney with the Center for Law in the Public Interest. Neither Baker nor_Assistant City Manager Paul Bratty·could be reached for comment Thursday. Orange County supervisors came up with the idea of imposing fees on new develop1Jlent as a way to fund needed freeway construction. The method will be used on the proposed $516 million San Joaquin Hills transportation corridor between Newport Beach and San Juan Capistrano as well as the Eastern and Foothjlt corridors further inland. Fees arc expected to pay for almost half the cost of each freeway. A San Joaquin Hills joint powers agency, originally set to meet Thurs- day, was canceled for lack of a fifth member needed to activate i" Oftelic said. Newport Beach, San Oementc, San Juan Capistrano and Orange County arc poised to join the agency but must wait for either Santa Ana or Costa Mesa to~ to be part of the group, Oftelie sa.ad. Santa Ana should be ready to join in March, be said. The Costa Mesa City Council bas delayed a vote on the matter several times. Laguna Beach has declined to participate in the agency and Irvine, also a potential member, is stymied by the same lawsuit holding up its pafticipation in the Foothill/Eastern JOint powcn agency . As proposed, the San Joaquin Hills corridor would link the Costa Mesa Freeway near the John Wayne Air- port with the San Diego Freeway near San Juan Capistrano. The Eastern corridor would run roughly parallel with the Costa Mesa Freeway. linkmg the Riverside and Santa Ana freeways. The Foothill would paraJlel the San Diego Free- way, linking the Eastern Freeway with San Clemente. DEFENSE CLASS HELPS RAPE VICTIMS ••• From A l comforting them; she's even accom- panied them to court when they've had to testify against an assailant, she said. She tries to be not only a teacher but a friend, as evidenced by the hugs and leis~ Chandler and Levy bestow on each other when they greet. "JJ'ust want to educate ~pie to avoi being victims, to avoid feeling helpless," she said. For Chandler, her efforts seem to have worked. "I learned somcthang new each time I took (the class). I am confident of walking out the door now because I know I can handle any situation, .. Chandler said. Levy said 20 percent of her stu- dents are rape victims. battered wives or victims of incest. According to FBI statistics. one in three women will ~ sexually assaulted sometime in their life. she added. Levy, who has been teaching the 12-week class in Orange County twice a year for I S years, said she got involved in women's self defense in 1966 after two men threatened to rob and sexually assault her and her daughter in a New York City pubhc restroom. She said the incident not onl y made her angry because she felt helpless but suihy because she couldn't protect her child. She vowed that the next time she was attacked. she would know what to do. However. her class is as much about how to avoid crisis as 1t 1s about what to do 1n a physical confronta- tfon. A would-be victim can often avoid an attack simply by being more aware ~~A~~E Daily Pilat MAINMFICE )JO -I Sar 51 ~ll ..,_ CA i.ta• IOOftH !lo• ·~ Cce1a .,...,. C• ms1& when she goes out, she said. If she can spot a possjble confrontation before it happens, she can get away before a problem develops. "The attacker who preys on women relics on them beinf. unaware, with their defenses down, '.Levy said. The first thing someone who is confronted should do is give up their property. "It can be replaced; a life cannot," she said. A scream often works to ward off a would-be attacker, she added. She teaches students to U.Jt: force onl y when their lives are irf' danger and no other alternative ellists. She tells them to make sure the attacker is disabled with one punch. Levy outlined several vulnerable areas she instructs women to aim for. the groin. the throat. the knees, the nose and the eyes. She doesn't stress the use of weapons by her students because a weapon can~ taken away. She shuns tear gas because it often fails to work when it's needed. Nonetheless, she said there arc no magic routes to success. The key is not to panic. "We've ~en told from childhood that we're not strong, but we arc ... she said. Chandler understands what Levy means better than most. She was caught unawar'C when she was raped. Had she known then what she knows today. she said, the attack might not have happened because she might have ~n the rapist before he attacked her. She said had she been more aware he might not have had the chance to grab her from behind. ~-g.t2 ~71 --& ""'or••• 641 43"1 Despite her effons, Levy said she often has trouble filling her classes. Opposi\ion from husbands who claim Levy's course will make their wives too asscnive is a common problem. Another obstacle she encounters 1s older women who were raised in the days prior to women's h~ration. She said learning self-defense techniques confuses them because they were never taught to be assertive. However. she said the largest problem she has had to battle 1s ignorance. "Nobody thinks 11 can happen to them." she lamented. Delly Piiot Def Ivery I• Querenteed CoQyr>Q"I 1983 ()I~ CO.HI 1>111>1..,_lllQ Cot'npeny NO -llOtofl 1•1Jtt•al.on. tOolOt•I "'•'let O' ICl•t •llW ,,...,It ,.,....., .... , Ot •.a<OCI~ "' t~out ~·•I Of' ,,_ OI '4>PY'IQ'll o .... Justcall 642-6086 What do you hke about the Daily Pilot., What don't yod hkc~ Call 1he number above and your messaae will ~ recorded. transcnbed and de· livered to the appropriate editor. ~, F111»y " y~ 00 'IOI ...... Yo>ll '** t>y ' 30 o "' ea~ tlolt0tt 1 o 111 •"4 yl1U' COf>'r .... 0t Otl· ... 9(1 Sa1u1oa, tno Sullclay " '°" :JO "Of •.r .... """ ~· tly f • ... u lll>lo<t -, .... OQtla~ c• ii •• c°''• V•N C• '""-. tUl'S !U eoo s,btc•OloO" Dv c ..... SS)'-". D)' -$7 00 "'CJt"\'Ny • The same 24-hour answenna scrv1c~ may be used to record lettm to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Tells us what's on your mind. \ •o •" •"O '""' toe>y _. ii.,....,'° Clfcutetton Tel1~ lototl <>•"Ot ~f ..... ~ ( ~. . -... Storm should end by Saturday U.S. Tempe HW\. low !Of 24 "°"'' ef!ClinO .i s p.m. "'6eny 25 20 AlbuquetQ<ie 15 44 Am41rlllo 7 4 39 Al'IOllOflQI 21 24 Attenta 54 30 Atllnlle City 31 11 AWtln 73 H BllllmOtt 32 II lirmll IQhlltn 54 21 ... 51 35 ~ 31 24 luft8lo 23 11 ~· ~ 31 Cnet!M1on.S.C. 52 37 CNt ... ton.W.V 31 26 CflerlOl1e,H.C 48 28 ~ 62 37 ~ 22 18 ClncinMll 30 H ~ 23 12 0...FIWOf111 61 51 o.yton 27 25 o.-n 30 0. Moln9I 33 24 o.troft 25 11 Oululll 1' .01 EIPMO II 30 FM11enkt 0. .05 Fargo 17 02 l'llgel.it 51 31 OtWICI~ 24 OI 0.-F... 42 33 ~ 3t 30 ~ 82 .. Houlton 61 5a lndlarleOOllt 21 27 '**-'.Ma 13 3t JedllOfMlll 81 32 -""-32 32 City 51 31 L.9Vegea 54 41 Ulllt AOCI>. "' 31 ~ 33 25 Memplllt 51 34 aATUN>AY 133 ._m 83tam 219pm 7·27pm 12 51 17 51 6t 52 .. 51 .... ~ "' " 85 50 eo 40 37 11 48 1 4 30 1' 811'1 Mii tocley al &.22 p m , ri.. S1111tdey 118.50 .. m enO Nit egllrl al 5.23pm. Moon •I-toeley al 11:35 p.m .. Nit 8etUl'cley ti 10: 14 a,m. encl,.._ IQeln ti 11:36p.m Irvine school board calls special meeting The Irvine Unified School District Board of Education will bold a specially scheduJed meeting Saturday from 9 a.m. to l p.m. in the district offices at SOSO Barranca Parkway to brainstorm topics for future meet- ings, said Helen Cameron, board president. Ahhou&h no official action will be taken durina the planned meeting, Cameron said the trustees will discuss what issues they arc interested in puttina on future agendas. Some of the items Cameron sajd she expected would be discussed ire lottery revenues, a decentralized dis- cipline policy, the gifted and talented program in kindergarten through eighth grade, a seven-period school day, a revised budget policy, and an updated master plan. Cameron said another reason for the "study session is to clarify any questions of the new board." She said the board which has two new mem- bers, Greg Smith and Margie Wakeham, wanted to meet in a more informal setting to go over any questions that have come up since the new board began meeting Dec. 3. CHILDREN FEEL SHUTTLE TRAGEDY ••• From Al Challenger Tuesday. If there's an extreme problem, district psychologists can step in and help. G1vner said. Dr. Robert Burroughs, principal at C ulverdale Elementary in Irvine, invited a psychologist to talk with the students m their classes. "Our goal was to make them start talking." Burroughs sajd. "And the kids seemed to rcspor.d. "Most of us don't know a Ph.D. or an engineer. but we all know a teacher. so this tragedy felt closer." Burroughs said he sat in during one session when the psychologist talked to a group of sixth-graders. "They talked of the suddenness of it, of the shock. We aU have known times when the death of a loved one or friend is impending. but this was so unexpected," Burroughs said. The students told lJurroughs they enjoyed the chance to talk to the psychologist about their feelings, too. "One girl said it helped when she could sec how sad he was. It affected all of us," he said. Sally Lee Bierbaum, a psychologist in the Occanvicw School District in Huntington Beach, ~cipated in a panel d iscussion wath another psy- chologist and two teachers that was taped for JCET, a local educational television channel. The panel discussed the impact of the tragedy and focused on steps teachers can take in the classroom to cope with the issue, Bierbaum said. The crogram will be shown today at 10:3 a.m. and S p.m. on JCET. Visiting campuses throughout the district. Bierbaum said she found all thetcachers were ellplaining to their students what happened, eliciting their feelings and launching projects to tum the event into an educational experience. "There's a time for sadness. but then it's time to go on," she said. "We should be using that to produce something positive." Bierbaum said the younger chil- dren seemed to be viewing the event as "a sort of Star Wars for real, and focusing on why people would take chances like that." "The older kids could better feel the impact. They had more of a sadden- ini and shocked experience," she said. Beirbaum encouraged teachers to provide project opportunities for the children. ( "A survivc1f needs to feel he's done something. We see examples every- where. such as the lighting of the Olympic torch. and setting up a fund for the children of the astronauts." That's why many teachers arc havi ng their students write papers on the disaster or letters to fnends and family of the Challenger crew. Perhaps most encouragmg to adults who talked with young people about the nation's worst space disas- ter was their suppon of a continuing space program. "When kids were asked in one class if any of them would like to be an astronaut after what happened. SO percent of them held up their hands," Dr. Burrou~hs said. "They said. ·our dreams arc still there.'' SLIPPERY WHEN WET ••. MIXUP •.• From Al Saturday, with less than a 10 percent chance of rain. Highs will be in the low to mid 60s today and Saturday, with lows in the upper 40s to low 50s. CHP officials said the usual barraac of traffic accidents occurred at the beginning of the sudden storm. Rain has not washed Oran.se Coast road- ways for a while. giving oils and lubricants a chance to settle and slicken the asphalt, they sa.1d. The windy storm sweeping over the area for the past few ~ys apparently claimed the lives of two illegal immigrants found in the trunk of a car that crashed on the Ortega Highway Wednesday. Only those deaths have been attributed to traffic accidents since the rain began, acoordina to the Orange County coroner's office. From Al mctronidazolc in doses of 250 milli- grams. Also on the label was the lot number "2979707" and the expira- tion dates 5/86 or 6/86. The pills themselves arc white. about one half inc h in diameter wt th a score mark across the middle. Ther, are imprinted with the code "Z2979. • SHUTTERS SPECIALLY ( PRICED • Capture the outdoors and create comfort with these custom moveable shutters in the colors, sizes and styles you wantl .: , "" Cable workshop slated in Irvine Orante County cable televllion will be the topic for a one-day workshop to be offered Saturday by \he lrvine Coramunity Services Department from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . at Deerfield Community_ Park. . T he sem inar will cxs+>rc the d ift'erent appli- cations of cable TV and will instNct puticipan,ss how to produce their own programs, start a career or Jhowcase their businesses. The instructor is Charles M .Denny . . The fee for the workshop is S3S and rcser- vauons must be made in advance by calling 660-3881 . Ohtetrlc• tea planned Women of all ages arc invited to join Evergreen, South Coast Medical Center's obstetrics and JYne<:oloay support group, for a membenhip tea Monday at 7 p.m. in the board room of the hospital, 31872 S. Coest Highway, South-1:;.qu~ Evergreen bolds fundraisers, helps decorate the department, sews baby bonnets, works with the new Bear BcJinnings baby club and provides voJunteer service in the Obstetrics DepartmenL CaJl Pauline HardJr1lve at 499-1311 , ext 2807 for further information. Children'• concert carded The Irvine Community Services Department~ conducting an excursion to the Los Angeles Music Center Saturday for a special Children's concert by the Los Angeles Philharmonic. The bus departs trom the Irvine Civic Center at 8 a.m. and will return at I p.m. The cost is S 13 and l'C5Crvatfons may be obtained by calling 660-3811. I Trailer burns in . South Laguna 20 firemen contain $65,000 blaze in an empty mobile home By LAURA uag °' .............. A fire at the Treasure Island Home Park in South Lquna caused $6S,OOO in damaaes and drew 20 county firefiabters to battle the flames Thursday. The fare 1utted a weekend getaway trailer owned by Robert and Kay Klinger of Fullerton. No one was staying at the trailer, at space 26 of the mobile home park at 3080 I Pacific Coast H iahw•y, Capt. Lou Furst of the Orange County Fire Depart- ment sajd. Renovation work had just been com-· pletcd on the mobile home, but Furst said he djd not know whether the fire was related to any of the work. Ot1n99 Comt DAILY PILOT/Frtdey, ~ 11, 1-* A8 O..,NM..._'-f ~II_.., FlrefiChter probe8 ctamace lo gutted South Lacuna trailer. Utilities restored in Mesa complex ~ ' 81 TONY LUVZDIU °' ............. Like a scene &om the fim chapter of Genesis. M ichael Kall walbd into Gae , Cotta Mesa apartment where be bad liwd without power for two weeks and Oippod a . switch. There wa.s liabL . _ "It works,-Hall exclaimed, SCUJTYUW down the blue stairs outside to tell bis Wifr . Michelle ... You bit a switch and it pa oe.; what a aood feeling." The Ralls weTC amona thccstim•aed 25 people wtio bepn movina back 10 t.be complex on the grounds of Fairview State Hospital Thursday after beina locked out by manqemcnt for nearly a week. The tenants were temporarily banished · last Friday after it was discovCTCd that Ibey were Ii vina illCP-llY in apartments that bad not been certJficd for occupancy. They reponedly were allowed in by a manqer, who was subsequently fired. Nunlng claues offered Free nurse assistant cenification and home health aide certification will be offered beginning Monday by the Coastline Regional Occupational Program. Furst said firefighters from the south county station could sec the smoke and flames as they responded to a call about 11 :30 a.m. The Laguna Beach Fire Depart- tnent assjsted. In alJ, three engines. a paramedic unit and support units responded to the blaze, which was contained within 21 minutes. Furst. who estimated the fire caused $50,000 in structural damage and S 15.000 damage to the conte nts. No one was evacuated from surround- ing trailers. Island, said she could sec flames shooting skyward from 1he trailer. "I tho ught 1t was contained when they opened up the sliders." she said. "and boom." another burst of flames escaped from the home. Costa Mesa officials were withholdina permits necessary to tum o n the ps and electricity in 64 units of the Harbor VilJaee complex because of a safety hazard. Not enouah water pressure was provided by tbe devcfoper to put out a potential fire. city inspectors said. The water system was improved this week and the city gave the go.ahead that brouaht blue-shirted utility crews to tbe complex Thursday to tum on the power. The classes will offer instruction at local schools followed by on-the-job training at local convalescent ~ospitals and home health care agencies. The course 1s open to anyone 16 and older, and further information is avajlable at 979-1955. The mobile home had no fire alann, said Toni Leech, a reside nt al Treasur~ "You ever try sleeping on a cold watert>cd?" said Hall. 24, adjusting bis Coors cap and racing back upsu.in to plua 1n the bed's heating device. Counaellng prpgrams set Topics for discussion by COPE (Counseling, Outreach, Prevention. Education) during February have been announced by Indian Summer Homes. sponsor of the free support group. Dedication of two sculptures starts Laguna city arts policy Wea.rinJ a pink sweatshirt and black jeans, MJCheUe Hall, 19, stood in the midda).' drizzle -3'12 months prqnant and stdJ seething from the snafu that left some people without a home. "I was (angry) because everything we own was locked 10 there. When we moved in we didn't think we'd have to do without power for so long," she said. Tbe organization. which meets Mondays from 10 to 11 :30 a.m . at 24946 Grissom in Laguna Hills, will deal with subjecls ranging from grief to sexuality. Contact Julie at 380-1703 for further information. PWP plan• parties The Huntington Beach chapter of Paren1s Without Partners has anno unced its orientation m eetings for February. Sessions arc scheduled Saturday. Feb. 8. Feb. 15 and Feb. 22, all at 7:30 p.m .. with partjes to follow. Call PWP at 898-797 5 for the meeting locations and additional information. An Invitation: Attention organization presidents and sec- retaries: We want to help mpe your upcoming events. meetings. seminars and fundralsers suc- cesaful. Send brief annoonoements including time. place, cost (If any) and a phone number for additional Information to: Bulletin Board, Daily Piiot. P.O. Box t560, Costa Mesa. 92626. Repona of yoor club or organlzatlon·s activities -like community service projects or election of ottlcera -should be directed lo the Community Newt Editor at the aame address. Non-returnable blac._ and white photographs are welcome. CALENDAR Friday, Jan. 31 No meet1n11 acltedaled Saturday, Feb. 1 • 9 a.m .. lrvlae UDifled Scltool District Board of Edacatloe, special meeting. District Educ.ation Center, 5050 Barranca Parkway. Monday, Feb. 3 By LAURA MERK Of IM Del!J l'llol Steff T~o sculplU res, \alued at $:!4,000. were dedicated Thursday to the Cit) of Laguna Beach b~ two Sycamore Hills develorrs. Leah Vasquez. chairwoman o the Laguna Beach Arts Commission. said she ho pes that the anwork -the first ever gt\ en 10 1he ctty -is JUSt the beginning of mam such dedications. Ttie commission is worlo ng on a public ans pohq that would require de velopers to pa) an-in-lieu fees. The fees would be collected b> the Cll) from . maJOr de- velo11Crs who receive permits for new projects. renovations or redcvelopmcnL Vasque1 said. . The mone' would be u~ to enhance ans program"s in the CH~. Vasquez said . Piece~ of an could be purchased or the monc~ could be use-d to help pa) for conr ens or performances throughout the Cit' The commission hopes to refine the pollc) and haH 11 completed \\1th1n l\\O mon1hs. It's not clear what size prOJCCt would constitute a major de\ clopment and how lhe cil) would delermtne the fees to be paid ... The sculptures donated Thursda) were do naled by ..\ & C Propentes Inc .. which ts de,eloping 152 two-sto~ townhouses in the s,camore Hills. ar.d the Kaufman and Broad Development Group. butldtng 108 s1ngle-fam1I) ho mes. The sculpiures "ere crraled b) Kenneth Capps of Carlsbad ..\hhough Kaufm an and Broad has a large corporate an collec11on. the pieces "ere purchased jOtnll) b) lhe t'WO corporation-; specsficall) for the mr Many of the tenants were lodged at local motels, with Fairview Development Corp. picking up the tab. They were allowed to take some clothing from tbe apartments. under the watchful eye of the complex security guards. Some rnidents felt like burglars in their own homes.. they said. Explanations of who is to blame for the mishap arc jumbled and confused. SpokC$men for property manager Vil- lage Investments said residents were gjven apartment keys to store their belongi• but they were instructed not to move in until the buildinp were certified. However. many tenants claim they were told by an apartment manqer that they could move in immediately. They were also told the power would be !urned on within days. they say. Other residents say the same manager ordered them not 10 move 1n unul the ut1ht1cs were installed. The Cll) blames Fairview Development for not settli ng the water problem before begmning construction on the 144-unit complell. the first phase of a proJcct to build 550 low-to moderate-income rentals on the stale-owned site. Fairv1ew Development, led by promi- nent homebuilder Merrill Butler oflrvine, is ar.ousing because It couldn·t get per- m1s5lbn to tap 1n10 a water main 30 feet away from lhe apartments. The pipeline was beneath pTopeny managed by a business that was asking what Butler considered an outlandish price for an casement. The devclope~ was ultimately forced to tunnel 500 feet to another water connec- tion. at an elllra cx~nsc ofSJ0,000. Butler uid - • 9 a.m., lrvlae ntld Care Project Board, Dlillf l'llol ,-e.,., ort1ct ....,_. Irvine Unified School District Administra1ion Gerald Gatee. prealdent of Kaufman and Broad, and Kathryn Both steel sculptures are pan of lhe "Zeph~ r"' !)Crtes complelcd h) Capps tn 19 3.The··z rph)r . l .. "e1ghs 300 pounds and 1s 84 inches b~ 34 inches. The .. Zeph) r XII .. also "e1ghs about 300 pounds and 1s 44 inches b\ 33 inches. Vasquez · said the an comm1ss1on 1s e\ctted ahout the dona11on. >which >was not !toltritrd h\ thl' Cit\ ··The) are g1' ing It as .1'1<.ual gil110 thl' n t\ ··she said . Not evcrxonc was as unforgi vmg. . Tom Childers. a ~year-old loan bro- ker. shpped a compact disc into the player in his new apanment and smiled 10 the screeching ~u1tars of Z.Z Top. •1 ec.n 1 te 1 r. 1 s 1 o 1 s 1 o 1 Ba 1 rra.n 1 ca.P 1 a 1 rk 1 w 1 a 1 y 1 . •••••--__. Thompeon. preeldent of A & C Properties, have dedicated sculpture .. Zephyr Xr by Kenneth ~ppe, right. to the city of Laguna Beach. PoucE LoG Drug suspect mistakenly released, arrested again By SUSAN HOWLETT Of ................ A 19-ycar-old woman who was mistakenly released from the Orange County Jail after she pleaded guilty to drug charaes was picked up by sheriffs deputies Thursday. Cheryl Sanders was being held at 1 the county jail for cocaine possession charges on a $1 0.000 bond when she was released sho rtly before midnight Wednesday. The mishap comes three days after two inmates escaped from the jail after overpowering a guard in the facility's recreation area. The search continues for convicted killer Ivan Von Staich and murder suspect Robert Joseph Clark. Sanders had been in West Oransc County Municipal Court early Wednesday where a number of charges against her were dismissed. according to Orange County Sheriffs Lt. Bob Rivas. She was transported to the Oranae County Jail and was mistakenly released. later. Rivas said. .. When they processed heT paper- work, they d1smis~d a number of chaf'fcs... Rivas explained, .. They didn t sec that she had one with a hold on it." Sanders was picked up in the Buena Clinton area o f Garden Grove at about 6:4S p.m. Thursday. Rivas said. She was not considered an escapee. and there were no additional charges filed qainst her. "lt was just an inadvertant re- lease," Rivas said. Meanwhile., securitl:procedurcs at the crowded Oranat o unty facility may be chanted in tbe wake of the Olcnncyre Strttt. was held 1n lieu of ss.ooo bail. • • • A stereo system valued at S400 was reported stolen Thunday from a car parted on Hilkrut Drive. • • • A tit\ 1980 Toyota pickup tNCk was at~en from tbt front yard of a Summit Drive home, lbe victim told p0hce Wednetday niabt. c.... .... Tbina.. de. pned open one oftbt windows. rePor1tdl\' ttole a escape by Staich. 29. and Clar~ ~-' Jail officials arc awa1ting co mpletton of the escape investigation bcfon- determining 1f they will ufldate cur- rent security measurc-s. The search for the pair has Oct'n expanded statewide since the.-) o' l'f· powered a Jailer and escaped from thC' facility at about 6:30 a .m Sunda\ They had told the lone unarmt•d deputy watching them d uring a recreational period atop the count\\ main jail 1hat they needed to use thl' restroom. When the guard moved to unlock the dooT, the inma1es O\ i:r· powered him and (ufl'ed him with hti. own handcum. • Si&htinp of tM escaped 1nmatc\ have been reported. and sheriff' officials arc d 1ttkins out all lend~ 1n the search. R ivas said. vidcocauettc recorder. an answcnng machine, jeftlry and ca5h from an apartment in tM 600 block of Baker Street Wednaday. The loss wu estimated at S7IO. • • • Otfkialt at C~. 3189 AiN'a). rePof1C!d that $450 tn cash. 1450 1n IWftPI and an llndetttmined amount of jewelry wete saoaen Wednaday nitbt.. lnlM A waUct conta1nu.. mott lhan MOO "' ~ stolen from the Pia\ ers Bar. I~ I 00 \o n Karman. Thursda). • • • .\ rrs1dent along Spnngacre re- ported Thur~dJ) that a thief. who cntered a with a kc\ he stoic from a lcx:kbo\. re poncd l} s1ole t~o nngs from 1he homc: las1 Fnda) • • • Thte,es. en1en ng a $1hcN ood home through an oixn rear <1hdmg glass door. reported !) 5tole a \ 1deocassette recorder Thursda) • • • ..\ "allel contasnmg $4:!0 in cash was reported 5tolen from an unlocked lock<"r of an estabhshmcnl at I Q7 J2 \tac rlhur Bhd. Thursdil' • • • B urglar~ reported!} \tole a \ 1dc.-ocao;cttc r~order and an un- deterrntned amount of J<"Wclf) from a homc tn the 200 block of Monroe Thursda' The th1('vcot cntt'rcd through ·a rear ~tiding door. police \aid. Fountain Valley fhtc' c' rtPortl'<lly tole $852. QQ in aquarium supplte~ from the bacl. of an quanum Suppltcs llnhmttC'd 'an parked 10 front of the I IOSO Talbcn •\' c hu'itnC'i'I Wcdn~a} • • • Fifi, ca'lst'ttC' 1. pes in a hoe bo\ and a c3r \tcrco "<'rt rcponcd stolen from a "h1tc T o~ou Corolla partccd 1n 1 lot at 10 70 • ptn~r Thunda)' The 'ilolen 11em~ "<'rt rtponedly "-Orth SS I ~ • • • Thc o"'ner of Luparcllo's Puza rcpon ed that $1:!0 1n cash v.as ~tokn from th<' back of the QOH Garfield Ave ~tau rant Thuf'Jtia} The cost to rcplatt the wtndow the thieves broke was t t1mated 11 $,SO. • • • Thtt\CS. who cntcttld throUJh a bllthraom •1ndow. l'qK>ncd1y ok St.000 1n vi~ CQU1pmcnt from a ··Tunes.' he >Clled happily to no one in pantcular ·T, e got music " home 1 n the ~I 00 blocl of Mallard Tuesda~. Newport Beach .\n auendant of the Park Ltdo l " nocal gas stat son on upenor Av- enue reponed that lh1evcs stoic $50 from the cash dra~er Wednesday • • • Someone reported!) stoic a $200 blacl car bra from a brown 1984 Chevrolet Camaro parkC'd 1n front of a home in the 1800 block o f Sher- sngton Dnvc Wednesday. • • • Burglars reportedly broke into a home 1n the 400 block of Onon Thursda\ and stole a $60 wallet con1a1n1ng S470 in cash. Police said the) entered throuib an unlocked door. • • • A $200 pair of pearl ~mnas were reponed stolen from a home in the 2000 block of Colto n Thursday. Buntlncton Beach A Parkside resident rcponcd that ht~ roommate hit him on the head and attacked him with a kntfe at\er lhe v1ct1m tned to stop his roommate from stealing his wallet. However, the v1ct1m dcchned med1caJ attention . • • • The owner of a ~llov. I 975 Ford Granada rcponed 1hat someone thrc" a rock through the car's window wh1k it was parlccd near the comer of Brookhurst Suttt and Pacific Coas1 H1ghwa) Thursd.a) • • • A 9th Street resident rcponcd that a neighbor slashed o ne of his urcs on his yellow I 975 Datsun pickup truck Thursda • • • ~ woman rcponedly was being treated at Pao fica Hospital Thursda) for tnJuncs she received after some- one pushC'd htr off a stool at a downtown bar Thursday • • • Bufl)ars rtponcdly s1olc a $360 videocassette rttorder from a camper parked in front of a home in the~ block ofCahfomia Thursday. Theft suspect seized Orange Count) shcnfl's dcput1e an'C1tt'd o ne man and arc look1nt for tv.o othc~ 1n connection with th1 momn\l' bufl)ar) ofa stereo tort in Fl Toro. Santa .\na rcs1cknt Thaddeus Eugene m1th. 2 • wa a"°"ted and hooked for burilary. pos ion of 'ilOkn propen) and tokn "chicle. I\ bout 4: l S 1.m. toda)'. patrol officers heard an alarm from the Pac1fte tcl't'O tore at 242 0 waru On\c .\pPf01ch1n1 tbt sto~ the) stopped a "chtdc headed out of the arta~1th utll hctdlij.tnson. La Bob Rivas said . Three USPK'\S fled ftom the car but pohct were abte \O capturt on l) • m1th. The car was loldcd with v1deio cauettc recorden. 1clcv1sioas.. aa.A camera equipment esuma\cd by t1lit st~ manaaer ., about S 16.~ Rivas satd. An onaanal check d.id not show tbll the vehicle had beeo stolen.. omc:.t v111tcd lhc f'tl*.lla'ed owner ofae cm 10 Llluna Kills wbo was not..,... the veludc was m111u19. Apeett!lly I was It.._ d\iri.nt \M Dilbl.. lliVll Mid. \ , .=_•-~~--------------...... ~~· - --::__-_ .... ·-· • ----~-- Drug company discontinues, ) sales of 2 IUDs! CHICAGO (AP) -G .D. Searle & Co. announced today it is withdraw- ina from the U.S. market its two intrauterine devices, includina the nation's most-prcteribed IUD, be- cause of the cost of defendina the prodUC\I •nst lawsuits and the company's inability to obtain ade- quate insurance. "Searle has full confidence in the safety. efficacy and medical utility'' of the product, said Tod Hullin. vice pmident of communications. The IUDs to be withdrawn im- mediately arc marketed under the trade names CU-7, the most-often prescribed in the nation, and TATUM-T. Hullin said. JAN 31, .EEB 1st & 2~d -1.JDO MARlNA t7TT-:.,, : .. 111, . , ,•-~GE- I I 3DAYSONLY Specialists examine chunks ·of Challenger NASA Is surprised that large portions withstood explosion CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. (AP}- Specialists examined at least five tarae chunks of shattered Cballenaer's fuselqe today, and studied the possi- bility that a blowtorch of flame from a solid-fuel booster rocket triaered the explosion that destroyed the shuttle and its crew. Officials of the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration were surprised that so ma ny larae pieces survived Tuesday's fireball. The bia sections and several small piecesoftbemain body were plucked.. from the Alla~ntic Ocean on Thursday and ferried to Port Canaveral, where they were unloaded and taken to a hangar that is storing thousands of pieces of shuttle debris. A NASA videotape of the unload- ing showed the Challcnaer's nose and part of the cabin, parts ofa cargo bay door, and sections of wing. The larJest 8icce of the latest find was about 2 by 8 feet. Ironically, on the side of the cabin area was a ycUow arrow, with the word "rescue" pointing to an emerg- ency hatch. Observing the unloading was astronaut St~ve-Nagle, who flew aboard Challenger last October. The wreck.age was spotted floating about 60 miles northeast of Cape Canaveral and it was hoisted aboard the Coast Guard cutter Dallas. Doctors at Patrick Air Force Base, meanwhile, examined a fraamcnt of bone and tissue that floated ashore 35 miles south of Cape Canaveral to determine if it belonged to one of the seven astronauts. ft was ati.ched to a blue sock, and police said it probably was a foot bone. ~Jf plecee of debrta, belleYed to be from the •pace •battle C enter, are llfted onto a dock at Port CanaTeral, Pia. The focus of the disaster shifted today to the Johnson Spate Center in Houston where President and Mrs. Rcapn were to attend a memorial service for the astronauts. Those killed were Christa McAulif- fe, 37, a teacher from Concord, N.H., who was selected to fl y as the first "common citizen" in NASA's citizen-in-space program; Francis R. Scobee, 46, the commander; Michael J. Smith, 40, the pilot; Judith A. Resnik, 36; Ronald E. McNair, 35; Ellison S. O nizuka, 39, and Gregory B. Jarvis, 41 . The president planned to meet privatcl.Y with therr families, five of whom hvc in the Houston area. Members of an interim invcstiaa- tion board were to attend the cer- emony and then meet with members of the Mission Control Center team. They will return here Saturday to continue the investigation. President ready to propose ambitious welfare changes WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan, in his State of the Union address next week., is expected to call for a sweeping overhaul of the prop-ams designed to protect the nation's neediest citizens, admini~ tration sources say. advent of former President Lyndon Johnson's GIUt Society program of social im provements in the mid-1960s . system for protecting all Americans from the costs of catastrophic illness. and the third would lay the groundwork for reform of the inter- national monctarv system. ReaP,n plans to propose a "pro- family ' approach to welfare and suppon programs that would press- ure more poor people to work and eliminate provisions that tend to encourage the breakup offamilics, the sources said Thursday, speaking only on condition of anonymity. Rcapn has contended for years that many people without jobs don't want to work. And be has charged that the welfare system tends to di~ couraae them from looking for work. Rcapn's fifth State of the Union address, which was scheduled for last Tuesday but postponed a week in the wake of the space shuttle disaster that day. is scheduled for delivery to the joint session of Congress at 5 p.m. PST Tuesday. The sources said Reagan would announce three major new studies similar to the one which led to his proposal to overhaul the income tax system. Two of the officials who agreed to discuss the administration plans said the studies would be modeled after the Treasury Department analysis of the income tax system, which Reagan called for in his 1984 State of the Union address a nd which led a year later to his proposal to overhaul the tax system. T he House has passed its own version of the tax overhaul plan, and the Senate is giving the issue top priority this session. If successful. Reagan's plan would lead to the most ambitious revision of the nation's welfare system since the The welfare study, the sources said, will entail a year-long analysis of the full range of f edcral a1td state pro- grams to help the poor. It will be conducted bY. Reagan's Domestic Policy Council. Another will be aimed at establish- ing for the first time a nationwide Former Presidents Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter both tried to rewrite and reorganize the myriad programs the government has to help the needy, but neither succeeded. ~ Last Soviet-U .S. pair reunited By tile Associated Prett LI NTHICUM, Md.-A Russian history professor and the high school Enjlish teacher he married in Moscow face a "period of adjustment" now that they've been reunited after 11 years in a Soviet $esture of goodwill. Irina McClellan, who marrried Uni versity of Virginia profes.sor Woodford McClellan in 1974, arrived Thurs- day with her daughter, Elena, 26. Mrs. McClellan. 47. was the last of eight Soviets allowed to join their American spouses in relation to the summit meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. "My dear friends, I am finally an the United States, you know what it cost me," she said tearfully at Baltimorc- Washington International Airport. "I am very happy now. I hope we will meet again in the future." Money due for Superfund? WASHI NGTON -The Reagan administration has reversed its position and now supports temporary financing for "Superfund," but a rcvtval of the cash- starved toxic cleanup program still faces a big barrier. The impediment is the tax-writina Senate Finance Commit- tee, which for reasons larger than Superfund still opposes stopgap money for toxic removals while Congress strugalcs to produce a long-term renewal of the cleanup effort. Committee spokesman Sam Richardson said Superfund is pan of a far laricr legislative chess game involving income tax revision and the budget reconcili- ation bill for fiscal 1986, which began last Oct. I. Sailor guilty In Navy murder NEWPORT. R.I. -A black sailor who fatally stabbed a white officer while at sea has been convicted of premeditated murder. and a jury will now try to decide if ~should be the first person executed by the Navy in 137 years. A prosecutor said after Thursday's verdict that he would be.&in presentinaevidence today to show there were awavat1n1 circumstances in Petty Officer Mitchell T. Gamway Jr.'s attack on Lt. James K. Sterner. The Navy must prove such circumstances existed before capital punishment could be imposed. The ciaht-membcr military jury deliberated nearly fo ur hours before findina Gamway auilty of plottina the attack on Sterner aboard the friaate USS Miller on June 16, 1985, while it was off the Bermuda coast. Tremor reported Jn 8 •tat. A stronJ carthq_uake nambled beneath ci&ht Great Lakes and Ohio Valley states, the District of Columbia and Canada toda,. Some dama,e was reported but there were no reponso irtjuries. Tbequake wu reported ftlt in Pennsylvania, Kentucky1.~Jo, West Virsinia, Indiana, Illinois, Michpn and wi1C0111in and in Ontario. Ira Stohl':& a Cny Council ata.11' manber in WuhiQllOn, o.c~1.:--:· tbe aty JOvenncnt buildina two blocu rrom the wnite Houe &book. The U.S. Oe01osi<:aJ Survey in WalbillllODt D.C.. 11111naled that tbe Quake.. which occurred 1t 1:47 a.m. PST, had a mllftitude of .S.O on the t Richter scale of ground movement and was centered JU miles northeast of Cleveland. Waverly Person of the agency's offices in Golden, Colo., said the center of the canhqualce was apparently in La1cc Eric. Police stations, newspapers and broadcast stations were flooded with calls. Reports of feelina the qua.kc came from as far north as Barrie, Ontario. Arm• ale to Jor~an shelved WASHINGTON -The Reagan administration, facing almost certain defeat on a proposed S 1.9 billion arms sa le to Jordan, has asked Congress to postpone indefinitely consideration of the plan to send jet fi&hter planes and missiles to the Israeli foe, cong:ressionar and other sources say. In a face-saving ~esture, Secretary of State George P. Shultz is prepanng a letter to key committees suggesting the delay. Without a post- ponement, the sources said, the sale would be crushed. O ne senator's vote count is 85 to 15 against the deal. Strike cla.a Hormel plant AUSTIN, Minn. -Striking mcatpackcrs forced Hormel to shut down its main plant today as I 00 vehicles blockaded the road to the main gate and 200 demon- strators gathered at the fence, preventing replacement workers from entering. Mower County Shenff Wayne Goodnature said a state of"mob rule" existed ouuidc the plant, and he placed the blame "squarely on the governor's shoulders." Gov. Rudy Pcrpich removed the National Guard from the plant grounds earlier this week at the request of Mayor Tom Kough, who also is a striking P-9 member. Ooodnature said law enforcement officials decided not to send in police and shcrifrs officers to break up the blockade because they "made the decision not to shed the kind of blood that would have been shed." Ne• home •la •ur•e 1Jl6he.t WASHINGTON -Sales of new homes suraed 7.4 percent last year to their hiahcst level since 1979, the aovernment reponcd today. Sales of new sinaJe-family homes totaled 686.000 in 1985, makina last year tbc best sinct' 709,000 new homes were sold in 1979, the depertmcnts of Commerce 1nd Housina and Urban Ocvclopmct said. For December, sales rose 1. 7 percent as the averaae price ofa ho me hit a record hiah ofS 108,600. The report on new home sales followed a repon on Monday that sales or ex_istina ho mes rose an even stronaer 12.1 percent last year to a total of 3.22 million uniu. also the hiahest pecc since 1979. For December, new home sales were sold at a 1casonally adjusted annual rate of 721,000 units followina a ,;ant 11 .8 percent rise in November. The avef'llC sales price rote 4.5 percent an December from the previou1 record hiah ofSIOl.900 an November. Tbe median price wu aho a m:ord of119,l00 in December up 3.4 pmient from November. The sirenph an home ma th11 yar hat been credited'° fallina lDteMl "'*' which have pushed IMfil r ,... to their lownt levels in aiJL ~n. .. ,, FOR Ht R T8ke • eddldoi ... 50% off already reduced prices of sweaters for women and Juniors. Orig. 22.00 to 122.00, ticketed sale price 9.49 to 74.99 . One ·Day Sale price 4.76 to 37.24 T8ke mn addftional 50% off already reduced prices of women's warm sleepwear and robes. Orig. 24.00 to 78.00, ticketed sale price 14.99 to 57.99 . . . . . . . . One Day Sale price 7.49 to 21.11 T8ke mn addftional 40% off already reduced prices of handbags and clutches including leather, fabric and vinyl styles. I B.H. Smith not included.I Orig. 18.00 to 110.00, ticketed sale price 12.99 to 73.99 . . One Day Sale price 7.80 to 44.40 Take an addftional 40% off already reduced prices of women's and juniors shoes. Orig. 18.00 to 87 00, ticketed sale price 11.99 to 59.99 ........ One Day Sale price 7.19 to 39.• Tek• an additional 30% off: All already reduced apparel in Focus Sportswear, Sportswear 80's, Plaza Sportswear and Misses' Coats. Ticketed sale price 9.49 to 149.99 One Day Sale Price 5.69 to 104.99 Save 30%: On all regular price T ed d1 of California blouses Plaza, 66. Reg . 28.00 to 36.00 19.60 to 25.20 Save 25%: On all Devon and Personal Haberdashery polyester basics. Plaza Sportswear, 133 237 Reg 20 00 to 70.00 15.00 to 52.50 Save 30%: On all Weekender and NY Jean Co . denims. Plaza. 1351442. Reg. 24 00 to 26.00 18.20 to 20.00 Save 30%: On all skirts and related tops from Topics, Paquette, and Jonathan Mar tin. Plaza. 135 1442. Reg. 20.00 to 40.00 14.00 to 28.00 Take an additional 25% off: Already- reduced career and bridge collections. D. 1041107 11971272 /406'' Orig. 13 99 to 136.99 10.49 to 102.74 '·In Beverly Cer11er Bred CPnlury City Del Amo fashion Valley Glendale Horton Pla1a Hun11nqton Be<1ch Laqund Hills La Jolla Mon1cla11 Newport Beach Northrrrtqe Pla1a Downtown Los Angeles Santa Anua St1nta Monica Sherman Oaks Thou sanrt Oaks T01Jcl'1Qil Plata Save 25%: On coordinates from Russ Togs Petites. 287 Orig 36.00 to 78 00 27.00 to 58.50 Save 25%: On Broadwav·s own petite car d1gans P-S-M D 405 Reg 30 00 to 46 00 22.50 to 34.50 Save 25%: On spring trousers from Counterparts Petites. Sizes 4 to 14 D 405 Reg 41 00 30.75 Save 25%: On crlJlse act1vewear from Aileen Sizes 38 to 44 More Woman. 279 Ong 32 00 to 46 00 24.00 to 34.50 Save 25%: On Gloria Vanderbilt denim 1n sizes 32 to 36. More Woman, 127. Reg. 34 00 to 44.00 25.50 to 33.00 Save 25%: On our popcorn stitch V-neck pu llover. Sizes 38 to 44 More W oman. 127 Reg. 30 00 22.50 Save 25%: On our exclusive dolman· sleeve 1acket . S11es 38 to 44 More Woman, 127 Reg. 30 00 22.50 Save 25%: On career casual and pants in Sportswear 80's D 252 443 Reg 24 00 to 40 00 18.00 to 30.00 Save 25%: On all misses' blue 1eans m Sportswear ao·s. 252 Reg 25.00 to 40 00 18.75 to 30.00 Save 25%: On all shaker knit sweaters in Sportswear 80's, 40. Reg. 20 00 to 29 .00 15.00 to 21.75 Save 25%: On our entire stock of misses' printed blouses Sportswear SO's, 125. Reg 32 00 to 54 00 24.00 to 40.50 Save 25%: On our French terry pullovers by Active Ingredient Sportswear 80's. 252 . Reg. 26.00 19.50 Save 25%: On all 1un1or skirts and printed denim jeans. !Except Esprit and Generra l . D. 129/236 Reg . 19.99 to 38.00 14.99 to 28.50 Save 25%: On all 1unior Actif fleece sweatshirts and pants. D. 246. Reg . 12.00 to 18.00 1.00 to 13.50 Tele• an extr• 25% off already reduced dresses and 1uri1or collections. D 641851 1301445. Reg . 4.49 to 44 .99 3.37 to 33.74 Save 80%: On 14K gold charms and pen· dants. Fine Jewelry, 810. Reg. 55.00 to 375.00 . . 22.50 to 150.00 S.v• 20%: On all misses' and juniors' regular price sleepwear. robes and loungewear including designer. Res:i. 12.00 to 80.00 . . l .IO to 94.00 Save 20%: On all women's panties. slips. camisoles. tap pants. teddies, and more. D. 631260 . Reg. 27.5 to 46.00 2.20 to 31.IO Save 20%: On ou r entire stock of bras and foundations. D. 19/258/139. Reg. 5.00 to 26.00 . . . . . 4.00 to 20.IO leve ~:.on our entire stock of silk dresses. Misses' sizes. 0 . 22. Reg. 98.00 to 140.00 . . 73.IO tO 105.00 leve 211%: On 111 Plaza dresse1. D. 73. Reg. 19.99 to 70.00 . . . . 14 •• tO 52..IO ..,,. 29'Mt: On ell regular price tof t dr .... 1 from Moderete and Plaza Petites. D. 27/163. ReQ . 60.00 to 96.00 ........ 41.00 t0 n .oo left ~ On some of your favorite women'• and 1uniora' 1hoa. - Reg. 33.00 to 74.00 . . 21.20 to a2I SELE (JI DAY SUPER SALE ONLY 8 A.M., TO 10 P.M. ~OR HlR Sawe ~ On all regular price leather and vinyl handbags. IOoes not include designer bags.I. Reg. 14.00 to 96.00 .11.20 to 11.• lave 20%: On all pierced and clip ear- rings. (Does not include M onet and Trifari.) D. 20/439/141 . Reg . 5.00 to 35.00 . . . ... 4.00 to 21.00 Save 20%: On all Round-the-Clock and Givenchy hosiery. D. 3 . Reg. 1. 75 to 7 .00 . . . . . ... 1.40 to 6.IO Save 20%: On our entire stock of ladies belts~ small leather goods and purse-ac· cessories. D. 861449/142. Reg. 6.00 to 92 .00 . . . . . . . . . 4.IO to 73.IO Save 20%: On all leotards. tights and leg warmers. Bodywear, 223. Reg. 6.00 to 45.00 .......... 4.IO to 31.00 FOR HIM Tele• mn eddltkNW ~ off already reduced prices of sweaters and outerwear for men and young men. (Men's Coats not included). Orig. 20.00 to 235.00, ticketed price 9.99 to 139.99 . . . . . . One Day Sale price 4.99 to lt.99 · Telee an addidOn.I 50% off already reduced prices of men's warm sleepwear and robes. Orig. price 18.00 to 90.00. ticketed sale price 13.99 to 49.99 One Day Sale price 1.99 to 24.99 T elee an IMlditJon.e 40% off already reduced prices of men's shoes. Orig. 48 .00 to 72.00, ticketed price 29.99 to 49.99 One Day Sale price 17.• to 29.99 Save 25%: On all men's suits. sportcoats, blazers, dress sl acks and rainwear. D. 9/48 /61 , 192. I Suits 1n selected stores. I Reg. 57.50 to 375.00 .... 43.13 to 281.25 Save 25%: On all regular price designer dress shirts. D. 147 /218. Reg. 24.00 to 32.50 . . . 11.00 to 24.38 Save 25%: On our entire stock of men's ties and belts. D. 225/404/415. Reg. 8.50 to 25.00 . 6.38 to 18.75 Save 25%: Famous maker men's hosiery. Reg. 3.00 to 7.00 2.25 to 5.25 Save 25%: On men's high fashion underwear. D 432 . Reg. 4.50 to 16.00 3.38 to 12.00 Save 20%: On all regular price men's casual and dress shoes (active not in- cluded I D 57 1121 Reg . 27.00 to 100.00 21.60 to 80.00 Save 25%: On our entire stock of men·s act1vewear and weekendwear. D. 1091251 Reg. 9.99 to 32.00 7.49 to 23.99 Save 25%: On our entire stock of men's woven sportshirts. D 213 417 Reg 12.99 to 28 50 9.74 to 21 .38 Save 25%: On our entire stock of Robert Bruce Orlon· acrylic sweaters. D 171 Reg 20 00 to 36 00 15.00 to 27.00 Save 25%: On our London Fog golf 1ackets D. 217 Reg 45 00 33.75 Save 25%: On a famous American designer sportshirts, swe~ters, slacks and outerwear for men D. 423 . Reg . 15.99 to 60.00 11.99 to 45.00 Save 25%: On Haggar's polyester Expan- domat1c waist slacks. D 182. Reg 29 00 21 .75 Save 40%: On men's updated casual and dress slacks from Arrow Brigade. Cadaz and Axiom D 245 Reg. 21 99 to 24 99 13.20 to 15.00 Save 25%: On our entire stock of long sleeved knit tops for young men D. 53 . Reg 14 99 to 38 00 11.25 to 28.50 Save 20%: On Levi's shrink to-fit 501 denim ieans in indigo only D 123. Reg. 19 99 15.99 Save 25%: On long sleeved woven shirts: solids and patterns in Young Men's D. 183 Reg. 12.99 to 38 00 9.74 to 28.50 Save 25%: On all fleece and active coor d1nates (except Ste1nwurtzell. D. 185. Orig 13.99 to 32 00 10.49 to 24.00 FOR KIDS Take en additional 50% off already reduced sweaters and outerwear for newborns. infants, toddlers, girls 4 to 14 and boys 4 to 20. Ong. 12.00 to 70.00. ticketed sale price 6.99 to 49.99 One Day Sale price 3.49 to 24.99 Save 30%: On Campus Le Tigre and lzod knit shirts Boys' sizes 8 to 20. D. 26. Reg . 12.00 and 20.00 1.40 and 14.00 Save 30%: On all Farah slacks, sizes 4-7 D. 430. Reg 15.00 to 16.00 10.50 to 11 .20 S.v• 30%: On all knit tops from Left Bank, Kennington. Chams and N.R.G. Sizes 8 to 2C D. 26. Reg. 9.99 to 20 00 I .II to 14.00 Save 30%: On our entire stock of woven HOUSEWARES leve ~ Durend ''Seabreeze" glass serveware. (Dept. 2081. OriQ. 12.00 to 30.00. • . . . • .• 1 .00 tO 15.00 S.V. ~ Crown Corning lead stemware. (Dept. 2081. Orig. 20.00 . . .I.• Save 21%: On all enamel tea kettles. Fujiware, Copco, Chantal, Mikasa and our own imports. (Dept. 1431. Orig. 9.99 to 29.99 . . 7 .49 to 22.49 lave 7.01: On Krups "Touch Top .. coffee grinder. (Dept. 2621. Orig. 20.00 . . 12." S.V. 4.01~ Farberware 2-slice toast8f (Dept. 95). Orig. 19.00 . 14.• SOFAS SECTIONALS Save 1001.00: On our contemporary all leather sofa imported from Italy. (Dept. 381. Orig. 1500.00 . . . . . . . . .. 499.00 SLEEPERS FAMILY ROOM Save 220.00 tO 311.00: On Berkline's · Niagara family room group covered in champagne herculon velvet. Chair not available. (Dept. 233 1. Orig. 449.00 to 899.00 188.00 to 599.00 Save 211.00: On our trad1t1onal queen sleeper with key arm design in woven floral print. IDept 233 1 Ong. 899.00 588.00 Save 111.00 to 311.00: On our Mandarin core ra ttan group in sunburst floral pattern of 100% cotton. IDept 2331. Orig. 329.00 to 899 .00 211.00 to 588.00 Save 1447.00: On our 4 pc. rattan modular group w ith loose multipillow- back. (Dept 233) Orig 3396.00 1949.00 Save 211.00: On our convertible sleeper. Choose twin, full or queen size in Ranger Blue or Panger Puma. IDept 233). Ong. 699.00 488.00 CHAIRS,RECLINERS ACCENTS Save 110.00: On our glass and brass accent tables hexagonal or square top. IDept. 2731. Ong. 199 00 89.99 Save 411.00: On our contemporary brass and glass wall unit etagere I Dept 1651. Ong. 999.00 588.00 Save 312.00: On our rocker recliner by Barcalounger . IDept. 2101 Orig. 650.00 . 288.00 Save 350.00: On our leather 'Zurich style scoop chair (Dept. 2761 Orig 599.00 249.00 Save 221.00: On our tufted back velvet swivel rocker I Dept 2761. Orig 400.00 179.00 Save 100.00: On our Shafford Grandfather clock imported from West Germany with tripe chime movement fOept 1651 Orig 799 00 699.00 Save 201.00: On our contemporary leather chair and ottoman set chrome base !Dept 1651. Orig 400.00 199.00 Save 400.00: Oak trim recliner from Bar· calounger, covered in top grain cowhide I Dept. 2101 Ong 899 00 499.00 Save 251.00: On our casual oa k entertain ment center !Dept 275) Ong 700.00 449.00 Save 1200.00: On our 5 pc almond lac quer wall system I Dept 2751 Ong 2999 00 1799.00 DINING BEDROOM FURNITURE Save 1300.00: On our 6 pc imported black lacquer bedroom set includes dresser mirror. 2 night stands queen headboard and queen paltform bed (Dept 921 Ong 3299.00 1999.00 Save 925.00: On our 6 pc Santa Fe' casual oak bedroom. 1Dep1 921 Orig 2124.00 DOMESTICS 1199.00 Save 50%: Liz Claiborne comforter sets twin. full or queen. (Dept 21 Orig. 169 99 to 219 99 49.99 Save 50%: Off on all d1scontinut--d rtose1 ensembles 1n stock from Richard~ (Dept. 41 Save 50%: On our entire collectH)n of hangers. !Dept 41 Save 25%: On comforter sheets sE>tS Includes flat sheet fitted sheet dusl ruf fie. comforter. pillow case and sham I Dept 21. Orig 79 00 set to 199 00 set 59.99 set to 149.99 set BRASS BEDS AND DAY BEDS sportshirts for boys' sizes 8 to 20. D. 260. S.ve 50%: Off our entire collection of Reg. 9.99 to 18.00 I.• to 12.IO Mikasa g1ftware. Choose from candy S.ve 30%: On our entire stock of Billy dishes, vases, bowls and more l Dept 701 The Kid playwear, boys' sizes 4 to 7. D. Orig. 5.00 to 50.00 2.50 to 25.00 74. Reg. 6.99 to 20.00 .. 4.IO to 14.00 S.ve 50: On selected 20 piece dinnerware S.ve 30%: On all fleece separates in· sets from Mikasa. Assorted patterns eluding Steinwurtzel for boys sizes 4 to 7. (Dept. 408). Orig. 110.00 to 179.80 49.99 D. 74. Reg. 18.00 to 25.00 .12.IO to 17.50 Save 20% to 30%: On selected Dansk Save 21%: On our entire stock of Health dinnerware and gifts. I Dept 204 1 Tex playwear. D. 441137/418/419/ S.ve 20%: Villerov & Boch selected I • HOME ENTERTAI NING lew ll'IM.: On our entire c&nectlon of silv8fplated holloware from Calegaro of Italy. Choose from barware. teaware. trays, bake and serve and accessories . IDept. 1661. Reg 20.00 to 199.00 '·"to•• r.AR PETS AND RUGS Save 34% to 50%: On 'f'\1811 to wall carpeting and ~ upgr~ ... ~---·-'till ... at no addhionel charge. Choose from 9 different qualities in over 250 designer col- ors. Free no obligation measure and estimate, removal of old carpet and choice of padding (90 oz. rubber or •;, ·· rebond pad . (Dept. 321. Ong. 30 00 to 50.00 · . 16.99 to 29.19 sq. yd. Save an edditlonal 10%: Off the sale price of our Maial pure wool pile Onental design ru gs from Italy !Dept 451 Ong 100.00 to 600.00, sale price 49.00 to 399.00 bonua price 44.10 to 359.10 Save an edditionlll 10%: Ott the sale price of our Madrid white wool Area Rugs from Spain (Dept. 45} Ong 2QO 00 to 600 00, sale price 99 00 to 399 00 Bonus price 19.10 to 359.10 MATTRESSES AND BRASS BEDS Save 50%: On Simmons King Ko1I Ferm mattresses IDept 691 Twin ea pc orig 129 95 Full. ea pc ong. 199 95 Queen . set. orig 599 95 King set, orig. 699 95 59.00 ... pc. 99.00 ... pc. 299.00 Mt 349.00 Mt Save 350.00: On ollr Berkley white iron day bed from Benicia Link spring in eluded IOept. 691 Ong 850.00 499.00 Save l00.00: On our Nottingham genuine brass day bed from Sw ann Link spring included. !Dept 691 ' , Ong. 1,000.00 699.00 LAMPS, MIRRORS & CLOCKS Save an addition9I 20%: Off the sale price of our traditional mirrors I Dept 31 l Ong 300 00. sale price 149 00 'Bonus Price 119.20 S.we .., edditioft9I 20%: Ott the sale price of our crystal table or brass candlestick lamps. I Dept 71 I Ong 75 00 to 80 00 sale price 49 99 Bonus P rice 39.99 Save en additional 20%: Off the sale price of case glass pharmacies and sol••1 brass pharmacy lamps Dept 71 Orig 125 00 10 150 00 sale pr ce 79 99 Bonus Price 63.99 Save an additional 20%: Off the sale price of traditional tHd!>':> floo• or 9lass top Torch1ere lamps 1Dept 711 Orig 200 00 sale pt1ce 129 00 Bonus Price 103.20 PERSONAL CARE Save 5.01: Clairol 1nst<1nt hatrserter with rollers (Dept 207 • Or q 25 00 sole price 22 99 less 3 00 m-'•1ufdL turt>r s rebate 19.99 TOYS Save 14.01: Monkey hand puppets. I Dept 281 Reg 20 00 Save 30.01: R1c.P P.1th 8JL•1's Reg 50 00 LUGGAGE 5.99 D"Pt 28 19.99 Save 25%: Ow "'' lu::-1\ •' \.\ cvlov.11h• 5 01t•1 t' luq4.iut• -:,1 • of 42u 11 ·' •111 "v 11111 111 qr»y with hi.ii " Pt 11 D··t ·, 3 l Spe1..1dl Purct1d...,t' 29 99 to 6~ ~9 .... 1 n Bonus. Price 22.49 to 52.49 each Sava 25%: Ow eio., uS1\ e Hunt•'' .l p1t>u"' luggage set 1n i-hdl-n\ Ion "'1th '.1• lt>c1ctit>1 trim and wehbed h,P dies •Dept 33 Special Pur.chdse 24 99 to 49 99 , 11 ' Bonus Price 18.74 to 37.49 each Save 25%: Our e'11lclus1\ • 4 p1t'C" 1i..J(J..lllt' set 1n canvas 1ute w1tt' lc.ither tr " Oep1 33 1 Special Pur Lhasl 29 99 tc 69 ~9 ~d .. ' Bonus Price 22.49 to 52.49 each STATIONERY Save 10.00: Small World v•'ltr') orq;in11e1 Holds monthly pl;inn r 1n1k• •.1t-,..; .ic1 dress book. calculator and " 1 11• 1n i refillable a· xlO format 11 •1·'1 1'fr1 1 ti1,'lc 11. IDept 151 Orig 29 99 19.99 Save 5.00: Our genu1nl' t1011dt>1! lt«~ther photo album with maqnet1c page~ Hold~ 1000 pl'totos (Dept 151 Aeq 24 99 19.91 LIQUOR & GOURMET 420/428. Reg 3.99 to 26.00 .2.• to 11.50 porcelain dinnerware and gifts S.v• 21%: On all fleece sets for (Dept 4331. S.ve I0.00: On Wild Turkey porcelain ... newborns, infants, toddlers and girls 4 to Save 240 .01 . Sango 91 piece service for decanter. Lore Series. 101 proof 8 year 14. 0 . 44/83/901137/234/428. 12 dinnerware sets. A orted patt ms old bourbon 750m IDept 845 I Reg. 12.00 to 32.00 .. . . . .1.00 to 24.00 (Dept. 11 I Ong. 350 00 •• Ong 79 95 21.'5 S.ve 21%.: On our entire stock of dreamy No special 0<d rs. Save 29.00: Ceramic barrel d cantrr ftlled sleepwear and lingerie for girls 4 to 14. D ·lewe ~On Longchamps crystal stem with 1 75 liter of Old Kentucky our mash 56179. Reg .99 to 29.99 ..• 74 to 22.• ware by J .G. Durand Available 1n goblet. bourbon IDept 8451 Ong 39 95 11.• a.we 21%.: On our entire stock of girls' wine, cordial and flute Alt full lead S.ve 4.M : Beam Duck Stemp d nti r accessories. Includes ptuah animals. D. crystel. (Dept 361 sen s filled with 7S0ml Beam bourbon 102 Reg 5.99 to 29.99 4.• '° 22.• Orig. 3.99 each 2.11 MCtt fOept 8451 Ong 9 95 4.9 N WI L VARY TOR T LIMITED TO STOCK ON HANO . NO MAIL, PHONE OR SPECIAL ORDERS. t • . . . • • .. I_ Irvine-Wisely gives })eave-ho to smoking plan The problem with voluntary controls as a response to public problems is that so many people volunteer to ignore them. Irvine's attempt to protect non-smokers from baanful cigarette smoke in the workplace is a case in point. The City Council voted Tuesday to scrap its higb- minded plan to allow businesses to police themselves on the smokingissue while public places would be subject to city law in the matter. According to Assistant City Manager Paul Brady Jr., his staff has beard few reports that smoking controls hav.e been initiated voluntarily since the original law was adopted in October. On the other hand Brady told the council there have been few reports of smoking problems by workers in city businesses. So, why worry about who's smoking and who's breathing the smokers' exhaust fumes? Because cigarette smoke in the air is a public health hazan:l._ no less than coal dust in mines or asbestos fibers in school rooms. The founders of the republic mar not have envisioned a government which took so active a role in the workings of commerce. But then, neither did the City Council of Irvine. Rather, it came to the realization that a public existed and would persist unless the city took actU>n. This course may not be the preferable one. After all, smoking bas, until recently, been considered among those purely personal matters, such as voting or religion or underarm deodorant. It was a matter of choice or conscience. It would have been much more palatable if the business community bad accepted the current wisdom -based on scientific fact -that incipient smoke is dangerous to those breathe it. If there had been an indication that businesses were acting responsibly to protect vulnerable employees from this very real hazard, perhaps the government could have kept its distance. But that's not the way it happened. So, given the choice between forced protection and no protection, the City Council took the better option. ~edevelopinentAgency pralsed for super 61ock To the Editor: I want to congratulate the Costa Mesa Redevelopment Agency on th e outstanding redevelopment that it has accomplished so far in downtown Costa Mesa. The super block is beautiful, functional and economi- cally a boon to our city. I moved from San Marino to Costa Mesa in 19S4 and was kidded by my Newport Beach friends that Costa Mesa was stiU "Goat Hill'. and didn't compare to Newport Beach. I kidded back telling my "Mackerel Aats" friends that their tune would chanae when we had a "Bullocks, Costa Mesa" ne ver honestly thinking that would happen. Over the years, the Newport Boulevard. l 9th Street, Harbor Boulevard triangle developed with 10me nice buildings and some cheap, unattractive buildings but economi· cally very good because of the central. 