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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-23 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE CO\ST • I FAIR I , I ' 'OMCAaTa ON Al ., FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1986 Earlie.r airport curfew· sought By PAUL ARCHJPLEY Of ... O.., ....... Aights out of John Wayne Airpon won't be scheduled any later than 9:30 p.m. under a proposal going before county supervisors. The plan aims to ensure air carri~rs won't violate the 10 p.m. curfew, said county urpon counsel Michael Gatzke. "The rule says an airplane can't Hayden dies Actor Sterl~ Hayden , the ma•erlci' •tar of 0 Dr. St:ruurelo~e," Tbe Oodfather"' and ''The Aaphalt Juncte. • • clled today. A3 Coast Lagunans are protesting the Laguna College of Art's bulldozing of native vegetation./ A3 Nation The House passes a trade protectionist blll despite Reagan's strong objec- tions./ AS Nation President Reagan has changed his mind and decided to join Hands Across America on Sun- Sports The Angels' Wally Joyner wlll be out for about a week after suffering a severely bruised tendon In his left knee./C1 INDEX Advice and Games Auto Pilot C7 81-6 A3 C5-6 82-7 cs 88 Oatebook Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather 810 Date book A3 88-9 C1-4 Date book A2 climb over New~rt Beach after I 0 p.m.," Gatzke said. ''Our problem is with airlines lhat schedule departures at 9:5S. and because or delays or waiting on the runway before takeoff, they fl y out after the curfew. "We're saying don't Schedule any flights after 9:30 p.m.&> it's feasible a plane could be delayed until 9:45 or 9:50 and stiU depan before the curfew." The proposal was unanimously Charges pushed in boy's death By ROBE RT BARKE R Of ... O.., ........ The Orange County chairman of a state board oversccina the care of developmentally disabled people said Thursday that the death of 14.year- old Banh Pico "was a severe case of child abuse of a ... person not able to defend himself." Merle E. Tracy. chairman of the Developmental Disabilities Arca Board based in Tustin. also said the restraining procedure allegedly used by an instructer May I to bring the boy under control at Gill Education Center in Huntington Beach was "a gross abuse of regulations." Tracy, a resident of Corona del Mar and a retired Los Angeles School District administrator. has urged (Pleue 1ee OFFICIAL/ A 2) Teen-ager convicted of kill ing molester By STEVE MARBLE OflMEW!yNot ltell A Dana Point teen-ager was con- victed of voluntary manslaughter Wednesday for fatally shooting his guardian and setting the body afire. but jurors said they sympathized with the killer. The Superior Coun jury, which deliberated six days. rejected the prosecution's argument that Jouri DcBcer, 18, was a cold-blooded killer who should be convicted of first- degrce murder. DeBeer. a native of Holland. said he shot Ph1lhp Allen Parsons, doused his body with gasohne and set ham afire in 1985 after Parsons tned to molest and choke him. Parsons was described 1n coun as a convicted child molester and a vul- gar. hateful man who frequently molested DcBcer or humiliated him in public. ··1 think what he did protected other little boys from being abused by this man," juror Dot Jones said af\cr th~ verdict. "I'm going to wnte him and send him hugs and kisses." she said. "He's a neat kid." DeBcer, who was 17 when the (Pleaeeeee TEEM/A2) Coast Guard unit for Orange Coast changes leaders Lt. Michael Parks ordered his crew to fire one of the .SO-caliber machine guns mounted on U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Point Divide across the bow of the fishing vessel. Parks spotted the ship just outside San Oemcnte Island. Ftrst its crew tried to flee, then they tried to scuule the boat. Parks and his men were able to stop the s1nkina. On board~e fishing boat from Colombia they fi nd 10 tons of hiah-crade marl.Juana. l>arks cites the capture of crew and contents in May of 1985 a perhaps the mo t memorable event during bis two-year stint as Commanding Of- ficer of the 82-foot patrol boat U GC Point Dtv1de H11 command came to an end Thursday 1n an elaborate chanae of command ceremony at the Coast G}Jard headquarters 1n Newpon Stach. Parks admitted 1hc day was b1tter- \Wttt for him .. 0 1vm1 up command 1s somcth1na PAUL AICHIPLEY FOCUS ON THE NEWS you don't rehsh," Parks sa1d. "But n's easier to aive it up to someone you've known for the past eight yean." Relievina Parts was Lt Martm Langlois Jr. The pau attended the Coast Guard Academy 1n New Lon- don. Connccucut. totcther, aradu- attna ID 1982 Parks' first a tinmcnt was 1n Aorida. where he helped make nine dru& tetzures in I YJ years. The Hunttnaton Buch resident's new assianmcnt 11 at the Coast Guard Operation Center 1n Lona Beach (Pleue ... COAST I A2) approved by the Orange County Airport Commission Wednetday at the urging of Barbara Liebm an, e:itecutive director of the ~rt Working Group, a citizens coalillon. "Enforcement isn'tanigbt as we'd like to see it," Liebman told the commission. The commission's action coin-' cided with its decision to extend until Sept 30 an interim quota of daily depanurcs for ultra-<1u1ctjets. The commission granted the ex- tension while its staff completes an accns plan that will limit yearly passenger usqe of the airport. Gatzke said air carriers had asked for more time to comment on the ,acoeu plan that's now in draft form. Staff me mbers also wanted the Fcdcral Aviation Administration to review the plan, and schedule con- mcts ~vented FAA officials from commentina before July I when officials hoped to launch the plan. The access plan will cap yearly passenJCf totalut 4.7S mtlhon for the next four years. The airport is seTVed by nine commercial and four com- muter airlJnes. Airline spokesmen a&recd to go alona with the delay, even tbou&h many hoped to have the plan in place for the busy summer season. ''AirCal and a number of other carriers arc facing capital investment decisions. scheduling decisions and other conetms ... 1a1d A.lrCa.I apok.tt. man RJchard Sherman. .. A.lrCaJ re- luctantly aarttt to adoption of the interim quarter quotas. .. Gatzke said the sta.tf repon.. with input from the FAA and &11' carriers, would 10 back to the eommissfon on June 27. The Board of SupeNisors is ten· tatively scheduled to review the 9:30 p.m . cutofffordepanuresat their first meeting in June. Bank in Irvine seized; unsafe practices cited Newly formed b a nk to reopen today under federal conservator By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. O.., ........ CbarginJ unsafe and unsound busi- ness practaces led Consolidated Sav- ings Bank to insolvency, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board Tuesday placed the Irvine bank in con- servatorship. The bank at 2171 Cam pus Drive was to reopen today with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpor- ation actina as conservator. The federal bank board also authorized Federal Savings to enter into a service' contract with House- hold Bank of Newport Beach. said board spokesman Dave Loveday. Consolidated will retain its name, be said. .. Depositors and stockholders re- main insured m the newly-orpniz.cd bank. The board placed the two-year-old bank in eonservatorsh1p because Consolidated was in "an unsafe and unsound condition," Loveday said. "It had dissipated its assets and earnings." The board also found Consolidated to be insolvent A state chanercd bank. Con- solidated had assets ofS84.3 miUion. Consofidated's financial woes &rew out of a rapid growth stratqy con· (Pleue eee BAJllK/ A2) Crash victims seek $2.5M from Irvine Balboa Bay Club bub Lady Godin. l•da the Balboa BaJ Clab Chill Cookoff parade, lncladhaa a Pfew Orleall8-8tyle faneral proce .. ton with OPel• ln wfi.lte llmouln• ln tl&e rm.r Thanday. Lady G -Aka Carole Arnold -la the clalef cook for the Wh.lte Hone, a Pfew Orleana chill IJ'CMIP bued ln Newport &e.ch. BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN ................ Two fammes who say they were injured in separate Irvine traffic accidents have filed claims seeking almost $2.5 million in damages from the dty. One of the claims was triggered by a collision involving an Irvine police car. Seeking damages in one incident are David and Karen Manin, both Sea w&.11 at Crescent Bay to be removed by owner By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .... D9lly .... ...,, A sea wall protecting a beachfront home in Laguna Beach was expected to be tom down this morning, ending a long feud between the . property owner, residents and city officials. Contractors representing the Cres- cent Bay homeowner during nego- tiations about the sea watt applied for a demolition permit after plans for a replacement structure were denied by the City Council on Tuesday, said June Catalano, the city's community development director. Once the wall is removed, Catalano said the cit¥ will drop its legal challenge against the property own- ers. Tony Montepart and Manon Knott Montepart -the daughter of Knott's Berry Farm founder. Walter Knott A court date was set on the matter for June 4. The boulder-and-grout wall was one of several built at Crescent Bay in 1983 after severe winter storms undermined the bluff beneath the Montepart ho me. The seawall was built to protecl both the home and a city staircase to the beach. Catalano said. But the wall. paid for Jointly by the cny and the Monteparts, was con- structed without proper permits be- cause of the emergency snuation. And later in the year, the state Coastal Commission ordered the wall re- moved because it encroached on public property. "Neither the state nor the city wants something that will take away from the sandy beach area.·· Catalano (Pleue eee DISPUTltD/ A2} .... .._ ............ ---. Street. Officer Joll.n Pberrta ealrered a broken lec ln the 2 :24 p.m . accld.ent. whlcb occvrec1 while be wu reeponcUnc to a call. age 20, of Fountain Valley, and thetr IS-month-old child, Dtcdre. The Mart1ns say they were tnjurcd April 8 ma traffic acadent on Sand Canyon Avenue at Bun lane. The Martins' attorney. Richard L Banh, said the family's car collided wi th a marked police station wagon driven by Officer David Edwin Stoermer. Stoermer was responding to a (Pleue eee ACCIDENT I A2) Cities, schools to close; trashmen off for holiday By LA UR.A MERK Of .. EW!y ......... This weekend highways wtll be iammed with people taking short vacauons and thousands of Southern Cahfom1ans will hit the beaches. It's also the weekend we remember those Nho died in battle for our country. Memo rial Day, formally acknowleged on Ma) 30. will be celebrated this weekend and people aro und the Orange Coast will get their first itch of summertime fever. Also known as Decorauon Day. Memonal Day was maugurated in (Pleue eee Pf0/A2) Sheriff rallying support, funding By LISA MAHONEY Ot .... EW!y ......... Financial supponcrs have rallied around Sheriff-Coroner Brad Gates' rc-elcc11on bid, shunning tus political opponent who he took to coun to prevent frnm printin& accusation$ ag~un~t him m Orange County's offic1al voters' pamphlet. ccord1n1 to campa1&Jl dasclosurc statements filed Wlth the RC&JStrar or Voteno n Thursday, Gates has ralJfd $61.790 smcc March 18 compared to $483 rt{>Oncd b challenger unda ua Calhpn Much of Gates' contnbuttonscamc after he and some backen sent leucn to ~upponers ask.Ina them to bolstcT h" campa1an warcbest Oates' (unds had bttn depleted by lcpl ea~~ incuTTCd m challcn11n1 C · 's ngh1 to ma kt accusatton, ap1n\t him 1n tht> vott>rs' pamphlet In contrul. all butS7S of •ll1pn'' (Pleue eee CAllPAIOM/ A2) J 1 * Otongo Cout DAIL~ PILOT I Friday, May 23, 198ll COAST GUARD CHANGES COMMANDERS •.• Prom Al La.nfois spent four years 1n Hawa.u. Pan of his dut)' included service on the CoaSl Guard Cutter Monroe that searched for survivors and ~lcage in the waters of the St'a of Japan after the Soviets shot down a South Korean passenger airliner car· ryina 269 pcoP.lt in t 9"83. Langlois will be commanding the only Coast Guard umt m Oranal' County. As pan of the Eleventh C'oa,. Guard D1stnet. tt~ operational con· trol extends from Point Conception to the Mexican border and halfway to Hawaii. Commandtng a crew 6f 10 nien, Langlois 1s charged w11h a varied mission that tnclude coastal drfcnse, boallOJ safety. na' 1gat1on assistance, ~a~h and rescue. customs law and batthng drug traffirkers. Although the C'oas1 Guard fall~ under the Department of Transpor- iation rather than the Defense De· partment. it 1s the federal mant1me law enforcement agenc). and that sometimes means being prepared to fiiht His '>hip. thi: U C'GC' Point D1v1dl'. hoasts a thr1."c-e1ghths inch steel hull. At ~4. 11\ the oldest 82·foot Coast Guard c:utter on Lhe Wc!>t C'oast l he 75·ton craft as equipped wtih soph1st1cated radar. depth finder and nid10 specifically designed for St"arch and rt"scue opcntt10M. ll cames &an 1nO:nable boat on its tern for use in rescue • boatdinas and supply de· li veries. And 1f Langlois encounters trouble hke Parks found oumde an Clemente Island. ht: can arm hi crew with a pair of SO-Caliber machine aun and a cache of M· 16 ntles .. 45· caliber handguns and shotguns. tr scoffiaws try to outrun the Point 01v1de. its ptur of 90().horsepower Cummins diesel v .12 engines can power tht: ship an exce'is of20 knots. Langlois. 25. can't expect many of his days to be that cxc1 t1ng. but Parks said they should be interesting. "On an annual basis we'll handle SO 10 60 search and rescue cases." Parks said. "We've hud 23 this year already." Much of the ta mt' will be spent on readiness training should the nation go to war. The Coast Guard also shares1urisd1cuon of the harbor with the count} Shenffs Harbor Patrol. and oversees the annual Newport 10 Ensenada yacht ract• -the largest yacht race in the world, Parks noted. Langlois will have to be on the lookout for increased drug trattic too. .. Thtte re good rcpons th.at the drua traffic is mov1na ~e t." Parks 1d ... But there arc differ ·nee be· tween here and Flonda. lt'~e:m~melr, d1flicuh to detttt on the open water. • Thnt job has been made even more difficult he(au~ of Gramm.Rud· man. "Gr.imm·Rudman 1.-. h1tung the C'oa t Guard. too... Parls said. be· cause funds for fuel havr bc<'n hit. "We're definitely feehn& the pinch, .. he said It's a tall order for the new commanding omccr. bu1 the Coast G uard picks onl)' lhr hcc;t. "A lot get screened and only a few make It, .. 'Parks said "( ·ommand of a ship is one of the most presllgiou'l thinas you can do "Mistakes at sea can be far mort hazardous than on land." Langlois will have his hands full making the move to the fast lanes of outhem California. too He and his wife Tamie and tbe1r 2· year-6ld sot1 Knstophtr are loolung for a home to buy in Orange. The Fulton. New York, nauve doesn't think they'll miss Hawa11 .. My wife was getting island fever," Langlois said. CAMPAIGN FUNDING REPORTED ... From Al contnbutions came trom loans made pnnc1pally by campaign manager Robin Reisdorf. Reisdorf s~ud Calligan 's lund·ra1s- ing ab1htY was senously hurt b)' the coun decision fa\ onng Gates. "Ifs kind of hard to raise mone)' or gel endorsement\ or c;uppon." sht.