'easy-to-get-to location. In 1978 my son-in-law became an -5SOCiate with me in my orthodontic practice. He was not very happy with the surroundings. His favorite or- thodontic teacher had advised him to pick a young. 'growing community to open his practi ce. He told him that pawn shops were a bad sign of community deterioration. We looked .out our windows ;:;cross the parking Jot to a "pawn .. shop on Harbor Boulevard, and I had tWH\fCS of embarrassment. My son-m-law moved on to a different co mmunity in 1981. I watched with pride the beautiful .Pacific Federal building go up. The super block is terrific; the new store ·fronts along Newport Boulevard tic .: BJ die AtlOCiatd Pres• the Spanish motif together. I was very excited and happy to hear that the Redevelopment Agency was going to redevelop the triangle. I was not surprised. because this propen y is the very center of downtown Costa Mesa and to not develop it seems almost foolish. Eyesores in the ccenter of beauty is how I feel about most of the present triangle buildings. If members of the Redevelopment Agency have been cnt1zed for their redevelopment acti vi ti es. they should remember that they have 10 take the heat when they are in politics. For some reason, it is easier for people to criticize than to compliment. A few complain but the great silent majority watches, approves. become prouder of their community but. verbally, they do not tell the agency to keep up th e good work. I am the secretary of Costa Mesa Dental Properties and feel I am speaking for all the dentists in this area. We have seen Mr. Mola's plans for the triangle and they arc magnifi- cent. We are satisfied with how fairly the Redevelopment Agency is treat- ing us. r want to be proud of the entire downtown Costa Mesa area so I encourage the Redevelopment Agen- cy to proceed. Thank you Redevelopment Agen- cy for changin$ an "eyesore" to a beauuful shoppmg area. All the years of hard work and effon by the Redevelopment Agency arc paying. off and you can take pnde in your achievements . TERRELL L. ROOT., DDS Costa Mesa : Today is Friday. Jan. 31 . the 31st day of 1986. There arc 334 da ys left in the rat' Today's hiahliaht in history: On Jan. 31. l9S8, the United States entered the Space Age. with its first )uccessful launch of a satellite into orbit. Explorer I. On this date: • . In 1606, Guy Fa~kes. convict~ for his pan '1n the Gunpowder Plot ••nit the EnaJish Parliament and Kina James I, was executed. • In 1797 composer Franz Schubert was born. In I 86S. Gen. Robert E. Lee was named commandcr·1n-ch1ef of the Confederate ann 1es. In 1917, Germany served notice that 1t was beginning a policy of unrestricted submarine warfarr. • In 1934. President Franklin D. Roosevelt devalued the dollar 1n relation to .,.d. ORANGE COAST lllily Pilat 1(-Wtftm. ,,.,. Zlftl Ec11IOI , .... , ... Mat'ltQ1nO E Oii Ot .,...,....., Oty E6t0f r ... c... ,.._.[ClhOI CNll ... Sflor!I Editor P11Dfl&Mf ..........,c .. ......, COntrOl!tf ~L.C..... Pr.oouc1ion ~ TerrJll .... C.Wlllion ~ ··EinlnentdOmatn and urban renewal have come to basically conaervattve. ttomettmes liberal and newly developing Orange County ... ; c5 llAJlTINUOW&R col•••t.t PHYLLIS ScHLAFLY Treaty could affect election Genocide Treaty s een as fa ctor in determin ing votes M-.iority Leader Bob Dole keeps sayina every few weeks that he intends to brina up the Genocide Treaty for a vote in the Senate. Since this United Nations.-written treaty has been hangina around the Senate since 194&, what's the hurry'? Eminent domain correct solution for Huntington Why is Bob Dole so cager to force a vote? That's what Senate Re- publicans arc asking, especially those who are up for election this year. A survey of Senate offices shows that there is no push to ratify it, but an enonnous volume of mail and phone calls apfost it. So many s;>hone calls have gone into the m-.ionty leader's office that his staff bas become very irritable about them. Even Dole himself. when approached personally at Republican receptions, displays enormous annoyance at anyone who sugaests that it's a bad idea to vote on the treaty. Time has come for good, old shops in city's down town The words "eminent domain" are harsh. cold words. They are strange and legal. They call up visions of the grasping hand of government grab- bing up public property. However. emment domain is sometimes used. among other things, to implement a concept that draws strongly negati ve reactions from both conservatives and liberals -urban renewal. Conservatives don't like urban renewal because it is Big Brother government stepping into the arena of private property -taking over someone's land and deciding what should be done with that land for the good of the general public. And liberals don't hke urban re- newal because 11 uproots people, often agamst their will-telling them they have to move out of stores, shops and sometimes homes so that the area can be put to better use. Eminent domain and urban re- newa l have COfT\C. to basically con- servative. sometimes liberaJ and newly developing Orange County. While planners are still determin- ing how to use open, virgin land in so me parts of this relatively small county. municipal officials have de· tcrmincd that other parts of the county are rcadv for redevelopment. MARTIN BROWER We can almost accept that cities like Anaheim, incorporated in 1878, and Santa Ana, incorporated in 1886, might have core areas ready for redevelopmenL And, in fact, both of those cities have active redevclo~ ment programs under way. But Hunungton Beach? Somehow, Huntington Beach doesn't seem that old. And, to an extent, it isn't. While Huntington Beach was incorporated way back in 1909 with a population of 91 S. by I 9SO the city bad a population ofonly S,237. Li.kc so much ofOranac County. Huntington Beach under- went its major growth during the 1960s-from 11,000 to I 16,000. And today,. the population exceeds 180.000. But the old downtown retail area - the shops that have served bcachgoers over the years, the ones this writer remembers during the summers of the 1940s -arc considered ready for redevelopment. The city Redevelopment Agency·s concept is to clear the two-block area bounded by Main and Second streets. Walnut A venue and Pacific Coast Highway, and to permit development ·of a SSO million project. including a 300-room hotel, 15,000 square feet of rcuil and commercial facilities, and a 20,()()()..square-foot public plaza - plus a pedestrian overpass spanning Pacific Coast Highway. That not only sounds as if it will be a tremendous enhancement to the city, but will also return a goodly amoun t of bed tax and sales tax to the city treasury. Not that everyone favors the facelift. Some of the merchants would prefer to stay put. Oh, business may not be great, but it is good enough for them. And some of the residents like the quaint. old stores. There is something comfortable about an ifing, well-used neighborhood sho~ ping district. The Redevelopment Agency began the project in 1984 with the concept that the redevelopment could move ahead only if the developer acquired two-thirds of the site and that two- thirds of the owners in the area not acquired should be committed to the sale of their propeny. But there are holdouts. If a person secs that his propeny is desperately desired. he tends to hold out for a price. That's only supply and de- mand. : And that is why eminent domain came into play. The government steps in, has an appraiser determine the fair market value, and ~kes the land -paying the price determined by the appraiser. Yes. eminent domain is a cruel, harsh phrase. But for the good old shops in the core of the city, their time has come. Mart/a Brower pflbll1lle1 Ille oeff1- letter, "Marthl Broffer '• Oru1e Couty Report. The problem with the Genocide Treaty 1s that it opens the door for Amcncan citizens to be tried in foreign couns without the protection of the U.S. Bill of Rights. Those at particular risk would be members of the U.S. armed forces and American missionaries serving abroad. This is why, amon• patriotic groups and among Chrisllan groups, the Genocide Treaty bas beoome a major issue. Many of these aroups scc the treaty as a litmus paper test that will determine their sur port of sena- tors over and above al other issues. They caJI it the "Panama Canal issue of the '80s." While there is no logical argument for the treaty, the term "genocide .. evokes the imagery of the-Holocaust 40 years a,o. But the world is different today: Hitler is dead and today's biggest perpetrators of genocide are the Soviets, the Red Chinese, and the Cambodians. But the 1948 treaty is written in such a way as not to apply to communist genocide. The State De~ partment admitted last year that the treaty could not be applied to the Soviets' genocide aga.inst Afghani- stan or the mass murder of the Cambodians in the 1970s. The Jewish Press has rc<:01Dized that the treaty "stands to hurt every American and especially Israel. lntercstinaJyenough, it would be used as a club against the very nations it was designed to protect." --l':a1:11:r;t.Jm ,t14.1,1.i~:1.1 .. --------------LcadinJ Jewish Americans, such as Sen. Chic Hecht, R-Nev., have spoken out against the Genocide Treaty because it endangers the consUtutional riahtsofaU Americans. He dispelled the notion that senators should vote for the treaty in order to prove they are against the HolocausL Spare parts could be straw that breaks Kremlin's hold Senators know that, if they vote for the Genocide Treaty, they don't pin any votes because even those who say they support it don't really care one way or the other. But they do stand to lose the support of patriotic and rcliJious groups that arc necessary to their winning coalition in 1986. Pentagon offers Third World nation s ---American parts for Soviet equipmen t WASHINGTON -As cenified critics of the Pcntagon·s penchant fo r extra vagant projects and hidebound suspicion of new ideas. we arc delighted to break the news of an ingenious. small-budget program the military has been running without fanfare for more than a year. It even has a catchy nickname: "Bear's Spares.·· The idea, hke most good ones. 1s simplicity itself: Offer Third World countries maintenance and Ameri- can-made spare parts for th eir Soviet military hardware. The aim is to make 1t easier for these nations to cut the strinas the Soviets always attach to their military aid, yet avoid the need to buy new weapons they can't afford. The Pentaaon has dclibcr>1tely kept the modest proeram under wraps. But we've learned that the two spamng partners of the Reagan Cabinet. Defen se Se c retary Caspar Weinbcracr and Secretary of State GeorJC Shultz.._ both approved the plan m Apnl 1 y84. A small staff from the Peniaion's security assistance pr~m was Jivcn the task of developinf and 1mplementm& "Bear's Sparet, • and has supervistd nearly SSO million worth of the imaa.inative contracts already. The proaram bas concentrated on Afnca. w6ere the Ru.ssian bear's pawprints have been a disturt>tna feature of the political landlcapt for yea.rs. The idea oriaJDated with Noel Koch. deputy a S11tant dcfen1e tce- retary for A fncan a train. who poinled out the problem that poor African nauons have when they decide to . back out of the Soviet bcarhug but arc then stuck with quantjties of de- teriorating military cquipmenL Reagan administration officials were quick to grasp the potentiat-of the United States steppma m with maintenance expertise and spare parts. As Koch explains, the Soviets "deliberately seek to develop a de- pendency that requires a tarse pres- ence in the country as well as an umbilical rclationshjp with Mos-cow ... The Soviets do thjs by "providing only the most rudimentary traininain mamtainina equipment, some of which -by desian -cannot even be maintained locally, but must be returned to the Soviet Union or elsewhere," he said. This system. plus the rapid accumulation of debts, soon re1uJts in a relationship like that between "field bands and the com· pany store." Koch said. Two countries that nearly became docile Soviet satellites throuah mili- tary aid were F.aYot and Somalia. But both fleed a hitcl choice when they booted the Soviets out Learn to live with crumbli.na, unreliable weapons or spend money they didn't have on new Western hardwire. Tbe beauty of .. Beer's S~" is that the former Soviet clienls now have a third option: for a relatively modest 1um, leam from U.S, e•pcrts how to maintain their Soviet arms, and buy needed spare pans frow1 American companies. Small U.S. cooll'KtOn ~ undtt· standlbly entllum..tic about the~ pam; more 1ur'Driliftlly, the "'8 boyl a~ too. A ,..lllOD tcNn:e G • piaioed: "''They mow tie coutrin can't aft'ord the bia·tickct item a. so it's • and DAU VAN A Tl A This is especially true of Sen. James Abdnor of South Dakota, who faces a challenge in the primary by Gov. William Janklow (a staunch oppo- nent of the Genocide Treaty), and Sen. Paula Hawkins ofAorida, whose re~lcction depends on maintainina her ftaJile coalition of Jewish and Christian groups and doesn't need a way for them to make a few bucks any problems raised by an unnccess~ they wouldn't have made otherwise." ary vote on a 38-year-old treaty. Another advantaae of the program Some senators are tryin~ to hide is that it probably saves American behind Jesse Helms' 'Under· wpayen a bundle by preventing the standin15" which were added to the necessity ofU .S. military aid grants to Genocide Treaty before it came out of buy new, expensive weapons. the Foreian Relations Committee. Sen. Helms did the best he could to Tbe possibilities of the provam arc clean up the treaty while in that very truly excitina. In the nut decade, it liberal committee, but it's impossible would not be farfetchcd to imasine to make such a bad treaty acceptable. that "Bear's Spares" could play a Helms is committed to vote apinst it major role in pryina loo1e from the despite the addition of his lanauate. Kremlin's embrace such countries as In law and diplomacy: "under· Mozambique, G uyana and standin~·· simply do not have the Suriname. Even Libya mi&ht be effect of .. amendments" or ''reter· su~tible,onccMuammarKhadafy vation1." The United States may is aone. "understand" the treaty to have a WATCH ON WASTE: Several ccn.ain meanina. but that is no aua.rantee whatsoever that the World years and many biUions of dollars too Court, or some "international penal late, Consrus has finally shut down tribull&I'' set up to try tbOle accuMd the U.S. Synthelic Fuels Corp. Jt of tenoclde, will "unden&and" the never achieved its mission of findina treat)''• terms the same way we do . alternatives to fossil fuels, and the Aocordina 10 The Jewish Pma. the world oil sJut made it irrele~ant. Now Otnocide Treaty is "a propqanda it tums out that even the aaency's tool of the Ruuians. demise it aoi{\I to COit a fortune: As majority leader, Bob Dole bu ConpasionaJ inves~tors estimate the power to call for a vote ot '° '-w. u much u SIO million. Tbal may -·· include more than SJ million left on lhe Oenocide Treaty buried in the the late of Synfuels' plush down· deep freeze h's been ia for~ four UL.a .. • ..:....:... pl dtcadet. If he foroed the Senate 10 fOWD '"llNliJlllOft Ou"""'a, US tet• VO~, be could p¥e the Democ:nll rNNIMM' .. l*Gtltomorcthu 100 jUll mu tin.le mmlill lllly .... IO =-~..::rad~~~ deliet ODI OI two ......... Md ....._.mo111111n11" =..-c'~-==,c:!.,..,..,.. • ...-cm11a1 "'* Je1t tlfJ _ _, lWt V• A• ,.,.. fttte' If • IJ•• U J .,. ,,. .. NW .rz ? ... "" .... I \ . Orenge co.et DAILY PILOT/FrkMy, ~ 31. 1 .. * A1 State Supreme Court may affirm death sentences .StatelawyerqulZzed · on teen sex reports SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The stale Supreme Court slood by ils rtversals Of lWO death SCnlenccs Thursday .• bul the d issenting votes of new Justice Edward Panelli hinted that as many as four other recent death sentences may be reconsidered and affirmed. "The vote of Justice Panelli to grant re~ear~ngs in both (cases) is encoura~ng in terms of the action to be taken' on five remaining requests for reconsiderations of death penalty reversals, said Assistant Attorney General Edward O'Brien, death pen- alty coordinator in the attorney general's office. In four of the remaining cases all decided Dec. 31. the death sentence was reversed by a single vote. Ill another ae11on Thursday. the court clanfied a death penalty ruling oflast month by,approvmg nandards for jurors to use 1n we1ghinR c1rcum- '1ances of the cnme and the dcft'n· dant's back.around and deciding be- tween a sentence of death or life without parole. The court reversed 11 death sentences on Dec. 31 and ordered the cases returned to lower courts, in most insta.nces for partial retri•ls on the issue of pu~ishment. Since 1977. when the Lqislature restored the death penalty law, the court has reversed 52 of SS death sentences it has considered. The attorney general's office asked for rehearings on five of the 11 re versals along with another reversal decided earlier. The reque'ltS were su bmitted to a court that has been joined by Panelli, appointed by Gov. George Dcukmejian to succeed the retiring '.Justice Otto Kaus. The court on Thursday rejected two rcheafi.Rg5--r~ucm.d by the attorney general along with a third Newspaper says cocaine found in Nelson's systeDl By tbe A11oclated Pre11 DALLAS -Toxicolo~y tests on singer Rick Nelson's body confirm he had a small amount of cocaine in his system when he dird in a New Year's Eve pl~ne crash. the Dallas Times Herald reported today. But the tests showed no ev1denc~ that .. freebasi ng." a method of cocaine use that involves heating the dr~g w1.th an open Oa~e .. caused the crash. the newspaper quoted an uni~ent1fied feder~I A v1at1on Administration laboratory spokesman as saying. A un1den11fied spokesman at the Civil Aeromecfic Institute in Oklahoma City said traces of both metabolized and unmetabolizcd cocaine - as well as a compound of the pa1nk1ller Darvon -were fo und in Nelson's blood and unne samples. the Times Herald reported. Blrds threatened by San Dlego oll splll Assembly backs recycling plan SACRAMENTO (AP)-The state Assembly has approved a com- promise recycling program that would cost con~umers one cent for every plastic. aluminum or glass soft dri nk or beer container. The vote was 54-16 Thursday on AB2020 despite critics who said tbe bill might hurt deposit efforts in other states and inconvenience shoppers. The vote was taken alter the autho r, Asse mb ly man Burt Margolin. D-Los Angeles. said. "It's a proposal to put this issue behind us and do something serious to begin cleaning up litter in California." The bill went to the Senate. bottles would not be in- 2 "Thick Cut'' T-Bone Steak Dinners • .. $£99 Each Dinner includes • Broiled T-Bone Steak • Soup of the Day • Crilp Green Salad • Your Choice of Potato CBl.ked Poca&o durinr Dinner Howw) --------------- Served Anytime only at Costa Mesa 2150 Harbor Blvd. at Victoria OPEN 24 HOURS CORONA DO -Bird experts at Sea World and at PrOJCCt Wildlife say th~y are not op11m1st1c about beinJ able to nurse water birds affected by an 011 spill back to health. A total of 31 birds were killed by the spill of 500 gallons of fuel into the San Diego Bay on Wednesday morning. The source of the spill is unknown. but Coast G uard officials speculated that 1t probably came from a large pleasu1e boat. Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Woody Loveland. executive offi cer ofthcMarine Sa~1yOffice.sa 1d1n vestigatorshavestanedtocheckw1ndand ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tide conditions to localize the spill point. as a first step to finding the source of 'rRU·l{t!JtJ the spill. Contlnental awarded $32 mllllon ln crash TORRANCE-Ajuryhasdecided the builder of a DC-IOthatskidded off a runway in 1978. killing fou r passengers. should pa y S32 million to Continental Airlines for misleading the airline on the plane's safety. The Los Angeles County Superior Court jury found Thursday that McDonnell Dou.slas Corp. had committed fraud. negligence and breach of contract for making false claims about the plane's abilit y to withstand a crasti. The accident occurred at Los Angeles lnterna11onal Airport. The panel, wnlclldeliberated 10 da)'S after a four-month trial. ordered the company to pay Continental S 17 million in damages plus S 15 million 1n interest. Oakland teachers, schools end strike OAKLAND - A tentative agreement has been reached in a 25-day old teachers strike against the state's sixth largest school district. officials announced today. "The strike is over," said state mediator James Tamm. adding the agreement was reached with the aid of State Supenntendent of Public Instruction Bill Honig. Tamm. who joined the talks Thursday. said the tentative settlement wa s reached shortly before midnight. "I am not at liberty to gi ve any specifics." Tamm said. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. -· , .. Dollr Cntn .... , 1922 HMIOlt IUD., COSTA IEA-541-115' SHOCKED! .. ... . . .. t'Z_ Ii' UllfTT llSIUICl .~ _. Est 1957 ''l . u1-n40 .. 1 otd M9wpot1111-fd. .... pon IMch, c •. (ill Pierce Brothers Be ll Broadway Mortuary 110 Bro.dway Cost.Meta 642-9150 the s~1ores interiors NEW YEAR SALE on Lomp1 • ,.tetvre. • T.W.. • A~ 642-2555 2640 Avon St., Newport leach "---__,-.....__.-~ CANADA by RAFT In Newport Be'9ch Thurs. February 6 At 7:30 P.M. •t Newport l}teraton 4545 McArthur Blvd. You a.re cor<11a11y lft\1119<1 10 a sllde a.nd ~Im presenlatlQn by CANADIAN RIVER EXPEDITIONS of ll11nee>uve< well known !Of tong cMlance. lty-in expedrtlQns dOwn untouched rtve<s delp ,,, the mc)\lnlams of Brt1osh Columbo11 the Yukon 1nd Alaska < CHILCOTIN ANO FRASER RIVERS EXPEDITION 11 d1ys $1450 combining coaslal yllClll CMH. gl-r fllQhtaM•ng. alptne lllke camptng. with 240 11111ll"'Q wtlde~ss 11ver miles TATSHENSHINI ALSEK EXPEDITION 12 days. $1625. off~ unbellev11ble 50111111)'. game, g1iiclel1 end beautiful IHI river From Yukon through 1 oomer of BC and deep v111ey1 !lePlllbng two o~ A.Iuka 1 l140hl1t mounte1n r a,.1 ou1 10 11'11 open Paafic HEADWATERS Of THE MIGHTY SKEENA. 10 days. $1250 180 m.111 ol ••CllWIQ rlll)ld1. grNn mountain valley ICtn9fY, PLUS faoulout 1teeltle.O. NlmOO and rllnbow hsh1ng on the neYll·filhed deep can)'On pool• of IN• wor1ct-1amou1 NY9f and n's moutenes For dltllla. pilaee pNJne IOcelly ~.or oon~ J H Mllln. Cll*llen R.,.., EJll)lldillON, 8'S Chilco Str9el V~rve1. 8 C Can.di TelephOnt (804) 738-4449 - GRAND OPENING SPECTACULAR UNIOUEL Y AUSTRALIAN GIFTS -@\ ~~ \)<"e Sh eepskin Boots and Slippers ~@~ ,t.e\°<t0 Official Amer ica's Cup Ch art ~ \S •"'' · Opal Jewelry • Boomerangs ~@ ~ ... ~(\e1 contHtdetansand h. I d \'\. \ \""'&) ~ 11 entry blanks in store S 1rts • Specia t y Foo s @\;:'.' 'II\(\ 1no purchase requ1red1 Books ... and muffimore! ~ ~ ~o\)< ~~~~ ~o\.e\" • GRAND OPENING WEEK ~~if'> c,\'1>"" SPECIAL HOURS ~<f}J f\<"\ Monday -Saturday 9 AM-9 PM ~ ~ ·c\•<e' Sunday 12 noon-9 PM ~~<& ~(\\' ,., \) ~(\~ .0 ., Prepare younelf for tbe Unlden LPGA Invitational toU toanaa- by celebratiac Valentine's Day with golf's matt famous eat.b--. Bob Hope. T'Mn come to tbe tournament and llH t.M world's belll lactJ toUen • stars lib Na~ l..opea. Ayako Okamoto, Jan SUD• 1I1 • and Pat Bradle1 · com~le for tuO,ood' from '"'-1'127 ·Mardi 2 at Mesa Vt~ C4*Mry Cl9, c.c. Mal Contact die ..._..,.. office now at Ul· 1775 to ~ Yarto. ":'u:::::.rctqes. n cillQC Pro-Am ..uiel, ln tbe official aon.ir ,.,....m. a..S tiea. T091"Umeat spon- IOl"I. ad9wtfwr1 and Pro-Am tMranCI wlll be ...,,...... tM ~ IO ob&ala Bob Hope -~-.... -8aU ,_ ,.ua. .. • I i ·• Or-.. 0.... DAILY Pl.OT/,,..._, JMuery 31, 1Ne . {State of siege called in strife-torn Haiti •• -=-~~:--;-~--:--:::--~--:::~~~~~~~~~~~~ ;: President Duva lte r denies colla p se of-.. aovernment had oollapscd and Duvalier had fled the country . mthtary escort, rode throuah the struts of the capital city at about 9 a.m. the president's father ln law. A st.ate of sieat was declared at 7 a.m. in a communiq~ sianed by Duvalier and read over national television and radio. It followed the most sustained anti·aovemment protests in .Haiti since the Duvalier dynasty wasetbblished in 19S7. Haitians in Miami celebrate ;~ governmen t; rioting fl ares in capital "The president is here, stron., firm as a monkey's tail," accordina 10 a transcript of the broadcast provided by tM U.S. Embusy. It was unclear whether the broadcast was taped or live. Mobs we~ seen runnina throuah the downtown area with police firina shots over their head. Rioters were puttina up barricades of tires and other material on several streets. . • .. ·-·. . . . . . By AllT CANDELL AMI I 1 f PtwtM91f throulh t capital city in an effort to dis f.ru on he had fled the country. " r friends, bcca~ of wiJd PORT-AU-PRINCE. Haiti - President-for.Life Jean-Claude Duvalier, who declared a »day state of sicae today. went on lbc radio to deny reports his aovemment had collapsed He uid he was "firm as a monkey's tail" and was seen ridina rumors and nonsense circulated br aood for nothjnas for some times (sic) now, I'm obliacd to Like to the streeu." he uid. White House spokesman Larry Speakes earlier had told repon.en on board Air F~ One that Duvalier's The Wbhe Hou~ later, citina "cootlictina reports," retracted Speakes' statement and said Duvalier appeared to stiU be in control of the impoverished Caribbean nation. Government offices and most busi- nesses were reported shut down, aod disorderly crowds packed the few open supermarkets. Jean.Claude, also known as "Baby Doc," assumed the presidency upon the death of his father, Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier. in 1971. MIAMl (AP) -Jubilant refuF.s streamed into the streets of Little Haiti today, celebrating the reported colla~ of the aovernment of Haician President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier. Many vowed to return to their impoverished homeland. Haitians said Duvalier, with heavy A mob was gatherina near an auto agtncy run by Ernest Bennett, who is NOW AT YOUR GENERAL ELECTRIC PREMIER DEALER ••• For a limited time, General Electric has reduced prices to dealers on selected Maior Appliances so they may pass the savings on to you!* REFRESHMENT CENTER REFRIGERATOR . ... -- ,I 1111 ' EX TR A l ARC.£ C A l'ACtTV SPOTSCRUBBER WASHER Model WWA8600G 3-way washer-extra large capacity for regular loads, SPOTSCRUBBER cycle for small loads ol lough stains and M1n1- Wash• system for dehcates 5 pro· grammed fabric selecltons. Variable wlter levels . BIG SAVINGS! ELECTRONIC POTSC RUBBER DISHWASHER Model GS028000 t 1 performance monitoring programs 10-year lull warranl y on PermaTul• tub and door liner (ask l or details) Tempera- ture Sensor System Del1yed start option BIG SAVINGS! New Electronic Refrigerator with a 1 JO S ELF ClE AMINC.O llEN GAS RANGE REFRESHMENT CENTER 23.5 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR DISPENSES CRUSHED ICE, CUBES AND WATER THROUGH THE DOOR! 8.57 cu. ft. freezer with adjustable shelves. Drop down door for instant access to inner shelf. 4 ad- j ustable glass shelves. Food Saver System helps keep fruit, vegetables and meat fresh up to 15 days in controlled climates. Sealed snack pack . Removable wine rack. Texture d doors, won't show fingerprints. NOW AT BIG SAVINGS! Model JGBP24GEH Bleck glass oven door and b1cksplaah Automatic pifolfess 1gn11ton 'Clock. minute timer and 1utom111c oven timer Wa11l·hlgh broiler with porceleln enamel finished broiler pen ind rack. BIG SAVINGS! PHIL & J IMS All locations LA HABRA HOWARD'S LAKEWOOD STANTON COSTA MESA DAVIS BROWN COMPANY 411 E. 17th Street HUNTINGTON BEACH HOME SERVICE COMPANY 17242 Beach Boulevard 901 E. Imperial Way LAGUNA BEACH J & H Appliance, Inc. 888 Glenneyre LAGUNA HILLS SADDLE BACK APPLIANCES 22692 Granite Way DON & TOM'S 4234 Woodruff SAN CLEMENTE DEWEY TV & HOME APPLIANCE 218 Delmar SANTAANA JESSEE APPLIANCE 1013 S. Main Street BI LL & DAVE'S APPL:IANCE 10687 Beach Boulevard Six people have been . reported killed and at least 30 people injured since anti-Duvalier demonstrations began Sunday in Cap Haitien, Haiti's second-laraest cit y of 60,000 people on the north coast Magic Steber, a freelance pho- toarapher in Cap Haitien, said the army caJJed a curfew there this mornina and used clubs an.d tear gas to get people off the streets. "I saw several incidents of the army hitting people with clubs to get them inside," she said in a telephone call to the Associated Press in New York. In the nei~boring Dominican Republic, President Salvador Jorge Blanco announced today that he had closed the border between the two countries and had reinforced military forces there. "The events of recent days in Haiti has required us to take every measure to suspend all traffic between Haiti and the Dominican Republic along the border and to reinforce our military strength," he said in an~ conference at his office at the national palace. Duvalier's state-of-seige com- munique also ordered three radio stations to 'o off the air including Radio Soletl, a Roman Catholic Church station that broadcasts in Creole and is one of the few stations that can be heard in most parts of the Maryland-sized nation. It bas been closed several times before for reporting on anti-govern- ment demonstrations. The two other stations closed were identified as Radio Lumiere, a Protestant-run station that has also reported on the demonstrations, and Radio Cacique, an independent station. Haiti, with an estimated 5.7 million inhabitants, is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. About 77 percent of the population earns less than SI 50 per year. A premature celebration Thursday naaht. when rumors circulated that Duvalier had been ousted, turned into a riot after a car plowed into a crowd of I .SOO refuaees. killing a woman and injurina two men. "It's a joy. The Haitians are all over in the street," said the Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste. leading spokesman for Miami's estimated S0,000 to 100,000 lepl Haitians and director of the Haitian RefuF Center. "There a~ many ... wantJna to go back." "I think it's the most positive news to come out of Haiti in the last 27 years," said attorney Ira Kurzban, a leadins refugee advocate. "The Duvahers have represented the most repres.sive regime in the Western Hemisphere." But Kurzban declined to guess how quickly the refugees -who have settled mainly in Miami, New York. Montreal and Paris -would return. "I think everyone wants to look carefullr at what the new government will be hke," he said. "Ofcourse.1'11} goins back. I have a good job here~too." said Jean Dorce. 44, a Social Security service represen- tative. "We're going to help build o ur government," said Dorce, who bas been in the United States 19 years. "We're going to ask the United States to help us because the United States can see we're not going to be a communist country. In the melec Thursday night, five people were bitten by police dogs, a police officer was wounded by his own gun during a scuffle, and another was hit on the head by a thrown object, said police Chief Clarence Dickson. Arab League won 'ttake retaliation against U.S . By tJae At1oclaaed Pres• TUNIS, Tunisia -The Arab Leque ended a special mcctina today at which it rejected Libya's demand for retaliatory economic action against the ' United States. and instead condemned U.S. economic and military measures against Libya. At a brief morning session today, the Arab League also expressed its disapproval of Spain's decision to establish diplomatic relations with Israel and recommended that Arab governments "adopt measures" in response. The Libyan issue was dealt with at a longer meeting Thursday. S. Africa~ Mandela freedom trade CAPE TOWN, South Africa -President P.W. Botha offered today to nqotiate black leader Nellon Mandela's release in return for freedom for Soviet dissidents Andrei Sakharov and Anatoly Shcharansky and a South African commando captured in Angola. In bis speech opening Parliament, Botha also said his white-Jed government will enact laws this year to extend black citii.enship and property rights and 10 involve black communities in decision-making. In a last-minute addition lo his 18-page address, Botha said he was prepared to consider the release of Mandela. the former leader of the African National Congress black guenilla movement, on humanitarian grounds. Botha off en conceal on• for black• CAPE TOWN, South Africa -President P.W. Botha told Parliament today his government will enact laws this year to e,itend citizenship and property riahts to some blacks and to in volve blacks in decision-makin&. Botha said the government also wiU scrap some controls on black movement into areas reserved for whites and will replace the passes blacks must cany in white areas-with a common identity document for all races. Pressures have increased at home and abroad on Botha's government to refonn apartheid, the system of racial segregation that empowen South Africa's S million whites to dominate 24 million voteless blacks. Mmco, Venezuela form oil committee CANCUN. Mexico-Mexico and Venezuela, both major oil exporten to the United States, announced today they will set up a joint com mittee to coordinate oil price scuina and efforts to defend their share of the glutted world oil market. The announcement was made by presidents Jaime Lusinchi of Venezuela and Miguel de la Madrid of Mexico in a joint communique, one day after they held intensive, closed-door talks in this Caribbean resort. Libya a•k• for meetbJ6 trltlJ U.S. TUNIS, Tunisia-Libya said Thursda)' it is wilJina to help fight terrorism and meet with the United St.ates about easma friction that hu led to boycott and talk. of war. Washinaton has &<lCuled Libya of supportina terrorists. Foreian Minister Ali Abdulsalam Treik:i uid the Unjted St.atct should take the fmt step -he sugesc.ed withdrawh\I the Sixth Fleet, which bu been conduetina maneuven off Ubya'1 ooest -but Col. Moammar K.badafy's government was ready to talk even without that SoatlJ Korean aJde abducted bJ Belrat BEi RUT -Heavily armed 1unmen kidnapped a South Korean djplomat today after sbootina out the tires of his car as he drove to work in MOllem west Beirut, a Lebucte army official said. The official and the South Korean Fordp Ministry in Seoul identified the diplomat as Do Chae Suna, 43, the South Korean Embuay's eecond teereWy and coosul Col. Munir Malouli, chief ofupecial Lebenete army force in cb.arpof protectina f~ cmbulia In Beirut, said Oo's abduction occurred tbJt momina ._iben five aunmen in a pn Mercedes intercel*d bis car about 50 yards from the em busy in Bdrut's seafront Ramlct al-Baida district. . TJaatcller tar6et of conr-ap clMrf• LONDON -Prime Minister M~t Thatcher ordered three officials not to tettify ia a lcsitlative inquiry into eft'ons to rescue an ailint belicoplef corn~y and the controvenial teak of a letter, lnleri.ns members or Putiament who11CCU1e wof1 cover-uj). ()ppolit.ion leaillaton reacted to tbe ban Tbunday by demandlna that the Coftla'Vltive prime miniller admit w own a1lelld involvement in the leak that led to the retipations of two Cabinet minil&en. '86Laser specialty · • 1spower Chrysler·s sports car adds an engine choice. refined engineering DETROIT -An added new engine choice, new center high mounted stop lamp, new head restraints and engineering refine- ments are provided In the 1986 model Laser, Chryster' s sleek front-wheel drive sports car, which also offers turbo power, fuel Injec- tion and high-tech electronics. Laser, a two-door hatchback with seating for four, ls offered In two price-equipment levels: the base Laser and Laser XE,plus a more performance-oriented Laser XTpackage. Chryater's 2.2-llter turbo Is the featured powerplant and one of three engine poaslbllltles. The .. standard engine In the base model Isa non-turbo 2.2-llter. Chryster's newly developed 2.5-llter engine Is standard on Laser XE and is optional with the base model. All four-cytlnder engines feature elec- tronic fuel Injection. A five-speed manual trans- mission Is standard and a three- apeed automatic Is optional. The keenly tuned suspension Includes front and rear anti-away bars and gas-charged rear shock '86 AEROSTAR Pwr Steenng. swing away mirrors bucket seats. 5 speed trans ~8997°0 '86 RANGER tmted glass. 2 3L E F I Cust wheels $699600 \ . Turbo power, fael lnjectlon and hl&h tech electronlca are an.llable In the '88 Luer'• three price cla•ea. absorbers. The base Laser In- cludes 14-lnch, all-season steel blackwall tires and sport wheel covers or optlonal 14-lnch road wheels. Speclal handling tires come with the turbo engine option. The XE has P205 15-inch special handling tires and cast aluminum road wheels as standard. TheXT performance equipment Includes P225/50/VR15 Uni-direc- tional tires, special handling suspension, turbo engine and '86 CLUB WAG N 15 passenger. XLT VS. at p s a ,, $16,99 '86 FORD ~:mRSION Auto trans. aux fue l tanks. guages tinted glass. s12 685°0 ' ~9976 boost gauge as standard plus all the equipment standard on the premium Laser XE, to include performance bucket seats with new four-way adjustable head re- straints. XE standard equipment Includes an adjustable steering column. electronic Instrumentation, 21-fea- ture electronic monitor and an Electronic Navigator. The XT per- tormance package provides gauge Instrumentation but not the Navi- '86 BRONCO 11 · 4x4 Y·6 5 spetd trans 1h4 s10 986°0 ' AIOli99 gator. Front air dam, rocker panel extensions and body side surround mouldings also are standard. New equipment on all models Includes a center high mounted stop lamp In the rear spoiler. and low travel switches for power door locks, power windows and rear window defogger and wash/wipe controts. . AT-bar roof or sunroof Is available for all models. Chrysler '86 f 250 Auto trans aux tue1 Ian~ 511'; Dum;,it>i • vl swin~ away m111or~ $10 723°0 ' ' '-!~009 '86 F350 RIAl~~EELS Crew cab auto trans 6 9 d1eStl a c cru1St lilt trailer pkg 11111 AM FM stereo s16 991°0 ' MilJ11 also offers a "Sun. Sound and Shade" option that includes sunroof. electronic AM/FM stereo radio with cassette and black rear window louvers. Groups of options can be or- dered at a discount in the Popular Equipment and Luxury Equipment packages, which provide such fea- tures as air conditioning, rear defroster. convenienoe lights. Il- luminated entry system. speed controt and power equipment. FREE REFRESHMENTS FREE HOT DOGS '86 BRONCO .• ' ~ i $16,996°0 '-l'!b \ '86 f 350 CAI CHASSIS A1i!P 11 1 \ '11 l • • .,., 1¥ ~I lr•m p~~ s11 582°0 ' ~919' 1 I derior new car as just too tall ........ ,... ·~ you eyer beer'I totd by • • ~ to "lhrtnk" or to ·~ Y<>'K Mad out of the aun-,.,. . ., Welt, thele are common atate- ,,_,,, heetd when ahopplng for a qer If you happen to be 8-foot-6. ~ year a new llne of both !Eelgn and do""8f'tlc cara hlta lhowrooma, and uch year "giant" optlmlam that our lllect group hu Slowty w.ara tfln. : t ltart my tearch for a aporty ~ wtth a firm and challenged •ttude, thinking to mr!!!f, ''Wow, I hope thla one ls It.' The atMtlng 11 always the aame: at ftfat a firm handlhake, and then t .. clualc, "Oh my, how tall are ytu" and now ... the challenge Is Uftder way. · Satespeopte usually try the 11naHer cars first (I guess figuring tf this one doesn't work, we'll try eomethlng a bit larger) with a determined and forceful look on their faces. "Nice looking car," I say. The salesperson opens the door; I put a foot In. "So far so good," I exclalm. Now for the legs. "Great, they both flt under the stMffng Wheet, .. he .. ya. But now for the reel tat . Crouched fOtWard, I pleasantly grunt. The aaleeperlon aaya, "Ya, I could t•I when your heeded didn't meke It paat the sun visor." Another typical event happens when "tfft ... ting" new cart . (I usually don't get up to the "tfft driving" part.) This ls the "fright- ening" experience when step- ping out of about the 18th car that day. with you hair standing on end, (not from the scary circumstances at hand but from the many "feet" type headliners they put In cars theM days). This can be a bit embarraaetng. After hearing the countless, "Oh my Gawwds11" and "Geeezzna.'' I accept the fact that I mloht have to make a few concestlons, so now It 'a cjeclaion time.--- I ask one salesman, "Leg room or head room?" He says. "Why bother, just take out the front seat and drive from the back." Obviously, this wasn't the con- structive advice that I wanted to hear. Well, If you're wondering If I ever found anything that I could "hold my head up high" In ... let's .,... ........ ,..... Art Broadatock demoutratee tbe •tock aoladoo ..iea- peoele recommend when tall penou ab_g for ama1l lOl"fdfllepofta can-0 8 tick JOU b•d oat the 8aD roof." just put It this way. I am st Ill looking, and I now know an easier way to save a salesperson's time. "I simply wlll say, 'HI, my name Is Art. Do you have anything In Barn Door large?" Average height people always are sayln9 things like, "You know, you re really fortunate to be so tall" of "I owuld give anything to have your height." I tt:ilnk the next time I hear that I wlll ask, "Would you llke to go car lhopplng?" WeU, If you see a man with his head sticking out of a sunroof. with determination In his eyes and a smile on la face, remember to smile back and wave. That wlll Just be me on my way to "t94t seat" the new '86s. ........... ~;....=.;;;;;.;;;.__----1f I THIS IS OUR SPECIAL DllCOUNT: I Manufacturer's suggested retail price Manufacturer's option package discount Theodore Robin's discount $8369 707 767 .... CMOlll TOTAL DISCOUNT TOTAL DELIVERED PRICE ,, THIS IS YOUR PRICE: 1474 $8895 THIS 18 THE EGW'MENT: ::J $ 2.3 L. OHC 4 cyt engine 1~ f., 4 speed manual trans. . .. ..,, Power steering, Power brakes , II ~ Dual remote control mirrors ', < Steel ~ Three to choose from at this price Power door locks, Cruise control ~ 'cri...~ AM/FM stereo, premium sound system · y-;~.. ""I Interval wipers, Digital clock w.a·a . THIS 18 THI PLACE: Styled road wheels #103411.0 . 181116 #96291.0 . 105096 •10348 1.0 181114 THEODORE ROBINS FORDI f AcroRY s~o~sonn ym~C~p~o ~!~so\~ cvL.l THU N:~B. F -\5 {4x2) • TE • RANGE~ MODEL) CL u o1NG" . · ·o (4x2 EX \ "'ransm1ss1on ' c /Manua 1 • ESCORT.-, w s MOS. UP TO 4 ed"t CHMtt•. Lie 11uo11e1 ~ v-e. euto ... ,. duel tenk• Lk: •2A 13IOl 8tk /1 4112 • On AP ro~ed Cr ' BRAND NEW 1986 THUNDERBIR 5 •P. casMtte, cw.ea• meg whla, 1.0 . • 108208,JClnt cond @ • \ AT 7.'91/e '7995 14 CU HIM H·llW Low otlglnll ,.,,...., tufty~ Coflec:Otort c.. Stk #3141 Lie 1DLUl32 • ---- NOTICI W INtr. Ho • ....,,.,. Of Ut· fAllMINT 'Of' UM ANO TRUITll'a UU llclll "9cardl Ill "'9 ofl'°9 of (NJOYMfNT IH AHO TO a........ "-Aec«det of Ofanee THI! COMMON AAIA, 011-P....,. Coun~ lllNO LOT 42 CW MID /CfT"NU laid .... Wll be,,_., tMlt T"-ACT NO. IOIM, Al Ill T.I ..... f-4,_ wttt\Out ~ ..,. fOATH, 0«'1NIO ANO DI· uwr COCMI' ~ .... or w ..... ,.,... IOWD IN THI OROLM- RAINll" "NANCIAL ~·-pamn.on, Ot ATIOH ()I CONVINATI. SlRVICH COMPA.NY, I ~ ":.. ': CONDITIONI ANO Al· Wllf\ll'loton COfpo'9tlon M ~ ITNCTtONI '~ OAN>IN duly 1ppolntN Tru•IH ::c,~~ ~--=PARK VIU.,\QI! _HOMI· undef Ille f~ CS. ' OWNl"'S A"8QCIA TION tcfSElbed OMd of"":"~ :!:"wrw::.=· = "!CO .. Dl!O IN 1001( LI. AT PU8LIC Avv • "'" WIN of Mid D9ed of .,_ IS877. PAGO 1ts4 TO ~g,.T~~~~:,~~°= ..... dWOM, and_...-;~l ~~ 8= 8=: CASHIERS 0.. Cl"TlfleD of IM TrutllM and of "-ANOE COUNTY, OALl- CHl!Cl<I SPIC"llD IN ~~.ct by Mid D9ed FORNIA. ANO AHY AM!NO. CIVIL CODI HCTION a!: .... _. be h9ld on· MENTS THEAETO. H24h (pey.-11 "-lllM of Friday fMIN.,., 14 19" It The ltf .. I addr.. 0t Nit In lawful money of the • - ' • • olller common dee!OMtlon Unll.ct Stei.e) Ill right, tit.. 1:30 p.m. In Ille lobtiy to the of the at>ow,.., P'GPWtY le Inter• oonW)'9d to ~1~~nlo_J_oc8•11~ ~ 801 known to ue •: 20-4 MAY- d now held by II \#Id« ;~eM..,, .,.ange, FAIA LANE, COSTA MESA, Oe9d of TNtt In the At .._ time Of Ille lnltlal CALIFORNIA 92427. rop.rty hertlnefter d•· -· ... lc•tlon of thlt notloe Thie Nit wtll be mede. rlbed: ......., . • without c:ownant or war. TAUSTOA: Wll.LIAM c . the lotll amount of the un-flMY expreaaed Of lrnplled ITTELL, JEANENE CIT· ~lon~~t::'.::! regerdlng title, paumlan: ELL 09 w7 or M'CUmb<encel. to pey the 8£NUICIA~ O~TtA ~ deed Of ltual and unpaid prlnclpal IUfTI of UBUAIAN MORTGAGE •tlmaled coet1. upeneee, 1142 351 01 .... _ lntareet .. ROUP INC Cellf-'• I n d ad v I n c e 1 I I • · •....,. • ., • ""'-1111 527 24 p<OVlded In the note MCUred POflllon ' ' ' by Iha dead Of trust plul In RECORDED October 12 11 Is poeelble that 11 the 1ddltlonal Hlim1ted 1983 u lnalr. No. IS-44to53 time~ ':.1~ ~, ': amount of '3.148.00 " any, Offlclal Aeoorda In the Of-r:!btednae1 d:'. 0 under Iha term• of the deed o~ ~der of Or-If avlllable, Ille e1epec:t9d of tru1t Ind ,..., charqae ty, opanlno bid may be ob· and 111penH1 of Iha Mid dead of tru1I de-I b II . Trutt• . rll:IM Ille followlna: /al~...:n=lng he:low· The L•ndartBaneflcl1ry PARCEL 1: THE llOUTH-t~. day baf 1;:"'..,.. i4:, under lhe dead of tru11 hal ESTERLY 15 FEET_Of' ifS..M-11': Ofe lttlQned end del!Wrtd of lie SOUTHEASTERLY 115 e I.ct· j 15 1988 the fndt• a Declafltlon of EET OF LOT 304 OF NEW-A~INil~NANC IAL Default of Iha obligation. ... ORT HEIGHTS, AS URVK:ll COW• .. y cur.CS by the deed of lruet HOWN ON A MAP RE-L .... • • Ind Notice of Defeull and ORDED IN 900K 4 PAGE .......... ..,._..._,.. 1 .-. tnMM, ., T .o MA-Elee11on to s.11, wtlid'I r• OF MISCELLANEOUS VICI COWAll't ..... ., corded on 9113115 .. Dow- APS. RECORDS OF OR-C...__. C..•• ·A .... taftt mant 85-348831 of Offlclal NOE COUNTY, CALI· ·-•· ._, Aec:Ofd1 ORNIA, TOGETHER WITH ~ ~·c=-Tiiis i.la will be con-N~~i~~~~LY~F~~~ CA ........ 717 (41t; duct.CSbyAgancySalaeeno OF SANTA ANA AVENUE ..._to11 POiiing wtlOM eddr ... llnd ADJOINING SAID LAND ON Publl•llad Orange Coa1t t;r&: Tacr~~·0· c8:t' THE SOUTHEAST AS Dally Piiot Januery 24• 31• forn1ae5880(918)4:t.2121: ABANDONED BY THE February 7• ltlMS F.739 Oiied: 1115/M BOARD OF SUPEAVISORS. HOm P'IDeltAL IAV· EXCEPflNO THERE· INOI AND L OAN Al· FR o M THE sou TH. PtlllC NOTICE 1oc1A......., • c .. C ........ " WESTERLY 25 FEET '""'"'."=v, PARCEL 2 NOTICI Of .. T,.._, 11J: M. AN EASEMENT FOR IN-T"UITll'I IAl.I Dabbln1, TrHtH ,,._ ORESS AND EORES$... YOU AA6 IN DEFAULT -.C:tteft c-•n•••l.ll ERASTRIPOFLAND50 UNDER THE DEED OF ,..!~~ Or~l~t FEET WIDE, DESCRIBED TRUST DATED 9/2/83. UN-.,..,, 1 .nuery ' eb- AS FOlLOWS. LESS YOU TAKE ACTION ruary 7• 14• l98e THE SOUTHWESTERLY TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-F-793 25. 00 FEET OF TJ1E ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT --------SOUTHWESTERLY 280. 14 A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU fltB.IC NOTICE FEET OF LOT 304 AND THE NEED AN EXPLANATION _ _...;...;..;.... ____ _ NORTHEASTERLY 25.00 OF THE NATURE OF THE I( mu F E E T 0 F 1' A E PROCEEDING AGAINST ADVIATIM..wT IOUTHEASTERL Y 280. 14 YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-Notice It hereby Given thlt FEET OF LOT 294 OF NEW-TACT A LAWVER. on Oec«nbef 8, f985, the PORT HEIGHTS. AS On FRIDAY, FEBRUARY loflowlno Item w• ..aad It SHOWN ON A MAP RE· 21. 191MS, at 1:00 P.M. Anaheim. Callfornla from CORDED IN 8001< 4 PAGE HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS AnM*m Pola Oec>w1rnanl 83 OF MISCELLANEOUS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION. for ¥tolatlon of 21USC881 MAPS. AECOROS OF OR-1 Corporation, formerly one 1984 Toyota Van, VIN. ANOE COUNTY, CALI-known u HOME FEDERAL JT3YA28Y1F5049851.(0rlg- FORNIA, AND THAT POR-SAVINGS AND LOAN AS-ln1lly Impounded by TION OF THE NORTH-SOCIATION OF SAN Anaheim Po41ce Oec>w1rnant WESTERLY 20.00 FEET OF DIEGO, u Trust• under a In Lake For•t, Clllfornla on SANTA ANA AVENUE AS OMd of trUlt dated 912/83 Oec«nl>ar 8, 1985), Any par· SHOWN ON SAID MAP AND tionad t>y DAVID P. CARAC. IOn dallrlng to plaoa Ille AS ABANDONED BY THE CIOLO. A SINOLE MAN 11\0 matter In the Unit.ct Stat• BOARD OF SUPERVISORS recorded 9123/83, .. Dow· Dlttrlct Court In order lo OF ORANGE COUNTY ON menl 83-41M57. ol the Of. contNt the probable cauM MARCH 4, 1914 LYING BE-nc1a1 RacOfdl of Orente forlhl11elzura.muttfllewtth T w E E N T H E County, Callf0fnl1, wtll Mii II th• RHldent Ao•nl In SOUTHEASTERLY EX-public llUCtlon to lhe hlghalt Charge, DrUQ Enfe>tctmant TENSION OF THE NORTH· bidder tor cMh In tfn!Md Admlnl1tratlon, P.O. Box EASTERLY ANO SOUTH· Sl1IH Doll1r1, at the 12809. Santi Ana, c.Mfomla WESTERLY LINES OF SAID NORTH FRONT ENTRA.NCE 92712. a claim 11\0 coet 50.00 FOOT STRIP. T 0 THE C 0 UN TY bond of $1,09-3.00. In the -YOU ARE IN DEFAULT COURTHOUSE. 700 CIVIC form of I cutllef'I or UNDER A DEED OF TRUST CENTER DRIVE WEST. In oertlflad dladl made pay- DATED 9/28183. UNLESS the City of Santa Ana, Or-able 10 the U.S. Oec>w1mant YOU TAME ACTION TO 9119' County. CalifOfnll , Ill of Juttlce, or flPl)fOYed ...,,.. PROTECT YOUR PROP-rlghl, title 11\0 lnlerNI con· ty, on Of before Fat>ruary 8, ERTY, IT MA.Y BE SOLD AT ¥eyed to Ind now held by It 198e. An lndlg9ncy petition A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU under the deed of tru1t, In may be flied In lieu of I coe1 NEED AN EXPLANATION the reel property, delcrlbed bond. OtherWIM, the prop- OF THE NATURE OF THE u : erty will be admlnlttratlvely PROCEEDING AOAINST PARCEL 1: forfeited pufluenl to 10 YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-LOT 23 OF TRACT 1085&, U.S.C. 1608, 11\0 will be die- TACT A LAWVER AS SHOWN ON A MAP AE-poled of according to law 2225 SANTA ANA AVE.. CORDED IN BOOK 471, lntarNted plrtlae mey file 1 COSTA MESA. CA PAGES 37 TO 40 OF MIS-SMttllon for remlfflon or "(If I 1trMt lddr... or CELLANEOUS MAPS. RE-ml11glllon of for1111ura with common da1lgn1Uon ol CORDS OF ORANGE th• Resident Agent In property 19 lhOwn ll>oYe, no COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Chetgt purauent to 19 warrenly .. gi_, .. to tu EXCEPT THEAEFROM us c 1808, end will be dle- completane11 or correct· ALL OIL. OIL RIGHTS. MIN· poled of according to - net1) " The b,.neflcl1ry ERALS, MINERAL RIGHTS, lnterett.ct parties mey Ille I Mid 0..0 of True!, by NATURAL OAS AIOHTS pallllon tor raml11lon or of a breaoh or default A N D 0 T H E R mlllg1tlon of lor1attura ..itn !tie obllgallOM aecur.ct H Y 0 R 0 C A R I 0 N the RHld1nt Agent In ereby, heretofore ex-SUBSTANCES BELOW A Chtrge pur1uan1 lo 19 .CS end deliver.ct lo tf!e DEPTH OF 500 FEET U.S C. 1618 and 21 CFR und4nltil'*f 1 written Dee> UNDER THE PARCELS OF '316.71-13111.8 1wllhoul111- atlon of Default end 0.. LAND HEREINABOVE DE· Ing I Clllm and COit bond. mend for Sala, Ind wrltl9" SCAIBED BUT WITHOUT "Hldant Atenl In notice Of brMCh end of elec-THE RIGHT OF SUAfACE CIW .. UOn lo c:auM the under-ENTRY, AS RESERVED BY c ... : R0-86-0009 llgried to Mii Mid ptoparty DEED RECORDED SEP· 0111. Jenuary 13, 19" lo NtWy Mid Ol>llgalk>N, TEMBER 23, 1N3 AS IN· Put>ffahed Orange COMt and ttlereafl• the under-STRUMENT NO. 93-41885& Dally Piiot January 17. 24. llof* c:ei..d Mid notice of OFFICIAL RECORDS 31. 1988 bfMCtt Ind of atec:tlon to be PARCEL 2 F-732 rac:ordad0c:1ober3, 1N5M A NON-EXCLUSIVE a. magnon subaru SLASHES •PRICES!• II ILL 1986 MODELS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD • SUBARU 2480 H•bor Blvd. Costa Mesa • "'"'*' Blach ( 714) 549-~300 rta.IC NOTICE ~TITIOUI _, ..... NAMI ITATIMINT The followlng pert0nl ere doing l>vllnell u : VILLA SOLANA APART· MENTS, 28033 Moulton P1rkw1Y. lagun1 Hl"9, CelH 92453 VIiie SOlena ~. 875 N. Mlchlgen All9., Sufta 1400. Chicago. 1111no1t eoe 1 1 Thia bu1lnH1 11 con· duct.CS by • general 1*1· neralllp ,..._lGumbtn Thlt llatement WU fMed wllh Iha County Ci.k of Of. anga County on Oec«nbef 30, t985 ,_,, .............. toll IOO Newpon Centef Dr. twtano Newpon heo"· CelH. tMO Put>llellad Oranoe C0.1 Dally Piiot Janu9')' 10, 17, 24, ~1. 198e F-M8 'Vice' star unveils car line SANT A MONICA (AP) -Actor Philip Michael Thomas, star of NBC- T V ' t faahlonabl• "Miami Vice" cop Mrle1, hu unwtled hta flaahy llne of. $30,000 1port1cara In cer-· emonlel atop the Bevef- ly Hills Gun Club. "No, ·lt'a not bullet-proof," Thom88..ad. ••tt give ua a chance to be outdoort In the open, to lhow It off." ''I love the Cir," Thomu Mid. "It toolla Ju1t llke I 1130,000 Fer- rari, Ilk• the one on tM lhow~ It 001ta only lboufl30.000.'' Tholw owne two of the T-top, Y·I ~ ...... IL.:.-==:=:::==t==:::=~one MCI 1 purple one. Mnnoue .,.. .. .._ITA~ T"9 ~ l*tonl .,. **" .......... V~ MA~. LTO.. A C ... IM.... Limited Pwtner- •• a 1t2 °""°"' onw. Me "t, ltvlne, C.llf. ""' ..... ~.•Cor· porellon, A ~ eo,. potM!on. 0..11 Pwtner, 2 tt2 °""°"' om., Suite 111,""4ne.Cellf.t2715 JHn-Mule Sperllng, Gen.el Pwtner, 2112 Ou· pont Ori\19, Suite 111, IMne, C4lllf. 12115 Ancnw 8w1Yely, Generll ,.,,Mr, 2112 Ouf>ont Orlve, Suite 111, Irvine, C111f. 12715 John O. Lowe Enterprilee, Inc ... Cellfofnll Corpor- •llon. 0 1n1t1I P1ttn1t, Peuma V.., Counlty Clut>, Peuma v..,, Cell. t2oe 1 Thlw bualneee ra con- ducted by.. Mmlted l*tMr· ~dP ... Mowntw •• I WILLIAM l"NllT MAmlTA~ nwy7. 14,2'. INI AIOI W.C, !MN, Celle. l"OWN. HU arlttol T"9 .......... ,.......,. '·7t2 12714 ..,..., 0-. ...... <lellf. dOlna ........ . T"61 tMielneee It OOft· nut P 0 L Y Cl 0 N 0 0 M • ••ti> -ducted by: I..,_.. Pitt+ Jolie ,....,, l!Wl, c.11-MMCIAL DIVll.OPMINT,1_......;..._..-.--....,-..... •---.--~ torNa. Nit lrtMol ..,_., StU ...... A--.. Mte fllCllllOUa• H•M Aid! Mouletw°" Colta ...... a.If. t2UI 100. Colee Mete, c.Mf. um ITA~ T"6I ••1 ,..,,. .. Mtd Thie ~ II oon-l2tat The to11cM1ftt 1*10M.,. wtlfl IN County a.ti of Or· .__ 11V: 1 OOF'Pol..._,, Hoftolle by~. 1 Celi--doing ~ ..: Mii County on O.OlfMW ~ VMZMdt, Cf'O torn&e ocwpcwltfon. St52 IOUTHEAN CALJ'OfMA St.1Ma T"61 ... .,,... ..... Mtd ...... Aw ..... 100, PLASTtCS 142 ' Allon ,_,. wtlh IN~ Ceert& fll Or· Colta ......_Call t2t2t .. a ' .. C•"t ~ Or-. COMlt Mii County on .w-y ti, T"6I tMIMM le con-'2'701 tnt• .. n1. -. o.ity Piiot ~ 10, 17, 1NI duc'9d by. I corporlllon o E. A. lnWiWMnll. Inc. 24. h 1... '-11 W...... '· ~. Ptelldlnt Celliomla, 142 E. Allon Ave.• '-4174 ~~~0r1n112~ .. ~ ~C:ot ~ s.n11 Ane. Ctllf.12707 ' ---------1 ,..._. • • '7 Thie bullt'IMI It con· "8JC llOTIC( F*'*Y 1. 14, 1 enoe' County on JflMWY 21. ducted by: 1 oorporetlon '·742 1Me D.E. Aodrlgu91. Prtlident HUGE DISCOUNTS PLUS '9CTl'n0Ue ...... M 1---------Publllhed Or '= T"61 at1tement Wll fled MAM1 ITA,.....,, MOt COllt w11h the County Cllr'k of Or· • T ..... .....-... ._ OelfV Piiot Jenuwy 24, 31, _,.Count" on J .... .-l4. .................. pettOn .. ,«>ruety 7. 14, 1Me 1tle , __ , eso:rl~o':a MAN· F-741 ..... ANNUAL PllCINTAGI IAR AOIM£NT,llte>o"9rDrM Thttolowlrlgper'IOMIA .,..._~" ON A 1 -l NEW ISUZU , 14, Newport leeetl, Call. doing~ 11: "8JC NOTICE -L -.. t2M3 (l)Al .. PO .. T T"AYU leMI-., c..t . .,.. ~SwtYely Thie ttltement Wit fMed wlttl IM County Cllfk of Or· enge County on Oec.rnblf 31, 1985 StuettS.QentFrye,211\t (b)CA .. DILLO Al .. PO .. T a.ti Pu.bllthed °'Intl COllt PICKUP TRUCKS IN STOCKI 81pphlrt Ave., 81lbo1 tAAVEL. H41 C1mpu1 '9CnTIOUe MWU Delly Piiot ~1. Febt· l~.Cellf.~ DrM.~~.~. MAMI~~ ~~~21,1 ·~------~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~---···· Thie butlneet It con· t2teO The lollowlrlg per*>Flt 11e f.713 ou:::n~,:lndMOuel .~:..s.c:n::·~ ~~~Flfwood. Nl.ICNOTICE '8 I I MllBK ,.... Publllhed Orange Cout Diiiy Piiot Jeouery 10, 17. 24. :t1. 19M F-MO Ml.IC NOTICE Thia 111ternent W11 filed ~ lleecti, c.llf: t2tlO lrvlnl, Cellf. 92715 with the County Cter1I of Or· Thia butlMM II con-Oynemlc EMFQY·Aec.N ITA:::.:.r OP Inge County on December ducted by: • corporltlon Product•. Inc.. Calllornl•. A•ANDOfl•MT OP ------3 t, 1985 Mlct\MI D. Miller, Prell.-110 Flrwood, Irvine, Call!. Uta OP PICnnout ,_, ci.nt 92715 autMU NAMI Publllhld 01-'"99 COllt Thie ttllerneflt ... fled Tl)lt bualnttt la con· Th• tollowlila-PeTaon• , o.lly Piiot Jenuery fO, 17, w+th !tie County a.ti o(Of. ducitd by a corporation eve~ the UM of 24, !1, 19M "I09 County on December EdWtrd Vtzlrlen, PrMI-hi Flctltlou1 Butlnttt F..ee3 27, 1H 5 <*It Name; WILLIAM ERNEST ......, This ttltemtnl Wit llled f'tcnnoutauMmu --------, PublW!ed Orenot COllt wlthlheCountyCllfkofOr· BROWN , 3333 Brlelol um aTATUmrT NI.IC NOTICE DeMy Piiot J~ 24, 31, : County on Jenuery 15. s~=· Coll• Meta. callt. ~ = ::eona we '9Cnn:u.--:-.. Februlry 7• 14, l F-J4' 1 ,_.. The Flctltl0u1 ButlMM HtR CLOSET. 19171 MAMI aTATDmn Publllhtd Or911ge COllt ::=-~~o ~-: M1gnoll1, Huntington The followlng per.one.,.. NI.IC NOTICE Diiiy Piiot Jen":le 24, 31, Septernblf 11 1984 FILE Beech, Cellt. 92&48 doing bullnell 11: Oekndge Februery 7, 14, 19 NO F254988 ' Lind• Ruth Pinto. 4 Flor•, AMOClet•. ACellfornle L.Jm.. Ila.. F-743 ~ Youngblood. 7202 lrvlne, Cellf. 92715 lted Plltnerltllp, 2851 Roll-'1CTTT10Ue aueMll Amapoll Avenue. Of'1nge, Frenoee OM C1nty, 3&85 Ing Hlllt Orlve, CA 92134 MAMI aTATDmlt'T rta.IC NOTICE Call!. 92889 Frencet Centy 2151 Rolling Hiit Drtw, Full-ALOHA MOTEL. 2409 S. NAm ITATu.NT 92880 Thie t11tement Wit flied tr1on, CA t2t34 Mein St .. Sent• Ana. C&llf. The folowlng perton• .,. Cindy Van Zandt. 418 with !tie County Cllfk of Or· Thia butlneea le con-92707 doing butlnell u: Brighton Sprlng1, Co1t1 .,. County on Oec.rnblf ducted by: I limited pwtner· B. Ind I<. Motel s.vtc.. PENNHILL HOMES. LTD .. ~ Ctllf 92827 Aepen VINege Wey. Senti HOUSING. LTD., A Clll-The to11ow1ng J*tonll ere Eiieen Seul to 19 Miii• S~BlB Ane. Cell!. 92704 fornle Limited PwtnerwNp, doing bullneee •: 'ICTmOUI ..-11 Lent, Newport Beloh, c.tlf. 8 L 31. 1985 1111p inc .• Callfomlll .• 2409 8 . Mlln ses The City Drive. Sult• Thia ~ _ w1t con· ~ ~~~ ~~.Anl.~HW~1.0r~~~ ~edbya~ll-~,.~-~~-------------···-----·-······------··· Publlahed Orenge Coett Thia utement -flled Thia butlMM It con-TAG Mllllglmlflt. Inc .• lhlo ~ Piiot Jenuery 10, 17. with the County Cllfk of Or· ducted by: 1 c:orpor1tlon CaJlfornlt corporation. 5e5 thla atatement w1t meet · 1. ttee ange County on Jll'WIY 8, Bt11gw1nJI s. Bm1kt1. Tne City Ortve. Suitt 201. wtth the County Clerk of Or· J 8 5 I M p u LS E F-887 1oee Prelldent Or1r1g9, Cllll. 928e8 ange County on Jenuary 15, --------'117174 Thie atatement wea flled This bualntH 11 con· 1988 NI.IC NOTICE Publlahed Of'ange Cout with the County a.ti of Or· ducted by: a corpor1tlon Publlthed Orenge Cout Diiiy Piiot Jenuery 10, 17. enge County on J1nuery 21, Wllllem E. Gerwin, PrHI· Delly Piiot Janulry 24, 31. · '1CTTTIOUJ aueMll 24, 31, 19M 1988 <*It F1bru1ry 7, 14, t988 NANI ITAftMetff F·71A-,_ ~'9tetement wu filed • F-757 The following perton It Publlahed Orange COllt b.'the County Clertl of Or· 1-------- 0olng butlneet as: "8.IC NOTICE Delly Piiot J1111.111y 24. 31, erio-County on Januery 14, P\lllC NOTICE TRONTECH CO., 2930 February 7, 14, 1He 19M 1-__;...;.;;.;;.;..;.....;.....;.,;;,...__ College A~. Unit B, Coet1 PICTIT10Ue .,_.. F·740 ,__ ITAn..wT CW Meu. Callf 12928 NAm ITAW Publlatled Orange COllt AaANDOll•NT CW Line MlrlkaJ, 2175 Pldftc: Thi tollowlng pereone ere NI.IC NOTICE Dally Piiot Jenuer; 3t. Feb-UM OP f'tcnnout A~ M . Coet• ~ Callf, doing butlnlM It: Nery 7, 14, 21. 1988 llU ..... NAm 92e27 J v F-n e TM foll:'~ peraona Thi• bUalneH •• con-ENTERPRISES/EXPRESS MAim ITATDmlfl ave abllld the UM of dUC1ed by: en lndMdull BUILDING SERVICES. 1701 The fOllowlng per.on It rt8JC NOTICE tht Flclllloua 8u1ln1aa Line MlrtkaJ E. Edinger 108, Senti An1. doing butinett .. : Heme: CONTAOORA PART· Thia ltatemenl Wit filed C.ilf. 92705 THE PLASTER SHOP, '1CTTTIOUI .,..... NERSHIP , 3135 Birch with the County Cllfk of Or· BAJA. Inc. C1lllornl1, 1215 w. a.ker st .. eo.t1 llllAm ITAT9•NT trHI. Newport B11ch, enoe County on o.c.mblf 1101 e. Edinger #C8 Sent• Miii, Cellt. t2t241 The followlng pereona 111 1111. 92880 31, 1915 An1, C .. 11. t2705 Jeck E. Mlhnken. 1880e doing bUtlnett 11: The Flctltloua Bulin"' ,_ Thia butlnHt II con-Senti Ynez. Fountlln Vllkl'f, EARTHQUAKE SAFETY, Name referred to above w11 Publlahed Orenge Cout ducted by: • corpor1tlon Cellf 92708 183n S1n11 Bellnd1, Foun-lltd In Orenge County on Diiiy Piiot Jenuary 10, 17, s. DIRoelett. Prllldlnt Th0lt bUtlneu •• con-teln Vllley, Call! 92708 Ober 18. 1985 24. 3 t, 1988 · Thia atatement Wit llled ctucted by: en lndlvlduel Jerome Jo Glull1no, J. Scott Fawcett, 8739 F~ wlttl the County Cter1I of Or· Jedi E. Mlntlen t83n ~1 Bellnd1, Foun-udton River Circle, Foun- --------.,. County on Jenuery e. Thia t111emeflt Wit llled tlln Velley, c.lff. 92708 eln Valley, Clllf 92708 NI.IC NOTIC( 1988 with the County a.ti of Or· Clement Pepe. 20712 Oonlld K. Benedict. t 19 P'B11'74 erio-County on o-nt>er Tllllf. Huntington BMctl, 1 Orvleto, NewQoft Beech, AC:Tlnout aueMU Publlenect Orenge COllt ze. 1985 Cllll. 92&48 1111 92883 MAim ITA,.._,. Diiiy Piiot Jenuery 10, 17, nlllll Thia bual~H It con· Thia ~ Wit con· The followlng S*90nt .,. 24, 31, 19M Publlthed Orange COllt ducted by: • ~ .. pelt· ucted by. a generll patt. doing bu11nee1 u: F-894 Deity Piiot Jenuery 24, 31, ner9Np tl'llp 800KLAND FINANCIAL F~ 7. "· 19M Jerome J. Glulleno This attttment Wit n1ec1 SADOLEBACI< VALLEY. a NI.IC NOTICE F-745 Thlt ttltemtnt wit flied th the County Cleflt of Or· p.nnerlhlp, 17782 Conn with the County Clerk of Or· County on Januery 17, &t. Suitt 202. 1rv1ne. Cellf. KmM 11111_.,. NOTICE enoe County on Janu1ry 15. 19 92714 l'ICTITIOUe .,...U rUUL"-19M Publlltled Orange Cout Rk:herd Zl1l1n. 35402 llllAlm aTATDmlfT KJm1 ~ Illy Piiot January 31, Feb- 89,888 m rJ.P._J ___ KI .. m 11BEACHBLVD.BUENAPARK (714) 521-3110(213)121-1111 Peaeo Vlento Cepltttano The lollowlng pertont .,. '1CTITIOU8 llU ... U Publlthed Orange Coatt u1ry 7, 14, 21, 19841 9Mch. Cllf. 92824 doinQ bullneee u : Delly Piiot JtnulfY 31, Ftb-F-764.L-----------------------------------------~ 1985 & 1.986 PLYMOUTH HORIZONS • ---- ANNUAL PERCENTAGE . RATE FINANCING ON APPROVED CREDIT VISIT OUR .~ A WARD WINNING SERVICE DEPARTMENT. THE #1 CHRYSLER ·' CORPORATION SERVICE FACILITY IN ORANGE COUNTY .. · OUR SERVICE TECHNICIANS ARE ASE CERTIFIED! ( NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR ) AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE EXCELLENCE CHRYSLER tnopqr CORPORATION GENUINE PARTS _ .... _111111! • r r i • • • t 1 Ml.IC ll)llC( MUC llmCl NI.IC 11)1111 Ml.JC ll)TIC( MJC .,_ -..C aa M.IC MUC lllTa I-" bldeMllbelNdeon 1 ... 1'11 ........ ~Ollf. 11 ,_ ~ICelf·-luWM.Hood eny wlll be ldmlnl"1etlWIY "'°'°"se.c:.=:lthe ,,._.,Form."'-" . ..,.. ,.,.., Donne Canary. 401 ' ,_.,.. Tiiie ...,....... It CIClft• Thie "•*'*" ... llled torlelt~ ~t to 1t ::r:;.:t~ L 1 end 3 lfl 1P· 1 ttvOUOh P•t . ~ lfl P\lblleMO Or1lftll CoMl .... ...,.... le "*"'*' OfMile <=MM l~chro. lrvlne, C•llf. ~ Or1lftll C.... .._.~en lftdlltldllel . wltfl the County o.tt of Or· U.8.C. 1808. en_d will.,.~ loolc S: ;" ~.:c: IN oontrect dOCumeft}!J OellY 1 PllOt 1 ... JenUery 10, 17. • Oe1t; "°' ~ 10, 11. 12714 o.itr PtlOt '*"*Y 10. 11, Theodof9 Mwd... enoe ~ on Oecernber POMd of eooordll\Q 10 -· ..,_. end Wll be eccomt*119111 a.., . . •AL-·~iM' WIN-14. ~1. ,... Tiiie ~ 11 c~ 14, ~1. 1... nm ••u ,..,. .. ..., a 1, ttea ~ ~::!n,... • ~ ~ ,.._, .; lby • o.nltlM or CMHer'• ,_., ..... ~ tlCllt TMI ,_... .,... ~ a ...-11 Pl"· ~ ... -~a.. OI Or• ,_,. l*ftlon for or ~ 3 ~43 °' ..... cNoll or• bid bond fof not !"I Clll ,..., ... c..y on Ox ,.. PvbllNd Orenoe CoM1 mltlOellOtl of lotftlMe wlttl • ,... 1._ttien ~ottheernount •-• --. · PtaJC llJTIC( o....... *'• 1MI T Dlilty PtlOt ~ to 11 the Aetldenl Agent In ~ ~ of.,_ bid INde ~ 10 , __ ,._ _____ ..,_,_~-- .-p Dlddo. 10002 TflAI eU?r •••t -..._, ft8l.IC lllTa I W t4, ~ 1, 1... ' ' Ctlarge ~r1M.1ant tocJ~ :::' ~:O. ~ty ca1-ltM coete .._. Sriwy PIC1"'0Ue lllH•• .. ·..,.,. ~ PICTmOUa• HR• w1'tt'tltleeountyewkof0r· MIHR• ' ~Orange CoeM F-111 U.8.C. 1111 end 21 ' Oletriol No Pl~ lt'9ll MAmlTAW lliea • --ITAW .... County on .-..y •. ~.m ·Oellv ""'°' .-..y 10, 11, I t3tl.71-11t ... 1 w!WIOuHll· -:-~of tl'le property.be~ unleM ac-TMtolOWtngpereontare ,,;. ... _ ,. -,,,. _ --,,.. -"'" --~1 .. · ''· ,,.. ·-rmuc llOllC( "\::::r.::.:r-; .... ..,. --..... '''"•~"'·• ., ''!f.." ...,. -.. llr: en lfdttdu• dolrla ~ ea; dolrla ~ M : compllthed by conteottng c:MNer 1 c:Mdl. «*!\or.....-HUNTINGTON lf.ACH IN- ..._ .,, Oeddlo AOVMfTAOI! ~· ~ ~ 1~ QG8 !HTVW'NIE8. sat PICtmOUe .-11 C= "°"""°°15 Joe Lehotl1 at (714) det't bOnd. ~ OEP!NDl!NT, 330 W•t TNll 11I7 1.m ... Ned t7tt1 Fltctl, ~ ·Dell'; ... --.. • • Wau ,__ "-d, ftaJCll)TIC( 1Mm8TA~ OM«.-..,Y2 l 191e 134·211t. . Nobld..-becorwider Bay, CO.ta MMe. Calif . .. o.uMy Clilrtl of Or· 12'71' 24• ,1• 1 Meea. c.Mt t2111 The fOioW1f11 pereon II Or ' eoaet TEAMS Of' SALE· Celtl In unte. 11 le mede on• blank 12127 on.-.,.YI. Dennie Nlkell, 1131 F-813 Oon9on~9edt.SMI PICnnDUeW• dolrla~ae: ~~~24 31, i.wtulmoneyofltl9Un1teettonnfumllMclbytMCoete Orengeeo.tPubllthMg, Wilk•,__ "-d, Coelal IMmlTA~ T\JllETECHWEST.472E. F 1 1Ne • Stat .. of America on c:on--MetelaftltaryDlettlc1andll Inc., Cellfornla corporation, a magnon MUCllJl1CE Meea.Cellf.ntae TM~pereontlre 11tt1St .. CoetaMeM.Cdf. ebNIWy ' F-758 llrmatlon of Nie. Of part ~.ln~danoe1.._ ~ S30W9!! .. aay 7 .Coet•Meee. Thie butlneee le oon· doing bullnW ea: 12121 CMfl end belenoe evlcMllOed prvwwie "' ... ..._ Calf. tcvc "--~by............. I w~ PLACE, LTD.. All*1 All9n Bolden. 412 --.,. Wtnl'C by"* or notet w:urM by ~ta. be Thie butlneet I• con-PICTrnoua -11 GordonO.led! 1 •Calltomiellmil'9d~· E. 1eth St, Coe1a MeM. ~ ""'~ mor1oe91 °'True! Deed on heh bldchr mU9t duCMdby:eQOt'POl'atton I NMmlTA~ Thie ltMllMnt WM Ned llllp, 2t112 ~ ~. Cellf.t2t27 1Mpropertyeo1oktTenper llcanlad end aleo pre-~A. Wittmer, Pub- The folowllla pertOnt .,. with the County CWk of Or·, Suite 111. Irvine. Celtf. Tl'ill buelMM It COO· K _. cent of amount of bid to ec-.. ,~by .... lilhel' e do In I b 1111n•11 • •: ange Couftty on Oecembe1 12715 • ducted by: en lndMdual PICnnDUe ._... COfnt)WIY bid. Property le A C.... A • -contrec-Thie It~ WM flled t MMNwlaill• A.uocl•IM, 31 11186 l 8partng lnwetment COr-Al .,..,, MAim ITA~ told .. II with no ..,,..,,ttee or'• .,.,_ .. ~-#Ith the COunty CWk of Or-p 0 n I a C HI 1 Aollna Hiie Dl'M. "'IM-' ,_ pcwetton, a Calltornle COr· Thie atee.ment WM llled The follOWlnl. pereont .,. except .. to 11119 gl*enteed The Board of Oirec:tore of enoe County on January 3, erton, CA ftt3.4 PUbllll'led ONl\oe Coaetj pcweeton, General Pettner, .with the County Clerlt.ot Oc· dolnAJMilr'IW M:.M:U.BA. by tttte-tneurence cornpen~. Coeea Mw -~ fNe COHTlNIHTAL :MOIMLE o.ty· Plot JenlJll'Y10, 17, Hit ~ Drive. enoe County on December W'O«LO, 1108 N. TU1tln All bide or offer1I muat be Olatrtet ~ the rlO"t to ""'74 HOVSIHO. LTO., A eel-24 3t 1MI 1111, IMne, Cellf. 12111 31 1NS Ave,, Orange. CA ll29e5 In writing and wt1 be ,. rejeet "'Y or ell bide. Pub1611\ed Orange CoMt fomle Umlted P--.IHp, ' ' F-471 JHn·M•rl• lparllng, ' ~ George lodlnar, 4827 Cll\led. at the aforwnen-Th• Contractor shell Deity Pllo1 JanuatY 10, 17, • ..... ,., ....... .... 1.1.a.1. ,.. ........ Ill ••• • FIElll • 11111111 • llllDILLEI • 11111 PlllS • 1000'1 .. =..-:!... WE SELL UCITEIEIT! a magnon P NTIAC • 1e1u 2480 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa • Newport Beach (l14) 549-4300 215t ~ ..... Fularton. . Generll Partner. 21112 ~ Pub411Md Orange CoM1 Hartman Wey, Far <>all•. tloned Office. at eny time with the ptO¥taklnl 24. 31. 111M CA '2114 Pont Dnve, "* 111, IMne, [)ally Piiot January 10, t7, ca. 115928 after IM Int publleatlon of of Section t170 10 11eo In-F-et2 Thia bu*-' 19 con· MUC ll)TIC( iCallf.112715 24, 31, 111M AndrM 8odlner. 4827 thll notice end before"*'· ~utlw. of tl'le Ce11torn11 dUCted by: a tlmlt~ partner. 1 JoM G. Lowe Enterpr1MI, F-e73 Henman Wey, Fair Oaks, 1ng uld ..... I~~ Code, tM prevaMlng 1-------- llllp PICTIT10UI Ill• •M 11nc • California Corpor-Ce. 115828 ,..,... Admlnl9tretor with rate end teale of wao-•· l'tlllC NOTICE ~ M. IWehert ~m MT 19 atlon, O•n•r•I Pertnar. • •-IC lltlJICE Janet Bodin er. 4827 WIH A.MU~ h«aoy re-'IM>lllMd by 1M Coate MeN 1-__;;..;.;;.--.......,-.-...__ Thie ICetement WM Ned ,.,. ~::::::_• ~ t Peuma Valley Country Club. .--nu Hartman Wey, Ftlr Oa«t. eerwe the rlghtto rejeet any Senltery Olatrlc:1 wt1'ch ere PICTIT10UI Mlll•N wit.I\ 1M COunty Qertc of Or· doing...__ ea: , Peuma VtJlat./, Calif. l20et C.. 115928 or ell bide. flled with tl'le Aaliatant Sec:· MAim ITATllmlfT ange1 County on Januaty 8, CHRISTOPHER /OVER· Andrew SWJV'lly Oener.i. PICTITIOUI .,._.. Thia butlnMa la con· OAIED \1.2.1118 ery of Nici Olltrtc:1 and Tilll fOlowtng peraona ere ltM STAEET PAODUC.!IONS, Part.nee. 2lllf°eup0nt OrM, MAim eTA~ duded by: eo-.pen,_. TMfMa II....._., ltd-hall forfeit penel11H doing bulineal- '211111 28t Santa iae.I, ~.,Suite t 11, lrvlne, Cellf. The follovMQ ~ere George 8odlnar. Janet .....,..., with w Alt-preacrlb4KI tti.ralore for I NT ERNA TI 0 NA L Publiahed Orange CoM1 Meta. Callf.11292f 927t5 doing bualneu u: 8odlner, Andree 8odlnar ,.. .... Clf t11e .. Clf tM noncompllanoeofuldc:ode. CARBIDE OF U.S., 34781 OeNy Piiot Jenuery 10, 11, Jeffrey L Oventreat, 281• Thie bualnell It con· BIPA?ST. GERTRUDE Thia ttel_,t w .. ftled ebMedeoedent · DI~: Febn.lary4, 111ee Camq10 Caplttreno , 24, 31. fllee Sant• laabel, Coat• MjMa. ducied by:. llmltM par1Mr· PARTNERS, 2111 Bullneat with,,... County Cleft! of Or· Publllhad Orange Coaet IY OltD~~, THI Capl•tr•no Be.ch, Calif. F-712 Calif. 112927 lhlp Center Orl\19, Suite 200, ange County on January 27. Delly Piiot January 24, 25, ARD OP ORa °' 112624 1.,...-------Thia butlneea la con· Andrew Sw111ely, Vice IMl\e, C.Wf.112715 tllM 31, tllN COSTA •IA IANt-MelWI L Hubbard, 3'78t l'tllJC ll)TIC( ~M by: en lndMdUal Preeldent BIPA. Inc .. General Pert· ,_ FS.759 ARY DWFNCT Cemlno Caplttreno. Jeffrey L Oventre.t 1 Thia etat«nent wee llled ner, Callfomla, 2111 &*-Published OrMga eo..t Publllhed Orange Coast Capletrano Beach, Cellf. PICTrTIOUe MWll Thlt llatemanl -flledl with the County Cler1c of Or-nea Cent• Dffle. Solle Dally Pllot January 31, Feb-Dally Piiot January 31. Feb-112424 MAim eTAW with the County CWk of Or· enoe Count:y on December 200, lrvtne. Callf. ll2715 ruary 7, 14, 21. 1988 MOC NOTICE 7, tNe Thi• bualneet It eon- The followlno pereon I• ange County on Oecamberl 31 tNS Thia buelneH 11 eon-F-788 MOTICI F-796 duet~ by' t llmlt~ partner· doing bullnall •: 31, tll85 _ · ,_, duetld by:1llml1~ptrtner· ............. _ 1 lhlp · T Q ANO ASSOCIATES. .._,.I Publlll\ed Orange CoM1 lhlp DI-.,. 11t1nrc ""--Ptll.IC NOTICE M. L Hubt>erd 1450 Port Cher1ea Pl., New-Publilhed Orange eo..t, Dally Piiot January tO, 17. Brian R. Burka, Pretldent ,._ nu1~ NOTICE IS HEREBY Thia eteternent wea llled port BMdl. Cellf.112NO Dally PllOI Jenuary 10, 11 .. 24 31 tNe Thi• ltatement WU llled GI v EN I h. I •• •I• d PICTIT10UI ..,_.. With the Cowlty CWk of Or· Anltlony M. Olblln. 1850 24. 31, 1Ne I . • F-e78 with the County Cieri! of Dr· ..::.: ==-propoalt lor IUmlaNng ... MAim aTAT'lmNT .,. County on Oecamber Port CNr1ee Pt., H9Wpof1 F.-eell ange County on December ::er labor, meterlels, equ4Pf'nenl, The folloWlng person II 31 1N5 8Mdl Calif ll2MO 31, 111M of 9'NI trenaponetlon. end euch ~ buw-t u · • ~ • -~ I •-.,. Wtnl'c rtaJC NOTICE .._,, el ,,..... other leellltlel .. may be re-....... "' C G '"R. DEN ING ,.. __ _ Thi. bu .. neaa a eon· ,._ nu1iw. . Publilhed Orange Cout In the Superior Court of I~ for the CONSTRUC-PACIFI " Publllhad Orange ....,.., duet~ by: en lndMdYel PICTI110U8 ....... Delly Piiot J1nuary 10. 17, the State of Celllornle, In ~:::;N OF THE.FOLLOWING AND MAINTENANCE, 3181 Delly ~llot January 10~ 17, Anthony M. Olblln ACTinOUI .,_.. MAim eTATlmlfT 24, 31, 1996 and for the County of Or· PROJECT: SANTA ANA AV· Collage Ave., Coata MMe, 24• 31• lllN Thl• ltetement w .. ftled MAim ITATDmlfT Tl'le followlng per'IOM.,. F-e71 enge. ENUE SEWER • PHASE I, Cellf.11292• F..f72 -wtthttleCOuntyOlerkofOr· The followlno i>«90ft It dolngbuaineu .. : lntheMatteroftheElt.ate PROJECT NO. 11t2100-t5. Stephan Roger Huebner, ange County on December doing bulkleel • KELLEY BLUE SOOK, 5 l'tllJC NOTICE ol VIRGIL S. WILSON. 0.. Bids w111 be recllved by 3t81 College Ave •. CO.ta t---l'tllJC---NO-TIC( __ _ 31, 1te5 BAUCE BENDER IN· Oldfleld Dr .. lrvtne, Calif. oeued. the CO.ti Mesa Sanitary Meta. Cellf.112&2e 1-__;..;;.;;..-.,;;._... __ ..__ ..-n SURANCE MARkETING. 112718 K a..1 NOTICE IS HEREBY DI t let at the olflcle of the Thia bullneet It con· PICTTT10Ua ....... Publlehed Orange Cout 1701 B. Weet<*ff Dr .• New-Alan P. JOhntOn, 5 Old· AD~ OIVEN that the und«aignld Cl~r cierk, 77 Falf Drive, duet~ by: en Individual MAim ITAW Deity PllOt January 10 • 17 • port ~· Callt.;.~ S lllld Dr .. IN!ne, Calli. 112718 Notloe It tiaraoy given that wlll NII at prlva1• sale, tot.he CO.ta Mesa. Cellloml• untll ST~~~ t ~ H~led The lolloWlng pereont ere 24• 3t, 11188 Bruce ... non ...,..,... '·· Wetter J. Slater. 5 Oldfleld on o.e.mt>er tll, 1935, one hjgl\at ancJ belt l>ldder. the hOur of t 1:00 a.m.. '"' •••amen wu bualneat ae: F-e7o 45.9 Cambridge Cl •• Colt• Or .. IMl\e, Callf.112718 Glory money counting ~· eubi-et to eonnrmetlon of Marci\ 4, 111ee at which Ume with the County Qertc of Of. LY TA.Pf, i4e Gold· 1--rtaJC ___ NO_TICE ___ M~ii c:'~i:~~7 la con· ~:ta'!:' WM tied= ~:!ni.~· ;;: ~~or9:~~he~ :1,:!s~~1= County on January 2. .11~· CO.ta MeM. duetecs by: en lndlvidUel with the County Cler1I of Or· lornla lrom Santa Ana Police of February, 11118, at 11:00 c:t\ambera. Sealed propoalt . ,,_.1 Bruce Steven Zamrtng. FtCTITIOUI ..-11 Bruce Meeon Bender&. enoe County on Declmber Department tor Ylol1tlon ol A.M.. at th• office ol end bMr the tltle of the Publllhed Orange COM1 495 east Baytnore Rd. MAim ITAT'lmNT Thie etatemeat w• llled 31, 1935 21USC811. (Ortgrnally MIZ· THOMAS M. WHALING, work and the name of the !Dally Piiot January 10· tf, #301, Pelo Alto, Calf. M303 The lollowlng peraona ere with the County C~~ ,_, ~ In Santa Ana, CalHornla Suite 102, 23072 Letce bidder bUt no other die-24. 3t, 111M F-en Henri.tta Wnrlng, 1148 doing bullnela •: ange ~rnty on Publltl\ed Or•noa Coast by Sant• An• Police Otpart· Centlf Drive. City ol El Toro. tlngullhlng maf'I(. Any bid oldenrod Drive, Co11a PALM HARBOR MEDI· 3t •. 1 Fmno Delly Piiot January 10, 17, ment on Dleembef t8, County of OfMga, Sitt• ol r~aftertl\eldl«lu4ed Callf.11292e CAL PLAZA. LTD .. A Call-. 24, 31, 198& 11185, from Benjamin Garcia Callfornla. all tl'le rtgl\t. tlUe cioe1ng time for the receipt "8.JC NOTIC( Ric K. ZltntlnQ, $49 Gold- tomla Limit~ Ptrtnec"Shlp, :~~J Orange 1~1 F-e7e Eltred&.) Any person dealt· lnter•t and •fate of aald ol bld1 at1a11 be caturned to od Dffle, Coate MeM. 2182 ~ Ol'M, Suite D '' I enuery · • Ing to place the matter In the deceden1 at tM time of the bidder unopened. 11 al\all F1ClTflOUI ....... allf. 112&2e 202. lrvlne. Callf. 112115 24. 3t, 11186 Un11M Stat• Diltrlc1 Court dMth and all the right. title be the tole ret90Mlbllity of NAm ITAT'lmWT Fumlo Wada. 2496 Eat1 Pen American Pfopertlet. F~T "8.IC NOTICE In order to eonteet the prob-and lnter•t th•t tald eetat• the bidder to ... that NI bid The lollOwlng pereon It ore Rd. #301, Palo A General Partnenhlp. 2t82 PICTITlOUI .,..... able ceuM lor thlt Mlzurt. haa ecqulr~ by 099flllon ol 11 rec.I~ In proper time.. doing bu91neu u: Ito CalH 94303 Dupont Drive, Sult• 202, PlllJC NOTICE M&mlTATl•NT must ftle with the Aelldent law,Ofotherwlle.oth«than A tat of plane, Special Al~PORT EXPRESS Thi• ~sin ... 11 eon· lrvlne. Callf.112115 The following person• ere Agent In Charge, Drug En-°'In acldltlon to that of Mid PrOYlllone and eddltlont to SANWICH ANO CATERING ~ by: a general pert· A. 0, K1«1, 32 Iron .8ar1c PICTrTIOUI IU9INlll ... IOfoement Admlniltretlon. decedent. at ll'le time of General PrOVlllona to Iha SEVICE, 31N F. A1rpor1 "'4P Way, Irvine, Callf. 112715 ..am ITATlmNT ~E~ CONSTRUC-P.O. Box 12909, Sant• Ana, death, In and to all that oar· Standard Spec:lflcat1on1 Loop, CO.ta Meta. Calif. Bruce s. Zlrnring Rlc:hard J. Hoegler. 541 Tl'le following peraon It TION 1214 Huntington Callfoml• 112712, • claim taln real property lltUe1e In mey be octalned •t tM of· 112e29 Thie etaternent WM llled Hone)M>od Lane. La Habra. doing bu'"-ea: · 8Mdl and coat bond of $250 00, In the COunty of Orange. Stat• no. or the Director of Putlllc Elizebeth M. Col'bo. 2533 e;h 1M County Clert! of Or· Calif. 90831 (l)F. s c. (b)FERRARI ~Tr92~tlngton • ll'le form of • cashier'• or <!' Callfornla. and more par. Servloel. Room 4111, n Fair E. Park Ln .• Anaheim, Cellf. County on Oeoernber Thie buelneaa le con-SERVICE OF COST A MESA · O & Suean M. oer1lfled ~ made PIY· ticularty delerl,bed .. IOI-Orlve, Costa Meta, •Cell· 92806 6, 11185 duet~ by:• Hmlt~ partner· (e)FOREIGN CAR SERVICE H ~~21 4 Huntington able to the U.S. Oepar1rnent Iowa. to-wit: lmpro~ real lomit upon 1 noo-retun-Thi• bualn"a la con-,_ tl'llp COMPANY, 2 t48 C-1 New-s::..i· Huntington 8Mdl of Justice. or approved eure-property local~ •t 501 8th deble payment ol s 10.00. An duct~ by: en lndlYldual Pubtllhed Orenoe eo..t A. J. Keen port Btvd.. Coat• Mau. Calif i2Me .· ty, on or before F~ 23. Streat, Huntington 8-cl\, eddltlonal charge of $2.00 Elizabe1h COrbo Deily Piiot January tO, 11, Thie llltM*rt WU' flied Callf.112e27 . I • 111M. An lndlgency petition Cal11ornta dMcf'lbed u: w111 be mede H handled by Thia •taternent WU ftled 24. 31, lllM .ittl tM County Clerlt of Of. Theodore Ectwwd Sahli. ~!!i ~~~ !tw, c::;. may be. filed In lieu of • COit All that real property lltu-mall. ,._.. (114~ ~ with the COunty CWk of Or· F-ea5 • ange County on December 3213 Iowa. Coats M ... ,. . bond. OtherwlM. Iha pr09-tied In the City of Hunt-..,........,.. .... _ .... ._ enge Coun on January 8, MICHllLIN YOKOHAMA .. -- ! CO- INDEPENDENT MAINTENANCE & REPAIR SPECIALIST EXCLUSIVELY FOR ER CED POR ~f OWNERS • Maintenance Service • Brakes • Electrical Repairs • Tires, Wheel Balancing & Alignment • Lube & Tune Up • • Engine & Transmission • Overhaul • Air Conditioner Service • Detail FMc • wl • FAE~ C.. FAfE MAt,. ) W/. ' NEWPORT BEACH 1640 Superior Ave 1 I SANT A MONICA "-==-------. 1629 12th Street ._-~-----n 2 1 I 0 7 2 I MXL TRX fJt'x~ xwx P44 P6 P7 P77 A008 ~ t 0 ' ' J I .. ). ' ) ECIAL MICH ..... 185170 A13 200160 VA390 220155 VR390 220155 R390 185170 HA14 195/70 HR14 205170 HR1 4 195170 VR14 205170 VR14 111 ;1 ~!1!1 1 185170 SA13 185170 SA14 195170 205/60 HRl3 195/60 HR14 225160 HR14 205/55 VR 16 225150 VR16 185170 HR14 195170 HR1' --205170 HR14 195150 VR15 205150 VR15 205155 VR16 225150 VR16 $46 $130 $132 $102 $72 $82 $92 $114 $118 $46 $48 152 $89 $90 $112 $185 $190 S66 $87 $73 $128 $1•9 $185 $189 All Above Prices Include: *FREE Valve Stem •FREE Fitting •FREE Balancing CORONA DEL MAR 3222 E. Coast Hwy. I b I) IRVINE/ COSTA MESA 2950 Alrw&y Ave. #A·5 I } 9bb 0 • 8UZUKI 414 4 PASSENGER IN STOCK NOWI YOUR COMPLETE DEALER PARTS • SERVICE • SALES MAJOR SERVICE SPECIAL INCLUDES MAJOR TUNE-UP, OIL CHANGE, BRAKE CHECK, AND ALL FLUIDS. PLUS 10°/o OFF ANY OTHER SERVICE WITH THIS AD. SPECIALIZING IN EUROPEAN AND JAPANES l\UTOMOBl[ES. AD EXPIRES 2·21-88 8UZUJ<I OrMge Cout DAILY PILOT /Frkfey-;-.J8nuery !f, lW Niiii ... , ... ,. Mnl r::-8TATWT Thie •twnent ... fled MA"KLINE YACHTI, ... Coun'Y on .-..Y I, ~ Not .-..y tO, .17, ._._. '*'°" 1e wttt1i11eeoumya.tio10r. uao a.se w ... c.... 1• a.-.t1.1• _ -m.~T ~. 1112 r,r: Cownty on J-..y 11. ~ ....... 1w11. ... ,, '"' OrMee ":: ~711 ........... All9., eo.te MeN, ,__ ...... JoM ...... tM ~Noc~ 10, tf, ....,..,. ..._ c.11. IHl1 Publllt* Orenge C09lt L IOltl It., C... Mw, I•. wl -..,Y af, 1tM rmaa. ..,,._ llWtlc.i.ll*lel9Clmln-Delly Piiot ~, , ..... c.lf.ntlt '·111 -111--==· ...,_ .. .,. ..... of Aft. ,.....,7 14 21 1 ' _.. T .. ~ le con•--------~ --· ... Cea. 30032 ..... . -, . • . duc*9 by. M lndMduel ·-.,. --• ..,... ITA Te reo•. Sen Juen ,.n5 o..NJoMlmlltl '"--·-The...._.....,. .. ~.Celtt.t2t75 Tiiie ............... fled "--~~-fNI l>Uelftw le con. NI.JC ll)TIC( Witt! "'9 County CWtl of Or· PIC'llTIOUI llllllll.. LO()( HOOK CO., ducted by: 111 lndMduei ... County on Januery 17, um ITAW :.. ~ .:.-· ea.. .._. Cecl '1CTmOUI .,..... 1• ~ ':::.:.~~ Euoene Grll'Me, 1llO Thie ~I WM flied MAim ITA'-T ,_ ...... ,. II: .,... Hlftlor lllatld Or.. Ian wMI "'-County CWtl ol Or· The tollowlng '*'°"' Ill• PublWled 0r.,. C09lt rtd19, Ltd., 2111 ~ Hllll Diego, Cellf. 92101 =County on J9nl.lll'y 15, dOlng buelMM ea: Delly Piiot Jenutty 31• ,._ OfM, ,llller1on, OA t*4 John Vl1a lloh, H7 202t POMONA APART· ruety 7, 14, 21, 1... 0Mr1dt9 A.Moolet ... 1 ~.eo.t.MeN,Cellf. ,_ MENTS, 904 IE. 9albo1 F-7• C.itfomla Limited Pertner-1 ~ Orlf9 COlllt Blvd., Belboa, Clllf. 92te1 ........... Con !nan Delly Piiot Jenuwy 31, Feb-Mary L. Moyw, 2167 NI.JC NOTICE .. ..,.. VF t t.I Molllle Chulhlehl Kato, 18' Mil') 7, 14, 21. 11M Mlranw Or., Belboa, Calif. t:;:1· p~:.!....,~ ~T Mectll, ~ , 7n 92te1 -"--.... , "'"F• octllglt!M, Jepel\ • '1CTmOUI ...... wll Plflner, 2U1 "°'91na !'#lo K091, ... Het1ford --------Norman Moyer, 2157 NAm I TATi-J ~ .... Drlll9, """'1on, CA !!!Y..:.. eo.ta Mela, calf. NI.IC NOTICE Miramar Or .. Belboe, Calif. The lollowlng pwaon II ... _.. ......... ----==...;~~--92te 1 doing ~ 11· Thia butl"911 11 con-Thia bu11neee II con-PICmtoUI .,.... P Sandra LM Eben, 18542 M!DICAL DIAGNOSTIC ~ed by. 1 llmlted partner· ~ by. a 9IM'8I '*'· um ITAl'i.wT ro Clrcle, Huntington SERVICES, 118 Btoolllne .,..., ,,_.,..,.. The lolowlng perlOnl .,. ~i.?f\:::9 7541 4th Ln.. Coet• M.... CAllf. Myron M. Alletlwt IWaO K091 ~.._"""'----' -.... -F ' ' 92827 Thil ltaHrnent WU fled Yt.1.. _....__t WM ......, -AOO-.... -P .. RTNER Place, Downey, Callf. ll0241 .. ~ ............. _ •·-111 ,,_ -·-· ·-"" " • Thlt l>lnlneea It eon-... ""',_. ...,..,,.~., with the County CWtl of Or-with Ille County a.ti of Or· SHIP, 3135 81reti Street, ducted by 1 general pert· ... 001ct1ne Ln .. ....,.,1 Mela. .,. County on January 8, ... County on C>acemMr N9wport leech. Calif. 92MO nerthlp Clllf. 92927 1Ne 31, 1985 J. Scott Fawcett, 8739 Mery L MO)W Thl9 butlneu la con-fllf7l7I ,_ Hucllon Rlwr Qfda, Foun-Thi• ttatement WU Hied duct~ ~o,;: lndMdull Publllhed Orange COlllt Publllhed 0r.,. COMt i.ln~K~:k~ 119 wlththeCountyC*11ofOr· T .. llltement -Ned ~1~anuary 10, 17, ~1~Jenuary 10, 17, Via Orvteeo. ·Nwport eMc:n. =County on January l7, with the County a.tt of Or-F·715 F.e82 Clllf. t2t83 ,_,. ;a: County on Jenuery 22, --T"'9 bullne11 11 eon-Publilhld Orange CoMt 1 P\8JC NOllCE ductedby:1Mmltedpertner-Deily Piiot JlllYety 31, Fib-Publllhld °'9ngl ~ ____ ......,,......., __ -------- ., Seot1 F9WCett ruary 7. 14, 21. 19M Diiiy Piiot January 31, F• KW iJiiljC NOTICE TNI llltement wu ftled F-7ee ruary 7, 14, 21, 1tee f"IC~.i:=,. .. #Ith 1he County Clerk ol Or· • F-n1 The lollowlng '*'°"'.,. "91 County on January 17, P\8JC ll>TICE doing bullneea aa: CederNll ,,.. Pl8JC NOTIC( Moblll Country Club. 2951 um ITA~ ,__ '1CT1TIOUI .,.... Rolling HiHt OfM, Fullerton, The lollowlng P«IOnl .. Publllhed Orange COlllt NAiii ITATl•NT ACnnoue ....... CA 92934 doing ~ -w ino. Delly Piiot Januery 31, Fib-The followlng l*IOflt ar• NAMI ITA~ Houling, LTD .. A C..... wwcf VMage, 2851 "°'9lna n.taty 7, 14, 21, 1~88 doing butlnMt u : The followlng peraona ara fornia Limited Plflnerahip, Hiiia DrlYI, Fllller1on, CA F-785 PAO MARINE, 28 HI doing bullne1111· 2851 Rolling Hlllt Orlve. F~ 92834 , L•f•Y•11• St.. Newpo!t AOVANCED LEARNING erton. CA 92834 ' Contlnantll Mobile Hou. --.---IC-Mn-TIC£ ___ 8"ch, Caitt. 92963 SYSTEMS, 3303 Harbor Myron M. Relcnen, 2851 Ing, LTD .. A Cellfomle LJm... ,.._ "" Yacht Technology, Inc .. Blvd &-3 Coeta Mela. Clllt Rolling Hillt OrlYI Fullerton ited Partner9hip, 2851 Rol-'1CTIT10U8 9UltNlll C1llforni1, 2818 laf1Y9tt• 92e2e ' ' CA 9283-4 ' ' Ing Hillt DrlYI. Fllller1on, CA NAm IT St .. Newport 8Mc:tl, Cam. Devtd W111ren Oraper, 151 Henry Relehen. 2851 ROii-92&3-4 ATIMINT 92663 TuHp lane Colt• Mell Ing HNlt Drive Fullerton CA Thi• butineu it con- The lollowlng ~90n1 are Thi• bu1ln111 i1 con· Calif. 92827 · 92~ · · ducted by: • Nmlted '*''*" dolna bullMll 11. ducted by· • corporation Howwd c 8' 85 ship . ~LTA CHICAGO PA.AT-J p odwk Rt JOhn J. Northrop Jr., . tghem, 2 1 Myr ~ Rl6ehwt Gen-NEMHIP 1 Cllftornla Gen· ~ 't 1 1.1 ft._.. 18681 Olorll St. #C, Hunt· Rolling HUit Ortft. F\lllllrton, arll p:n.; -• arll p ' 1 I a tmen WU _, lngton e.aet1 Clllf 92649 CA 92~ ~· 2111 Bull· with the County Cleft( of Or-Miit• i.and.r.. . 938 w Thi• butlnet• I• con-TNI ttatemant WU fled =-~ t~~,';97 58Yh• =County on Januwy 17, 18th E-4. Colt• M..a. Calif: ducted by: a gen.II pert-with the County C*1t of Or-w..n i auric d.n.,11 1 92827 nerw.1p r.I: County on Jenuery 8, Partner 1 carmtt ~ OrlYI Pu..._.._ .. _. "'-~ Pet• A. JOhnton, 3113 S. Myron M. Relehef1 1 _ ,._ • ........ •• ,..... ' ....__, ..,.ange ....,.., Oougtu. S.nt1 Ana. Call!. Thlt 111temenl -fMld r-•-• """er°::'R ..,.,, ....,f 92t25 Dally Piiot January 31, Feb-92704 with the County Clwtt of Or-Publlthld Or.,. ~ P . Bunt•. General ruery 7, 14, 21, 19M Thi• bu1in11t 11 con-=County on January 8, Diiiy Plot January 10, 17, ~"'."eam~~2:{:0"•ton1. F-787 ductl ed tJ:l:•~!~~: !........ _ 2~.~~·-~~---·-···M'9 Aober1 w GYthrle Gen-an p r-···· .., Plflner ·97 ar..iwnoor Pl8JC fl)TIC£ Devld w. °'IPll' Publllhed 0r.,. Cout 1rvtM Clllf •92714 ' Thlt tllttmenl WU ftlld Dally Piiot January 10, 17. Thli builnest ii con-'1CT1TIOUI .,..... with the County Cler1I of Or· 24, 31, 199e --.---.,.-..,,.-Tll'-r--ducted by: 1 general part· NAm ITAT'llmNT ll'IQ9 County on January 15, F-717 ,._ nu1.- nerlhlp The IOllowlng per9on It 199e i--------BtWI R Burk• doing butlnett u : ,..... "8.IC ll>TICE I(.~ Thie ttiitemer.t wu flled ADVANCE RENTAL, 1572 Publllhed o...,. Cout '1CTmOUI .,_ .. wtth the County Clerk of Or· Plaeent11 Ave .. Coat• M.... Diiiy Pilot January 31, Feb-KJm7 T:::-_,!l!=.,. .,. County on J1t1uery 17 Calif. 92827 ruary 7. 14, 21. 1988 f"ICTTT10U9 .,._11 --".,, ltlf • Mar11c.ci,apeclalldmln· F·7.80 NAm lTAT'llmNT doing butinen 11: ,-. 111rator of the 11t1t1 ol An· The following per90nt .,.. MNdowlah, L TO.. 2851 Publllhld Orange Cout drew c.ci. 30032 HIH11de "8.IC M>TICE dOlng butlneta u: Sane!-~~lilt OrtYI, Fullel'1on, Delly Piiot JlflUllY 31 Feb· T • r r • c • · S • n J u • n pjper Mobile VIiiage, 285 1 MMdow!MI Atloclat .. ruery 7, 14, 21. 1988 ' C1p111r1no. C11tt. 92875 a.. Rolllng HUit Drive, Fullerton, 1 Clllfornla Limited Penner: F-7ee Thi• bu1ln111 11 con-'1CTTT10U9 .,...,, CA 9283• lhlp by Continental Mo«>lte ducted by: an indivtdual NAm ITATl•NT Pacific View AllOCl1t11, a Houling Lid 1 Clltlomla --------M1rl1 Cecl The lollowlng penon1 are 0-al Partnerthlp by Con-Limited 'Part~ G.n-Nl.IC M>TICE Thia 1111amen1 wu ftled dOlng butlneea u: Con· tlnent11 Mobll• Houtlng, •al Partner 2851 'Ro(llnQ with Ille County Clerk or Or-t1nent1I Mobil• Hou1lng, Ltd.. 1 California Limited Hlllt DrlYI ' Fullerton. ·CA '=A~ll I~ County on January 15, LTD .. 2851 Rolling Hllft Partnertlllp, 0-11 Part· 92~ ' ' The lollowlng 19 Drive, Fullerton, Ca 9283• ner. 2851 ROiiing Hillt DrlYI, Thlt bu1ln1t• 11 COii· bullrMel :::-""' •re f...o Myron M. Aelchert, '524 Fullerton, CA 92~ ducted by: a limited pertner· ~E PENNHl~L COM Publllhld Orange Cout Green Acre Orlve. Fullerton, Thia bu1inett It .con-Ship . ..... • Dally Pilot January 31, ~ CA 92835 ducted by: a limited partner-Myron M Relehef1 PAN1c.o, 695 The City Drive, ruary 7, 14. 21. 199e Howwd C. Br19ham. M12 ship This atat9m.nt wu filed Sul1e 201. 0r.,.. Calif. F-772 Cerlt• DrlYI. \lllla Plllll. CA Myron M. Atlchert, Gen-with the County C*1t of Or- 92tel 92887 •II Partner .,. County on January 8 TAG Management, Inc... .._.,. MnTIC( Thia butlMH it con· Ttllt .,.,.,,,.,.., Wll ftled ,. • Calltomle COfl>O'ltlon, 595 ,._ "" ducted by: 1 llmlted pertner-wttn the County Cler1I of Or· '217171 Tiie City DfM. 8u419 201. '1CTmOUI .,_.. ltMc> Miit County on Januwy 8, Pubhhld o..-Coaet Or.,., Cellf. t2tel Myron M Reichert 19M -.,,... 1 Thia bullneu It con· NAm ITATIMINT Thia tta'9m.nt llled P'll7l11 Delly Piiot January 10, 1 • ducted bY-a C0f1>0flllon The following per9on '-w1 h the Coullty c.::' of Or· Publlltlld Or COM1 24• 31• 1* W..... E. Garwin, Prell-dolng~u: I I ... F-713 TRUCK SPECIALS LEASE A NEW 1986 RANGER BRONCO II 9900 #4'7517 +TAX Pll MO. WITH NO MONEY DOWN CAP COST 6202.81 • 60 MOS. @ 99.00 t TAX RESIDUAL 2992.32 0 .A.C. 18085 #10701 +TAX "I MO. WITH NO MONEY DOWN CAP COST 11 , 100 • 60 MOS @ 180.85 t TAX RESIDUAL .a39.60 O.A.C. USED SPECIALS $500 DOWN* •PLU&~Ax auc. '80 PINT0#9100 s 7888 Price $2588 3e Payments of $78.88 PER MO Me2.28 down . APR 21.20 '77 ASPEN #9215 s 8998 ~•ofsaus PER MO. S754.28 down APR 21.20 '78 CHEVY WGN #9002s 93,, r of $93.911 PER MO. I down APA 21.20 '78 MUST ANG #6302 '82 GRANADA #6275 '81 MERC WGN #6281 '84TOPAZ #6268 '84 LTD #6286 •114•• ~ofS1 14.« PER MO. 1714.00 down APA 21.20 •12211 ~tofS122.M PER MO. S7 I-down APA 20 • .,5 •13911 :.mllofS13e.71 PER MO. r,.:2o.:-" •15911 ~Of l111U7 .. PER MO. APA 'lO.::- •19921 ~OU1M.21 PER MO. !..,. ,uf-" '83 DODGE 'P.U. *16911 ~=.of ll• ... #9165 PER MO. 1..,. J.411 dowft ..-._. .. ...., ..... ..__. ..... ...,,?.a 1211 llEACH BLYD. IUENA PARK (7M) 121-3110 .,.1 ... 1 ORANGE COUNTY'S # 1 HONDA DEALER GIVES YOU ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE ''FINANCING'' THE .HOT CRX IMMEDIATE DELIVERY THE BEAUTIFUL 4 DOORS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY THE HARD TO GET SPORTY "S" 41 mos. max. t.rms 20% min. down on eporoved credit. APPlvs onlv to cars In slocl(. Not velld on ftMt deels or retell deels made Prior to F.c>. 1, 1916. D•ei.r s>erllc fpallon mav enect flnef Mffln9 price. Expires I P.m. Feb. 16, 19'6. 2860 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA •SA SALIS HOUIS: 9 AM TU. 9 PM 6 DAYS A WIB. ~~"-"71 ~ RINDAY 10 AM Ta1 I PM. ~ .;J > ... .. !WI.. !!M pp r,'aTiL:-------1·R==~==· er-. Lw. ......_ .,_GfMllllDUI w11te1111CowAYQlrtlofOr· Cl.9 ~.Inc,. a C.-. ~~!'l'I M:::.,---~ .... Atl:OOpJ;.,;\; arH•ll--:,·~OflDHl"'*~:=.etlOft,.;.W:.':. 1"9 PlfW II N ._....., IWll :l'ii.~ ...... = "-"=-~ ~llP Nd Or-. C.... ...m,Clll.ttta -..----.._.. Dllillrtal ...,_ --· -._. IMI retl"'"' ..a ~ Not ....,.., 10 11 TMa ~ le CiOft.o ~I~( .. ) ... T~ ..... on T'= lftddlalaNd.n.oratlllda ,,_. ''°'"'°"• ._,,.... t4.,1 ,... ' 'duOtedby.eooopoi9IMlfl ... ,. LecHGCIL-lllCT, .................. -. .... Yt i ~ 80l.U-Jenuefy '1, 1MI, .. .... lill Oiied '°'· M .. ..._UNION HOMl8 NlfO ' ' FM1 c;;ep Wlluft 1t1 u 'f1rt TIONa, 11111 ....... IMM. ............ u-.to• ................. ..._ YAMCIR~ANDTM· Thie ~ .. lled am =-..-ea-mnPaca.mubiln1CTN0.•1. AW«UU 1f1M°'11 P d Clll. m 15 ldl 111111 '°' .... of...,_. • 1:00 P.lft. on ~. DfT10NA&. HOMU. t 11t -.JC llJtlC[ _.. .._County a.ti ot Ot· "°'*1 Wiiiem 1Mtoft 1m1J111y 4',000 ::': .... ~ 11, 1111, ,,_. Melfi llNet. IA. lnllM, ~ on Deoamber ,. 't• ... •••• ••u 011 d 9' fl P I All If... 1. ~ ':il1~ ....... .....: :..**"con:-': ,,..nc: :::.~·~--:= ~-:.:... ...... "°..mr=.~ .. :~-TH. bU91nMt It OOflo. "*'· 1'1111 llfld 11 on .. pweon Ot ,_II tilde. lld ..... '*T'9d to.....,... TN tolOWlrW ,.,_.. .. ,. ....... ................... --.__rt........ ,__ a-... .... n. forWM Ind ii*-• r n .,. lled a or.. couney on ..,. ~ • w ~w':"~T -T9' of .. -.-. ... ~ln .. .._Of. <>at.-11, fNtFUNO. MWl'IMALTY&IH-PvtllllMd Orange C... 1'1111 .....,,.... ..... lled f:': M M o1 dr911'1 .. .._ ... ldladorl '114111 VHTMINT COMltANY, OelfV Plot '*"*Y 10, 11, with .. County a.ti of Or· .......... _.~ ldllt cen.... ,._ H, MoNM1M, 1111 130t,. A"""'9. ~ 24, $1, , ... ange County on '*"*Y 11, o1 ~. TM ~ P\*""9d orange COllM Mein ...... if A. nine, a.di, c.llf, tlllt F-llO 1... bld ........... 000.,.,,.., Dellt fllot,,...,. 11, 24, Celt. 11114 ,_ '°'.term of 15,..,. Wiii 31. ,... Dell ""*°· 1I01 Gel---.,. ll)TICE PutllllNd °'*"' coeae .._.,.., otMlone tor ,. ,.131 ... Terr~.1.-C«ONI dll l __ ..---.;--..--.------Dliitt PMot ~ n ,_. new.!. 8ll6d bldt w1t1 be *> Mat, Olllf. wt • ~ OP COICMTION Nerf 7, 14, 21. tMI oepted unlU:OO P."'" ,._ NlJC llOTIC( Thlt ~ W:,.,c:;: ~ dM utla end fof'9l8n ~of.._ fl.111 'O:J.'· :,.-..:-,= ITAWO. v7 ltealflo .............. ot NllWpOtt 9wfl In tN State of cen... ~ • 20451 oumal rrcw ••a•..,. ... ..-ClelfOmll.• .. .._of...,...onDeoa111...-31, 1111 1-------MUC ll>TICE Pl8JC llJllCf MUC llOTIC( eun.ncy, unc9et ::.!:ir ~ eocte. lclkwl 111. I ~In NIPOfllll to cal,,.. by Coftll*-.r °' .. COHIOUDATm MPOllT 0. CoemrrtC* Ci pl .... ti .. c.u-,, ~ Dllll'tJle 0. AW-CM •llMTATI U.. 1"11•111•• .. ••Mll .. ll•-k" of ...,.. ., .,...,. COntolldeted Repott of Condttk>n of "AIMtlcen lntertt•t• ...,, Cllt\ and ~due "om Newpott ~. Ot1nge COunty, ~ Domeetlo Subtldllr* •t the cloM of __.OfY in.cttuttona buelrlW on Oecefnber 31, 1115. Nol.,._eet-lillettng beiJncet .............. 1072 end~ and ooln ........................................ 1,053 .,... AM I tlMa .....,_.-.mg bllenoee. .................................. 4,900 A9MTI lft TIU 11odl ~·-·-.. -.............. ,, ................ -........................ 4$8 Ceet'I ~ due frotn blintta ........ ,, .... ,, ................ ,, .................................... 5,353 ~!Undt ~ .,,":!.::':,...... lnwetment ~~ .. v-. 13, 122) ........................ ,,,, ............... 3, 118 In domlllllC of"'* of .. bank end of Non-lnveetlnent ........... -............ _,, .. , .. _ ...................... ,,,,,,,,,,,, ...... 0 ltll ldge and ......... ~. ~:!,~ ::':::::':::Uritiet'~·~ ............ ,,,, .. ,.,.,,,,,, ........ 0 ==-·~·~*=''""""" .. """ 8,300 -oi..,.,,.,,t1 to,..... In don'leetlc of'ftoee,,,, ......................... ,, .... ,, ...... 3,900 Loena end ....... ,,.. of LOW, Total (uctudtng unwned Income). ........................... 39,020 ~~kj;'k);;';;d';·i09M.~'~~: Lw: Allowelice for poellble loen loeeee ..... ,, .... ,, ....................... 505 l.E88· Alloc*ed tr.,.._,_ r...w -0- Loen., net,,,, ..... ,, ...... ,, ...••••. ,,,,,,,, .. ,, ... ,, .......... ,, ..... ,, ... ,, .... ,,,,,, ........... 38,516 Loan9 end ....... ,,_. °' ~ inec;;;: .. . Biii* Pt"entle•. F.F. & E. 9'C ............. ,, ...................... ,, .............. ,, .............. 471 ....... end~ .................................... 33,920 Re-' Mtat9 owned other thin A.-. hetd In ~ eocounta. ................................... -0- DATED: JMU8fY 31, 1988 MITAN a TUCKP, A...,_,. tor PWntlff, lay ltan Woloett "ti.nk prentleM ........... ,,,,,, .. ,, ........ ,,,, .......... ,,, .. ,, ........ ,,, .. ,, .. ,, ........ ,,,, .. ,, .. 825 P"""'9t end tbced ...... F-114 lnveetrM11t1 In uncoMC>lldated aubekt..,.._ (lncludlng cepttelll9Cf ..... ). ...................................... 937 ~~ed~ 0 °"-•--owned .............................................. 417 -PublWMld Ofenge CoMt Delly Piiot Jenuery 31, Febtuwy 7, 14, 21, 1988 F-789 ------------------------------------1---------1 Cuatorner'a llabll , to thte ~ ............. ,, ......................... ,,.......................... lnveetmenl9 In unconeolldeted aub14<11W ... MUC *>TICE NI.IC *>TU NlJC *>TICE Nl.IC *>TICE Pl&.IC ll)T1C( on~ outstlndtng ....... ,,,, ............................... ,, .......... ,, ... ,, ........ o =-'llebllty"°"l:'=bei*···· ................................ -0- NOTICE OF PUBLLIC HEARtNG ON A PROPOSED ZONE CHANGE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Or ange County Pl anning Commiuion will ho ld a public hearing to con 81der r ezonin g o f a 4 .18 acre parcel o f l and l ocated generally in Santa Ana Heightti. __ .._ 0 .. ·-· L ...... "' .... Date of Hearing: February 11, 1986 Time o f Hear ing : 1:30 P.H., o r ad tioon thereafte r a8 p oatiiblc Location: Pr opotidl: Hearing Room, Hall o f Adminis tratio n , 10 Civic Center Plaza (Co rner o-l Bro adway and Santa Ana Blvd .), Santa Ana Change of Zone Catie No . ZC 85-42P propubCtl t u change certain property from the Agricultural (SR) Dl ti tri c t t o the Profoi;biona l Adminibt r ativc(SR) Ditit r ict . Compliance wi th the Ca llfvrnia Env i runm~nta l Qua lity ~ct: Final EIR 508 , prevluu:..ly ccrtificd by findingtt un Fc..·bruary 26 , 1985, wati d e t ermined adl·quatl' tu oc..·rvc ao d Program EiR f u r the prujt:ct and :,;a t ib fy a ll requirc mcnto uf CEQA. The EIR i:. availablC' f u r public review betwel'n the hourb uf 8:00 a .m. and 4:30 p.m. dt the.• Advance Pla nn ing Divibio n, Room 243, 400 Civic Cc..·nter Dr iVl' Wci.t, Santa Ana', Ca l iforn ia. The !::IR, the r etipuntic• t o pub lic cumml·ntb on the: EIR, and the: titaff rc..·purt on the ELR will be k~pt un fil ~ dt the dbuVL l vCdtiun . =~er·s:::::::::::::::::::::::::~j:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::··5~::;~ ~~~~:::::·:·::·:::·::·::::·::·:::·:·:·:·::·:::·:·:·::::·::·:~:·l TOTAL DEPOSITS IN ToUll-'L ............................................................ 5e,139 DOMESTIC OFFICES ......................................................... ,, ... 50,ee9 UAKJTlll Toti! defnllnd depoelta ......... ,, .................................................. 9,974 Dlpollta: Totel time Ind .. ..._ =• 40 895 In dOlnletJc omc. ............................................... 52,301 ·"-1G ......... IC,,.ES ....................... ,, .. ,,.,,, ' o ~-beerlnQ ..................... , ......... 1t,2111 TOTAL DEPOSITS IN F N OFF ................ ,,,, ............ ,, ......... ,,.. ._.__ ..___ . .. .. 020 TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC AND tn "r:;.;·~~Ed09'ind ...................... ~. FOREION OFFICES ........................... ,, .... ,, .................................... ,,. 50,889 Af.-::• IUbeld ...... -"' IBF1 .......................... ..().. Federll fund8 purcheMd Ind aecurlt... Nof*t -~ ...................................... ..o-eold ~_,.......,ta to~ In dorneetlc oftk:iee ................. ,, ... O llfMl91t~ ....................................... ..o- Oth• llClltlM-for bOi t 6Wd mcn.y, lneludfi'IO":not. · · · --Mettrtuneli-~ and aecurtt ... ~of U.S. T~ ............................. ~ ........................................... 0 ao6d under ~ti IO~ In Mortglige lndebtednw ................................. ,, ....... ,, ..................................... 0 ~ ,.,_of .,_t -~....__ ~ 1n 18fa. ,. Aoceptllnoee ecuted by or f ..., ....,_... --· .... . .......... ...,.. •>< or 0 Dlmencl notet ...-to the U.S. Tr9MUry .................. ..().. eocecciount of thl9 benk Ind out.tandtng ....................... ,, .. ,, ....... ,,.......... Ott. borrowed moner ..o- Other Hablltt ... ,, ••.. ,, .... ,, ................. ,, ... ,, .......... ,,.,,,,,,,,.,, .. ,, .. ,, ......... ,, .......... 709 Mor19JIOl llldeb...-OenctOGbii08iionS"••OO"OOOOOOOOOOOOOO TOTAL LIABILITIES (exdudlng aubordlnlted not• unc9et ~ ....................................................... 93 ~ debentur•).,, .................. ,,,, ...................................................... 51,378 lenk'a llebllly on~ SYbordlneted not• Ind debenturM,, .. ,, .. ,,,, .. ,, ......................................... 464 ...,.,._,and~ ...................... ~ ......... ~ IHAMlfOlOEl8 •GUITY Nolea and~ aubordlneted to........., ........... ..,.. ~=ock ==~:;;i:~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:~ outatlndtng ...................... 4 Amount -0-IGUn'Y CAPn' Al. Conwnon stock ~pi ... led atock ............................................. ..().. No . .,.,.. Common atodt .......................................................... 2,!505 =··········· 1 • 200• 000 ~'j;Oiita'ind'~iii·~:::::::::::::::::::·12~-::.~ outatandfng..... 1, 1CM.423 Amount 1,380 CumulmM foNl9n curr9ftCy Sur'*'8 2 330 II• llMlon ed;.trnenta, ................................................ -0- TOf Al OONifiialiTEo·cAF>rr"A·c:::::::::::::: ... :,, ... ,, ................................. 3,110 ~= =-.~~ ........................................ 3.•10 =,:mC()fl'T~"•••••••""•••oo•oooooO••,.••"•••••.,••••••••"••ot•••••••••"""'•'" 127 pt":.ed.:c: .. -:.~ :o::·;;;;·;~··;;;;·=~ Ind other capltll ,_"99 ........... ,, ............................................... ,, .......... 0 nw of ttlla Jt'*"9nt of reeourcll -"' llMMlltlea. We TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ............... ,, ............. ,, ......................... 3,837 ~""'"'*~.umlnedbyue,end1ott1ebM1of TO~~~~~b~~:s ~8u1TY .............. ,, ........ ,, ........ ,, ........................... 55,879 :'n!':::r .,_end...:::,,_'*_, e.:,,:~ CO:ect~- The underalgned, John Engberg, Pree6dent Ind S. R. Whltfteld, Sr. Larry L L.udl~ V.P./Controler of the~ benk, wtl declerea, for hlmeelf 8lone ~~ ·All p~ri.uni. either fdvurinK ur vppvbinK thib prupubd l the ir vicW1> befvrc the P l dnninK Cummi:..1>i un. Ind not for the other: I h1r1e per90NI knowtl ctge of the matt .. c:ofltalned In 1 Jo Ann "°'*-a.a Vim Preeldant/caani.r of the thll report Ind I beMe¥e thet wtl at1tement In elld repor1 la true. &ch of the ..,0....Nl'lled '** do ~ decW9 INt tt11a Aapor1 of d r l ' i n v l t l ' d t v pr c b C..' n t undenlgned, for hlmMlf 8lone Ind not for the other• ceftlftee under pen.ny of Condltton It true end corr9Ct to the ~ of my knowtedge perjury thllt the foregoing II true end corr9Ct. and belief. Any written mdtl·ridl b t u bl· ·be :..ubmittl·d t" Lhl prvjlct (10 cuplc:.. dr~ rcquir~d). 1>Ubm it t l'd pldnn1.. r J l t11 thl· P lanning Cumm i1>1dunt r:.. mui.t h d 1> t 2 4 h u u r l:> p r i u r l v t h l ' h c: a r i n g If yuu ch..JJ ! .. ·ny, thl 7.,n, Ch,1n>~l 1n tu11r t , vv11 r•1.1v l1l l imir ,tf (., rdl:.'n~ unl y thv1>c..· i::.::.Ul'::. v .. u .. ,r :.uml'""'-' '-'lt>l' rdi,..ld dt th<.· public hl'dring dc..-:..c ribl·d in th i:. nu ticv, ur writt1..n c.,rn,,p .. nd<.•nc<.· d1..·l ivl•nd tu th<.· pTv J'.'Ct plannc..·r priu r tu th~ pub l ic h~dTin~, Fur furthl·r infu r l'ld l i vn, vvu .irl invitld '" c ..il I Bvn.nil H .. rmdn in t~l Land P l annin K S1..c tiu n Jt C7 J ~l 834 -~380 , u r c .. m1.. int., thl v fficl l vcal1..d ,1t '•00 Civic C1..n t1..r Dr ivl \\\,.,t. H .. um .''d, <,.rnl.1 And, L dif •. r nid 9~70 !-4048 . l'h·ab1.: rl·fl·r t 1• ~(' N, •. 8<.,-... .'I'. -:----.. . ......;_ 1 ··----··-'" · . ..., .. ... ,,,.. .. , _ ... ,~ .. .,; ' I ' Location of Project .. -.. J. J . . ~ / Location of Public HHrlng ""' a' tOt~ • .. I __,.,, ......... MLL•-.aT••f ... ,_ ... ~•) .. MC • .,,... ~Al• ...,•-C• Published Oran ge Coast Dally Pilot 1/31/86 F-793 •• l · Executed on J.nuary 28, 1988, et N9wport ee.ch, Cellfomla · Jo Mn Jonea John ere 1-27-11 S.R. Wh Publllhed Orange CoMt Delly Piiot January 31, 10M Publlahed Otenge Coat Diiiy Plfot JlnUlr'y 31, 1986 F-790 F.1111• __ Nl....;.,,;,.;;.IC--...,*>--.TICE.;..;.-._, Pl&..IC M>TlCE ,, __ Pl&.IC--...,........._*>...._TICE_._ ___ Pl&.JC __ *>_TICE __ 1 _ __,,;Pl&.JC;,,;;__M>_TICE __ "OTIC! OF PUBLIC ll.!ARlMC NOTICE I S H!R!BY CIV!N that t he Orange County Planning Co.tiHion vil l ho ld a public hearing to coneider rezoning of an 3.1 acre parcel of land located at 1515 Heea Drive, Sant• Ana Heiaht a. Date o f Hearin11 February 11, 1986 Ti•e o f Hearin11 1130 P·•·• or •• eoon thereafter a• poeaible. Location • Planning C011miaaion Hearing Room, Hall of Adm1n1stret1on , 10 Civic Center Plaza (Corner o f Broadway and Santa Ana Blvd.), Santa Ana Propoeal1 Chanae of Zone Caet No. 85·15P propo1e1 to <hanae certain property frClll the Al (Sit) Ceneral Aaricultun (Sign b1tr1ction} Dietric t to the lt2 (2418) (Sit) Hulti-fHily Ove llina• (Minhru• Aru per FICTmOUI Ml-II NAME ITA TD:'!NT The lollow4ng P«'JOfl la doing bu91neee u : AVRIL ASSOCIATES, 14 12 Vivian Lane, Newport BMctl. c.111. e2eeo , Seltt Hobll1, 1412 VMen Lane, Newport BMctl, Callf 92eec> Thfl buelneu la con- ducted by: an lndMdual Slllt Hot>lh Thl9 atetement WM flled wtttl the County Clerk of Or-= County on Januwy 17, ,-.1 Publletled Orenge COll1 OeNy Piiot January 31, Fet>- ruety 7, 14, 21, 19H F-110 Unlt 2418 Square Put ) (Sign lutrictlon) Dhtrlct. l--Pl&.JC-.--,.,-TlCE--- The propo eed zone change vould allov a .. xl11U• of 56 dvelling uni t • on elte. Compliance vtth the California !nvironaental Quality Act 1 It vae dettntined thet althouah the propoecd project could heve eignificent effect on the environ-nt, there vlll not bt a eignifi cant effec t in thla caee becauee the •itiaation 1aea1ure1 deecribed in Neaetive Declaration I 85-091 hi ve been added t o the project. Al 1 pereon1 t ither f a voring or oppoaing th11 propoeal art invited t o preeent their vleve before the Planning Co.ileeion, An y written .. ur11h t o be eub•itted to the Planning Co.ih1ioner1 •u•t be eub• i tted t o George Fe l h the project p lannc r at ha• t 24 houre prior t o the hear ina (10 copic• ere required}, If you chal ltnge eub ject &one chenge in court, you ••Y be li•ited t o rahlna only thoec iHuee you or 1C111eone ehe rai eed at the public heerina deacribed in thi• no tice, or vritten correepondenc e delivered to the Oranae County Plannlna Co.ii11i~n 1t, or prior t o, the public hearina. FICTmOUl.,...11 NAm ITA'T'lmMT The followlng pet90n 11 doing bualnw •: tNT£RNATIOHAL COM· MEAClAL REALTY. 43 Ca- nyon IJlend °'·· Newport BMctl, Celt. t2teO Chert.. Btoodamt11't Blr1ell. 43 Cenyon laland Or., Newport Beect\, Callf t:leeo Thia bullnMa ta con- ducted by: an lndMdual Cl'tar1el Battelt Tl'tll etatement WM flled wtttl the Coun1y Clef1l of Or-= County on .Jenuary 1& • ,._ PubllaMd or.,. COMt Deity. Piiot Jenuery S 1, ~ "'*Y 1, 14, 21, 1N8 F-711 Por further info n1 .. 1 lon, you are invited to call Ce orae Pelh in the Land 1--MUC--.;--..,_ll>_...TICE ...... ..__ Planning Sec t i on et (714) 834•S380, or COiie into the office located at 12 Civic Center Pla1a, lloOll 243 , Sent• Ana, Californie 92702•4048. Pleaee refer to ZC No. 85-15P. >nbliohed Oran c Coast Daily Pilot 1/31/86 • I Not To kaM ~-79 4 ·- NllC fl>TICE -.... =-~:::: .. :: ...... ·:~.·.~:::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::.·:::::·:::·:: .... ·-:· .... ~ ~:~:= ,_.., ...... o.'9CI ...................................................... ~ ........ -... ·-· .. . 6,236,200 ca.. '-"""' enes u.a. Cla •nmmtt~ ..................................................................... 64.492,74' °"* ~........ .. ........................................................... -.... ·-5&7,552.552 TOlll ~ .......................................................................... _., ....... S 1,447,3e0,092 Traditional Realty 631-7370 EABLUff CllftyOft Tnwt 8' 2'~ ,,, oc:ie.\. ,.,... Ing $181,000 6'2..St2 .. ,Dim ... B«ylor Mdl 1500 alft S 8d 2'.'t ba Sl«.000. M ra.. welcome. OWN 79&-0678 lllfFl ltTFlllT 3000 tt. 3 BR. 3'M>a. din/lam '"" Fireplt, ~. pool. View of bay. ntte it.. mtn1 $379,000. 722-Mee ILlfn ltTAllT 3000 ft . 3 BR, 3'11ba, dln/fam rma A1991t. IP•. pool View of bay. nlte tu. mtn1 $379,000. 722-Mee " .... Sacrifice NEWPORT ' SHRS a..cn Bung91ow due to OHth ~1212 nm. 631~2 W!'k 111•,.. au 1411,111 Just reduced-What a value! E.xoeptlonalty smart 4 BR In Harbor Vtew Hiits, etegantJy deeorated and bMutlfuOy lltu- ated. A apatkllng 19') poof wot help keep you flt. Thia ts• "muet ... ,. I . I , , -- ' 4.... 1-....... ---.a::.; ~!!!::~!!! .... Meture NA .... IMM Ip jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..Af11111.,.f tl.,.....;:11:;:;1 tiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. __ _._. · G!' ..... _,,nee. • P•rten Ced L., g~ ftl ..... _.... tf.l!~~l"l!~~ll!ll!'ilPt ,.. .•• ""' & bowd + tout Ill O.C ottloe AePIY '..._.., _ "· Cll Ol-t014 to lox •SSS. Coete M..-Ohio Co.~ to CA. $"1.1N\1 p =~~/~ CA 92828 Con. lldentlll ~~ ~~::; , ':"" ....... llOllTAIY 9PC>mll, S5 hf. guwen-NIN '"' GrOW!nQ ~Ing """ teed. HeQh comm .. ~ COl In o. . A#'port .,..; leelllf'IG •xi> Mef'etlry/ CW\ IP!tft+ ~. EAltft ~ i.. ~. ger1 ornc:e to WOfk In fut 1111 .... + , ... 1111 ;CA&.L 751.too3 ~-dept . nu. 11eevy AdVenoernentto UftllrV -iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ """""-·•Int typl1t, dettit "'IMIQement tot right ~I NlllU or*1ted. Xlnt ~ta a cweon.Cell417·21V PRIZES 2 ...-+benllr~ Pleuant working c;on. Myllme.AlkforDon,Jr. ~ ... Of bootee. dltl0n1. Send reeume to s.Q',....... to Mlef\MI, Mr. Fuent .. at Roti.ft 1---------= TD~ 1401 Dowe 8t, #290 Bein, Wllll1m Froet Cl IU" .J .._. ldl, CA t2te0 ' Auoc 1401 oua11 st.. ds/a..tunall la• ....... .... ~port Bch, CA 92660 II• M&f fl.IT w/experlenQeMl-0312 pa"rtM•=•~a~":; !:~'lo~?{~~~ wk P/~~~~l~F~. lfyou~=•1C:nxtra W=:=' & ,...... .,.,. PRewardlng & dl~llfiecl. Ca11Georget>«.11amor ~~.or Ith 7:30-4:30 . leneflte. grow w/company. /R Dept Marden School •h 2pm, M·F, 02-0e70 to 00 plaoea Ilk• Magic $4.75/tw to ll#t. offtoe, no 1mott-Co11a Me11 645·9392 OlllTIL •• .,..1 Mountain, Knott• Berry 210 ~·CM Ing -1111 _. for Ed -_,., Fllfm. or wWI Prtme Md between 1~. IEOln&lY Feat fOOd rMtaurant now Awerdt. Cell ue nowt We lz ... --..-.. ,.,,..-----1::.:---::-:---:-~..,.-,-,--Part~ T~k~ r!gu,;:~u11~f,:'. ~1~~.G~~~ ~~"! ~~=.~~.~ :.• l-.,...-........ --.--..,.._.--- uperlenc• preferred o.Cll Plaza. C111 ror older. HouMwlvH & 642'""'333 ··-· Mil 20-'5 houre a wee11· appt. 7141957-1838 Mnlors ~ A"'*1 -·-.__-------1.,....,,..,...,...""'.-.-..1._.. S•lerV commen1ur11~ llOn /IE~ In P«son btwn ~5. Mon autornotM I 111111 .ttWexperlence. Send r• Part-time 2 ·dys/Wk U lll thru Sat. Feb 3 lhN Feb frMf IM I....... LES 967-8131 tunifl or mltle •PPll· Ju.,. Then Fwi n 13. t 1045 Werner at MUST BE EXPERIENCED 2 AEFFUOEAATOAS calt9n ~o; Needs .general olc ~':· Euclid In Fin. V""'-'!. & HAVE OWN TOOLS. $75 & $200, WASHER r.-:,.......,,.,.,.--..,,,,_.....,.._,,,.-,.~•• llllT Call lor appt 957-8351 . 01111'0 •LI 2200 ~ti! KB~ert,CM $150. DAYER $150. -M&T PIJT Ttebical/Tr••H Full or p/tlme. Daya & Mon-Fri. , • _IM.5-__ 9_353_. ---- »OW. ltl)' St. eves. Very ftex. IChed·r=-------- coita Meea. CA 92828 5505 uHno Apply In Pereon. Be cr•tlw. 12 women *IALll IALIJ* ATTN: Accounting Dept. •-•11&.Elll Orange JuHu1 7f1 E. needed teach I demon-_,__•tor• 1121 1 , ... .._ Balboa Blvd ltrate ne«tlecratt. Wiii ._ .. -....,.. B~EPElt PfT. Fun Apply 7 AM only . -. train c .. Joen M2-<4975 Waaherl $99 & Up ch job, hf• llex MacGregor Yachts 1631 111111'1 lllllT Dryere, gu/etec: S9t & Up NB. t flfY 640-4950 PlacenllL Costa Mesa. -I~ U ... ILDI ~~OVM $99 & Up ...... 925. 54t-oM'4 Da Anu 8eyl6de Vlflaae cvrod, .-:,er500ttya9~ MfVlce -- -11-. Adult w/axperlence lor Complete Une of Home 300 E Cout N.8. r · -· .,....7574 ~TTNT ., PllfSSlttl I• look i ng lor a busy lrvtne Drug Store FurnWllnga" OAK MOLOtNG 'A"ll 2W' 173-1331 M H;:r·~ BMW •13 320! Uka new , FULL TIME Host/Hoetea lo WOl'k M-30-40 Hre/Wk Abl9 to ALL APPLIANCES llreMll!ne CMlnQ. Tot• on.-• __..,.,... mint con<Y. 5 ~ elf ...: T~ so.eo wpm and lmmec1111e opening for F 11:30AM-2:30PM. ldMl work evenlno•' a week-=......... ~ ea. L1 (9000 Shore Moorlno up to 18' In ioy.. enrl Bleu~kt 21K I hi good organlzetlonal quallllecl parson. Harris for person who 11 looldng end•. PIMM cd Man-I • LF). lndlv lengtN ea. LF. Balboa CovM $80/mo. ml. Orig Ownt 751-222• Sk .Hourtf:00-5:00.lf 11600, 1660exper.help-forafewhouredurlnothe eger 78~1ee UNIOUEFUAINIT ... AE EV9talt8pm497-7418 YMrty850-5027 · I 1 tereeted e.it Judy at ul. Excellent company day. Plea.te 1w1y at I U ll'Tm 'IZ 211D IL ;..2•4321 Ext 318 I benellt1 and working 225 E. 17th St, C.M. UIW Wll"fll 1947 S. Main St. OFFICE FUANITUAE(a SLIPS Avt 25'30'& 35'. Sapd .,, PIS full ' ' · conditions Appl _ F Self &.rve Gu Sente Ana Variety) and FOAKLIFt. 3333 W. Coat Hwy • • • power, 11aT111TI11 · y. restaurant ~~ M~•t be ~t~ Btwn Edinger & wenw on Pr I c • n •go ti• b I•. Newport Sch 9.5 Mon-Fri :.'ft!-c::,'"' CNIM, Accountlno Dept. A11l1-llAHE Ol&ST PIT F/l IPl-S. dependable. PIHH Main St. S.. the Beatl 846-1212 hm, 831-4402 Iliac Trau,.rtltiea (438249)' oywtleele 1an1 for <*l Cont. Loe In l&IU PILIT Cashier. counter help, apply In P«IOrt at 890 111-1221 frtt ti fft MB ' 17HI Nwolt Bch. Full-time, 330 w Bey Streel Pizza maker, for fut food So Cout Hwy, lag Sch. Open 10-8: Sun 12-5 Fr• to oooa m ' mo pr-1 .. 10·key, light typing. or call 642-4321 gOOd pay. will train. Muet •m-w/freezer Brown excel loV9I ctilldren &45-4321 ' 1719'1l"'n0:wner 2 way POUCH I! AUDt CH!VROU.T Hl91Me1 Q..alt111 s.1 .. •s.n.1c. CHIClt IVEllMJN U 5E.C-1Hww Nowpon 8-ctl 67S-e9ff THI ODv" r ROBINS r r_, Ar ~ ~ '. ( 'A ....., t A TH I ODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HAlllOll e 1 V' (')~TA Ml~& ~4 •' I' bklf\>g, computer exp Costa Mesa, Ca operation. Lunch houra, M/F ~/0/E FRIGIDAIRE Lg apt. u old fem Coc:kerfTemer Caarn Mlt - lilln9, congen111 per-speak Enottlh 641-8209 -·-COnd ns:~tm refrg. elec toilet: "*'YI ••• -eonallty. Selary com-3033-0 So. Bflstol. C.M. Laborer• needed for N.B. Grey 10 moe old ferr"'9 extraa S2000 873-39tll ~rete w/axp. Con·' nPISlnll/ SANO C S area. Minor carpentry a Frigidaire trlg/tnr 20.8 cu cat/Wht pewa, mellow . ' .2888 v tlC\)(1'1 •1152-8202 PASTE" &lTIIT shift~~ ~nd~o~ 25~: plu1. 111-up, Engll1h tt. Xlnt eond. Wht W/wd young cat. Md ahOtl. 8' Cemper Shell, 1ouvr .. & (<•la Mna ~-0.130 !~~~===~~CHEVY '74 VEGA Cc>e. PORSCHE •74 91•. bia(:j(_ Auto trans, looh/.rune gd eond, 1.8 liter. SA200 ort $875. Bkr 722-18A8 uP«teooe 1n f: .. t.FOOd. epeaklng. Interview at trim. Ice maker. "300. Heatty.55e-702I bubb l e w i n d ow•. llTmWP/IP'l2 11& .... /P·Tlrl-l Immediate opening for Enollsh S9Mklno on.ly. ~~=-=lon~t 497·1751or55M20e NMdvwygoodl'lomefot .$200/obo,645-8192 1 5 1Pd.~•.ovwetz• Perm. mature reliable ••per typesetter Mult Mature female pref d. Sal. Feb. 1, 1o.m-12pm · I llT ... IJZUTm epeyecS fem Samoyed, 72 PACE ARROW 25 tt. magwne.te. Excellent ladyf n-emkr754-0370 have have mark-up Cal1Joe524-6043wtldya. Worldngornotca.tlpeid IC)prox2yr..S4&-0l51 Fully Hll-contalned. eondltlon ~:::id ~~~~nt~: 528-70_2? Eves & Wkndl HllTll.... Same d~/U. 850-1397 tlH!PfH ES. I.AS T Xlraa W.00. 548-3155 oo.i 10820&) ellts Including medical & TIE IUll .U M-F. FT/PT. $4/Hr. ~-REFRIG: F/F. Top freezer. CHANCElll Lab Shep hit •·1 pill (StU 333e) dental 1n1urance, con-Is accepuno appllcatlon1 port Bch. 640-821 1 Top con d . S 2 o o , Mix, lhota. Next 11op Lii:ii Wll ... genial atmosphere. Con-tor the lpllowlng pos-•ma "47-3020, "47-3358 enimal lhelter 957.ol20 ... , TH IODORI tact Alissa, 6•2-4321 ext lllons· F'( & Pfr Ber-Light piekup llnd dellvwy. WASHER & DRYER 5 145 ill= 1141 • ., ... Plllln1 291 ten~er. IT Day Food Senior prtllarred. each Gaa11owl125 · ..... .. Waitress. FIT Day Host· Thomp1on Blueprint Dilhw9h $100 648-sMa INGE RAND Com-111T-HAllE Ol&S7 esses (stanlno at S6 hr). 3t88-E. Airport Ave c M' r · prn1or. Bid opening '"-l&ILY PILi'l' Apply In pereon between ' · fanitut 1114 2119/M , 3 pm. Submit HUNTINGTON BEACH . 10am & 12 noon. Ask for EASY ASSEMBLY WORK auledbldstoMeuCon-CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH ROBINS FORD J•Jl>L' H&llllOR Ill VO (Q<,a M l\A l'.4] 0010 UL .. nUY co~~ ~~s~~~:tr:;~27 Joe. No phone call• SCI00.00 P« 100. Gueran-1olld•ted Water Dl1t. 642-0e31 540-5164 Lltl"-"'tlon • • please teed Payment. No Ex· LES ..,.7 •133 1985 Placentla, CM. ••Tiii s~. Npt. ~~~eo.~~~ 142-4121 619SleepyHollow Lane perlence/No s ..... De-.,. ..... 150CFM roto-flow, • cyt 4 n..1 Drift/J~ -21111 'IJ Laguna Beach tall• send Mlf·eddr"MCI * .,.. UUJ• eng. w/2 100 tt hoM NH Auto. A/C, PW, SI R, . Sim /II lltl 5518 W&IT-l /W•1199r••RS stamped envetope: Queen Thomuvtlle bdrm rHl1. Beginning bid .... -AM/FM. 33,452 mllel S min 3 yr1 Clv & Lit., "" "''" -Elan Vital ·903, eet twn beda dlnlno set 1850. Aval! to ... by -irw Ser. 003030 6 ~ty flfm. Xlnt typlno ForctasslcBl1tro with 1yr ~18EnterprlMRd, oamarmtet dlahea -eve appl. Contaet Ron ~ 11111 skll , wd/proc req'd. UYll'"••ie exp in French CrulSine. Ft. Pierce, FJ,. 33482 for 12, ETC. ·640-7&9l Wlnatow 831-1472 It comeewfth buc*et ... t• J•-. 955 0560 •... Call between 9am-11 am d ..... , • AOOlllTHHmYE Tues-Fri. 645-9858 1um.ars11LPD 2 VELVET c:Mn, orange LEATHER Exec.~ & an radl •I 11rea. -1111 Pfllll Needed for Automotive & 2 yrs e11p. 770-7070 S80 ... Queen sofabed rec:fMtlon chalr1. Vari· (Ser#5"37) (Stk#2462) Mat~. fMt & accurate. Real Estate Classllled Ctat11I 5530 11MT-IUU $75. Small deek $75. 009 pricel. MS-9353 ORA=AS Carpet Mfg. Co. Call AdvertlSino Sales II a 11.-·· ...... I ·---Twin Mad/foot boWd• fanitan T HONDA If Ooflfla at eeG-1828 rapidly el(panding local l"9A,,.... _., Full-time. Appty In P«IOn SSO ea. Toro mower $50. Jeep/Renault newspaper Aggreutve needed for better deelgn btwn 7am-3prn. 425 So Gu edger $40. Cheln uw I ........ 1147 2524 Hart>or Coa1a Mela , RILL OLEll self-dtsclplinect lndlvld~ sports boutique. Ex-eo .. 