> said ~ Superior ( uurt Judge ordered c.cvcral allegauons ( 'alhgan made a~inst Gates remowd trom a can· d1da1e's Matcment 1ha1 \.\3S sent to more than I m11l1on registered 'oters Judge Judith R~an called the allegauons false and misleading and ordered them '>trid.rn under an untested !>el uon ut the Eleu1ons Code. Calligan hus <ipJX•aled the dl'C1s111n on const1tu t1onal groun<.h. hut thl' matter won't be he<anJ h} thl' 4th D1s1n c1 Court ot Appeal untJI alter the June 3 pnman ek ct1un Gates reponed ~ix·nding more than $41.500 in legal fCl'\ 10 prn.enl Calligan\ lull c;tatcment from go ing to the 'oter~. He also 10\CSted s .:n .181 for l.Jm- pa1gn literature. S 12.104 for rall w ad\eniscmcnts and paid $.:!0.1611 to a campaign comuhant dunng tht· l\\U· month reponing pcnod In all. Gates )pent SI ~:!.008 dunng the• reporting penod and $I 71.080 s1nll' Januaf') Hl· had $54. 796 kft 3'> ol May 17 ( alhgan'!> lqta l fee'> ha'c mountell tu SJO,OOU. acrnrding tll her cam· pa1gn spending n:pon Ha ving raised S9.35M since Jnnuaf}. she reponcd only $926 left as of May 17 and bills of $30.408. Most of Calligan·s e~pcnses ha ve been in defending herself against Gates' Superior Court complaint. Bobb) Don Youngblood. the thtrd candidate for shenff. raised $8, 916 1n cash contnbut1 ons smcc March I 7. He repon ed $2.375 in loans and $4.121 in non·monctary contribu· tt0ns. Total cash contnbut1ons received since January by Youngblood, a ~un1c1pal Coun1udgeon leave from the bench. were $28.606. He claimed a }'Car to date total ofS8.080 in loans and S 18.642 in non-monetary con· 1nbut1ons. He also hsts $105.000 in a~ }C't unreceived pledges. Youngblood spent $8,299 dunng the reporting penod and $21.931 since January He reported $10. 783 1n cash re· maining in his campaign bank ac· count and debts of$2,97S. In other count) races, 5th D1s1m·t Supervisor Thomas Riley handtl} outstnpped chief pohucal opponent Jon Brand Riley ra1'1Cd SI 04.075 in cash l'Ontnbuttons dunng the reponing pcnod and spent $86 783. With ht) 'ampa1gn al read) \.\-ell endo""ed. Rile) rcponed having S 110.013 lcft as ofMa) 17. Campaign htc·raturc and rnnsuh- ant -;crv1ces were respon sible for mO\I of Kill'> ·s l'Xpt·n<.l'~ Brand. of Laguna Beach. raised $25,941 and spent SI l.443dunng the reporting pcnod. In all, the former mayor raised $33.27 1 to wage his campaign aga1ns1 Rile}'. Cash on hand at thr clo\C of thl.' reporting period was S 17.320. Mone} spent went for campaign literature and fund-raising events The third candidate Kenneth Palmer Pratte of Santa Ana Heights did not file a disclosure statement. Second District Supervisor Har· nett Wieder raised little and spent little between March and May to protect her seat But the well-financed candidate did drop about $420,000 of her$55 I .3921n campaign fundc;at the beginning of the year. Wieder opponent Oav1d Mcslovich of Garden Grove. raised only $976 and spent S 710 from the beginning of the campaign. He rc- poned a cash surplus ofS266. Onl) twoofthe lourcontenders for Founh District supervisor have filed the required disclosure statements. 1-ormer U.S. Rep. Jerry Patterson and Orange Mayor Jim Beam ltsted the tr campaign act1v1t1cs. Statements lrom •\nahe1m Mayor Don Roth and Manuel Mendc1. an Anaheim architect. are still outstanding. Patterson outstripped Beam by about $25.000 1n cash contnbut10n!. but Beam led in total contributions 1ncluding $40,027 in cash. $47,500 in loans and $58,0<XJ in pledges. Patterson reported $64. 748 in cash. $.l5,000 in loan'> and no pledges. OFFICIAL URGES CHARGES IN DEATH ... Fr om A l D1stnc1 .\ttornl'\ ( l'UI lltl k'> tu rccon~1der a (k et'lmn not In li k cr1m1nal charge' 1 f3C}. \\ho \J1 d ll1d ,., rcpont'd h "oulc.Jn't talk 111 him on the tcle· phone. said he'' u>n\ldl'nng other ahernatnc'> thJt 1nl'l udl' asking the Orange ( ount} (1rand Jul) to rnn· dull an 1nqu111 to dl'lcrm1 nc 11 charges ~hould be ti ll'd t'V.e ha,•e gra'c toncl'rn lhal thl\ dl·ath be gncn lon\ltkra11un equal w thal g1,en 1he death ol Jn\ u t11en\ of o ur {ommun11 ~ .' hl· \J1d \\cdnc\da\ in a kttc•r 10 111' b \t T r3l} ·, rnlll l'\t, <>range ( uu nt~ "urx·r""or I horn(!\ I Rak\ al~o urged I ltd.\ h' klll'r to re' ll'" thl· t aw "I t ,1n\lh 1 ny d1\,1d' a ntJgn l '11ung\lero; nn·o mnrr ol 11ur fl,, e Jnd \.llnl crnthan other'>· Rtlt•\ ''"d Hut Paul 'v1n l·r .1n Jtl<lrnl'\ Im ( 1111 Education c l'ntl'r 1mtructor Jeanne W<.1rnn kt• l ltttml·J th<1l cnl1· U\nl mer thl· d t'll\11111 n11t to ti k l n nHn al thaqtt'' "1' l'1t\l>t1011JI tl.'Jt· uon to 1m:omplcte and parttdl infor· m:u1on." Me, er claimed that Warnecke did not tape a pla\llC·hned diaper o'er thl' bov''i entire fale Instead, he ~1d the diaper was placed onl)' mer tht• qe<, 10 screen out v1<,ual <,t1rnuh Meyer also claimed that the boy\ head and neck were not covered h) a mat in an ensuing re~1ra1n1ng prcx:ev·. ·· \.1rs. Warnecke 1'i a Im 1ng, c:om· passionate perc.on ""ho did the ap- prupnate lhing~ 10 protect thl· child ... he ..aid. '1e'rcr r;a1d he bchl''t'' that the 711- pound boy's phy'>tcal d111icult1c\ 111 nwd1l·al comphcauon<. were fatlof\ 1n ht\ death The h<>> died MJ)' 3. three da)S after the inudcnt. ot what thl' Oran2c ( ount\ < oronl'r\ r111in· rulrd was a<,ph) 1'1a11<1n Huntington Beach Pohn· l t farnl'' WJlker. who trt{'d but la11cd lO persuade Deputy D1stnc1 Allorne) R1l k Toohey to file 1n voluntar) mamlaughter chargr' aga1111,1 V.. arn- cc ke said \\tine\'<'' in the room reported that the diaper wa~ placed and taped over thc ho~·., cnure lace and that h1 \ entire bod\ wa\ in' oh ed in thl' malling pnxe'>~. allegedl) 1n1erknng """h the bo> ·.,,breathing. Walker \:ltd Thursda}. howe"er. that poltc.·e art abiding with the J1stnc1 attorne) \ pos111on not to file chargcc; l he <ll•\d opml·nrnl d1sab1hlll'\ ~roup 1~ rc•.,pon\lhle lur uver~ceing _w 000 'oung'>tl'f\ enrollcJ tn ~pcetal cduc:at1on program\ in Orange ( oun- 1). and cha1rnian I racy <.aid thcrc ma) be a ft·chng amt>ng oflic1als that d1 .. ahled people arc c\pendahle. "There nec:d' to be \Ome penalty. <.omc determm;.itao n ot guilt to serve not1u: that )'OU rnn't ahuse kid'>." he .... lid f>cput~ Dl\tfllt \ttornc} Toohey. \\ho t:arl 1er said then.• wa<. 1nc;uffic1en1 n 11.lenc:c lo '>Upport a homicide t hargc. 'ia1d Thur\<lay he was sails lied with the police 1nves11gauon and ht \ re\. le\\ of the matter But he d1dn'1 elaborate furthl'r DISPUTED SEAWALL TO BE REMOVED ... From Al \,lid ·• f h~'I(' \\{'It ,1 i11t nl l fllll pl:tllll\ .11lcr 1t \\J\ huilt T hr ul~ "a' h'.tJ\ 111 de<,tro} thr wall ( atalan11 ,,11d hu t necdt•d tht• lllt>perat mn o t lhl· h11meowncr' be l :.tll\l' part ol tht v.Jll wa' huilt on pn"all' prupt.·rt' Hut the part it'' wt· a· llll<Jhk to .lgrcl· on the rem!l\.al and the Montcparh a~ked the Ctl) lo dela} ns legal challenge so the) rnuld \\Ork on plan<, for a replacement wall Bui when lhc propo~I for a replan:ment was denied Tuesday, the contractors agreed lo knock down tht' wall Whtie the M•lnleparH <;1111 hope to build an('" protecll' c barrier in front of their home the C.'11} will not try to protect 11s concrete sta1rca">C leading to thl' public bfach If 11 1s destroyed by future stonns, Catalano said. 11 will he replaced hy a wooden stairca!>e to bC' rebu1l1 as wavt>s and tidal action dictate. TEEN CONVICTING OF MANSLAUGHTER ... From Al l nml· \\<J\ comm111n l 'aid Pa"""' heeanit' ht\ guardian in I IJR I and hruught him to thl' l 'nlll.'d f)tatc'I with I he prom l\t' tha 1 he: would make C>eUcer a mntc>efl>'l'I '\tar But instead l>cBeer said he w,\\ forced lo t"ndun: }ear\ nl ..c~ual and emotional abu"c al the hand\ nl ParltcJn\. MAIN OFFICE VOL. 71, NO. 143 • The attad. ""3'1 .1 re\ull of the 1111ment and hum1l1a11nn hc.-'d put up \\,llh, he testified The prosecution. howe\.er. dc- \crtbed Ddkers a~ a cold and lalculaung killer \\ho burned Parson'\· bod> in an effort locra'IC h1!> 1drnt1fica11on tu a m:nm1n1um uf IS H'arc. 111 prison 1fht• "<ocntt.:nced a~ an adult. rfhe 1s 'll'111 to the ( altfornia Youth o\uthonl> hl' c:ould ~ released "-lth1n three yeari. c;c"cralJuro!'1 ~td they plan to urge Judge Rolxn f1llgerald to sentence DcBcer; to the ( ahforn1a Youth l\uthon11y De Beer could l'>c-,cntenced June 20 Justcall 642-6086 What do you hke about 1he Daily Pilot? What don't you like., Call the number above and your mc~saac wall be recorded. transcn~ and de· h\ercd to the appropnate edJtor. The same 24.hour answcnna service may be used to record letter$ to the editor on any topic Contnbutors to our Letters column must 1ndudr their name and telephone number for venfica11on Telb us what's on your mind • ., D•lly Piiot Dell very It Ou•r•nlMd •' 0'9, IVl'l '•""'•t it /{lu f\Cf ·~· •• 10.·• {o( r llr 1 a "' CAil• 11"1 •• •o • ~ •JI':~ '°"" ; ,, ... ..,. ... a Clrcul1Uon Telephonee ...... " ... --- Fair skies for Memorial weekend Ttmperat\.lf'M are ex~~ to warm• bit along the Otenge Cout .. the ~Oflal DayWMkend begtnt, with .ome i.ta night and Mfly morning cloud• bu1 othttwfte fair tklee thfough Saturday, according to the National WMther Setv~. High• today will In the 70. and Sa tut day from 72 to 82. Low. wtH droo to 52 to e2 overnight. Southetn c.tff()(ni. mountain• wtll b9 fair through Satur~. Overnight Iowa 35 to 45. Hight 81 to 78. Inner coutal wet•• -Ught varlabMI Winds through Friday night txc.pt w..t to tau11"'"8t 10 to 18 knot• Friday afternoon. Southwest twelt 2 to 3 I.et. Liit• night and morning low cloud• otherwlae fair. .•. Outer water• -Northwest wind• 10 to 20 knota through Friday night. Sea• 5 to 8 feet. Liit• night and m0tnlng low c1ouet1 otherwlM fair. U.S. Temp• Al~.N V 72 I& I.JUI• Aoct. 74 641 z=t:-97 M t°"""* 641 46 13 65 Mem9Ht 78 01 ~ &.. 'ROHTt: ~ .. W•m-Cold._. SllOWett Allln FU'rltt Sl'IOw OcoUMd Y'IF StallONlry .... Ht101W w.twr 1aMD.e HOM. VI OM! OI ~ AnQl\0<'09 67 40 Mlilml leeclll 12 75 Allenll 78 .. MlelleM.0.... 92 84 Atl..,llCClty 03 " M......_ 62 4S Calif. Temps A1tttln 1:1 eo 11411tllNlt• 71 " lirmlnigllem 74 41 ~ 78 50 8ofM 90 51 eo.1on 90 5t lkllf.io M 50 llwtng1on, VI .. 03 CM!* 83 47 Ctlarletton,S C 11 .. cn.tlNton,W Ve eo 50 CMyennl 78 41 Cllleligo 51 '7 CltlcillNll 51 42 ~ " •• CotumtMl,SC .. $& Cdum-.ONo 56 41 ~.N H 13 fM Oellu--Ft Wofln " IO Oeylon 5l 47 o.n-82 63 O.MOIM9 et 45 OelrOll 52 41 El PMO 83 es Flllr-• 641 41 Fwgo • 45 Ftegetall 11 ... Oland"-'>• 49 .. Ot•tF ... 84 41 0.-bOro NC 75 " Hwttord 79 83 -92 49 Honolulu as et "-Ion 12 fM lndlanepolll se ... Jecll<eon.MIM 75 50 ,,_, 51 43 !Yin-Cir, 13 50 LU VegM 97 74 ....,..,p..,. 84 ,. HMINlll 84 41 HewOftMM IO 57 ...,.Yono Cny 71 e3 HottOlll. y~ 78 12 Oii'-'-" City n H Onlella 73 52 ONndo " 03 PhlllldllphHI 73 es ""-4• 108 1& Reno .. 47 Atc:IVnon<I IO ., St loul8 97 41 Sell I.Ilk• City .. 51 a.,, AlllonlO .. ., a.n.Nen.PA " 16 Seetlle 5t ... ~ 79 54 Sfola F .... 10 42 Spoil-u 47 Syr-74 52 T wnpe-81 PlrabQ 13 87 Topelle 7:1 50 TUCIOtl 102 .. TulM 74 SI WuNngton,O C 11 eo Wlc:M• 73 641 --ean• 73 IO Extended Nlgltl and momlng low clouOe, Sltn- dty lhrOllQI\ Tueecley, ot,,.,..... lair. Tempet•11t1• ranoee BNc:Ne, Nell• ee 10 12 l.OW9 50 to eo. v~. hlgha 12 to 12 LOM 50 to IO. StOClllllon TalW>e Vllllel\I lorr.,_ Y-"'le Vt/ Surf Report LOCAT!Olt 11111 DA l.urM ._,,, 2.3 SW Senta Montee 1-15 IW ~...,. 24 aw S.. OleOO County 24 SW Outtoola tor SeM-lJnle ~ Tl dee TOO.A\' a·•9e.m. tO 1~1.1'11 :S.01~ t •lpm IAlVM>AY •·31a.m 11-ot ""'· 343pm 10:03p.m . _,, 4.0 1 e .. -0 1 at II .. BANK IN IRVINE SEIZED BY U.S ...• From Al ceived by the bank's management. Loveday said the bank increased its base by 300 percent in 1985, funding its growth by sohciting h1gh<ost "Jumbo" certificates of deposit, which require a mimmum invest- ment ofS I 00.000. "to fund risky and poorly underwritten commercial loans." The bank board also found Con· !>Ohdated was guilty of several regu· latory v1ola11ons Among those v1ola11ons were loans to maJor stockholders and family members. and failure to acquire adequate appraisals, Loveday said. Board auditors served notice at Consolidated at closing time Thurs- day. then worked throughout the night taking inventory. Ohav10 Angotll, Consolidated's chairman and chief executive officer, was ousted along with several other managers. The new management team 1s headed by Charles A. Colip, senior vice president and chief operating offi cer at Household Bank. Loveday said no decision had been made on filing criminal charges. "It's too earl y to tell on pros· ecution," he said. "We'll detenmne that la ter on." A threc·member board was ap. pointed to advise the conservator. Chairman is John S. Griffith, Jr .• former chairman and presjdent of State Mutual Savings and Loan, which is now Far West Savings and Loan of Newport Beach. Also on the board are James C. Hughes, former president and chtl'f executive officer of Hartland Savings and Loan. and Walter Allen Jr .. a. retired Bank of America vice prest· dent. NO T R ASH COLLECTION MONDAY •.• From Al 1868 by Gen. John A. Logan, also a congressman ll was originally in- tended as a day to decorate the graves of Civil War veterans, but has since become a day on which all the dead are remembered. He was elected to Congress as a Democrat from llltno1s in 1858. before the C1v1I War. Afterward. he resumed his career in the U.S. House of Representatives and in the Senate. where he was known as a radical Republican and one of the House managers of the Andrew Jackson's impeachment trial. Logan. who helped found the Grand Army of the Republic, an organiza11on of Union Army vet- erans. was known as a tremendous supporter oflegislation for veterans. Because o" 1,is effon s to acknowl- edge servicemen, on Monday all Orange Coast city halls will be closed to commemorate Memorial Day. As city workers spend what fore- casters claim will be a beautiful sunny day at parks and beaches, trash collectors and academics will be joining them. All schools in the Orange Coast will also be closed on Monday. Trash pickups scheduled for Mon· day m Huntington Beach, Fountatn Valley, Costa Mesa, Irvine, Newpon Beach and Laguna Beach will be collected on Tuesday. During the remainder of the week all garba!$e will be picked up a day late, accordtng to trash collection companies' spokes- men. People who normally have their trash collected on Friday will have 11 picked up on Saturday. Only those who are regularly scheduled to have their trash collected Saturday will be on schedule. Normal trash collection schedules wtll resume the following week. ACCIDENT VICT IMS S E EK $2.5 MILL ION ... F rom Al crime scene 10vesuga1ion call but was not usin~ the car's with lights or siren, Banh said. Barth said Stoermer cut in front of the Manms' car and that David Manin was unable to avoid sinking the police car. The claim states the Martins suffered injuries to their spines and nervous system and are ~eking S2 million in damages. The second claim was filed by Mana Elena Ruiz. Salvador Ruiz Gil dnd Antonio Ru1zJ. all of Santa Ana. They are seeking >46 1.800 from the SpltiKg ~s SpllU~Q! Let the sun shine In! Capture the extra hours of daylight with moveable custom shutters ... in sizes & colors to flt your lifestyle. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call ( 7 14) 548-684 1 548-1717 city of Irvine and the county of Orange. According to the claim, Gil was driving a 1976 Chevrolet when it was involved in a Jan. 18 accident in Irvine on the 1800 block of Warner A ven ue, east of Pullman Street at the railroad tracks. The claim charges that the city "ne$ligently failed to reduce veg- etation which obscured the view at the railroad crossing. ... " It says that Maria Ruiz. si1. months pregnant at the time. was a passenger in the car at the time of the accident. Antonio Ruiz was born prematurely on Feb. 20, according to the claim. As a result of the accident, the mother and child were injured, and driver Gil's car was dam~ed. the claim states. It says Mana Ruiz injured her pelvis, n~ht hip, leg and arm, and that her child has required extensive hospital care. The claims are scheduled for re· view Tuesday by the Irvine City Council. The city staff bas rec- ommended the claims be denied. Designed • Finished • Installed & • Established 1953 1977 Placentia Costa Mesa ' Cranston plans Newport oil talk Sen. Alan Cranston will addttas a meetina of local elected officials 1-nd communny leaders Saturday at 10:30 l .m. in Oalaity View Park. Newport Beach, on efforu to prevent offshore oil lcucs off' the Ora nae County coa1tlinc. Those wishint . to attend should park at Newport Harbor Hl&b School, I Sth Street at Irvine Avenue, where tran1port4tion will be provided to 9aJaxy ~icw Park. Call (213) 21 S-2186 for funher information. Prop. 61 talk la NB · Atto"!'~Y Joslyn A~~kin will speak on the effects of ProPostllon 5 I, the deep pockets" initiative at Tuesday's noon meeting of the Newport lk~ch Kiwanis C ub at the Reuben E. Lee restaurant an Newpon Beach. Call Dr. Raymond Osbrinx at 642--0420 for more information. Radlo ha.tea to •peat' Barbara Esensten, KABC talk radio host, will be the guest speaker for the Association of Jewish Business and Professional Women at Tuesday's annual United Jewish Fund dinner at the Hotel Meridien in Newport Beach. The dinner is open to m~mbcrs of AJ BPW. their guests and friends. Dinner reservations are $20 and information is available at 530-6636. Rable• clinic at fairground• An antj-rabies vaccination clinic for dogs will be held Wednesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on the Orange County Fa1rgrounds in Costa Mesa. The vaccinations are priced at $3 per dog and will be administered by veterinarians of the Southern California Veterinary Medical Association. CaJI 523-0980 for details. Free •plnal erams offered Courtesy ~pinal examin~tions ~e being offered by . local . chiropractors ·~ conjunction w11h Cb1t0pracuc Wellness Week m Huntington Beach People with back problems should contact th~ Huntington Beach chiropractor nearest to them for an appointment. Skla cancer testa •lated Dermatol<>gJsts will conduct free skin cancer exams during an open house Tuesday from 9 a.m. 10 noon at the UC lrvme Medical Center's new Melanoma Center. Further information may be obtained by calling the UCI Cancer Center at 634-5081 . AIDS luues •et at forum . Experts m the medical, legal. personnel and msurancc fields will answer questions on AIDS. related issues an the workplace Wedneday at a forum from 7 to 11 a.m. at the Orange County Medkal Associauon Center. 300 S. Flower St.. Orange. The cost of the forum, which mcludcs a buffet breakfast is SSO, and'furthcr information may be obtained from Pat Baker at the Red Cross office. 835-5381. Laguna GOP meedng slated The Laguna Arca Repubhcan Assembly will bold its annual meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m . 10 Ben Brown's Restaurant. The agenda includes the elcct1or:i of offi~rs. annual .reports and a videotape on Chief Justice Rose Bard and the Cahfomia Supreme Court. An Invitation: Attention organization pr•lldenta and tee· ret.,i.: Wa want to Mlp m.tc• your upcoming ewnta. mMllnga. Mmln.,1 and tundra!..,. suc- ceastul. 8-ld brief anne>unc41fMnta Including time, ptece, coat (If any) and a phon. numw for 9ddttlontll Information 10· Butletln Board, Dally PllOt, P.O. 8o11 15e0. Coata M .... 92828. ~of your CIUb or organization'• actlvitlel -Hh community wvtc. project• or .i.ct1on of offtoat1 -lhoufd be dlr-ct9d to tri. Community Newt Editor at tM aem. 9ddr .... Non-r•turnable ~ and whit• photographs are welcome. Frlday,May23 No meeU.011 acliled•led PoucE LoG Coalition pushing rural areajall site By USA MAHONEY Ot .. O.., ........ A coalition of Anaheim residents and bus1nestes downplayed their parochaaJ !n.tercst in keepina. a maximum security Jill out of the city Thul"lda~ emph.a1izin1 instead the imponanoc or llndina • "real countywide jail solutjon. •• Committee members aJI have homes, real estate or buaines.ses near the proPoscd Anaheim jail site at Katella and Dou&lass avenues, but •Pokesman L.C. "llud" Smull said location isn't the issue. The Jail Action Committee doesn't c:arc where a jail is built as long as it doesn't 1mpa~ .. any community in the county." be s&Jd. ~~ull ur&ed. ~County aupervison to sttck to Otcir cattier plans of bWldana 1 ja_al in a rural area wbctt 11 would effect fewer people. He c.Jlcd the Anaheim Jtil proposal a "temporary" answer when what ia needed is a "Iona-term, oomprehens1ve solution." County supervisors are takina a clotc look at puttin& a 1,581 ·bed jajl acfOll from Anaheim Stadium to satisfy the county's short term need for tecUre prisoner housina. They also plan to build a S,000 to 6,()()0..bed jail in an as yet undctennincd rural scttina. Environmental atudies are under way for <be Anaheim site with final selection set for November. Pressed by a federal Judac to provide adequate bousiGI for pmtnt and f\matt ~1l 1n~tn, ~pervitonchoee the K.ateli. OOUIJ&l ahe for fUnher study OVft" three other posaibiUties -one near Disneyland and two in Santa Ana -in wbat some have called an end run .-inst tttinna Supervisor Ralph Clark who repmeou the ara. Where to build new jails in 0ra,. County has been a hot Political topac: throUSbout the I 980t with no supervisor wijlint to acciept one in his or her dittrict. Clark, not 1urpn11nsJy, is opposed to puttin~ a jail in Anaheim, as is the Anaheim Caty Council. Members of the Jail Action Committee include the same people who have ~~apuMD ........ aa Aaal!leiJlljlil OD the buia &bat it ~ eoiJ tbcir comer o(tbe .. Hub o(Happiaeal." · Anaheim Sa.dium laaftt.a Cabfornia Anltll and Loi Altldcl llama. Dit- neyla.nd, tbc PboeDia Oub. ua ~ o~ horneowaen l'OUP' and mobile home park midcat.a are 111 part or .... commitaee wbicb Smull uyi wanta ao attract a c:ountywide foUowins. ··we don't want 10 be chaitct.crfmd • local in nature bec:aux we belie~e it'• a countywick isaut," be aid. The oommiuee ha bmd political coniultant Entla.nder Commuoicauoe1 to reptetent it and paid 1 New Jeng jail consult.ant to acrutiniz.c couaty aaJf walk on an imponant environmeotal report. Brush cleared for art college's sake Laguna residents up in arms over removal of native vegetation By LAURA MERK OflMO..,,... ..... ---· The la&Una College of Art's bulldozing of its native vegetation has some Laguna Beach residents ano city officials up in arms. The college began bulldozing the native California vegetation Tuesday in order to revamp its fire break around the school. Patricia Caldwell, president of the college, said the move was required by the school's msurancc company, which called the foliage a fire hazard. "We changed our landscaping for the protection of the institution. It's not a mauer of public debate," she sa1d. But according to June Catalano. com- munity development director. the school removed plants approved by the City when the school opened 1976 and will ha vc to replace them or appear before the city. "Along the front they took out coyote bush. We will be communicating to them that they need to replace it or go before the Design Review board again," said Catalano. Coyote bush is a native plant known for its tolerance to heat, limited water needs and moderate resistance to fire. Catalano said the school may have violated other conditions of the approved plans, but a city planner only made a brief visit to the site Wednesday morning. "'They cannot remove any trees," she said. The school's design had to be approved by the Design Review because of the sens1t1vc nature of the area. The school is in the Laguna Greenbelt. According to Fred Lang. the landscaper who donated the ongmal landscapmg at the school, the indigenous foli&Je there is admired and studied by schools and those interested m native California plant life. "The front was dculy beloved to those who loved native plants. A good uamplc Reagan will join Hands Across U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan. determined that the first family "will do its pan," abruptly changed plans and decided to JOtn Hands Across America on Sunday to help raise millions of dollars for the nation's hungry and homeless. A White House spokesman said Reagan and has wife. Nancy. decided to JOtn the hne afier a long family d1scuss1on Thurs- day night, the first ttmc they had focused their auentton on the demonstration. which aims to raise at least $50 million by forming a nearly unbroken human chain from New York to Cahforn1a. Pres1dent1al spokesman Larry Speakes ~·d the Reagans were mvi11ng members and families of the White House and c~ccut1ve office staffs. the Secret Service and the media to JOtn them m stretching the hne along the White House dnveway ,, _, . . . . .................... Tom Ra.euber& aaee a chain uw to cat away the bruh while Nlcll Stepien and Anthony Clarke clear away tlae cattlap o.talde the i.a,aaa Collete of Art. of Cahforn1a native plants are being destroyed, .. said Lang. Caldwell said the insurance company claimed the foliage was a fire hazard and' demanded it be removed for the protection of the school. Caldwell said they cleared the plants to revamp the fire break and "proVJde areas for the students to mingle.·· The admm1strat1on and the library at the school suffered damage in a fire m 1979. CaJdwell sai4 the fire was caused by an electrical shonaae. The school is now in the proccts of doublin& the size of its hbrary. "What we used is fire rcsistanct," Lana said of the original land.scapin1 JOb. He said scveraJ oak trees Lhat were on the campus at the time oft.be tire S\lrvived and Sterling Hayden, rebel actor, succumbs at 70 SAUSAL1TO (AP) -Actor Sterling Hayden, the maverick star of "Dr. Strangelove," "The Godfather" and "The Asphalt Jungle" who preferred lhe high seas to Hollywood, died today at the age of 70. Hayden. a 6-foot-4 merchant seaman and decorated Manne Corps captain in World War 11.daedat h1shomeat 8: IOa.m PDT after a long battle with cancer "He went an his sleep. It was real quiet and very peaceful. Has whole family was with him when he died." said George Ruckert. Hayden's son-in-law. Born John Hamilton on March 26. 1916. 1n Montclair. N.J .. the son ofa New York newspaper advertising executive. Hayden went 10 sea as a youth, but has rutsed good looks. blond hair. blue eyes and deep, husky voice led him to Holly- wood in 1939 for a film career he vowed to pursue only for the money In 1951 . he told the House Un- Amcrican Activities Committee that he had briefly joined the Communjst Party, but testified it was .. the stupidest. mOlt ignorant thing I have ever done in my life." He was also an author, an alcoholic and a devoted father who took his four pre- teen-age children on a windjammer cruise 10 Tahiti in defiance of a court order in 1959 af\er winning custody from his second wife, Betty de Noon. Has first wife was actress Madeleine Carroll. Hayden apologized to the court, said he meant no disrespect. and was let off without a fine or Jail sentence. In 1960 he married New York socaahte Cathennc McConnell. They have a son. Andrew. born in 1961. In 1968. Christian Hayden burned his draf\ card 1n a Vietnam war protest. He was convicted of failing to report for ? physical examination and induction. are still lhnvm1 on the arounds. He abo planted Orcaon .,apes. Toyons and wild lilaa. Caldwell said the school's board of trUStees made the dccilion to destroy the plants and its word it finaJ. "h's a shame wert aettin& into acstbetics when were talkina about the protect.ion of tbe school," said Caldwell. Bouvia allowed to use morphine By FELIX GUTIERREZ & to ,,,_...., LOS ANGELES -A Judge has barred d0C1ors from reducing morphine doses to Eljzabeth Bouvia, 1 quadriplqjc ocrctnl palsy victim whose attempu to starve to death under hospital care received inter- national attention The county also was ·told Tbunday to move her within five days to County-USC Medical Center from High Desen Hospital 1n Lancaster, where doctors had souabt to wean her from the addicting pain killer. County attorney Steven Carnevale araucd unsuccessfully that county docton believe morphine is too strong a dn.ia for a woman who may be able to survive for decades. "It's not the court's intcnuon to dJrect the doctors how to treat her, but the plaintiff is entitled to have some choice m her medical treatment." Superior Coun Judge Jack Newman said Mesa motorcyclist injured, faces drunken driving rap Recovered were cassette tapes and a pencil sharpener. valued at SI S. Newport Beach About $800 in stereo equipment was taken from a residence on Park Balboa • • • A resident m the 200 bloc~ of door. then smashed a window with a Pepsi bottle before fleeing in a yellow Ponttac. The damaae was estimated atS115. • • • A student who h vcs on the 11400 block of Ivory reported Wednesday that someone bura.tanzed ht& black I 983 Volkswagen Rabbit while 1t was parked at Los Amiaos High School. I 6S66 Newhope St. The loss incJuded stereo equipment and cassettes worth $465. A Costa Mesa man on probauon for drunken dnvina was critically injured Thursday an Newport Beach when he lost control ofhis motorcycle an an accident pohcc blamed on alcohol. Gerald D. McCloskcy, 43. suffered massive head and internal tnJuncs and multiple spinal fractures when he was hurled nearly 175 feet after runnina into a center d1v1der. New- port Bca~h police said. McCloskey's motorcycle tumbled Int.De A three.foot Gum by doll was stolen from 1 Ford EKOn parked on the 3500 block of Almond. • • • About SJOO in cash was found on the 3400 block of Michelson • • • Twenty wooden pallets we.re stolen from a construct1on sate on the 16000 block of BalTlnca. The two male suspects~ seen load1n1 the pallets iruo 1 Ford pickup truck • • • Someone scratched ob5ccnat1cs on the front door of a residence on the 100 block or Helrthstone. • • • A stereo worth $400 was stolen from a Volhw&&en Jena parked on the 2200 block of Ouoont end over end for almost 500 feet before coming to a $top. pohcc said. McCloskey w~s travehng at speeds approaching 80 mph and "sphttina" traffic on his motorcycle when he struck a center d1v1der on Newport Boulevard near the entrance to Hoa, Memorial Hospital, anvest1ptor Mark Fischer s.aid. • He was not weanna a protective helmet. Fischer said. Police said the nder apparently was drivina an a reckless manner by • • • A b1c1cte decora tcd w 1th "Cheetah' stickers WIS stolen from the 4500 block of ndbura Way It was valued at $400 HandJlCton Beach A resident of the 1000 block of Amberwlck rcJ)Orted Thursday that she left the keys 1n her red 1981 Mustana, and the vehicle was stolen The lol was e t1mated at S'.000 • • • Someone pncd the lock and broke lhe door to buralanic the Country Munch'n restaurant, 17296-Bcach Blvd., employees reported Thunday The lo ~. ~sumated at S 1.600. 