1 Hwy. Lag Bch $10. !Mk• $75. Trampoline bRA'FTSUXNitXBLE Mt-1121 1--.. -Tm--MID---' ... ;.;;..;.;;;;;;; MaJoJ Orange County ulls may urn excellent r.fan~5~;~ Falhlon Help move & 11adt emell s25• xtra L twin~ 31x90, 3"" hi + equere & Tncb MlS P/wta, T -top. tllt, crulM, H ... th Care faciHty h.. Income (ulaty • com-· obJect• Atter 9Choo4 or ALL French Provtndal: Din light. HrOWd frm. gd end digital cue , leethef an opening for 1 weff·or-mission). benefit•. ano Apt Maneger eoup+e with weellends. near Newport eet orig $2800.aac. $1400. SSOO 642-0440 mag mY I/~ 'ti. 11* int9'1or. (ID•068739) gantzed, energetic: lndl-advancement opportuni-experience for bellutlful Pier. 873..e249 Cof tbl Mt $550, e6egant fttt I l•lwth liit New tW.. ~ Retail Kelty Blue Book vtdllil! wf2-3 yre exp AP-ty S11et and/or advertll · 50 Unit Garden Apll CM. • aolaJloveet $&50 occaa 111711 pllcant muet enjoy WOl'k· Ing experience helpful. SaJaryH>onu1+Ap1.' No P/T,..D Pmll ctir1S150. Xlntl~7o5 1 MITRATE CONOUR DUMP BED FORD '71. Wholesate K~BlueBook Ing .,/numti.fs, pouess Send resume to: pet• 642 ..... 914Wkdya11--4 M/F, aome heavy llftlng (Mccaw) w/wrght Iron C-800. 5 cu yrd. Bid S 14 400 Ille 'typtng, CRT knowl-P. Blevins From 1MO hr1 P« Wk. DINING TBUCHR S95 cage $75 548-2155 opening 2/19/lle, 3 pm. SOLD S S edgi helolut S 1 tuffl Ol&ST Im llTIAMI Mon·Frl S8 75/hr Cati TWIN BED S25. SYbmlt IMled bide to A 1 ~ p . urycom· ExP«lenced.645-5355 8am-no0n 548-5574 75t·7200 Singer Sewlno Mech & Mua Con1olldated WITHSALVAGEDTITLE rate w/exp llll Y PILIT . · table. Comptete. Work• water Diet 1985 Plaoen-A BARGAIN PRICE OF .... Ull OllP P 0 Box 1560 Mee e • e eee• •••••••• •••••••, Kp_ Bd & beddlno S3S250. gr•t '80. S.-8-2155 Ila. Co11a M9N 330V8 111-(7 14)115 1 2273 Coste Mesa CA 92826 .. .~ ... aple tbl & chre SO. •11•---t I ..._ Oppor;unlty Em-' : DELIVERY DRIVER I Dbl bd S50 854-3303 flun fUI tt'tt:-'°PS;B~ :!:'!; ·;~ er • • King size waterbed MSI alecirlc traller brak•. llUIPUIT SAUi • O II Pil • w/heater. wood frame. ORGAN. YAMAHA 15 Beginning bid $3400. •PTllllST PIT Hr1 fle:t Retail ex-e 8 y Ot motor route e xlnt cond $90. 498-3797 Like new 9 moe old. Mov~ avail to aee by appt. Con- THIODORI ROBINS FORD 2060 H&llllOll Ill VO (Q<,J& M l ')A t>41 0010 catl (71•)894-7S7l CHEVY '77 CAPRICE PORSCHE 911SC Targa. 13.000 orig ml. tufty triple t>ltl. ·as 3 2 Carrera loaded SA500 645-9421 eng, new trertt~J'•A~ -r ..... _. Grand Prix 11ereo, lllr, --·-•& p/Wlnd, alerm. phone. 111 Economic.I. 4 spd, air. record• $29,CIOO Chrle H PI S. stereo. custom 497-2217. w11 281-2680 't'Wtleels Exoepttonal t>vy. (10HR422) PO RSCHE 924 79 s•Jff Loaded. Good COnd •9K • ml S8500 8181333-8435 CORMIER SUZUKI ~ ~ 770-7001 23ee3 Rocttfleld Lake FOf•t. CA TOP SSS PAID For Pempered 'Mer~Benz l•HDIATEUSI Top Meloedel Prloel Paid CALL PETER or RAY ...... TS ....... , 213 or 714 837-2333 DODGE 01ytona 1984. Turbo, alr, AM/FM stereo cruise control. automatic. Excellent con- di t 1 on $680010 80. 6 73-1646 leave message, WIWAITY• ILWlnDWll See Veno dos Santoe e ~firm In New-perlence prel 645-0210 • available in Huntington • Couch & Lov .... 1 S150 Ing. Can't , •• II w/me. t ac I Ron Wln1low P Beae n"8d1p/tlm• PART-TIME SALES IN •. H b '4 2 h •. EuychrS25.St--S75.· S2000tlrm.990-483& 831-1472 , . rec!f>t. with typing. t111ng nowER SHOP. w iu ar or area. 1-ours .... ..., ~~~~~~~~ &p&tlng.2-3dayeweek. train 833.1883 e ft e 2 drSSf & 2 nlte1tnd1 PIANO: KOHLER & RANCHER079 Ford. Bid DATSUN '83 280Z.X. red. TRIUMPH '78Spltflre.Gd-=: Exwd only 752-6868 . • per a ernoon. • $100. Cott Ible & 2 end I CAMPBELL. Top COnd openlno 2/19/8&, 3PM. xljcond. lnciell xtru& T· cond am/Im can. , ... YAI E·2H ... • SALES. For,;-. Nautlcal • ·call 642-4333·, Monday_ • tbl1 $75. 979-6646 1 S700/beat otr. 645-9353 · SYbmlt Maled bid• to top s10.soo 494-6238 S1600/obo or trade ror ~.Ton. V-8. auto. PIS •PTllllST Gilt & Clothlng Store. • • Meu Con1olldated ,________ 1ml truck 642·1290 (Llc=ZG2970•l lor Rf"llglou• Newport FI T Exp prel'd. Charue·s • Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for • Water D11t. 19tl5 Placen-FERRARI '82 3o9GTSI. -=Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii 1Stk:: 39501 c M• Ill T 1 • • Ila Ave CM 351 V8 Xlnt cond. every option • Sk•llf, e~ ~,;, ettfu~ Lockflf 87S-6230 NB • Art. • 'ea.~· .... ::-c(_.> .Mii~~°"" auto. PS. PB, air cond: $35.900/obo 771-8275 YW lllllT '11 11n1 a Inuit. All employee ltLIPHIE Ill.ES : 1' : ~ ~ vw .. .._ Beginning bid S2200. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-4 lpd, AIC, AM/FM c111 , 1! benefit• provided. Call Flell hour• se per hour Oranne Co••t • ~ Avail to ... by appt. ••••• ........ rool racit Roq·Jackaon 644-4242 lmmd opening 646-0312 : • • FJ' •r · • ~ ·" ' Contact Ron Wlnllow at -..,... Ser 157929 THIODORI ROBINS liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~----------. Dally Piiot • ::\ ~\' ~9 ... "fr· .,, 831-1472 1171U 12111 : 330 W. a.y Drive : ~ ... I::~ . ~-.JU;". ·t-: .~ ~~0~};':.::: .. 'I 0 1 I # ",.. .............. -.... h ..,._ .... , 1 I ·n WE WAllT YOU! •. Cnta Meu, CA .• · 1 ·· .... ~ • '7 \ ~ ..; ~ touvers. 49,672 m1. "''" Ser. 097810 • •• e e •• •• •• e 91•• ee•e • • e e ee• OAIAGI SAU ADS NOW ., . ...) ' \ 1J111 BEST PART TIME JOB IN TOWN Energetic people needed with a pleasant telephone voice to con- duct marketing study for leading local newspaper. "NO SELLING." Hours: Mon.-Frl. 5:30 P.M. to 9:00 PM, Sat. 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM. $75 a week to start, share In partnership profits after 1st week. Pleaaa.1t working conditions, private desk & phone. Casual attire. A real fun Jobi MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITES. For Interview call David Grant at 642-4333 between 9:00 AM and 3 PM M-F. 642-4333 CLAHIPllD IY CITYI .•• '·· • 511 NLOW HONDA l~,!f', ' • FORD 1060 HAlllOI Ill VD CO~JA MH A ()41 001( THIOOOAI ROBINS J OR[) •' ,. ••A•.. • (<'''' .... .. • . flfDllll• ---""10. *· --.-.. P/S,OW..~­&....._(1 ... ~ - • SOUTH COUNTY Five'{:Star llUNTINGtON BEACH--NORWALK/BUENA PARK - '•QUANTUM .. '13,215 1 ,9IO ~-.-. ......... -.~- •auANTUM .. '15,000 '12.880 ,.,,, ... ,.._ .... ___ ~ VANAGONS flCIOPT OU" lllCJH PRICE •YAMGON .. 114,116 '12, OL.4-.... --.-·--· -.--1 •YANAGON .. •17,085 •11.i OL-. ,., ........ , ...... -.... .--{o7t ... l •• VANAGOH .. '14,515 '12,717 --• _..... ·-0'911 IOlllW'O .... ------(044111) • •ICIROCCO .. '11-™ .............. ,..-~- •• 8CIAOCCO .. ~ 1,135 •10,3" .-..,, a .... -(OOtMI) '•SCIAOCCO .. •11,seo •10,141 ....... -,., - --IOOl:ll'7l •8CIAOCCO .. 111 ,135 •n1 I .._ a , ...., C001'l'12) '159CIROCCO .. '13,035 •11.w NC.-· -I*.,._......,,,._-. (ci1"1ie7) .... Ulh --. """ ....... ---(O?Ollt41 ··PICK UP ....... '1641 '8248 I.A --· .. -· ~ -'""· .... --. ...--.----.--.-_., bed, -_. _.., "'9. II IPd f0710Clm) ··PICK UP . . .... '9851 •aeeo """'° ._ --.g, C<1n•l711 '•PICKUP ....... 7lfi1 .. 729 MoWM -· ---_..,., (07JlllMI ··PICK UP ....... '1927 •734e AMPM -· --._ ..... ....,, ..._ --· .... -• -.....,, .. Co?'IMl7) '•PICKUP ....... 91792 ·-,.,,. -· ...,. __.. 10'7W19tl '•PICKUP ....... '1117 ·-UIN --. """ ....... -lf'9I 107._,.,I '•PICKUP ....... '9182 •212 NiiW'M -· --... ......_ 101 .... 11 •• PtCKUP ..... '14,515 '12,757 4 8ixJ ljM ---l~Aftl) _ ....... 1 .. 1 fll'filiiilll!lllll'I; WOlJ GICM .., 'Wt s.w . ..... ...... '7115 •110 -·-~-.... a..----._.., •GOtf-...... '1125 '711D ______ ,..,,_ ........... _ - ...... I •OOLf ...... '7llO ... 7. -----·-HJ).-.... ---.• •• -(1nlllt) •GOLF ...... '7llO ... 7a ---.---11.oo.ooo1 .... ---.11 .. -..._.,,,.., .. QOLf . . . . . . ... '7787 NC.-. .... ---.---·-·--.., ......... ..._ (01tcm) '•OOLf ...... '12'10 •llD ............. -.... --. ... 0.-..... ...... -.,,.,..,, WJETTAFJ. ... '10,IOO ._. -· -"'· ""'· ..._ ........... ,... ................. -..... .. WJETTAGL '10,111 '8280 ........ Nf.AJ.-.-.......... -....... .................. !~~~-. ~o~ ... ~!! """°"'· ,... -.. ..... cat-.cll •JETTA ...... '10,111 '8280 ........ Hf.A>.-.-....... ,..._..., .... ....................... , •JETTA ..... 'lllO ... 7 -......... Nf.AJ ...... -.-~ .. •JETTA .... ._, •na ..... ....... -...... HT.A.J.-. ............. ..,'*,..,, •BtONE ... '12.155 NC ............. (tM14il •IERtONE ..... '11,115 W ---•-11•1111 ..... ,ONE. .... '10,415 (1 .... ) ..... ,ONE. .... '11,155 .... ~ .......... --.... -,, .. .,... •BtONE .... '13, 120 '10.-0 ~.--.---.-............ (1991'41 •MnONE .... ~1,1&5 ... Ta • NC •........ --· ... I ,._ (ll4077') '11 .......... . !Ton .... TIUClll. 4 IPd. ,_,,,...., 46,000 ........... 0-"""'' CJAtl41'1) 77 FORD F150 .. .. .. . .. .. •3999 .._ ......... "Ton,ltlt V•.-.--.,.ir. -""°"" ....... If• _,._._, '''°''"' 74FOADllUSTAHO ... .. •2499 i..i ........... v ... ,.,.,-.Clf'O-~,,.. -.,t ._ °'99 C..I ( .. 011<K) '13FOADPICKUP . . . ·-v• ....,. -. •-.. -• ....... - •M:RtONE .... 112,235 '9U7 NC.--. -.--.-•--OMOll) '12 FORD EXP .... •4715 4 .. • ....... ST.000 (t...., 'MFORDIUTMQ . '1411 •aTaT v. .... "'· ........... a..ooo (147lll7) '1tOIYYDttCMIO .'3115 '2A7 v ... -• • ..-.~-1~ '11'°9fTRREMI .. '4115 'WT ...... "'· ~ ...... 1'0.000 (t_,.., 11 CHEVYCMIMO . -.S '4U7 1.0, ...... - -t9C01m) '2097 •4397 14V.W.VMAGON '10,115 •Ta7 ~.4 ..... coc-1 'MV.W.RAlm ..... '1115 14987 ,,.., "'· o . -. ,, .000 -1W7) '12HOM)AM:COAD .... '4U7 ............. _.....,,,..., '11Y.W.JETTA ... '1115 '4U7 •....,, "'· ..... -eo.ooo 1..-1 'IOV.W.RAlllT .. '3115 '2M7 4 .. -· •.ooo c-111 . '11POMCIEIM .... -.S 'N87 ...... -,...-.-... .000......, 11 CAD.ELDORADO '1115 ·-7 ~. -· -.000 .... .,., 11CHVYCOIMTT£'13,IOO 111,887 T ................ -..-. ..... dl I p.a. -.000 ,., .. , . .._ ~.-............ .....,,..., ..... .,._. ,,.,....., '13 TOYOTA PICKUP .... 148H ''•lon, 6""" •1•-. -· -Ct-- --· IOp -(ll!007••1 14RANQERXLT......... ..... ~Toro. tl.000 -....... Of'9 .,._, -. --.. •• ---~ --(SMIOetll '•DATIUNaGZX ....... ·-••eo..-.•-. ............. lllWP.-~...,. 1.-vMI 11 CHEVCHEVETI'E . . . . . 12111 .-.-. ............ -... --· ..... "-• ~ 1tC81CtlOI 71 OLDS CUTLASS..... ,._ e-~ iow -...111....,., ...... °"""- ---· --· te1tWZZl '11 FOAOMUITANG . . . . . ·-......_ _ ......,., ,...,, .~4-.-- NORTH COUNTY l!LACENflA '701 IDr.••·-----.H..O.-... -f01.., •OOLf ......... ..., 'Un Cir, --II IPO• ......... ,.... e11D. ....... (01419DI .. QOLf ......... '9050 'T•O er.1 .............. -,,...-.-.... •OOLf......... .. '8219 Ct.••·-----···-~' •GOLF ......... 'M3I '779t MM"91~ 40r. I .... H.0 oool ... """'1M ...... pt. & .... ~104) .. QOLf ......... '1125 •1• 0 ...... --........... -...... •OOLf ......... 'llOO ... . Cir, ............................ .._.,, •OOLf ......... 'll70 .. '7 .. ,-,., Cir, ........... --................. •OOLf ......... ._.. 'TaTa . ... .............. .. A .... .. 40, ...... --· (at1'CICM) •JETTA ...... '10.MO Cir.·-· ...... e04nm,--- •JETTA ...... '11,200 .. 724 Cir, ............... -· -....,.., WJETTA ...... '11,000 •1a1 40.-.--...... -(__, '•JETTA ...... '10,300 ._Ta 4Clr, II -. •· --...... Cllmlllel . •JETTA ...... '10,300 '1112 40 ....... - -...... {191., •JETTA ...... '11,225 '9U7 Ol4 ""---· .................... -. T. "911 • (llD7t) '•JETTA ...... '10.MS ..ata 4Dl'OL.--. •.pla. .... :-....... ..,..,41 '•JETTA ...... 110,200 WT CIL 4 Of\ --· • ............ ,,.. 121,_.I •JETTA ...... 110,850 teaat 4 C..OL. ..... ,.,.., --· ............... --· p. ..._ (ICM?tl) '•JETTA ...... 111,225 4 ....... --.-,. ................. ... .......... 1117112) •JETTA ...... 111,000 •700 4Clr, ... "'· .... ·-.,.... .... .._,, •JETTA ...... '10,880 •280 .te>r .• ...,, ......... -_, WJETTA ...... 111.000 •1eo 4Clr, -· "'· ........ ~,I -- •JETTA ...... '10,775 ... 18 40r, II-. ....... ,..._ •• -1-741 '•JETTA ...... 110,l&O '9321 40r. II llPd. • • ......-• ..._ (J041911 '•JETTA ...... '10,115 •144 40r ................... ~ '•JETTA ...... '10.171 •144 ..................... •ICIROCCO .. •11.w •10,484 ....... "'· ,,, ....... ..-.. , ... , •ICROCCO .. ~2JIGO •10,aM ........... ,,, ..,, -tiiiiiiliit -• .-.--fn' ... I •Pi1JP .......... '7541 •210 ..... ..._. .... __ CO-ti ··p.up .......... '8028 ·-4 .. (71711'11 • p..up .......... rra-1 ... 1 a 4 ...... --...... C1'IOOOll • P-UP .......... '1123 'TUT ,., 4 ...,, AM'l'M. ...._.._ ... .......,, - (m4U) .. ft..UP .......... '1741 •t• N, 4•fn'tM ) •P-UP .......... '7114 '' f1l'f • FRIDAY. JANUARY 31. 1988 Top-rMked North C8'0llne ehocked bf Virginie, •n. Cl. Cdll fMlnt.lna IMd In -View L•81•1lrl8 bMll9tNll. Cl. ., Mulligan's hom.eaway from. ho1ne ............. ., __ ........ UCI coach now 5-1 in Logan following victory over Aggies Special to U1e Dally PUo& LOGAN, Utah...-Tbere·s~me· thina about playing in the Spectrum at Utah State that seems to bring out the best in Bill Mulligan's UC Irvine basketball teams. Tbe Anteater coach improved has record to S-1 lifetime on the Aggici' home floor and 11-3 1n all games against Utah State after UCI won a wirc-t~wirc 89-79 PCAA verdict Thursdar. njght. "I can t explain it," said Mulligan about hjs success at Utah State. ''Maybe, it's because we hke the people here so much. But, n's certain- ly not an easy place to play." !'CAA •n•s• C I WAI o-"11 WL WL Nev•-i...t v.... ' 0 20 ' New .Mnlco $tatt 1 I IS • UC 1N111t 6 3 10 I Fr-Slate S • 12 I 5911 JoM $1•1• !. _s 12 ' UC $enlt la'11ere • 6 f lO ll'Klflc 3 6 10 10 Cal Sttlt Fullerlon 3 6 10 11 Utlltl Sltlt 2 6 6 11 Lone e.actl Sitt• I I 5 IS ,,.,... .. , kerM UC lr\llnt "· Ulall Slttt 1' Ne• Mexk::o Sttlt Sf. C•t•tt Fullet1on S1 (OI) UC Senft INtr'Oert S6, L ~ Sltlt s. Hev-·1..a• V-s '-?,Sen JoM State SS ,........,.. Gefnea c.al Stal• Futlenon tt Lone a..cfl Sltlt FrftllO Stitt at Ptc:Hlc UC Santi Barllere el New ~•leo State Nn-·Llls V-s at Vlth Sttlt S-.Y'•~ UC !Nine tt Sen Jote State ICllallftel •ti 1:30) WooclbrldCe BJcb Coach BW Shannon (left) and Jtatancla'• Joe Reid plead for an ectce In •aper-balanced Sea View. UCI effectively took the AJ&ies' crowd of 6, 192 out of the game.m lhc early going. racing out to a 1~2 advantage at the o utset. The lead grew to 24-13 less than eight minutes into the game, but four straight UCI turnovers melted the lead to 24-21 . nine straight points to -'1ia: the advantaae to 77-70 on a ti~in by Grant with 3:22 left. But Murphy took a lob from Scott Brooks and stuffed 11 home and UCI made 10 of 12 free-throw attempts down the stretch 10 keep the Aggies at bay. Crowded Sea V-iew·resumes tonight However. the Anteaters took con- trol agaio by scoring the next four points aod with Tod Murphy and Johnny Rogers netting 12 points each in the first half, UCI owned a 49-37 halftime edge. The wrn 5e('UtCd ·the Arifcatcrs~ hold on third place m the PCAA at 6-3 (I ~8 overall ), while dropping Utah State to 2·6 and 6-11 . Newport-CdM tops slate, but other crucials on tap The Sailors will be trying to reverse a 73-50 first-round loss, one which Corona dcl Mar Coach Jack: Errion discounts in terms of marJin. staling: "A six-point turnaround in the third quaner turned the pnic completely around." Monday, Wednesday and Friday of next week prior to the final two games the following week. Meanwhile. Ocean View can clinch the unset League championship with a victory over Foun- tain Vall ey toni&ht. combined with a Man na loss to v1s1ting Hunungton Beach. Pan of the reason for the big lead was a 64 percent field-goal shooting performance at halftime. "We went to a zone late in the game because of our fou l trouble," sajd MullJgan. "It's something I don't hke to do because of the three-point shot. but ll worked out for us." Newpon Harbor High basketbaJI coach Tim Parsel said it best and for seven of eight coaches in the Sea View League Wednesday night -"We've still got six left." For Harbor to succeed, however, it will take a second strai&ht loss for Corona del Mar, a team which is 16-4 overall with three of those losses by a total of five points. While the Back Bay rivalry at Corona del Mar comm.ands attention, it's by no means the only gamein town. All games tonight are 7:30. Here's the schedule: * See View LMeW NtWPOrt Herbof' I•·•> ., Corona det Mer (6·21 Laouna 8HCll (S·l ) •I WOOdtlf'~ (S·JJ Est1ncl1 <•·•> et Unl~llV <•·•> And. the Anteaters were able to hmll the Aggjcs' top scorer, Greg Grant. to JU.St eight first-half points as he made just 3 of 11 from the field dunng that umc. Grant, who entered the game Wlth a 24.6 sconng averaie (fifth best in the nation). did manage to finish wtth 22 points. The An teaters shot 56 percent from the field (28 of SO), whale Utah Sta~ made JUSl 32 of 73. Grant was 9 of2 I. For UCI. Murphy was the sconng leader wuh 21 points and Roacrs added 18 Brooks. who entered the game as the thard-lcadmg free.throw shooter in percentage at 92"1 percent.. made all six opponuniues from the line Thursday. That's the consolation for everyone m their hunt for the title and the three benhs in the CIF 4- A playoffs. The winner of the Woodbridge-Laguna Beach issue takes a major step toward a playoff benh. while at University, the loser will be in a situation which finds potentially six teams ahead of it. Costa ~" <0-11 11 SaddleOacll <•·•> ~LMIW Hunllooton BHCll (2·•> 11 Marine (3·3) Fountain Valltv (3·3) el Ocean View (6·0) Edison (2·•) at Wtslminsltr (2·•) "They all dad a good job on Grant." said Mulhgan. noting that he rotated his players throughout to combat the altitude. "We fi~urcd on playing eight or nine guys going into the game." It's so tight now with crucials on tap tonight that ifNewpon Harbor "upsets" Corona del Mar it would leave the Sea Kings tied at the top with a 6-3 record, followed by four teams at 5-4. assuming Saddlcback can handle winless Costa Mesa. Tonight's round in Sea View wiue play 1s the stan of a span of seven ni$hts which include four rounds of play, with action continuing on SWtll C..11 LM...- S.n Ciern.nte 12·6) II Irvine (~·)) Leouna HIMs (1·6) al Et Toro 14·•1 Otna Hl»s (0·1) vs Caplstreno V1tltv (1·0) el SedOltDaCk College The Anteaters came out in the second half and built the lead to 67-49 before Utah State made a run with :'\lt.>\t up for l Cl is a daae at San Jose State unda) I Channel 4 at I.JO p.m.) Mulligan secs 11 not o nl) as an t.>xtra da) of rest. but also another day to praC11ce Another Hyman took silver, gave from heart of gold Laker H f~ rt b h t ' 11 b 11 nenceand11scurrentpopulan1y,but "as themost humbleperson.so ere 0 s roug women s VO ey a With 1natta11ng interest on the prep magnan imous. SOgl\ 10gofher11me l d - -level. and herself." ano stated. bll•tz respect. prominence, soi programs Muchas 1he '84 U.S.gymnas11cs SHARON "Flo' hean v.as v.1ththespon.she --team inspired an increase 1n enrol-reall~ "'anted ~oung people to cam In her 31 years, Flo Hyman broughl While her last breath was taken next lment at vario us gymnasucs inst1 tu· on ... PORTLAND (AP) -There was a time, long ago, when the Los Angeles Wersand the Ponland Trail Blazers were among the fiercest rivals in the National Basketball Association. These days, there is no rivalry at all. only a Laker landslide. Even without Magk Johnson. Los Angeles ripped the Blazers, 118-94 Thursday night. It was the founh victory over Portland in as many tries this season for the defending NBA champions and the 18th Laker triumph in the last 21 meetings of the two teams. "I don't know why we don't play them better than that," said Portland Coach Jack Ram~. whose team shot .355 from the fiellr. this country more than a sil ver medal to the volleyball coun 1n Matsue. uons, Hyman brought the spon of f RUJOS It will bc difficult for an) pla\<.'r to in volleyball from the 1984 Olympics. Japan. her presence and accomphsh-volleyball into summer programs and duplicate t ons oft he 6-5 ·18~ She delivered us.and persons all over men ts will long linger at the net on the li ves ofhuodredsofgjrls and boys pounder ou Morningside Htgh. the world, the essence of competition. courts around the world. in Southern Cahfom1a. H' man was e of six pla' ers sponsmanshipandacaliberofvol-"The loss (ofHyman) 1ssogrea111 "I thank she helped all of vol-chosen to the '\II orld Ci ·Team 1n leyball no other woman has been able can never be measured," stated leyball." Sano said ... A number of 1981 and took top-on 1n to match. Marlon Sano. "Herlosscenainly men (volleyball pla yers) looked up to matches because she enjoyed the kids that compe11t1on In t 975. H) m Hyman, a member of the U.S. can't be measured. Hopefully people and respected Flo. With someone that She spent a lot ofume with Gahr made the "la11onal Team and then women's volleyball team in I 984 and who were touched by Flo will help great .. that kind of person goes (H1&h's team), too." v.ent on 10 the 01) mp1cs one of the foremost players in the propel the spon in her memory." beyond a (pan1cular) sex or color or H> man 'sded1ca11on to the game \'iev.ers u t the t 91S4 Games teamed world , will be buried today at In-Sano coaches Fountain Valley anyt hing else. was rarel) matched. according to through repons the )&en fices made glewood Memorial Park, not far from High'sgjrls volleyball team and knew "I think high school k1ds,arc more Sano. and her pla) was second to b\. pla,ers on the l 1 s team. and where she began her brilliantathlctic Hyman from his five-year stint as the aware ofhercontnbuttons because none. But" ha t left the biggest t-h man in par11cular career. women's assistant coach on the U.S. Flo did a lot of work wnh 1un1ors." 1 mpress1on on Sano wun 't her ath· · he had ~n ~lected to the 1 ~ o Her death last Fnday was shockmg National team. Sano said. "She was involved with leuc ab1ht). L s team butt he decision b' in that Hyman, a resident of El Toro, Sano credits Hyman with not only cl ubs, chnics ... she came down to "The greatest 1hingabout Flo wa!> • was in sccminglyexcellcnt health. bringing volleyball to national prom1-Fountain Valley to watch our she never knev. she was an.\ thing. he (Pleaee eee HYMAN /C3) "We aren't going to beat the Lake rs playina like that," he said. "The last two home pmes have been aweful. "We djdn't play hard." The Ponland coach said his team may have too much respect for the Lakers. Angels honor Montgomery NFL drug controversy heating up "We don't beat them that way," he sa.id. "We have to go at-them hke we do anybody else." Kareem Abdul-Jabbar led the Laken with 25 points. while Byron Scott and James Wonhy added 20 apiece. Abdul-Jabbar, who was around when the Blazers-Lakers rivalry was flouriahina. was asked to cxpla1n the Lakcrs' domination of the series. "Maybe the character of their team has chanaed, but I think ther,'ve been 11ood team the whole time, ' he said. ''We've j ust been a better team." Abdul-Jabbar said the takers fi- nally teem to have learned how to win without Johnson in the lineup. "It's like sensory deprivation.'' he said. "You've aot to wake up and realize: you have to play without him ... We've aonen over that hump now. We've aotten over that confusion. We know what we can do." Outfielder Rew e Montgom- ery. a former Orange Coast Col- lege and U C standout, has been selected as the Angels' minor league "Player of the Year" for 1985 as voted b~ members of the club's organization. Montgomery. 23. en1oyed a banner season for Midland of the Texas League. finishina third in the ci rcuit with 22 home runs whale totaling IOI RBI in 11 2 games in addition to a .289 average. The native of Los Angeles recorded a .491 slug.mg per- centage m a dual role as an outfielder and desianated hitter. He missed the final 26 aamcs of the season with a fractured right foot. Montgomery was selected by the Angels in the 25th round of the June. 1983 draft. League official criticizes Patriots· Berry: Clayb orn denies problem. seeks trade FOXBORO. Mass.(AP) -II staned wuh an "almost neghg1 bk" drug problem and a "bold and courageous effon" to keep that prob- lem from fC('Urring. • It exploded into a cross-<."ountl) controversy in volving a trade de- mand. an unfair labor practice com- plaint and cnt1mm by an NFL official of the coach of the .\FC champions. • The dust that has swirled around the issue of drug uS<' by N<.'w England Patriots' playe rs began to ~nlc Thursday with a Ouf'T) of acttvll) from Follboro to Honolulu. Patnots' psych1atnst Dr. Armand N1choli. who runs the team's drug testing and counselina program. is- sued a detailed. two-page. san11lc- spaced statement 1n "h1<:h he 'ia1d that. during tht.> past year. tests showed fi vt.> players had used man - Juana -two of them on one occasion each -and two others had Ust'd man1uana and cocain e. Tests show that none of those sevt'.'n. the only pla)ers te ted. has used drugs "for ".ieveral weeks" and that some were "druJ fret' for the en11re season," N1choh said "We have had no severe ca~ ot drug dcpendenc) and no one who required hospitahzauon ... he added Compared with drug use 1n soc1ct) at large in a similar age group. '"tt\c result\ of our 1e~11ng indicate that our problem 1s. 1ndt'ed. almost negJ1- g1blc," N1choh '31d But scnous probll'ms surfactd ooo allc.-r the ( hi• ag1l Rear .. , ru.,hed 1hr Patriot~ 4n-lll lJ'lt 'lunda' 10 1h1· 'upt.·r Bov.l 10 'c" Orkan1: On :"-.fondJ\ the Patriots 1mtatl'd 1he pla~er~: union h~ \Oting tner- " hclmangh Ill 1nst1 tute 'oluntan drug te'itlng. the li~t pro team to do <to On \\ l'dnl·sda\. the BoMon Globe puhhsht'd thC' na.mt"'> nt S1\ pla)l'f'I v. ho. tll'cordmg to th<.' ne"' paper, told C oa h Ra\mo nd Bern the~ had used drug~. On Thur~da'. "lauonal FMth.'111 League" l·ommunKatto n!> d1rl" tor Jo<' Brov. nc Jumped into thi.' tr.l\ "'h<·n he t·n11C'11t'd Bem for not no11 1~10g 1hc IC'agul' alter learning that some pla\· er~ had used dru gs following a ·'O-~~ Im\ in M1am1 lxc lb .. \\ l' regr<.'1 and arc dt'lappomt~ that v.c did not hear from (. oJch lkm :· ~1d Bmv. nc "'ho C'lled .i lcagu~ pohq requ1nng \U h no11fi ra- tmn "Wc·rC' in th<' pr°'-<.'\\ of f'\'\ ll'\\· 1ng lhe enu~ mallrr ~oth1ng "111 be Early starts help Wood, Arai in Pebble Beach tourney PEBBLE BEACH (AP) -The aolf' tournament has a new name -the AT&T Pebble Btac:h National Pro-Am -but the same old weather, Crosby wealbcr. ·•we bad it aO: wind. rain, cold," Peter Jacoblen said.. ThOIC conditions. familiar for the Monterey Peninsula. were dubbed Crosby Weather durina the ~plua ycan th.al Bi"I Crosby's name was associated wi"' this old event. The chanae of the tournament title - Bi,.a widow, Kathryn, refUlcd to have the Crosby name auociatcd wath a commerdal ~tor -did nothina to aemper the con- dition• that bavt become ISIOa&ICd with lh11 toumament. If anythi~ it was a little wone than u1ual. To l&ltt Wltb, theft wu a ono-hour delay • because offlooded courses. Then there wa$ the rest of it, perticularly the wind. "It w11 the wont wind conditions I've ever olayed in," Jacobeen said Thunday after b.ttlina the wont of it for a 3-under..p&r 69 that left him one shot beck of Willie Wood and Kikuo Ani of JaJ)ln. who tied for .the first- round lead with 68s. • Amons the fint players off the tee, both lelden DlaYed at Pebble Beach and. due to thett relatively arty nanina times. avoided some of the wont of the Ttather. , "P1a~na early was a definite advarnqe," Wood 111d. But JICOMn p&a~ la•er in tbe day, and on the ~ opoecd Cvorea Point coune where the winds were at &Mir woni. Thel76-~ par-417thbolewasacuein poun. ,, ,, "You could barely stand u~. let alone hit a aolf shot." Jacobsen said. He naakd a driver. hit a l ·iron "as aood as I can" and still had a full wcdat shot to the arcen. He then tw~puttcd for a S that was one over par for the hole "but definitely not a hoity." Jacobsen said. Hasdifticullieson that hole. howrvcr, were shared by some stany com~ny. Jade NM:klau.s. for cxa~. was mak1na • move at the leaden untJI be yed the 16th and 17thatC'YOresabotcy-dou boteY· Heb1rd1ed lhc 18th for a 7 J.. • Tom Watton was one shot off the lead when he went to the 17th tee He made double boltY and finished with a 71 . ADdNathlaid Cl"O&by, aon of the founder, had the OotbY name bide 1n the tournament (« a Willie. t<e wu tllnc under par and one stroke off the Pl~ throuah 13 holes atCypn-u . But he playtd the nCJ1t five hole$ seven over par -1ncludin1 a trip~y 7 at 17 -and was well bee.le It 76. Then there was Cun1.s tranae. a runnerup in this tournament a )'l'ar q o and 1he 1985 leadina money-winner. He ~utrcd nine strokes to play he 17th and sho1 an 81 . Jacobsen was tJCd at 69. one stroke off the (J9Ce. wub Fuzzy Zoeller, wbo p!A)'C'd at SpYllus Hill, and John McC'omaab t who spent h1i day at Cypress Point. Mark Wicoe and Bob Eastwood. e.ch with a 70 at Pebble Beach. were twobK The 180 prM. each with an amaacur panMr, pla OM round on each of the thrtt counH befbtre the field 11cut f« the final round 5'lnday ll ~ Beech •• tinah1c:d un til .111c:1 thl' Pro Rtw.l slated 1111 'lunJa' .11 H111wlulu '-1• holt \Jlll•d th<' \llll' lrn \ lllun· I.ti'\ ll''>lln~ .. a hold .ind 1.ouragl.'llU' dlort on lhl' part lll ,1ur , nal hand h1" r ta,er!l" 1ha1 ht' ho?l'' ··-.A.111 '><'f'C a!t a model tn he tolll.H\<'d h' .i1hkt1( program) at all k ' el' 1hr1.1ughl>U t tht' nauon .. But hopt'<. for thal program ~ru mhled after thl' C1hlhc rcporlt'd that Ra,mo1h1 C la\ horn. T,1n\ Col· ltn' Jr, 10g Fnar. Roland James l\.<.'nncth \1m!> and \tt'phen tamng had told Bern tht'\ had u..ed drug\ Patnot,· ( rcn.cr:ll \tan3gC'r Patnck ~ull>' an '31d he "ould not den~ tht.> arcurun of that l"l'pon eta' horn. a comcrhad. "ho al-.o " 111 pia' in the game. ha' .... ud he:" 111 dC'mand t1.1 ht' tradt'd .. I Lan·1 heht\t' l ~ulln an l 'l.l\lng that 1''1.' got a drug prohlem v..hcn he and e'er.one" el"l' ~n11\A.\ I don't" Cla' bom "'1•d * * * RaJden 'ad' problem LO <\NGELES ll\P) -C1tana a lack ot leadership in the at1onal Football Lcaauc. Al Davis. the man· agana senera1 panncr o( the Lot Anaeks Raiders. has uraed ouwde pov.TTS to become 1n~ofved rn the lcaaue's ftiht ap1nst us dru& prob. lem. Davis also s~ud Thursday that dnaa tcsuna isn't ne«Uafily a sotuuon to the probkm at thu ume. He latu acknowlcdacd that the Raiden hlld a problem acvcral rean aeo but at hlil bttn "v\nualty dimina~ •• •• 1 kno• th.u IOQ.d bke I ca.It to arm" but ~ Med \ht ~•P ol tbe Pmlde1't. the C~em did t19i cooperation of the twntry IO win \Ml 61tu.," °'"" •Mt ... We ere '8ltili atioU1 u cewe ewt'8ft. , Ta es of 'The Gipper' still make the rounds Stories of his gambltpg rematn, much as Illegal betting hangs on ....... 'AP ........ At balftime ol Notre Dune's pme with Army in 19201 Ca.di Kaute Rockne wu exbonioa the Fi&htina lriJb to come tom behind in one of his pt tented lock.er room~ playen wun•t respondina to Rockne's theatrics IDd the COICh admonished him. powlina. "I don't suppoee you have the aliabiett interett in this ,.me." "You're Wl'OQI theft, Rock. I've fOt $400 on this lilft'e and I doo't intend to blow it." replied Gcorae Gipp. Tbat tale, pe.n of the Georte Oipp .letcnd, appeared in the December i.uuc of Smjtblonian, the monthly journal ot tbe Snlitbtonian Institution. It became appropriate lut Sunday when President Reaaan. said in - UDIYenlty of VlqlDla buketball ellayen celebrate 9lctory Oft!' No. 1 rank North 'Crosby weather' hanging around, even if nanie isn't From AP dl1patcltes PEBBLE BEACH -Barbara n Nick.Jaus. a Bing Crosby Pro-Am spectator for more than 20 years, felt right at home Thursday. "Everything seems the same. In fac t. we think the Crosby name will be back in a year or two," she said as she watched her husband, Jack. and 24-year-0ld son Jackie hit their opening shots in the golf tournament nowcaJled the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. "It still feels like the Crosby," she added. "The weather is typical." Rains which fell overnight and just before Thursday's first scheduled tee times set the stan of play beck one hour. There was a mid-<iay, sunny break before more rain and stiff winds arrived. The "Crosby Weather" tradition continued de· spite the tournament name change. On the Cypress Point c.oursc, things were running about 11/4 hour behind schedule after actor Jack Lemmon finally holed out at the par-4 first hole. Lemmon topped a few shots along the water-logged fairway and hai:t a tap-in putt for his 9. The weather obviously contributed to a relatively low opening day attendance. ''The crowds are down, way down," said Milt Gabbs. the first-tee stan er at Cypress." I think the name chanae might have hun, along with the weather." For more than 40 years, the tournament was known as the Bing Crosby National Pro-Am. The title wu chan&cd this year when K2thryn Crosby, widow of the founder, refused to allow the Crosby name to be c.oupled with that of a commercial sponsor. Tournament officials announced that 15, 165 tickeu were sold for Thursday's ro und. At the 1985 Crosby, which had good weather throughout. attend-ance wu 23,000 on Thursday and a tournament record 132,000 for the week. . Pre-tourney ticket sales for the fi rst AT&T were about the same as for last year's Crosby. Quote of the day De.le Hofmau, a Milwaukee Sentinel spons writer on mammoth Lonnie Shelton of the· Cleveland Cavaliers, who .P.rccipitated a fiP?t by puttina a pick on the Milwaukee Bucks Paul Pteuey: "But then, Lonnie Shelton sets a pick CV!'} momina when be gets out of bed -on the tun. ~ racma p09tponed II POMONA -First-day qualafyrng 1n t.bt 26dJ annual National Hot Rod Assoc1a- &ioa's Wintetnationals was postponed nunday buauae of rain. More than 600 drivers are scheduled to panic1pa te ia lbe lour•Y c-vent, which starts the 1986 cham- ~ r1C1n1 scaM>n. at the Los Anaelcs Count~ Tap ftlel, ftanny ar and pro stock drivers were idle ~ becaUIC of the weather, but they will have two ~llllion• both today and Saturday to to set the ~·· final eliminations. an anterview durlna the Super Bowl prepme show that Rockne once ••t1trew a pm bier out of hil office one day bodily who had come to tee him and wu teekina information about wbo wu aoin.t to win. He )ust bated the idea of~bUoa auociated with football.' Reapn, orcoww, ~yed the role of Gipp in "Knute Rockne: AlJ.American, ' a l 9..o movie. NBC newsman Tom Brokaw noted that as much as $2 billion mipt be waeered on the pme, most of it illeplly, and asked the president if that bothe~ him. R~ replied: . "I wish that it could be without, because I think when it aeu up to that kind of money then there is too much temptauon to try and tU thinp. And, human nature beina wbat it is, we know from past history that sometimes they aet away with that." The mapzine story pointed out that Gipp, a minister's son, went to Not.re Dame on a baseball scholarship at the aae of 21 after spending the previous three ycan in c.onstruction wort and driving a taxi in his home town of Laurium, Mich. Besides playing in an Ill ......... Carolina Tba.nday nJcbt. Vlr&inla de- feated the Tu Heela, 86-73. Boston owns best mark in NBA Larry Bird scored a game-high 26 m points to lead Boston to a I 01-91 National Basketball Association triumph Thursday n1ghtoverChicago. It was the Celtics' ninth consecutive victory and their 13th win in the last 14 games for a 34-8 record, best in the league ... Mike Ml&dtell scored 26 points and Artl1 GUmore added 22. and San Antonio held Cleveland to 15 points in the founh period to beat the Cavaliers. 11 2-99 ... AJ Wood scored 25 roints. incl uding 13 of Seattle's 19 founh· quarter points, and the Super· Sonics snapped a nine-game los- ing streak on the road with an 89-82 victory over flu-ridden New Jersey ... Veteran forward BUI HauUk scored 14 of his career-high 27 points in the fourth quarter and Ales En1ll1h had 39 as Denver handed New York a I 02-97 defeat . . . Akeem Ola· Jawoa blocked an 18-foot ~r -~~ by Sacramento center lie TllolbplOD to assure Houston's 111-109 victory over the Kin$$ ... Sldaey Moncrief and Paal Pre11ey each scored eight points in the fourth quarter and Milwaukee's deicnsc did the rest as the Bucks notched a 120-108 victory over Golden State. Milwaukee broke an 81-8 1 deadlock by scoring the last six points of the third quarter for an 87-8 1 lead. Forward Ke.uy Fleld1 opened the final period with two straight baskets for the Bucks to increase the edge. McGuigan-Sosa bout off Irishman Barry McGulgaa'1 defense m of his World Boxing Association feather· weigh t title against Fernando Sosa of Argentina was cancelled today because the challenger broke a finger m training. Promoter Banaey Eaatwood said he was urgently seeking a replacement opponent for the Feb. 15 contest in Dublin. which was due to be televised live m the United States. Eastwood said Sosa broke the index finger of his left hand while sparring Thursday in Buenos Aires. "This is a remarkable change in the situation:· said Eastwood. who also 1s McGu1gan's manager. "I spoke to Sosa's manager 24 hours ago and he told me nothing about it. I learned eventually that he had asked for an 80-to 90- day postponement." ... Three-time boxing champion Roberto Dtiru returns to the n ng in his hometown of Panama City tonight after 18 months of high living in retirement. A victory agaanst Manel Eatebu Zam- brano of Colombia m the 10-round middleweight fiptt at the 16.000-seat New Panama Colise um would $Ive Duran a chance at an unprecedented founh world title. Althouah he says he 1s going pack to the rtnJ because he is bored. friends and relatives say he has fnttered away a fonune. gambling at Panama City's casinos and buying fast c-ars and other luxuncs, and has to fight to rebuild his finances, Also on the card is a World Bolling Association nyweight championship fight between Hiiario Zapata of Panama. the champion. and MeJt1can challenaer Javier Lac11. lalanden cruah Flyen, 8-4 UNlONDALE, N.Y. -Patrick F1at-Iii) Icy scored twice in New York's five-soaJ , first penod Thursday nlaht., the ftnt just 19 seconds af\er the openina faceoff. and the lslanden Y'tnt on to an 8_. National Hockey l.caaue victory over PhjJadelphia, their founb triumph in five meetinaa with the Flyen thit tealOtt. The lalanden, unbeaten in fivcpmes, bombarded F1yen plie Darren JcnJen with 20 shots in the opcnina ocriod. ' amateur bueball lcque, the mapzine 111d Gipp alto c~celled at pool, poker and dice. ··PenonaUJ, be WU tolally un&amed, I potential SW to wbom pnctJce wu a bore, dilCipline eometb.ina to be ianored;' the article laid. But tbe late IUM Lardner wrote that Notre Dame bad one formation ana one~:" ... have the team line up. s-u the ball to Oipp and let him utc hie judament. .. In 1919, Gipp and eeveral teammaies played for money in a footbllJ same at Rockford, Ill., but no ooe at Notre Dame found out. the Smilhloruan l&id. Gipp alao picked up money, it laid, by frequeotina the pool balls of South Bend; a joint called Hullie and Mike's became his leCOnd home. At tbe Oliver and LaSalle Hotels be took on some oftbe aharpeat pool buatlen and card sharps on the Chicqo circuit. ··rm the ~t fieelance pmbler ever to attend Notte Dame," Gipp once said, altbouah the mapzine said beiiever pm bled for money with otbcr students. Aocording to hla roommate, An.bur ••Dutch" Bergman: "Nobody around South Bend could beat hlm at faro, abootina pool, billiards, poker or bridfe. He 1tudied the pel'tlentqet in dice-rollin:a and c.ould fade those bones lo a way that bad the profet11onall dizzy. At threo-pocket pool be wu tbe tenon of the ... parlon:· Oipp'a winni• however. helped put aome of hie frieoda tbrouah collqe. .. I've teen him win $500 in a crap pme and then ljlCOd his winninp buyinJ meals for destitute families," Berpnan l&id. "No wonder he was idolized by the South Bend townies." Berpnan also recalled that Gipp ignored curfew, drank and smoked heavily and often stayed up all niaht c:arouaina or playintt:ards. In 1920 Walter O'Kecfe of the South Bend News- Times 11w hlm stumble out of a hotel elevator the morning of the Purdue pmc "unshaven ... sleepy-eyed . .. downriaht sogy. I p ve him hell for stayina up all niabt.•• That afternoon, Gipp rushed for 129 yards, including an SO.yard touchdown run. No·. ~North-earolina .stunned by Virginia Tar Heels suffer first def eat at hands of Cavaliers, 86-73 From AP cllspe&cltet Olden Polynice led six Viraift,ia players in double fig1.1rcs..an<lthe Cav"'1iers withstood an early 1eOOod-baJf rally Thursday night for an 86-73 Atlantic Coast Conference basket6alJ victory over top-ranked and previously undefeated Nonh Carolina in Charlottesville. Polynice, ajuniorcenter, scored 19 points as Virginia moved to 14-5 overall and 4-3 in the ACC. The Cavaliers broke a seven-game losing streak apinst the Tar Heels dating to 1982, Ralph Sampson's junior season. John Johnson added 13, Mel Kennedy and Richard Morgan 12 apiece and Tom Sbcehey and Tom Calloway both contributed 11 for Virginia. Nonh Carolina, losing for the first time after 21 straight wins and falling to S-1 in ACC play, was led by Brad Daugherty's 21 poants. Kenny Smith added 20 and Steve Hale 14 for the Tar Heels. Except for a 2-2 tie in the first minute, Virginia led the entire game. Polynice got free for a dunk, Mel Kennedy hit from the left s1de and Sheehey scored inside to tum the early tie into an 8-2 Virginia lead. Elsewhere: ff/ MlcMp.11 I!, No.Uwescen 45: Antoine Jouben scored 13 of his 19 points in the second half as No. 9 Michigan romped to a Big Ten victory over Northwestern in Ann Arbor. The victory improved the Wolverines to 18-2 overall and 6-2 in the conference. Nonhwestem fell to 7-11 and I· 7. In the PCAA: New Mexico Stace H , Cal Stace F8ller1M 5'7 (ot): In Las Cruces, guard Kenny Travis canned a shonjumper in the key with 16 seconds remaining in ovenime to lead New Mexico State to the win. Kansaa State coach to retire MANHATIAN, Kan. -K2nsas m State Coach Jack Hartman announced . Thursday night he is stepping down as head of the Wildcats' basketball program after · 16 years. Hartman ~d at a news c.onfercncc on the KSU campus t.hat his resignation is effective at the end of the school year. "I'm a guy who's 60 years old and has been coaching for about SO of them ... do you have to have a reason?" he said. "I think I'm satisfied I've had enouah." Rartman has a cumulative record of 292-162 at K2nsas State. He has led the Wildcats to three regular season Big Eight championships and two post-season tournament titles. They have had seven 20-win seasons under Hartman. His overall college record, including eight seasons at Southern Illinois, is 436-226. He ranks 14th in victories among active coaches. Angela' managera to return Each of the Angels' five minor league • managers will return for the 1986 season, according to Bill Bavasi, the team's Director of Minor League Operations. Winston Llenas returns to Edmonton of the Pacific Coast League for his second season after a combined 66· 76 record in 1985. Joe Maddon enters his sixth season of managing for the Angel organization and second as skipper of the Texas League's Midland team. Tom Kotchman, lheCalifomia League Manager of the Year at Redwood in 1984, will guide the relocated Palm Springs franchise. Bill Lachemann (brother of Angel pitchina coach Marcel) and Mickey Saatzer return at Quad City (Midwest League) and Bruce Hines and Howie Gershbera lead the Salem club of the Nonhwcst League. Mauey lead.a bunched field MIAMI -Debbie Massey fired a n four-under-par 68 to take the first-round lead over a bunched field at the Elizabeth Arden Classic LPGA tournament Thurs.- day afternoon. ' Six players -Muffin Spencer-Devlin, Dawn Coe, Ayako Okamoto, Elaine Crosby, Sally Uttle and Penny Pulz were_just a stroke behind at the Tumbeny Isle Country Oub. A field of 144 players is on hand this weekend. Reynold• named to UCI pcNlt UC Irvine has named Bill Reynolds as ~ assistant men's tennis coach, head coach Greg Patton announced Thursday. Reynolds. 40, comes to UCI from the Manhattan Country O ub in Manhattan Beach where he Strved as tennis director and pro. A vaduate of UC Santa Barbara where he was a teammate of Patton's, Reynolds lettered in vanity tennis for the Gauchos. Reynolds served as an assistant tennis coach at ucse from 197S-77. Televtalon, radio TELBVlllON 10 p.m. -BOXING: Channel 56. l.ADIO 7:30 p.m. -PRO 8AIU:TBALL: Pbillidel· pbia a1 ~ Kl.AC (S70). • The win 1,1pped the Allies' overall record to 1 J.-4 and improved their l>acific Coast Athletic Association mark to 7-1. The Titans fell to 10-11 and J..6. NMSU has won rune ofiu last 10 pmes. NMSU blew a 14-point second-half lead and watched u the Titans took a S0-47 cd&e late in the pme. But a free throw from JUUd JefTWilliams lifted the Agies into a 51 -5 I tie with..25 scoonds lefLi.n..rc&Y.lation. Fullerton trailed 29-17 at haltUme when the crowd of I 0,213 in the Pan American Center was forced to evacuate for more than an hour because of a bomb threat. When play resumed, the Titans bounced back behind the bot shootm& of senior forward Kerry Boaani, who canned four ~point shots, the final one com ina with 6:58 left to bring Fullerton within one point at 46-45. ln the overtime ~riod, forward Gilbert Wilburn kept the Aqiesclosc with five points before Travis nailed the garne-w10nina points in the final 16 seconds. Neva4a-Lu Vep• 1%, Su Jose Stace H : Juruor auard Freddie Banks sco~ 21 points to lead the I 0th· ranked Runnin' Rebels to the road win. The Rebels improved their conference record to 9-0 and their overall mark to 20-2.Tbe victory was Nevada· Las Vegas' 10th in a row. San Jose State dropped to 5-5 and 12-7. The Spartans, who led 31-18 late in the first half. took a 37-30 advanta&e by the half behind sophomore Ricky Berry's 20 poinu. However, UNL V scored the first seven points of the second half to knot the game at 37. From there, the lead seesawed until forward Armon G illiam made a dunk shot with 4:48 left.. giving UNLV the lead for good at 52-5 I. UC Suta Bart.ara U, LoD1 Beac~ Stace H : Conner Henry scored 26 points to lead the Gauchos over the host 49crs. UC Santa Barbara, which improved ils conference record to 4-6 and its overall mark to 9-1 O. led 30-22 at halftime. B1.1t Long Beach State, I ·8 and 5-15, rallied in the second half and closed the gap to 53-52 on Andre Purry's three-point basket with I: 11 remaining in the game. But Henry hit one of two free throws with 41 seconds left, and then sank two more with three seconds to play for the win. In the Pac-I 0: Walltlat'OD 7!, Arbon State SS: Senior forward Shag Williams scored 22 points and pulled down a career- hiah 18 rebounds to help Washington to victory over Arizona State in Seattle. • The victory gives Washington a 7-1 confetencc record and a 13-7 overall mark, while ASU fell to 3-5 in the lcque and 9-9 overall. w......-State U, Arbon 13 (ot): In Pullman. Keith Morrison's driving jump shot in the key with one second left gave Washington State the overtime victory over Arizona. In the WCAC: U. Su Dle10 It, Pepperdlae 8': Pete Murphy scored 18 points to lead the University of San Diego past visiting Pepperdine. The Toreros, 4-1 in conference play and 14-5 O\'erall. and Pepperdine. 4-1 and 16-4 arc now tied for second place in the WCAC behind Loyola-Marymount. San Diego led 56-38 in the second half before the Waves cut the margin to 65-62. with 56 seconds to play. Paul Leonard and Scott Thompson each hit two free throws to seal the win. Thompson scored 15 points, pulled down a team· high nine rebounds and had three a~sists for the Torcros. College basketball WUT UC S.n1a 8ar1>ara S6, Lono eaacn SI. S4 Nevad•·LH VeoH 62, Sa n JOH SI SS WHnlnillon n. ArllOM SI SI we.n1ne1on SI 6S, Arlron. '3 1011 Lovola·Mervmount 11, s1 ~rv'• n • u. San Dleeo "· "-rolne .. Porllencl 11, USF Sf Gon1 ... 70, $anl1 Ciera 62 COlorldO SI. 75, $an Dle9o SI. n Clllca90 SI. 110, USIU 17 Cllrl1t Cotteoe ln•lne IO, Paclfk (OH i 8aollll lf "OCKl•S UC lrvlne "· Ullll SI 7' New Mexico SI. 59, Cal s1111 Fullerton 57 (Of) WVOl'llnt n, He•wall SI Nt'lldl·lleno n. ldello " Norll'lenl Arlzont 7', eotM SI 42 DenV« ... S.. COiorado .. •AST 8o1ton Coll. 7'. Seton Hall 6S St ton.venture 7', lllutoen '8 Penn $1 59. SI. Jottpf\'1 Sot Canl1lu1 7', 9o1ton U 61 Ge«oe W•llllneton n. ~ .... d'IUMlll 67 LovOll, Mo 61, lllo«iert Morris 56 MAtrtllaM IS. VMI 11 N0<111Hslren 90, Nlaora 7S Sitna ... SI Francis. N. V S6 SOUTH Vlrolnl• 96, Nor111 Carotlna 73 Ala.·81rmlnon.m 71, Old Oo· minion se Ark ·Llllla Rock IOS, SE Loultl· an• 97 toll SI Oavldton 62, W CeroHn. St LOUlt l•ne Ttcn ,,, L•m¥ .. NE Loul1lan1 n. McNftM SI '3 NW Loul1len1 IO, Ctnttnarv 62 S Mlu l11l1>1>I 95, 111. W"levan • SW Loul1la.ne "· Ttnllft ... Ttcll TtmN ... LM 57 TtnMUM 71. GIOl't l• 11 11• CClnlmonwNllll 60, Wllllam ' ~rv '4 Vlrt lnl• Ttcrl 71. Richmond •1 MIOWIST Mlcll'91n 12, NorlllWHl.,n 0 IOWI 7', lnellena " Mkrlltln St. ll, WIK0111ln 11 Mlnnttoll 70, Ohio State 65 s, 1111no11 65, w1cn111 St. 57 T u4M 61, IWlnols St S4 t• ·Clll<ffO IS. E. 1•1no11 7' lndllne SI 7S. Creloflron s 1 IOUTHWIST l radle¥ '3, W. r .... SI S4 N T .. H $1 70. ArlllnM I SI .. Norri• may aot qualify for probation program OAKLAND (AP) -A Superior Coun j\ldac on Thunday ordered an uivestipt.ion into whether former Oakland A's pitcher Mike Nonis can qualify for a probation Pl'Olflm rather than being prosecuted on a cocaine pc>Mllion cbarle. Jud8e Richard Hausner ordered l>f'Ob&tion oflicials to ~iNorria' q~i.ftcation1 for the di version· prosram, which wo1.11d reQ\ltre him to attend claales on drut abute and meet rqularty with ~lion officen. The officlals are to repon beck to the U«W March 27. Norris' attorney, J m Oilier, said there was "no question" hia client will quality for the prosram, which is for people with no prior criminal records.. Nonit, 30, wu urelted Feb. l 3, 1985, after an ofticcr stopped lti=ina car to 1nvnlilaie for drunk clriviftl.. A paper bi of cocaine was founa in a pocket ofNoni1' Jacket. Deputy Dlauict Anomey John Adams said. • ... OrMgeCOMtDM.YPtLOT~.___.,11, _.*Cl . VoluDta a·y drug tests for Orioles .,.., .......... .,, De¥ld....,.... Strong-arm tactics Betanda'• 111.ke Baker keepe cloee fuard on Woodbrld«e'• All Roanacht (left), while Newport Barbor'• Maurice "Lee (23l towen o•er La(un•'• Todd Spath (•hooting, right). All wtl be ln action when Sea View League reaumea tonight. Mustangs slip by Saddle back Woodbridge, CdM, Estancia also post Sea View wins; Mater Del downs Pius X Costa Mesa's Mustangs slipped by Saddlcback, while Woodbridge, Cor- ona del M d stancia scored convincing their opponents in Sea Vie girts basketball 'action Thu y. In the only nsct game on the schedule, Huntington Beach defeated Marina for the second time this season. Meanwhile, Mater Oci won its seventh straiaht in Angelus League .. play, and UC1rvine fell to San Diego State. Herc's a look at what took place: Costa Mesa 47, SaddJeback ••:The M ustanas won their second one-point game in a week. but not without havin, to overcome several mistakes in the ast moments of the game. With 14 seconds left and a 47-46 lead, Costa Mesa Coach Paul Kahn told his Mustangs (6-3, 11 -8) to run out the clock. Instead, they were calJed for holding the ball for fi ve seconds. The Roadrunners (6-3, 6-8) tried to inbound, but Mustang Meg Mitchell deflected the ba1J with seven seconds left. The Roadrunners' next attempt at inbounding was successful, but their shot was off. Mitchell brought down the re- bound for Mesa, but was tripped up by a teammate and called for travel- ling with no time showing on the clock. The buzzer had not sounded, thou&h. so Saddleback had another chance ... and the Mustangs made another mistake. This time. they fouled Saddleback's Kriston Cook on the inbound play as the buzzer sounded. Cook went to the line for the one- and-one after a Costa Mesa timeout, but missed her first attempt, and the Mustangs puHcd out a hectic win. Stephanie Swanson led the Mus- tanp with 12 points and 13 rebounds, whale Mitchell had six points and 15 rebounds. Teammate Jennifer Boyett had a good all-around outing with 15 points, four steals, two assists and two rebounds. Monica Walton led Saddlebaclc with 22 points. Woodbrtd1e H, Lapa Beac~ 34: The Artists (3-6) kept pace with the Warriors throughout the first half. but tired in the second as host Wood- bridge improved to 8-1 in league actio n, 14-6 overall. Gilly Powell scored 24 of her me- high 26 points 1n the firs three quarters ( 11 of 15 from the fie . an had 14 rebounds. Teammate · a Zalko had 12 points and eight re- bounds, and Randee Mahony put up nine points and had six steals and five assists off the bench. The Warriors' assist leader was Nina Hansen with eight. Corona del Mar 17, Newport Harbor H : The Sea Kings ( 12-7) ran their Sea View record to 9--0 behind the play of Michelle Willard and K.C. Jones. Willard turned in double digits in both scorine (2 1) and rebounds (23) while chipping in fi ve blocked shots, and Jones had 24 points and six assists. Sharon Andrus led Harbor ( 1-8) with 12 points. Esta.Dela H , University 18: The Eagles (3-6. 5-12) helped Coach Lisa McNamee celebrate her birthday with the lopsided win over the Trojans (0-9) at University. Estancia's Annie Foley held her own party with 14 points, six re- bounds, three assists. two steals and one blocked shot. Teammates Dana Nasby, Wendy Marn and Leslie Self scored eight points apiece. while all three turned in strong defensive games. Self contributed 15 rebounds, Mam had nine. and Nasby brought down six. In the only Sunset League game scheduled: Huttapa Beacll 57, Marina 49: The Oilers, who claimed a 45-44 win over Marina in the first round. beat the Vikings again as Tammy Chick led the way. Chick, who also d id a fine: Job on the boards, scored 11 of her 18 points in the first half which ended with Huntington Beach in front, 25-23. Mater Del H , Plat X ZS: The Monarchs continued their unbeaten romp through the Angelus League with the lopsided win at Pius. Junior guard Debbie Wagner tossed in a personal high 16 points for Mater Oci ,,() in league. 17-7 WRE ST LING overall). The Monarchs led 19-4 after one quarter and never looked back. Pius had 40 turnovers. In a college women's game: San Diego State 5 7, UC Irvine 5%: The Anteaters turned 1n their worst half of shooting w11h a 6 for 26 effort in the second half of their conference match with the A.ztecs at UCL UC Irvine made more free throws ( 18) than field goals ( 17) as It dro pped 10 3-3 in PC'AA. 11 -8 overall. Natalie Crawford was the .\nt- eaters' bnght spot w11h I~ points. 10 rebounds fi"e blocked ~hol'> and four steals Edison, Barons ready for Sunset showdown Fountain Valley and Edison tuned up for their showdown for the Sunset LeaJUC title next week with victories in hlgh school wrestling action Thurs- day. .._, Here's how at went: Foutain Valley n , Marina 14: The Baro ns moved to 4-0 an league and 20-5 in dual competition with the easy win over the visiting Vikings. In the featured heavyweight match. Ted Procolamos of the Barons won by a decision over his Manna foe. The Vikings' efforts were highlighted b~ Eddie Ruiz's win b y decision at I J4 poun'ds. Marina dro~ped to 1-3 in 5unsct compct1t1on. EdJaon 54, Ocean View 18: Thl' Ch!IJers overwhelmed the Sea haw~., at Edison to stay unbeaten 1n league dual matches. Freshman Kenny Richards led 1h1: way with a pin at I :05 over his Ocean View opponent at 100 pounds. The (hargers 14-IJ) n.'lel\l'd four forfeit "'ins. as "'ell Edison senior Oa"c Clark pinned ha'i 147-pound foe at I 05. and teammate (1ene Palino "as awarded a I .:!8-pound pin at I 46. Ocean Vie" 's Jim Dallas earned a pin at 134 10 lead lhl' Scahawks T"o Edl\nn staners \at ou1 the match w11h knee problems aQd John Lowenbrud missed the match "'1th a sore back. hut thl') are all expected back for th1: lcague-dc1:1d1ng ma1ch at Fountain Valle~ Thurs<la~ Westminster 51. Huntington Beach 19: lack of depth again hun the Oiler.; "ho remained \\tnle'' in Sunset compc1111on in J mallh at Hunt· 1 ngton Beal h llo\\e\ l'r C hrn H.1~l' (I~ I pounds I and h 1c Hud\\IE( 112!0 remained unbeaten in league matc.:h1:s as Ha~c "On b~ deu,1on and Budwag panned his opponcn1. Other Oiler winners b) dec1s1on'i were Denn' o\llcn at 134 and Doob1e Escobedo al 147 Each has lo~t JUSI one match apiece in Sunset compc11- 11o_n 26 ree to unde' 0 exams In first such pro ram for baseball BALTIMORE (AP) -The Balti- more Orioles, exprnai?f concern over baseball's tarnished •mate. an- nounced Thursday the formation of the game's first voluntary drua tntina program. Acting 1ndiv1dually, 26 of the 38 players on Baltimore's sprina trainina roster already have~ to take part in the one-year pilot pr~m. or were already subject to similar arranee-- ments through contract clauses or minor leaauc tcstina. The remainina 12 have not yet been contacted. General Man.aacr Hank Peters said he hoped for l 00 percent participation, but added that no disciplinary action would be taken apinst anyone who refuses. "We've Iona been concerned with the ind ;vidual welfare of our play- ers," said Peters, "and the magnitude of the drug problem in basebalJ bas certainly damaged the imaae of our game.·· Noting the many public disclosures of drug abuse in baseball last year, Peters said the new program should "remove any clouds hanging over the club, or baseball." -- Baseball has not had an indus- tryw1de program since the club own- ers withdrew from a limited testing plan last fall. Should qrecmcnt be reached on a new drug abuse pro- pm, that would *S*cede Baltimore pip. Individual playen OD odMr lllli-. • Jeaaue teams have ipeed to ... tettin& in exctws for a ~' contnct, which the playen ...._ ii . opposina. But there was no union com,._.. • on the Orioles proeram. .. From a union standpoint,~ ii is truly voluntary and not a ooedihoe of employment, this ii oot aomelbilll we ordinarily become iDvolwcl with." said Don Fehr, necutiw director of the ~or ~ plaJ'ft UIOciation. "It 11 somethina die· playen a.in& OD \heir OWll, widl • docton of their own cboolial and ii not compelled u a condition of employment." The Orioles testina prosra.m wa stronaly endoned by pitcher ScoU McGreaor, Baltimore's 1epcntn&a. tive for the ~or Leque Buet.11 Playen Association who asked adl player individually if be wished IO pertici pate. This differed from the method med . by the New Enaland Patriots wbm they met as a team last Monday, and became the first pro team to vote IO accept a voluntary tcstina Pf'Oll'llll· .. We have to stand ue and wotk t()Jether with ownership, M~ . wd. "If we don't do somethina. nothina is goina to happen. "There arc players out there who need help," McGreaor said. "It anevcs my heart to see it 10 on any lonacr." .,....,.._ Flo Hyman wu competid•e on, and gentle off the court. HYMAN REMEMBERED ••• From Cl Pr.rs1den1 J1mm) Cancrto boycott the 01> mp1cs in Moscow that year ended her hopes of a medal. Women's "olle)ball 1n the United States had nc' ert>een 101erna11onallycom- pet111' e before 1980 H' man comm med herself to the program. though. and for fo ur more 'cars she toiled with the demanding -and respected -coach Ane ~ehnger. In the up-<lo~-and-per­ ~onal' 1gnettes a1~ dunng Olvmp1c co' erage. H) man was spotlighted for her aggrc~s1' e pla> at the net. Man) ol us also go t o ur first real glimpse oft he powerful game the lJ tt'am could pla>. But the gold medal went to C-h1na. which ~.no said "1us1 played a better game that da} .. Sult. Hyman wasn't disappointed,· even afterdevot1nge1&ht very long 'years to practice. But Flo Hyman wasn't practicing .. She was laving the sport. much as she hved her hfe. with complete ded1 ca11on. Members of the I Q80and '84 Nauona l Team are in the process of setting up the Flo H yman Foun- dauon. ~h1ch will ticnefi11un1or development pr~ms. Those w1sh10g to pledge donations may wnte to the Flo Hyman Foun- dation. 