1n· eluded a microwave oven and A JUICt processor. speeding between traffic lanes. a method sometimes used by motor- cycle ndcrs to pass slower traffic McCloskey was treated b) cat)' paramedics and taken to Fountain Valley Reaional Hospital trauma center where he is listed an cnucal cond1uon today. Polioe said they will seek drunken and reckless drivin1 charges against McCloskcy, who officers said as on probation for a previous drunken dnvi"I offense. • • • A resident of the 19300 block of Worche,tcr reported the theft of a aold Pulsar watch from a white M11,ubash1 pickup truck Thursda> The loss was estimated It SI 2S. • • • Entenna throuah the skyltght, someone bur&Janzed Tosha's re$- taurant, 1687T Beach Blvd .. pohce wert told Thur1day The anttudcr took S82 from a cash rqsster. .. ~ A re 1dcnt of the 19100 block of Randt reported Thurt.day lhat some· one stole his white 1980 Ford Couner pickup truck. valued at $3,SOO. • • • Two male JUven1lcs were arrested Thunday on suspicion of hoplifhna at the Taract store. qss2 Adam Ave Jasmmc reported SI , 150 an telcv1s1on equipment m1ss1nf from 1hc home. • • A 1986 ubaru su111on wagon was stolen from a Fashion bland parking lot. • • • A car stereo wonh about $700 was taken from a vehicle J>4rked an a carport at 100 Baywood • • • A 1982 Volkswaaen Rabb11 was stolen from the 1900 block of We5t- chfT Dnve. P'oantaln Valley Two business buralane$ were re- ported ea.rly today. Someone broke the &Jass in the front door to buralarize the Radio hack store. 170'34 Maanoha t '" video re- corders worth almoo SJ.200 were stolen. Entcnna through a roof\op vent. someone broke into City Fu.mature. JOS70 Bechler Raver. but ICt oil an alarm The intruder was aonc when officcn amved No loss was 1mmed1atelY d11COvered ' . . A General Telepho ne upervasor reported that someone stoic 1 coin telephone that had been placed It the Fat Boy~ re taurant, 9430 Warner Ave . which clo~ last December The PA> phone was valued at $41 2.SO. • • • .\ rc~1dent of the 1100 block of Slater A vt'nuc rep0ncd Thursday tha1 an a<'quamtancc broke htr front Judge revokes bail in firebombing case LOS ANGELES (AP) -A federal Judge revoked bail for the director of an Alabama paramilitary survivalist school and two other men accu~ in a bombing case:.. while a fourth man was urested in Khode Island. Prosecutors charae that two Dana Point women hired the men to c.arry out two fircbombin.p last Aua. 13. No one was in;urcd in either bombma. U.S. [);strict Judae Stephen V. Wilson on Thur"lday revoked the bail of Franklin ·Camper, 39. director of the Mercenary School 1n Dolomite. Ala., auoaatc Paul Johnson. 42i,. and parM1me instructor Paul l.aKosa CUneo. 22. A federal mqJstrate 1n Birm· 1naham; Ala . on Wednesday h.ad set bond ror Camper and Cuneo at SI S.000 and for Johnson at SS,000 All three 'ftrc arrested Tuclday on charaes of mahc1ous damaaina of propcny b) fire and cxplot1ves and conspiracy to violate fed~ral U · plos1ves law. and prosecutors here had souaht to block their rele&K Assistant . Attorney Charle~ J 'telfens SaJd Cuneo would be re- arrnted Campcr and Johnson were ... still m custody and were 10 be transferred to Los Angeles today. tevens said. Another pan-tame instructor at Camper's school, Wilham Dean Hed1econh, 22. was arrested on the same charaes Thursday 1n Newport, R.l The 1ovemment alleges that Charlotte W}'ckoff. SI , and Leta H1m1lton, 39, oWMrs of sevenl nursery and elementary tcbools.. souaht to mt1m1datc fonn.cr cm· ploycn wbo had filed complaints ap1nst them wtth tWO tate aaenciC'l. The aovemmcnt allqe the two women and four men plotted firt- bomb1 nis that dntro) ed the tcacbcn' can ~ bail heann1 1n Lo Ansclcs for the women was po tponcd Wednt$- da) until nut 'Nttk after W)ckoff's dau&hter uf'ltd U.S. ~IU'lte Vol· nc) "'Brown to keep them tn ~ll "l know the ""') they arc. '111d tbc dau1hter. h11'ky Wrilht "I can't even cllpl"C s at. They py, the whole th1na 111 pmc to t~m. Tiua 11iu ta little btt more for them to pla)' · · 3·DAYSONLY All 12 STORES ARE CELEBRATING THE GRAND OPEN INC OF OUR RIVERSIDE STORE. BUY ANY ONE OF THESE SOFT. SUPPLE, LUXURIOUS LEATHER SOFAS & GET ·················-·················-: s 100 CASH! Es200 CASH! ••. BACK1• =· BACK.I Present this coupon and Present this coupon and receive $100 cash rebate upon receive $200 cash rebate upon purchase. Not good on prior purchase. Not good on prior • sale. Expires 5·27·86 • • sale. Expires 5·27·86 • •••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••• our vast color selection extends beyond browns and beiges . to blues, greens. burgundies and more! --,r----..-~ ' ~~=~s999 BUSTLE BACK SOFA. BUY FACTORY SAVE 50· 0/ DIRECT AND /0 ·cash ret>are amount w111 Of'Of'nn on stvte ourcnasM WESTMINSTER 15424 Golden West St. <714) 898·3911 llYIRStDI 10194 lnCllana Avenue f 714> 351 ·4433 TOnANCI 18508 HaWthome BIVd. (213> 214·4644 OTNm ITOlll llil: San Olcoo W!st Los AnO!I~ Encino MOnrovta Fresno. ~m~nto san Rafael ~"° santa Clara .... DAILY _. SAT _. SUN.U.. ...... "F"'OAr 111tll Ck> DAYS SAME AS CASH • NO PAYMENT'S FOR THREE MONTHS-OAC •DON T PAY TH. AUGUST 96 ON APP'lOV£0 CREDIT f:INANCINC AVAILABLE UP TO 36 MOS MASTeRCARO VISA • AMERICAN EXPRESS bound on U.S. 101. and made the sighting shortly before rcacl\ina Petaluma. Wnen the craft cro scd the highway once apin. she said she saw two "tiny green lights" glowing fain.tty on the side opposite the two bnaht white hghts. • "I thmk I saw son ot a black ·x silhouette shape," Ms. Cohen said. "It was really hard to tell." "An unidentified object described as a large orange ·x· with wbi_te liahts in the front was seen travehng at a high rate of speed eastbound from Petaluma," Santa Rosa C HP Officer B1U McChristian said of the report from the unidentified officer and several callers. Sao Francisco Bay area air traffic controllers said they could not ex· plain the sighting. sayi~g ra<;tar screens detected no such object fly1n1 over the area at that time. The North American Aerospace Defense Command in Colorado said no man-made spacecraft would have been visible at 4:30 a.m. in Northern California, but that debris from the Cosmo 1683 satellite reportedly re- entered the atmosphere over Cali- fornia more than an hour later. Kidnapper, molester given life sentence PROVIDENCE, R.I. -Dnfter David Roger Collins was sentenced to ljfe imprisonment Thursday for kidnapping a California youth 1n 1983 and molesting him during a 2 I· month cross<ountry trek. Superior Coun Jud~e John E. Orton Ill sentenced Collins. 56. to the maximum of two hfc terms on two first-degrtt sexual assault conv1c- 11ons and the maximum 20 years on the kidnappiniconviction. The judge ruled that the hfc terms will be served concurrently with the kidnapping sentence to follow. ''He's a threat to society. He's a blight to society." Orton said at the sentencing. "He's a plague on all of our homes and he has no business being outside ... Collins showed no emotton during the sentencing. He calmly addressed Orton before the sentence was im- posed, saying that Bobby Smith Jr .. who was 1 1 when he disappeared from his Long Beach. Calif. home, went with him voluntanly. "Bobby stayed with me because he wanted to stay with me. The boy wanted a parent. I was a lonely ol~ man who accepted that responsi- bility, .. he said. Collins said authont1es wanted to make an example of him because he was one of the first people 1n the nation arrested after the first sencs of photographs of missing children were distributed by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. .. I was the person who was found with a missing child. and I was going to be the example for the world." he said. Assistant Attorney General Michael Stone requested the maxi- mum sentence on all counts. Stone read a letter from the boy's father. Robert Smith Sr., saying, "When Bobby left home, he was a boy. When he came back. he was a teen-ager ... The prosecutor also said: "The scars of this ordeal will be there forever." Suprem.e Court restricts growth control m.easures By Ute Aasoclated Pre11 SAN FRANCISCO -Local governments must prove ~owth control ordinances -approximately half of which are passed by initiatives -arc reasonably related to the public welfare. the California Supreme Court ruled on Thursday. The unanimous decision came in a dispute in which the Building Industry of Southern California challenged the validity of a 1981 initiative passed by Camanllo voters hmuing new dwelling units to 400a year from 1982 to 1995. Building Industry lawyer Stanle) Cohen said he anucipated the decision and believes the city cannot can prove the 101lJat1ve 1s linked to public welfare when the c~sc returns to trial. The industry argued the cit y should be required to make such assurances; Camanllo disagreed. Laffer's Senate campalgn goes broke SACRAMENTO -Economist Arthur Laffer, whose theories guided creation of "Reaganom1cs," says his Republican Senate campaign has gone brokellnd the latest polls indicate he trails several other candidates. But the 45- year-old father of President Reagan's supply side economic theories and a top economist for former President Richard Nixon said Thursday that he remains optimistic about hts campaign for the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate in the June 3 California primary election. "I'm thinking about putting mr own money into the campaign. Maybe SS00.000 to $750.000. I'll look at pols and decide whether or not it would affect the outcome. I think there's a real chance of winning." Laffer said in a telephone interview Raquel Welch salng over lost role LOS ANGELES-A lawyer for actress Raquel Welch. who is suing MGM for $I 0 million for firing her as star of the movie "Cannery Row," said Thursday that the actress was a scapegoat for executives worried about cost overruns. "What you see here is a whole series of events conjured up so they could do what they wanted to do," attorney Edward Mosk said in his openina statement in the Superior Court breach-of-a>ntract and slander suit. Miss Welch contends she was illegally fired in December 1980 by MGM while shooting "Cannery Row," a box-office flop that starred Nick Nolte. Miss Welch was replaced by Debra Winger. Mosk said the movie was already $84,000 over bud.ct by Dec. 4, 1980, the day Miss Welch appeared on the set. She was involved m shooting requiring no speaking parts until Dec. 16. Mosk said. By that day, the cost overruns had climbed to S 11 6.000. he told the jury. ()IlPierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary no lfOtdw•y 642-915 The Pros · Smee 195 7 UllITT llSIUIC( 1-t • No~:r~k~ RUFFELL'S lFHOLSTERY INC. ... ,.o..c....11n1 ltU ~ kWD., COSTA IEl-W..115' ....... "' Y8aht lnterfon M2-2215 M40 ............. ".n .. 9<h (!: l31-n40 4't10tdNcw,...t""" ............... c... ...... -~-'--......_....__ VOi HEIERT llTERIORS WAR•USE .SALE 20 to 50% on 2 d•J• only May 31 & June 1at 1515 Newport Blvd. C.M. 842-2050 House OKs trade protection bill over Eeagan objections WASH INOTON (AP) -Tbe House passed lqislation Thursday callint ror major lmpon restraints. despite President Reqan•s wamina that burseonina prote<:t.ioni1m at home will launch new trade wars overseas. The 295-115 vote in favor of a 4'SS- ~ measure that Reapn castipted as 'openly and rankly political" 5et up an· election-year battle with the Repubti~~ominated Senate. f1f\y-01ne House Republicans voted for the bill, while only four Democrats voted apinst it. And White House spokesman Larry Speakes branded the measure "an A-I candidate for veto." Principally, the biJI would force the president to retaliate -presumably with quotas and tariffs -apinst countrtes that the independent U.S. International Trade Commission de- emed. to be e~aaaina in unfair tradina practices aptnst U.S. sales abroad. That would remove much of the discretion and neaotiating flexibility the president now has on trade cases. att the JOb done. Several boun after' the vote. Speak- es iuued a statement callin& the bill ••a rrajor step back ward for the U.S. economy" and sayinJ it would .. in- vite massive retaliauon apinst key American industries." "The House of Reprcaentatives bu failed to learn the lcuons of history," the statement said. "We will oonllnue to take whatever actions are oeceu- ary to protect our tradina riahts. At the same time, we intend to carry our mesaaae -that markct-openina, not market-closina-is the answer to our trading panners." Just a shon time before the vote, Reqan told the American Retail Federation that "economic arowth in America and around the world would the casualty" of such trade legislation. Althou&b the Reqan adminis. trallon and memben of Conaress agree that somethina must be done to erase America's huge trade deficit with other nations -it hit nearly SI SO billion last year -there have been fierce ariumenlS on how best to Reagan has fa vored working quiet- ly with· U.S. allies and tradina • pannm to coax a wider opening in world markets tor U.S. products and services while ml.lly lawmakers have insisted that only retaliatory measures will ·work. Kemp calls on Reagan to fire envoy Habib WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Jack Kemp asked Presjdent Rcapn to fire Cent.rat American envoy Ph1hp Habib, saying the mov~ is needed to aven "a diplomatic disaster" involv- ing the Nicaraguan peace talks. Kemp told Reagan in a letter Thursday th.at Habib is promoting an a~ment that would be quickJ y violated by Nicaragua's leftist gov- ernment while resulting in a sell-out of the U.S.-backed Contra rebels. "I remember your firm statement to me that you would never abandon the Contras," said Kemp, R.-N.Y. considered a potential 1988 presiden- tial candidate. ''Now some within our own State Department, with misplaced faith in the omnipotence of diplomacy, would have us walk away from the democratic resistance for the false promises of an unenforceable treaty," Kemp said. "As your strong supporter, l urge you to recall Ambassador Habib and appoint a new negotiating team, led by someone who shares your goals ... ,"he added. White there was no direct state- ment from Reagan, both the While House and State Department quickly came to Habib's defense. "The presjdent 1s solidly behind has ~--------------------~----------------------------- WOMEN'S FASHIONS •21..99. 0 11g S.34 Summit side button spilt skirt or ttun polyeste1 sax colors {"7) $'16..99. Ong S22 Our own JWR polyester ·cotton spilt skirt in six summer brights ~7 $21.9 .. C.rPOI buy IJUI own JWf.' polyester ~011 n split sk11t with top.1ttc-h1r1q eight coloro:: to ch c;e .. •1s..99. Orig S24 Your.g Stull cotton polyester k nit T·shirts tor the large stlF- wornon As.sorted styles and colors Not m M1s.s1on V1e10 01 Palm Spnngs '70) $15.9 .. Great hi 1y YOIH1 ... 