30581 Nonh Hampton Road. Laguna Niguel, 92677. For more 1nfonnat1on. phone 831-927~ Sport on TV for weekend LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST BOAT? LOOKING FOR YOUR NEXT BOAT? Saturday EVISION 9:30 a.m. -MOTORS ggy·racing from Naples, Fla.. Channel 9. 11 a.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Houston at Chicago, Channel 2. I I a.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 9. Noon -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: UCLA at Louisville, Channel 4. I p.m. -WAR OF THE STARS: Channel 7. I p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Nevada-Las Yeps at Utah State, Channel 56. I :30 p.m. -GOLF: Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Channel 2. I :30 p.m. -GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS: Channel 7. 2 p.m. -COLLEGE BASltETBALL: Anzona State at Washin1ton State. Channel 4. 2 p.m. -WORLD CUP SUING: Channel 7. 3 p.m. -BOWUNO: PBA tourney from G rand Prairie. Tell .. (delayed), Channel 7. 3 p.m. -WRESTLING: Chinnel 56. 4 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Racina from Ascot. Channel S6. · 4:30 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Iron Man Triathlon world championship, from Kona. Hawaii (taped). Channel 7. 7:30 p.m . -PRO a.U&ETBAIL lippers at Ponland, Channel '· • ltADIO Noon -COLLEOE IAS~ETBAIL UCLA ll Lo~1tvllle. KMPC (710). .5 p.m. -PRO llO<SEV: Kinp at W1nn1pca. KLAC (HO). 7:30 o.m. -PRO BAI~ Chppcn at Portland, KM PC (7 10). 7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: (al ~tdll' Fullerton at Long Beach State. K WO W ( 1600). K \\ R \\ ( 1370). Sanday TELEVISION 9 a.m. COLLEGE BASKETBALL L~l <it Georaetown. Channel 2. 10 a.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Kentuc~' at North Carohna St.ate. Channel 4. 11 a.m. -SPORTS SUNDAY: Bolung -Paul Gonzales vs. Alonzo Strongbow; Figure ska11 ng - European championships (tape). Channel 2. Noon -SPORTSWORLb: Boxing -Meldnd Taylor vs. Robin Blake, from Lake Charles. La. an liaht~i&ht bout. 10 rounds: World Cup skung. from St. Anton. Austria, Channel 4. I p.m. -PRO l"OOTBALL: Pro Bowl &amf from Honolulu, Channel 7. I p.m. -GOLF: Pebble Beach Nauonal Pro..\m. Channel 2. 1:30 p.m. -COILEOE BASKETBALL: C" l~1nt at San JOK St.ate, Channel 4. 3 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: tanford at Orqon State. Channel 2. RADIO l p.m. -PRO POOTBALL: Pro Bowl p mc from Honolulu, KMPC(710). I :30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASK.ETBAU.: lrvl~ at San Jote St.ate, KPZE l 1190). 'p.m. -PllO Boc&BY: Kanp at Winn1pca. KG It ( 1260). 'p.m. -PllO aARB'l'L\LL: New York Knaclt at l..akers. Kl.AC (570). , I\~ SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 'l BOAT SHOW JANUARY 31 TO FEBRUARY 9, 1988 Loa Angeles Convention Center 1201 South F1tueroe. Downtown Loe An..- '* tM IOA1S OM DeSPU YI '* '* Ht MlfltllWT & SllVtCI IMSPU1SI '* A BOAT A DAY GIYEAWAYI f'*'f dey 8 MW boel WI. be .... oed in a fr .. drawtnO to someone attending the ahow that dlly' ......., , ........ CM,_ P'W.. I tf'~~ X11"41Toi-,()9 tr .. ,_ t , •• ..,.._ ~ .at'<O ,_oe r--......, , ... a ,, . ..,..._, t SOflpfWY\IOeQe T'll-Mt-• ~ , •.• _ ... ,...... ,,....,,,.,oe 1 , •. _...._.__.._ 15"D~oe r .... -..,., ...._, 11·z.-• 1.,.... ,,..,._oe ..... 1 t t'Doil0.,0wy, 1611PY....,.09 ~ ..... ,. I' 11' ....... _ OMC 8lemOrlw n.l-flllle ..... ,..,.. " ........ _-..-twMit...., ~ , ..... o .... ...--... ,, ... 10 .... ...... 11 .... , .... ... , ... ,...., ... ~ •• ,. 1100 ~~~-Cl-.--• ..... t Ora ge County Marathon sets date TbeOruecCouoty btd ol SupervilonKted dbl week t.o autborix theteelOlld naaai1111 ofllae Oraneie County Mannboa t.o be bdd onSunday,Dllc.14, 1916. Oncupin, 196891ympicdeca- tblon told meda1iat Bill Toomey and hit partDef II Soonl Directiom. L&d.., Betry Kins. will ect u race or- pnizers. "The fint Oraaee County Man· thon wu a cenifac sucic:a' with moTC than 800Nnnen&om~t Oranse County and put Olympic cities P9fticip&tiQJ i.n I.bit euit1na test oftndwuce .. said Fiftb District Supcrvitor=rhc;mas P. llUey. The boud's contnc1 with Spons Dim:tioos calls (or the county to provide $.46,000 in teed money ~ > . M9A W•IT'm .. COW ... MC. hc:9c ..... w " ~ ~ ,. lO .m Ponlend 21 22 ..560 "-I• 17 77 ... Cllll9lrl 11 JO .l7S S.tlle l7 ,, .370 G06den Stele 1• )6 .ao ----DMlliM Heutton 31 1' "" ~ 77 20 .S74 Seti A"'Olllo 15 23 .Ul 0.... 22 21 .Sll Ulell 23 25 .479 *'•mento 11 ,, ,313 •ASTallN COW•ll•MC• ·---~ &otlon ,.. • ..110 ~ JO 1' .4S2 New.WM\' 27 21 .563 WMl!lneton 2' 22 .511 Hew York 1' 30 .)41 ~~ Mllw•uk• 31 " .647 Alteftte 2S If .5'1 Detroit 23 n .500 CleW!end 11 • _,,, "*"° " ll .MO ..._ IJ 22 .. ,,.,....,... SC.. .....,.. 111. Ponletld M Seelllt "· New .Jeney 12 tot1e111 101. Cl'llCaeO t l ~Antonio 111. Ctewlend" o.nvw 102, New York f7 Mlw•Ull• 12t. Go6d9n Stele IOI Houtton 111. s.crernento 109 T ........ 10.... Pfll~ •t Lahn lotlon et Weahlnelon Detroit •I Atlante SNllle el lndl-C~e10.-. *'•f'l'ltftlO et Uleh New Yon e t '"'-tht L.Mrwa 111, leaun M Ge • 17 11 11 13 5'h I llh 10 Ulla 6 10 121h 20 5 • 1) lS'h 17\'a L.AtC•RS (1111 -ltembla M 0-0 2, WO'Thv 10-13 0-0 201 Abdul-J.00.r 11-22 J·J "· c~ 3·1 2-2 1, McGee 1-4 2-2 •· Scott t· 11 2·2 .20. Luce• S-7 4·• U, Gretfl S-6I•12 II, LealW M 1·2 3, Scwleet 2·4 0-0 4. Totell: •-to 22·77 111, ~TUM) (M) -T~ 2·1 0-2 4, v., ... ...,_ .. 11 t-10 2S. Jonft 4· 11 2·2 10. Colter S-1.4 3-l 141 Ornlw S-11 4·9 14, P•uon 7· ll 4·4 It, c.rr 0-4 0-0 0, Port., M 2·2 4, .JOllntOfl 0-S 0-0 0, 1(-v 1·11·1 4. Totets: l3-f3 U-2• •• SC.-.IW~ Lelt"'' 2' l3 21 l l-111 Po<tlend 21 11 2S n-t• Ttw..-POlnt ~Olfw, Put0n FOUied OUI~ R~k¥t 62 (ADOUl·Jet>oer t ), Portlend S3 (T~ I). Anlttt-Lekt'l 31 IC-111, Portlend IS (Drexler Sl Tote! foult-l.e1ter1 n, Port1enc1 v . Tecnn1cai-Portland Coecl'I lltemtev, Scwl~ AllendenG-12~ COLL•G• UC !MN n , UtMI Sl9te 1' (l"'CAAI UC !MM (It) Cermon ltooer• Mu'""'" 8'0010 evcnanen Hn1 Enoellted Cle«Jo OOlltorciyk CelOw~t .... ft·• ,,, "' 3·4 l ·I 3 14 1·13 1·2 s " 1-13 6·7 • n 1·4 6·6 2 • 2·6 .. , ) 10 1·2 4·6 2 ' 4·7 1·3 , 9 1· 1 0-1 2 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 Totelt 21·50 32·39 23 .. """' s .... (7') .... ft-•,,,. G Grent 9•21 4·7 2 n N Gren! 0-0 0-0 0 0 Pet• -~ 2·4 l 12 Nhton 3·13 1·3 l 1 f:tovd 2·1 1·2 I S Anderton 6· 12 2·3 3 lS Conw.v 7·• 0-0 4 • Judkln• 3·4 •· S 1 10 1f11 1·1 0-0 • 2 T uetter O· l 0·0 0 0 Jotln\Ofl I· I 0·0 4 , Tolelt 32 Tl 14 74 26 19 Helftlm.· UC Irvine, 49·37 Thr•·POlnl goelt UC Irvine Rover\ 1 Vte h Stele· AnderlOn 1 ltet>ovndt UC Irvin« ~ IMure>nv 11) Ulen Stele l3 <G C.renr 9) ""'''' Ut lrvlne 17 (8rOOIU .,, Vien Stelt 16 INt1on " Tur~' VC Irvine 11. Vien S1a1e a A119"0811Clt 6.192 CIWtlt C ..... IO, PC 8aptl1t Jt IWCAA) a.mt C ..... (IOI l"'C .. 9'1tt (Jtl .. ft.,.,. .. ,, .... l(tf10 I 2 0 4 W11Ue1n' I O 0 ' Tiede 1 0 0 2 Henc~ S c • 1• Aolbfv ) 2 I I OOIC>f\ev 0 l 4 3 8"1 7 o O 1• Mevnerd 4 2 2 10 S\;frtooe S O ? 10 JOfln'°" 1 O 2 1 w .. r O 0 1 0 Gllletole 1 o 3 4 TMIOtOtl 7 I 0 1$ Eerl'lan 0 0 ) O Kieft 2 0 I 4 Slkn 0 0 2 0 ~I• l o o ' Hetcl'l 1 o O • '-" ) , 4 I ,..,..... 0 0 0 0 C~ l 0 0 ' He1nll111<1 0 0 I O W"""9ft1 0 2 I 2 lenton 0 I I 1 Tol•IS JS 10 12 IO Tellal\ IS 9 " " Hetftlrnt' Cl'lrl•t Co1i.o. tr.l11t ?~ 11 PCAA 1'8fdnes (......._. w I. PffVede l.H If eoet t 0 New Mexico Stele 1 1 UC lr'lflM • l ,-r'""° Stet• \ c Sen JOM Stete s S UC Senle tMl>ere 4 6 ~ , . Cel Stett I' uller ton l 6 Utell Stete 1 6 Lone hecrl Stei. I I ~Y'lk-.. UC lrvlM "· Ut•ll Stett 1' o... .. WL 20 , 1) 4 10 • ,, I 11 ' 9 10 10 10 10 II ' It S Ii New Mt•leo S•••• s•. c.1 Sl•te Fvt~t(lft S1 loll UC s.me lerller• 5', l.ono kecl'l s1e1t ... IWvede•l.M V ... t 6', kn JOW St•tt U .......... 0..- ,., Stele F~ el LOllO ~II Sle te , r9ttlt Slllt If ~k UC Sent• ..,..,. I I New t.IWxlco Ste t• .....-,,lde~Laa V ... t 1t Ulell \tett ........... UC tnlll9 et left J.-. Stett ICl\eflnel 4 et IJO) IMOMOUA&. STATWTKI 'nw:..=•> ...... •"""' ....... Of1111, usu " 1• n ,.,. 10 NIUrJflf, UCt 17 tH * )$4 101 HeNIWaon, U F 11 7t M 214 1' S '""'· UCI f1 f)I • "9 IU M9unl, NMSU " Ml N "1 11 • 10WWd dlil rear·• evenL &«aux of the succaa Of \ht fint marat.boo, it iJ al*Uld tbat the lrviDe Compuy will announce Its in~tions to ~oin the county u a co-spooaor (or the event B«auteofbisinvolvementio !nitialiftJ the 191.S.awatbon and ~ mtaat m promounasponaevents 10 Ora• County, Supervisor Riley was authorized to continue u liuon between the bro ofSuperviton and tboleorpnlzina the race. It is allo eitpected lhata l Ok run will be held i.n conj unction wi lb the marathon. * • • A total of l, 708 participants were on hand last Sunday at the Newport Btrrv, SJS 11 112 '4 J!2t 11.2 Ban111, UHL V 21 lJt II m 1u m IU Ht1VY. ucsa 11 " .o .JOllea, UNL V 21 1Jt SS ~ IU fl'lllllr. ucsa It • IO 256 IU ··~ ...... ~."5 11toew1. UC~ Gllllem, UNLV GrMt. usu Wll>um,NMSU F..,_,uae A,_, UOP /W.1"1,tY, UCI Turner, CSF l(ul-1, FSU ....,. Wellttr, LBS Wede, UNLV .._,..,UOP Httldltaon, CSF HtllrY. ucsa Welker, FSU hnka,UNLV Buctlenen1 UCI Jeckton, CSF Nl•on, USU • 17 17 21 " " " 20 17 20 IS .... ..... 1§9 u 1SJ t.o 113 1.7 ll6 u 111 7,4 llS 1.2 Ill U 111 u 125 u M S.7 ............ 1t 117 6.2 21 127 6.0 20 105 S.3 11 Sl ... 17 71 .... " 13 u 21 13 "° " S1 u 20 71 3.4 16 SI U hdk·lt Westll1111ton Artrone Cellfornle Oreeon Stete UCLA Stenford use Ari~ Stele Wfthlnelon Stete °'"°" C••-W &. 7 I s 2 s 2 4 ) 4 4 J 4 J s ) s 3 s I 7 .,...,.....,. SC.. o....r-1 WI. IS 7 I• 6 1l 4 I 1 ' 7 • 10 . ' . ' 10 11 ' 12 WMll!neton n, Arll.-Stete 91 WUlllneton Stele 65. Al'IJ-63 (OI) T ...... 10- C.elffofnle et Oreeon Stete Sr.nford e l 0reeon '""*Y'•O-VCLA ., LOUllYllle (non--conftrenct) ArllOll8 Stele •• We\tllnlltOll Sl•I• Arltone et Well\lnllton ,_..Y'• G.- Slenford el Oreeon Stele Cellfofnle el Oreeon INDtVIOUAL. STATISTICS ,~,,_,., ~ Mllltr, UCLA Welo,. Wei/I. L-lt. USC Oow'41, use TeviOf', Ore, Llcl\11, Sten Mof'rlton. wsu Fortier, We1'1 Kwr, Ariz. S.ndle, ASU SCOlllMG G ,G" T~ IS 132 111 l7S " I '1!> 13 363 "101 11 m 11 lot 11 2tl " m n l01 1t 114 • '31' " 111 n JOI " 91 .. 250 It lV 3' 1tO 13 13 JI 1'7 ....... u,o It.I 11.1 17.S 17.I IU 16.2 IS.6 IS.3 IS.2 ,.._ RI BOUNDING G 11 17 17 16 13 17 19 Ao.mt, Ort 0o .... .-. USC 8ullW, C.I Fortltr, Wetl'I SC>reeue. Or• Teytor, Cet. Welp, Weill. Edllar, Ariz. wtlllerns, Wei/I Wr19ht, Sten .... A'lf9. t71 9t 15' 9 I 142 14 175 7.1 " " " IOI 7..t 131 7.7 137 7.3 13' 7.2 13' 7.2 111 " COLL.GE WOMEN SM '*99 Stllte S7, UC !MN SJ (l"'CAA) Seti D1ew St. C S1l UC INIM fS2) .. ft·-......... 111noer o 1 2 J Hiiiei/ii 2 O 2 • Edmund\ O 0 0 o Oelln 5 I 2 11 SttVtflS ' 0 I 12 ,..,.., 0 0 , 0 Gould I O I 2 Crewfrd • • 3 12 Arena S S l IS Brown I 2 1 4 HeYnet 6 o 12 Burks 4 O l I Ounun S 2 3 11 Grel\ern O 2 I 2 Meee)Owl 0 0 s 0 T .. rv I 2 , 4 ltlct 1 0 • 1 Totell ?• t ?I S1 Tot•h 17 II 17 S2 Halltlm. UC Irvine, 17·26 HtGH SCHOOL GtRU CclM 67, New"'1 H8f1tW 29 CS. View &..-.-I .......,, (?t) c ......... Mor (67) .. ""• ...... .. Vem.11• I 0 I 2 Wlllerd I s , 21 OtlwO S I • 11 Jonft 11 2 I 24 Androt S 1 • 12 Sml<I 6 0 0 12 Sluclter 2 0 3 4 81mcyn I 2 3 • WllVW\kl 0 0 2 0 Stovkln 1 0 I , Z..letkl 2 0 0 • 0emPWY 0 0 I 0 To1et1 13 l u 19 Totets 29 9 I 67 S<-llV~ NewPOtl Herbor 10 4 10 S-2' Corone d8I Mer 11 17 20 l,_.7 Cosq Mn.I 47, Set1•1111c11 46 (S-..,,.., L....-l c .... Mou (471 .. ft,,,. Peim« I 0 l , Lono 1 J 4 S Swen'°"' 3 6 3 12 Mltct1811 l 0 3 6 Cowley I I I l Benedict I O 3 ' Bovell ,,.7 I l IS Fle4ds I 0 0 1 II ts a '* (46) .. ft .... ' 4 , n 0 2 • 2 4 I 1 t , 0 4 ' WellOft Sto!vde COOi! WOOd Cerruto eon.11 Morris ' 0 > • 2 0 0 • 0 I 0 I Totets II 11 11 47 Totall 19 I 1S .. ~ ... ~ Coste Mete t t IS 1~7 S.dClltOt(a 11 • 11 ......... T ectlillcel SeddleOKll Coecl'l W11llarldee '2, Ll9UM hBdl M cs.v.-....... 1 1..8-'9 Btedl (,.) .. " .... Welntrtll I l 2 S CMlmtf• • 0 0 I Otttmen S • t J 11 Crelltlt 0 0 3 0 Welford I 0 I 7 Maurl« 0 0 I 0 SOVoo20 1 4 Lene 1 o ' • •••• ,... (61) .. ft ... 11 4 ,,. P-tll z 11110 Miiiet t.IWhonY Henltfl J81\Mft Wttv8" s 2 , " > I 0 1 4 I 1 • 7 I 1 S 1 0 0 ' 0 0 1 0 Totell IS • IS )4 TOI•" " ' 10 63 kere .. ~ Leovne IMcl'l 10 I? 6 ...... :M WoodtlrldM 17 10 17 1......, I 1"'9da 46. UlllY9' -,. cs. ~ '--""9) ....... <•> ~·•• llfu HI) ........ .. ...... FoltY 7 0 J 14 '1-W'I 1 0 t 2 lteclo o o I o ,.,,..... 4 1 J ' Ne.OV • 0 I I '9M 0 0 0 0 Melll,.._ I 0 0 2 11\Alntr I 1 2 l 1(-• 0 0 0 --I ••• Self 4 0 4 I ·~ • I • 1 ~rrt 4 O I I Olftefw 0 I I t ........,,. J 0 I 4 W9flt t 1 I 1 't:-' 0 0 ) 0 r-I 0 J 2 •J 1102 Tot• n , 12 • r..-1 • t 11 k-. ......... EatMCle It I 11 It-et Uftl"'"'IY I .t 1 t -· C.etner fbrl'M Spirit Ihm, an eveat desiped t.o raitl lftODIY for public dementaty ~in Newport Beech. Tbe womea•a overall wiaoer of the lOt ... ·~year-old Carrie OanUon. wbofinilbcdiaati~of37:l9. Tbe NJl.DCr•Uj) WU Amy DlbuJ, in 37:'4 I. A t.oW of7 l l penicipanta took pan in the IOk. The 1M11·1 ovcrall winner in the tOk clue wu~_y Oerk~n. an e•· Corona del Mar Hiab star who clocked a 30:3'. The .Sk victor was SteveCubilJuin I S:2S. Supervitor Riley was the official stanero(the .Sk race whiJe Coun- dlwoman Jackie Heather staned the IOkNn. * • • Runners interested in developin1 OP.ti mum runnina form are invued w a •video Form Analysis Workshpp," sponsored by ST AAR Sports Meda· R uNN INL ane Institute on S.tmday. Each panicipant will be videotaped while ru.nnina. and their Nnnina styles will be anaJyud by c.m~~na stopactionancblowmotion v >.Jn thote casn where new techj)jques will improve n;an""'-1~le. •. pmcri ptjon forcom:cuvetra.inana~~ outlined. The Nnninaconsultant for STAAR VideoWorbhopi1Jobn Loetchhom, wbo bu been runnina competitively for the put 27 years Men's golf results ..,...._......, , .. ,.... .... , Wlllle WOOd JM7-11 I( 111411 At.. Js-D-11 fl'llllY ~ >So,._.. ,...., .Jec:o«IMn ,... Js-.9 JoM McComlall JS-,._.. Met1t WllOt 37· ))-70 BOii Eeatwood 37·»-70 Pevne Stewert 34·37-71 Oevld Groftlm lt-»-71 Jey Hen U-»-71 Tom W.taon 3'-37-71 04tll PoN J~»-71 Scon Hoctl >6-U-71 l.Atllnv WedltlM ll·-71 Oen Helldoraon :13-,,_ n Jim Thorpe 37·JS-n Tom P9rnlce 37·U-n Ectuwoo •omwo •n-n Oii CPll lltodrlllue1 JS-37-n LMrv NtlaOfl 3'· ..... n Tony Siii •,.._n ,,... 1..ew11 37-»-n C>tMv........ »·>s--n Staine McCe•latw 3S·37-n ltev Ftovd 34·»-n Crete Stedler >t-»-n c11rr. P'wrv Jt-»-n 11toc.co Madie•• •·,._n lltHColcfwtl Hel Suflon Oe'lfld Edwerdl JKlt Nlc:llleul Bred Fabel lltod Curl Mark Pftll l(rlt Mot T Im Slf!'IPt«I .Jev Otblnll MM1t Hevn L.ennle Clementi AndYMffet Andv Olllerd Tom WolsltOPf Ken Brown Merk Lve AltOY North 8111tv ..._., Morris Hetetskv 800Glldtr Cler enct It OM Oen Fortmen ~rkO'MNre 81M Kre11ert P~ Oolt8"t1Y!s HutlertGreen BoOTwev Joetnmen 33·40-73 >S·»-73 l6-J7-7:1 37·36-73 l7·3'-7:1 3S-lt-73 l6-J7-n 31·3s-n JS-»-73 36-37-73 JHt-73 37·37-73 34.,,_73 )7·36-73 35-lt-74 37·l7-74 •·3'-74 36·lt-74 37-17-74 l6·lt-74 31·3'-7• ll·3'-74 37·37-7• Jt·3S-74 lM7-74 37·37-74 31·3'--7• 39·3'-7S )t·3'--7S WevneGf'W'tl Oew<>trtn Tom Slecamenn .JoMC..-Ed fl'lorl Ok:ll Lota Mille Hu!Mr'I ,,...., 1.MrvMIH 1-Aoltl .,..., C""-'t OeMv EdwMm Ooue T...- ArwlY leen J.C.S.-0 lwrYJMcll'4 ltldl Fettr Tom Kiie O.A. Welbflnt .JoMAdWns BenCrentllew tr.o Fuon SefldY LYie .J«f Slumen .J«fGf'YMI Tim Norm Corey Pe'lfltl StrnPllte lletl UtlW M. VW lrUIMlt N•!Nnlel Crowv Hele lrwtn PetUndMY ··~ T.C.Cllen Lou~el\em Gr" N«rMn Jim COibert lton Slrecll MllteGo¥• ltldWd ZA>llol ltldl llthOecll 8oO Kltln Mille MCCullOutlfl 8rlenCINr Riek Oelclol 1obOY Wedkltls KenGrM!I Jim~ JoMnv Miiier l.MrY It"*-" G«WUltler Ooue.JoMlon Jim Deni Oennl1 Trlatw L.H Trevlno PelMcGow•11 .John t.IWl\eftev Brien Moll9 1tooer Maltbie Sl\lm LeGov BOllby NIUIOll M«. O'GrldY '"'" •oder'lcll Fr9deouNt 0.... Stockton ~Smlffl OIOMMt .J«rv,.... Tom 8-rrllfTI ~ .. .,,M Fret*C- a..Merd LAtn9er Tom~ Oennvlr .... Lon Hinkle Mlkt Nlcolltle CIWtel CoodY Chenetlolllf'I Howerd Twitty Joey SlndNr Trecv Nekealtl Nldl Fetclo BuddV Geronw Ml/at Reid 811 Plerot MIMMMft Jim Ul"911Y Ed Luetlllt• ltuu Cocnr en Stu tnerenem OoYld L.OYt Ill L. Thompaon Mill• DoMld TommvAeron 811 Sondtf Ptler Senior Mlk.oMcLMn T. TomlneM WoodY 8leclt.Durn Clllp 8ec1t Gorv....,_11 ltldlCr- G.l.Adtnhofl Curtlt Sire"" GtMSouws Donnie Hemmond MltleWnt Sclott Hovi ltobW'IWrenn Oevt It Ul'nl'l'ttlh OeYld Ptoo1e °h ... AJ¥con Vence Heefner Gtorllt Arctte< 8008otdl Nick PrlU O•v• l.undtlrom Phil 8lecltmer 8o0Lolw GlllOY Gl!Ott'I Oennv Men Women's golf results Elbabetlt Ardlft OaUk (et Mleml) OtOCll• Mlluev »·36-61 M. Soncr·Oevlln Jl·~ Oewn Coe JS-lt-69 Aveko Okemoto 3'·u-.9 Etalne Crost>v 32·l7_., Setty Ulllt 33·3'--ff '"-y Putt 33-'36-ff S.ndre Pelmtr 33·37-70 I(..,, I( ennedv :M· 3'-70 Pel 8redltv lS·lS--70 Nencv Lodbttter 3'·,.....70 80111 Solomon 35-35-70 htl'l Oenlel 3'·36-70 Jull lnlttter l4·>6-70 J KohlhNt 35-35-70 Nencv ltUOln )4·36-70 Judy Oldtl<lton l4·>6-70 lkvtrly KIOu U ·3S-70 8ecky Peerton 33·37-70 LeAnn CHaadeY 33·-71 COiieen Wetlter 35·3'-71 Anne-Marie Pelll 35-36-71 Jene 81elock lS-3'-7 I Pet Mey.,, l~3'-71 Petti ltluo 3'·»-n M.J SmllPI lS·l7-n Hollla SIKV 3'·~n ROOln Welton 35-31-n Mereeret Werd l4·:M--n HMt!\81' Ferr l7·lS-n Jooy ltOMntNll JS·l7-n MorY Owver 37-ls-n CetPly Kret1er1 l~37-n Alauk.O Hlltfft 37·36-73 Allee Mltttr 37·3'--73 Jef'llvn Britt )4·3'-73 Petty ~n Jt-,._n Ctnctv Meckey 37·3'--73 Sul•n Tonkin 37·3'--73 LIM Youne )6·37-73 0 Mc:Heffle 36•17-73 Lori Wetl 3'·31-73 0.0 ltlchafd ll·lS-73 Celhv MorM 35--73 Chf'lt Jonnaon )6.J7-73 Mortene Floyd J7·3'-n ANlton Flnnev Leuren 11ow• 8erbre Mlirehle Cetl'lv ltevnolds JoAnne Cerner Cindy lterlek C.ll'lY John1te111 !Cris MonNNn Leurl Petwton OonneCePOnl ~8hffOW St-..nle Ferwlo MIHle MGGeorDt JllClllellerlKl'l MIUlelef'1eolll Ketl'ly Ahwn VelSlltnner S.ndr• Soutlcl'l hi• y IC.lnll J-'COln Pie NllalOfl Oeot>le He• SuslePeoer J. 8. Glbton Amy Benz I.Of I G8f"bea Donne Wt\lte uurlelltlllelw 0..E9"11nt 881'11 Bunt!owtlt v Ok·H .. Ku IC.ellly Po•lltw•ll T. Fredrlckton A. lltelnnerdt WvQulni.n C.Ct\Mbonnler Mitzi EON o.t!IM Stretli9 Allee ltltimen N. Whlle·8rew.,. Kim S/llpmen S/le<r I Turner CerOlvn HIH HM lhwOr- Amy AICOll M.Blecllw~ Cf\erloltt Gr ent KMln Mundlnow S. IMrtotecclnl HutrA11t a 1 -..0 S7, MarN 4t ,._.. &,.-...) HllM. IMedl (S7) M9ttM ( .. l ........ .. ..... Chlcli I 2 > 11 ar-11w 1 o 1 , Krc1tlc 2 :> 2 1 Cllerroln ' t 4 13 BoY!w•r• 2 o o • l(ueater 7 2 O " Armllr11t s ? 0 It l(lftiuo 4 O 4 I ,..,.,.., ) 0 2 • SI-4 2 2 10 H¥tmen 4 1 1 10 tall_.• O O 7 O s11 .. r 0000 KreuM O O 2 O Tole!\ ?4 t t 57 lotell 22 S IS 49 sc.. .. ~ HUfltlntton 8-cll 15 10 12 2o--S1 Merine 17 ' I I....., Miiter 0.. ... ,..,. x 21 ,.,...,.L..-...l MIW °"IM) """JC (IS) .. .... .. .. ...... w..-r s • 3 " Orelfl 1 o J 2 tllddon 1022 t yrne 20>• MM1fre S 0 0 10 "'11llPI 2 0 I 4 lteMlflt I 1 0 • ~ 0 0 , 0 CHltlev S 2 1 10 ~ I o O 1 0'9'"" I o O 2 flten.raon I I 1 J Hrr.nen 5 0 2 10 HtduMn 2 2 1 6 fl'orl'Mlt 2 2 I ' W... I 2 0 4 L.Wf'l\Ce 3 0 I 6 TOiell • 10 11 64 Totlll 10 S 12 2S SC-IW o.nwt Marer Del If " It 1,...._.. llllut X 4 IO I ..-,5 HIGH ICMOOt.. .. U ... vw ........ L.-. . " ' 0 I I . , 6 J J 6 a ' 1 • ·o ' TIM .. f",..._ c.... Mele "· ....... '* .. .,...... WL It 1 1• ' 11 • ... s • ' 17 1 12 2 14 w •• ..,..,.~...,_,. c... .. ,,., 61 • ........, ..,.. Jt ·--.. ~..,., " \ 3S·lt-73 ll·3S-73 37·3'--73 37·37-74 31·3'--74 36-lt-7• 34-40-74 37·37-7' •l·))-74 37·37-74 )6-31-74 3'·lt-74 l6·lt-74 l6·lt-7• 37·37-7• 31·3'-74 37·37-74 40-3'-7• 3~3'-74 37·37-7• ll-36-74 l6-3'-7S 37-lt-75 ll·l7-7S 36·lt-7S 37·lt-7S l~4C>-75 37·lt-7S 31·37-75 •37-75 >7·lt-7S 41·).t-7S 40-3S-7S 31·J7-7S ll·31-7S l7·»-7S 31·31-7' 31·»-76 39·37-76 36·4'>-76 31·»-76 39-37-76 CO-:M--1• 36·4'>-16 31·lt-76 37·3'-76 36·40-76 41-35-76 41·35-76 0.-.. Luker 4 l-lS-16 Kelhv Hitt 37·3'-7' Linde HI.Int •36-7• 8erb Thomet 37·3'-76 Je n Ste1>11enson l7·,,_76 M. 8. Zlmmermen «>·17-77 M. Fen-0o111 l6·41-n Shwrl Sltlnn.vtf Jt-»-n MarYO.Lone •37-77 Mlndv Moore ll·lt-n Suten Sondtfl 17·40-77 0 . H.Cl\o~ lt-lt-n Jene G.cklft C0-37-n Nencv SCrenton lt·lt-77 Vicki Atvere1 42-lS-n Slllrtev F urlonll 31·3t-71 Lynn Adelnl Jt·lt-71 Vicki f:"'eon 3'·42-71 c. MofltllOfMf'Y Jt·lt-71 P9nfly Hemmel 42·3'-71 Sue Fc>Mmen '2· l6>-7' Marci 8ozenll 37·41~71 Cell\y Ment 41·17-71 ()eCJC)le Austin >t·lt--71 OleM>t OelleY .0-»-71 lltosle .J-. >t-lt-71 Lynn Sir_., 41·37-71 Pem Allen Jt•lf-71 Cerollne Gowen ll-40-71 levtf1ev Oevl1 .0-3'-7' .Judv Elll1·Soml f?·l 1-7' l(etl'ly Whllwortll Jt.40-7' Terrv·.Jo Myeo 41·lt-7' Mory Muff/tty 31·41-7' Clndv Fiiio 31·u-t0 M4111aa Wllltmtre • ......, l(rJi 11 Ar-r lt'llllOll 41·3'-40 !Mcltv Lefton Jt-41-.0 Ltllle PMrton 39·41-«) Tiie<' ... Htstlon 41·4'>-tl Joen Otlk 43·,._.I Clndv HNI 31·u-t1 Lenort Mureoh 37·•~ Jo Ann Well'lem C0-42-41 Sit semen Jt-~ 8 . ~Clell C0-42-41 .Joet1 Jovet 45.,,_.. Stleron hrretl CO-.._.. Jene Crettw OQ MIMIY'I O- E ttencle et Corona dt4 Mel' WOC>OOrldM et ~ Le11une et Coste Mow UnlYt rtllY et N-POl'I H•rtior S4lflMt ~ LM9W w L. s 0 l , , , 2 ) 1 4 Fountetn VelleY oc .. n View Edlton Wettmlntt"' Huntlneton hKll Morine 7 • TllwMIY'• ~ Hunttneton 8MCll S?. Marine " TMtM"• ..... Edl\Ofl •• WettmlMIW Setw*Y'I ..... Fountel<I V.-r et OCeell View T.....,.,..,,... Marine et fl'OUllteln If ...... ovw.I WL 11 4 ,, 7 IS 6 10 ' 10 11 12 • Oceon View et Edlton Wn tmlMI« •I Huntlftoton BMOI 17,,, 231 "1n D..l "2't Ut ,..,u and coeches 1k MiMIOt1 VICJO Hiah CJOM country team and more than 60 lduJts. Tbe total cost of the worbhop s SlO. Jt will be k>caltd tn tbe C.tdllt lldtabilitatjon Center, adjacent to ST AAR Institute on the f"ountain Valley ResionaJ Hospital and Me(U· calCentercamput, £uclidat Warner ln Fountain Valley. For more infonnadon, phoM 662--0114. * * • ..... ~ ~Y'Sal~n , ..... ,, .... _, ..... _..., NIST aACa. • furlollet. Vlcllnul¥• IC.-r-) ll.20 UO UO l(ulllft't Orum Chae) 7,00 ..SO Arneca .J. (McCerron) 4."> Time: 1:10 J/ 5. AllO ren: LadY Hlller:y, Folll'• lflc1orY, AMlit u... Golden .__. Mentel Bank Moote. Cecllr Queen. ~ Abendon, Coun· try T-. W9ndll Doi. SICOMD •AC•. 6 tur1onlll. IOINr 8ov (Votenzuele) 6.20 UO l.40 lltlclllrd'• Goldlo (OllYwnl 1.00 UO llaH Flame (McHef'llUe) S.60 Time: 1:10 J/S. Alto ren: Told YCMI Twice, Gold AtaaYW, Two ....,.,,, 1,,_-Cllof, len Cooe. TOUIJfl And Proud, F rftl'I a.ca., T ... D •AC•. 61h furlonllL Time Celed (LIPhem) UO UO lAO .. ,. MftMlllltf (OrleN) 4,60 ).00 Gold N' Snow (Ollvern) s.20 Time: 1:11 4/S. Also ren: Ftv t.IW To The Moon, Wolkll'll &old, Colorful AHelr. IC.Piel 'N' T.-. ltevn 8erlllz0ft, &old Mteen. Oewn 01 G1t>rY. B~ec. Cool Lulu. 12 DAI&. Y DOUM.• (9·3) peld 174.'1!>. l'OU9ITH RAC•. 1 1/ 16 mtln, Tourtuno (Slbffltl s.oo l.00 2.IO Plneoum lOelohoustevel uo l .40 Seven Pwetnt (Ollvern J 4.JO Time: l:AS 2/S. Atao ren· TM C•'• Lad, ltNI Good Mvllerv, E11otlc Arbltor, Flyfnll 811te Boy, 8""8re, /W.Jlr'rtmer. ,lf'TH RAC•. 6 lurlonlll. Merl SuPremt (K~) 9.00 00 2.IO Alfordel>lt Luxury CS1tven1l 4.tO l.20 Wllet A Merv Knllll\I (0Nnou1aayel 2..60 Tlme: 1:09 4/S Also ren· ~en Emotion, Oell Portet, Ouf' Lutlte. Endlns S.Wcll, Polv1 Lh lt•Kel. • IS •XACTA (1·4) P81d 1177.00. SIXTH RAC•. 6\'a 1ur1on11S Trltlle's heu <C•tt•non> 6.10 uo. l.20 Mu1ll <Stw¥ent) 10."> S.60 Wln10tnetlll1111 (Oelenouueye) 4.00 Time; 1·11 2/S. Al10 ren Mllltllv Heidi, Jon OI Scwl1111, Ke llt t.1W Gal, ttelle Belle, Gold Ctarlon. C.n You Gel A PHI, EbOY'I JKllPOI, ,.,.., Con. SIVINTH ltACI. 611> furlOnllt tmP<nslve Wind (Pinc.vi f.00 4.20 4,60 LUC:kV ROOtrte (81eelll UO 6.to Medi• Girt (Soll•l 11 20 Tlnw 111 Atao ren. 0-tCo, Count On Lvn. SIOP Qulclt, Llketv Ge n U IEXACTA 13·41 ci.ld U IOOO •IGHTH RACa.. 6'h furlonllt Privet• Jullllle (SOlll ) 6.00 l .40 3.20 Sten'• !lower IH•wlty) 3 to 3.60 Time For Siience llfettnzutlel 4 20 Time: I 16 Atao ren: PrCKPtellve Ster, Mltchlefln· mind, FHI PHMllt. Cosmotron U UtACTA 12·71 P81d 161.00 NINTH RACI. Ont mite Ernecle (H.,.nender) l0.00 t.10 S.40 Prtttv Steff (Plnuv) uo 3.60 Miu Royel Monte (Ollver11) SOO Time: l:.3t 3/ s. Also ren Ed'• Bold Ledv. Netelle Knnwt, 8 Ellte. Oewrt Otw U • JCACT A (6-1) P81d '3:10.50 '1 f'tCK SIX IS·l-f·J·?·6) pe)d '44.447.10 to two wlnnlne tlclttlt <Jlx hOl'W1l. S2 Pick Six con\Olellon pe)d WU.IO to llO wlnnlne tlc1te11 (five hOraetl 11 ~I( NIN• <?+t·S·l ·9·3·2·6) 1>eld s 1.ltS 40 to 3S wlnnlne ticket• ( teven l\oraetl Cerrvovw POOi: Sl,1?6,9'7.37 Allendenct' IS,211. U.S. Pre...._ (It ........ , .. , TI*~ R8UM SINlet &red Glib«! (U.S.) Ollf Andert Jerrvd (Swedenl. 7·6. 6·0, Pltul Annecone (U.S.> Ollf AndrH Gomez <Ecuooor). 6·1, 3·4. 3-1 (retired). Kt'lfln Curren (US I de4 Torno• Smid (CtecNKlovet.lel. l-4. 6-4. 7·6, Yen· nlc:tt ""°'" (Frencel Ott. Ben T11ttrmen (U.S.J ... 3. 7•4, Jek~ HleMll (C1edloslo· veltlel Otf. Leonerdo Levelle (MtMlco), 6-3, 6•l; tven I.Andi (C1.emo.10veltlel def. Orff Holmn (U.S.), 6·2, 4·1; Jlmmv Connon (U.S.) def. SloboOen ZlvollnoYlc <Crtdloll0- 11ekle l. 6• 1, 7·6. Tim Mevott• IU.S l def Mertv Oevl1 IU.S l, 6·4, 4•6, 6·2 . W.,,...1 teunwMftt (If Kn 8"al.,..., flla.) ~ lleuM SINlet Steffi Gr•I !Wet! Gerf!'llny) def. lo\¥,¥ Joe Fwnenctez (U.S.>. 6·0. •~1, Get>ritle Sotlellnl CArttntlne) def Swen Masc.erln IUS), 6-7. 6·0. 6-4, Sleol'lenle ltllM CU..S ) def IC.elfty RIMldt IU s l. "'· ~. t~4; Ketllletn Horvell\ lU $ I def A1'0rM T-verl (HUt!Hrvl. 0-6, .. ,, .. ,_ MMtu· ... Melelve (8uitwlel def Kettw JordM (U.S.>. 6-l, 6•1; Bonnie OedUMlt IU.S,J def, Jo Durie (lrlleln>. 7·S. 6-4; W.,.,_ Turn• bull !Austrellel def. MN Marll Ctecl\lnl • 11181'1), 6·1, •·l, CMlt E¥ttl LIOvd (U.S.l Otf Certlnt l••Mlt (CtlMdtl. 6•1, 6..0 ...... tet ~ •••u .... ,.._. .... , JUN~ llOHTWllGHTS -Merlo MarllMI IN\ilxlco) KO'd Lenny V••• (Nlil•ICOI. 10IPI rouno (Mefllntt It llOW • M·J. V11011 It 1'·•>. "°' THEltWEIGHlS -Louie ltelnote ,..._.., l(O'd Anetl If... (Melllco), MCAIM rouM. IE YIMH la 1WW It• I, V ... 11 12·JI • ,......._, .... tCMOOt.. ......_ l ... lrWt 11 I t .._ ..... °"""""" 1. Cet"9fl • Christ College romps. 80-3-g SAN DIMAS -Cbrita Colics lrviM broke away from a 2S-f7 balftime aead and went oa to ddcat Plcilic Cout Baptitt Bible CoUete. 80-39, Thursday nip.t in a Wet1e111 Christian Athk1ac Al- toc::iation pme. CCI improved to )..t in ~AA play and I S-.S ovetall. Mjke .Tbompt0n poured in a penonaJ..bett l5 po1nt1 for the f.allel, lti1tins seven o( ei&bt field IO&I attemptS. Brian Beal wu 7 for I I from the field for 14 points and Tim Sutridee coonecied oo five of teVett attempts to finish with l 0 poi nu. CCI'• leadin1 scorer. Derwin ApPlebmy. scortd just eiaht points in Jess than a half ()faction. CC1 convened 3" of 66 field pl attempts. The £aaJet will return home tOiiijJH for-another WCAA con- test. mc:etina Southwestern Ba~ tilt Collqe ()f Phoenix at 7: 30. .... ..... ICMOOl. ---~ .,_.. V...., G, _,... M IOl>-Nalllt (FV) P. ~. 5:16. 101-0trnoneev !FVI -H dee. 11t-erennon IFVI WOii tlv forttlt. 12.....eennlnlltr (Ml dee. Woodberry, 1·2 • 1~ (FV) p, Hollowey, 3:30, l,.....ulr (Ml dee Oueourd6tu. 13•2 1~8"' (NI) dee. MKM-.n, 11·4. 1'7--0cler IFVl p. lt--.um, :». l~o IFV) dee. Guedde, 4-2. 167-V~ (Ml dee. Leftlltea, •-1. 1n-f'rencl1 (F VJ -bV forielt. ln-Metldia.dlh (FV) lec;ll, fell Attltn, Hwt.-Pt~ (FVl dee. Florn , 10-l. ..... M, 0-View 11 1 .... lcMrda (El p. Smflfl. l;OS. IOS-Aloundlr fE) ~ bv forttlt. 11....ui tOVI WOii 1W forlillt. 12~ CE> -11Y forfeit. l_.,.tlno !El P. SMfenl, 1146. l:M-Oel!M lOV) P. SouM, 1;00. 1.....,.em IE ) WOii t1v forltlt. In-<:..,_ (E) p, Het~. l:OS. ls.-Muff•Y <El dee. Slutie, 7·l. 167-AMl!n !El P. TOIY, 2-.A2. 1n-oornwi <E> dK. Tr~. 11-• 1'3-Mevw (OV) P. Butler. 1:04 Hwt.-E¥wt1 IE) won by forfeit. W• 11 II S1, 11£ It el a..dl '9 100-+iWdY {W) P. CO-.e, 5:24. 107-vtlmllflt (W) p. Yocum. 1::30 II~ (W) p. ~I. lA l?~e (H8) dK. Ar-*• 12·2 12t-8udwlll CH8) P. Rlol, 2:17. l~Alltn (HBl dK. Bermudol, I ... I. 1.-+iU!lflft IW) dee. SklMtr, 7·1. ,.,-EKOtleOO (H8) dK. St~. S-1. 156 Mlftdou (WI p. Treto. ):Sot_ 167-elu (WI -by forl9ft. 117-<YHere (W) p C-1MY, 1:04 I~ !WI -bv fotfttl Hwl.-ftMCI (W) P. Wllloft, l:Of. s-V'l9w &..-... •••71-2', .............. JS I~,,_... (NI P. DtMI. 1:30. 107-Morten (W) dee. Lulal, 6-0. 11.,_ .JlmlMI (NI ltCtl ,_,, W1111ernaon, 17·2 121-eunerd lNl dK. Sima, 12·3 l a-Rodltn (W) dec. R. l.OMI. I S-4. l~A. LOOtl (N) dee.. Jecdlltn, .. 4 140-elrMmlen (W ) deC. Sler1lne, IS-14 147-Teneu IWl P. Matfflews, 1:1S. IS.-"-(W) P. LUO..nkl, ,.,_ 167-Dtdfthtl CW) dee. Kwcflner. 10-1 In-Lero (N) dK. 8econ. S-4 193-Tulol' (N) dec. Cocrtl, 7·1. Hwl -<~ (Wl dee Gordon, 6-S NHL CAMl"8•&.L eotel'•R•NCI Edmonton CelNrv KMea Wlnnlotll Vencouv., Cnkeoo St. LOUll Mlnnnol• Toronto Detroit ~OM.-w L. T ll'tl Of" GA JS 11 S 75 261 207 23 21 S Sl 210 192 " t1 ' » 111 m 16 31 S 37 IN 2"> IS 11 7 J7 In 20S "'"1t OM.- ,. It 7 SS m 211 20 20 1 •1 17' 111 19 23 I 44 201 "' 13 31 s l l 117 241 11 3' s 'I1 170 264 WAUIS CC*l'l••NCI PtllleOeloflle WHl\llllltOll NY lslendert Pltttt>urlll'I NV ltenetn N-.JerMV MonlrM I QuetltC 8o\lon Heriford 8uffelo htrtdr OM.- JS IS I 71 n1 1S7 1t 16 4 '2 ltS 171 23 17 10 S6 211 112 23 ,, 6 52 ltS Its 22 2• • .. 175 175 IS 32 1 l2 111 236 ...,.,.. DMlletl n 11 s 63 m 114 ,. It 3 5' ?OI 173 ?S II 1 S7 201 llO ?6 22 I Sl 206 llS 22 23 S 49 llS 171 TllwMeY'a Sc-Ntw 'l'or• tllendt n I, Pfllledelr*tl• 4 T ........ 10-N-Yorll lteneers el 8uffel0 St Louts el Ottrolt CelCl8rY et Edmonton MlnntlOle e t Vencou¥tt Otrta MCett HIGH SCHOOL. s-.tLM9W ..... i. ............ Edison KCWll\t: ·~ 3. COMPLETE NY• COMP081ft TRWACTIONI, Cl Oil firms to fight off shore exploring restrictions By llOBERT HYNDMAN Ol•Dmlr ........ . Oil CX?mpenie~ are anxio~s to citpand drilling off Cahfomla s couthne and will fight restrictions on offshore oil exploration through 1986. Laura Pankonien, exploration editor of World Oil mlP.11ncl. II.id oil industry lobbyists will push U.S. loten!>r :secretary Donal~ .Hodel and congressional ncaouators to lift the d nlhng moratorium currently protcctina waters off Orange County and other areas of the state. ~ ''They (lobbyists will very bard, · ust as environmentalists wil/;• an onicn said at World Oil's annual Oil Industry Forecast held Wednesday in Newport Beach. ''But with ~e w~y talks arc going now, we don't expect any soluuon this year." · The discussions on selecting areas for offshore drillina indeed have made little progress lately. Hodel and the I 8-member congressional team resumed tails Tuesday but did little m ore than decide to meet apio next week. Representatives from both sides even disqreed on auidcllnet for future negotiations. The campaian to expand otrahorc oil drillin& is seen as one of several measures oil companies will pursue in 1986 to help lift their slumpina indu1U")', Pankonien told those pthered for lunch at the Balboa Bay Club. The Houstoo·baKd World Oil mapiine ofTc11 an annual oil industry forecast bued on its own survey of operators' drillin& proarams. Wednesday's prcaentation attracted about 130 representatives of local oil industry manufacturers. "California's offshore waten arc considered one of the major rqions for Iona-term development," Pan- konien said. ''What they're asking for is the opportunity to at least explore. Right now. we d on't really know what's out there.' While much of California's offshore ocean tracts have been protected under a federal drilling moratorium, Panlconien said oil industry officials believe they-contain Fluor to build in Houston Joint venture project with Trammell Crow has retail-office mix By die Alaociatecl Presa Fluor Corp. 1n Irvine has agreed to a joint venture with Texas developer Trammell Crow Co. to build a $380- miJJion office and retail complex in the affluent Houston suburb of Sugar Land. The plans calls for development of 1.5 m illion square feet of office space and 400,000 square feet of retail space over the next 15 years on 160 acres owned by Fluor. The project announced Wednes- day will include high-end specialty stores, restaurants, theaters, office buildings a.nd a hotel. Fluor will contribute its land to the project and receive an unspecified cash payment~' weU as <L50 percent stake in the venture, said Fluor spokesman Rick Maslin. Trammell Crow, one of the na- tion's largest privately held real estate developers, is putting up the m oney. Construction will be baodJed by Daniel International. a subsidiary of Fluor, an engineering, construction and natural resources concern. Tram- mell Crow will be project manager. The land on which the project will be built surrounds Fluor's cngincct- ing center and office complex in Sugar Land. Fluor sold the building last year to an investor group for S 160 million, then leased it back. Separately, Fluor last year sold its glass-sheathed hcadQuaners and 57 acres of surrounding fand in Irvine to Trammell Crow for $340 mjlJion in another sale-leaseback deal. No de- velopment plans for that land have been announced. -laEltmm-------------------- NEW V()ttl( (AP) -The foltowlno li11 st1ow1 ll'lt NeW Yri SIOdt Exc:henoe stoc:kJ •!'CS werrent1 tNI Nvt ~ UP the mosl Jncr dOwn the most bllMCI on r:f ce.pli:' ~noe '4?"'dlel' of volume lJ et~E I ~i;,,.,::,I rl ' No *"''Wt lr'4'1no betow S2 ere Ind· -~. Net Jnd~centeoe CNnoft •r•· lht d bet the Pftvlou1 cto1 no pr ct end ursd•v's 2 p.m. l f'\!;'6 p r I c e Uf'S Lest c'\ ~+ ~ I ~ 1~ ·~ ~ f214 I l · LMn wt Mottwk Oat Pct. ~lelr Jn UP I . 1eCt Auoc UP l\l 4 enleUnd Up .J sRed !-/P is U ~"r.ro1nd ~p-1 .S ~ Trlco Up j .4 UP 0 Na mt Up . I I Comdrt lnt Up .9 2 ComoeQCpt larlt oil 1u~lie1 a.nd should be explored. "They re potentially very promisini, judaina by the aeolOJY and the drillinJ that is currently ao•na on adjacent to these art'U, .. she 111d. The United States. Pankonien added, has ~me "a mature drillina area with few areas for new oil exploration. For the national interest, there should at least be access to thcie areas, at least to find out what's there." detailed an&ly1i1 that 10 into their forecast, many oil iodunry re~tative-5 attendina the luncheon said they were skeoucal of any lo na-ranac forecasts While they declined to be tc:lcntified in a story, they said the oil industry is all'ected by too many uncertain fact.Ors -wot1d..wide demand, foreign competition aod federal lcaillation and taxation, a.mona them -to make Offshore oil dnlhna holds promise for an industry that expertt say has little to be optimistic about. accurate predictions of the oil market. . · But they firmly wppotted efforts to explore offab~ oil tracts and said the drillina technology now available could be counted oo to prevent the Otl spills that polllJted Californa beaches in the 1960s. · -"~rkina time is the best the 011 and ,as mdustry IS expected to accomplish this year," wd World Oil publisher William Dudley. ~ They also admitted the 011 industry has been very tiaht-lippcd in public discussions of offshore 011 drillioa. With no major positive indicators Ul sipt to boost business, Dudley says it appears industry activity in l 986 will fall about 5 percent from the l 985 level. "Our side hasn't really been brought out. and that's due to a lack of aood pubhc rclatlons," one equipment manOfacturct said. "lt IOCS back to thOK fat years When the oil indUJtry had people who wanted to d1.g holes in the ground, no man.er what. "Any improvement in gas demand - a ma1or problem for the U.S. producer -would be a blessing." be said. While the World Oil eduors touted the ctron and "That indepe~nt spint has earned over 't1I now ... New president Kenneth Lelbler, former eenlor aecatl•e Tice preel- dent of the American Stock ltachanCe, wu appointed to be lta pn.ldent Wectneeday. Be la a 10-year •eteran of the ezcbaJlCe. OTC UPS & DOWNS NEW YORK (AP) -TM following 1111 •hows the Over -lht -Counter stOdts and warrants 11\al h•v• gone uP lht most and down lhe most ~Md on percent of change fOf Thursd.l No ~urlti.$ trading below 2 or 1000 Ul•rn •rt Included Net end i>ercenter>e changes are rl'le difference between lht previous closing price Tnd Th\JrsCS.v's last 0< bid P r c e UM Name L as I C~ Pel ~~~T~r~' 1~ i ~ 8~ ~H Auto un ,,.. ~ UP H.4 ~ !Cl.IS V. ~ UP lf 9 cu Ve ~ UP I 1 :~: ga::'1 7 A1/• + lJ- 11l 8~ J .1 AdvanTele 9~ ,,,.. UP 1 .9 C~J!SVld ~ ~ UP 1 .I C~11;~ 41/'J 11'J UP 1 ·~ ~:~~~ l': ~ 8~ lM MRFV CP ~ 'I• UP 111 i~~r~n "" -lit UP 11 1 e:!fl~11!N l s 1:~ 8~ !!1 :il ~~~lcs J~~ :~: 8~ ll : ~~~red Ind ''• ,.. UP . IS~s ~ "• UP 1 . ldBkNH 'l'J 2 Up I NoCaroFSL 111/• + 1 Uo 9. Pacific Savings managers move Corona dcl Mar resident 'l'Mmaa J. SmJtb ha~ been promottd to senior vice president of La Ctts&a Paclfica Corp .. a wholly owned subsidiary of Pacttic Savtq• Baak of Costa Mesa. Wllliam T. O'Brtaa, also of Corona def Mar, has JOrned La Cresta as vice president of its commercial investment finance group. O'Bnen comes to La Cresta from-Prnley of s..1llen Califoraia, where b~ served as vice president and general counsel. Two vice prcs1dents have been added to Pacific Savings Bank's retail banking division. They arc: Artie 'ftyer, manager of the Yucaipa branch. and Suclra L. Sbdwick, manager of retail banlong. operauons. Another Pacific Savings Bank subsidiary, PacUic Real Ea&a&e Mortpge Corp., has named three branch managers tn Cahfom1a Mlclaelle L Croce has been named branch manager of the Ccmtos office, Jeff Anold Wiii handJe the Concord office and"Betty Loa Sllackelfonl will run the Bakersfield office. , • • • Holly Ooclaon has been named account cxccuu"e at 8800 Direct, lac.'1 newly opened office in Newpon Beach. 8800 rs a director m arketing agency and a subs1d1ary o fBBOO lntemauonal, SMITH DODSON Inc. Dodson was formerly publrc rtlauons account C'l:ccu11\C at SmJtll Ir Myers Advertlabag in Santa .\na • • • lrvLD1 A. Gailk ofNe\,\pon Beach has qualrfit'd fortbt' ~utual of Omaha Co Sales Leaders St-mmar srgn1t~ ing l'\~elkncc 10 polrc~ o wner sales and scf'\·1cc for tht' past 'ear . ' CBA Marketing, lnc. J "ic\.\pon Hl'Jl h lomputer hu-.;mess applrcauons firm . re-cent I> named Peggy Howell 'llt' prt''ltknt and product manager. • • • Irvine-based American Savings ud Loa.o Auoclatlon rC'CC'~tl~ appointed Rollen N. Broasard vice pre'ltdt·nt and manager of lb Huntiniton Harbour branch. • • • Ton.I Qolato. a UC Irvine honOl'S graduate and an F.I Toro resident. recently 101ned the Orange Coonty Economk Development Corp. in lrvrne as a stafTass1stant Quinto \.\111 be rcspon'l1hk for the development of the 0 C ho\1-casc '86. \,\here count' busrnc~sc~ "'Ill d1spla} their products and SCI"\-recs • • • Dutel C. Strave, president of Helma1" Temporary Service ot Huntington Beach. has been appointed to the ad' 1sof' hoarJ ol Business·to-Bus1ness magazine of Orange ( ount~ He JOln' I 'I otht•r Southern Cahfom1a business profess1ona!I. on the board \tru't'" \llCe president of the California A11oclatlon of Temporat') Services and serves on the board of directors of the national org.an11at1on • • • F. Rould Sltermu has been naml'<i ~le' director lor the Newpon Beach-based homebuilding fi rm of J .M. Peters Co Sherman. ofNewpon Beach. has been act1"C' m real estate along thl' Orange Coastsrncc 1971 Forthe past ninncars he has prt''i1dcd cl\ er his own res1dcnt1al resale business 1n "'1e\.\ pon • • • Huntington Beach resident Rlellard A. Coone)' hao; hecn promoted to manager ofHoase bold Bank's Huntington Beacb branch office. He formerly served 11 as1ociau branch manager for tbt bank's Ml11lon Viejo brancb. • • • Job.D ToW111end oflntt'grity Communications ot "'t'\.\ port lkal h has received a New Amcncan Hero award from the International 8asl.De11 Nt'twork. a Los i\ngt•lc -ba~d !>uppon org.anr1at1on lnr small business men and women Townsend •'>one of I" \ou1h1:m California entrepreneurs honored for therr proneenntt 1,p1n1 wtlhngness to take nsxs. and their ingcnu1t~ and re ourcctuln('" in creating new products and sen ices lntegnt\ C'ommunirat•l•n' provides pay phones for busines~!> No other newspaper brings you m of your city council, planning com i sion, school and college districts and county government than the .. ---- NYSE COMPOSITE T RANSACTIOHS OW,N ..... LA•O. IO 16 I Fllllrl ILi-..... Market hits new high NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market climbed to record highs today in buying attributed to hopes for lower interest rates. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials Jumped 18.8 I to 1,570.99, surpassing the previous closing peak of I ,565. 7 I reached on Jan. 7. For the week the avcraae pined 4 I .06 points. Advancing issues outnumbered declines by more than 2 to I on the New York Stock Exchanac. Bia Board voh,1mc totaled I 43 5 J million shares, against 125.34 million in the previous ~ssion. The NYSE·s composite index rose 1.26 to 122.13. WHAT AMEx Orn W HAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK (AP) Jan. 31 AMEX LEADERS GoLo Quoas Mf TALS Quon s 'd~ HEW YORK IAP) ~lJI '. ~~ev. Ill~ . H ~E,~ •• NYSE Ll ~0[ RS Dow JoNfS AvERACES NASDAQ SUMMARY 12~ TolbJtt tuz.s rrom tha. Robz.rt. Telbct.t. d@190 ~\O m o:irrn¢l velltty . the world~ {\rvz.st, ~ t.1~ otwey~ th2 plf flz.ct.. gift, end elwtJY& thcz L!:i~t. 9¢liu:t.ion 7ADV1 Intelligence comes in many varieties Well before the psycholog11ts dug very deeply into the subject, l ex- pressed the strong conviction that there reall.Y is no such sinaular thing as "intcU~aencc." There a re plural "iotelllaences" of different kinds and the possession or one kind doei not necessarily imply another. I wo uld even ex tend this di vision to the faculty that is commonly called "qard sense." which some people arc supposed to have and others not. l suspect even that is too broad a generaJizatjon to be true. For instance. J consider myself to be a tolerably good poker player. but only a third-rate (if that) bridge player, even tho ugh l have played much more bridge than poker, a nd take it far more seriously. Also, along those lines. as a young man I used to beat almost every checker orponcnt I came across, but although labored diligently over the chess board, J have never been more than a patter. Whatever shape of intelligence I may have d ocs not conform to the patterning of bridge or chess. The most dramatic example. I suppose, was Alexander Alckhine. the greatest chess master of our time. All the money he won at chess he promptly tossed back at the bridge table. under the fatal delusion that he was as skillful at the one as at the other. He died broke. from gambling as much as from d rink. The man who makes SIO million devising a new product surely has a SIDIEY H1111S d ifferent intelligence "bite" than the mai:i who can build a beautiful period cabinet; and whatever kind of in- ~elligence I may ha~e, I am to tally incapable of doing either. Without a slight gift for reasoning and wntina. I could easily starve to death. Everybody is dumb about different fhnrgs-and I n different ways. Even a S<Kalled "polymath" bas intellectual powers that few possess, but he may be unable to tie his shoelaces correct- ly, or cross a busy street in safety. I am convinced that we were given diverse sorts of intelligence because no one kind alone could assure the preservation, much less the proaress. of the human species. I could' have lived 200 years and oever figured o ut how to build the first bridge over a stream -but the first bridge builder probably couldn't count past ten without taking off his shoes. It's time we stopped usinf "In- telligence" with a capital "I · a nd -moved I t down UJ its proper lower- case position. All you have to do 1s to listen to a general for a few minutes to realize how limited Military In- telligence really is. New meaning to the term 'burned out' N umero us h ighly intelligent citizens believe some people literally catch fire internally -by spon- taneous combustion -a nd bum to · death. Believers show photographs of the charred remains. They're trying to collect case histo ries. Have ~ou ever witnessed anything like that. Futurists believe the first messages they expect to get fro m intellige nt beings on another planet will be some son o f simple ma thematical formula. When your great grandmo ther was a girl. many of her generation to mourn deaths in their fam ilies ke pt their pianos closed for a year. 0 . How d o you write out "Mrs.'' 1n ful~ A. You don't. Many generations ago 1t was the abbrev1at1on of "Mis- tress," but not any,rnore. Q. Can dried blood be typed? A. Indeed. T he blood of ancient Egyptian mum mies has been typed. Q. How long have Moslem women had any say-'lo over their own mo ney? A. For 13 centuries. Always was easy for a Moslem man to get a d ivorce. So the wife's protection was her legal control over her own assets. Q. What's the wood in the heads of wooden golf clubs? A. Laminated persimmon, usually. Among the more cunous of crime stat1st1cs: About half the people m urdered had themselves been ar- rested at some time in their lives on personal violence charges. Infants born to mothers who smoke ciprettes weigh less at b1nh - on the average -than infants born to non-smo kers. In Chicago. you don't pour wine in a dog's d ish. T hat's illegal there. Most people bitten by snakes arc bitten in their own yards. Highest b1nhrate nat1onw1de is around Utah's Provo. I Pf OPLE '---- L.M. BOYD ~ Alcohol cools not warms the body. Twenty-five percent of all su1c1des are committed by the elderly. In Peru. it takes six minutes. at least. to cook a three-minute egg. Q. Who 1n,c111ed stilts., .\. Can onl) tell you their regular use probably origi nated in southern France. Early sheepherders strapped on such to negotiate the mar.,hes around the Ba~ of B1sca~ Q. How much of what's now the ll ni1ed Statec; used to belong to Mexico" A. A founh. .. Q. Why is that Sargasso Sea pan of the Atlantic Ocean called the "horse latnudes"'? A. It's where sailing ships ofie n were becalmed. so ran shon of fodder and water. and therefore had 10 Jettison any horses aboard. Sir. b} the time you reach 70. 1f you're typical. both the tip of your nose and your earlobes. too. will have dropped half an inch. Belgian shnmpers used to fish on horseback. trawling their net~ through the knee-deep surf. A few still do Am told you can take $Orne makeup marks off some clothing by rubbing the spot with a slice of bread. With today·s eh.·ct rode implants. Hrkn Keller could have hero made to hear. do<:tors 'kl) The second facclill almost 111· \anabl> look~ more natural than the first one. L.M. Boyd Is • 1yadlcated colomaJ•t. ) . s...,...1, r .. ,..,, 1 ARIES (Man:h 21 ·April 19): Scenario highhJhts 1n1.ens1fied roman~ C reative juices arc activated, you speak, act in passionate manner. You could make discovery which helps you ·•strike it rich." Leo. Aquarius persons play dramatic roles. TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Focus on union, cooperation, legal ties. pennership and marriage. Family reunion is featured> you learn whMe you '1and in connection with special agreement. Cancer, Capricorn persons figure prominently. · GEMINl(May21-Junc 20): Major decision need not be made in midst of confusion. Emphasize cauuon, pa--------------tienc.e, play waitina pme. Keep rHOI· utions concerning employment. depen- dents, pets, heaJth. Sagittarius, another SYDNEY Gemini fiaure prominently. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Emphasis on physical attraction, var-0MARR icty. speculation, courage o f con vic- tions. You'll recei ve offer very.difficult ••••••••••••• to refuse. Young person will play major role. Scorpio, Taurus natives figure prominently. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Tabulate accounts, take inventory. make 1nqu1rics eonoeming land,-property. mineral rights Get ideas on paper. contact member of o pposite sex who a ttracts you. Virgo. Sagman us na11ves figure in dramatic sc.enario. ,f, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): D1plomacy gets you everywhere' Know 1t. don't force issues. Family member makes s1~n1fican1 concession. Shon tnp may be necessary to obtain funding. An 1cle recently lost can now be recovered. • LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You get what you need following 101t1al delay. Spotlight on payments. collectio ns. ability to utilize resourc.es in profitable manner. Judgment, intuition will be on target. Be sure terms arc clearly defined. · SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): This can be your power-play day! Lunar. numerical cycles highlight responsibility, authonty. ability to cam money a nd to intensify love relationship. Accept challenge. agree to meet deadline. SAGITI'ARIVS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Answers arc found behind scenes. Someone is playing games, including "I've got a secret!" Dig deep. reject superficial responses. f ocus o n institutions. special interest groups. You arc going to win-big! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on hopes. wishes. ab1l11y to tum in "outstanrung perfo rmance." You attract favorable a ttention. members of opposite sex are d rawn to you. you'll be called to .. center stage." AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): Accent on career. business. achievement. accolades from peers. You'll be asked to "explain .. s1tuat1on. perhaps before the media. You are due fo r unique honor. )'Ou get credit prev1o usl) denied. Another Aquarian plays role. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Travel 1s emphasized. future plans. .rospects come into focus. Long-distance call relates to special 1nv1tat1on. chance to add to wardrobe. Accent also on education. publishing. dissem ination of information. IF FEB. 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are an innovator. an onginal thinke r. creative. attractive and stubborn. You have an abundance of courage. you possess pioneering spirit, you arc willing to take nsks in order to achieve goal. Leo. Aquarius persons play 1m ponant roles in your hfc. You will complete major project this year -you'll also reach wider audience. Burden will be lifted. you'll earn more money and love will play maJor role. August will be your most mem orable month of 1986. A prayer for parents proves lasting legacy DEAR ANN LANDERS: M' father recently d ied and we found this letter among his personal papers. It was in his own ha ndwriting. We have no idea whether 1t 1s an onginal piece . We never knew h im to collect other people's work. Have you ever seen 1h1s in all )Our reading? Does anyone recognize 1t'1 A PRAYER FOR PARENT S Oh. God, make me a better parent. Help me to understand my children. 10 listen patiently to what they have to say and to respond to their question~ kindly. Keep me from interrupting and contradicting them. Make me as courteous 10 them as I would have them be to me . G ive me the coura~e to confess my sins against my ch1l· dre n and to ask them for forgiveness when I know I have done wrong. May I not vainl)' hun the feelings of my ch ildren. Forbid that I should laugh at their mistakes or reson to shame and ridicule for punishment Reduce the meanness in me. May I cease to nag: and when I am out of son s. help me, Lord. to hold m) tongue. Bhnd me to the little errors ol my children and help m e to see thc good things the~ do. Give me a rcad) word for ho~csLbra1se. Help me treat my children ail hose of their ov. n age. Let me not expect from them the Judgment of adults Allow me not to rob them o f the o ppon unity to wan on themsehes. 10 think, to choose. and to make thC'ir own decisions. Forbid that I should rver punish them for selfish sat1sfac11on Ma.,, I grant them all their wishes that are reasonable and have the courage a lways to withhold a pnvllrge that I know will do them harm Make me fair and JUSt. considerate and companionable. so they will ha' e genuine esteem for me. Help me to be lo .. ed and 1m1tated b) m ) children. Oh. God Give me calm and poise and self-control. -BOISE. IDAHO DEAR BOISE: Thank your for sbarh1g that beautiful essay. I have not seen It before. It could be 1U1 original composition. E ven if it isn't, the fact that your father kept it tells us 1ometbing about the kind of man be was. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS· This 1s for "Been A.round 1n Bakrrsfield" who told women hov. 10 spot a mamed man We an: a group of servicemen stationed 1n Europe "'ho compared notes on gu> s "'ht> run around on theirw1 H''i We then took a poll 10 our squadron Here an.· lhl' re<;ults: I Don't bothcr looking for a v.edding nng mark Man~ mamed men ha .. e ne,rr v.orn a v.edding band. If there's a stnpe from one. thr~ can cas1l~ v.rar another nng IO CO\l'r It ~ Most mrn who cheat "'111 shl)v. the p11:1ures 1n their wallrts to an~ dame who ash. The wife and k1d'i v.111 be 1dent1tied as his slSlrr or c;1ster-1n- law and her kids 3. 10gle men prefer undcf\\<ear that 1s most comfortable \1amcd men wear what their w1,e.-. hu\ tor thl'm Most wt\C\ bu) either h1 k101 or JOCke~ c;hons But, hl·~. h' thl' 11me ,1 woman findc; out "'hat ~ind ot 'hon' a gu~ wears. it'~ 100 lat~ 'lhe'c;go1ng tn bed with hl{!l no ma11er "'hat -l D .\ND OTHERS. DEAR L.D. And Others: You a re right on all counts. E specially the last bne. Singers cited for charity recording By die A1Nelated Pre11 LOS ANG ELES -s:n Dtoue Wuwlcll, Stevie W r, Glady1 ltJIJcfllt and E l ... J.U have received honors from ac- tress EUubetfll Taylor for their hit single. "That's What Friends Are For." recorded to raise money for AIDS research. a spokeswoman $lid. Taylor. chairwoman of the American Foundation for AIDS Research. presented crystalline tculpturcs 1n a ceremony at Paramount tud10 A check for SS00,000. reprcscntina the Pf'OQecds to date from the sinJ)e released in October. was liven to Taylor by Warwick and Clive Davis. pre$1de nt of Arista Re-- cords.. J'lre at OU.ta'• MALIBU -A pool bu1tdina o uuide 11ntcr OIM• N..-. HM'• home sustained Sl.800 damqt aftc an clec1ricat shon· circuit caute<l a small ftre. fire- 1t1tnensa1d. Newton-John. husband Mau Lattanzi. and their baby dauahttf Chk>e were not home when thf fire broke out. said Los Al\fl'ln County fire Capt. Joe Monto 1. ~ small fl~ -htch damqcd th<' butldina and a pilt of con- truct1on m•ttna!5. was reponed at about 2-10Lm.~1 nelf.hbor. Montoya l&Ml Farefaptm qu1ck- I)' tAt1npithed it. 'Vlce' can '\NTA MONIC .\ -~dor P lllUp Michel nom&1. \tar \If NB("-TV's "M1am1 \ ll(' .. ~np SCneS. has unH1lcd a Oa\h\ hnl' lll SJ0.000 sponscars "I love the car II looks 111\1 h~l' a $1 30.000 Fem n. llkt the one ,,n the show, but It costs onl> ahout U0.000.'' said Thoma'!. "ho plans to market tht car thro ugh nat1onW1dr franch1sn. Thomas o•vns two of the T -top. V-8 Mach1avelhs. a wh1teonrand a purple one "Ifs Oash). \t)h\h and soph1sucattd.'' he said ActlaC &onrnor JERSEY CITY. N.J -Go' n...aa H. Keu stepped M forc the TV ca meras to _play str11aht man to rom 1c JM Plk'.,e for a comed)' ipttial w1lb a rw Jerw theme. In tht sttne. • nnf ' Pttc0p0. tht uper<'OOI rop, stops t~ eovcmor~s hmou 1ne, onl)' to run an ID chcd; on btm and thtn bq h•• (Orpvcness, Ot.nge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Frld9y, MnMy Ii, .. f1I HELP POR YO I FRIEND Roth vulnera ble South dul' NORTH WEST •9 7 +K 863 AK2 7 & .. •K4 2 EAST +QJ l054 -: 10 8 8 KQJ 109 •J93 QJ9 5 8 2 •Q6 SOUTH +A2 743 A63 •A 108 715 The bidding South West l • Pui. l NT Pau North Eut 1 • Pa111 3 !'IT Pus Pus Pass Openrng lead KinR uf Every card played b) a defendn should tell a story If partner 11., te ns to the tale. he m1Rht find a w ay to help North-South reached a rea<1on · able three no trump contract after a n uncomplicated auction Since all !\orth's pomts were pr ime h1 ... h and was actually worth mort- than the 13 1t counted l'nfortu I\ately. South did Mt use his a-..;,e1" to best advantaRe West led the kmg of d1amond'I then continued with the queen and nine whPn declarer held up the acc> for t wo rounds Since th1'1 dden'ie marked West with tht' J· IO of d1a monds. his nine had to be a •n11t preference signal. shnwmR a po'l"I· ble entry 1n the lower rankmR 'iUlt dubs. To give his partner a helpinR hand. East d1s{'arded lhP quE't'n •>f CHAI LES Go REii o ... SHARIFF (tubs' !'riv. tht>re was no way for ~ 1 lan·r to set up his clubs without dllow1n!( West to gain the lead. and when he did West had t wo mott d1aamond'i to cash Down one. We • salute East for his brilliant dt>fense. but he did receive an as- "'"' from declarer South should havt• wun th<' -,ernnd round o f di•· mond-. thus preventing East from Jt'tl1'\oning the queen of clubs . f>f'darcr must ~t up clubs by lo.,1ng a trick 1n the s uit to East. If ~;a.,t th<•n has a diamond to return, 1 lw <,Ult I'> breaking 4-3 and deelar· 1·r ran afford to lose three chamond- t ru k.., and a dub Al tnt'k thret-declarer mus t t ro•" to dummy with a heart and lt•ad a 1 lub toward h1 hand If Ea.st pop<; up with the quttn. he is al· lowed to hc1ld t he tnt k. 1f he p lays lo" dt>clarer ri~s with the ace and dmk-. a club. hoping to find that Ea-,1 had '\tarted with e ither a d ou · blNon queen or Q·J -x Stne t ricks l'Oml' rolling home won UMI ------E .. ,. ... lty CU.T a ,Ou.AN ------ 0 Reorronge lette•i ol •t>1t fovr tcro"1bled wo1d1 Oe low ro form to,, .,mple wo•<11 H 0 A R T T I 1 I 12 I I I G R 0 I R 1 I I I I' Tile most wonderlu1 inuig hao- peneo re1a1Pa "'Y ne•gl'lbo• re1urneo to "'Y c.ar ana tound thal lhe paper unae• l!'lt' "' "°Sh•t'ld ..--M-U_l_J_E_B _ __,, ,..as,,• a . "'" :H .. ' a .... _. I I I' I le 0 ~ r •.• .. • • ... a •• 1 -T • • • • ..,~ -,,nJ ""' , , ... ,. t ' .... \~i--t: • ..... 3 o.-.. • ... ~A "•'f ; I. r ~t •• •• '0 t I' ;· l I I I 1 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Channels 5 Della1es 9 V11a1 14 War godOt'SS 15 lroouoian 16 Herm11 17 Dross 18 Can orov1ncp 20 Eaen 22 Goll club soci..ets 23 Eye sore 24 Bitters 25 Flocke• 26 Prior lu 2i G1mo.,. 28 lllol m~n\ 31 l\4e~I 10 G1bra1ta• J4 Skin pr 'l!"IP1' 35 Sra Pt»'" 36 Obla1n 3-MaJe melod•• V'I PIPac;e1l IOO~ -J .q1.1n1es J' Sphere 42 luau w•ea111 43 p, v, ICI J4 S1ea1 14 17 }0 23 36 39 42 51 52 55 58 e1 45 S1uo10 ones J ~ Ana not .t8 Sch1 •'0 51 B~11 53 (,r SS ">'> Slv .,..t'd01nq.; 5( DrouqM, 58 veate~ 59 Wounl.I 60 D1soust1no 61 S1uqq1sh 5; W ~o; obhOt'cl 6 i l t'llt>r<; DOWN I fir t>ril'1E'<. 