1 Stull polyester ~ottor. twill wolkstiorts made 101 tr1e tuller 11gured wcman A.ssorted colon' ·, ·' 1r Mt.ss1or. V.e10 r i:ti.n, Sprmqs "'O $'16.99-•21 .... 011q S22 S34 Cotton pol',IBstei sheeting sk11ts in rnore 1r1ari !Ocolors / $11.99. Ong Sl9 r<ibbed cotton tonk:; 111 ., c >!ors trom one ot _11.JJ ;ireol Amnrican dPsigners l '5 $24.99. 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CJll•J S:'8 S58 Borgan..La PlonePt Etm and JWR smooth arid tPxtured leothPr har.dbags m thP most wanted color 1nd styles 186 ~b1r1SOns Memona l Doy Sale ends ton'ioy May ?6 Huny in lor best selections some quan1111e::; re hni11ec.l and all items orP sub 1ect to pr101 sale Intermediate markdowns may have been token on some merchandise No mail or phone orders please Central American envoy. and will continue to do so," White House spokesman Larry Speakes said. "He thinks he's an excellent man that bas served his country well in many capacities." State Department spokesman Bernard K.alb said Habib enjoys "the full confidence" of Rcapn and Sec- retary of State George P. Shultz. Kemp, a staunch supporter of aid to the anti-sovemment Contra rebels in Nicaragua, objected to Habib's statement in an April I I letter to some members of Congress. In that letter. Habib said the United States would discontinue aid to the Contras MEN'S STORE from the date an acceptable Con- tadora treaty with Nicaragua 1s signed. Another conservative. Dan Burton, R-lnd., expressing s1m1lar views. said he believes the State Department and Habib "arc leading us down the road toward an agree- ment that will hamstring the United States of America." He said the Habib letter "leads the communists to believe that even 1f they sign a phony Contadora agree- ment, there will be no aid to the Contras... I think the Sandm1stas have to go. I think the communists have to go m Central America." ••20-•a• ..... ,----., Reg S24-S45 each Buy two dress shuts from our special collec11on and save 20% (20) •16.80-•21.so eec ... Reg S24 S45 each Buy three dressshtTts from our collection and save 30~ 20 .MA0-.27 eecll. Reg S24 S45 each Buy lour dress sh11 ts from our special collection and save 40% (20) 2/.90. Great buy From Bass. classic Wee1un slip ,..,ns in tassel 01 penny moc cu.sin style Also avallablP One pcm GrPat b'Jy '49.99. l t1• r<e~ s1F s:ar .; lm mer sulls tram lup r.omes in dlSIHiCtive po1tern.s and solids Not in FU.m Springs JS $Ml99. l ~rPa' buy Trim 111tmq knll shirts with a famous logo VI ...... Great buy 1wr, CClSUOl slacks With elastic back waist J/3 KIDS' FASHIONS aona-20 $3.99. Or 19 So Culton/polyester tank tops in n ssor ted colors SM l XL (n\ $7.99. Orig 512 JWR PJ1vote Lobel sw1mtrunks 1r1 100'1 cotton with nylon hr.P-r 09) Gl•LS7·14 $12.S4··11a.80. Ong SiQ S.3l famous maker sw1msu1ts in assorted b11ght olors 45) Gl•LS4·6X $10.56-.19.48. Ong Slti S28 Famous maker swimsuits in assorted styles and colors (4Q) •a.ff •• 1S..99. Ong s1 S24 Save .33% on our PnhrP collect1on ol Carte1 ·p1aywea1 4Q 80Yl4•7 .7.ff·•tS.99. Ong Sll S24 Famous snappy maker sportswear in polyoster/cotton assorted colors (32) fODDLIU2·4 .4 .......... Ono SB S28 Save 33% on Cat IP! s' µ!Cl',' wear in assorted s1ylesand colors ( ll3) 0reng9Coeat OAIL'f PILOT/Fndey, ~23, 1Ne A8 Wfilte Hoa.e wo11 'topptMe Soelal SecarltyitJcrew By Ge .u..etaiM P,.... W ASKlNOTON -The Rcapo adm1n11tration on ThW'lday iiana1ed it would n.Ot re&llt conpnaaonaJ efforts to ar-nt 37 milhoa Social "Secwity recipieota cost-of-li vina 1 ncrea.ses ix•t Jan uaf)'. even 1( lnflation falls btiow lk curTCnt 3 percent threshold. "We've bad• sianifioant &avtnas from the~ of inflation and people on Social Sec;unty should have tome lharinaofthat, budett director James C. Miller Ill told reponen. Miller's comment.a came after a speech to the U.S. Cb.amber of Commerce in wb1cb he cited "strona 1entiment in Conaress to pey a COLA (cost-of-livina adJUStment) at the level of ·inflation." S klUed •lten N•YY bomber end• . VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. -A Navy Jet bomber crubed into a fldd Thursday, lallina, the two crewman aboard and a woman whole station~ was hi t by the flam.ina wreck.ate as it skidded acrou a road, oftici.aJs said. Tbe A-6E Int.ruder went down about a mile from a runway at theOc:au Naval Air Station as it ~n a fli&ht to Pueno Rico to join the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy, wd Cmdr. Jolene Kecfero(the Atlantic Fleet Naval Air Foru in Norfolk. Witnesses said the tail section of the two-seatjet wu aflameu it went into the field alonaside a laraely undeveloped road that is the main entry to the base. Iran'• ambauador •79 CIA framed IJl.m NEWYORK-lrat1's U.N.ambauadoronThundaydenied lbat be tried to shoplift a $99. 99 raincoat from a department store, and bis to"ernmau said the allc;P.tion is the work of the CIA. Theambuudor,Said RaJaie-K.horusani, also said an FBI qcnt tried to blackmail him over the incident more than two weeks ago. "lt'sa very senous embarrassment and it'sa slanderous situation." Rajaie-Khorassani, who was released under diplomatic immunity, said at a news conference at the United Nations. Tu clleatlng m•y IJIJally be decllnlJJ6 W ASHlNGTON -A 20..ycar trend of risina non-compliance with federal tu laws may have been reversed. accordiq to a new analysis by the Internal Revenue Service. Voluntary comphancc by taxpayers increased to 91.8 percent in 1982, from 9 1.0 percent m 1979, the IRS estimated . Compliance had declined steadily from 94.3 percent in t96S. The study also concluded that chcatin& on individual itcm12ed deductions may not be as serious a problem as earlier believed. Only S.5 cents of every S l of itemiud deductions as disallowed by the IRS, a figure that has improved steadily since 1973. ta.ao-•17.16. 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'"'' )t~Jr r11mmu1111~ rnllt:J.tt' th.11 ofkf' J 'ar11·1f Jnd dl\"(•r:-t• t•th1tJltonal prnj.(ram Co.1'1 ' f .1U1fl) IS dt'dlla~l'~ Ill hl'f(llll).! )'Oll ohtatn tfll' t•\pt·rit'nl't' and informalion )Oil 11t·t'(_I to movt' alw~ut m llft· 'f\\11 t'l).!ht \H't•k \t'!\.\IOll~ art· Oil tlw \lllllnlt'I 'dwdult· Thi:' fir..t ht-${11l~ .Ju111· 9 .ind t·nd' o\UJ.(U'l I Thi:' \l:'COnd 'I.tr!\ Jum· .! ~ and rnncludto:-o\Uj.(ll\I I) R1·w:.1rJ111111 hq.(111' \1:1~ !t> Ltll lur r1•1-t1'1rn111111 mforma111111 .11 C' 1 ... ) .... ~2 -5T' 2 Summer Classes Begin June 9 and June 23 We 'll Help You Get There. LLDl'D•s FUCHSIA: gard nshop (~ The Offlclal Flower of Costa Mesa Second Annual FUCHSIA FESTIVA ~ Spedeu tz1td 'ilH"""'"ttafioMt1 ,,,, 7't1ttiM9, Pt1t11t1it9, Sat.ttlfll, ~ 241.i Slmdfll, 111"' 25tJ 7'r"Pll9atio11 tz1ta '7~C!au 11 e1'I ?II • """'" 1 7'111 -2 7'111 • 3 7'111 1'1111dud11 o/ Vaeietie4 o/ '711eluia 8"7,uc111c1 "" 'i.lJuptayl ?naJty VaeietietJ /oe Satel IMPATIENS Elcelent Shade Color 4" Pot Re&. $1.19 NOW 69c FUCHSIAS 4 i1. Pot Upright & basket types. Many varieties to choose from. Reg. $1.49 NOW 99c ~: LANDSCAPE PLANTS ' SPECIAL 5 GAL. Pt.ANTS • ~~ / BE.AUTIFUL HANGING &3!·: '{ 'f' ~ 'FUCHSIA BASKETS /->,r . ·.~ ( ,,,... • ~ ~\. ~ [ tn bloom or bud ! r /c ( (~ ~ tde~~~~~,~~ady .~/, ·~ ,~. ~ IO" wooden basket ( ·~ \it. 1\'r' Reg. 119" NOW 15.98 FUCHSIA Basket or upright Ideal for shady locahon 1 Gal. Size Reg. 1391 NOW S2.98 SPOONIT FLOWER FOOD Can Be Used On Indoor & Outdoof Plants " 1 ;, Juniper Old Gold •. ~ ~ Italian Cypress Juniper Prostrata P11tosporum • Tobrta ~·~b s719 NOW • 811 ~o'i.:2219 NOW '19" £1 Sale prices effective thru 513 1186 All lternt Mibtect to etoctl on l'lend LLOYD'S NURSERY AND LANDSCAPE CO, INC .~ 2028 Newpof1 81vd ,., Bey St) Coeta M .... CA 92827 (71.C) e.ce-7.u 1 ~ Bomb wreckage in Beirut Two •lx-•tory apartment bulldJDC• were wrecked by a car bomb ezplo.lon in eut Beirut'• Chri•tian dl•trtct of Sinn el-FU Flllday. The blut 11et doaen• of can afire, kllled nine people and woa.nded 84. Police Mid three otben were ml••n1. U~o Hello, Kentucky Queen Elizabeth 0 wavea to onlookers a• •he arrive. ln Lexington, Ky. Thursday on a five-day private vl•lt to the region'• horse farm•. Israeli officlals suggest WaldheilD could be hied By tb e Asioclated Preu JERUSALEM -Top Israeli officials suggested Thursday that they had unearthed evidence indirectly linking former U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim to Nazi war crimes. Justice Minister Yitzhak Modai said Thursday that if Waldheim were in Israel, there was enough evidence lo put him on trial. Moda1 is overseeing the investigation which began last month. Waldheim, now running for the Austrian presidency, dented any wrongdoing in an interview pubhshed Thursday in the Israeli newspaper Yed1ol Ahronot. He said Jewish leaders were lying about his alleged responsibility for war crimes in the Balkans. Europeans crltlclze chemlcal arms plan BRUSSELS. BelgJUm -Three European NATO members voiced strong opposition Thursday lo a U.S. plan to resume production of chemical weapons. officials said. Norway's defense minister, Johan-Joergen Holst, said he told NATO defense chiefs meeting in Brussels that the United States. by extending a 17-year unilateral U.S. ban on production of chemical arms. could help reduce East-West tensions without harming NATO's security. "I made it clear that we cannot support a U.S. dec1s1on lo resume production of chemi cal weapons." he told a news conference. He said he had insisted that his pos1t1on be made known to the U S. Congress. Crit1c1sm from Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands docs not mean NA TO will ve to the Amencan proposal. but 1t could Jeopardize final U.S congressional approval of funds for the weapon~. Mllltlas clash ln Lebanon fightlng BEIRUT. Lebanon -Chnstian and Moslem militias fought with howitzers, multibarrcled rocket launchers and tank cannons in Beirut's residential districts Thursday. kilhng 35 people and wounding 160. police said. • It was the worst random bombardment in four months and shattered a two- week-old truce that was called by the pnnc1pal m1lit1as 10 Lebanon's 11-year- old c1v1I war to honor Ramadan. Islam's holy month of fasung. Hostilities Oared at dusk Wednesday and raged all night. A cease-fire began at daybreak Thursday but collapsed six hours later. when shelling across Beirut's dividing Gr~n Linc resumed at midday. Pohce said 28 people were killed and I 00 wounded in the overnight exchanges. and that seven people died and 60 were wounded after 1he truce broke. ellesse 30%-75% Off May 23-May 30 We arr makmg room for our C\l1Uisitc new li ne 1u st 111 from Italy lomc grt acquamtcd and take advantage of our unbelievably low sules price's Raef~ upon rack of our men s and women 's "non-active wear" are reduced 101\,-751X1 Suede and lea titer )Utts. linrn and silk shirt s. dresses and pant s all Ita lian . all sumptuou.s-all 30-75°4)! The Ellessr Boutique Atnum Co urt .... Fa sf11on Island hbilwn '" JL•")I part of tile t'tpt•rience SCHOOL NOTES l , 191 to graduate from Orange Coast A total of 1,191 studcntt are c:aadida&a for ~uation at Orantc Cout ColJcae 1 31th commence-ment. Gl"8duation exercises will be Wednaday at 7:30 p.m. in OCCs LeBard Stadium. Memben of the coUeae's faculty and ldm!nistration, in full academic ,.U.. will lead the procession of candidates onto the field. Music durina the ceremony will be provided by the OCC Varsity Band. The co ... , Chamber Singers will also perform. David A. Brownell, chancellor of the Coast Community Colleae Dis- trict, wit present OCCs annual Outatandina Citizen Award. Gradu- ates will be presented b¥ Dr. Donald R. Bronsard, OCC pres.idcnL Nancy A. Pollard, .J?.residcnt of the Board of Trustees, wlll accept the class of 1986. Co111menoement speaker will be f ormcr OCC student, Judy Burns. Burns. a member of the cou~·s Alumni Hall of Fame, is a television script writer who has written for more than two dozen different programs, includina "Magnum P.I.,' "Cagney and Lacy," "Fantasy Island," and "T.J. Hooker." A 1965 OCC graduate, Bums earned a B.A. degree in anthropology from U.C. Irvine. She was inducted into OCCs Alumni Hall of Fame in 1984. Student speaker will be Joel Castellaw of Santa Ana. Castellaw is a member of OCC's state-champion speech team. Walter E. Gleckler, an OCC music professor for the past 2S years, will be the faculty speaker. Gleckler will retire this summer. A p.la f'CCe'PliOn for the P'lduates will t>e held on the field foUowina \be ceremony. Candidates listed by city include: Cll'OI P. Cr-. Jtll Cronen. Donald L C,ow II, Mwillnne S. Crowley, Jotwl M. ~. Mll'Ollf9( I. eun.1, ltMI O. CUU., Jann W. CVbulelll. Coneuelo O' Amico. PNlne ~. MWI N. Deo, Mldlell 0 . o.Gne. T'*-A. o.leney, Mld*'9 M. o.n.I. Julie L '*"-"· TU)'el M.T. DWI. )Cuen K.T. Do, Aon a. OotlnMn, Ttecy C. Dom. K..ay A. OOMlnglr, My LC. Duoftg, OlneJ. Dyer, Lorrelnef. Eger. AtttlurC. e.Melm, Ellzabelh E. EllM, ~ 0 . eoo.ton. Aobett E. F0<d, Sally L. Frenken, Ettc J . F'rederidlton, Todd R.J. Fullet1on. EIWlbeth M. Gege, lMK9 M. OlllM'tl Ctllg H. Oll'rleon, JoMpll A. Oeydo9. ~ W. Oodfrwy, Or9gOty 0 0-. Herber1 c. ao.. Oen L. Or-. Ginger Lare... Au9MI J. ~. Jiii C. ontllttl, Corel I. Groff. M•gwwt J. HaMen, Dennie 0 . HMeon. ~ L Hart, Cybllt HMtlnot. Klllo\:)I P. He)W. .i.nnlfw L Hlckey, Donald J. Hin. · Nhen V. Holing, l(ennlllh W. Hotlbt. leurl 0 . Hochwll'ttl, Katfllewt Y. Hoffmen. Thomeil C. Holland, AoOlfl J. HughM. Den E. J-. Mhur c . .IC>hN«I. Dianna c. JOllNOll, Oellld W Moine. Midleel 0. Monge,"°"*• P. Mooiw..,EtlnE.~.8i-F. ~. ~ J. Mwpny, Dwllll M. Hlumen, O.WS ~. ~ T.Nguyen,QuyT.~. T'MnaC~. Yen1. NouYln. Cletue T. 0 Men, KM It~ LOYM P. Obiee,MwyC.Oteen, Clll'IC. ~· H.noy A. Ontllo, EJelne M. p.,_, I. ,.._, Art0t• I . Ptlllociotll, Metil H ............ L-.n J. Pwfy, PNllp C. ,.,....._ Tift H. P9luflg. Nw9 M. l'lelnolll. Delltd 8. ~. ~ Y. "-· • P. Poner, llloeer1 C. l'YtoeJt .. ~ J. ~. M1ert R. Oueny Jr .. a..._ I . ,_.._., C... I, Aellnofl. John R. Aeecf, LIM M. "9ld, '--d A. Renda,~ L ~ ~ L Aoblneon, Oebr1 A. "°'"9ro, Shelly J. Aoeel, Mon1C1 Ruth, Sindt• A. Wemoto, Mn o. Sllll'non, Mllril 8. Scflutl. Ctwlltlnl M. s-tn. JoM R. SIWIMr, AoMr1 M. ~. o.tlra L Sllowtly. Olrll A. ......... Mer9oC K. IWnml. Steel A. Smith, Shll'on "'-· Sdomonlen. Lldll9n I. loM,lyMI I. 8tennlltt, Trtclja M. s--i. K..ay T. TICflll!I. Aobett F. T Mlrno, "-E. l'--tEdle A. Tlmmonl. Judith L Tomtovlc:, PNllp L otmen, AM-Hoe T. Tren, 81n11 V. Tten. Vitt M. Tt111, 8Mne 8. T,.ip, TM! Trieu. LOri L Ven Aken, Petttcle A. Ven De W••· CettllmeA. VwldefPOOI, ........ A. Vk)no, HunQ 0 VII, l(Jlrltln J. Wll, S004t H. W.,,.,.,, Mitt! L Wetlllnl, ~ 8. Wlllklnl. KalNllll 0 . W ..... ~ N. White, Mldlell L \tflley, Oeldt9 L Wlllilllneon, M#tl A. Wlllletneon, Alcherd 8. WU--., Aobel1 L Wiiton. Alexender C. Wono. Ktletln L Wood. Atnlnda I(. Wrrty. ~ E 1--. SAVE 81.00 TO 1401.00 GET YOUR DECORATING IDEAS ;1 OFF THE GROUND WITH HANDWOVEN DHURRIES AND CHINESE RUGS Start from the bottom and work your way up. All it takes is one magnificent handwoven Oriental rug from our collection of many. In patterns that dramatize your interior. Instantly. And colors that give you new richness and texture. Since each rug is unique. selection will vary by store. We will also offer to buy the authentic Oriental rugs you already own. For an estimate of their value call Moussa Soomekh, a member of The International Society of Appraisers at 1213) 464-7930. Oriental Rug Gallery, 804. Laguna Hills and Newport Beach. CHINESE ORIENTAL RUGS Timeless designs from our exquisite collection of Chinese rugs. HANDWOVEN DHURRIE RUGS FROll INDIA Each is deeply handcarved in plush wool in designs that range from delicate floral sprays to symbol rich patterns. Orig. 160.00 2x3 . .. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .. 71.00 Orig. 200.00 2x4 ........................... 99.00 Orig. 500.00 3.6x5.6 . . . . . . . . . -.... 259.00 Orig. 1200.00 5.6x8.6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .511.00 Orig. 2600.00 8.3x11 .6 ................. 1199.00 Orig. 500.00 2.3x8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241.00 Orig. 200.00 3' round . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 91.00 Orig. 360.00 4' round . . . . . . . . . ...... 171.00 Reversible wool flatwoven rugs from India. Choose from an extensive selection of contemporary geometrics. floral designs or a mix of both in subtle pastels and earth tones. Orig. 160.00 3x5 . . . •.oo Orig. 260.00 4x6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....•• 00 Orig. 600.00 6x9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... 1•.00 Orig. 860.00 8x10 ...................... 211.00 Orig. 1160.00 9x12 . . . . . .. . . .. . . . .. .. ..... 00 Orig. 1600.00 10x14 ............... •.OO THE BROADWAY IS SOU1HlllN (A(lfO •N t A Or ... C.. DAILY PILOT I Fftder, Mar 21. 11M LE' SUPER BUY! 12 PACK OF CANS e PEPSI •PEPSI LIGHT •DIET PEPSI •SLICE •DIET SLICE e MOUNTAIN DEW e PEPSI FREE e DIET PEPSI FREE PERSONAL FANS 6 IN. 2 SPEED 6.88 18.84 CUSHION PADS Astro-Tex CHAIR PAD 14.84 CHAISE PAD ~------c___,;;.j"" 23x72x3 IN IMPORTED 6x15 FT. BAMBOO FENCING 1.98 REG 6 99 CLEAR OR WHITE COMPLEXION BULBS 25 TO 60 WATTS EA .__ ___ r ~ ![ 24.84 28.63 Green or Cocoa L1m1ted quantities 2 BURNER GAS GRILL MR. BBQ CHARCOAL BRIOUErs 10 LB. BAG I.BIL WITH SIDE SHELF ...,.._, .. -.... :.:....~-==:... ---- ASSORTED 1 GALLON OUTDOOR PLANTS 01anthus. Impatiens. V1nca & more • Bouga1n- v1llea •Gardenia ASSORTED GROUND COVER FLATS Great for hillsides. large areas. 5.88 EACH LIMITED QUANTITIES WHILE THEY LAST! FOAM FILLED LOFA COUCHES CAMELBACK OR SQUARE BACK STANOARD OR FERN PROPANE CYLINDER 2 ~sa 140Z R CYLINDER r.:!l::"'-il,, - 1/3 H.P. SCREWDRIVE GARAGE DOOR OPENER 1nsaso1 01g1tal radio controls with 512 personal codes . 144.fl ~ STEPPING ~STONES ~ 5Aedoor ncat~r~~ x ~ 121N. EA RED PAVING BRICK 8x16 IN MEDIUM·80 LBS. VOLCANIC ROCK REO • 40 LBS • 50 YOUR L. CHOICE KELLOGG 'S GROM ULCH 2 CU. Fl BAO 2.78 8AG CHROME STACK CHAIR Brown seat/back 14.88 YOUR CHOICE GOLDEN GATE I 5-PC. PATIO GROUP 199.49 ser OAANOE COUNTY ANAHE1M f71 '1!121\ !>U O ANAHEIM (71') 7H 11300 FOUNTAINVALL(Y171•1968 331 • FULLERT0N (71'18l'l 44;?1 GARDEN GROVE ( 7IA1 ~14 !>00 I GARDEN GROVE (11'1 7!>0 34'1 HUNTINGTON BEACH 171418'16M6 IRVINE (71 'l 5S2-5 788 ORANGE 171')&39 2S6l SANTA ANA(11") 979 81!1 1 YORBA LINOA (71 'I 777 2388 SAHGA8AIEL COVINA (81!11331 0771 EAST COVINA (!118) 987 5132 HACIENDA HEIGHTS (81!1) 333 5218 MONROVIA(818)303 1561 PASADENA(8111)"9 8537 ROSEMEAD (1118) 2!111-0().-0 ROWLAND HEIGHTS(lllllJ9e5 8338 WEST COVINA (!11!1) 917 3138 SOUTH PASADENA (11111) '"1 5101 LA VERNE (71') 503-0512 SOUTHlAN L.A. COUNTY CERRITOS (213) 924-e130 OAADENA (213) 532·2833 LONG BEACH (213) '211-7501 NORWALI( (213) 968·9"1 TORRANCE' (2 13) 370 58eO SAN PE~0(213J6'7 1122 SOUTH TORAANCE (213)530 766& SAN Fl"NANDO YALLlY BURBANK (213) 849·64181 NOATH HOLL Y'WOOD (!11 !I) 711!> 5900 NOATHRIOOE(!lt!I) 368 3&21 AESEDA (11111) 3..,. ~2e 1 WOOOLANDHILLSC!ll!l):l'7 8!1SO OXNARD (805) 983· 7268 INLAND EM~l"E CUCAMONGA (71') 980-021' FONTANA (71•) !122·05S1 ONT ARIO 11 I "l 083·38U RIALT0(71 4)8'5·5810 RIVERSIOE (71') 687 0100 RIVERSIDE (71 ') 687 5860 CLAREMONT (71') 625 0651 SAN BC RNAROINO (71 ') M2 3703 SAN OERNARDINO (71') 8119-IMI UPLAND (11 ') M&-M01 OAK PLYWOOD (3MMJ 1/8 IN.x4x8 n . 8.41 :~r .. 5.2MM 114 IN 4x8 FT My luddy 19 IN . STEEL TOOL BOX WITH TOTE 5 fl TRAY • 49.87 .a SURFACE SPRAY HEADS 39c FULL (LTG-200) CIRCLE EA 8.88 ~ -- 82000 Cab Plus is stylish, sporty LOS ANGELES -The 1986 Mazda 82000 Cab Plus becomes the newest member of the Mazda pickup truck family, 88 this ex- tended cab model joins the already popular standard and long bed versions of this vehlcte. The new Cab Plus has the same overall exterior dimensions 88 the 1986 82000 longbed model but features a larger passenger car- like Interior. With a cabin length extended 17. 7 Inches beyond that of the standard model, the Cab Plus offers space behind the seat for two jump seats or extra storage. The addition al space makes It one of the roomiest cabs In Its class. The exterior design of the Cab Plus Is notable for Its smooth, aerodynamically clean bodyaur- faoes. Accented by an Integrated NEW '86 323 ~ ALL TRUCKS Equipped With: • 5 SPEED • RADIAL TIRES • FULL CARPETING • DUAL MIRRORS • REMOTE LOCKING GAS DOOR '14 Mustang GTVI 5 s;pHd T. iop, alloy wheels, Olf, p S Coss. Ser# 120550 OFFER EXPIRES AT CLOSE Of BUSINESS 5-26-86 ,. front bumper /front skirt design, quarter sldewlndowa and slanted nose and hood surfaces that flow Into a 53-degree wlndshletd rake, the 82000 Cab Plus blends rugged good looks and sporty styling with a practical compact pickup truck. The 82000 Cab Plus Is powered by a 2.0-llter SOHC gasoline en- gine, derived from the award- winning Mazda 626 powerplant. The engine produces 80 hp at 4 ,500 rpm and 110 foot-pounds of torque at 2,500 rpm. Estimated fuel econ- omy for the Cab Plus Is 22 mpg/ city and 27 mpg/highway. Thesuspensionofthe 1986 82000 Cab Plus pro~ldes the rugged rellablllty of a truck while offering the comfortable ride and handling t.ratts of• passenger car. The Independent front suspension M•-4a 82000 Cab Plaa plckap tracb come ID ~5 trta left!, left. GI' L][ ftnloD, altoft. Is a double wishbone type that Incorporates an 1-shapred lower arm with tenston rod and torsion bar. Special suspension bushings Increase longitudinal compliance to Improve ride comfort while stlll maintaining excellent handling characteristics. Shear-type cab mounts have twice the vertical compliance and lateral rigidity of conventional compr88Slon-type mounts, resulting In superior ride comfort and quletn888. At the rear, trapezoidal spring shackles provide lateral control compliance. The bias mounted rear shock absorbers act to prevent axle wind-up and excessive hop under hard acceleration. Even wtth Its roomy cab, sophis- ticated suspension and high per- formanoe engine, the Cab Plus ls all truck from the r.ear window back. The 56.9x72-lnchcargo bed fea- tures doubte wall construction, has Inner tie-down hooks and an easy- to-use, on.touch tailgate releue. There Is plenty of room for surf- boards, furniture for the houee or whatever the owner wants to carry. The Cab Plus comes In four trtm levels: 1tandard, SE-5, LX and LX with Convenience Package. The standard model Is priced at $6,895, with the SE-5 at $7 ,295. The LX, with Its higher level of comfort and tralm features, Is $7 ,895 and the fully loaded LX coats $8,~5. Standard featuree on atl truck• Include full carpeting, tinted glMa, Intermittent wlndlhletd wlper1, radlal tlr•, locklng fuel-ftller door and bright wlndshletd and drop raH moldlnga. '11 Toyota Tercel S (l)ffd AM FM "et90 c ou lof1 bo c k S.,#2685•3 . In eddttion, the SE-5 S*k8D8 0,,.,.. whit• IPOk• whl ••• with rm..d white-letter redill tne, btack-pMMd ,.., ... tunper, eporty body lti'tpea, cut-pile ~ ~ eport door mirrors -,.....doorr1t11•. The LX °"9r91UC1h 1""'9M chrome-plated 8PC*• wtt 1111, front bumper with chrome motdlng, pin atrtpee, ~•,anAM/FM stereo redlo, Ing buck9t ... ta wtth lumt. euport for the dmer, diglttll qu.u dock end center con90le box. In eddttlon to the LX equipment, the Conwn6ence PllCk8ge includee halogen helldl8mpa,,.. llldlng window, AM/FM electronlclllly · tuned ltereo redlo with c 1111tte deck and tour ipellkers, crul9e controt end tttt 1t11 rtng wheel. • '14 Mazda 626 Luxury T 04lt!llQ S.00,., A., _.. rOQI, p S CllllOftl wtlMll S-#602275 1425 BAKER ST. COSTA MESA, CA 92626 (714' 545-333 • --~~ ~----------------------------------...;;;,;,;..._ ______ ~------------··~ ......................................... _. ............................... .-------------------------~~--------~--~~~-----~--- -Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Friday, May 23, 1Me CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220 IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE 411-UOO THE ART OF SELUlll IS MAM WY IN TIE DAIY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES. H•ve•pr•geule without the garage Sell your Items In cla11lfled. ( • Your flrat pet, your ftrat Job, your flrat c•r, 1 your flret home cl•••lfled'a your flret choice. • 5 spd • Automatics ... -----------......... ,. .... ..... 1111 , ... •·=· .. =-=·=·= 1'MIDID" I• ...... , 12,111;.o An elegant estate In Three Arch Bay only 1 ~ years old. View ot coast, 4 BR. maid's qvarters, li- brary, security system. Owner will trade. • IN Nf WPOHT C CNTl ~~ 6449060 llEW 1986 300ZX •TU RBO'S • 2+2 's • COUPE's ••• ...... /c.Mll Flneet ''Bey91de Cove" YILU llLMA ___ ,,,,__ __ I TOWf"'°'"9 -28r SYlt•, lneral Illa End untt et wet.,. ecSoe SeYw.i eicoe1ent ,... ------w/M bay view • An valuee In fnhlOft•bte -. +~ +WllW ef-aent & dl1tlnct1ve gete guerded VIII• S.vlew 2 1tory, epe. loft. ... home. 1153,400 ~ BMutN com- $449,000. 640-7'49 PP ....._.I le. mun1ty poo1 end 9'19 .... 8aturdey-8undey 1-5 ..:::::PAHYTIME CUt'ed Plf'lllng,.., cones. ......... Llllfm Specteouler 8e:Y & OoMf\ . I mlllll llllllllmllll view. 2 Bdrm, lerge ()(Mt IW>fN for femlly If¥-prlve1e tundedc. Reduced 1ng end~ Prt-to t2t7,t50. ~1ar991otwttt11pertd-TURN N9wli.tteio-pdoedrtaht1 Ing pool. Formel dining, THEM Lovely 1 8dml unlf wttn pwquet fk>«I In temtty INTO. petlo. Only 1121,000 room. weiec to ~. MONEY pwtc. end ~ vii· lege.UH.900. • vtCl<I KRAUS 7~Q 9100 Call 642-5678 rr-r• ·-~~""f 11--:4!!!> ';$,~;~-*1j Exoltlna --.... \4ewt Luxurfoue Penthoule unit with 2 Bdrma, 2 betM. Form81 dining room, flr.- pteoe t285,000 c., ......... llU Pri& O#OWr...U = w/pool on one of M'1 beet ltreetll Potential ~ come of S29K yrty. GfMt 2Bdnn front hotM cur- rently owr.. occupted. Ju1t 111ted Uto,000. Rob6l'I Tench 83 t-12tl Ctlta... 1114 a; 28' ilianectl ger. r;;; nn, ~. venetite tenna. PremlUm tlome. 2879 Mlguel Ll\. 548-9314 EASTSIDE • 2 HOMES on letge R·2 lot. t 117,000. Oevld or Ndcle 831-12tl .,. .... ,.. Large 2 1t0ty 48drm. 2'"8a fwnlty hotne. Aak- lng $183.500. Traditional Realty 831-7370 IN THE BEAUTIFUL IRVINE AUTO CENTER 735i 528e 325es SPRING CLEARANCE ON SELECT PREOWNED VEHICLES ' '15 IMW 325e '12 521e White/block 4 dr, lowered w/o lot White /ton, 5 lpd, loaded. of extras. #012169 #7951 103 '11ASO '13,991 '14 Chev Corvet t e '12 IMW 521e Block/red, 4 spd, glou roof, stereo, low low milel. Save big. Block /block 5 spd. # 7950498 #269162 '17,991 '12,998 '10 IMW 7 331 '15 IMW 325e Blue/blue leather, 5 lpd. excellent Colmos blue/.,.arl, 5 spd, 10 cond. II 149631 thoulOnd mites. # 1629131 •12,991 '11,991 __ ....,.. ...................................... , .. ,... Saddleback BMW 45 Oldfield Rd , IRVINE 380-1200•800-831 -3377 ·B ----....... __ _..._.._.._~ '12 IMW 521e Silver /blue, 5 tpd, low milet. #7950932 '13,M8 '141MW32Se Sapphire ~/pearl int, outo trans, low mli.t. # 1JNS767 '11,M8 , • ~rgundy/peorl, 5 spd, et.<t. MOts, comp. dite atereo, chrome whHIS. #93.58283 •19,998 • '14 IMW 5331 Block/red leather, ovto, loaded. #1JHP856 •20 998 '14 IMW 325e White/brown, .5 apd, P /W, sunroof. #1002939 '11,MI '12 IMW 5 21e White, S tpd, A/C, nke (Or, # 10231 •13 10 r..e.... 1111 ·~..... I......... II Ctltl... lllt ..... _ ti55LW * * ~~~ ':O.;t.O:O~-" ~·=::.~;... 4::o.':i=:9'.J11a-;,; ......... ., In.eta.I 111 ·-.,.., ' ,., .-c ...._ """ ... ,......,.,.... ·-m ,,.._ n-ptlla 11,111~. tionwl t27,IOO.IV,_nd ..... ,.. iiOO'a ,. ~ ~ JUITUKINIW 4M2t.e ~71, ptlno._ .uDI tncd 2Wrm Nd CHO IN ':ii MW~ no LIWllT,__ 20::.IU ..= c"anMI. ~':.depo53Mtt1 : IMl'nkt. t 11oo MO. 29e. MW wpec I '*"'-~only 8t .r.ow· W011. Noe a a.M. Laroe._. abd a. up 1bd • 1~ anPi To llACH -IMND---NIW--,.,-2-'Mte.---- 18f'd • '°"9ndel lW IO-csoWn, frplca: btt..,;. I 4 SBA, llA, IY rm, **'O 1450 lq. Ft. 2 ml to bdl. c"• ,, 1t,too. c a11 C*' .,.,-1ng. Pttced at a;mtrr;tc· ~~ ... et11 ..,, .-fncd W'd Georoe, A8t .._.n1s SHS,ooo. mo · 11110 .-.. otc 142-3141 MUA ve .. oi 41"+ 3bd, 2b• UPP•r unit SUHHYl6deof ... 4"M'I. IAANDNiWTowmouaa Oeft1br 21.tM, 2 atry, wltrpto, bft-N I ~of 2ba, dlW, frp6c, frig, llf. 2., 2·~ 2 _.get, fJ*, pOof rv Pl1la $214 000 bay I OONnl Lower unit 11800/MO )'Ml'ty, eYall yetd 2230 Padftc Ave Aft.°Ja 117-3111 ' . :.~.o ~ptc I p¥t t115.175-l640. . Untt '1 . 11100/mo. A~ n W... of are.. 1m.:ino out e11. M5-0HI ...,_.. I I ec-, front, 4bd, 2b• ......... IHT CIACLl THESE Htoa .... .:n. two down, 2bd, 1ba up, good 1& 1L m: i "· to Won't IMt It u:,~~-latfl wMl olllc M'ctWoocs location, wlntw/IUml'Mf' bofl, Yrty s150 Ind aM vatetv fnod yd t hon. brk* fltepleoa and r • n ta I a. Pr I cad at utlla, no '*' ISS-5"45, local call ·~,-·;;~~~~~~ 11t01 rtrd· Won't 1aet 8t 1421.000 210 44ttt St. AYI lmmad. *1111-1111• -~ 11u.~oo. c~11 curt ••IRln• ~3~:'~1: associated HerMrul H Ut t2M 2bdrm, 2t1e. TN Point arw I prtcae 53M190 .,... New decor. frolc. 8aat Atty taa '"",-51-0u-~ICk-or_ooh_e_I -,op....J ·~ j,; ~ I W I t h ' W A ' garage, onty t 1300. fl'• ,,,....DOI •bd 20.-,...... ..... C...t TILml1 ., ..... vvn ~ • .... "-· of 4-ply bulky yarn _..,...-=-=~~~--...=--patio, pool, get. lndry fa-Otrections -14·20 Incl WOOOllO!VlUAGE ..... I .. Practally on...., A-1 c:Mty.NMrCMcourtyard. 510-Crochel top of 38r wtttt MW c:ar1)M I ·--·.. . ...tu bu-•'-w/m~ A¥11/1,tt050. 780-1121 h h --* T"T • ._.... synt ettc mo air. lacy Ptllnt. ldnt loc. I cond. Only 12400 Down •~ neww kltdl kid 1 EA8TltOE 2bd 1ba.. twoe sleeves yoke 12 14.16 llUOO. 75t-5410. Int Stlarp 3Br 28. ale 53M1•1 A8t taa yard, caul9t. Prtv.ta. No lat. Ml eonao. 1 blk to 's.c. C... ... .. llU peq ... 50. et S.5159. Send S3.25 plus 75c COxONioOI 2 MHt•r Plaza w/poot, spa 1 2 iiBN66U WfTR 'di'. EMc'6da houN 3Br 2aa postage. handling, for ......_ 1122 Waterlall Ct. carport. Only tl2,to0. 2 PLACE: FRONT UNrT. StoOlmo. Drlw by 2M 11 each j:>anem SEASK>E Vllaoa T/Hm Br -172,000. 25n w. etoea to aMt '860/mo Senta Ana Aw, Unit A. s..s IO 1175,000. Century ~3~~~s.:; 7SM570orl7MMa · ~~1=DavldorNlctlla :::.w:r'Cnftl.!, 1.J 211e.,..t12-1111 131-5114. •lllT.n•• t:':::c.-=.... ..,_ llptl lftl I·~~~-Lg 1Br 1ea. 1 cat eeraoa. wt um,,... .... MMll.' 1'81Rih on NO. f6 t• A!.:,_,--11 aff bftlnt. utlla Incl. ~ n,. si.. !'lllt!I --.. El Niguel cc poo1 epe, _ "-c mo or yrly teaO/mo. F• .. • aeuna, S15cil( in' up-111.11111' ., ...... M-. Woode. 