4f , I l\Jc;h '"l' t ~<'''<'Vw 'lJI I l .. QP' 1! , r ..., ... ,t'd -fienOf'• -,..,.a,., ...,,.,. u Rt>tec;-.e., •o Rela•f'O 1' MPdOlt> •'} L>arn pr 1 •' Foochs '.:, 0•<,Q' l Cf'<I I' \•110 o,lltl S 0 T t 1=1·u·e Q·A:(E • .., ........ 1 .... t I, N~f 11,Jl~1 t ·~.J tit'' .. "''ilql\ ..... ~ • • i .. "'" 16 Person 1n Coventry .: -Our Fr J8 Risk 1~ Warble ·) Mounta11"1 range '1 Traolef type 52 Pro1ec1 53 Winter drtvll"lg hazard S·l to tnYSI So Sell 10 11 12 13 °'8ft09 COllll lWLV PILOT/~. Januety 31, 1Ne TBS PMOLY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "Claire is one age older than me." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "What are you now ... a marriage counselorr PEANUTS I&>·-~·--"" I -JI GARFIELD BIOOEOROE by Virgil Partch (VIP) \)IL- I -JI "I'm thinking quite seriously of flying south for a couple of months." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ I·~/ 'HE JUST OOES ~T TO GET YOUR A1TENTIOO,Gf!RGE. by Charles M. Schulz SOUNDS LIKE A TRAIN GOING Tl-IROU6"4 A TUNNEL, l-IUH, MA'AM ? by Jim Davis SOME PEOPLE HAVE THE 51LLIE~T PHoBIA5 1 HAVE A FEAR OF LETTINC:r MY MIND WANVE.F\ I'M AFRAIV IT WOULPN'i COME BACK TUMBLEWEEDS l'T'S H01 f:N006t4 iDM~eA s~~ ff Ll.. '( '°1"10N. DRABBLE DAO w~o 15 HH5? ROSE IS ROSE 00 T'-'1\1 '5 -4~ U.lE VNC.l.E LEON.~ WA~ !>C.l-l I Z C>P\..\Rf...N\C I by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan I 31 by Pat Brady BLOOll COUNTY -l •ll KOON llULLl1'8 , ,, FOR BETTER OR FOR WQ~SE_ SHOE ~== ... ~- A ~ wu.ee.~ l o Fl'J. rr !OMO~. JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN DOONESBURY -11/Htr r.AN >QI Siii MOVT A ~­..aPa IJ#DPttP. THAT --~-llWMf. .,,.., H IJMIP Ml1/lllt:I MJIWJI. --IMTUf. AllJMI." ~1 '~11 by Berke Breathed by Ferd & Tom Johnson <SEE, TH' H,A'SSLE Y,A «<:1TTA Go T~H 1b FINISH A CoMIC BOOK ... -----r by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk by Gary Trudeau 25~ FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1986 Bone found in shuttle'search: ast guard also finds what is believed kind of bo ne it was, and there nothing was to link it to an astronaut. Air Force Base ... Meanwhile, a Coast G uard cutter on Thursday found a large piece of debris believed to be part of the fuselage of the space shuttle Challenaer and said pans of the cockpit appear to be floating on the Atlantic Ocean. large." With the fint maJor find aboard, the cutter Dallas returned quiclcJy to port. CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. (AP)- A bone with blue fabric attached wuhed up on a beach Thursday, and medical ~tmicians examined it to eee iflt belonged to one of the seven astronauts killed in Tuesday's ex- plosion. Coaat UC Irvine will receive a $225,000 grant to equip an Image engineering center on campus./ Al Nadon Reagan to call for the most ambitious overhaul of th9 welfare system since the Great Society. sources say .I A4 One In 3 chlldren In the U.S. are In families that receive financial aid./ A4 World Libya willing to meet with U.S. to ease tensions and wllllng to help fight ter- rorism, a Libyan official aays./AI Sports The UC Irvine basketball team holds off Utah State, 89-79, In PCAA action. /C1 INDEX Bulletin Board Business Claaslfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Fun & Games Horoscope Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather Class A3 CS-6 87-9 ca 86 Datebook C7 C7 A6 Datebook A3 8 i-7 C1-4 Datebook A2 Three and a half years ago Sue Chandler's life was a mess. The bone was found near Indialan- tic, 35 miles south of Cape Canaveral and taken to a hospital at nearby Patrick Air Force Base. NASA spokesman Hu&)\ Harris said tbe bone and tissue fragment measured four inches by six inches by one inch. NASA officiaJs.did not know what "An anonymous citizen found a navy blue sock with what appeared to be a burned bone fragment attached to it at 11 :30 today at the high water mark on the beach," said Steven Okes, an Indialantic police com- munications officer. Huaid police called NASA , which instructed them lo refrigerate the find, then "20 minutes later they told us to take at to the hospital at Patrick The fuselage is the central body PQrtion o(thc shuttle. A Coast Guard spokesman reported. ''they said it took everything they had to get it up there on the cutter, so it must be fairly NASA divers were on the scene and prepared to go down 140 feet where sonar indicated a substantial piece of the ChalJenger lay. An investigating board spent the .day checking TV tapes of the liftoff taken from different angles and NBC said the focus was on one of the solid rocket boosters. ~Net,......., o...w ........ Three Coeta llaa yoatha adapt to Thunday'• rains u they under a broken umbrella while Lydla Green, 9 , drapa a He flt while leaYlng mchool. Linda Mayfield, 6, flnd8 •helter hooded coat o•er her head. Jamie Sheppud, 8 , get. wet. New storm brewing; 2 die in accident By PAUL ARCHJPLEY and TONY SAAVEDRA Of the 0..,. ..... &tafl The first riia3or storm of the new year splashed in Thursday. leading to numerous fe nder-benders. tempor- FRED VocELSTEIN Focus ON THE NEws women in Garden Grove. Chandler attended -not knowmg what to expect. Today. 1t seems she got more out ofthc class th1tn she ever hoped possible After being a student 1n the class for six semesters. the 30-year-old Garden ary power ou1ages and tlooded inter- sections throughout the Orange Coast. Slick roads may also have con- tributed to the death of two illegal aliens locked in the tru nk of a car when it ovenumed on Onega High- •ay late Wednesday night. Mea nwhile, a second storm was due to blow in today with an 80 pe rcent chance of showers through Saturday. followed perhaps by yet another storm on Sunday. The Pacific storm from Hawa11 dropped .59 inches of rain on !\le'A- port Beach dunng the 2'4-hour penod ending at 4 p.m. Thursda)'\ a NJtional Weather Service spokesman ~td. San Juan Capistrano reponed .24 inches. Santa i\na had 61 in ches and (Please 11ee MORE/ A2) Freeway-fee agency meets By LISA MAHONEY OflheO..,.l"llol&WI Representatives from live c1t1es and the county of Orange met Thursday to form a JOIDl powers agency to plan and finance the Foothill and Eastern transponat1on corridors. The new agency will pla) a role in the design and construcuon of the freewa}' comdors planned for the southeastern ponion of the count~. said Stan Oftehe. executive director of the Orange County Transponataon Commission. It wi ll also handle tinancin$ of the $5 16 million project. including the ant1c1pated $250 malhon in fees to be collected on new development. said Of\ehe. who will be the agenC) 's director. Members of the 301n1 po1Aers agenq include fi, e of the eight c111es to be effected b' the comdors. Anaheim. Orange. San Clemente. San Juan Capistrano and Yorba Landa. Orange Count} 1 also a member. representing unincorporated areas along the path of the planned cor- ndors. Three other c1t1e arr e\pccled to JOIO the agenq in the near future The' are If' ane. ~nla .\na and Tustin. Ollicaals from all 1hrer c1t1e~ attended the ThuNJa' ml'l'llng a~ ( Plea..e 11ee FREEWAY I A2) Reporkr Jay Barbree said a ~ by-frame study oft.be film teen by me public seemed to indicate that a IPlice between two of the boocla"a four sqmenu spruna a leak and .. served like a blowtorch and buroed tbroup the tank - a 6,000 dep'CIC blow torch." A sourc.e, speakina on condition he no1 be.identified. told The Auociated Press that "this is one piece of evidence ... they arc look.ins at it, but (Pleue eee JIOlllS/ A2) Bradbury \search puts kink in case Eviden ce found In fnunrelated s laytng case may be illegal By STEVE MARBLE Of ... .,.., Net..., A public defender representing an ex-convict accused of killing a Cosu Mesa man outside a BiJ Bca.r bquor store said his client's nght to a fair tnal has bttn severely Jeo pardized by the anvestagau on into Laura Brad- bury's disappearance. Public Defender Alan Spears will ask that the Sao Bernardino County DmriC1 Attorney's office be barred from prosccuung his client and that murder charges be dlsmissed. The motions. to be heard today. include an accusation that confiden- tLaJ information in the murder case was 11legally seized by authoriues mvesugaung the Oct. 18, 1984, disappearance of the Huntington Beach prl. Laura was apparently ludnapped while campmg with her family near Joshua Tree. The slayi ng and lodnappmg have no apparent fink. according to San Bernardino Count~ Shenffs m- ' est1gators But pears d a1med 1n legal papers 1ha1 his home phone records were seized becau)e he had conversauons "'11h a man "'anted for questioning 10 the Bradbur) case. pears also represents Daniel W1l- hamson. the 38-year-old ex-convict accused of shooting and killing Costa Mesa resident Ross Howe. 31 . Howe. a graduate of Newpon Harbor High School. was vacationing at Bag Bear Lake with fnends when he 1.1.as shot and killed outside a hquor store Juh ~6 IQ S W1lhainson. v.ho has served pnson terms for robbe~. burglary and murder. faces the death penalty A JU~ tnal 1s set for March I I an San Bernardino Spears. though. is ask.mg the coun to bar the D1s1nct A.ttomey's Office from prosecuting Williamson. If the motion as granted. It could mean the murder case would be turned O\'er to the state .\ttome\ General. In a separate motion. the attorne} rt.'q uests that ~harges against Wal- hamson be d1sm1.,sed ~pul' D1 tnct .\ttorne~ Ra\- mond Haight Ill the proS('Cutor (Plea.e .ee MURDER/ A2} She had just been raped and her emotions were numb. She didn't care if she lived or died. She was on tranquilizers or drunk most of the day. Often she was too scared to leave her house. Grove woman has aJmost recovered from the emotional trauma 9f _her ••esa rape -a feat many rape v1ct1ms.-J.F.& ~ never accomplish. The intense fear and anger - common emotions for rape victims -have subsided and she has re- gained most of her pnde, confidence and self-respect, she said. She said she repeated the SS class so often because she teamed something new each semester. allows lights to go on in apartments "I thought the whole world would atop," she said. Chandler (not her real name) said the attack occurred as she was walkina to her car, parked outside an lrvint hotel. The attacker approached from behind, forced her into her car and raped her at knifcpoint. She spent four weeks unable to eat or sleep, until a friend told her about a S6-ycar-old Newport Beach woman who tauaht a self-defense class for That's because Barbara Levy's class is not only a place to learn self defense techniques, it also acts as a suppon group. Le vy is the support. (Pleue eee DSFENSS/A2) By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. .,.., ........ Like a scene from the first chapter of Genesis, Michael Hall walked an to the Costa Mesa apartment where he had lived without power fo r two weeks and tested the light switch. "It works." Hall e:xcTIUmed. scuttl- ing down the blue<alorcd stairs outside to tell hi s wife Michelle. "You hit a switch and it goes on. wh at a good feeling.·· Space tragedy brings out emotions in small children Teachers use various methods to deal wtt chtldrens' feelings of sorrow, hurt ' cxpenencc. Or. Bruce Gavncr, deputy super- intendent in the Irvine distnct, .said that rather than o,.._nizc a district· wide proaram c:xplaanina 10 students what happened and how 10 cope with their ftclinp, teachers and adminls.. trators at each hool devised tbeit own methods. ran11n, from class discussions to wn una cttm to the students at lht oncord, New Ham~ 1h1rt, school whtrt Chnsta Mc:Aubffe • taupt. She was one of the se ven crtw mmtben who died in the Challcnacr on Tuetday. If there'1 an eim"me problem district ptYChololasts can step an and help, Oivner said. Dr. Robert Bu.m>u&hs. pnncipal at C\aJverdale Eleme-ntary in Irvine, invited a p1ycbolOli1t to talk with the students ln their claues. "Our 110&I wu to make them start talkina.'"-Bum>uP• said. "And the kids 1etmed to MOOGd. "Most of\&& doft't know a Ph.D. or an CftlJnttf. but we all know a taeMr, IO .. ~)' felt cloecr ... ( ....... TaAOUT/.Ut r • The Halls were among the esti- mated 25 people who began moving back to the complell on the grounds of Fa1rv1ew state hospital Thursday after bemr. locked out b) manage- ment for nearly a week. The tenants were temporanl) barred last Friday after 1t was dis- covered that they were hvmg 11lcgally in apartments that had not been certified for OCCUP3n e> The~ had apparently been let in b) a manager. who was subsequent I) fired. Costa Mesa -omc1als "'ere wi thholding penn1ts nC'Cessaf') to tum on the gas and el ectnc1t' an t>4 units of the Harbor V11lagt' com pie' because of a safet) hazard. Not enough water pressure was pro' 1ded by the developer to put out a potential fire. cny inspectors said The water systelT\ wa 1m pro'ed this week and the city finalh gave the go-ahead that brought blue-shined -, ut1ht' ~rev. to the com pie \ Thursda' to tum on the power. "'t ou ever ti) slt"Cping on a cold 1.1.aterbed''" Hall said. ad1ust1ng h1~ CoorJcap and racing back upsta1~ to plug an the bed's hcaung de' ice Weannga pmk s~eatsh1n and blue 1eans. Michelle Hall stood 1n the m1dda) dnzzle -31 : months preg- nant and tall Sttth1ng from the snafu that left ~ome people w1thout a home (Pleue eee LIGHTS/ A2) Fire guts get-away trailer IJ LAUR.A MER& ............... A fart at the Tre.a Urt Island Mobtle Home Park 1n South U,Una Thu..,. day caused $65.000 in d&fNllC' and ~.,.. 20 <lOUnt y fi rcfiahtcn to beulc the Aames. The fire auttcd a Wftke,nd eet ... way traikr ownt'.d by Robert and Kay ~ or Fu19a'ton. No ooc ._ 11.ayins at lhe trdlr. a..Md • lcM 26 of the mobllt ~ '*' • lC*>e Paofk COQt H .... ny, .._ 1M llw OCQ&rftd. laid~ Loi ,.,. ot• (Pl•••_ .... , .... =~~~~ l!~'flCl'OUND IN SEARCH.::- ~ ~ COOCh•ve... "It will take some real expert to ~' N had r~nded its take pieces and say it's not Snatk. N '°"-~utlle debris. dispatctnna Redstone, Per hina, Atlas and on and avy -.pa to probe the .. missile on," he said. nark and Rcdston~ are ~;ey~ or the wortd." Cttws two of the early missile1 of the t 9.SOS. dt ~e·~ thousands of pounds of Thousands of Pounds of small <'6~~"t 1ndudina one of the shuttle's pieces of debris found noalina oo the ro s>enels. sea were aboard hips runnina search At. a news conference Thursday patterns over 8.000 square miles. ~e•ecnina, Lt. Cmdr. Jim impson of northward from ('ape Canaveral to oastGuardsaid the cutter Dalla Daytona Beach. P<>ned flndina "a large piC<Jc" and "To my knowledge no personal llja& ~ appeired to be pans of the effects of the astronauts have been 09CllDtt aa the surface. recovei-cd;' said Simpson. et~ ... •ed ~hethcr there was any siao Challenacr, with five m~n and ~wo ~of the seven astronauts women aboard -10clud1n1 o died in Challenger when it schoolteacher Chnsta McAuJifTe - ciploded on Tuesday, NASA spokes-was 8.9 miles hiah and 8 miles off the ma5n1 Hup Hanis said, "no." coast at the time of the ex plosion, but . mpson would not give tht lo-the nearly 2,000 mph speed scattered ~ahon of the si&hting, but said 11 was dcbns over a vast distance. 1tr offshore. Also found wci-e two cone-shaped . ··:rhey had muhiple sonar hits objects described as "about 10 feet" 1nd1catina there is something large on in diameter. One had an attached the .botto~," he said. parachute. indicating it came from Jim Mizell, a spokesman for the one of the solid rocket boosters blown Kenncciy Space Center, called the up b) the range safety officer. Each area offshore "the missile graveyard booster is 12 feet in diameter and of the world" because it contains the contains four parachutes designed to wreckage of scores of failed rockets lower the spent roc kets to the ocean lll'nd the 'discardea first stages of for retrieval. trundreds more. "The ships have begun picking up a The ...,Ch f0t MuftM detWte covwa .n ., .. o1 e.ooo ~· m11ee -~tety 75 "*- ncd\ of 'Cloe ean.'* .. and 50 rnllee out 10 .... • 0<1anoo FLORIDA v ~llt ' - - great deal more debris. larger and more varied pieces." Simpson said. MORE STORMS ON THE WAY ••• h'omAl cl Toro checked'" With .80 inches. • The intermittent rams. accom· panied by gusty wi nds, may have contributed to the deaths of two iJl~l aliens when the car the) were ndan& in 0\.Crtumed and Crashed Wednesday m&ht on Onega Htghway about 14 mile~ cast of San Juan Capistrano. California Hi&hway Patrol spokes- man Paul Caldwell said the uniden- tified victims were found in the trunk of the 1974 Chevrolet Impala that was ~rrying I 0 people in all. After the crash. the driver and six passengers fled. CHP officer Ken Daily said all the people aboard were presumed to be illcpl aliens from Mexico. A search turned up three of th ose who fled . They were identified as Maria Del Rosario Rodriguez. 36. and Cruz Ramona Alfaro Mercado, 23. both... of Pacoima, and Victor Morales Pantoja, 22, of Mexico. The two fatalities have not been identified. MURDE R EVIDENCE QUESTIONED ••. From Al assigned to the Walhamson case. said at wou ld be improper lo discuss today's scheduled hearing. The odd turn of event s un folded m September when Spears refused to tum over detail!> on a client who was believed to ha\t: inlorma11on on the Bradbul) abd uction Spears ~1d attome)-cl1ent pnv1 - lcgc preventrd him from disclosing his conver!>at1onc; with his chcnt. A San Bcrnardrno·Count) grand JUry later 1nvcst1gated the case. St- cause a grand Jury meets m pnvatc, at is not known what, 1f anything. was lea med. Duri ng the investigation. however, Spears' home telephone records were seized, according to coun documents. Tt.e records included the telephone numbers of cxpen witnesses in the Williamson case. 11 was alleged. Williamson allegedly shot Howe without provocation as he was walk- ing out of a hquor store with a six- pack of beer. according to San Bemardmo sheriffs spokesman Jim Bryant. Bryant said Wilhamson later as- saulted a Torrance couple and fired an errant shot at another couple in a nightlong crime spree. He was ar- rested following a car chase. accord- ing to reports. At the time of his arrest. Wil- liamson was a fugiti ve, havinJ failed to report to his probation officer for nearly seven months. according to a spokesman for the state Department of Corrections. DEFENSE CLASS EASES TRAUMA ••. F rom Al She is obses .. t•d wi th helping people. "I'd be in a mental institution toda) had I not t.iken the class:· said Chandler. Le' y·c; three-hour clac;s meets onl) once a week in thr evenings, but Levy ~ays she !>pend!> 30 hours a week outside class tending 10 her pupil<;' needs. She'c; had '>tu1.kn tc; call her at 2 m the morn ing she''> spent evenings comforting thcm c;he's even alcom- panied th em to lOun when the)'ve had to tcc;11f) ag.11m1 an assailant. she 1;a1d he tm•c; to be not uni) a teacher but a friend. as evidenced b) the hugs and kisses ChHndkr and Lt''> bestow ~n each other when the) greet. ' "( JUSt want to educate people to a\01d being •.ic11mc,. In a\01cl kchng hclptcs .. :· \he <oa1d For < handkr. her cllonc; \C'em to have workt•d .. , le.u m·d 1,omcthrng nt'" each ume I wok (the: da.,.;,) I am confident ofwalk111gou1 the door no" h1.•t...1u<;c I knov. I uin h;mdl · .11n \tluat111n ... ( hand!C'r c,;11J Le'' ,,11d 211 pull·nt 111 Ian 1,tu- dentc, ;m r.1j')I.' 'llt1mr.,. battered w1\e\ or ' 1l t1111c, of lnll''t \1..uird1n!f to r Bl -.1at1st1tc, om 1n tlHt'C '"'omen .... 111 be ~xualh '""aultl'd c,11n1l'lln11 111 thl'll lik. \ht: a1kkd I 1.·'} '' hu h:t\ hccn ll'.1• h111g the I ~-v.n·k d,1\\ in <>r.1ngl ( llUt>I) IV.ICt'. I H'•ll 1111 I 'I "l'tlr'> <1,11<1 \ht: got in volved in women's self defense in 1966 after two men threatened to rob and sexually assault her and her daughter m a New York City pubhc restroom. She said the incident not only made her angry because she felt helpless but guilty because she couldn't protect her child. She vowed that the next time she was attacked, she would know what to do. However. her class 1s as much about cns1s avo1dencc as 11 1s about what to do in a ph ) s1cal confronta- tion A would-be v1cum can often avoid an attack simply by tjcinf more aware when she goes out. she said. If she can spot a po\sable confrontation before it happens. she can get away before a problem develops. "The attacker who preys on women relic'> on them be1nf. unaware. w11h their defenses down. ' Levy said. The first thing someone who is co nfronted should do is gi ve up their propeny. "It can be replaced: a hfe cannot," she said. A \Cream often works to ward ofT a v.ould-be attacker she added. he teaches students to use force onl) when their hvcs are in danger and no other alternative exists. She tells them to make sure the attacker 1s disabled wi th one punch. Levy outlined SC\ eral vulnerable areas she rnstruct'i women to aim for the (troin. the throat. the knees. the nose and the eyes. She doesn't stress the use of weapons by her students because a weapon can be taken awa y. She shuns tear gas because it often fails to work when it's needed. Nonetheless, she said there are no magic routes to success. The key is not to panic. "We've been told from childhood that we're not strong. but we are," she S~lld . Chandler understands what Le vy means better than most. She was caught unaware wh en she was raped. Had she know n then what she knows today. she said. the attack might not have happened bey~use she might have seen the rapisfbefore he attacked her. She said had she been more aware he might not have had the chance to grab her from behind. Despite her efforts. Levy said she often has trouble filling her classes. Opposition from husbands who claim Levy's course will make their wi ves too assertive is a common problem. Another obstacle she encounters is older women who were raised in the days pnor to women's liberation. She said learning self-defense techniques confuses them because they were never taught to be assertive. However. she said the largest problem she has had to battle is ignorance. "Nobody thinks 11 can happen to them." she lamented LIGHTS GO ON IN APAR T MENTS ... From Al I \\,,I I\~ l'dl "'~Ill'• \. f\ thlfl~ \~C ()" ll "il' )q (d Ill ch.11 hoU'>l' When \\C rno ul 111 ''' d1tl11't think we'd ha \t 111 In,, lh• ll 1111 '"'Im"' long. '"' ,,1hf Ma11 ••Ir • • ,1111' v.1 re lodgt'd at local rn111l 1 •· 1 1 I . 1" 'l'W Dl·vclon· ment C 1111 1111~111~· up !ht· Wh J hq were .illn"• d 111 1.1~t· c,11mr clothing from lht .1p:.r1rn ·111' under the watchlul 1•\1' 011~.\: 1om11le' 1;erurit) &Uard\, rna~ 1np lhC 1t''>11knt~ feel llkt• burglar' 10 th 1..·11 0\\ n homes Accu\.illom ,, r "ho 1c, too hlamr ~or the mt'>hJp .tr1' 111m hlcd nnd confused · Man.1gc.nrn1 firm \ dl.11w lnH'\I· .nents !>J1d fl \Id ·ntc, "l'H' g1 .. rn apartmt'nt ke\ .. 111 \lore tht•1r hclong-ui.as. but the' "· r 1nc,truc It'd not to move in until till' h111lll1ngc; were ~rtified. Howcvt'r rnan' 11 n:int' a'r11ut• thc' ~~~~( Daily Pilat MAfN OFFICE VOL 11, NO. 31 wC're told hy 1hr apartment rr.anagcr that the> tould move 1n im mediately The)' were alc;o told 1he power would be turned on w11h1n days. Other re\11knts say the same man- ager ordered 1hi-m not to move in until the Ullhllc\ we re installed. I he city hlnmc~ Fairview Develop- ment for not \etthn& the water problem before beginning construc- 11on on the 14.i un11 complex. the first phase of a project to build 550 rnodcratel)'·rmted rentals on the state-owned \Ile Fairview Dr' elopment, led by prominent homebuilder Merrill But · lcr of Irvine. 1<1 grousing because it couldn 't ~t pt'rml\c;1on to tap into a .... ater main ~U feet awa y· from the apartments I he p1pehne was bc- nrath propen) managed by a busi- ness that was a'lk1ng what Butler considered an outlandish price for an casement. The develope r was ultimately forced to tunnel 500 feet to another water connection. at an extra expense ofS30.000. After living for nearly ct month an darkness and eating from a Stcrno- hcated fondue set, 18-year-old Deb- bie Burrough s wasn't much in the mood for excuses. Somebody messed up. And Burroughs said 1t wasn't her. "I think tbc manager and every- body involv~d should be shot." she blasted, fighung back tht' snaffies born from nights 1n an unheated apart- ment. Not everyone was as unforgiving. Tom Childers. a 40-year·old loan broker. slipped a compact disc 1010 the player 1n his new apanmcnt and smiled 10 the screeching guitars of ZZ Top. "Tunes." he y<"lled happily to no one in particular. "I've got music:· OaJly Piiot o.tlY..., 11 Querant-.d Just call 642-6086 Y O•y ' •-0.1 I! rw oo 'IOI "••• YO\l• IM-0? • )Op ... (.t ot10'•7pl'll A"<I fOol' COOy "' Dt What do )OU hke aoout the Daily Pilot., What don't yod ltke'> (~II.the nwnbcr above and your • mcssaat will be recorded. trtnM:nbed and de- .J1vercd to the appropnate editor. The same 24-~our ans~enna service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contnbutors to our Lttters column mus& 1ntlude their name and telephone number for vcnficauon. f tll' u~ ~hat's on ~our mind. ;i. ... ~ s .... .,., • " "'""•• " '"" 00 ""' •"C.•~· ,_ roo-r o, 1 • "' u I>*! • 0 • "' -'°"' '®' .,. .....cs • ·- Mor e rain on t ap for week end The MOOnd Of a ..,... of P9otflc llorma wtll bring .,, IO percent ..,,. of rain Joav Md tonight, dlrnlntlNng to 50 percent 8aturday. the NatloMI w.tNr ler'ilOe Mid. Contlnu9d breay and cool temparaturee In the Orange Coatt wttl eoeompeny period• of rain thrQUOhOut the day, t8'*ino to ahOwer• on Satutd1y. Temperat\ne wltl range from the tow to mid 509 with gutty wind• to 20 mph at time.. LOWt toolgtlt wlll ~ a mtld 50 to 55. A amall craft acMIOfY It In effect from Point Conc.ptlon to the ~loan border du. to eoutheut to eouth wind• of 15 to 25 knot• Ind 4· to e-root oomblned ..... Wind• of 20 to 30 knot• with 6-to 10-foot combined .... er• roreout ror tonight. U.S. Tempe .Qi~~ ,RONlS .. IA Mleml 9-Cll 71 H W•m-c .. io..,.. AIOW>y 25 01 ~ 71 30 'nc>"''"' OIWl FV'"'' Snow 0<.lll.O•O...., '>ldl• ·""'' .... ~ ts JO M ....... 21 02 ..... 11 • .,., w ... " ... ' ~ ... ,, r ~' 1AA 11'" '..-1 ' 74 34 Mp!Mll Piii.ii ,. 01 Mcttotege 25 21 NMl!vllle M 17 Atllitlta IM 21 NftOrlMll• " 63 Atlentlc City 31 21 .... Yor11 30 21 Calif. Tempe ~ 1) 47 Notfolk,Va » 21 Ullmote 32 It °"~City ... 21 lllmll~ IM 2t ~ )5 22 Hlglla. IOM ltlrougll 5 p m FrlOl!Y 81oc:kton '1 S3 ....._. 20 15 72 ~v...., as .. Tal!OeV.-, .. )5 OrWldo « lolM 51 13 "911eOe!pNa '° t1 W•9fteld 71 55 Torr..-15 60 eo <Ml eo.ton 51 22 ..,_.,.. .. 62 """'°"" .. .. Y-"•V~ 8ullalo 23 15 ... ~ u 12 ~I 51 .. IM'llnglon, VI 25 -01 p ,Or. .. 41 ~..., 55 56 c.., u -u ··~ 31 u IWlop 50 ,. Surf Repo rt Ctlllt!Nlon,8 C 50 41 ="City 41 ao ltyllle ... 52 Chel1otte.N C. •• 25 21 25 Cet ..... 64 54 CMyeMe 82 34 Reno <Ml 37 <:ui-Clty ea 52 LOCATION ecza DlfL ~ 21 00 ~ » 11 ~ .. 54 tUfl'e9Ncl\ 2-4 w Cincinnati 34 12 81 LOUle 3" 14 ,_ 15 55 8.,,ta Monlce 3-5 w OewlMd 23 10 a 1 ..... Tempa n 45 ~ 54 46 HewpOt1 8-11 ... w COluml>la.S C 52 27 Sell I.Ma City 51 IS.4 Lone 9Mcl\ 13 51 Seti Diego County ... w Concorel,N.H 50 18 Sen Anlon6o 12 .. ~ 82 $3 OvtlOolC for .. fllfdey Utlle CMl'Oll OllM-FI Worth ea 82 Sen.Mn.P.11 13 .. 58 52 Oeyton 27 15 a..nte ... .. MorvO'lle ... 51 0.-82 31 ::,.-,;: 16 M Mon..-0 eo 52 o..~ 33 1S 27 13 ~ 64 54 Tides Detroit 25 03 tpole-31 » Mt. Wlleon 45 32 EIPeeo ee " a~ :17 ·2 Needlea 64 $3 F.irbenkt 04 ·2t Topeka 63 24 =IMCll ea 63 TOOAY F•OO 17 04 T-18 .. 83 53 Flret IMO" 12;4tLm 4.7 f'laOetall 51 24 Tuite 81 21 Onl«IO 81 51 Flt91 IOW 7·0SL-m 18 Or.rid Aepldt 24 07 WMlllnglon SI 20 P*11~ 71 52 s.cono lligll 12:Mp m 37 OreetF• 37 2t WlCNI• ao 25 PM9dene eo .. Second IOW ll42pm 11 G~o.N C 42 23 Wllll-e.rt 25 11 Peee>Aoblee 12 54 IAT\MDAY Hertford 31 14 ,__... M 50 Flr91 fllGll 133Lm 48 Helena 31 31 Aed lllufl 5e 54 Flrtl IOW 8:3f Lm I 4 Honolulu 8 1 .. "9clwooO City 81 SS Secondlllgll 2 1tp.m 30 Houelon 72 :~ended •-10 83 52 Second IOw 1·21 p.m 18 lncllenapolle ~· ....,_ 15 SA Jeebon.M1 83 31 • .,, .. netdk>O .. 53 JUMllU 32 23 Pan~ cloudy Sundey ltlrougll T.-0.y SenGebtlel ... 52 Sun l'leM lod•y •I 8•111 am. and Mt• !<.-City 111 20 '"''" • ~ of en-. Mond..?e ..,, Diego 15 51 :p:: at 5:22 p.m LMVeveit 54 411 Hlglle ~Ille IOe. Lowa In Ille Sen Francleco 86 54 rltM lod•Y at 11 35 p.m. and Ml• Utile Roell .. H encl lower Sen"-82 51 aeeln ., 10-14 • '" FREEWAY-FEE AGENCY MEETS ... From Al observers, Oftehe said. Irvine has already agreed to partici- pate in the joint powers agency. The city started collecting fees on new developments along the proposed freeway routes in December. But a pending legal dispute with freeway critics is preventing the municipality from complying with requirements for joining the agency. Each member must turn over fees collected to the agency, but Irvine's fees arc being held in a special fund pending the outcome of a lawsu11 brought against the Committee of Thursday's organizational meeting with the mtcntion ofasking for a rules change that would allow Irvine to JOin the agency while iti. legal battles are being resolved. Oftelic said Baker raised the qucs· tion before the meeting and was told that each ci ty council would have to consjdcr an amendment to its fee collection agreement with the co unty to accomplish :ha t. "It's faster JUSl 10 wait," Oftche said. A few months delay 1n 1oin1ng the agency should not hun the city, he added. But Irvine's legal entanglements could last much longer if COST has its way. COST is in the process of asking the state Supreme Court to review an appeals court ruling that it may not petition to bring the de- veloper fee question before Irvi ne voters. said Fred Woochcr, COSrs lcJtal representative. Seven Thousand (COST). a group ~~~~~sde~~\~~~,e~~~ voter approval FIRE RUINS TRAILER ••. Tustin backed away from a com-From Al mitment to join the agency because of Orange County Fire Department. a dispute with Irvine over the Renovation work had just been alignment of the Eastern corridor. Its completed on the mobile home, but City Council will reconsider the Furst said he did not know whether matter in March, Oftelie said. the fire was related to any work being Santa Ana officials are in the done there. approval process right now and Furst said firefighters from the should be ready to join the agency south co unty station could sec the March I, he said. smoke and flames as they responded Irvine Mayor Dave Baker att ended to a call about 11 :30 a.m .. said Furst. The Laguna Beach Fare Dcpanment assjsted. Toni Leech. a resident at Treasure Island. said she could see flames shooting skyward from the trailer. "I thought it was contained when they opened up the sliders." she said, "and boom." another burst of flames escaped from the home. l0~f}GEJ)Y BRINGS OUT EMOTIONS .•. Burroughs said he sat in during one session when the psychologist talked to a group of sixth graders. "They talked of the suddenness of 11, of the shock. We all have known times when the death of a loved one or fnend is impending. but this was so unexpected." Burroughs said. The students told Burrough s they enjoyed the chance to talk 10 the psychologist about their feelings. too. "One girl said 11 helped when she could see how sad he was. It affected all of us," be said. Sally Lee Bierbaum, a psycholo~sl in the Oceanvic w school distnct, partici pated in a panel discussion with another psychologi st and two teachers that was taped for JCET, the educational channel m the Orange Coast. The panel discussed the impact of the tragedy and focused on steps teachers can take in th e classroom to cope w11h the issue, Bierbaum said. The 8rogram will be shown today at 10:3 a.m. and 5 p.m. on the JCET channel. Visiting campuses throughout the district, Bierbaum said she found all theteachers were explaining to their students what happened. eliciting their fcclinas and launching projects to tum the event into an educational experience. "There's a tame for sadness, but then it's time to go on." she sajd. "We should be using that to produce something positive." Bierbaum said the younger hil- dren seemed to be viewing the event as "a son of Star Wars for real, and focusi ng on why people would take chances like that." "The older kids could better feel the impact. They had more of a saddcn- in~ and shocked experience." she said. Beirbaum encouraged teachers to provide proJect opportunities fo r the children. "A survivor needs to feel he's done something. We sec exam{>ICS every- where, such as the lighting of the Olympic torch, and setting up a fund for the children of the astronauts." That's why many teachers are having their students write papers on the disaster or letters to friends and family of the Challenger crew. Perhaps most encouraging to adults who talked with young people about the nation's worst space disas- ter was their support of a continuing space program. "When kids were asked in one class 1f any of them would like to be an astronaut after what happened. 50 percent of them held up thei r hands," Dr. Burroughs said. "They said. 'Our dreams are still there .... SHUTTERS PECIALL Y • PRICED r Capture the outdoors and create comfort with these custom moveable shutters . in the colors. sizes and styles you want I JANUARY 31, 1986 D\ILY PII.Df ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE \OL.1 /N0.5 . . . -. . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 'Beyond Therapy' cerebral slapstick That old gag that "anyone who'd go to a psychiatrist ought to have his head cu.mined" takes on new meaning in "Beyond Therapy," Oiristopher Duran&'s sterling sendup of PIY· choanalysis now on view at the Costa Mesa Civic Play house. In this case, however, the shrinks arc crazier than the clients they counsel1 which makes for a lively evening of cerebraJ slapstick. Director Pati Tambellini, who mouoted a supelb production of .. A Far Country'' (the story of Siamund Freud) a few seasons ago, now offers audiences the flip side of the subject. The three-set show is played out on Costa Mesa's new revolvinf stqe, which couldn't have amved at a better time. There arc some minor~ lems of backstqe visibility to be ironed out, but the turntable TONI format definitely enbanoes the TTTUB. enjoyment by making the tran- sitions (and there arc eight of ----------them) come off smoothly. The play centers on a bisexual man who's been spending most of the ume with his own gender and would like to broaden his horizons. So he places ads in the personal section of the newspaper which keep attracting the same woman. Both arc in therapy, and when they report to their respective analysts the fun really begins. Patrick McGinnis as the fellow who's out to change his luck treads a fine line between the introverted and extroverted facets of his personality, turning in a marvelously understated comic characterization. Offering excellent counterpoint is Kathleen Collins as the reluctant object of his affections; Collins is a particular pleasure to watch as she gradually comes unglued from all the craziness around her. As might be expected, the shrinks have the showiest assignments. Robbie Schoonover is delightful as McGinnis' befuddled therapist who plies her craft whifeclutchinga Snoopy doll and malapropping her dialogue (patients arc referred to as "porpoises'' and her secretary becomes a "'dirigible"). Collins, meanwhile, is presided over by Neil Prusscl, a heavy-banded macho type who's only out to raise bis own consciousness. however briefly. Despite all the obstacles, McGinnis and Collins get together, only to come in conflict with his lover, played poutingly by Thomas Lopez, and their triangle scene ts a scream. Randy Stevens completes the cast as a swishy wailer at a restaurant where the others convene for a hilarious finale. ''Beyond Therapy" is a highly potent adult comedy which holds as much appeal for the average audience as it does for the intelli&entsia. ~ Performances continue through Feb. IS with curtain at 8:30 Thursdays through Saturdays at the playhouse, 661 Ham ilton St., Costa Mesa. Call 650-5269 for tick.et infor~ mat ion. Publisher. K.trtn A. Wittmer Editor. Frank Zini O.rellooA: &Jitor. Dixie Lindsay An Director. St.even Houah Otan.Lion ~ Terry Kandat Production ManllfCr. Roben L Cantttll O..eboolc 1t pubhshed evny Fndly ~ the ~ Cout Pubh1t11na c o • P.O. Bo.11 1560. )JO W. Bey St.. Cosaa Meta. CA 92626. T~ (714) 642""l2 I. Rcplir buliMM hcNr'I ~ 8 a.m. to .S p.m .. Monday throush fridly. Dadfine f'or caltftclllr of ~h item• and kt kn 1s .S s>· m. Monday. n-e en••~ <'Ontent• or O.tcboc* ~ copynahtcd ~ lM Oru~ae COHI hlltilht• Co. All rilfns wt retm'Cld. ------- -EN- ST AR OF 'BRAZIL' PROMOTES BIS MOVIE ······················································t .......... 12 By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer When a studio is launching a big-bud&et, award-winning movie, the star is usuall y brought to town a~d set up in a posh hotel for a round of interviews. Not so for Jonathan Pryce, star of .. Brazil." "Uni versa! wouldn't pay for me to come here," said the Welsh actor. "I came here on my own. and I'm stayina with friends. I still get the feeling that Umversal would like the picture to die." ;.c, , , _-.._ .. ,.~, ~ ..... . -- 1986 SEASON FOR GLORIA NEWMAN DANCE THEATER SET TO OPEN ••••••••.•••••• 4 The Gloria Newmtn Dance Theater opens its 1986 season on Sunday, Feb. 2 in the Robert 8 . Moore Theater at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. Newman will premier .. Cantata, Pan I" - the first of a set of dance pieces that eventually will comprise an entire evening of dance. Also on the program wiJI be a new piece b> the company's associate director, G ladys Kares. entitled .. Each To His Own Rag." In that number .. Kares illustrates life's problems. relationship hassles a nd coping in general. MUSIC FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE? ...•.. 13 By CHRISTOPHER PALMER Rosemary Brown is a London . h.9u~wi fe. Composers v_isit her on a regular basis. They dictate musical works to her, which she records on paper. What is unusual about this relationship is that the composers have all been dead fo r some time. Last Friday evening. I attended a concert of Brown's music. The concert was at the Yamaha Music Education Center in Irvine. U nder the direction ofcomposer/conductor Donn Mills, the center presents concen s to the general public o n a regular basis. This one, .. Music from Beyond," caught my eye. DUTUNTl-E LOTS OF LIRES AT THE GRAND DINNER THEATER ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 17 By BEVERLY BUSH SMITH This week, resuming our from~ti~c­ time explorations of the dining aspect of dinner theatres. we traveled northward to the G rand Dinner Theatre in Anaheim. I'm a li ttle mystified by t~c problem we experi~nced in getting into the theatre. We z~mc-:<S n&;tlt thr~ugh the hote~ s well-marked special entrance to wall an bnc, llckets m lland, 22 minutes. Slowly, slowly, we inched our way forward to the hostess at the theatre entrance to be seated at ~t. A spokesman tells us normally there's no more than a fi ve ----------minute hne. • =:J -AAllVENIS TOP BILLING ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 RESTAUllA1'T OF THE WEEK ••••.•.•••••••••• 16 RBSTAURANT DIRECTORY .................... 19 WID .ARD 8PIR.ITS •.•••••••••••.••.•••••.•••••••••• 17 Face ic; bowt:ng isn 't very sexy. For decadt '· ~ · . spon was considered a bit, uh, low-b. J N. Like Rodney Danger- field, bowlers goc no resFcr. Trying co topple 10 wooden pins wich a 14-pound ball from {,() Fett away could never txcice che masses che way hitting a baseball or sinking a 30-f ooc putt could. Bowling was boring. Television didn ·c help . .Bowling for Do/hrs was unincencionally hilarious. Witching che latest scop on che Pro Bowlers tour taxed the patience of even the mosc ardent sports fan . And TV commercials creited bowling only as an excuse for four Neandenhal buddies co get together to drink bttr and raise hell. In sunny Southern California, faced with its vase array of spons and 1.;suretime acrivicies, who would wi/Jingly choose to go bowling? Ir's a shame, really, considering all chat bowling has co offer. For staners, you don't have. co be in great shape ro bowl. In fact, many bowlers look to the bowling pin as a guide for their own physique. The game is slow-paced and relaxing. In becw~n cums, bowlers can sit back, spread rumors with their friends, finish a beer, visit the restroom or order a cheeseburger and fries from che snack bar. Bowling has an incredibly populist apeal. It doesn 't cost much, so the wealthy bowler has no edge over the unemployed competitor. The young have no distinct advantage over the old and women are competitive with men. It's an ideal winter sport when inclement weather makes outdoor rec- reation undesirable. In recent rimes, bowling centers have become much more chan places co bowl. Almost all now include video arcades, a snack bar and a cocktail loungt. The lounges, in face, att created as neigh- borhood bars, often visited by patrons who have never rolled a bowling ball in their lives. The equipment and clothing range from cacky co gaudy, which is hilf the fun of bowling. The balls come in basic black, but designs wich fl1mboyant swirls of color and glitter are preferttd. The bowling shirrs revered by lt1gue competitors muse be m1de of shiny, Cover photograph by ut Payne An ditttt1on by Sctw HouJth Cowr model: P~d Vo lsctin Life in the alleys can be a ba ll By ~obert Hyndman wrinkle-free, man-made fabrics . The bowler's first name is typically embroidered above his chest pocket while the name and logo of his ream or sponsor dominate the advertisin,g space on the back. Shirr-rails are never cucked in. Then, there att the bowling shoes. If you buy your own, the shoes are relatively inconspicuous in their beige or brown hides. Bur if you ttnc the shoes at the bowling illey, che manager wants to know who's thinking about walking our with them on. So they'tt usuilly designed with a loud, cwo-tone mocif, combining ttd with brown. And rM back of the shoe cells the world, in inch-high numerals, what size shoe you wnr. Believe me, rent1/ bowling shoes will duh with everything you have in your wardrobe. They're supposed to. Bow/~r in unc~r u De~ Bvirwr of chr All~y C.rs. Ar rop 11ghr,)oc-MCC.rrhy. Brwi umo« and ).D. 8otw ,,Uy vicko gatn~s In /~r phoro. Sy NhiJga. EUy Ualima. Shvon M~ld1M and j<N Rodnqu~s of ck Amahaud Kalqxxi1 Team ~l~bnr~ rhru vKrC>rf m rhr Prnnppl~ Lagu~. ~spite all these assets, bowling has been suffering. Bob Ramirez, secretary-trea6urer of the Orange County Bowling Association. says the organization had about 32.000 members when he came on board in 1979 Today, membership has atrophied to about n.ooo. Nationwide. the American Bow/mg Congress reports a dr op in recenc years in rhe number of regular league bowlers Following steady increases during che '60s and '70s, the number of men who bowled regularly in ABC-sanctioned leagues reached a high of 4.7 million in 1980. Bue by 1985. char figure had slipped to 4.2 million. Kay Guadagno,.assisranc secretary for the Orange County Woman's Bowling Associirion. said women ·s bowling lt1gues also have bttn dying o f( over the past five ro JO years. "Mott women have jobs these days ... Guadagno says. '"Some girls who used to bowl ch~ or four rimes a wt-ek are now down co once a wt-ek. ·· Faced with dwindling crowds and a lacklus~r image. operators of bowling Plttfit" 6tt BOWLING REVIVAL/Plgr 10 * oat~/ F11day. January 31 . 1988 I SMTWT F a , "" ..... ,. 5 6 7 8 ' .... --) • C• 1 1 , .? 3 4 15 ,6 1 -I I 18 19 20 21 2? ::3 :>..: :-'5 26 27 28 "ALL BECAUSE OF AGA'l'BA" at the Huntinaton Beach Playboute, Main Street at Yortctown Avenue, Huntinaton Beach (832-1405), Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Feb. IS. .. ALONE TOG8TllER" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Hatbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-SS 11 ), -nigbtly eAcept Mondays at varyina cunain times throU&h March 30. .. BEYOND Tll£1lAPY" It the Costa Mesa Civic Playhowc, 661 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa (6SO-S269). lbundays throu&h Sat- urdays at 8:30 until Feb. IS. '"CIUlll:I OP TB!! BEABr at the Gem Theater 12852 Ma.in St.. Gar- den Grove (6'36-7213), Wednesdays throuab Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sunday performanc:a Jan. 19 and Feb. 9 at 3 p.m., Jan 26 and Feb. 2 at 7:30 p.m. '"DAMP.SAT SEA" in tbc F'me Ans LittJe Theater at lJC lr'v ine (856-661 7), Wednesdays throuah Sat- urdays at 8 p.m. until Feb. 8. "DRIVING AROUND THE llOVSE" on the Second State of South C-Oast Repertory, 6SS Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa Gloria JlfewmaD Daw TIMater dencen rwla tD acllle•e one of Newman'• precl8e claor~bed ••••· The company will perform oa Sanda~ • 2 lD tile Oranae CoutCollece'• Robert 8. Moore Tlaeatre. Call 432-5725 COr more laformaUon. 23RD ANNUAL LAGUNA BEACH WINTER FESTIVAL Local Arti1ta and Craftamen Are Elpeeially ln•ited To Partieipate FRIDAY tltn MONDAY. FEBRUARY 14 -I Mt FESTIVAL Of ARTS CIWUNDS E..hihi1.1, Fgod and Entertainment ARTISANS' FAlllE -10 A.M, .. 5 P.M. FMturint ArtiMN Crom the • W•ern United St.tee Aduh don.tiont t 1.00: a.drm under 12 frft POETS FESTIVAL ••. S.t.,.._y, Fe.._,., 15th 2:30 P.M. in the Forum HOLL y PRADO. Loe A111• poet and OOYeMt HARRY NORTHRUP. poet and actor THE JACK RATHER BAND S.tud.y and 5-481. Fe......,, IStlt and 16dt liOO P.M. on the Creen ,,., ......... s, .. .., ta. iApM ... a..liw fll C IUW For laformatiota • 494-1018 • (9S7-4033), Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:30, Saturdays at 3 and 8:30, Sundays at 3 and 8 p.m. until Feb. 16. .. El.GRANDE DE COCA COLA" at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2SOl Oifl' Drive, Newpon Beach (631-0288), Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. throuah March l. -rllE l"OllEIGNER" at South Cout Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa (957-4033), Tuesdays throuah Fridays at 8, Satur- days at 2:30 and 8, Saturdays at 2:30 and 7:30 until Feb. 13. .. BEAVEN CAN WAll'" at the San Clemente Community Theater, 202 Ave. Cabrillo, San Clemente (492-0465), final performances to- niaht and Saturday at 8 p.m. 11 DO, I DO" at the Grand Dinner Theater, l Hotel Way, Anaheim (772-7710), nightly except Mondays at varyina curtain times through April 6. "IISS ME, UTE" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492-99SO), final performances toni&ht and Saturday at 8 p.m .. Sunda) at l and 7 p.m. "LAGUNA at the Forum Theater on the Festival of Arts pounds. Lquna Beach (63-4-1300), final per- formances toniabt at 8 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m. "MY PAlll LADY" at the Cunain Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real, Tustin (838-1540), final per- formances toni&ht through Sunday at varyina curtain times. ''SOME OP MY BEST fl'IUEND8" at the Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St., West- minster (995-4113), Fridays and Sat- urdays at 8:30 thro~ Feb. 8. "TA.IINO STEPS at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, LaJuna Beach (494-0743), final performances to- ni&ht and Saturday at 8 p.m .. Sunday at 2:30. S.tuday "ALL BECAUSE OF AGATHA" at the Huntington Beach Playhouse. Sec Friday lis!!.•na. \!.. "ALONE TOOETllEll" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Sec Friday listing. .. BEYOND THERAPY" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. Sec Frida listing. ~ OPTBE llEABT" at the Gem Theater. Sec Friday ljsting. .. DA.MD Af SEA" at UC Irvine. See Frida listing. "DRIVING AROUND THE BOUSE" on the Second Stace of South Coast Repertory. See Friday listina. "El.GRANDE DE COCA COLA" at the N-.vwt Theater Arts Center. See Frida --jfi--:·. ~ ~NER" at South Coat Rcpertory:Sce Friday listina. • "BS.A VEN CAN W An-at t.be San Oemente Community Theater. See Friday listina. .... DO, I DO" at t.be Grand Dinner Theater. See Friday tistina. "KISS ME, UTE" at Sebestian's West Dinner Ptayhoute. See Friday r . is~OUNA" at the Forum Theater in i..una Beach. See Friday listing. ....n' PAlll LADY" at t.be Curtain Call Dinner Theater. See Friday li . ~E OP MY BEST FIUEND8" at the Westminster Community Theater. See Friday listing. .. TA.IINO STEPS" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. See Friday list- ing. Sma~y "ALONE TOGETHER" at the Harlequin Dinner Theater. See Fri- day listing. "CRIMES OF THE HEART" at the Gem Theater. See Friday listing. "DRIVING AROUND THE BOUSE" on the Second Stage of South Coast Repertory. See Friday listing. "THE FOREIGNER" at South Coast Repertory.~ F(iday listing. "I DO, I DO" at the Grand Dinner Theater. See Friday listing. "IISS ME, UTE" at Sebastian's West DinncT Playhou.sc. Sec Friday listing. "MY FAIR LADY" at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater. See Friday listing.. "TAIING STEPS" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. See Friday list- ing.. Wedaeeday .. ALONE TOGETHER" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Sec Friday listina. "CIUlllCS OP THE llEA.Rr' at the Gem Theater. See Friday listina. "DAMES AT SEA" at UC lrvine. See Frida Hsti rig. ~"D1t1V1No AROUND-THE BOUSE" on the Second St.age of South Coast Repertory. Sec rriday listini. '1'llE FOREIGNER" at South Coast Repcnory. See Friday listing. "I DO. I DO" at the Grand Dinner Theater. See Friday listing. Tbanday "ALONE TOGETHER" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Sec Friday listing. "BEYOND TBERAPr' at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. See Friday listing. "CRIMES OF THE HEART' at the Gem Theater. See Friday listing. "DAMES AT SEA" at UC Irvine. See Friday listing. "DRIVING AROUND THE BOUSE" on the Second Stage of South Coast Repertory. Sec Friday listini. "THE FOREIGNER" at South Coast Rcpcnory. Sec Friday listing. "I DO, I DO" at the Grand Dinner Theater. Sec Friday listing. . --- ••• FILMS Friday "V AMPYR." Carl Th. Dreyer. di- rector (Denmark 1931 ). This bizarre chiller, also known as "The Strange Adventure of David Gray," isabouta young man who becomes involved an the marauding.s of a vampire who appears in the form of a sinister old woman. Presented as pan of UC lrvane's Film Society wanter quaner series. 7 p.m .. u c r s Social Science Hall. $3, S2.50 and $2 at the door. f hu11s:1• < tltJ\I C ;,//, '-'' ( 1 tll/111111111 I \t ,_.It t \ /lft 'f l/f\ Sailing Adventure Series J•n. J I -Hrrb Pa""" hb. 1 -R•lpb 'laranjo Ac,uss Thre.-Ocean" A ~ arn••v Cruir.tnq At:hlt-nture 1-rb. 14 -l.tt and Ott I a Jrurw''># • Ntc.araguan N1gh1m•1~ 541,i, ,, ~ ... ,_. hll. 21 -Al Hd ~ ... I •ur11 co ..... ua•ts '" c ...... nq ORANGE COAST COLLEGE FRIDAYS n t l'tlll R09£RT MOORE THl.-ntl '••'••f"'w & 4rl1nqton Sis Ct"I• ~ TICKETS S~ loO -•"" ~ •""•"'~ S6 so at "'" """' s..-S?O Ad•~nce S?1 •' ()" • TICKETS (714) 432-5527 \ii,,., ~.u,.,, .. ,n Acr•ptrrrf ,,,, AtlflttHW:.r $.Jlt'.t (Mly C>etet>Ook/ Frkt-v. Jenu81Y 31, 198& I - i :Al I c -o N -T l\DAI I I N U ·I! D ·dancina pleasure frem-4-7 p.m. at update ofinfonnation, includina the llOlldaJ Osko's tf ub Marina. 190 Manna Dr., prevalence of AJDS and AIDS- Seapon Villaae, Lona Beach. No related diseases in ~ County A llANDMADE PAPER WORK- coverctw,e. (213) 493-0444. and surrouodina communities. SHOP, pltid for the ''kitchen" ---Topics include transmissibility, tes.-papennaker, ·is cond~ by Vera WedDeedaJ-tin& and reponina. diagnosis. pros-Vtua Asperarthe Cotta Mesa "'SWEP'f AWAY." This Italian film. with Enalisb subtitles and di~ by Lina Wertmuller, depicts the tumuftuous couruhip of a rich and bcautifuJ Milanete wbo bas chartered a yacht. and a swarthy Sicilian deckhand, marooned toaetber on an isolated island in the McditetTanean. 7:30 p.m., Golden West CoUeee's Focum JI, IS744 Golden West St., Huntinaton Beach. $2 and SI.SO admission. 891 -3991. MARTIN a TONI'S Swina Dance nosis. blood and blood producu , Laaue's Art Gallery. This four-pan O ub features beajnner lessons at 7 new-born "positives," opportunistic worbbop meets eKh Mon. through p.m., iniermediate lessons at 8 p.m., infections and tuberculosis, and cur-Fe~3~.1 andandthe cost1 o~~jcludes and IOcia1 ~at 9 p.m. Each rent AIDS treatments available. 8 ma~1wu1 tQpls ~. 7-10 class is S.-and social dancina is $2. a.m.-2:30 p.m .. Golden West Col-p.m., Wcstcliff' P1az.a. 1044 Irvine Meadowlark Country Oub, 16782 lqe's forum I, I S744 Golden West Ave., Newport Beach. S.9-0284. Graham St, Hununston Beach. St, tluntinaton Beach. S 18 fee. 'l'aeedaJ Friday 8-40-7442. 89s.87SO. WORD CHOREOGRAPHED by .. P.AINLESS AND PRACTICAL ADULTS WITH AllTlllUTIS is the JAZZ DANCERS, INC., see Fri-UC Irvine lflduate dance students PBOTOORA.PBY."Thisworklhopis focusofthiuelf-help,tix-weckcoursc day's Jan listina. arc performed ton.iabt-Feb. ht 8 p.m. conducted by Richard Beenen. who l>cJjnnina tonilbt Topics covered are The araduate choreopapben arc will teach the functions of the 3Smm pnnciplaand &enefiuof exercise. the S.tuday Anita Mitchell, Micbaef Gallina. camera, includina F stops. shutter proper'* o(medicatiom, relaxation JAZZ DANCERS, INC., see Fri-Steve Escudero, Robert S. Salas Jr., speeds, stop and pan action, depth of techniques. joint protection, and day's Jazz listing. Arlene Brackett. Jana Fran~fisber. tie.Id, nash and composition. I 0 eneray c:omervation. Held each Tues. and Greichen Jacobson. UO's Fine a.m.-4 p.m ., Newport Hatbor Art from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at He>eJ Mcm-8a.Dday Arts Concert HaU. SS scnerat ad· Museum, Lyon Room, 8SO San oria.I Hoapital's Rehabilitation Ser-Ta~J-_ _ THE GLOlllA NEWMAN DANCE mission. $4 senior citizens and stu· Oementc Dr .• Newpon Beach. S2S vices l)'IDnasiwn, 301 Newpon TREATER presents 1 multi-faceted dents. 856-6616. fee. 7S9-1 l22. Blvd., Newport Beach. $20 includes "A JEWEL UNDER THE chorco&ral>hY which deliberatelv ...... _ _...__ the te•tbook. "The Arthritis Help- SOUTllEAN CROSS -South takes the troupe's I 0 dancen to the(r a•--, SaDdaJ book. .. 76()..S64S. Africa... Career photo journalist maximum capability while meldina WOllU CHOREOGRAPHED, see • • WAY NE T B I E B A V D : Allen Hubbe.rd personally narrates them tosetber in creative fonn. 7:30 Wednesday listina. CITYSCAPES." Gene Cooper, Weda•daJ his full-length 16mm color film. 3:30 p.m., Oranae Coast Collqe's Robert professor of Art History at Cal State "ENllANCZMENT OF MEMORY and 7:30 p.m .• Fullerton Collqe's 8. Moore Theater, 2701 Fairview Lona Beach, lectures. Participants STOllAGE With Onap: Facts. Phys•· PlummeT Auditorium. Chapman at Rd., Costa Mesa.. $6 advancie, $7 at have an opportunity to view the o1oey and Forccut." James L. Lemon. Fullerton. $3.SO scneral ad-the door. 432-S880. exhibition of Tbiebaud's wo.rks McGau•h, UC Irvine professor of mission. $3 students and seniors. BOB KEANE HIS CLARINET be/l';ore ... _ •--3 m N~rt .. _.!!'~ and ..i:_. C t , .. uKO """'we. p. ., --..... psyc""""-·~. w ...... or, en er 871-8000. ext. 2S2. AND ORCllESTllA. perfonn for your 8atard&J Harbor Art Museum, Lyon Room, for NeurobiolOIY of Leamina and ----------------------....;....-. ---~-------8SO San Clemente Dr., Newport Memory, speaks as pan of ucrs • • ORANGE COAST COLLEGE Robert B. Moore Tlae.tre Fairview 6 Arfi-sto•, Co.ta Mesa Sailing Adventure Series JANUARY 31 -HERB PAYSON FEBRUARY 7 -RALPH NARANJO FEBRUARY 14 -LEE & DEE LaJEUNESSE FEBRUARY 21 -AL & BETH LIGGETT 8 P.M. FRIDAYS Advance Sales 520 Se,,es. 55 50 per program '(iiiiiiir At the Door. $23 00 Sefles. S6 50 per program SOUTH AFRICA Armchalf Adventure Series featuring Allen Hubbard SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 -8 P.M. • Adm1ss1on $4 Advance. SS at Door Gloria Newman Dance Theater 'UNOAV, FEBRUARY 2 -7:30 P.M . • H1'"'" I'll .'in111 .VI 11/1111111·. \ 1 111 J>,,,,, GOLDEN CITY Barbershop Harmony SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8 -8 P.M. (1 'Reserved Seats $7 Advance. SS at Door l OCC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Robert Haag, Piano 8 P.M. -SATURDAY, FEBRUARY, 15 ·~r.tl AdmlS!.IOO''S4 Advctnc~. SS dl Door 0 ORANGE COAST COLLEGE Rot.ert 8 . Moore Tlle•tre f ainrit-"' & Arlinston, Cottt• MeN (714) 432-5527 AM FOR ONRATOA 0 Coll for 1986 SchedLf.le! Visa/Mastercard Accepted For Advance Ticket Sates 'Discounts a11allabl9 tor Children Gold Cards ISentor11 Oeteboc*/ Fridlly, JelMHwy 31, 1986 '"ClUENT PDSP1!'£1'1VES OF Beach. $3 NHAM members, SS Distinsuished Lecture Series in Basic AIDS." Thia 1aninar provides an scneral admission. 7S9-1122. and Medical Neuroscience. 7 p.m .. t---------:.._ ___ __:: __________ __, UCl's Science Lecture Hall. Free 2 for 1 Buy one 1ame and the wond one la free! The Newest Bowling Center in Orange County • 40 Lanes • Pro Shop • Lounge • Arcade \ • Snacl( Bar • Trophy/Embroidery Dept. • Leagues • Parties • Special Events • Tournaments IRYlllE UllES lll-982& 3-415 Michelson Dr. lrlvne, CA 92715 admission. 8S6-7016. H AllS'l'llACI' SUllllEALISM INTO Abstract Eitpreuionism. The Decis- ive Link." Paul Schimmel. chief curator at Newport Harbor Art Mu- -.lNm, presents this slide lecture w11h It. question and answer period 10 follow. 7 p.m .• Laauna College of An. 2222 Luuna Canyon Rd., Laguna Beach. •~sot•. THE N PORT Ill VINE CllAPTBll Patents Without Part-ners praenu their Newcomers' Orientation each Tuetday_. from 1-9: U p.m .. ~ by coffee and con"Vel"lltion. Call S49-1 I 3S for f\an.berinronnation . • ......... , POCUI ••. a aroup of linales IFS 40-49, ~at 7:30 p.m. at die South Cout Comm\&Qity Qurcb, SI 20 Bonita Canyoo Dr .. Irvine. 8'4-7600. TllE IWINO aAJ'8 llNOLIC8 DANCE is pretea\ed with free buic swi~ lesaoas, milers. contests, ~and ' Y: nilbt' .-.ial a~ lt~kR-LTj:jl p,m., E Conejo Reaaurut, 1750 W. :J\l ~l:i~i~;I\~; --0 N Lincoln, Anaheim. $2 admission. 991-0S40. Thanday CAllTIERS SINGLES features Dr. Pat AIJen at 7 p.m., Jeremiah's. 8901 Warner, Hunungton Beach. $3 mem- bers. SS auests. 641-3987. The event is a fundraiser to the Michael J McCulloch Children's Food fund. · Newport Beach. 675-2968. THE FR.ANUE S. BAND Stt Friday's Pop listing. ' . JAZZ DANCERS, INC., a conccn Jazz ensemble from Los Angeles, P.Crf~~s a new repenoire includan* Latin an Vogue," ··Relationships.' and "Going 10 Another Place." Full- enon College Campus Theatre, 321 E. Chapman Ave., Fullenon. $5 feneral admission. $4 students. 87 -8000, ext 252. -~!UrdaY JAZZ PIANIST LES CZIMBER, W'edD11day Kathleen Murphy and Brian Beshore musi~ by Dupre, Jongen, Bossi. SWING VOCALIST BRUCE on violin, and Adrienne Bias on deGnany and others.. 8 p.m., 12141 LEONARD, formerly with ibe cello. 17900 Jamboree Blvd., lrviM. ~wi.s St.. Garden Grove. $6 ad· Cha I. S · a.k Ore 863-3111. GILLIAN WEIR is fea-mission. 544-5679. r ae pav hestra. performs turtd in the Crystal Calhedr"AJ Hazel THE each Wed. at !he El Conej0-Rc.-. W ·gh CAPISTRANO CILUDIER taurant. 