3Br 38a. 96~EW F?u':~Y~~ gr9daa. 4ts-tOM avea. LMlt .... CdM ctwm fncd 5 rm hm ~· 't'fs~i=-~~· log P?cr.tta -pattems. SUZUKI SAMU.RAI... BREAKS THE DULL BARRIER 8UZUKI ' . CORMIER SUZUKI (714) 770.7001 23633 ROCKFIELD, LK. FOREST YOUR COMPLETE DEALER PARTS • SERVICE • SALES 8UZUKI - ltWJld ... ~ 1111 fer SU. llM craolcNn frplc bftln• encl Dr~ by 3281· T~· bOoks. supplies, crewel, ·~-~-~~~~~~191 ~~~~~.·==:=~-~~~~f~-~~~~~=,~~~~N~~E=~E~=o=~=c==,====~~=,=.===d===-~ 4 Bdrm 2 beth + den, 111( Mak•. Offer Muat New EMtlkla 3Br 2'Mk 2 more e 0 p e a s e f'*'Cfl doon 1 -~-. NII ·Sc> rent '550 ·100 11111& 111 UI 1tory Townhoma. All --..,..-----1 ._ s I I -efaborata patio/deck•. Udo.Pane 0r14 s6o.te73 2 BR., 18A, ,.., duplex amen1tle1. S1250/mo. LAURA WHEELER . 12ee.ooo. 7~53 . with 1 car getaga. Prima VIII• Aentall 875-4912 c R A F T s --~ MW#llT IUll Olde Corona dal Mar lo--------*HAABOA VIEW. 4 Bdrm Welltt. to beect\ • Ebbtlda cation. StoO par mo. 1------------------'--------_;;;.. ______________ ......._ ______________ _ :·~~:ii ":c>.~9!.!f:,d~ Mobll• Hom• Park. lllllllUl.n 1315,000. 71().1215 ~1~:11~ ~:,::i~~ l'JM411 8eyWda CO¥e Condo. Lg 115,000. Call Joyce Spill-CUTE 2bd home lb•. 1Br + Dan. 1980 lq ft. ., 131-12M getg. frplc, petlo, s. lkla ::l "*::led, ~ ::t I •jf~;Y:} . ~7:,cn~~v::....OMC:. tip~. 13~ Incl ,~ between 8-5pm , ~. 7to-1018 pp ff . 5~ 1U11 W1111U TAKE OVER ASSUMABLE CUTE 2bd home 1ba. FANTASTIC-BUYS LOAN. Low down. New QlifG, frptc, petlo, S. tide f>rtced ,_.,below~ dbl wide, N.8. Boat lllp of PCH, avall 06-03, DOVER R.E. 75f..&ol0 . a\1911. e&1·20CM S975, n.pet.1, ~call -•-p&11 between 8·5pm, BY OWNER. Hwb« View •-•-5~ Homea. MONACO 2Br+ Downtown Coata M-.. den or 3Br. App. 1450 1t. Wall to ~ & ,.... Cute 2Br furnllhad. 8o of pool, epe, upgradaa. No taurent1. Newly re-Bay91da. 1blkto86g Cor· Broller1. S250K fH. decorated one bdrm ona. 2 car get. frptc. Belt 644-1' 19 for 1P9t. wlhuge cov.,ad dnk appl9S1300/rno Y"Y ·Incl DUPLEX onty s 12,995 w/ax«*lant grdnr 780-1123 I 3bd, 2ba. + 2 frplc, tarma. agent, 54Mt15. Exec home w/OOfll//1 view. eundacit, 1 bMI to bctl. Lett fer Lie Hii Pvt bctl. 5Br 48a, yrty ••. yrty 11050 tum S1000 $2900 mo. Celt INGA. 'unf\Kn &45-l755 Laguna Beach ftat lot. Aa/Mu 559-9400 or ' View. Near beh, ldloota, 71&-7891 ~ ~f! f~ :r,w;1ea~2:''1as~~~ cee=--,._, .... ,,,,_ ___ t_i ..... M~ Hlgf\ly upgraded. Sky •---L~ f * * EASTSiDE 2Br llgfM,cuatomwoodwotll, ~~ U.I 1575 TownhOUH detached. celltng tan1. Open _.... Bttln1, encl oaraga I Sat/Swl 1·5. S20SK lH. 2'J\ xc;; m cuo;m: yvd. $875/mo. 145-6H2 0WC 2nd 720-1314 Ev Vty, San S.d. Co. and of *SHARP W•talda 2Br, UNIQUE~ to own• Appta vty. Modular hm 18a Oplx.. Tiie firs. Cflltl, ~ 3bd. ~be. 2300• 2br 1be. detect\ IQ get. drpe, w/d hkup, get MOO home In the IMuffl ANO Tr .... ax wall, fed. Sell, + MC. Mutt ltand credit anjOy .. the banafltl of trede. ..... purch.... .,.. . No pet9 77().5129 owning 5 epar1t~ f9n-159.950. 54&-9384 38dnn, 18a, QIJlet ., .. = ~OIM~ ctub~ a.tab St50tmo. New paint, ic:"iundk· set5K cwpon, trg ywd. 950 ~ •• , ... s'i< , .. . ...... Zl n GGYefnor St. 497-4579 ownw/t*r. 953-1220. OCMn dOM 1565 2br A Claulfled •d It en eay Youdon'tknowwflet you're •bode bUk: bYt eppea1. weytoMllyOUtmerehen· m1e11ng" you,,.._,., 1MC1 Ing decor hurry 53M 190 j dlM, an<l 11'1 HIY on you1 ~ letely , S..t Rlty I• wellel. too ' FU SUCCESSFUL CITIZEN How much will your son or daughter know about business when applying for their first fuH-tim. job? Plenty, if he or she hos ever been o newspaper carrier. Through route experience he or she is olr.ady o lop oheod of their classmates. While they all master ideas, the boy or girl wifh a newspaper route is able to pvt them to practical use. Business? Corrien learn the basic laom the basic principles from fhe first doy of starting to deliver newspapers. They buy at wnolatale, sell at r9toil. molce collections, keep their own books, and deal with people face to face. Carriers quickly find out that "profit'' ond "loss" ore more thon textbook terms. The benefits of managing o newspaper route are an equation for a future successful citizen. A great number of today's prominent men and women started their public cor"rs as newspaper carriers. And they all vouch that a newspaper route giws a boy or girl o heod start on fha future. Boys ond girls I 0 yeors ond older who moy be interested 1n rou1e work should conioct the Doily Pilot ctrculo1ion deportment ot 6~2 4333 Dilly !!~~ION DEPT. 330 WEST 8AY ST. P.O. BOX 1560 COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626 ,-----------------, I Ya,, my 10n/dougf\ter would like I information on o Dolly Pilot rOIM. I HIS/HER NAME 1-------1 I ->-~~~~~~~1 I ________ l tP_f I PHON_E _______ ~AGE__I I PARENrs I StGNATUR.._ ________ I L----------------~ NEW 1988 SOMERSET CPE. List Price 112,069 Sale Price s 11,386 SAVE '683 ~ NEW 1988 CENTURY SEDAN List Price '·12,466 Sale Price $11,461 SAVE •1oos NEW 1988 REGAL CPE. List Prlce112,991 Sale Price $11,910 SAVE '1081 NEW '81 CHEVY VAN CONVERSIONS QUALITY FINANCING. SUPER LUXURY. 4 to CHOOSE · FROM. 5% over Invoice. SAVE 1503 Automatic Trane •• AM/FM ttwao radio. (Ser 111880) NEW '88 ROOPE RS II DLX. IN STOCK 4-Dr. I 2-Dr. Model• Avelleb .. 530VER FACTO S IMILAR St\ \II NGS ON ALL OTHER B llOl'Q TO Tllf IUVQ. n. .... ..-~ tlCWt......,...,..,....,. ,._...,. -..,.,. •• ""11e -'"• 11 "" ..... n. .................. """ ........... ,,... .... _ .................. ,.. ................... ... .... e1111 ......... ,,,._"" .... .,,, M Orange Coat DAILY PILOT I Frtday, May 23. 1Ne JEEP DAYS ARE HERE! : : 1984 Porsche 911 : 1985 Cherokee 4 Wheel l : 1979 Porsche 930 Turbo : Carrera 1 Drive $9986 i ! E•t•a nice under 21 000 miles i A Real Beauly ! A11 cone s111ree>casse11e 5 SOd l l ,. f'~\. Musi See Afua.,. ! $26 986 : 10,.. m1lt>age under 24 000 •••lY!Co : : 9£t.~1 .,.,. 8Et.u : , •" .... : Pru:ed To See1 • ~-r····························-··-···--···1·························~-·······,··································-······i : 1985 Renault Encore : 1985 Audi 5000$ : 1983 BMW 528 : : Aul' ·''' M powAt s1no AM FM : Demo ioadt'O : E•lril nice . loaded : l NEW l $16,986 l $14,986 l : •U ... 'J ; ---''· ~ • ••t . I : '••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.L••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••L••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-. .. .. . ........ -. .. . C..11... llM 11111!!!,..... 1111 leapt.... 1111 la8'u P11l1~ C.tl.... •M 2:'!fT:i=.to:w ~-........ HYHMllnwMC,Moneoo mnn™• •EASTSIDEUOAM* & -~Ira a • 2bt, den, comm pool, * _., Qanloe. Huge ywd. ,.... ..,..,.. .... bteine, I I Ind. °"*' wetf/gtdlftl lftd, ~""Lo 18' 11a, llttadaM. Al 1787 ~IC CSeoot. w 10 l*uP. t c... ~ ~ ,_ '"*'· n...,.ea. e¥a11 e.-1, bltine. Hunytl7St,.. s1101mo.120-M22 l:Oo~M&-~~1:-0 • -.-r ..,..,.. a1400e1~S:10 °'......., HMlll E--. unf\w'ft 11t 1e.. Pramlum CM lbr 2.._ Nn-**LIDO e.oent ,um •"cl petlo. cerport tal ~ MOlllCMd Yd LM91 2BA. 6en, 2"'" ,....., 11.... C.... ... ... •. U U451mo. S2t ~lfly 111da1pe•• o;;-ttooo poof. 111e. tenn11. pleno. °*"-*""· °"'" ev.-.. ;eUtt i&&m. ,.., gw-0r. c.. Ewe M1 I 53M1t1 ~... (714) 11s.o.t7a .. dOM lo Meoh. • & frptc 1150/mo. EAIT~OE8HAAP& *"" f Slngle _.,,,, 71 Mt Mletlo S room abOd9 IAllllllY MITAL 875-4912 Ville AentM 28'. 1a.. 1tove, tide your budQM btg 1bdml E-1 w/9111 t700 tlel d*I ftM ~ I _,--ywd, 1 C/11 encl~ llde llddr... 53t-f1t1 other•53M1IOAotM 111-4111wllM1ll C..ta.... 2114 S*tl150/mo, ~· Q09t Beeutlful ·~ Newpor1 N. w p 0 , t H. I 0 h t • IAITXAT IA FU ~=·: ~H.ml-lut. f<no41t Condo 21drm. Townhout• 4Bdrm 2 UIS/mo 1BA 1BA, .,, mo. CM o9il tee 1111 2'Aa.. ell emenltlet, etc. Beth V nic. S1200 + bullt IN. tndry rm. "' ton, °' 15 9LOCK8 TO OC~N • 1100/rno 722-1477 dep. 'c.i~ 1-5715 l>Mch & lhOpt. Gordon Of MM!•. Eteoant cedar a gteee 735.741 w. 11tt1 St 211"drm. 2~81, femlly • lllYll-Newport Htt. 3 BR 21~be TSL MOMT 642-1803 aa~ room & den. Ptuef\ crptl, 28A 2'"9e on golf ClfM, 2 townhouM, 2 eel, 318-A. ___ _,, ___ .,... ~LI-=--- frplo, eundedt. Obi 09', car gar S18". ?&t-0079 I!. 15th St. a1250/mo. 2BR 2ba w/pool, newty , fully meln~ ywd. BLUFF CONDO: 38 A 2 be Avtjl June 1. M5-105e pelnted end c;pt'd. no f&ml.Y APAIMITI ! •• Ul1 S1200/mo. Avl e 130: ON THI! WATER! 4bd, ~~:~,: MOO s,:~~.~':~ :'; l Excel 3 8r 2be ... ou1 de 91tl434·• 100 wkdyl view from ~ room. chlklren N9&r pW1c HMt tae nr Wttmr Maie Ger· 714fl2Q.9721 eYl/Wtcncl Available now tor a yearly •GBr 2S. TownhouN. lkl ~pet• • dner Inc. a 10504' i 1400 BLUffS CONDO: 8gl ..._.. or eummer rental. VMrly ~b:J.~~Oof ;':!. 2~r~ 1 v.Beth 1120 tee:urtty. ~2 28A 2be, trptc, hUge ~eu~t!: ~ $990 No Pet1'122-io11 28drm 2e.tl\ S740 Kids/pelt otl l'ncd 5 rm hM peS tlo w/gt..,.bett view. Barbar• 875-5511 •ci..n 28< 28e N SC 398 W wu.on 831·5583 nlct Miahborhd MOO't 1300/mo AQ17~ •FREE CABLE TV Lg 18< 63~19f ""' ,.. CLEAN 3bd 2ba. Harbot Rent option OCMl't dOM Pl:,•· S .A. cir~po~. & 28<. 2e. G11d9n Ac>••· NEW LUXURY HOME Hllendal LM S1200 mo. : ,,;: =~~~1= r,50·N~Ers 722·801; POOi, rec room '525-Never ocoip6ed, 2200 eq oard/wet•pd. NO PETSI S3M191 Agent fM $&55 710 W Ulth St tt, 3bd, 2~ be, Welc to M8-2349 °' Me-13M. *~* USA M •I bc:h, .....,..... option, DUPLEX SPECTACULAR CONDO 2Br. 28e remode6ed. Jae, ALL UTILTIES PAID S1400. M0-3521. • 3bd 2ba + 2 trpl"' 18drm 1be + f11>1c. ell d/Vt, gerage $750. FM Com ....,,_,.you._., · • .... bltln• poo1 rec room m.nm 111-... PM•............ ·-· · Latau eundeck, 1 blc 10 bdl. Muat i.1 o;..iy '595. FM Newty dee«ated c:wtom MBRU 2 IX wooa: yrty. •1050 "'"'· 11000 ---.,...... •NICE 28DRM 2BA* d•tlgn , .. tur .. pool, • untum, 645-3755 •~• Lndryfac, d/w. Fncd petlo. bbq, eovr'd oarage. tur· = !:g ~Oar: EXECUTIVE HOME Try thla bOrder bargain No pett te50 N/tmkre rounded with pluah '9nd· $1500 4tt-l715 ' Yeatly 38R+den S395 ~ bec:NIOr pad 790-1•18 or '42·7528 tcePng. No pelt. · overtoolllng the baCk bey w/eoota pool & mOf• 1&.dioom Furnlahed In EM1bluff .,.., Aveil .. 53M191 Bett Alty fM me... 385 WEST WILSON .. lllla II II July 1 et S2100/mo. Gar· VERSAILLE CONDO BJIU M2· 1111 •tor~~15~t ~':r.'n~s.:~ & 1bd. 1b•. poo1. ;~:·i .. APU1WITI llWLYllWUI ~~ •tety $875 722 8729 ec>eciOU•. MCUfe, • IFNturlng l>Mutlful land-Xtralg3bd 1'hba carport . . • LIDO ISLE. Vrly ...... 8~..()900 ecape. BBQ•. pool/epe. WlltOf. poof 'n-pett ~-~~M~~~~~~~~-~·~g~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~b~~u .~~~ llll Q~~~~~~~BA~~~NDO ~~~~GM~°' va~~1~. !!!!! , ~ -• NOW, no peta .. 11800 mo Prof decor comp! fum carport• Sorry, no pet• FIND Y SELL ..... ,... 4"'"3400own/bkr 2BR 2bi LR/den/FR/OR 2Bdrm 1'/•B• $715 POOL-PRIVATE PATIO -------BU ============= _48< 2e.. 2 car gar. yard. Ullllll POOi/spa. t>Mut vu of :::~,':st 842.~~;! x~t~~·~·2\~=5· -------Wiii condtld•r P•t? 38R 28A double at ocean/bay/llghtt/ LH EASTSIDE 567 2641 through classified through classified through classified -rti;~rryl ~Jl-llll moo~·CallA:t.::: ~=~~·11~::-8492 '!~ ~t~m~I= SHARPA.NOCLEAN~AR· _________________ __, ________ ..._ _______ ~--------1..--------~WATERFRONT Condo for pool, catpor,I No pell OEN APT. 1BR. etov. & IMM 3bd 3be. trplc S.8-8791 relrlgerttor, no P•t•. 6.9 Annual Percentage Rate Financing 36 Months on Selected Models A On Appr oved C redit . ESCORTS Brand New 1986 BRONCO ll ONLY$ FROM A Month! • I\ toi .0 .,..lho retll•-'1 111/H I ll'Ol i...,..,.. ll'O i10<'" ion -111 ... Ulll .... "'' ~ ll!Ct llO'U ~"' , •• Ir & ... l)o """""' ,, .. , °""' .. INlll'.,l Jt•• SIC l1ft ti s10,486 " . S5888 drapM, wpeta. petlo: $520/mo 6-48-1377 garg doclc spec. poea.-UOO-U50, 2bd. 1ba. She"' lafna 2 Bedroom ' s " ~••• completety renovated, on .,. .,.. · Ible, 1575, 87...--vv wee! l7th near Whlttlef _Upetalra. Abeolutety Im· Hll ha ltll~tl 6-48-3829 for more dell. maculat1. OlthwHhet, encloMd lodcable gar-114 1735 mo. E/alde 2br 1'~ba age Perk-Ilk• ground• •2ea-rm-on-··1·11:1-... -oc;;n-· towntiouM. trplc. petto. $875 Av11tebl• June for ln~lon on Sunday garage. tndry room, otf 12tnll•th. No pe11. Cell 10anMpln 16-41 M.. atre.t. quiet locatlon 6"4M279 Oriv.. 213/Sel-2510 Tll ~Or~ 1IOI Sp1Fkllng unlurnlened Ht• Hit ••trt • • 1Bdrm, utlla pd. Quiet. 21M lllff APT W/'11W No pell. Pool. Nr W>pe ______ ....,-. Vault•d c•lllng1, prvt SS40/mo. s.&-7&89 2ii( 2L condo. c:rpo;; belcony, redecoreted MESA PINES 2850 Halla $775 POOi, jaou.rzt. Nr S895. 2151 Peciflc Ave 2BR 18e w/gar S750 South Cout Plau G 3 1 • 8 1 O 7 pm or TOP AREA. Oullt, tlo Pete 645-7131 or 731-5188 855-0965. No pet• ••s.t5-3117•• Int• L!Jau I CLEAN & SHARP 2 BR. TOWNHOUSE TYPE Lg ......, cpt1 & drp1, O/W, gar-28r 1 '~91.. Lndry hkupe. 28< fur Ill*' Pttlo Pvt •· no pell. 1640/mo. Fncd patio & gar~•· pool/p~ bchiNCUrlfy. By 8-45-5577 te95 No pet• 6-4S..5e05 owner. s 1200. 8'42-1so2 Eut coat• M ... newer wtlf'm&-.. or 831-8250 prvt 2Br 1Ba. vaulted <*I· went a Mtec11on of grMJ iaa.ho t Inga In llvlng rm, dining IMng? we can off• any-~n I rm & kttehen. Sngl gar-thing from a tmall eipt to ege $750/mo. Avl 811. 1 4 bdrm houae. If loc*· la1Ma Call Sheryl B. 873-3117 Ing In CM. NB, or HB la.... 2'M or 831-1288 think of u1 flret for thet 1---···y I ·ii~w:~. choice of Ideal IMng -•~ • r lit TSL MGMT .. 642-UI03 ~·se~2e;ew hQ WllTUIE YIU.All Nwp1 Penln 38< 28a. gar. UITllM 111111 ~~~;:;mo lndry, frplc. Yrly S1300. Loll of wood, $475/mo POOl/epe no pett vus. R«ttall 87Mt12 No pe11 990-2970 Mw122 ' 8:33-a17 PENINSULA POINT. 2 EASTSIDE 2BR 18A Bdrm, 1 ba, gatage. trpM:, j PA TIO SINGLE LEVEL. ~..,_a nu 11epe to OCMn & the bay. ENCLOSED GARAGE ~u ,. seoo1mo. yrty 873-895~ 1 s1001mo Agt 759-8389 APUT9UTS C..ta .... 2114 C.ta .... 2114 Beautiful targe Apt• tn quiet na~borhood WOODLAND VILLAGI 2::m ~~~. ~~s150 APARTMINTS ~5~.~.2~~ ~~2408 Come & enioy our eardi!n style apls Quiet. comlortablf hv1nc 28R 2ba. cptaJdrapea, cw to freeways & So Coast Ptm while only minutes lo the pallo, garage, dleh- btaGll Garaee$ an1l1ble NO PETS PllASC wHher. coin lndry NOH · .... • LA ... Y ltOOMI S7251mo. 8-4&-8-451 •Aam.oe •ua.•11111;;1m~at-.. ___ ..-;.;.;4 tm•OOM '611-'MI 11111 IPllllll 1 m•.... .., • ..,.. au .. ans U., Ill.AT 6 llOT WAID mcL. lrtaf lnlM l.etatlH Ml PAaumi •IAIYlll llllT* !~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!~~~ 1 Bdrme rrom U75 1: 2 Bdrm• from S825 POOi & Spa. Waitllng dl.unc:. 10 *Shopping * ThMtr• •Restaurant• * Par1ta/Tennlt Court• S e l ected Un1t1 w/Catl'ledrat Celllnga NOW TAKING DEPOSITS FOR Immediate Occupancy Unha avallabll to thow IM-4142 ...... 1u1ltac~ 28 1BX/cerport. Re- furblened. Sp1nl1h duplex. View. Vf:torll. No pell St150tme <CM-5'49 •llZY.,,_* w.i11 to bcfl, all utN• Incl prttng. Hunyl $!25. F• 11UlllT 17MHO OCEAN VIEW Only tO mint from Laguna Your own prtvat• OCMI\ View from Dene Potnt'1 rnoet MClucMd acenlc Bluff. Like new 28'. Cell HO-e331 °' M 1-M41 18< v ...... P9nthouM. Quiet. ~ blda. Qlfllgt, poof. Gd vu. Nr W MH 875-4912 VIiie Rent• 28< 18e uPPW· AM new ap- pllencee, knct1. new etpt eome view. Stepe to bch 180'7 w B.ibol 8l¥d a.tty 120-eo.2 10·5 * •arenct ,., 2ar 2a... ChOICe .,.... Q., .... ,.etlo. StOO No S>ett 790-1713Ot1&7°1711 • ...... .. • ,....... ••••••• •••• I •• ... ....... •• 'I'" ':::: L-r ., .. ~·.... ....... 