1750 W. Lincoln Anaheim r;;::::;;;"='=Orpn=-====Seri==·cs==:-perfi-o_rm_in_g __ PLA_YE __ RS_pi_c_sc_n_t_a_Ba_.roq_:_u_e_S_:pec~- 991-0S40. • . I &;a I ... ::m.~~~-T.,,,,.. CAFE UDO, see Friday listing. JArl PlANIST LES CZIMBER see Friday listing. ' T banday JAZZ PIANIST LES CZIMBER sec Friday listing. ' CA.FE UDO, sec Friday I.isling. Friday BEST PICTURE! ' • I Ii I ii " I ' : I ) 11, I \ \\ \ f\ ; I ...... -:._ --see Friday listing. ~-Y · JAZZ DANCERS, INC., sec Friday THE BO~ rrcscnts dancing music listing. -------NOW PLAYING -------- by emcee Joe Steven Fri.-Sat .. "The CAFE UDO, sec Friday listrng. :..., • tl TOllCI • 1.A "•H• •-P01u NM:" •wuu .... sn111 Authentics," a la·v .. 50's dan,..'band --_., t-•ll••• -ci--, 1-00-•c-,_ .. v._r-.. .. "'" Sanday !111 WJO "' OUJ , ... , .., ao6(1 ~· Cl'>6 Sun. at 8 p.m.; ''Rock 'N Roli _ ::=.:""" •-11to01ouc•c" l.A--. .~-···- Heaven," a tribute to the legends.. CAFELIDO,seeFndaylisung. «11__, r ..... ...._,,_ "VI<•'-C-Cr.lot ~1 I "~· ... •~·•··• l Mon. at 8 p.m.; "Rock Around the •cos,...... 144311 ~ ''" -·--·-·' .. -' .. """"'' - Oock," a history of rock and roll ll~~y ~~'=..':""'__ l!_ ...... su.•to ... _ _;~;:i featurina Jason Chase. Tues. at 8 CAFE UDO. see Fnday hsung. Friday li~iiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiii' ~~~~~~ p.m.; and Crazy Contests. including -lip Sync, Limbo, and Basketball Taeecla_y THE FULLERTON ciufBER Shoot. Thurs. 18774 Brookhurst PLAYERS oerform Thurs.-Sat. from Fountain Valley. 963-2366. · JArl PlANIST LES CZJMBER, 7-10 p.m. for dinner guests at the THE LEE PERRELL SHOW, wuh see Friday listing. Irvine Hilton and Towers' Moretrs HaJ IUtliff' and Laura Vida, features CAFE LIDO, see Friday listing. restau.ra.nt. The chamber trio feawres Ferrell. o n S&XC?phone and piano, and r-__ .:._.:..:_.:...:...:..:..:.....:....:..:..::=.!...:..:.=::-~:__-..:..::=..:::.=::.::....::...:::..:::=~.!!..!.:~~~1 a musical vanety of oldies, country, rock and "boogi~woogie rock 'n roll • Wcd.-Sun. evenings. Club 17. 1670 Newport Blvd.. Costa Mesa. 64S-S448. THE FR.ANltlE S. BAND performs rhythm and blu~ from 4:30-7:00 p.m. as part of the University Center Backlot Music Express. Presented by ASUCI Soundstaae. UC' Irvine. 856-4S89 or 856-5547. 8atarda7 TRI! LEE FERRELL SHOW, see Frida listina. nk BOP, see Friday listing. ..... ., TllBE BOP, sec Friday listi;g. lloaday TRI! BOP, sec Friday listing. THE BOP, see Fnday lasting. WedDeedaJ THE LEE FERRELL SHOW, see Friday listing. THE HOP, sec Friday lisung. T~anda7 THE LEE FERRELL SHOW, see Friday listing. THE HOP, see Fnday listing. ,tpzz Friday JArl PIANIST LEs CZIMBER, who previously played piano with vocabst Al Januu's trio, performs popular m'\lsic in the Irvine Hilton and Towers Lobby Lounat Tucs.-Sat. 9 p.m.-1 Lm. 17900 Jamboree Blvd.. Irvine. 86~3111. CAR lJDO pmcnlS Judi Lee, piano and vocals, Mon.-Fri. from S-8 p.m.; the Udo Jazz All Stan Sun. from 3:»8 p.m. and Thun.-Sat. from 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m.; "freeway," featurina Max Bennett, Sun. from 9 p.m.-1 a.m.: the ~i 8~ •• ~xtet Mon. from 9 p.m.-1.30 a.m., lnter- teetion," with Wayne Wayne, Tues. from 9p.m.-1:301.m.: and the New Yort Jan Connection Wed. from 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd .. Wllff!IN •PIQl.ClllSSolUS~,_, "'~ ... "'WI~ l'{lllfiaJA'l'I A IJ/IMJOO ~ Oolffl\ lWMt 1lf a.NI I) llf fN !IN!' ~ lllD M~ ll._ ~ G \IMTIS • .l'>fl IXl1 1111 Mal Ill N>H Sl~Slll LmN l'llllM.m J.'/41£1tl\S. P{ll~ WIR. ~ ~ AICl h" lfllJ CoU..~lllalm~o.Mt Bml91 hlblt~~IJ ~(At l""I {)#j~ A4JJ ~111..()fj s.w\lS ~l)ISWllOntr l'lal.Clllbl~OI ~ klll .. MOlAtt~ ADfV\M~ Fii 1!15 1:15. 10:30 aa ... •u11•n l1•1111m.-11w edwarrls NEWPORT .:···: .:: ·:. ·;:.. ~l4 0 lb-0 . -· ........... . SAT/U 12:00 2:00, 4:15, 6:15 1:15, 10:30 Sally Field :?J Ja Just when you think you've found the right guy, someone even worse comes along. "'Murphy•s Romance' is one of the first pleasant surprises of the new year, a civi- lized and funny and very perceptive romantic comedy. James Garner is wonderful:• -~t•kC'l 6 EbC'rt, ATTHt.: MO\'IF::-. er ,PO ,,,_,._, __ ,_ __ .,., .. ____ ., D E L P H I . -"--·-·-·-·~ 0 ... .._.,~ ...... !I ..... &TDWIDlll •• edwanls CINEMA "·8!1~ ... 546-3102 f116:te l:ts, lt:lS SAT/M l:IS i:-. '--ltlS. ltlS edn'ds CINE VIUO ....... _. ...... ., 830-6990 TOUP41 ...... ""'° ..... t1s.11:• SAT/91 l:lS. l:ll •• tl5, lltll edwards EL TORO :.:-..::: 581-500 edwants lltlVERSITY c::= 854-8811 edwards CHAITO COOIE =.::. 141.ono Dlltebook/ Friday, January 31 , 1886 241-1700. readinp at the Laauna Bc:ach Public lloada)' Ubmy. An open ladiQI is featured ::.:::...:;..::..:.--=.. __ .---~~~ \D. toailbL 494-9SSO or 494-8375. SCllABBLE 11 played. each . Mon- • I I U I MlCILU:L JORDAN, acclaimed day at I p.m. at the Leisure w~ oontemponry pianist. appean in the clubhouse~ on Moulton Parkway 10 C T--, N -U 8 D Irvine Marriott Hotel's Skyli&ht ~na .Hills. Call 837-7223 for ____ ,;,... ____ _. ___ .;.._..;..;;.. _ _.~---~-....;;;;....~l.~oun111p:...,. Mon.-fri. noon-2 p.m. and... in(ormauon. _ . S-9 p.m. 18000 Von Karman Ave.. . ~C'llAEL JORD-xN, see Fnday MICIU.BL JOllDAN, sec Frida li . ~ IWN'nNOTON BEACH AR L&AGUE holds its monthly mcctin with Buban Jar.usz, nationally r oopjud artist, the-demonstratOI" the meetioa. She demonstrates h creative tcchnigue in watt"rcolor wi t a paintillj of f1owen.. f.dison Com muruty Center. 21337 Magnolia St Huntinaton Beach. Call for tim 842-8718. iacular with J.S. Bach's "Branden-. butt Conocno No. S" performed, u wclf as Corelli's ''Christmas Con- certo." Vivaldi's "Concerto Op. 3, No. 8 for Two Violins" and "IJ Gardcllino" for Oute, and the Tele- mann .. Viola Cooocrto." 8 p.m. Chapman College's Salmon Rccit.;i Hall. GlasseU and Palm, Oranac. SS adults. $3 senion. 493-7682. Satarda)' ----- THE FUU.EB'ION CHAMBER PLAYERS, sec Friday listing. THE PlllLRARMONIC SOCIETY of Orange County oclebraaes the Oolden Batorr Gala honoring Aoss Schumacher, recipient of the 1986 Golden Baton A ward. Also honored is the composer~nductor Johnny Green. 7 p.m., Irvine Hilton and Towcn. 17900 Jamboree Blvd., Irvine. 673-4649. A WOODWIND CONCERT featur- ing noted faculty musicians of Cal State Lona Beach is presented at 8 p.m. in the Gerald R. Daniel Recital Hall. $4 general. $3 students and seniors. (213) 498-SS26. ------· ~anday "MUSIC FOR ONE PIANO, FOUR BANDS" is presented by Christ Collcac Irvine. Featured pianists arc Timothy and Nancy Le'Roi Nickel, and the program includes works ~ Franz Schuben, including the ''Duo ' known as "life's storm," a lovely "Rondo" in A. and the famous "F Minor Fantasy," as well as French music by Poulenc, Ravel, and Biz.cl 7:30 p.m.. Chapel of the Good Shepherd. I S30Concordia, Irvine. SS ~ ·-.. ,, ""I' l "I I I ... I ... ' ___ ,... adults. SJ ltlldcots and senior citizens. 8S4-8002. JENNIFER PAUL, a young harpsichordist, is ptttented by the Oranp County Chamber Orobest.ra and Perform• e.ch's Harpsichord COllClCl10 No. 3. The on:heltra. con- ducted by Micah Levy, also performs Mourt's .. Symphony No. 29" and ~njamin Britten's ''Variations on a Theme of frank Bridge." Today at 4 P:m., Oranae Campus of Loyola Marymount Univenity, 480 S. Batavia, Orange; and Moo. at 8 p.m., South Coast Repertory Theater, 6SS Town Center Dr., Cost.a Mesa. $1 2 aeneral admission, SI 0 students and senion. 777-SS90. Tllanda)' THE FUU..ERTON CHAMBER Pl.A VERB, sec Friday listing. Irvine. SS3-0IOO. hsuna. BRIAN lllELAND, hypnotist and THE SOUTllE~ C~RNIA mystic, is featured atona with The BOAT SHOW, see Fnday lisl1oa. Nelson Fontaine Trio and Jill Ireland Taeeda)' Tburs.~un. at Lord Nelson's, SOON. ~--- Euclid SL, Anaheim. 772-2130. SCRABBLE is played each Tues- llOBERT DUQUESNEL enter-day at 6:30 p.m. at Home Federal ta.ins on the piano with a wide variety Savinp .. on Calle de la Plata at Paseo of musical sdec1ions Tua.-Sat. from de Valencia, Laauna Hills. Call S-~ p.m. Irvine Hilton and Towers' S86-2378 for information. Lobby Lou.DIC: 17900 Jamboree ROBERT DUQVESNEL. see Fri- Blvd., Irvine. 863-3111. damtil>UTBERN CAUFORNIA Sata.rda)' BOAT SHOW, see Friday listina. MICHAEL JORDAN, see Friday SINGER ALMA PIAZZA presents a listin&- complcte cvenina of Broadway show __ __ -----_ tunes, popular pieces and light opera. 1f ed.Deeda)' Music by Georae Gershwin, Cole THE UC IRVINE -00 •• o"E Porter and Stephen Sondheim arc ~ ..r. ed 8 F Tb BOWL between the facultr, and stu-penorm . p.m., orum cater. . UC • U · 417S Fairmont Blvd., Yorl>a Linda. dentsbeainsatnoonat s niver- $6 admission. 779-8591. -sit)' Center HcritafC Room. It is BRJAN OU!!LAND, see Friday list-defined as a "vanity spon of the ing. mind" compet.itioo which tests par- THE SOlJTllERN CALIFORNIA ticipants' knowled&c of subjects. BOAT IBOW, sec Friday listina,. 8S6-Sl81. THE SOUTHERN CAUFORNJ BOAT SHOW, see Friday listing. Tllancla)' BRIAN IRELAND, see Friday list i'1au...BLE is played each Thurs day at 6:30 p.m. at Home Fedcra Savinp on Main Street at York tow Avenue, Huntinaton Beach. Cal 960-2729 for infonnation. ROBERT DUQUF.SNEL, sec Fn day listina. MICHAEL JORDAN, sec Fn<h) listing. THE SOUTRERN CALIFORNIA BOAT SHOW, tee Friday listing. ROBERT DUQUaNEL, sec Fri-SCRABBLE is played on the first P'rtda)' day listina. and third Wednesdays of each month AdftDCe at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach THE IOVTllBllN CALIPORNJA ..... --1 ---_ Tennis Oub, 2601 Eastbluff Drive, RAY BRADBURY, science ficuon BOAT SHOW beains today with a Newport Beach. CaJI 979-7321 for writer, appean for a one-time onl> variety of boats. booth displays of MADAME Z'1 DOLL SHOW and information. spcakina capaemcnt. He speaks on marine cquipmentaod services, fllh· Sale featura more than 1,000 antique ROBERT DUQVESNEL, sec Fri-"The lnvisible Revolutions In Our in& and skiina equipment, and dcm-and coUcctablc dolls and miniatures day listinis. Society" pretentina ideas and prcdic- onstratiolll, beinapre1entect. A ··eoat oo diSPlay from 10 Lm.-4 p.m. SOVTllCOASTPLAZAhononthe tionsoftbcfutureuwercachlheyear A O.y" Jiveaway features a variet)' of Rochclk's Convention Center, 3333 Orange County Philharmonic Society 2000. Feb. 28, 8 p.m., Pacific Chris· prizes given away each day. Mon.-Fri. Lakewood Blvd., Lona Beach. $2.SO Women's Committee's Continuance tiao CoUegc Auditorium, 2SOO E. 2-10 p.m., Sat II a.m.-10 p.m .. Sun. admission. (2 13) 832-2282 after S fund Kjck-ofT and Membership Nutwood Ave .. Fullerton. $1 0 ad- 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Los Angeles Conven-p.m. Drive from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Spcakcn vanoc, S 1 Sat the door, but seating 1s tion Center. SS adults, $2 ch ildren. BIUAN lllELAND, see Friday list-arc followed by a luncheon and limited so call early. 871-8000. eit t under six free. (213)7 48-8S3 I. ina. . infonnal modelina. South Coast 2S2. LAGUNA POETS meet each Fri. at THE SOVTBERN CALll"ORNIA Plaza Westin Hotel, Main Ballroom, A SDDNA.I\ ON ALCOHOL AND 8 p.m. for scheduled and open BOAT SHOW, see ftiday listing. 666 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. DR9,.JG abuse features a discus.sion on c-r-~~~-~~-....:......~~~-~~~~--~~~~~~-.-~...;._------~~--- .'I( r /,,,., rt ( ~ I /;,,,., 1tW'fHt.,.. •"" Allil II ( "'-:! 1/N;lf'rlt hi.,_, .·1i,19<"fH.,.1Aw 1/ ,..in""l 1/;r /,;,,_. • /t°,,; /Im I# I if,.,'"" .'/(///,,. ~ ~:tu )WN ttn'l.RNATH )NAL t•K l\JRJ:.ll r ........ ,, A MARJMAIUC rRl)OUl. TtON "MY CHAUFfEUR" otatrinc D£80RAH FOREMAN· SAM JONES· SEAN MtCLORY. rENN &. TlU.fR [.a..,.,~ HO~AIU> H~-' E.G. MARSHAU ... WITiiERSPOON ,,_..._, t.. MAlllLYN J. TEN!IU Co·~ MlCHAEl. BENNETT Wriu"" _, OWC1ed t.. DAVlD BEAIRD Olttrnw of fltl.11,......,..~ HARRY MATHIAS ,.--""T,...,-=~-bil--, l:.JffN h Rl<:HAIW E. WESTOVER 9 R ..o:J:li£iii5 e Col"r I'!\ lnlu\<' a A Cn>Wft l1>1ttfteli<"'6I PK-turn ~-......... ------· &-:=al· NCR-•• ---" -UNDI .._ .... .,..11 ...... .., --P\AD ~· -ai.-coma ~la&.IMJ. _,_.,.., -111.-. ... ...... .... --... -ClllalUT ....-11M1n _ ....... ... IM•I·* ...... ·--NCR mt a ... ••TllJ9 YEAm·• euc-·ceeeo a TO •n•Me OF EJmEAa. llDT. • THE KDID Of WRO LE·HEAa TED DMllA THAT llAKE8 PEOPLE UNE UP TO 8EEIT." -UOCZ .. ,,A,,_,,, PIA YBOY MAGAZINE (BJ~ o-n.....,~ '-'1 .. :_A~~l1..1i;;;ml\l:ll\I I The Newman Dance Theater :OO<U: .. ;de~, •• d:r."'°' 1 M::,,~. :,0~a1 .. v: is setto perform on Sunday popularity of heroin. as wel as the des Dr. So .. Rancho Palos Verdes. consequences of substance abuse and Gu1d~ tours are featu~ on Monday pieces that eventuall y will compnse an entire evening of dance. treatments available. Feb. 3, 7-9 p.m.. and Tuesday each week during the The Gloria Newman Dance Western Medical Center/Santa Ana. winter months. After lt'aming some Theater opens its 1986 season on 1001 N. Tustin Ave .. Santa Ana. and of the history of the 31-year old Sunday. Feb. 2 in the Robert B. again Feb. I 0. 7-9 p.m.. Western occananum. the tours depart on a Moore Theater at Orange Coast Also on the program will be a new Medical Center. Anaheim. 1025 S. two-hour stroll through the park. College in Costa Mesa. piece b) the company's associate In tha1 number. K.ares illustrates life's problems, relauonsh1p hassles and coping in general. Tickets for the pcrf ormance arc available at the college for S6 in advance. S7 al the box office the mght of the event. Anaheim Blvd .. Anaheim. Free ad-Stops include "Baja Reef." killer Newman will premier "Cantata. director. Gladys K.a~s. entitled mission but seats are limited. whales Orky and Corky. pelican~ Pan I" -the first of a set of dance "Each To His Own Rag. .. 953-3S40. penguins, walrus'. dolphins. and sea ,----------------------------------------- PROJECT PACE, INC., St. lions. Guests are introduced to some Joseph's Hospital in Orange. will be of the most lovable animals along the training volunteers interested 1n par-way, and tour guides answer ques- ticipatina in the Supportive Counsel-tions of virtually every nature. S5 ina For lhe Older Adult. This J~hour adults. $3 children ages 3-I I. The class beains Tues .. Feb. I I from 9 park is fully open Wed.-Sun. from IO a.m.-12:15 p.m. Volunteers will learn a.m.-5 p.m. (213) 377-1571. communication sk.ills, explore facts MOVlELAND WAX MUSEUM, and myths concerning aging in o ur 77 11 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Elvira society. learn to handle crisis calls. is the newest featured replica among and become acquainted wi th com-the aJrcady elaborate collection of munity resources available to help in movie and television memorabilia -Wrle of need. 898-0043. including life-like replicas of more "FUN, SUN AND THE COMET" is than 200 renowned stars. Daily I 0 the titJe of a 20-day tour of New a.m.-8 p.m. with Fri.-Sat. open until 9 l.ealand for outdoor lovers and p.m. 522-11 55. amateur astronomers interested in OLD WORLD VIU..AGE, 7561 studyina Halley's Comet. Held Mar. Center Ave., Huntington Beach. 31-Apr. 19, hi&hliahts include meet-S~ty shops are located in this inpand parties with local astronomy VJllqe that features the charm of club& in Auck.land. Rotorua. Well-quaint European vi i~ with co~ inaton. Queenstown and Dunedin. bled street!: lantern li&ht.s. and 70 ~2.687 per person, double occupancy. murals of european scenes painted includes round-trip airfare. first class o n exterior walls by European artists. hotels, a home-stay. special 894-0747. astrono my-related meetlOJS and lee-QUEEN MARY, Long Beach tures. around transponauon. trans-Harbor at the end of the Long Beach fers., porterage, daily sightseeing and Freeway. EA hibits include ~aJ more. 960-2300. effect sound and Light shows 1n the Engine Room and Wheelhouse re--ODCol.a& lt•enta enacting a near-collision at sea. and pALllOA PAVILION, 4()() Mam an extensive World War II display St., Balboa. Catalina Passenger Ser-depicting the "Queen's" active role as vice provides weekend service, Fri.-a troopship. Daily 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun., to Catalina. Passengen have the (2 13) 435-351 1. opportunity to si&ht IJ'CY whales as SHERMAN LIBRARY AND GAR- they mifratc south. Daily service DENS, 2647 Pacific Coast Highway, resumes 1n March. 673-5245. Corona dcl Mar. Roses, c:actus, • BRIGGS CUNNINGHAM AUTO-annual gardens. an orchid con- MOTIVE MUSEUM, 250 E. Baker SL. scrvatory, koi ponds and a gift show. Costa Mesa. Antique can circa 1912-Daily 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. praenl 9 a.m.-.S p.m. Wed.-Sun. UNIVERSAL STUDIOS, JOO Uni- .546-7660. vcrsal City Pl., Universal City. A GEAR UP FOR FAll ... "Sperry Top-Sider." with reg1S1ered ont1·shp sole Put them with our great selechon of qctl\/0\Y00r penis and sh1r1s 8~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND · NEWPORT BEACH· (714) 644-5070 CATALINA CRUISES, Catalina auided tram tour of UniversaJ's Land.ins. Lona Beach. Whale watch-famed 42~acrc back lot and the ina every Sat..Sun. throuah Mar. 16. Entertainment Center, which fca- plus selected weekdays. The three-turcs fi ve live shows, is offered. (818) hour crui1e features 700-passenger. ~5~0~8~-9~600~=· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:;;;;;:::;:;;;;;:::;:;;;;;:::;:;;;~~~!:::~========;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;;::;;r::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::: tri~ vessels . .527-7111. r. b lSNBYLAND, 1313 Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. The new "Circus Fantasy" event. a Parle-wide circus celebration, continues daily show- c as i na pro fessional clowns. daredevils and live animal acts. "Circus on Parade" is presented at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sat.-Sun .. and 3 p.m. Mo n .-Thurs. The "Aud io- Animatronics" cast of the .. Country Beat Jamboree" star in a new va- cation-themed show entitled the "Country Beat Vacation Hoedown." This foot-stomping musical is the third performance for the lifel ike, sj1t4ing stats who are showcased in their own cozy, pine-walled theater located in the Park's Beat Country atea. The Mllic Kingdom continues to celebrate iu 30th anniversary with the "Gift Giver Extraordinaire Ma- chine." Sat.Sun. 9 a .. m.-9 p.m., Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 999-456.5. ~01TS BBIUl Y FARM, 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. The park featurei 165 rides, shows and attrac- tions in five themed an:as includina Old West Ohott Town with stunt shows and cancan dancers. Other entenainment includes country music star Jim Tumcr. the fabulous Tonyon Brothen, and Snoopy. who meeu his pests in his home. Camp Snoopy. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m .. Sat. 10 a.m.-10 p.m .. and Sun. 10 a.rtl.-7 p.m. 22~.S200. "THE YEAR'S MOST WINNING COMEDY.DRAMA ... ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST.'' FRI 7:30 9:30 -~nctntlinb,4 N.Y. nmtS SAT/SUN 1:15, 3:20 5:25. 7:30, 9:30 ''SCARY!'' ..... ...... TMf .. l'OM,., "A HORROR FAN'S SWEET DREAM ... ,_,_,....,_•usmn,.2: ---=-..,.·•lfl'llS _ _. • ..,__. .. Qll .... Mtm•-. •"81f_. --0 ..... -c:Mlm.,.... .. -Sllll'l ........ ... R ---r::-=-FD It. ll('W lll *MA c ... i,.<-c.., eum -• r BOWLING REVIVAL •• : FromPateS ~ <:qtters have recently embarked on American Recreation Centers, which campaiJns to improve bowling's owns Forest Lanes and 27 other reputation and add some excitement bowling oentcrs in California. to the game. Forest Lanes is also amona the For starters, they're tryine to dump handful of bowling oenters that stay the word "alley" from their names. open 24 hours on Friday and Satur- Call it a bowlina center. they plead. day ni&hts to attract youna couples on not a bowlina alley. dates and ni&htclub petrons look..ina "Bowling oentcrs are really tryina for additional fun after the ti.rs close to clean up their act.s." says Lee at 2 a.m. Kimti.11, aeneraJ mana,cr of the "The entire clientele for bowliDf Kona Lanes in Costa Mesa. "We're has really improved in recent years, tryjns to chanae the reputation that R<>sensar,s.. "lt'snotUkeapoolroom bowhng is only for bouseWives and anym<>R. ' blue-collar workers." If you were to visit bowling oentcrs In that spirit. operators arc trying like Forest Lanes on a Friday or all k..indsofnewideas to boost interest Saturday night. you mlabt be sur· in a tired pme. prised to find such a biah number of At Forest Lanes in El Toro, for tcen-qen and youna men and eumpk, ICJleral manqer Lucy women. RoterS Mys the new Lottery Lanes "The bowling alley is still a pat have beclome a bis hil A arecn pin is pJa« for guys to meet ajns," R<>sen amed in with the repl&rones. If that says. pin i1 aet in the halCl position, and you In some circles, the borina pmc of rolJ 1 striU. you wiJl a lottery ticket. bowling has actually become a hip Then, you have the cbanc:e 10 win pestime. &i ven iM ri&ht tet of circum· up to I 0,000 California lottery stances. tickets from a drawina bdd by Conlidcr that io San francisoo. one 1• D•tebook/ Frtdmy, Jmnuary 31, 1986 C!S of the nation's most accurate barometers of cultural trends, bowl· ing bas shown itself to be a well-suited pertner in its marriqe to rock videos. An otherwise duH bowling alley at I SSS Haiaht St. turns into one of the city's hottest ni&htclubs., dubbed Rock ·n· Bowl, every Friday and Saturday niJi!t from I 0 p.m. to 3 a.m. Bay Area nitbt owls who flock there are treated to "IJUIC clauical and obscure rock videos" shown on a pant 9-by-12 foot video tcreen io the middle oftbe alley. In addition, each lane comet equipped with a 25-incb screen for personalized vicwi~ while a bl.lat sound sy1tem and niabtclub li&htlna completes the effect. Whc~ cite can you roll strikes while watdtina the latest Dire Straits video? At least one bowlina center in Oranae County tw picked up on the idea, addioa the music, If not the videos. for ill late-nilht customers. The best·k:nown llock 'n' Bowl locally is held Saturday nipts at Garden Square 8owtina Center in p c - Garden Grove. From midnight to, 4 a.m., bowlers arc treated to rock music spun by a disc jockey and often dance wherever they find room. For only SS, the late-night pany- &oers have unlimited bowling and turn out in crowds from 80 to 12-0 people, says manqcr Joe Russin. "We're prot.bly the most popular Rock 'n •Bowl in the area and attract a real fun crowd," Russin says. Such effons to polish bowlina's imqc have helped, says R.F. Cor- dennan, manqina editor of Pacific Bowler. a Garden Grove-based week· ly newspeper dedicated to covenng the locaJ .. bowlina scene. "The:rc arc all kinds of promotions ac>ina on because they're losina not only the women's lclaucs, but the 1c1gues that be&in later at ni&ht," Corderman says. "People aren't Willi· Ina to sCay up u late as \My used to." .. The)'.' re all tryint new thi nas and I think it 1 heloina a fittlc bit." While species may be thinnina in number. bowlen art r•r from extinct. 0 - pz (J)MOYIE H * "Monty PyllOll ll¥t Al The Hollywood Bowl" (1982) John a... Mldleel Plln. -2:9- i --· Ac.cording m the American Bowl- ing Congreu. 12 million go bowling each week in the United Sta~s. Of those. 8 million are adults who perticipete in established bowling lequcs. Another I mjllion arc youths competina in leagues. The other 3 miU1on bowlcn visit the alleys for open bowlina. And if you think all the ~wlei:s come from Minnesota or M1S50un. think apin. The ABC bas its taracst membership in the states of New York, Michipn and Ohio. Number four on lbc hat .:_California. .. There really are a lot of advan-taaes to bowlina." says Kimti.11 of Kona Lanes. "Il's competitive: you act the th.riJJ of competition. With handicap llCOrina. the betinncr can compete with someone •ho's been playiq for yun. It's also a arett way to aocializ.c. "But one of the belt tbinp about bowliq is that 10t11e people u.IC it as a release. You can lc1 your fru1tration out on the pins." ----........ ..... ·- Bo w ler's guide_ to the Orange Coast By ROBERT HYNDMAN Six bowlina cenien can be found throughout the ~ Coast. While they vary sli&hdy in SlZC and prioe, all offer similar facilities and op- ponunities for te.fue and open play. a.m. to midnight. Evening prices are S l .ro~r pmewithili~~ntsdu~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the day and for juniors; shoe rentals are St. Your best bet 1s to find the one closest to home. They include: •Forest IAMI Bewllat Cater, 2~77 1 Centre Drive, El Toro, 770-0055. Features 40 lanes, a game arcade. the Dartiy's Pub cocktail lounge, a snack bar and a pro shop. Open Sundays throuah Thursdays from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m.; Fridays and Saturdays, open aJI night. Eve- ning prices are $1.80 per game with discounts during the day; shoe rentals are 75 cents. i Fontala Bowl, I 7 11 O Brookhurst St., fountain Valley, 963-7888. features 60 lanes, a game arcade, two lounges, a snack bar and a pro shop. Open Mondays througtl Thursdays, 8:30 a.m. to I a.m.; Fridays and Saturdays, 8:30a.m. to 2 a.m.;. Sun~ys, 8 a.m. to midnight. Evemng pnces are $2 per game with discounts during the day and for 1uniors; shoe rentals arc $2. •ff•~ Laes, 19.582 Beach Blvd., Huntiqton Beach. 963-4587. Features 32 lanes, a cocktail lounge, a snack bar and a pro shop. Open Mondays throuah Sundays from 9 • lnlae Lues, 341 5 MicheJson Drive. Irvine. 786-9625. Features 40 lanes, a pme arcade, a cocktail lounge, a snack bar and a pro shop. Open Mondays through Sundays fr~m 8:30 a.m. to midnight. Evening pnccs arc Sl.98 ~r game with discounts during the day; shoe rentals are SI. •Jtou Lues Bewlla1 Cuter, 2699 Harbor Blvd.. Costa Mesa, 545-1112. features 40 lanes, a game arcade, pool tables, a lounge, a snack bar and a pro shop. Open Mondays, 10 a.m. to midnight; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 9 a.m. to mid- night; Fridays and Saturdays, 9 a.m. to I a.m.; Sundays. 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Evening prices are S 1.75 ~r $lime or $7.50 ~r hour ~r lane wnh ru~ counts dunng the day; shoe rental is $1 ~rpair. •Saddleback Laoes, 25402 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo, .586-5300. features 32 lanes, a game arcade. a cocktail lounge, a snack bar and a pro shop. Open Sundays throuP! Fridays from 9 a.m. to midni.&ht; Saturdays, from 9 a.m. to 2 a.m. £vening prices a.re $1.75 per pme with discounts during the day; shoe rental is 7.S cents ~r pair. Guitarist Slick is still versatile By l\ANDY JAY MATIN Dllly .... C-1 p I ft I Cinemax docs justjcc to a rockabilly legend tonight in "A Rockabilly Session -Cati Perkins & friends." an hour-long special that will soon be released for the home markeL Fcatum:l prominently aJong with Enc Clapton. George Harrison and Dave Edmunds is guitarist Earl Slick and his two ex-Stray Cats cohons Slim Jim Phantom who wbops it up sharing drum sticks and cymbals with Rinso Starr and Lee Rocker who brings an authentic rockabilly touch with his upright bass. Slick, the flashy guitarist featured on David Bowie's Serious Moonlight tour and more recently of John Waite's "No Brakes" band has been popping up all over the place. You can catch him in Phantom, Rocker & Slicll's videos .. Me n Without Shame" and "My Mistake" or tending to his endorsements for a new line of namesake guiiars at the NationaJ Association of Music Merchant's Sbow held earlier this month at the Anaheim Convention Center. lt was at the NAMM show in '84 that the three musicians got together to fonn Phantom. Rocker &. Slick. Said Slick in a telephone interview: "A friend of mine was hanging out with Jim and Lee. That is one of the reasons I went to the NAMM show. It's a pretty cool scene anyway. You get to sec ~pie you haven't seen an year. I mean you run into everybody down there. Of course I had some endorsements to attend to but I also wanted to get the word out that I was looking for a good situation." Slick, who is married and recently ce lebrated the birth of his first son, bad been taJlrin& about settling down to one gjg ever since coming off the road wi th Bowie. "l don't like doina that much hopping around," Slick said. But until I met up with Phantom cl Lee circumstances have prevented me. U ntll now I had not been •ble to find the riJbt pys. The reason that this band is working out so well is that we all like the same kind of music, And we aJJ have the same k. d of energy." Slick. who is a aooct bit older than bis two c-0m~nions, d hqwt' r ta.kc his shalt o{ ribbtna about being the ··vand ol' man." Stkki'°' to one Iii ma~ean playing with the same bunch of guys but when you tulveahit record is not much 1ime for staying at home. "We've done a hlieuofar"'(openinafor Heart at the Universal Amphitheatre), said ~lick. "The record just came out in Europe and we will be hitting the road later in Fe~ ... Tnctma throuah the album it is easy to sec how the public caught on to the band's sound. It is besic blues rock with influences drawn from the Rplling Stones/Small Faces tchool. "My Mistake" even btu.res a guest solo fro~ Stone, Keith Richards. SJick explains: "We were recording in Chicago and I got invited to a birthday~ for Mick Jager. We were looking for someone to do a t0lo on the tract, It wass:imple, really. I met Keith at the p,anyandjust asked him if he would do iL I love what happened on that track. ' Otherauesuon the album include longtime friend. pianist Nicky Hopkins and Carlos Alomar from the Bowie tour. I "'ANAHEIM Padftc·sAnahelm Dr·ln 879-9850 iiiiEi Man-n Brea P\au 529-5339 fl. TORQ ~ Saddtltbkk 581 ·5880 --•rm u-•JMJ -.. CG&IT fUZA NaAC IA-I a-m.,.. -m..-__ .,.. •CIUlll.U -.. .-a --Nil -· Q NaAC CW:•• -... i:.-.., 1WI ...... STARTS TODAY HUN'TlNCTON BF.ACM Edwards HuntingtOn Twin 848-0388 LAHABM Paofk s La Habra Dnve-ln871 ·186Z ORANGE City Center 634-2553 I -··•ll •cmc:oma .,....1.7 9-"1MI c:oma MIWIWa sm •EWIU11WI .. WESTMINSTER Edwards Cinema West 891·3935 iiMiiE I.AMI~ Pacl1\c·s Gateway SZJ.1611 SANTA ANA t/ WESTMINSTER F.dWards Woodbr1dge 551-0655 LA HABRA AMC Fashion Square 691 -0633 Eowards BnstOI Pactfln Hl·Way 39 540 7444 Dnve-ln 891 3693 v PTesented in C1ne-11 (Your AM c.v radro 01 l>O'Uble ridto IS your Sptilk'tf) Oatebook/ Friday, January 31, 1986 11 '' I I I r · NOW PlAYING .-ANAHflM ~fl(l~O. In f19,tl50 eoeu M«SA £ ........ . 111•1 S40-1'"4 COil• Ml:SA E~a C'"fN CMw ,,.,.,., I fOUHTAIH YALLH (ftlldlJ~YJllfY a.1500 LA HA811A AMC F Woon._, 691 06Jl LA ..-IRAOA Pi1ctl1t J (ll!l .... oy ~ 1611 12 Oatebo<>kl Frida • January 31, 1986 • •-t•."Ctt-• ...... ...... . ~ ....... , .. .... ANfdt~·-ft--- L By BOB THOMAS over the squabble, convinced bureaucratic blunder. • • s o ,,_...... Sheinberg that the film had aupcted It was directed by Gilham. the only LOS ANGELES -When a studio enough interest to hazard a release. It American of the Monty 'Python is launcbjn& a big·bud&Ct. award-opened last month for a week in Los zanies. He wrote it with Tony award- winning movie, tbe star is usuaUy Angeles to allow it to qualify for t~e winnin& writer Tom Stoppard and brought to town and set up in a posh Academy Awards. It also opened an Charles McKcown. hotel for a round of interviews. New York. where it received critical The director of "Tame Bandits." Not so for Jonathan Pry<:e, star of raves. Gilliam found financi~g. for "Brazi.1" "Brazil." Alan Sutton. a spokesman for from Universal ($9 ma Ilion for Unat- "Universal wouldn't pay for me to Universal. said the company is be-ed States-Canada) and 20th Century come here," said the Welsh actor. "I hind "Brazil" and is "platforming" fox ($6 million for Europe). He came here on my own. and J'm the movie's release. Besides New assembled a stellar cast of c~mco staying with friends. I still ~t the York and Los Angeles. it will be an players: Roben ~Niro. Ian Holm, feeling that Universal would hke the 100 theaters later this month and Bob Hoskins, Michael Palin (of picture to die." ~ more later'. Monty Python) and Jan Richardson. "Brazil," Teny Gilliam's Or-Still, Pryce felt Universal was The role of Sam Lowry. the Evcry- wellian vision of bureaucracy gone halfheaned in its release of"Braz1I," man who endures the horrors of a mad, refuses to die. It was rcleptcd to as evidenced by its failure to send him computer society, was more of a the sbelfby Universal Pictures ch.air-on a publicity tour. problem. man Sid Shein~ who believed the However, Gilliam now says he is "Teny wrote the script for me . frc-tic nature of Brazil" would not tan· · the late '71'\. " recalled '"' satisfied with "the marketinJ and s ing m \13. · attract a bia enouab audience to promotion and he will be going on Pryce, a lean man with long face and warrant the millions needed to mat· nationwide tour. innocent eyes. "As the years passed. tt Itel it became a Dorian Gray situauon: l The movie became a c:aute cekbre Few films in recent history have aged but the pert didn't. when Gilliam took ach pleadina with had such a bizarre hjstory as "Brazil," "When Terry arranaed the Amen- Sbtinbera to allow it to be 1CCn. which has nothing to do with the can connection. the studio wanted a Gilliam finally manalCd to show it to country ellcept for playina the song. member of the 'Brat Pack' to play the Los Anleles Film Critics Aslocia· ··eranl." The movie is 1 black Sam. So I figured I was out ofit. But in lion, wbo prompcly named it best comedy set in the near future about a h' h T .. h t b n•· 9U. lower-level civil servant whose life as can erry .. nows w a e wa ~. picture of 1 5. 0 tbe bl' . -....0 __ a ni· ... t-·--..._use of a and du.rjna the time he was lookina _Tbe1ri~aiward,iiif9iuiliweli.4i:iu!"ll~purg~K:tlITtyW-'ii~~i"il':"'•iiii .. <;•·~· ... w; ....~ .... ~:-1 for another Sam, he kept coming back ,. to me." WAT,_. -..n ........... ................. ·-----. ntlCOUMI~"''" ·-... ,..,,.. .... ... _....,._ IOWNMeOUf .. llVmlY-.U• ·-................. ,__. .. IM»llMU ... 111 .................. .. ,_.,.. IOI DMMAllONI• ...... llPMAft ..... '°" IOCICY Pl INt ......... -·I'!·-~ '"' llll Of TIMll ...... ............ , ... llOI LOWI YOUf•ILOOD • ................. ILU'•MTOlll 1Nt ....... .., ....... .wa Of '"' ... ... .................... * _,... * * YOUf•ILOOD• * * ......... .. _. .. ,, .. _,_.. YWOfntl~• * ................ * MYUUW!I-• ORANGE i...~-YI.:: --llOWll1111 l&AMI n ON ll90 • ~ ..... WNIAftLY .1mrs IUMN ,., .. __ _,..., .... ... ......... -. ...... , ... .......... .-(?M) ...... TM1 MOnON ~tit ntl lllT Of T-. ...... MAUllU ....... • JLl'lat ... * '** loHABRA ., ... , ..:._:uai 1,~ ' _ .... YOUf•ll.OOlt lll TIM°'ntl •MON• * ................ MYCMAUJ,.,.1111 * ~ON aM .,_., PMT 21 , ......... . TIWCw.MW M'll'Cll • Three ycars-.o. Gilliam scot Pryce the .. Brazil" scnpt .. I was overwhelmed," aid Pryce "The script reads just as strongly as it plays on the ~n. I saw no reason why I could not play Sam. True, I WI.! in my early 30s (be is now 38), but time had not been too cruel to me. I could comb my hair forward (to covet a bald spot). I saw Sam as the kind e· clwactcr Jif!!my Stewart did in the 1930s and 19405., an innocent whc looked older th.an the young mar pla_ying him." Pryce. who had starred in ··Thi Ploughman's Lunch," and ~Some thin& Wicked This Way Comes;· dJ< somethin& be had never done before He asked to be tested . Gilliam was reconvinced, and fo five months Pryce worked every da) He even did some lll'Cnuous fanw· scenes that involved nY,ina 1ik.e a bin to the strains of .. BrazJt:• "There were some rough days, but never lei.I tite4," laid Pryce. "I alway looked forward to IOlna to the studic Workina with tboee auest stars wa enouah to keep my CftCTIY up." A native ofHolyweU, North WaJC1 Pryce bu had a distinpiahcd SI.If career in EQ&land. His Hamlet, 1 which =ycd both the hero and hi father's t, was a hit at the Roya Coun ter. last year, he gave a critical! acclaimed performance on Broadwa in .. Accidental Death of an Ar arcbist." Remember family or fnendS w1tl' Special Occ(\St0n. Get Well or Memorial cards 'l¥ffiE AGHTlf'G fm 'O.f?UFE American Heart~ Association,, ' s J ia--~- • Unique concert with a metaphysical twist By CHRISTOPBEll PALMER o.IJ,...Cc a r Rosemary Brown is a London housewife. Composers visit her on a regular basis. They dktate musicaJ works to her, which she records on paper. What is unusual about this relationship is that the composers have all been dead for some time. Last Friday evenina, I attended a concert of Brown's music. The con- cert was at the Yamaha Music Education Center in Irvine. Under the direction of composer/conductor Donn Mills, the center presents concerts to the feneral public on a regular basis. This one, ''Music from Beyond," cauaht my eye. Stuart Rob& was our presenter. A noted musician and authority on psychic phenomena, Robb Lives in l\nahcim. He introduced a small but 1 receptive audience to Brown's story, and to her music. According to Robb, a man ap- ~arcd to Brown in a dream when she was eight He would, he p,ledged. return to .. teach her music.· Later. she was able to identify the man from a photograph as the composer Franz Liszt. Decades later, in 1963, Brown began her new career as cmanuensis 10 deceased composers. Since them. she claims to have received about 900 musical works. ~rom composer; as diverse and as historically separate as Bach and Fats Waller. These works arc quite re- markable. On the one hand, accord- ing to Robb, Brown has no music education or ability. On the other hand, musical scholars find her "compositions" vinually indist- .......... '-.... , ......... 11111: .&=r 1ngu1shable in styleand mastery from Another question arises wbctbcr a that since these works lack the quality has Just completed ltis fourth book. h those of spccilicfllaster composers. talented modem compo9et' could be of eugeration, such an explanation seemed somehow fittmg that this Robb, who 1s a musician and mimick.ing specific com~ in can be ruled out. evening of "music from beyond .. authonty on {>SYCh1c phenomena. production of these "genuine imita-should end with reassurances from seemed the logical choice when the tions." Skeptic or believer. it was not an Nostradamus. If Robb (and Association fo r Psychic Phenomena Robb claims that when you im-evening soon to be forgotten. And it Nostradamus) have their way, sent him to London in 1969 to itate, you ta.kc a feature which you ended with an intc~ting twist. Robb "something" will happen in July of , investigate Brown's claims. He came know. and you eugerate it. He is an Cllpcrt on the prophecies of 1999 which will bring peace to our back a believer. In what? First, that ell tends from this argument to suggrst Nostradamus, a subject on which he planet. the great composers of the past have .-------------------_,..----------------------- chosen to communicate their music through a musical ncoph)'le m order to dramatize their presence; and secondly, that these composers art communicating with the world throueJt Brown in order to prove that there 1s mdecd hfe after death. Fridayevcning'sconccrt included a Courante "dictated" by Bach; a Mazurka by Chopin; a Bagatelle by Bccthoven: a Moment Musicale by Schubert; several songs by Schumann; and other works by Gncg, Ocbusscy, and Liszt. Some of the titles are evocative; for example, Schumann's songs, entitled (in Ger- man): 'Disappointment," "Bliss." and ··1ntrospcct1on " One wonders what son of use composcrs~r anyone) 1n "tbe world beyond" have for such worldly con- ce rns. And why 1s 1t that composers whose styles matured from year to year while "in this plane," ceased to change after death? In answer. Robb refers back to "their" intention: to prove that thcr<' 1s indeed life after death. He points out that in order to be recogniz.able. a composer needs to have a style which 1s recognizable. h ceruunly sounds reasonable. though II rcqutrcs one to accept'the initial assumpll_o_n_. __ __, *--' MINlhPlall 53-5331 euutA~AM u. .... 1152-493 ., .u.NA~AM *COSTA MESA •HUNTINGTON IUQI •I.A MIAAOA •Of'•NO£ Pacific'~ Part! EdwWOS c.n.N Ctnte e..-.0..c..1 Pac•llC s ta M11~ Cl1leOOl'llt o.M-111121-4070 97t-4141 141-4770 .z:..VIE.JO 63'~ *COSTAWIA n T<>f'O •1t11VINE ~ EdWlrclS Town Oenltr Edlflrds~ E dW•°' Untwt<Slty Edwards Y>tiO ~I ~Or·~'" 7$,1~114 Sll-S. ~8111 49el 6220 m-eno • WHTfllMSTU• EctwCIS Clll9lna #tll 191 3935 I• --mo;;-_ DDhl!~· 1 ~I Frtday.Januwy31, 1Ne II .. 3 L HANNAH AND REA SISTERS: A comedy written and directed by and stanina Woody AUcn which explores the Hfe of an adulterous man. Also starrina Micahel Caine, Mia Fanow, Carrie Fisher, Barbara Hcnhcy. Lloyd Nolan, Maureen O'Sullivan, Daniel Stem, Max Von Sydow and Dianne Wiest. evcrythina and becomes an urban bicycle meuenaer in hopes of rcbuild- ina bjs life. Starring Kevin Bacon. Written and djrecled by Tom Don· neDy. LADY JANE: A romantic histori· cal drama about Lady Jane Grey who at 16 was Queen of EQ&land for nine days in the summer ofl SS3. Starrina Helena Bonham Carter a_nd Cary Elwcs. Directed by Trevor Nunn. QUICUILVER: A film about a youna options trader who loses GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD WINNFH I f ; t I i • a triumph of blinding brightness. It shouJ"f be against the law not to see The Color Purple: " -TOOAY. NBC·lv. Gene~ " The Color Purple' Trtumphel It's hard not to be moved by Spielberg,s film and its fonnidable cast.,, -NEWSWEEK.. OilYld Ansen "The Color Purple' I• the year'• bat fllml **** ( 4 &tan-hlghat rating)." -CHICAGO SUN·TIMES. Rogft Ebert .. The Color PurPle' Is nothing leu than a rewlatton. I loved The Color Purple' from start to fini~h. A lot of Oscar nominations are going to come out of this picture. To miss this film is to cheat yourself and your family of a memorable movie.going experience." . -AT THE MCMES/CHJCAGO TRJBUNE. Gene Sllkel WARNER BROS -"STEVEN SPIELBERG,..,, lliE COLOR PURPU: .__DANNY GL~ ·ADOLPH CAESAR · MARGARET lfl'ERY RAE DAWN CHONG ..,.-,..WHOOP! G01.D8ERG •<-,_ ~ At<--Al.l.EN [)llMAlJ --.a..-J MICHAE1. RNA ,..., ,_MICHA.El KAHN. ACE -QUINCY JONES __ .... _.,.ALICE IAW...KER ~1orMENNOMEYJES 1-.---JON PETERS,,.. PETER GU8ER --.S'TlVEN SPIEl..BERG KAniLEEN KENNEDY· FRANK MARSHALL· QUINCY JONES Olt.-.,.st"EvEN SPl£L8ERG 1-.. g..-w1r l IPG·..._.. ___ ... __ fSf1M •AllNIRllRI .. $ , ... ~...................... ~ \.'&U'-l•~t•:lla """\fll• ,......_ .. , ~ -----tm.· .... - NOW SHOWING! _ ........ &-Yl·tMI .-n1mo . ..,. ___ ,711 _..,,,. *ITPUU WIWt• W 141.fnt -a.Ill ClllTll ~ -• -Diii COUT ~ 417·1711 14 O.tebe>Ok/ Frtday, Jan'*Y 31, 1986 ScTeenplay b)'. David f.dpr. ert Mandel. F /X:. A thriller about apcciaJ effects expert Robert Tyler who has been offered $30,000 by thcJ ustice Ocput- ment to 1tqe a fake assasination but must fi&ht for bis life when the special effects become real. Staniq Bryan Brown as Tyler and Brian Dennehy, Diane Vcnora and Oiff de Young. Written by Robert T. Mcgjnson and Gregory Fleemu. Directed by Rob- DELTA FORCE: In the wake of a arowina world terrorist threat the Uruted States aovernment creates an elite squadron of trained fiahters to defuse world crises: the Delta Force. Starrina Chuck Norris and Lee Marvin. Dirccled by Menachem Golan and written by Golan and James Brunner. WILD CATS: Ooldic Hawn stars m ........... _SUI ~iMa'TA•I ~7:•o&t:d -MmOUY• ~Yta.&.Slin SHOWS AT 1:10J!ll l :JI 7 :10 & 10:00 ..,..........,.r;. .... ._S"°'"AT f :Oo J: 11 l :U 7:•0 .. 1:11 ......... .,..,.. .. , SHOWS AT s .•o 1 oo • 10.20 OUTfW,.,..ICA .. > SHOWS AT U :4S J :l l 7:00 .. 10:10 IN 70MM llldllSAeU ... •• SHOWS AT 1:to J :JO S:•o 1100 & 10:20 COLOll ............ SHOWS AT 1:01 ••Ol 7:0S 6 10:01 Vllll OU~ ........ • •O~ IU• ~lflMlfl[)( •• .&-t: ,.mous HCMtM DRIVE-INS m~ !J!u2£!!2t~P DOM9 ""°OUT.. s _,,.,.LY .. U.S .. , ~11 Sf'L.ASH (f'O) HAM911 ·--Tiie ........ ) ...... , MAL.l•U KJICll"tt~ ("I ~c..a.. S~llUTtllln Ntthtmere on er"'-''· I , .. , llOCllT "' l'OI TO&MM9• •L.A. --~~~ ... , ... u .. 101 D~L.MATIONS (0) Chlld f'rlcH Ch•rtM .. • --~' this comedy about teacher MolJy McGrath - a football fan whose dnam to become a football 009Ch tu ms into a nightmare when she finds herself as the coach at the rouabest school in the city. Dircctcc:J by Michael Ritchie and written by Ezra Sacks. Rated R. YOUNGBLOOD: Rob Lowe stars as Dean Younablood, a talented young ice hockey player who has left his home behind to take on the pros. Inexperienced in life he srows up fast. Directed by Peter Mattie and written by Markle ud John Whitman. POWER: The story about the machinations and the bchind-the- scenc maneuverinp of political can· didates and the people they hire to sell them to the public. Sta_mng Rlthard Gere. Julie Christie and Gene Hackman, the story is written by David Himmelstcin and dtrected by Sidney LumeL MY CRAUFJl'ER: A romantic com- edy about Casey Meadows (Deborah Foreman), a vivacious youna woman who tries to break into the malc- dominaled Brentwood Limousine Co. and ends up marrying her first customer, the owner's workaholic son, Battle (Sam Jones). Written and directed by l>avid Beaird. Rated R . BRAZIL: Terry Gilliam's con· trovenial comedic nightmare about the human cond ition starring Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Michael Palin, Katherine Helmond, Ian Holm, Bob Hosk.ins and K.im I ;::~~~·~"§'v~l~··•~s~o~,.~·~•~:J~I ·~·~·~··~·"~'~"~·~·~·.,~tl~U~·~··~· ~11~'~"~' ~u·~-~·~· .. ~·~~~::-1 Greist. The story is set in a time where I, computers can get fudged with hor- rificconsequcnccs, where every home has unreliable municipal services and where the public seems not to care. ScTeenplay by Terry Gilliam, Tom Stoppard and Charles McKeown. UTHE GEM OF THE HOUDAY SEASON-. H yoa enjoyed tile adloa /adwntan/faat.-y of 1UJftANCING THE S10NE,' yoa'n aonna love 11tE JEWEL Of TH£ NILE.'" ~s.-n v •1*'· WMCA MDIO .. , grabbed both s1des of my seat and hung on." .. Danny DeV\to keeps us roOtng tn the aisles." ~~ ·~ slam-bang tun rest..:· ----· •.-S• --t1Mm ---c:aa _.._,..,... •-COUT -"4hv lyona. SNr.M l'N:\l1EWS llWIHWIHI -llMlll --n u-m.uu PMllCMtmlt ..-.u,......11 ~ ..--.u .... ..... a helluva ~ie." -~Hufll~I 01(. IWJ\HOR( SUl'I ..... delWtful ' ... pure pleasure:· -ludlthC,.,. -117 ... --Ml -IM-•U •cm C111111 MIW•-Mt.fnt ---amt Mi ...... _Qllfll_. __ ...... •mwawmu 1111' OP TDIES: A comedy about Jack Dundee, a happily married man with a successful career. who is obsessed with a pass he dropped durina u imponant hiah school footbe.11pme12 ye:m aao. He wants a second chance. Starrina Robin Williams and Kurt RusselJ. Written by Ron Shelton and directed by Roger Sponiswoodc. RUNAWAY TR.AIN: The Akjra Kurosawa story about the escape of two convicts, Manny (Jon Voi&ht) and Buck (Eric Roberts) from a maximum security prison in north· cm Alaska and their getaway aboard an out-of<.ontrol train. John P. Ryan Stan as tbe maniacal prison warden determined to catch them. Rebecca DeMomay also stars in this Andrei KonchaJovslcy film. THE LONGSHOT: Tim Conway, Harvey Korman. Jack Weston and Ted Wa.ss star in this Paul Bartcl- dirdcled comedy about how to make a million at the horse track. Written by Tim Conway. THE CLAN OF THE CA VE BEAR: Set 35,000 years aao durina the twiliabt of the Neanderthal qe.. lhe film is about the inftueooc an or- phaned Cro-M1pe>n cruld has on a primitive tribe. Based on the inkr- national best seller by Jean M. Auel. Di~ by Jobn Sayles who also wrote the KRenplay. BLUE CITY: the story about Billy Tumet"s (Judd Nelson) life-threaten· ina KatCh for bit father's killer that eitpoteS a chain of corruption. AJly Sheedy and David Caruso aw as Billy's friends who help him track dOWll the IUapecl. Satenplay by Lukas Heller and Walter HiU, Directed by MlebeUe Mannina. MUllPlfY'l llOMANC&: The 1tory of Emma Moriarty fSatly Field ), a davorceeout to make non btt own on an Arizona hone ranch, and local (Pleue ... llOVID/ ..... 11) FromPaC•l• pharmacist Murph y Jones (James Gamer). a take-at-in-stride, middle aged man rady to elplore new opportunities in his life. Directed by Martin Ritt. Screenplay by Harriet frank. Jr. and lrv1na Ravetch. Based on lbe novella by Mu Scholl A CllOllUI LINE: Richard Atten- Jlgrou&h's movie venion of the 1975 TolJy aw&rd winnins Broedway musi- cal about&ettinaajobon a Broadway chorus liOc. The film bas 20 stars includina Miclwel OouaJas as the maniacal chofeosrapber and direc- tor. Scretnplay by Arnold Schadman. ENEMY'ldN&: A 11ory of conflict, fnendship and d.tama in space 100 years in the future starrina Dennis Quaid and Louis Oosactt. Jr. As enemy s.,.c::e pilots faahtin& in a distant sun sys1em they are forced to overcome their hatted when they both crash land OD an inhospitable planet. Directed by Wolfpng Petersen. Bucd on the story by BatTy Longyear. THE JEWEL OF TBE NILE: The adventure of Jack Colton and nov- elist Joan Wilder that bepn in "RomancinatbeStooc" continuessil months later in the deterts of North Africa as Miclwel DousW and KathJeen Turner brave raaina storms. fierce desen tribes, whirlinc dervishes and the duQICOlll of the evil Omar to solve the mystery of the jewel. Danny DcV1to st.an as their enemy, Ralph. Written by Mark Rosenthal and La~n~ Konner. Directed by Lewis Teague. Produced by Michael Douglas. CLUE: The internationally popu(a;) Parker Brothers whodunit board\ game 1s now a comedy starring Eileen Brennan, Tim Curry, Madeline Kahn. Chnstopher Lloyd. Michael McKean Martin Mull and Lesley Ann Warren. Written and directed by Jonathan Lynn. Rated PG. OUT OF AFlllCA: Meryl Strccp and Roben Redford star in this Sydney Pollack film about a Danish writer's account of her hfe on a Kenyan coffee farm in the early part of this century. Based on a novel by Isak Di nesen. Rated PG. YOUNG SBEaLOCK HOLMES: A film that is not only a mystery but a supernatural adventure. ft speculates wha1 mi&ht have happened if Sherlock Aolmes and John Watson had be&un their friendship during their E""nalisb school days ·in the I 870's. Starrin.Nicholas Rowe, Alan Col and Sophie Ward. Direct61 by Barry Levi nson ("Diner" and "The Natural"). Written by Chris Col- umbus. THE COLOR PURPLE: A Stephen Spielberg film of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Priz.e winnina novel about the struaJes of an early 20th Century Southern family. Starrina Danny Glover. Adolph Caesar, Maragaret Avery. Rae O.wn Chona. Oprah Winfrey, Akosua Busia and Willard Pu&h and introducina Whoopie Goldbcfl:. REVOl.UTloN: Al Plano. Donald Sutherland and Nuwsja K.inaki star 1n this rnovie about the human emotions, hardthiPt and turbulence oftbe Arnerk:an Re"olutiorwy War. British roct star Annie Lennox makes her motion picture acti!'-debut. Directed by Hush Hudson(' Chariots of Fire") and written by Robe11 Dillon. FEVER PITCll: Ryan O'Neil stars as a IPOftJWriier 1nves.tin1 the lurbulent world of pmblina in thjs SUl)Cnte/dram.a writ1en and dim:tcd I?.>' Richard 8roob. Catherine Hicks, ~~~o Oianoini, John Saxon and ~lUMI Everen alto star. WHITE NIOllTI: ~ atory about a Russian bellet wbo baa defec\Cd to the West but mua ~once -.in to "Pin hia freedom after his London to Tokyo flilh• crubn in Sibaia eight years after his defection. Star- ring Mikhail Baryshnikov and Gregory Hines. Choreography by Twyla Tharp. Directed by Taylor H.ackfo«! a~d featuring the music of Lionel Richie and Phil Collins. SPm LIIE USt A comedy star· rina Chevy Chase and Dao Aylcroyd u two inept fC9fUits in a U.S. inteli.encc-gathering organization who. in theu counter~spionage at- tempts, almost cause a nuclear war. Also starring Steve Forrest. Donna Dixon, Bruce Davison. William Prince. Bernie Casey, and Tom Hatten. Directed by John Landis. Screenplay by Dan Aykroyd, low.tll Ganz and BabaJoo Mandel. BAD MEDICINE: A comdey about Jeffrey Man (Steve Guttenberg. "Co- coon' and "Police Academy") a reluctant medical student wtt~ fam- ily sends him to Latin America to study at the Madera School or Medicine. Alan Ark.in plays Dr. Ramon Madera. founder and director oftbe institution. Also starring Ju1lie Hagerty ("Ai rplane" and "Lost in America"). Written and directed by Harvey Miller. Based on the novel "CaJliDJ Dr. Horowitz" by Steven Horowitz and Neil Offen. THAT WAS THEN TRIS IS NOW: Emilio Estevez stars in this contem· poray drama about the friendship of two boys who arc like brothers as kids but grow apart as they help each other survive the tough realities of adult life. Estevez also wrote the screenplay which is based on a novel by S.E. Hinton. The film also stars Craig Sheffer and Kim Delaney. Directed by Christopher Cain. Rated R. TARGET: Gene Hackman and Matt Dillon star in this film about a mystery 1n Walter Lloyd's (Hackman's) past that lures the family away from their Texas home. marks he and his son. Chns, (DiUon) as targets for murder, and aquaints Chris Wllh his father's special talents. It also hel~ to form a lifelong bond between the two. Directed by Arthur Penn. Produced by Richard D. Zanuck and David Brown. Rated R. eowaros ~uNT NG~o~ 848·0388 9lA,"8C,.[,AA~A "lllol•6 L. S "·""oHC,"~"8E A(M edwarda 'H•P'IP '"f ~TPf 841 .ono llU•J 6 RI •" ~ ........ "'llll " .-...... . ...... •wn lad'' 111 ..... , .. ,llJt NUf Ulllt "llMUCU" '"Ill HS a•. It IS ·-----.. ..... Tm llf" "'' ttlt, ltM, 1 .. M PC ... i·r.:<, . • ~ • ::: ~46 2711 '1.. \ .,,, #If I a •l J' ' • ' .. • • '~ t ' ' • • • • ••• --·-· Mt. .. ecwaro5 ... ·~"=.. 8548811 . .. , " ..... ,•.' .., ---.._ ... _,..,... ........ ----.,. .... ......... .... ....... ·-----.-.. .,.. .. •• ............. ..... .._._...,.. .. --....., ... ..... IF' .......... .,, --IA&. --•Lim ·-·, fl ..... -" .... ............ .._... ,. .. ~ -.... ' eowaros ;AJC.EBA:• 581 5880 ( •, '-I ~ '~ I .. • ' ( . ' t.. --" .._ ... _,II.LI' .• . ......... ., I r · 111 ....... .. ,~.,...'IPll ... •1.1111 "YllHB&mr'' Ill , ...... iam~ ... .... faf ..... 111 ....... 11:11 edwards EL ~ORU 581 ·9500 t ' 11. ·~ ... • .. ~. I .. " • • • .. ~.(I.II STl((l.PllT l" 111 6 M I M. It IS .... .-_, __ . .... ... H ... \.. , ....... ·-..n ..... ,.. .. ........... ·-urs .... ,.. . .... .. ,., ....... edwards v,EJC ·w1 ~ 830·6990 SA.,:l<lC~<'llo •": ••~•·"""" • lll S~"-~•l. --UUf ... . ...., ... , ... ............ <f'lom """"" mu.• . ....,,, .. ,., ........ , .... OOll• \llllr tlO• ucu '" ' .. '" ~ Dlt9book/ Frtdey. JMuary 31, 1986 I& r CJUTCJN II IE T --• f I .,:j_:.~_ ~~ ~ ·~~~~ ~:-~~~ Kl -, 1 AIJKAN r t'KANCAIS '1 1 \ N. ''kw pm I ISl\'<I .. Nt·w1xirt tscdch, C..A 17 14 tM~700 A Tradition of Sea, Food and Romance. Experienre the finest of amdlelit California cuisine. sunsets~ the water, and a touch of the romantic ~· Al dl<: &lJtx>a Inn JOS Main Stm1. Balboa (7 14) 67S-~U ' :&stauranu OF THE WEEK IJ CBllll CllAwroRD .._,...Ceco a ' Geol)C Kookootsedcs bas an appreciation of fine cuisine that stems from both his familx back&round and his formal culinary training. Currently General Manager of Bob Bums Restaurant, Fashion Island. Georae is oriainally from Ohio, where his immigrant parents raised him on traditional Greek cooking. Another family inOuenoc was his uncle, a lhon order cook. When George decided to. become ache( his uncle advised him to tel some . formal education. As a result, George chose The Culinary Institute of America, thep located in New Haven, C.OnnecticuL After several years as a chef in the F.ast, be decided to open his own restaurant in l 9S8. hlM::k in Ohio. When his first venture, a coffee .shop. proved to be a success. be went on to open a aoun:net dinnerbome, a pizza puior, and a student-oriented eatery caUcd The Study Hall. While running the four restaurants, be also carved out some time to enroll at Mfobipn State Univenity, where he earned a dqree in ~ taurant management. · Jn 1982, Georae and bis wife became "booked" on the California life-style. "We had come out here for a visit, and when we went back, I put my business up for sale," he said. After two yean as a managina partner at Camelot Restaurant,~ assumed his present position with Bob Bums, the continental ~ taarant with Scottish decor which is not in its eighteenth year at Fashion Island and is one of the onginal businesses there. .. Last Saturday, the restaurant's annual .. Rob- bie Bums' Birthday" oclebration was held, complete with a special menu and entertainment by papen. On February l 4, the restaurant will observe Valentine's Day .. by ftivin1 a flower away to the ladies at dinner time, • said George. Also next month will be another series of Bob Bums.' International Niahts, at which time the restaurant will offer some cveninas specia.lizina in selected cuisi ncs from around the world. On these evenings, the regular menu will be available as well. Although the International Nights' menus .. are •Jill being finalized Geo~ said, .. we will definitely have a Greek Nf&fit, because it was very sucocssful last time around." A popular addition to the ~ular dinner menu, he said, is chef Steve Belani s Blackened Duck with Peppercorn Sauoc. Fint offered on the menu four months ago, it bu been continued "because it's aoina over very well for us.·· · . Another of Belani's innovations, said Georae ... is a broiled swordfish with two types of pepper sauces, a yellow and a red. served aloopidc the fish." All of Belani's sauocs have fresh herbs and spices, GeofJC said ... He has a little garden of herbs and spaces in the back of the kitchen. What be can't arow, he buys; but it is all fresh'." The restaurant's Sunday Brunch buffet. initiated last Spring, continues to be very popular, he said. Priced at S 13. 7S_ for adult.s, SS.SO for children, the buffet features carved meats. such as round of beef and leg of lamb, plus a changing chicken and fish selection each week. The choaocs also include various kinds of eggs, salads, cheeses. pastries~nd desserts. 14 e11p cllldea 1&odl l .. a.an,... 11terry wlae OF EWEEK I .. wn,... cllllJ pute wl~ prUc Rinse scallops in cold water. Drain on paper towels. Dry thoroughly. Mix with salt and cornstarch. Set aside. Stir-fry ICaJJepl la I &e 4 ..a.ae.,..u of .U la ... Of Millet. ae...e f,._. ,_ ... Ml uWe. H•t 2 ..... ,,, •• ..... .._ 1Ur-fry ..._, ~ ...................... prUc ,., l .... te. AM~Mi11eek.Bl'fllc&eaW.Sdrla Aer'rJ, et11111,..1e, _. .ean.,,. Sdr-try llwtlkly • ~ ... t M NCH••· Sene a....aate11. Makel a ............ 1'MI redfe WU ........... bJ 1'l9e Le• aMl1M Rettawt. C..ta Mesa. I ,art wMte creme lie eeeea 1,.nu... ~-'" OF -rHE WEB<:: one. Blend and serve with chocolate 1havinp. Serves PLEVll DS LA aw... Thisrecipewere1ubmittedbythe Rqi11ry Hotel, 1 ,an~-Irvine. Cl IT ON THE TOWN .... ,~ ____ .,.... Dinner With theater pJeasant, but plab ahead 8)' BEVEJlL y ause SMITH This week. resuming our from· 11me·11mc explorations of the dining asptel ofd1naertheatrcs. we traveled northward to the Grand Dinner Theatre in Anaheim. I'm a little mystified b¥ the prob- lem we experienced in getung into the theatre. We zoomed ri&)n through the hotel's well-marked special cntrancx to wall in line. liokcts in hand, 22 minutes Slowly, slowly. we inched t" our way forward to the hosless at the theatre entranet to be seated at last. A' spokesman tells us normaJly therc·s no mort than a five minute hne. .\fter this time lapse. we wondered a(v.e might have to wait 1ntcrm1nably for a cocktail waitrtU. as we did in one other dinner theatre. Happily. we did not. Our wine order (from a list of about 20 selections) was soon taken and promptly delivered. rhe theatre itKlf. done in gre)' and red. wuh dark blue seatcovc!'l. prt~· rnt~ a good looking showcase both for d1n1ng and viewing the production Hro;1d and ralhn" sh.allow m ~hape. 11 lrature\ both tabltj and banquettes t1enng upwards from the stage. Wisely, then, the powers-that·be have located the buffet at the front of the stage. where 11 becomes a focal point. an ovenurc to the pla) At the conclus101'1 of the buffet. a gold curtam pulls bcfort 1l And 11\ quickly dismantled so thr \how can b(gin. Clever. We were told when ~ated at our banquette (well located for "1cw1ng but straigllt-backed and rather un· comfonablc) that a ho~tc'>s would come to escort u~ to the buffet That seemed a much nicer wa> to hmtt the lenglh of the line than calltngout table numbers- a method another theatre used. After half an hour. however, the ho\tess hadn't appeared '><1 when tht're was a lull in the hnt'. ~c \lipped an. . We found a hcllcr·than•avcragc assonmt'nt of ..alad\. of wh1r h 111" favontes were <mpy mannutcd \'Cg· ctatllcs. such a'> 1unh1n1. >ello" squash and l'auhnowcr, a pleasant tomato and cucumbc.•r "ina1gre11c and a 11pp) Me\1can \Cr.111n of wlc '''1" Other salad) indudt' macaroni .ind checSt'. frcr,h lrull\ "1th \ tX·11nu1 and orange and ptckled beet. Hot entrees bcpn with mahi mahi almondine. What can I say except that fish JUSt doesn't hold well in a buffet line'? The roast beef. which was all well done and the ham were standard. the "breast of chicken New York" was OK. "0'1er the rainbow" pa.sta. nch and ch~y, came across as the most successful entrec. Brussel sprouts with bacon and onion and "cabaret roasted" red potatoes rounded out the hot dishes. Your ticket pncc covers theatre and dinner. but not wine or dessert. and there's a rather extensive desscn hst. plus des~ns from the bar. such as liqueur w11h ice cream, cappuccino. Thc bar also offers special "souvenir dnnlts" ("drink the drink and keep the glass"), mcludmg a Praline-Gran Mam1er cappuccino. You pre-ord'er dcssen for 'Service following intcrm1ss1on. We con- sidered shanng The Grand Slam (macadem1a nut ice cream. w11h both hot cream> caral)'lel and hot fudge. SJ 25) but decided instead on The l:ncorc -excellent cream puff topped with ice cream, hot caramel Way. Anaheim: reservation~ sauoeandcashews.Goocyandgood. I 772·7710. Tickets: Tue. p.m .. S2QiR5: also tasted the Bailey's lrish Cream .1. Wed .. Thu.~ Sun.~ p.m .. S21.95; Fn . cheesecake -the dense, rich kind of $24. 95; Sat. p.m. >26.95. Champagne cheesecake. well laced with BaJley's brunch on Sat, S 18. 95: Sun. brunch. ($2. 95). For the caloric oonsc1ous. S 19. 50. Tue .. Wed .. Thu.: doors open The Grand also offers Skinny Haven at 6: dinner. 6:~ 7:45: cunain 8· 15 stta~bcTry mousse. at JUSt 124 Fn .. Sat\. p.m.: doon. open, 6:30 caloncs($2.95). dinner. 1-8:15: curtain 8:45. Sun. T he waitresses an their short, black p.m.: doors open, 5:30: dinner. "tuxedos" keep very busy juggling all 6-7: 15: curtain. 7: 15. Sat., Sun this. but somehow manage to be both matinee: d_oors open. 11 :30: buffet pleasant and extremely effioent. 12· I. cunain, I. 30. Cumnt production at The Grand Dinner Theatre: "I Do. I Do:· which will be followed 11rApril by "Evtta." We called an November for Januat') ~rvauons. so it behooves you to plan about two months ahead. And here's a suges11on for. that special evenmg when you'd prefer not to thank about driving home late at night: The Grand Hotel'o; "see the show. spend the night" package: buffet dinner, show, a "luxunous room." It's $49.50 per person. double occupancy. THE G RA N D DINNER THEATRE. Grand Hotel. I Ho tel Note: This column 1s my "Grand Ftnale." my farewell to the Pilot. as I resign to concentrate oo ~ng m' third non-fictjjln-book and a novel To all of you who have taken thl" time 10 wnte and call and ofTcr su~csuons. my man) thanks. I'll miss heanng from you. But I do want to welcome my sucC'C$SOr, a bon v1varit whom I've known for man\ rears as a fellow member of th~· Southern California Restauran1 Wntcrs. Fifi Chao bnn~ knowkdgc- expenencc and a sp1n1 of ad' entun· 10 this column. EnJOY' It's the grapes that inake Clos Du Bois wine By JERRY MEAD CLOS DU BOIS -Some w1nenc~ ha'e large structum that look like cutles, chatcaux or Victonan man· s1ons. and convey the impression that lhey must make sood wine because. af'ler all. the place loola hke a wmery. Clos du Bois' wiocmalting facility conuuns all the equipment nC"CCssa ry to make fine wine, bul the structure itself docs not impress. Owner Frank Woods elected to put his money mto extensive vineyards and the tech· nology of wincmwna instead of a fan~ facade. The winery looks hke a FO RGET HER NOT! VALENTINE'S DAY Ma~t )ONT RutriwlloftJ 11qu·! • warchou'\C hul 1hc wine~ mo~t oltt·n taste as if they ramc frnm a cimle Because of owning 11~ o~n vineyards and recognmng the un1~ue quah11es of each plot. Clos du Bois 1'i one of those w1nenes that feature vmeyard des1gna11ons on the label and produce several d1ffere"t wines of the same type. If you have any doubts that 11"~ really the grapes that make the wane. Clos du Boas will conv1 n<·e you that 11 reall~ 1s 1he grapes. You only ha vc to taste, side by ~1d1.". the several ( hardonnay' (or Cibernets) m~de~ same wine· maker, at the o;ame facility, using basically the same techniques, anct obsel""c the d1st1ne1 d1fTercnces. to know that vineyard designations have real meaning. I recently tasted m y way through thc C'los du ~is Chardonnay and Cabernet Co1fcC.1on and found two standout favontes. Clot d• Bol1 ltH "Dry Crttll Re.ern'' Caberaet S.Hlpoo ($ 15): Thas is a r~lly classy Cabernet in the Bordeaux mold. lean. ught, and firm in structure. for a 019uthfeel that refreshes watb food while promising a11ng potential equal to the finest 428 E. 11th St. Between Irvine & Tustin Ave. Costa Mesa 71 4-650-1750 Corne In and have breakf8ft with us. Chooae from a good variety of Items on our breakfast menu. Cathy Is t.e to take care of you with her frtendly smite and fast eervtce. Our cheerful, caauaJ atmosphere ta great for yo.Jr Informal breakfast meetings. tool Don't forget Valentine'$ evening out with your .sweet- ie-we have some nice surprises In store for you. Big dotn'a happening at Gino's on Feb. 22 -Blrthday celebretlon for Gino, Herah and Georgell 7 A.M.·2 A.M. o.Jly • Sundays 8 A.M. to 12 Midnight R11rv11t#ona Accept«/ • Entert-1nmMt • S.telllt• l>l8h -· Cabernet" "'nes produced anywhert· in the world. The flavors are eanh) with hints o f black cherry and the finish and aftertaste arc very long and complex fapens1ve but wonh 1t Other wonhy reds from Clos du Bois include 1980 "Briarcrcst" ($I 2.50) wath 1ts round. npe choc· olatcy flavors: a 1981 "Alexander Valley" ($9) with similar flavors but a slightly firmer structure; and 1981 "Marlstonc" ($ 15), a blend of 55 percent Cabernet Sauvignon, 40 per- cent Merlot and five percent Cabernet Franc. The latter wmc shows the complexities of its blend With man) layers Of 03\.0r Jnd ,J round. soft. but not fat or pondcrnu' structure. Clot •• 8011 IH4 "Calcalr~" CMr4 .... y (S 15): Look for th1& ve11 special Chardonnay to win its sharT of gold medals tn the coming round ol oompctit1ons. One hundred percent baml-fermented, 11 was aged for a full 12 months in Llmousm oak and the wme spent about seven months in con(aci.. with its lees before lir1t rackini. ThCK same pToducuon tech- n1que.s employed with lesser grapci. (Pleue eee WDR/Paee 18) CoMe Celfb_/fl)te Owl 15 (jeaAS!! :3ebh1JOA1j With all dinner entrees a glass of wine, choices of: Frascati {dry white) Castello di Gabbiano (Chianti) Bel Arbres (White Zinfandel) Open for Lunch a Dinner 215 Riverside Ave. Newport Bue AESERVA SUQGESTEO • 541-7418 Dltebootil/ Friday. Januery 31. 19M • • 11 t • ~ ......--_ . .....,,, --=----. -. -~------- - - I .. • •T Cl\I THE T CRITICS AGBElf'"* BURNS BUPl'ET 80llETBING SPECIAL Restaurant writers and critics teem to aaree that the bounteous cham- pagne buffet brunch at the Newport Beach Bob Burns Restaurant is pretty hard to beat. In fact for only Sl3.9S ($8.SO for childttn). it may ~u be the best tastina barpin in town! Fresh caned meats, cold pe>aebcd salmon, salads, imported cheeses. frnh breads. omelettes made to order, Btlpan wamcs and scrumptious dcuerts arc all awaitina you on Sundays at the elqant and intimate Bob Bums Restaurant in NC'Wport's Fashion Island. Bob Bums takes great pride in servina only the finest quality food available. For example, only certified Anaus beefis served; and each day for lunch and dinner several fresh fish entreesarealsoavailabk. Dinners arc served with .Oup. salad (their famous Caesar salad, if you like), several fresh vqrtables, choice o( potato and specially baked breads. Whether it's for I. special oocasion or an after-shopping repast, Bob Bums has been a favorite for many -years for many reasons. Bob Bums Newport is located bctwem.BuHocks and Broadway 1t 37 Fashion Island. Reservations arc recommended at 644-2030. MONTEUY BAY CANNt:llS 11.ES- TMJL\NTI BEGIN "DDIG!'fATED DIUVEA~ PllOGLUI TO COMBAT DRUNK DRIVING With so much attention beina focused on stoppina alcohol 1bule and preventina drunk drivina, many restaurants i nd bars arc ~int for ways to make sure that people who consume ak:obol duriQa their visit won't over-indulle and drive Uftder- the-inOucnoc. In responte to this arowina social conc:em, Montay Bay Canners Restauranu-have siarted a "=led Driver" prosram to bo Uy ensure that if a lf'OUP is drinkinaalcoholatany Monterey Bay Canners Restaurant. that there will be at least one member of that party who will remain sober and make certain that everyone ttts home safely. Offered to sroups of three or more people, Monterey Bay Canners' .. Desianated Driver" program ident· ifies one member of the group who WINE AND SPIRITS ••• FromPa&el7 could easilr yield an overdone, oaky -------»,.,,,,_.leL Cak:airc is · deed very stylistic. but shows restraint and subtlety throughout. A ~t. and I don't use the term loosely, Chardon- nay. The 1984 version of the usually 8961 A<Jarns At M&gno!Oa H1.1n1ong1on &each 968-5050 ellcellent "Flintwood" Chardonnah ($12,50) ba.s a sliaht P.robkm wit alcohol awareness, whale 1984 "Bar- rel Fermented Aleunder Valley" ($9) is an exceptional wine for the money. The Chardonnay flavors arc more strai&htforward than in the Calcaire WE PROMISE YOU GOOD CHINESE FOOD LUNCHES. DINNERS. mc>PICAL COCl<l AILS BANQUET FACILITIES. CA TEAING. FOOO TO GO OPEN 7 DAYS SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON FOOD TOGO 31• Boactl Bl~d .... l l<OOllS Anan.wn 827 1210 will llJ'CC to refrain from dnnkinaany alcoholic beveraees durina that eve- nina and will be responsible for dotnt any drivina and makina sure that no one drives 1fter drinkina. By perticipatina u the sroup's "dcsipated driver," Monterey Bay Canners will provide uolimiced non- akobolic beverqes to this penoo throuabout the aroup's visit such u soft drinks. coffee or any of Monterey Bay Canners' own es~ially mixed non-alcoholic dnnks called "Mocktails." These drinks will be complimentary as Iona u the "dni&- nated driver" doesn't have any aJ.. cohol. If the person cbanp their mind and onkn an alcoholic drink. be will be characd for any previous drinks. Monterey Bay Canners' "Oesia- nated Driver .. procram isavailableat all Monterey Bay Cannen in the coclctail loulJIC durina all houn of o peration.PAVILION llES- TAVllANT -CELEBRATES FIRST CRINER NEW YEAR At a recent dinner meetina at the Pavilion Rataurant in frvine, a steerina committee was formed to set in motion plans for a traditional version. and the oak inJluence is more nrulla J.ban_ the toasty, .hinL of butterscotch found in the more ellpcnsive wine. ft isa style that many will prefer for considerably less money. RUMOR MILL -Rumors con- tinue to fl y conc::emina an impending sat-: of Souverain. Add to the list of prospective buyers, Barton Brands. a British owned importer that is cuEr rently marketing the California wines of Angelo Papqni and Estrella River. Berinaer and Italian Swiss C.Olony were previously mentioned bidders. The craziest rumor heard in the past week had Gallo buyina Washing- ton State's major vintner, Chateau Ste. Michelle. A Ste. Michelle spok~ man flatly denied this. and since Gallo always denies everything. I didn't even bother checking with the Modesto half of the rumor. There is evidentJy more grounds to the rumors that Chateau Ste. Michelle is acquisition minded with a premium Cahfomia winery as the community CbiDCIC New Year festi- val DC1lt year. The meetina of cultural leaden from throuahout Oranae C.Ounty was in raponse to a published request f(' · intetated peon&.> to attend and plan small, "starter{;Cdetntion this year. The near-unanimous concensus was that lead time was too short to arnnp: for even a small event that would do the community honor for 1986. However, Mr. Henry Liu. owner of the Pavilion, ~ sponsorship of a traditional n Dlance both to mark the beainnmg of the Chinese Year of the liaer. and and u 1 small token of faith that the brief but colorful display would be just the forenanncr of more im~ive cel- etvltions to come. " The Oraaon Dance will be held at 2:30 p.m., Saturday. Feb. 8. 1986. in the restaurant's park:ina area. The public is invited. While postponement of a full community celebration was disap- pointina to the event's orpnizers 1nd first sponsor, the idea itself was received in a most J>('Sitive way, aicoeratina enthusiasm from the 36 in 1nendance to immediately the neciessary orpnizina for a estival. Suppon wu received from all groups for 1 succesaful, orpnized festival for 1987, ind committees aarttd to meet in a few months time to beain plannina for this event. The sociaJ hour and authentic Chinese dinner were hosted by the Pavilion. and warm appreciation from the VoUP was elltended to Henry Liu. tarict. Two names that keep popping always try to alen you to these up are Acacia and..CoJULCreck.. The.~ barpins. Ste. Michelle folksarc "no comment" River Oab 1112 "Somom1 " on this rumor. "No comment" Clbermet S..viJMll ($6 or less): The almost always means yes in the wine second label of Oos du Bois. River business. Oaks wines have long been known for FREEBIE -"Mead On Wine" value, This wine is blended to 20 readerscanreceiveafrcesarnplecopy percent' Merlot for c::ompkllity and of one of the most successful new softnm, and actually comes from wine newsletters called "Just Re-"AJeundcr Valley." It's a style that leased." Molt newsletters have the will appeal to Jordan drink.en at a weakness of reporting on wines after fraction of the price, with the lflpcs they.have already sold out. Instead of ha~';t oriainated in the same reJion. waiting to sroup all the Cabemets or Su ly balanced for immediate Chardonnays, or whatever, "Just dnnkina, yet should aaic and improve Rel~" reviews the wines~ they for _several years. The flavors arc arc being re!eascd (or som.e~mes a stra1&htfo~rd. ~iatnly herbaceous weekorsopnortorcleasc).givmgyou Cabernet with a hint of mint. plenty of time to buy the best ones DEBUT -Whether you pro- before everyone else discovers them. nouncc it "Dootz.." as most French R~!JeSt your free sample copy by do, or "Doyu," beinJ faithful to the wntJng ~o: Just Released. P.O. Box fou~der'sGerman ongfos. you're still 708, Cahstoaa, 94S 15. tallt1n1aboutone of the premier firms BEST BUY -It's always easy to in CbampqM, and one of the few to find special wines selling for SI 0 and remain under family ownership and more. Finding special wines priced manaecment under SIO is the challenge. and I Andre Lallier, areat-traod10n of ~~=:::ii==•=:z::::===-===o:=:::ii=::===-=====-====c=~:::li----------------------------. founder William Deutz. has been 1hc ..... ---~~-------------------, bead of the family fi rm since: 1972. ' 100!100! STARRING KEN BERRY OF T.V.'s FTROOP PETTICOAT JUNCTION MAYBERRY RFD MAMMA'S FAMILY "Few can match "Bob Burns: Still and still penonally uscmbles the h ( b (f ) firm's Champqnc cuvces. Deut7 t e u e t at Great ... " owns its own vineyards, whkh Bob Burns.··" fky•rfy lkuh milh provide approllimately 40 percent of Daily rik•• its total production. Including Round of ~I. ~g of Lamb, Ham, fa• &neditt. Oroelettes. Quiche, Bel~ian \\1affles. Poaclw!d Salmon. S.ladt. Cheeeea. frdh Brsds, Deuem and Mu<'h MOJ,!! . ., .. ( .... .,........) ~"rfl s ... , 10 ... ~.pm 37 FMhioe bland New Beeell 644-2030 eJo~ Northern Italian Continental Cuisine Now F .. 1w'91 A Speclel Utlhter, Lete·Nltht Dini .. Me•u ( ... Item• moathly) Entertalamat Tua.·ha •• Codltalle with compllmcatary hor• d'Muvr• from •:30 Dl•Mr from 5:30 Suday N .. ht le Famlly N'9ht Sll.50 cM1plete dlaMn from 5 p.m. lit price (chlldrea oder 12) U!O Eut Coe1t Hwy .. Coro.. del Mar 675-1922 Now Serving COUITIY snLE ••••• , '1 '' ••.•. .. lncluc1-s Beverage wen Drink or a.. HI • ti 1:11 Pl .. T 01\1 THE TCJWN. HE BARN H B\t' lht' prime or your life ch0081ni: frum thf' txtensive 25 item menu. ~t€'uk,, 'eafood, aalada. Italian and ~..x1rnn cfahes. and more. Weit.em l'h11r111 and country ambienct Lunrh \! f", Dinner M-S. Happy hut.ir \I F .uo.; p.m. Satellit~ dish l.1\1· •·ntNtainment and dancinac. Sun Champagne Buffet Brunch IO .! ·111 Honquet facilities. 14982 U .. dtull. Tu,un. 730-011 :"i. HE ORIGINAL BARN ARM F:R STEAKHOUSE Y"'' ·1 h1·\ 1trf' the ori1einal. Famuu• fur Jlw1r 1111t.<-and-a -half pound 1• .. rrt rh1111-i· ,teak., and featuanic •It pl.1 l1r111l111ic. Pmudly servm11 for ~I" .tr• I.um h Mun.-Fri 11 -2 l>m 11"r rnl!lil h Mun.-Fra from ."i '' m ;-.11 f.. "'1111 fr nm 4 p.m 200 I H11rlx1r Bhil r '"tu Mesa fi l'l 9':-";"";" E\'~IGAN'S Fn-h l•HKI '€'rved with a i<ldt' of f1111 \!1 "'' lf'nlure,. uniqtie appet11t-r' • 11111· •1."al1111d. u oi sanl '8rHI ~" 111 • hurl(er:-.. Mexican d1~ht--. 11111 .111 t>Xr1tm1t hrunch mf>nu I. 1111 Ir .111cl dtnlll'r lrom 11 11 m "'"' kd.1" Brunrh 9 'l 11n wt>t>kenfl, I rll liur wnh s~111ltv drtnk" 11.tpp\ hour -1-1 wet'kdav"' In c ..... ,H \I,··• :">11uth C'uast Plaut parkin11 1111 It' ~.1k\ Fifth Avt'nUt' 241 :l9:lli In \\"1·-tmm .. ter. fi4f1 Westm1n~trr \I.ill "!!ti .i.1·.n Danl'init e\•enin11 ... 1n \\•·•I min'tl'r ln<"ation JOB BU RNS "'"Pt-rh ll'i the word to describe th1~ 11111· dming ei1t1tblit.hment Ser\'11111 '··~p .. rt for 18 year". penahzi n1t 111 \111111' r111~ bttf, lht' rinest yuu • 1111 IC('I Also futurinic fresh fo1h. 't·11l 1rnd chrckt'n. T he linen rovered t.1hlr~. candles and fre!lh llowerq iuld 111 lht' t'legance. with booth~ and h111h hack chair-8 for privacv Fl11·kt'rin11 lanlernl! and class1r11l m11 .. u· rapture the charming 11nrl ~arm lltmosphere. Open for lunl'h. drnnl'r nnd their splt'ndrferous Sun dtJ\ hrunch. ExtenMVI' wine lu;t. .r: F.hh11111 l11land 6-44 20:10 R I STOL AR A GRILL· t Holiday T raditif)nally an nll 1\mtrican favoritt' piece to eat arid prit•t'd fo r family dining. Everythin11 frt1m juicy steads and chop!l tu ~1x-cial chicken cfo1hes and fre11h -'t'Llf•NKI. Bc,untt'OU.8 ulad bar S11mptunU1 delly luncheon buffet OPt'n dftil.Y for d inil\ll and cockteil11 .u :11 Bru1t.ol St., Cea.ta MH8 :11'17 ao00. RAZYBORSE Tl!AKBOUSE Aut.henll(' cmantry dining, featurinir P..-11tern Corn Fed Sffr.P rlme Rib. fresh wafood and 1pec:l1lir.ing In their (emou1 pn-ftitd awakl. •nd dt'88erta. Lunch Mon.·Fri. 11 -3 Dinner Mon .• $u11. 6 p.m. (Dinner tnervetiona guaranteed). Auth~ntic Wt'llte1n dKc>r. dendnl( end 11"'.e music In I.he uloon. Oyer Rd. fdit/Newport f'wy.. Sent.a Ane. ~9·1612. DILLMAN'$ The Dillman fam1h 11> fam1111s for their lrad1ti1rnal warm hosp1l81it\ and fint' foud Fine•! prime nh rn Balboa and fre.,h ls-h da1lv C'11m pletf' dmner ;.pt>ual' dailv Fr1endh •el"''lfe and a fun. delightful Ill moi.phere. Open d111h for lunrh nnd dinnt'f Hrunch Sat and Sun, l.iOJ E n olh1111 6-;',I ";"";':!fi THE HIDE-AWAY Tired of t'Ottni: out Ill 11l11l"t'' with no priv111 \" :-ie11rrh nu more' The H1cl1> 81.\8\ prm1dt'' prl\111'\ IA llh II' '"'"' h, ind part 1t 11111' 1)t'rfert fur 1111 ... 1111•,, l1111l h""'" and r11m11n111 d1111111: 1\ll 1w~ h rl1·111rntf'cl otfntn~ u r1•l,1\1n.: .1111111,phvr1• The 'l't·1·iol lw• Mt •t·ul••><l .111d -teak' Al f11rtl,1hl1 d1111111: fur 1111· ~ h11l1· IAm 1h \ tr11·t\ 111 du1h ·1~111tl' Hu1111 rn11d1· ,,,11 "' .uuf "" 11 ,., Krn t.: lo\ 1111' •t'rH'll .11,11 ·'"~I Ecl1111tf'r at :">prinac d,ilf· 111 \l11f111'I !'thttpJlllll( \'1lllll(f' ll1111t111i.:t1111 lfr fj Ii "l lll li.-tfi'\ .JO LLY ROG EH ( • rt'<t I \ lllf fll •Ill It• ,(j o111tf ill I ht' h1•,f pri. ,., I h1 lulh l<11111•r hH, .1hl\/I\' lt1'l'll k1111~ 11 ,,, ,1 i:•··~I l11m1 h· n tlut· rc·-1u11rnn1 l"h1· n11'IHI l1·11tirr••' t.rt'akfu,t. lu111 h uml d1111wr 1A1lh 11 l,lfl(t' \o lflt't\ uf d1•hf•' 111 c h••"'f' I r11111 ~ r11111 1•1t1: 1f1,h!''-. iimldll • .1k1·• h11rac1•r,.. 'nndlo\ 1c·hl',.. 'alurf, '" 111111plt'lt' d1111wr' 11f 'eel11111l. -t1•.1k• 1 !111 k1·11 ,111d tli-hnou~ de' 't'rt' F.111111\ 111.\ 111·tl l11r .1:. \1>1ir' \\1th llw lr1 .. 111ll1f"t '""""in tc•wn llMI :-. c .... ,, H"'' l.a1it11nn He111h l !l 1 II .!~ CALFORNIAN HEMINGWAY' In the• :<tvle of the man h1mi.ell. He1111111(WO\ ·, \.• 11 rrlehrntrnn ol 11!h"l'nl11rt•. 111 r11m1111t 1· and t-he nrt 111 h\1111( ·\11 t1\o\11rcl wm111n11 re• 1.111r.1111 11l l!'rtl11! E11r11peen t"11"111i-~ 11 h " ('nlif11rn111 11t1't'nl And en 1•xlt'l1'i\f• lo\ lllf' h~t llinner n111h1lv l.unch M F Th<> 1ll mosphere is warm anrl lriendh and filled \\Ith enlhu~ae'lm. l-:«l8hh~hed sin<'t' 1972. thi)o re,1aurant/t-afe '" locate<! tn Ct•rnna clel Mar nt P11cifir C'oRsl Hwv 111 M.irArthur Hlvd 67:1-0120. MONACO'S Experience· fant1111tic C1tliforni11 nouvelle r reRl11>n!! acct'nted with 8 French. nair. while dining in An ,1~ant we~rfront st'ttin11 over- lookinti Nf\wport Bay. E:njoy a vatlf selection or entren for brun('h. lunch, and dinner in addition to the oyater har or •(t.ernoon t.eP on tht' Ba " malting Monaco's • wry special treat. Mon1co'1 ia lnr,.ated ecrOM from Newport lmportll in th• Toltal Bank Bldg. at :i:\a!l W. Coe11t Hwy. Newport ~•ch. Phone in your re.ervatlON et (714) M6·5226. ITAUAN CARMELO'S Thia ultra-smart haven of e:ioep· tional Italian and Continental cuisine is one of the more rewarding places to dine. Freeh put.a and special "light" sauces are carefully prepared by three oft.he finest Ital- ian chefs. Piano bar entertainment complements the fun atmoephere. Patio dining available for the 1un loven . Open Tues.-Sun. from 6:30 p.m. for dinner. Sun. Brunch 11:00-2:30. 3520 E. Coast Hwy. Cor· ona del Mar. 676-1922. MARCELLO'S Thia award winner offera an ex- ~naive menu 1peci1faing in puw. veal. cioppino and their famous handmade piz.z.a. Established since 1973, thia family owned restaurant hu ~ptUled the heart.I of Italian food lovers. Lunch Mon.-Fri., Din- ner 7 nights a week. 17502 Beach at Slater, H un ti ngton Beac h . 8-42-:"il'!O.'i. VILLA NOVA I\ ht•1111t 1! 11l hu\ \ 1ew create" the r11111o111111 ""11111~ that has m11de the \"11!,1 ""\If u ··,pe11al kind of place" 1 .. r "'l'f lift\ \ellr' !'{uperh t·u11ttne lwm l t>Mrul JnJ :'l.t>n.hern ltalv ,1 r' I'd 111 Olcl \\ 11rld 1.:harm Ex· 11·11'1\ c "1 Ill' "'' I >inner 11111htlv. l'1t11111 l111r Full mt'nu 1111 l·OO a.m. II IJ \\ ,.,, 1"11a,1 H"'v . :--:t'wporl H1 ••• h Id.! -.. 'll 1 LI'S RESTAURANT It v1111 l11vf' ( 'hineiie lnod. vou're ~ure t11 l.'nJ11\ rtininl( here. as ·1..·11 prom ,,,., truh uuthent1r Chinese rc•td Th .. menu offer' a "'1de vara et v of c·~11t11 d1;,he.s, from a la rartl' t11 r11mlt1nat1on~. Hreathtakinl( den1r 1n u '<Upremelv heaut1ful At mu,phere Trop1r11l drinkK 111 qurm h \our thir<1l Open seven davi. a week for lunch and dmnt'r H961 Adom"i. H untingto n lit'a<·h . 9f):! ~J I .'l :114 N. Beach Blvd. Anahe1rn 827 1210 T~E LOTUS t-:ntrr 1h1• Orient and experie111·1• 1 hr t'Xl"l'llt>nc r· ,,f Mandarin and :-i1efhwon ( 111,mei. Authe11t1r ('h1 ne"" d1,hr' "'l>er1olh prepared h\ ITHl'<tt>r 1·ht'I l.111 The Lotus rnn ofh'f n 1h11nrv molllt>rp1eces l11 \11IH lik111g The l11velv <l ininit art'B •~ d11nun ted with pictures 111 the Lot ui. n11w n tht' i.ymbol of 1>11nl\ 1n Chint>-.e t ulture. En1oy fine Cha nest' dmrnJC aii Wl'll as wine. spirits and ht')i\pitalitv at t.hr Lotus. Loc11ted in Harhor Ct'nlt'r at '.!:IOO Herhor 81\'d. 111 Cc~ ta Mf"a t'111l ;,45 :1:1:l1 MANDARIN GOURMET A truly spedel plaCt' to dine. the M11ndar111 Gourmtt ha11 bffn a l(old 11ward wmntr 11nrl ownrr. M1('h11rl Chaanf( wa voled Restaurateur uf the ·v .. er. Spec111lizin1t in Pt"ktnl(, Sh11n1thoi. Su<'hw9n and Hunan ruu1inl' • they offer an array of dt'lt cacie!' mrluding Pt'kin11 Duck. dumplrng11. wholt fi11h 11nd mor(' ~umptiou" dishes. Elea&nt at· mu•phere. 1mpe«ahlf' .ervtt't' 1md uttn ivt wint Iii\ 1500 Adams. C1.11t.a Meu. 540 19:l7 PAVILION Large Pai:oda huilding beautifully decorated restaurant. Finl'lll and freshest ingredients, no M G. Tan- talizing ruis1ne that excites the palate Fine service. Four larice roo ms. ample banquet fac1hties. Champagne lunches and early bird dinnen;. Special holiday feasts. We welcome company C hristmu partiets and lad ies' club mt"etings. ··You Wlln't ht' hungry an hour lat.er a t the Pa vrli o11 ." Man- d1mn/Szechuan cuisine. 1411 0 Cul- ver Drive. Irvine. !°>51·1688. Lunch & Dinner Dailv. Bar. Casual dress. rf''lf'rvationi. .. uggested Lunch from 11 :lO. dinner from 5:00 p.m. CDNTll\ENTAL MEDITERRANEAN ROOM · Airporter Inn C'unicenial and t'cluded from thl' hll!IV airport :.urroundingi-Thi' Mt>diterranean Room offen. superh , •t1H111ental t'llhtnr for lunrh, elm 1wr and Sundav hrunrh. T op t•ntl'r 111111men1 n111hth 1p the C-11harc•1 l.u1tnll,e Tht C"apta1n', T8hlt-'' "l>\°" fur d1111n.i..? I hour., Per(t'<'t for lo\·1111·hm.c ('alif"rn111 i>un ... el!' 1s thi- Fli1£hl Der k L111JOl(f' The Airµorlt'r 11111 '' lornt!'d ul IH7()(1 MacAr1h11r Bhd in lr\lnt '\II 2";"711 ;\IARCEL'S \ 0111111' :\<11H1 t-1' I lt-lil(hlfulh ri·t r"'h 1ll1t menu fl'ut11r111~ lrt>~h '"af•kl<I ,111tl l.11111,1un11 <"111un ... p e1•111(, f .uurmet 11\ -ln hRr Ele.canl 't>I 111•11ttl .c11 "'"'Jlhl"ft• l.1\ i-ent l'rl ,1111 m1•n1 &Of! d,uw1nl( festurir11: ()('', fint'"t i-11tert111nm1•nt , llnnnni: unrll.'r t lw ''ilf'' I .11m·h fr11111 11 II m I >1111wr 111~h1h trom "i pm o v ... tn hnr till I 1111 Im 1111 r: 17th !'ti 1'11 .. 111 ~t''·' h In ~;,;) PUft'FI N'S An ad\ f'nl 11rt 111 natural t11t1nl! Frt'"h qua ht\ lll1£rt•d1en t' prt>pRrt>d 111 11 -1mpl1• '"' .. 1,.i:ant wa) Aw11rd ~ 111111nl( '"' 'f>''' ( :orden "t'l I tnjC 11111 t-:ur11pr11n <'u lt' '<tvle atmu><pht•rt' ( u'11ul hrl'akl..i-l 11nd lum·h Formnl d1111111( for dmnn ::-\11n Thur... 7 11 m Ill pm . Fri & Sat 1111 11 v m .IO.l(I E <"••ll~I H\,\\. ('oron11 rtel Mur. R.io 1;,-;·1 RIVIERA Helox to i.:ro<·111u• ,,ervace m nn .. le1<1an1. 1n11ma1e atmnl>phere Ex pl' rt h prt>part'd continental d1shl'' h\ C'hrf R11·hurd Hericnt-r ~111ct> 111";°0 J'h1-. ,l"llf0 Wlllllllll( rf''- totllnllll •ll,11 11flPr, Rn l'Xlf'll'l\f' Wlflt' (,,, .11ul t'\I el' in tahlt''ldt' prep .ir.1t 11111• .111tl namhe.. 01w·11 l11r l.11111 h 11 .10 .I p m . D11111 .. r f rnm -, p 111 Exn·llt·11t lto1141ll'l 1111 il1llt''- ( ·1,,....,1 Sim Hncl holido\' 1:1 I.I '- Hri,lol. 1·11~1.1 \lt"•ll ;>411 11(111 FRENCH LE BIARRITZ 1-:xpeom•nre 1'Xq111-.1lt' f'rl'nr h prm 111r1al rn?<int• whil1• dinml( in thti< 111t1mote Fren1 h chatt'llll Sper 111I fie, indude r111·k n( lamb. 'veal \(arqJo 11nd o h~11u11ful «f'IKt111n uf frt' h rish H11mf'm11df' aw11rd ""''" 11101< dessert!! EnJ\•)' un. hrun1·h with unlim1tf'1I rh1tmpftJ(ne. an el11boratt' buffet. a hot entrH and du.wrt all '<t'rvl'd 1n • <'fl7Y. ff hilt e-d otmo11ph~re f 'ull b1u with d11mest1r and 1mvortl'<i wine 1'(>!tt tum~ Lunrh. Mon fo'rt.. Dmner, vnn nithta Sund•y brunch 414 N Newport Rlvd • Newport 8ea<"h. fi.4~ 6700. CAFE FLEU RI Take a seat in Cafe Fleuri for hreak- f11.~t. lunch or dinner. Enjoy an u qui&tt..e environment influenced bv a French touch Hot J871 Monciav through Friday from 5:00 ull 9:00 p m and an outstanding whitt'· i;love brunch make th15 Cafe thf' place l<J meet Open i days a week. fl·OO a.m. lll::JO p m Moderauh· prared. 4~1() MacArthur Blvd . Newport Beiu·h 4-;"R-2001 LE C HARDONNAY The fine•t 1n t'lb.'IC Frenl"h and n11U\elle cu1 .. tne 1n plush ~urround· 11111~. Excite vour sen«e<, wnh Su- w eme of Du1•k w11h pm.1ched Ceh- l11rniu Fi11i. 11r Loltster \a.s.wrole in a f'h11rd11nn1n wine 'auce \\1th c h1intertlle... i-;s1en$I\ e Sl'lect mn nf 141111.",. frnm a 1emf)t'ra1ure C"11n t r111led relltH 1.unrh Mon ·Fri 11 .IO '.!:to I l11111!'r M11n Se1 rr11m ti Ill "\un hrn111 h I I 2.:111 In He1t1' In H111el lti.'1110 \lac·l\_rthur Hhd Jr, an~ -;·,:.! "'77: u : MIDI ..,f'\ c• ml I hmK" n111kt' l 111, ,1\o\ ard \lo Ill 111111! h1dt'1t" ,1\ t ruh 'Jlfl 1AI \\'.1lt n llwir =""•" 1 hc•f ir.11111'1! 111 ... 1111r .. 1 I ht• 111.•'t h1111't''. l'Jl,11 t :">I "111r111 I 'H11 t' { ;~1,111cl. Bour .111 I .He l.urwh 1\ II I n I 11 I I 1 f II I ' I n I' 1 'r .. , l IU ,1h· ... t-tt,11n.tl t.:1Htrmet ,.., ... ff\,,,, u '-llndo' r1nmc h '" 1mlq111 11 • hk1• ''"PJlllll! l1111·k in 11m1-l111111 If.I "ht ll l'\OPlll'nll' "' fo•i<I lo\,)• 111111• lwtl h\ ai••rwr1111' h11,p1111ll1 \ " h"'lllt.1l1t \ r.trt"h l1111ntl tht-w d,t\• 1 .. 111 \1.ir11 ,, ind \\ oihvr Ill thl'lf Frf'l11 h 11111nrr\ h111111' I.um Ii rt111 ""' uncl :->11ntl11\ hr11n1 Ii H11nqud l.h 1111 It'• I 0l1t'l'fl \lnml.n'' II:! I \" w I 1tf., '""f"'r' JIPL11 h 1;-·, H10.1 ~ACl SA RE. TA l'RA~T n11-11111' hrr It· .f11p111ll'"(' rt' ... t.rnrant •1w11allll'' 111 ~•1,h1. lt'mp11rd. 11ncl l1·rl\uk1 'I ht· ·11-111 hitr 1, pri-purrd Ii\ t h1•1f I 11111111• .l,tpROf',., I ht•I I ruh .l 1 .... 11111: 111 l)t'IOI( 111 li1pnn ( ;rtnt fur '"' 11111111111 •t1-h1 lu1r .. Ml' J l11t 111 l11n Jlinin.: r1H•ffi • .i,,. ll\A1h1hlt· ( lpM1 Tut'' thrn ~1111 l11r h1111·h ancl <l1111wr IMO r: l'oa•t Ill.\\ < 'ur11n11 dl'I \1ur f.7 C 1'11.\ IVEXICAN '.\11 CASA I ht 1r l•M•d ... l1k,. ii I rip I• \lt"Ul'I' "'"flllrlhl\ l(llf'' h1111d 111 httritl "''th llwir m111111, "11 1·.,,11 ,., "'"I H'·'-' llf Ill\ ht•ll~t' I' \'Ollr h111J't' r:.~tllh (a,lwcl .. 11111· 1 !I';'..'. 11 " 1111 ~dt'I I rit•lltl' l'll)m d1111111( ht r .. t l lpt'n d111h t rom 11 n m lor l .11111 h Dm nN and <'•11. kuul~ Entt'rt1111101l'nt \\ t'<I ~111 1111eht~ 1n tht> Burro lfoom ~; i-: l ;th :'t . t '"lu \.ll'...g !>.\.) 761ti PORTY C ARROTS 'Dtliciou" f3,h1 u111,"lli. 111•r l!Pnr\ ~eictr.itmm l>l'•«••\t'r thllt r!'1tl 1t•M><I ftthn11 of f'lll m1r 1rr .. 111 Ul,t 1111( mrAI' prl'parl'<I tl111h n11111ral and health\ Ortl(lfllll rPrlf'll'' frt''h 1111r•"• ..quH<t.l'<l dt11h A 11reat pla~'t' for 1>1nner 7 clnv~ (mm 11 11.m. Sund11y C'hem~nt Brunch f\et.,Hn Bull 11C'k<.11nd I M~ni11 So. <'out PIAQ, lu•~r le~I ~"'6 9700 c.1eboc*I Frid~. Januery 31. 1911 II • I .. • .. _g I · ORANGE COAST THE REX OP NEWPORT Located on the ocauthont acrcm from Lhe Newport Beech pl.er, The Rn ia tba Ciranp Co.at'• moet exclualw ...tood rMtawant. Well known for f~ Hawaiian Jou.rlMt flab MJect.iona and tpedaUsinc in 1 ... t Channel Ialand abelona, tan· der veal Md prime mHta. The warm ambiance ol the pedded bootba, sot.hie paintinp ~ the / Newwrt Blvd., Beach. well 1t.ocbd wine racb lend to 87~·2968. R.1'1 convivial at.moepben. The SEAFCXXl/STEAICS THE CANNERY Ra of Newport;. Lhe choice of Thia hiatoric waterfront landmark loca.la ea well aa viaitora. Recipient ANTBONr8 PIE R 2 in Newport'• Cannery Vil.lap fea· of Lhe p~ Tr11vel-Holiday The Bout.hem Calif. Reatawant tur• (~ toe.I ...rood and KMt·. award. Cuual/elasant attire. Writart voted thia one the winner of em beat. Comiatntly pod aervice, Lunch, dinner. Call 676-2566 for the t.t value r•tawanta. Their open for Lunch, Dinner, Sun. r .. rvationa. Valet pukinc. ...tood ia tbe talk of the town with Cbampepa Brunch Md Harbor RUSTY P E LICAN 30-36 fneh rllh daily. CBS Tele· Cruiaaa. Enwrt.airuMnt nlshtly and "'-1' ...tood and lot.a of it! Come Yition claima tbey have Lhe beat Sun. ahmoom. &joy the &oun,e happy hour in Oranp County. food plley-...uparb clam chowder! dock younalf ban and dine over· Menu baa calorie count for the 3010 LaP~ue. 676-6777. looklnt the beeut.itul Newport &y. .-iibt conKioua. ()pen nifhtly for REUBEN"S OP NEWPORT ~~y 1~ 2!!::: ~ =~~ dinner. Locat.d on the beautiful Ne ,..,._,_ 19• •L.-.....i..:--' --~ ... __ ... __ 0 ood wport Bay al 103 N. Bayaide Dr. 1 ma wie ........ naa ..... ,_ _. No wait Mat bar in tbe lounte. 6'0·6123. ..~ N~ Beach for 2& yean. Lunch, Dinner, Sun. Brunch in Thtit. tpaeiaity ia M&food Md Newport. 2736 W. Cout Hwy., CAFE LIDO 1~. Cbel11pecia)Mlec:tionadaily S.2-3431 . In IrviM-Lunch, Din· K11own u Newp<;rt•11 Cannery Vil· anCi famoua for U.ir broMt.d ner, and Happy Hoar. 1830 Main, l•ie jazz spot. EnJOY 1eourmel food chicken, too! A beautiful waterfront 6'6-4774. with l(OUrmet JllU 1n an mtimau view ol Newport Bay enba.nctl the and cozy almo ... phere Dinner 1tmoephere. Perfect. for buaineM TALE OP THE WHALE n11thtly 6 p.m 111 m1tin11tht. Enter tnt.erulnins and romantic dlnins. Esperienee a 1tap beck Into time to Blnment ni)Chtly ~«1. ~n:r -iAca~flfwy .. -ew-:..---a~place w re you can cffna a your Ae8111on 4 I a m Happv jazz hmH f1-8 port. Reearvat.io1111 accepted. Phone own leiawe. Enjoy the romanoe of M11n. f'r1. Ample parktnl( WOO 673-1605 old Newport with a PMC)ramlc b.y vift. &aclta your MnMI with t.helr MDUtJoeal ...tood and traditional rnoritMa. B....kf•t 7 e.m .. Mon.· Fri., Lunch 11·• Moo.-Fri., Dinner •· ll Moo...S.t. Sat. and Sun. Bnmc:b 7 4, Oy.ter Bu Fri .. Sat. • Sun. Banquet feclliti• up to 600. 400 Main St., BaJbo.. 673""633. SAIL LOFT~ Located above the Jolly Rocer in l..quna, this .C/Xy rMtaurant r ... wrtl fine f~ aealood with OCNn view diniJlc. Enjoy the oyster bar in a warm 'at.moaph.re and decor of nautical motif. The ...tood menu r .. tune awordt'iah, 1hrlmp, h&l.ibut, aca.lloJ» and many other Mlectiona. The O)'lter bar ofrert oyatar 1bootera, clama, crab A ahrimp cocktail and allo hot diahet. The Sail Loft. a rtetaurant that ia dedi· cat.eel to the trllditioo of CQmredary. 400 8. Cout Hwy .. lAruna Beech. 494.8358 THE W AREHOUSE Nawport.'1 moet innovative water· front dlnini nparience. Chef Chari• Ka1.Jian f .. tw. fr•h .... food and intamaUonal cuialne. HichJy acclaimed, award winnint Sun. Brunch, allo feeturinc patio dlnins. lncrecUble oyatar bar, e11· quialw ambieoct. 11ception.t..Jin enta..Wnmeol. Banqueta and cater· Ins available. Lido Vili..,e, Newport S..Ch. 673·•700. 'DINl\EA Tl PAI ll m GRAND DINlU& TDAT&ll Impneeiw cliaiac ud pNt.-....i produetione .,. Mn to ..... MCh time you Nit. The eweal'diMry buffet otren roMt buoe ol bMI, , ...... ham wkh a fndt ..... a.or. sia cbkba with l*C1* ud ..... and the Mahi Mahi it ..wet in a . pelMDt Muce. Tri~ ftU.uccin.i and Cl'MJD it a r..i f9¥0rita. ~ dinner and a play ~tl Gruel Din.Mt ThMt.ar locat.cl withia the Grand Hotel in Anaheim at l Haul Way. CalJ 772-7710. H ARLEQUIN DI NNE R ~ TH•ATBll Every cmtotn.t can be nl*Ud to be u.at.t Ukf a cele.brity. Tbt thNter otren eaumptiout ..a. with top produc:tiom in AD .... t at.moapben. The IWDpWoua buffet lncludet rOMt t.ron ol ·beef, chkbn and flab dlthee, ..-... ..w.. ,,....,.., and liaf\al ... Mrta. 'f'lw Set. and Sun. brunth incl~ a viriety ot ._ clilha The c.lebtify Tern.c. iii a..U.ble for private dinbic. The indt.idueUy deootated private balcoay fOOIDll owrlook the (6(). ... t ~ 1 mam room. um ii located at 3603 S. Harbor ln Se.nta Ana. Call 979-7660. GLJIDE TD ORANGE L=* '"' ±T I I M l~I I ~--s U-I $ ; I /, iii q,. ~ -e -e ~ ~ ' ·$ ~ ~" f' ~ll 1 J /hi/ ·~ ·~ § Restaurant d1 " ~ 'I ~ "3 ~ ------AI RPORTER INN ('onllntnlal ~9 ::.Cl $1149'· .. 7~-$8 9~ Y,.:.o.s11J r111 from ~I OU 4 j • • • 10 700 . -lll?OO M•Artlw< 81 . 1,..,,.. 11-11 .• 711 ' . THE BARN Amn1ca11 I rum $4 !1'1 rrom I •j", 111 9f1 fr1:m '2 i fi 4 :10 7 • • • u&,oto 1.-.ZA.dlllll TMl.eWllll& BRl!ITOI. RAK Ir c,RIU . • llohd•) hut <\n11:r11·1n Ml.9fl $12.!lfl ,3,9'1 $7.00 Suri • 2. ()fJ~1f>. 00 ... , • • up to UJt ._,_. t ••• \t-.. "d7 ..... 400 THE CANNERY S.-11(1".d S 11 !l"• JOIO IA'•yYll~ ~~ 8««h 41"7\ \r. 1•14r, S4 ;•, ' ~ 11:. IH10 $.'! !"141 4 fl .lo * • ue lo 15 • CRAZYHOR8E 8TEAKHOURE Stulh 'f !J', I Ii 'I' \, .,., ,., ., .. MIO lkoc4hollo>W """t. AN \4~ I •II ~.1 .... 11 Hul1rlav• .. -; • * * up lo 200 DILLMAN'8 Amrrn 1111 I !f"• ..,.! I 11, ~.1 11·. ~"'I 1 IOI r. &lbt ... Belt.... fti1 17lil $:1 !.~> ~ 1 !f;, • 15.45 • ' LE BIARRITZ t"rl'n<'h Sfi ')(I $9 yr, $l<t.Or1 4.j • • 20-7rt 4 If H N""'IM'f' Rllfd N_.,.,,, ~ .. h '-I~ R7!Wl ' LE MIDI F'rpn1 h rrum «A t,(1 Prom S.'l!iel F'rnm Jti [..11 Beer It 10-flO • :Mtl v .. l,od., ,,,.,..,,.~. ~ .. 11 t.,7•, ·~·· --W1M Ll'H Chin~ 17 (XI II~ II{) $2 7b·S.,,.!'10 up &o !!Ml Ad•-· Hunl,.wt•"' llo"'h Jfll 111 160 ;JIANDARIN GOURMEt Chinne from Ill) 00 from $4.f•O $8!)1') • upw tMO .W-, <'A...., M"" f..U '"' r. AO MA&CELL0'8 h11l111n fri1m S4 6f1 from l !l 2h Bttr I up ll) 17Mf ~ ...... """' e. ... 11 !I.A/ ~·.o-. . Wint M M A&CSL'8 C'11nllMnl11I Sf\ 011 "r11111 '4 IMI .,. fMI $8 00 4 ::lO f\.:1(1 • • • Up LO ,_._ ,, .. ,_. r-.u.w--M:.~ 60 N I C.UA •I 17U. "-c-.._ ... 792'1 Mn1nn • ~ cart. It comhoo 111 Ntrl• &. romht * • . ••u1u :.N'N ur NIGWPOKT Seafood from $8.9r, frnm $.C.~f) frum l'i.9rl 1'17 • * up'" * •ti C-Hory.-'-11 :l/i . nsw•aamov• ..... _..... .......... .,...,. Ste food from $8 9h ... !lb ti !I.°• SI 2.!lfl ... • • 16 400 Valktt4 .. • - - full lisap- sand was ;ali, iately for a l all iiz.ed 1ttees time en tic f the at ion d to - these •ma" The tivcr 1l for 0 20 and from ·that It I rapes Jion. diatc lf'()VC 1 arc :eous pro- -c nch :> the : still irms :w to and n of 11 the 972. 1he tcutz ·hich DI of I • _________________________ ............ . T 01\1 THE TCJWN HE BARN Ha\t' thr prime of your life chOO!liog from the extensive 25 it.em menu. ~ttak,, •eafood, salada. Italian and :'-1t'ltt·an di~hei.. and more. Western !'harm And country ambience. l.11nd1 \1 F. Dinner M-S. Happy hu4.1r \I r 4 :10.7 p.m. Satellite dish. I.I\' ~nkrta1nment and d&nctnl(. :-.1J11 C'hampagne Buffet Brun<"h 111 .! ·111 Ham.iuet facilitiei>. 1491!'..! l<tdl11tl Tu.,ltn 730-01 J!;. HF. ORIGINAL BARN A R~1ER STEAKHOUSE Y1 -·'I hi'' 1tre the oril[inal Famou' 1111 ll1t'1r 11ne-and-a-half po11nrl l'••r•• rh1111,1• ~t .. aki. and featurml( rl1•1•l 1\ liru1li11j( Proud ly servinj? fur 'I'' or• 1.unt'h Mun -f'ri 11 '.! f>tn hf'' mi:hth ~l11n.-f'r1 from il p m ;'·ti A. ~1111 t rum 4 p.m. 2001 H11rh11r llh rt I '11,1.i Me!'ll. 64'.! 9i7i ~ ri··h l1111d ~flrved with a btde uf 11111 \11 11 1 lt-11t11rl', un11.iiit appe1111•r' • 11111 • 't•af1Kod, l'rtll!'J.ant ,llflll "••ft,' hurl(t'f',, Meic1ran dt,ht''. 111d .111 ~«1tinl( hrunch nwn11 l.111 1 h .ind d inner fr11m 11 11 111 "'" ~d.1" Hrun<'h 9 :11111 wt>ekencl' I ••II har \\tlh spttiah\ drink" I i.111111 hour 4-i weekd11vs. In ('11,.111 .\11···•· 'i11uth C11as1 Plaza parkin1it 1111 '" 'ik' f ift h A'enut> 241-:l9:lK In \\,·,tm111~tt'r. fl4fl Wei1tmin~t!'r \l,111 "1!11 ~r1:.!'i. Oancml( ever11nl£' in \\hi llllll!'llt'r lcM'Atiun H>B HURNS "11 pl'rh i~ 1he word to de-.<:rlbt' th1' I 1111 1ltning l'lltablishmt'nl Servrnl( \,...,. 11ur1 fur 18 years, i.pecialit tn l( 111 \11~11-raised beef. the lint!l!l vou t;111 l(t•t. Also feaLurinl( frei1h fi'<h, \l'AI 11nd <'h1cken. T he lint n <"OVt'rt'd 1.1hle-.. C"andles and fresh nuwer" 11ctd to I he elegance. with hooths and hil(h hack chairs for privacv Flu kl'rmK !ant.u ni. and clai-!'lit-81 1t111M1 capture the charming and v.arm 11tm11sphere. 0 1>en for lun<'h. cl11111pr and their splend1ferou5 Sun d.n ltrunch. F.1tensive w1nt' lt,.,t I 1 F.1,h111n Island 644-20:10 RI STOL AR A GRILL - I Ho liday T rad1tmnally an all 1\mrrlt'an favorite pla<'e 10 eat and prll'l'd for f&mily d ining. Everythm~ fro m JUi<')' LHd!! and cho~ t o "'l)(>t·1nl <'hicken dishes and freiih • enfo<id. Bounteous u lad bsr Sumptuous daily luncheon buffet 0µt"n daily for dlni"l( and co<'ktail11. :11:11 Rriat~1I St .. t't181.A MtM ;,rr: :1000. RAZYHORSE TEAKHOUSE Authentic country dlnlnic. (eaturin1< F.astern Com Fed Beef·Prime Rih, fruh seafood a.nd specializing in their famous pn·fried 1teak1, And de!IM'rt.a. Lunch Mon .• Fri. I l :l. Dinner Mon.-un. 6 p.m. IOinner retie rv•tiont guar•ntffd). Authentu• We.terr\ decor, dancina and liv.4' mU3ic in OM aaloon. Oyer Rd Exil/N"'J)Of't Fwy., S.nta Ana. ft49· l612. DILLMAN' The U1llman f11m1h 1i. 111m111i.. lor tlwir H11di11<1nal111 wnrm hol>pttnht\ anrl line food F'me•I primp rth 111 B11lh1111 ,ind fre,h fhh da1h C'om pll'te d1nnrr .,p1>1111I .. datlv Friendl.Y .. erv1ce ond a fun. clehl(htlul at moi.µhere 01k'n cl111l\ fu r lunrh and dmnrr Hrum·h "Ill .1nrl ~11n HOI E Balhoa ll7.I ii:!h THE HIOF.-AWAY Tired 1tl f'lllllll! 0111 HI plact'' with n11 priv11n" :·war< h n11 m .. re' T ht' H1dt' 1IWll\ [1r11\ lilt'' 1ir 1\·111·v with 11'- liout h' 111d part 1111111'. pnf{'n f11r ft11,1111 ·-.-111111 ht'1111' .md romantic cl111111i.: All 1w" I\ 111'111rlllt'd 11ftt-ri n1t ,1 ri l,1,i1111 ·''""""h"''' Tht' •J>t'l'1al lit'• olrt •l'.lf••"I 111cl 'lt'Ak• <\f l11r<l.1l1l1 rl111111i: 1111 tlw \\h11l1> fd111 1h \ ttrtt'I\ 111 ti.uh -p~1·111I' H11mc· m.1cl1· •1111p• ,111d """ ,., H1•1·r .S. v. 1111' •l'f\l'cl ,1J,,. ·,,._:I hl11ll(l'r 111 ~IHllll! cl.t I•· 111 \ l.ir111.1 ....,h11pf1Hll! \' 1 ll11i:1· ll11111111i:11111 H1·.11 Ii "11111i:o1>< .JOLLY IH>GEH 1.r1 .11 \111n11 ,111 f1o111l ,111d 111 1h1• h,.,, pr11 ,., l'ho· lull\ l«1i:i:r h11' alw1w• '"'''" knn\\11 ,, .. I l!•Ho<I 11111111' \llhlt' r1·•t1111rnnt l'h1• 1111•1111 h•11111rt'' l1rc•.ikl.1,t. 111111 h 111111 clmnn v.11h 11 l11rl(1' \ Mlt'I \ "' ifi,tw .. 111 C'hoo.;t· I r11111 Fr"rn e1o111 1fi,hP~ 1trnldl1 , 11k1•.. h11r,:1·r-'unrfv.11 ht·'· .. 11lut1 .. 1 .. 11111lpll'll.' d1111wr• nl -t-1d1H1d. -11·11k-d111 k1•11 ,111cl cll'lll 11111"' c1 .. , 'l'rl' Ft11111h "" 111 d Im 1.·, v1•nr- " 11 h I hc· 1111•11cll11·-1 '"" 11 e in t 11\1. n llMI !'> 1·,. .. ,, II"' l.10:11n11 Hriwh l!H .\I l~ CALFORNIAN HEMINGWAY'S In 1h1· .. 1,le of thr man himself. llt•1111111(Wll\ ·~ L' 11 1 elehrntmn 111 111h·1·11t1irt 111 r11m11n"t' 11nd t.Ot' 11r1 111 lt\1111( •\n av.arc! winntnl( re" 11wrn111 1•ll er111i: E11r11pe11n 1·111,,11w "11 h 11 ( '11l dorn111 m 1·1•nl and nn ,.,, .. n .. 1\t' \l.llH' h~• l>tnnt>r rui;:htf\ l.11111 h M F l'hi: 111 m1l!lphere H• warm n11tl fr1e ndlv nm! l'illetl with enthu~18'<l11 Esrnhli .. ht>d ~in('e 1972. Lh1-. re,.1a11rnnt /rnlt' '" lo1•ated 111 C'mon11 del Mor nt Psc1fir Coast llwy.111 M.ll'Arthur Hlvd 6i:l-OJ20 . MONACO'S Experience· fant&Rt•c California nouvellr rrr1tl111n!\ 11ccented with II Fren<'h 011ir, wh1lf' dininl( in 11n elt'Kllllt • 'wn~rfront settin• over looking Newport Ray. En)Oy • va111 eltction of ent rttt1 for bt\m<'h. lun<'h. arid dinner in 11ddition to th11 11y11ter bar or aftl'rncM>n Leu on the Ray. makiOJ Monaro's a very pt"CiaJ treat. Monaco'11 is locat.d acroes from Newport Imports in ltlr Tok11i Bank Bids . at a.i:la W. Coe.st Hwy. N«wport S..cb. Phone In your miervatlon• at (714) 6'6·6226 ITAUAN CARMELO'S This ultra-smart haven of e1cep· tional Italian and Continental cuisine ia one of the more rewarding places to dine. Freeh puta and special "light" aauces ar~ carefully prepared by three of the finMt Ital· ian chefs. Pi.ano bar entertainment complemenl.8 the fun atmoephere. Patio dining available for the aun loven1. Open T ues.-Sun. from 5:30 p.m. for dinner. Sun. Brunch 11:00-2:30. 3520 E. Coaat Hwy. Cor· ona del Mu. 675-1922. MARCELLO'S This award winner offera an u - t.ensive menu specializing in putaa. veal. cioppino and their famous handmade piua. Established since t973, this family owned reatau.r&nt has captured the ltearta of ltali&n food lovers. Lunch Mon.-Fri .. Din· - ner 7 ntghts a week. 17502 Beach at Slater. H untington Beach. 842-5505 VILLA NOVA \ l11·u1111f11I li,l\ '~ createi. thl' 1u111.111l11 wtt1111t that '1a,.. made thl' \ tll.1 :-.,,., ,, ,1 .. ,pee 1al k md of pl are" 1 .. r 01\1·r lift, '''/Ir'. Superh cuilimt' trum l t:ntr.il imd Nurlhern ILah '''"I'd 111 Olcl \\ 11rld <harm 1-:ic It'll''" '"n" li:-1 Dinner ni~hll\'. l'i.1111• l111r Full mPnu 11 11 1:1\0 a m I !I \\ 1••1 t ·,,u .. 1 Hw' SP\\J>c•rt l\l'J• h h I.! -~._II - CHINESE LI'S RESTAl RANT 11 \1111 l11ve f'hine!!e fnod , v1111're "ure '" t'llJtl\ dintnl( here. a~ 1.1·~ µr11m i-t-• truf\ au~hen11r Chme!\e l11<od Thr menu offer<. a wide \'&rirt v of 1·xot 11· d1,..hei<, fr11m a la carte t1• 111mhinu111111" Ureathtakini;: de1·or 111 11 -upremelv beau I iful RI "'"'llhl're. Tropical drink~ to 4 ui:rll'h your 1 hir;it. Open ~even dav .. a wet>k for lunch and dinner H~I Adam'. Hunt ingto n Re11r h 96:!911;; :114 N. Re11ch Hlvrl . Anaheim. 82i l:.!10. T!1E LOTU S 1-:ntf'r t hr Or1Pnt and uperienrc• the ex<·ellenn• ul Mandarin And S1e< hwnn ('111-.11wi; '\ulhent1r <'hi nt''t' cl1,..hc·~ 1•:..pt>n alh prepRrNJ t., n111"ll'f r ht>f l.111 Tht' l.11111~ rnn offer n1lmuf\ ma-.tPrptt>Ct'S 111 'u11r hktnjl. Tht' Im el\ dintnl( 8rt>11 1:- rlnmtnoted with pirlurl's ol 1 ht• l,olui> Oower the symhul of purtl\ 111 ( 'hmei.e culturt' EnJo) fine C'h1 n~ d1ninll IL" wt'll a!I wme. spir11 .. and hoi;pit.altt y at the J.01u. Located in Hllrbor Crnter ot 1:1110 Harht•r lilvd m \1111111 M~a I 'all 1'145 :\:l:l 1 MANDARIN GOURMET A lruly special pl11cr to dint', thr Mnnd11rin Gnurmet ha11 hffn a 1e•1ld award winner and owner. M1C"h1tel Ch1a"l( wa11 voled Res1.ttureaur of the ·vear SJ>t'('i&litina in Pek1111<. Shan1tha1. Sir rhwan anri Hunan cui11inl'11, tht'~ f)ffM an arra of dtli ('at:ll.''\ mdudani: PC"IUnj[ nu('k. domphn1111. whole fi8h And mol'f' 'umptiou11 dl•he.. F.lf'«11n1 •t moaphtr~. impe«able ttrvitt and utens1ve ·w1i~ li11t. 1500 Ad11m•, Coeta Mf'M. f 0-1937 PAVILION Large Pagoda building beautifully dt'corated restaurant f'int'llt and freshest ingredients, no MSG. Tan· talizing cuisine that e1cite11 the palntt'. Fine service. Four lartce roonu;, ample banquet fac1lit1es. Champagne lunches and early bird dinnen;. Special holiday feaat11. We welcome company Christ mas parties and ladies' club met'ttngs. "Yuu won't be hungry an hour later a t t he Pavilio n.·• Man · dann/S1..echuan cunune. 14110 Cul· \er Orive. ll'ine. !>!'ll ln88 Lunch & Dmner Ua1lv, Bar. Casual dre'IS. rPservationH .. uggested Lunch from 11 :m. dinner from fdXl p.m .. CONTll\ENTAL MEDITERRANEAN ROOM - Airporter Inn ('11n1[enial and ~cludt'd from the h1111y a1rpor1 surr11undinl[~ T he Mediterranean Room offer~ s11perh t11nt111en1al <·u1.;inp for lunch. din nrr and Sund&\ hrunc·h. Top PntPr tainment n11ithll,\ 1(1 the rahorrt 1 .... 1111i;:e. T ht' t'apldtn°'-Tahlt' '' 11f)t'll fu r d1111n1it :?4 houri. l'Prf Prl fur "atd11nit ('11hforn1d -.uno;et<. 1~ tht' Fl11(ht Ot-rk l.11unl(t' T he Airporter 11111 1, ltt<utt'cl at !Hitt<> Ma1Arrh11r Blvcl 111 In 1111· "l:U '.!';'ill MARCEL'. \ .,tf11' ~t11ro t·I' l>t'l11o11'1111ll' rl'lrl''h 1111( IOt'llll lt'.1t11 r1111.( lresh -.p11f11o<I .inti l.11111 .. 111011 ( .111111 "fl"' 1.11 .. ( ... urint>l ""'"r l111r El!'l(Anl 'Pl '"''"''' ,11 rn11.,phl'rt' Lt\'f' t'lllt'rlitln m1•n1 and d11111 111,: lt•aturi nl( ()("._ l1nt• .. 1 1·nlNtr11nmt>nt lli1n11ni: 1111rli>r 1 lw 'lJr,' I 11n1 h frnm 11 11 111 lltr11wr 1111.(htf\ lrum •,p m (h ,ter t.ar till I !Ml,, ni 110 E 1-1h St ( '"'''' ~lt''ll 1; Iii ~1~1 PUFFIN'~ An .1d \C•11llirc 111 n11111rnl t'fllllll! Fr.·..,h 4ual11 \ 1nl(h·d1Pnb prt>pered 111 ,, ... 1mpl1· \t'I di:ic11n1 way Award w111111r11it rPc 1pc''· ( :arrlt'n M>ltlllJit 11111 E11r111iean t 'nte ''' lc> otmcl'<phrrt' ( ',1,11;11 hrt'<1k Lb l 11nd l11nrh l-'t1rmal d1111n~ fur rltnnN Sun Th11r... - 11111 Ill p m .Fri &Sat till I I p m. .10:>11 E ( '1•11:-t ll\I.\ • C'11r11n11 dt>I \tnr fi41l l:,:t RIVIE RA Ht'lax 111 )!rnr1<111, hervll't' 111 t111 elr1ean1. 1111 1111Hlt' t1t n11-spht're Ex pt' rt ly prepnr«>d rnnt mental rl1~hf•" h\ Chl'f H11 hard Ber1o1nt'r. •1111 I:' 1 •1-;11 1111-11111 a rel winn11111 rl'• 1.11ir1111t '''"' 11lfer' 1n ex ten'" I' v. 1111' "'' ICIHI l'\I !'I' Ill tnfilf''ldt' prt•p .ir.1lll!ll .. nnrl n11rnlw-(lp~·n 1 .. r l.11111 h I I Ill I I' 111 1l11111Pr I r"m ·' I' m Ex11·tl1•11t h11111111e1 1111111111•' ('l,,....·rl S1111 1111.t h11hdA'' .1.1.1.1 ..... Kri,tul. ( ·,"'II \1t'"lt ,-,40 IXJI I FRENCH LE 81ARRITZ Ex pt>rirnrr t'ltl.I Ul'<tll' f rc•nl'h pr1\\ tn<'1al 1 U'<tnt· whtlr din•nK 111 th•~ 11111mntf' Frttn1 h l hatl'RU Spt>rial 11r' 111dud1• rnc·k nf lomh, vt'nl . \forMln 1111cl 11 l){'aut1ful •t'lt'i'I i11n of frrllh fi;.h Homemade 11v.11rd win 111n1< d~,prt.<, EnJo) un hrunC'h with unl1m1ted ch11mp11ine. 1111 l'l11bor11le buffet. a hot f'lltn-i• 1tnd del!:Sert 1111 <1ervt'd m 11 r.1n •. rt la it f'd atmcti1phl'rr Full bi.r "'''h .domt'st•<' and 1mpc.ir1rd wmr ~lf't' lion Lunch. M<1n,.Jo'r1. 0 1nnf'f, Wvt'n n11ht& Sund.,· bmnch H4 N Newport Rlvd • N~rt R4-.A1C'h 64~ fi700. CAFE FLEURI Take a ~at in Cafe Fleuri for break flll>t. lunch or dinner EnJOy an u qu1Mte envirrmment innut'nced hv a French touch. Hot j07z Monday through f'ridav from !;:00 till 9:00 p m and an out,tand1ng wh1lt' tcl11\e brunch make tb1s Cafe the pluce Lo meet. Open i davi. a week. 6:00 a.m ~ 10:30 p.m. Mode.rat•h pri<-ed 4!i00 MarArthur Bhd • Newport Bea<h 4';°1;-2001 LE C HARDONNAY The fine~• in c la;.s1c French and n11uvellP cuisine 1n plu11h i.urround '"~' 1-:iccite v11ur sen'!t'i. with Su µrl'rne of DuC'k with poached Cah l11rn1.1 t'I!(!. hf L11h~lE'r rlb-.erole tn 8 C'hnrdunnay , wme s11uce w11h • l11111tt'rt'lle; IO:.tens1\(' '!E'lec:tmn 111 \\1111'' lr11m 11 lt'mperaturf' <'11n trnllt'd 1°t'llar l.unt·h M11n Fri 11 .111 :! ,\0 IJ111nt'r Mon Sat lr11rn h ·111 S1111 hrun< h 11 :? .\0 In Hel(t' 1~ Hutt'I 1~~1 \1;11·,\nhur Hhcf I r\'llll' -;-,:.! "'7-;· LE ~11 01 ;-..,,,_.ral 1hmic-m.1kf' thi-.1\\urd "'111 111111! htdl:'UW(I\ truh 'Pt'( 1111 \\'11lt1·r t lwir :-O\\ ._ ... 1·ht>I. I r,111wrf 1n '"lilt' .. 1 tllt ht''I hull"t'' l'.11111 'I ~t .. rtl/ 1•1:11 ,. c; ... 1aacl. H.111r t111 I .111. Z11rt1 h \ 11 I h !' 11 I I • I II I ' I II I' l'n•\l'IH 1tft• 't'•""n.11 1("11rm1•1 '"' I I\ 11, .c S1111tlJ' fir, 1111 h '" 11111q11• •• -likt• -tt'pflllll! 11111'~ 111 llllll:' '" ,111 1·r.1 v.h"n ,.,,,.11 .. n,., 111 t1•1<l v. 1, 111,111 h1•d I" i:1·n1•r1111 ... h1,..,111111lt1' 1 h•"t11t.1ltl\ r.ir..t, 1111incl tht••• ii.I\• .f11111 \t11t11 •I ,ll\tf \\ ,1it!'r Ill tht•ir Fr1•111 h c 1111111 n h11m1· I .1111ch d111 111·r nncl !'>11nd.1\ lor11111 h B11n1pu•1 I 11111111•, ('l.,•1•11 \l,.nd,I\, 14.!I \ 1.i I 1d11 'i·v.p .. rt f11•.11h •• -. l<!C ll .JAPA..l\ESF ~AG I . 1\ RF:STAl'RANT I I hi-f11u· 11111'• 0l11p1111hf' r(' .. t1111r.u1t 'fit't 1al11t'' 111 ,11,h1 lt>mp11rd 1111tl 11 rtH1 k1 Thi• '"'h1 Ii rr 1-llrt'JHHt·d II\ 1 ht If I 11n11u.. lap1tnl' .. P t lwl I ruh " 1 .. 1•li 11)! .. 1 he1n.i 111 l11 pH11 Creal lor .. w111l111nl(. -<11•h1 t.,1r' Ml' ,1 (111 11f 11111 I 111ttf11>( (IK1m .1l-11,l\111l,1hlt• 0pt'l1 I 11<-' 1 hru :-.un lur 111111 h 1rnd d111n..r .IX-111 E <'1111,I H"' ( '11ron11 d1•l \1ur fi';' I l!l'l.I IVEXICAN ~11 C \~A I Jwu 1 ... oet '' hk1· .~trip'" \11•x1111' 11 ..... 1111.11i1, "'"'' h111111 ... 11nrid "1111 I ho:rr 11111110 \It 1 ,1,.1 ,., 'II C II'·' •r Ill\ hull"' 1' \u11r h1111't' ~ 't11h 11,ht•tf ~1 11t·1• 1!17~. 1t', no w.r1•t lrlt'ncf, t'llJ•I\ clt111n11 hN" 01J1.'n d1~1h I rum 11 ll 111 tnr I.um h. ll1n 11er .iml 1'111 kl1111:. t-:ntl'rtni11nwn1 \\'1·rl Snt n•l(ht ~ 111 tht' Burr" H1w1m :!!ltl E (';'th ..;1 1·,,..111 \11·'11 ll 1:, itl:lH FORTY CARROTS 'llfolic1ou fa,h1••11 tc .. •d ~>t'r Henf\ :-;t-ltfr"ltrom 1)1"'"""' 1h111 rr11I 1111ttd teelina'or eat1111( l(ft'ltl 111o111n11 1'0l'11I' prt'pnrt'd <Intl\' n11tur11l 11nri h1'11lth' Ori1t1n11I , .. , 111.-.. .. '"''h 1u11 , ... -.qul'f'r.Nl d111h A 11rr11t plA('f' fm Oinnt'r 7 da" lr11m 11 e.m Sundav C'hampnanr Krunch R4-twf'f'n Hull 11ck ... and I MA.(nm :-.<> Cout Plua. lo•"f'r level 5."6 9i00. o.1eboc*/ Fftday. JMUety 31, 1918 I I I I , ORANGE COAST BEAAXJD/STEAICB ANTHONY'S PJBB 2 The Bout.hem Calli. Reetaiuiant Wrii.n voted thia one the winner of lb. bMt value r•taUJanta. Their ...tood ii the talk of the town with 30-36 fr•b rlth daily. CBS Tele- viaion cl&im1 they have the beet happy hour in Oranie County. Menu Ml calorie cou.nt for the weicht conacioua. Open ni.chtly for dinner. LoCllt.d on the beeutifuJ Ne wport Bay at 103 N. Bayside Dr. 640-6123. CAFE LIDO Krmwn u Newport'11 Cannery Vil lage Jill 11pol Enjoy icourmet food with l(uurmPl J8ZZ in an intimate and c•ay atmo.,phtre Dinner n11thtly 6 p.m. t11 m1rln1icht. Ent.er tlllnment 11rght1r'1".i0. ~un j"a'rr aeiiiuon 4 I u m H apr1v J8Z7. hour fi·8 Mon Fri Ample parlttnl( 29()(1 Newport Blvd., 676-2968. THE CANNERY Thia hiatoric wat.erhont landmark in Newport'• Cannery VW... rea- tur• lreah local ...tOoCf and E.t~ · em beef. Conai.t.antJy sood aervie», open for Lunch. Dinner, Sun. Cbampeipe Brunch and Harbor Cruiaea. Entertainment niahtJy and Sun. af•ernoona. Enjoy the lounre food sall.y-1uperb clam chowder! 3010 LaFayette. 676-5777. REUBEN'S OP NEWPORT Thia ia lb. orisinaJ and hail be.n ae~ Newport Baecb /or 26 yeus. Theit, apeci&lty ia ...tood and . 1.._u. Chafe 1peci&l aelectiona daily anCi famoua for their brOMt.d chlcken. too! A beautiful waterfront view ol Newport Bay enbancea the 1tmoapbere. Perfect for buaiMM int.ert.t.ininc and romantic dlninr. Loeitid at 261 E ."COMl Rwy., New· port. Reeervationa eccepted. Phone 873-1506 --- THE BEX OP NEWPORT Located on the oceanfront ICl'Oll from the Newport Beach pie'r, The Res ii the Oranp Coett'1 moat ncluaive ...tood reetawant.. WeU known for freab Hawaiian rOUJ"lllet ft.ab Mlectioaa and 1pecl11isiD1 in 1weet Channel bland ab.lone, ten· der veal and prime DM11ta. The warm ambiance of t.he pedded bootha, sot.hie peintinp ~ the well 1tockad wine r.cb lend t.o Rn'• c:oovivial atmosphen. The R.s of Newport ia the choice of locala aa weU 11 visit.on. Recipient ot the preatiJjoua Travel-Holiday _award. Cuual/ele1a.nt aUire. Lunch. dinner. Ca1J 876-2666 for r .. rvadona. Va.let perklns. RUSTY PELICAN Preeb ...tood and lot.a ol it! Come dock younelf beA and dine over· looldnc the beautiful Newport Say. Featwhlc 15 to 26 fl9h r..tt .. 1ec. tiona daily from around the world. No wait ...rood be.r in t.ba lou.np. Lunch, Dinner, Sun. Brunch In Newport. 2736 W. CoM1. Hwy .. 642-3431. In lrvin.-Lunch, Din- ner, and Happy How. 1830.Main, 646--4774. TALE OP THE WHALE E.1perienee 1 at.ep beck into time to 1 p w re you ciiic bne 1 your own lelaure. Enjoy the romance of old Newport with a panoramic b.y view. EsciUi your NDNI with their MDINltioul INfood and tteditionaJ fa.,oritiel. Bndf11t 7 a.m., Mon.- Fri., Lunch 11·• Mon.-Fri., Dinnet 4-11 Mon. -Sat. Sat. and Sun. Brunch 7 -', ()yet.er Bar Fri., Sat: ts Sun. Banquet facilities up to 600. 400 Main SL, Balboa. 673-4633. SAIL Lorr" Locat.d abow the JoUy &,er in La,una, tbie cosy reetaurant f ... t.urea fme freeh aeafood with ocean view dininc· Enjoy the oy1t.er bu in a warm · at.moephere and d.cor of nautlcal motif. The Mafood menu featun. nrordf'tab, abrimp, h&libut, lcallope and many other aelect.ioM. The oyater · bar often oyster abooten, clama, crab ts tbrimp cocktail and at.o bot dlahea. The S.U Lott, a rteUiurant that la dedi- cated to the tradition of comradery. 400 S. Cout H.,y., 1Acuna Baech. 494-3358 THE WAREHOUSE Newport'• moat innovative water· front dinlni esperlence. Chef Cbarlea Kalqian t .. tu,.. freah .... food and international cuiaine. Hi.cbJy acda.imed, award winninf Sun. Brunch. aJeo reaturinr petio dinm,. lncndible oyster bu, n - q_uiait.e ambien()l,JmP!Nntl Jjye~ ent.ertl\inment. Banqueta and cat.er- inr available. Lido Villqe, Newport Baach. 673-4700. DINl\m!!R n ••• m • GRAND DINN.BR TIU.AU. lmprwiw dia1ns and .. dr la..I produc:tiofte .,. MIN to ..... eech time you yiait. Tba eatnaldinary • buffet often ro.t buoo ol beef, 1Lu.ed ham wit.ha fruit ..... a.or. Pa chicbn .rfth ~ ud ..... and the Mahi Mahi a aarwd in I . peeeant aauce. Tri-color rauuccini and c:r.m » a rM1 favori1e. ~ dinner and a play ~ Gnnd OW..r Tbeeter located withia the Grand Hotel in Ana.helm at 1 HouJ Way. Call 'T72-7710. HARLEQUIN DINNER J TBBATBR Every eu11tomet can be espec:Ud to ba tnated Uk, a e»lebrity. The thaaUir otfen acrumptiooa ..... with~productione ln UI alapDt at.moapbere. Tba IUIDpWoua buffet include& rOMt baron ol beef, chicbn and ftah cllahaa, ........ aalada, ........ ud eiaf\al ct.- MN. !fhe S.t. and Sun. brunch includat . viriety °'"' dw-. Tba C.lebnty Ternca ii •van.bit for privet.a dinlnc· The iDdmdually d.corated private ~ rooma overlook the 460-t boneahoe a"ha main room. uin ii located at 3603 S. Harbor in Sent.I Ana. Call 979. 7660. GLIDE TO A --Ci •ART I n 8 i l~I l-IAN I s $ I ~'° 1,1..,1 CL ~ -e ~ ~ ~ ·$ ~ ! ~ ~~~ 1 I 4'.f _Z1i1/ -~ -~ .§ Restaurant '->.::i ~ 'J ~ ~ "3 ~ -- AIRPORTER INN Cont tnf'nl.111 .~9 ;,o SIK.9" ... 75-$8.95 ~'111-$111~1 from ~:i 1111 4 i * * • JO 700 * -' 18700 MMArth..-1 Ht lnr1M ,._lt ' '711 . . . THE BARN Am1>rn;i11 I rum ~4 !tr-I rum .I 'I"• SI I 9!> (rc:m ~~ 7C, ":10 j • • * u&,0'' 141112 11.odlMU TIOOWI W Ill lb - IHU~TOI. BAH 411 c.IU l.1. • lluhd•r Inn #,m.-rir11n Sff.9f>-$12.95 ':I.% $7 (XJ S8.9r1 $2.00~Sf>.OO 4 7 • * up to I ... , .............. ,, __ '\.S ~ ltlftG 4M THE CANNERY ..;..,.ro.,c1 IJOIO lAforll# ,.,_,.,., S..Ch ~1\ \~' ti I !I-, ~l'I ~·, ~I -;'',. 14 9;, f; '>II $14 <ill I fU11 * * up lo 7!'1 * CAAZYHOR.8E8TEAKHOUSE Slf'llka 'f !I'· 11;\I' < I •1~1 ~4 !l;, MIO Bmolllboll.,,. S.ft,. Ana \.411 "" ~·'·"od H"l11illv' up Lo ". • * * 200 DILLMAN'S ~rn"'"'" ~·; !1:. JI !!'1 IOI f. RAJI>< ... l:lel!Yoe 871 7WI ~.1% ~14% $'1 l;, "I ~(, • 1().46 * LE BIARRITZ hrn'h !'I '10 $!1% "'!1:1 4 i * • 20-7~ •U H N_.,. Kl..t "'-Po"' llr-h •·<' ~;,,, LE MIDI f r•n.-h frum IA till p r•lm .... r.41 PmmJ11:.,11 Beer Ir 10«1 * :Htl VO. Lido. N..P-•' 11'-"'h ~ , 1\1114 --Wint> Ll'H C'h1nl'MI S7 tit• s 1 ~.on 12 7!'1 Sf>..'\O up to 11111111 MAI-ll11ftft"Cil"' 11-•h "1111 'II I 160 lilANDARIN GOURMET "h•ne.f from SIO l)(J rrom M ~ $8 f~I • up to lM .W-. <'•'"'• M-._.l llfl° AO MA•CICLL0'8 h11l1an frum l<I 6fl from $'.I 2f1 e.,., It up lO '\ l'FllM ...._ R1"'4 Hu11I A. .. h M l .\',f1 . Wi.ne .. 66 llAACllL'I f'11nt1nenlAI $f1 110 " ;, 1111 M 1)0 *" IMI Sitm 4 :io 6.:)() • • • up lo &M Ir 11• jlt r-.. ..._ 9411 IW\Y, 50 - lllCUA Mn1C11n 111 cart• Ir cnmht)j al• ('Ult It tumb. • • •I INI t.. e-.,._ ... 1'211 llUltlr:N'lf 0.1" NKWPORT Sta food from $8.9.') (mm S.of.2fi (mm S6.9~ a7 • * up to * •t 1. r-"~--...,._ 'lft -~··aaou• ~.rooc:1 from '8.9f) $.4.!*f> Si !#;, $12.U~ •·1 * * 16·400 VaJlch4 ..... ---. .......... m.me - N ~/ ,,..,,JenueryG1, 19" •