1111 Ill -•rrfiil:°' ................. illi anwww w dil8iaxm .......... ...... ... •1-tnt "'*' .................... 2W ..... ,,., ............ +Ml 1n..,,a If llllL: _. 1 =· 1Y, llN tO. "'°"' NIAe 11+, ....,_ "· dip ~""' ... OM1 w: IDI, -..... °"' ..... f/w end "9W Wkftd ~ 1111 111-142..... ' Ml-1711 ' _..-.;~·:.-..n= &,No=· Y'!;e:; ~""C:.·: ~,,.. PiOf, fMMk, llCLUOIO ttoploet t1•. Clll t44 0t0t "'°· ....,.1 2... • ~ ...,._, 14,9 :: ~+w'i':i Hw, ,,;,., ,.,...: hCHM In ,.,,. v~ btwn ..-. ..... Moll. poo11. 11GL !400. MIM .......... Lt11dn1111e • ..,..tttnd (~, wtm=="" otMW.Ml-1104 --- _ «edit oheolt. HMted 11W1g ~""• ~~ Cofone dll U. Hae, oom-lhft fWft1Wii i .l CU pool. c.tpott. MM112 ..: ....,. it Idell Oil, =---olelft~ f/m, = 2 "'* bd ... w, t100 SAVE l'i' 1 •' $1350* •• ,1 ........... .......... ............... • Month-to-month also available • Furnished/ unfurni1h1d • Fltn111 ctntera, tennia, swimming no,..., fot.............. monetl +-:::..0. +11 utlt. Joan M·' home W/ooetft .. for 1 -· • d-241-G211,..eao-111t . ... In Jtl/t, -.... • ,..... .... "''"*' .. -------.... n• ~· ,..... ... llrbe,v6eiwA,c rvbotl ........... .,. lalGOa ielan3, rmlit ~:-..~~1~JS: IHI/mo. Avail 111. NYWi•W- w/PN '""*•• f410, ...., "'W -F t1Mttl Of f7t.H42 Delirel to --fl A. .......... 11t/lllt, l200 MOUtlty. l11t1la It l•aH m I\/.,. etv Hr fUmllhed NI w:: Yrty rental. Ml-07M ftlt Condo. Co1ta Meta. or lir'9lt ~ home. COtona c1e1 Mar women P9tfl'I or temp Oii IHO..+ from J4Jkt 11 to A..11 11, Wlntt to 1Mfe ~ TM 111, ltilt. 841 M:M min 2bd, too.i , ....... houte, pool, with ooupte. ··==~c!IMHtlll , non '"* ptot. to .,_. call John 71.....,.f111. 11aoo1mo. t73-2tl2 Aoom!Tlete. ~* latte Sbd, home rv bMdl wi!ii'iMb =~ ~ Gent °"" 40, irem 24"id to .,_. i&i, llM Pl9T 1• •• houtl~ Cotta MeM non emoktt, Ille kitchen 2t>e ~In CdM. Neat ir n/lmkr tlV Ht TwnhM .,... pr••ed f4t•aaot ptMltgel. 548-71M end Udy, nOft•lmkr. nr IC Pteu '300/mo + Fem. nHr ao Ooa1t 13tf+cltP+113 uttt. Pit •.t utMt. ~ 841-IMO 1111111 ltr IHI Plua/405 fwy • .,...,,dry, ... l;eo.-9028. Cathy X2111. l!V9 ~2-1eos • : nt1 Models open deity. 9-8. kltctlwtt•, pool, teaz. 2wa ffemale, retlable, ir to etv 8br C.M. home. • ~ ..,_ Sorry, no pets 1325 mo. SM-17S7 non"""'· to etv IEMlbluff 1171/mo. + ._...,.... ltorege -IUlllde Newport Btach No.' lrvtne. m/f non-tfnkr. prvt. · ai>I. l400/mo. + utll. for F•m. '"Cher In C.M • ...._81 7 10.7pm 880 Irvine Av1nu1 bath kit pool gar11g9 7~ whlchr. N/tmltr 14S-2Sa7 -1 ltt 16th) ...00 ~ 113 Utll. AvaM S8D 2BA CDM·'.t ml to Huntington 8MCt1 ~ Rl!HT-JINOLE GAAAQ! 145-'104 811. 494-0i11 lft e.,,,,. ~. xtr•, 1480 +~ 5bd, 4ba houM, ali MO'l~L2=~ ~Le. N ..... port Beach So. u7~ .. fil,"'1~2''2 .. ~llMn alMnltlel. X'lnt loc.1240 551-2144 ..... ....la[...... ftll _._,, " · """""· month. "4-t178. l700 18th Strtet UN ik iifi A cNnNno 28' furn NB lrvtne/Mltr lt/ba. n.tmkr. IUll, .. tall ftt4 '!.~:!'.:I Wkly ,...... now avall tlotN, kltctl, ~IPL Pref Pfof 25-35 yr1. Next dfXitiAUiHT UOl0t- -iHW 1129 50 wk l up 2214 ~7~emlt.r /mo. to U.C.I. O/W, W/D, hom• Hft 1450/wk Nwpt 8tvd CM ~7445 22-micro. 1410/mo Incl uttl. + 10c9ntl mt. ae.p. 4-1. ' I! SIDE CM CONDO Kevin 854-3447 Alv/eurnmer. t57-4I071. IU I .. L-F/wt1nt1 MrM to llW, 36+ lrvtne pvt qttrl/entr+ g.r. Apartments 302tW. PeclftOCO... HwY 2bd, 1'.tba. trpec, ltnkr Pr.t 1g1 otc1tt pereon. c....niaJ R&S MaNoed l'lllPlf1 N9WPOf1 leedl. AefrtO T\f ok, 5 min to bctt, 1337 .50 a..ut "'°*· Fantaietlo LL lalt/IMt · ·111 $125+ wk egt, no.-.. +12 utN, l-01, 145-3371. pttc.13t5+utl 730-e071 m111 IT BICB BY PLACING AN AD IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES PRIVATE PARTY RATE (No Cancellation) 4 line, 5 time minimum •.60 per line-Example: 4 linea, 5 days•1200 • Pncr must ~ included in ad. • Rate doea not apply to Commercial accounu. Automotive, Bo.ting or Rul E.tate • NO CANC£LLA TIONS OR CHANCF.S once the ad hu run. Cu.tomer ,. reeporad>le for the run amount • FOR MORE DETAJtS Iii"' Plat CALL 6'2-5678 IJ 11':.,W-=~i>t":':a ........ , .... n ..... 1450. 11t/lut cMc>. Jiii He-2424 or 8674513 1Ml. IM. .. Mat\n edult non.-9mok• Sci Ff. -1ift WUTCLIFF to INlr• hm. pvt rm/ba. Nwpt lld't 541·5032 Acl1 So Co.It P"'8 1375+12 GEOAGEOU8 BAY,AOHT Utlllt .... 841-1180 EXl!CUTIVE OFFICI!. Mature Miil' lhr loWly & 1100/MO. 84&-n85 W•ollff tlotN, non emkr OR 759-3074. UOO/mo 11t/IHI + ..... lln'D ctMnlng dep. 548-7183 Ample pkg, utlll pekl. M/F. Cool, ~.prof. Ht ~855 E Cit Hwy 875-llOO l>Mctl. P9t•OKl440+ "'· CHAlllMINO NB WATER-Call tor good.... Burr. 850-9230· 132·t200/E FRONT aoo lq " on PCH M/F to.,,.;,_ 2bd1!Mt91cM 11WI 1-1411 Cotta Mw dupt9x. Ger· n•llT ... tg•, prlvat• yard . Full 8ervtce luMdtng 557-3242. Secnlartel a.rvtc.e' NB OCEAN FRONT Conw of W..tdfff & lrvtne 3bdi!ba. Medi Ml' 1500 VIEW SUITE · l ao50, avail 08-02, Call .... 111 Krlltln, 973-00ee. O.C. AIRPORT AREA Npl Hgt9 prof M/F lo lht Atrium otnc.. 22M50 eq 3bdrm 3ba condo, fullY n. Janltotlal, uttllt•. Iott turn., maid 842-101210 of pttklng. 852-9311 545-1715/E ult tor Cl Cl OFFICE SPACE IPCH'Oll· Quiet, reeponeltit., WC>f11· lmattty 250 equwe '-' Ing pert0n, lhr 2 BR apt. lneludea utllltlet, eo.ta CM. Part furn. l350+dep M9M. 714 831-0783 1/2-utU. 84&-7023 Small omc. lpecet tor Reep. F/non tmkr to lhr rent. EMt 17th St. FuM me. 2br 1ba E/Colta ....W:.. 1350 & Up. AM Meta. 1350+ 'A utll. No for 8111 845-3381 petl. 831-3117 '** lutam I, ........ lllm&TIF•m •o.tiy computer updat9e lulMu •M0te 1Md1, fMter e.v. !trrtuldet ltM •All e1en111e1•• m IUIT'f llLll 11!. .. ,, .......... Good 'ioc.t1on. Pt1wldpelt .. NIW '16 SUIAIU DL SIDAN INCLUDES Jutt Ul 1.60 dell.,.n on oppro...d cr.cllt. 60 month clo• end lecne purchoM option. Cap co1t 7988-totol of poy-n 9253.15, RMiduol 2795.80. NIW '16 SUIAIU 3DI 4WD GL #5'7t·I02•2t ~,) '1000. Off MANUfAClURll'S RITAIL 'llCI INCLUDES • .5 Speed Tro~smissi~n !t • AM-FM Radio ~- • Air Conditioner -====-• Thermo Guard -~ --V-- Protection Package • And Much More NIW '16 SUIAIU DL STATION WGN INCLUDES • 5 $pMd Overdriv. Tronsmluion • Pwr S'"ring • AM·FM Radio · • Thermo Guard Prot.ction Pock • And Much Mor• ,... .Mt Ul 1 .60 de4Mn on Gf>ProM aeclt. 60 lllOlllfl dote elld .._ purdl-option. Cap Cot! 7911-tota1 of fNl'f'M"ll '2SJ.t5. RMldvol 2795;80. NIW '16 SUIAIU XT DL , #WM'°67' '1000. Off MANUfACTUlll'S llTAIL 'llCI INCLUDES • Air ConditioMr • Pwr Windows & Door locks • Premium St.reo With Ccn..tte • Cruise Control • And Much MoN (114)141-1111 only 845-5924 '"-~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~J--~~---~..::.:::::i:==:::::;:=======- 0 4Dr,S1t'4. '86 JETT A A/C.INlltv-..W. ..._,,_, FACTORY STICKER $9840 VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU ~ # <D, . IN · THE NATION '86 VW GTI olloy ......... .ii- 1.0. tO.U909 '86 IMPULSE FACTORY STICKER $9830 FACTORY STICKER LoocMd.1.0. #0902960 $12 ,001 '86 P'UP TRUCK FACTORY STICKER $6237 You Save $1041 You Save $1143 You Save $1502 You Save $1242 '12 Detaun 11210 'IOM&lde121 '14MudeQLC •11 Torot• 71VW8ug '14Ford '85 lauzu P/U 'nVWBua •11 CMvy '13 VW Quentum U8ACK 5 epd, .ir, AM/FM _,_ Dehl•• Corolle8R·5 TempoQL Cltetlon a IPCI. llr, AM/FM lteteo, 4 IPCI. elr, AM/fM etw.o, 5 epd, P/8, AM/FM C&N, 4 cyl, 4 epeect, AM"M A4.lto trane. PletMMQ. 6 ljld, AM/fM .-. -• epd. llM/FM -· 2 t-Auto, 111r ooncl, AM/FM i>.1110, AIC, N1y io.o.G, w/ .. CeM & oN; 29,000 ml CUI & oN; 54,000 ml. --.~~I-AM/F°M llteNo & oN; lflell I mullll mucfl mor9' ptjnt. ="'9 new IMld9 I IM I~ tow mllea •It* •S32ZPZ W/QM9. A ~ l)uy, e conom y p I u I UPOHll Olll •8t7 N •t-. 11'911 lfW\epot· #214817 •1JMT2t7 •tCOX06t tlOMCI ., ... , 21.000 mllea. A greet l>uy t11lon. • 1CTN541 13111 13111 .... 13111 tFCk425 $2111 ..... ... 14119 ..., ..... 'MMuatangQT '15 OTI '19VW Bug .. 1 Hond• 'll'Porec:he 144 '85 vw Qolf 'I 2 Dataun '14 Ponttec Conv. Convertlble Accord 2008X 6 ~. AIC, eunroot, NCI, AUIO. A!C. AM/FM -· ,,.,,_ ,.,,,. 111119 •ct Milt Nb' lolded. ontr u.ooo ml, epedel edllloll. •04 1213 6 IPCI. A/C, AMIFM at-f'lre tftQllle NCI I loeded o"Uw 11,000 "'" .. iwto, AIC, AM/tM ..._ 1-*1 "''1<:.t ..,.._ ... Ol't lllildl, --· 111191 •IOI02 w/1111 the t• OHO~ e1 UIO Cllllt ...... tv.fOfte '*"' ...... , .._.. {ttll(ITT7l •'""''' • Qnnoa Co.t OAtl Y PILOT/ F'rtMy, May n . 11M HAND WAS Available for pecial Cars suoo ASH N' WAX Wash, Sealer W ax,$/!!!! 75 Air Freshener d WITH Tiii AV ----------------------------------COMPLETE DETAIL Interi or and J. ~ /!!!! 00 Exterior d d UP 1 WITH AD $1 OOOFF 3 DAY MEMORIAL· WEEKEND WW MILEABE EXECUTlrE DEMO -UllOElf 1.511 MllES- Fully factory equipped air, pwr steer pwr door locks & more' (#704122) Loa<Jed' Leather. automatic, sunroof. stereo-cass air lull pwr & much more (1'035595) $2.40 per day Tl\at'I All you pey for 3 Mnee, 30 day minimum In the SERVICE -DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYll AllFNLlll ...... FiAi lXJMINd I; N£ dl4N'f cERXUIC t1nO wd Sinor. 11 yr1 of Nippy Dl9tlncthle. Ancn.ble cuttomen. Lie. 2'0644. Kltchene, betl\a. 722-t783 Thantc·Youl te.3-<4114 l~~~~=i~~ L THE SUNSHINE IN BUILD OR REPAIR Walla, doon, Windows, Entry & Frencfl Doon FIND ~~~ . . Commeldel/"-ldlntlel pat!<», COVWI, remodell. By Nomwl TM DootrNn Uc/Ina. 81111Mt "4-6149 Oek & Fir. 167..()()()A through class1f1ed 1.ecory PO• 2..-Y $40 C.. Wlndowe MW 124 OUR AUTO LOAN RATES HAVE SHRUNK. W~rc offering !Omt of our lowest rate.~ in yari.. So tab advantage of them whtlc they last. Corne lnto any conveniently lcalcd branch. Or apply by phone and w~ll give you an answer the next busin day. Call Mon ·Fn. Sa.m. to8 pm.,1-(800) 551-3333. .. ~~ .. ~•l"t•M ... "'~ ------' t •• SGUILOS .. IOlllOIPIS ..... Llll1D •111 Fii llYllE lllll PllE ............... TURN THEM INTO MONO Cell 641-1671 th<ough ll'le 0• fled•• ............... wt1at'1 your home MtVlol ~ • Altaratton1? Ac-counting? Auto repair? AdYartlM In ctaaaltled. MOTOR ROUTE Available In Irvine area. $300 to $600. No collect- ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk. ORANGE COAST bllyPllt 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA Earn Extra Ca•h For Del/very Of Thi• Pa,,.r HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week. No collecting, no soliciting. Must have dependable car, truck or station wag0n and Insurance. New 11 th• •••••n t• m•k• ltlt ltucka. Seti ...... ............. hevtehel411 ·-··· .. ,. 1r•wn clethea er tey trvdu lty •4ilv•rtt11nt ,..,, ........... te411eyl Oftty -,... ..... (4 ..... "''"'""'"') D1ilr Pilot Cl111ifi1d 142-llll . . • rot!SCHt AUDI (Hf.V•Oln H19Jta1 0-..11111 s.i.. a S.•1tv• ,,, ...... ,,,,, """ U .S f Coe•• H•11 N••po11W.a<h 673-•9" PORSCHE '71 914 2,0 eng, Gd cond, '*' w••· rw ,,.. tlr•. 12800. 913-5773. WE'RE llU101NG. UsedCarSales TIPlllP• ,., ....... Meic1d11 ... ••mn .. T~Meindu,.._,_ CAU NT&tOI MY -···" .... . ... 21S or 114 IS7·2JSI . .......... ' • -()qng9CoMI DA11.Y PtLOT/ Friday, ail8)' 23, 1811 . ~·' -· . - BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY We Offer. •New Car Sales •Used Car Sales •Service •Leasing •Excellent F1nancina IPUER ~GIJO©ill 979·2500 ...... ,., .. mtfTPT'" .. Auto, ,,....... tilt ..... °""°"' ....... Uc # 1LUNl1 -14120 -THfODORf ROBINS fORO • • 11A"' I\ • ., t\t Vll t. ',.,,,. AiA• •• • • 111111 MUC Illa !!M PP ..U !!!!Cl MMC Pg MMC.. MMC.. !!M Pll !!M msa , .....,,..... ~'!.... ..... -."' Olno.JllD& •• , ••• _.,, li--.-t --· "'""' .. =¥™ ... ,,_,,_...., • _.......... -..,,. W b&IR-.r A A ~I'. .-na -ITA·-• .lflJ iO A~UTIONOfll)41--.Mcm-1••= .... -~o..lltr U a ,_==,..._ .. ,,_ ..... ,._.,..,. ~ gr'~.°'~ ... ~y'J2...!'.: C:.,~3 = .--:. = 'L Ao--:'ltAT W,lfl"N ~J;'~~ CAl.lflOMA. OIClAMtO ""v .. ~ .. ._ -OfTY Of' tlMNI ~ GA._,.. !'Om ..... f, fl' •Y Pi J9I! .,,...... -UNon MAINT8fMCI llJMll. ITt IHTIHTIOM TO LIVY !!._ ~W ........... fllw _.., ,.. lifG ITI INTWmON TO ,, •• , •· ~ ..._.,. • ... AT A W AT;( Ui& Mt., C.... ...... Celt. t411 ._.., ·-•• : AN 0 C 0 LI. IC T .,._, ..,_,co;,...,. ..... ON>ll' THI LaVY AHO .-a.,andMI; ~ A. UL&•'9U-MD-191,A. .-r ... t1'1. ~ AllHIMINTI DU"IHO Mon or ~ ·~""" 001.UCTION 0, AN ........ 'U•ATI•• .. , •• M MW ...... IM ~. Celt. -I "IOAL YIA" 1111-17 on June •• t .... ~I ........... IT'°"'11CAL C..Ne.•1m MATU•I o• , ... °' •UNonA•.•= Oflft ..,,..... ... .._;,, wrnilN CITY Of cotTA commentc•,..,!,,o ~!"~"YIM 11M-tf llO" THI •nml-"°cm9111 AeAmlT AeAt•IT YO t YOU c.1t . .-r 1411 .... ,_ ..... MllA LANDIOAPINO ~. .,... """""'" cnY Ofl llWM UCIKT1NG ~ V.. .... ._YOU. ¥0U -8 OQlt. MMMK.D 0 aC~ A '* 111iJu11Met le oon-pott ..... c.lf .... ·t I ==.~~T DllT.-ICT :,.::==:r.p~ =~A== :..n..:-:.:-:rr: TACtA~ LA ... _,_.. -:'_,-r.~i..::::--=~.: .. T9;,l THI C11'V COUNCIL Of' lox 11176, lrvlne, CA P~CIE FOfll A PUeUC ....._...._...._,_,.. ,..,..MU ,_,_.UU Tilll l1lllMI .... tied Ollltl.HMll.ftlr io • ... ft.ftlllTI ITHICITYOflC08TAMUA 12113-1178. HfARINOT.-MON ................ ,....... -----~ci.trofOr· "* ........ -~· '1'WaoonNNWll.IUO. DOU HIMIY MIOWI TlleOCyCounoltwtllhcMd WHERU.l,U.°"YC...-...... a .... NOTICI II "'""y OnJwMD.-.•10:GO =~on .. "· .... ~ci.trtf0t~1 .,.._ 1'7to Al FOl.LOWI: • puMc '*'int on 11111 mat• ol ot the City of IMnt. br W • wllll to ..a._ .... GNIH, tt1M on .,,....._, A.M., It THI llllAR -1 tntt CouMy on MIW I , MM 1 WHIAIEAS, on Aprtl 7 lel'MCl .. tM•puMceotn-AH olutlon No. H·ll *9 of In~ In Ille .U. 11, 1•. a 11:CIO TMHOa LOii\' ON fTH ..,.. ,_' CORVETTI ·ea rtd on red, &apd, gtua top, BON atereo, a ll e xlraa. •22,800. 486-1301. TH EODORE ROBIN S FORD )O(>J HARllOI 111\10 CO!>TA Ml\A t>ol 2 0010 .......... Former ford ex90Utl¥9 van. Lota or ... ting toom, dual air and tota of power equip. (1MDC3M) 113,995. Johneon & Son Linc. Mere. 540-5630. T_...IUl'M Lo•d•d to th• mul (101813) $7995. Jonneon & Son Linc. Mere. 540-5e30. 1 ... 1 !~ CounC4I tdopted menta .. tNt ...... °""'In-edopMd on June n. ttll, "**· -....., • eo ...... Liii .......... "" ""'" 0, CHICAGO ....,~...... °"'* COllt PuOlltf'9ld ~ 0... ~Ho. te.n, lnltlet• '°"'**' mey be otitalned ordered the fonMttOn of the ~ t0 "* ~ wrte-tN room ...... .., °°"'" mu INIUfl+MCll QOM. ~ 111t1ot M41Y t . ft. ta. ao, o.1r ,..,. Mey n , ao, AN 11'9 prootedlnQI for,.,...., IWD~Tl&(114) MO-MS4. City of IMne ~lt\o Mein-19'1~IfWfi,,._1111 duottnt TNIMe'• ..,_, PANY, LOOATID AT•\ N. 1111 ' I , 1t 1MI or' city ot co.fa MeM I.end-,. • .,._ aa. 1111 tentnOe Dlelrlot rc.tt. oon-Mid on ttme. ..,. 1fle ..... of MM. MAIN, tn .,. Clew of .._ ia-t• ,,.. ~ •11111-,.,,t 019tttGt CfTY. .,,,M llllVINl.L~y ttructton. lnt*alletton. melno ,AYleOl uae.1 ha aldo ._ UTATW MCUNTla II"' AM, ~ .. Onftle, t J ~Iller t MCI ordering the MW.RA PAUIKA.-.... tenenot. onwvtclna or put>-mendedO. El rilunat ~ VIOi • ......, It 1D Nori\ ..... of • CAU-•-t1t --.,_.,. _.._ Ip Protec1 ~ 10 P'epet'9 tr CltJ ca.tr l*c llghtlng wlUlln tN City deader oontra Ud .• w-·~· ..... 100. "" .. f'OfMA ANOa ~ ..,,_ ~ ..,,_ c e~wtth,...,.cttoMld Putillilfled 0rtinge CoMt MCI ~tty ~ dlendumenoequeUd.,. ~ofhneeAM.~of COt.,ANY, a Oalttotnte MMIOUl• H•M PIC""°"9_,H•ll Dlelrlcll siwwt 10 a.ctton Delly Plot M9Y n . 1t11 tN ~of <>rainge ~ dlntto de ao ~ ~.._of~ Corpoillltoli. • ..._ • um" w um ITA'llR IT' 22516 ttwOUQll MCI tnollldlnO 1'1M County SttM t LIQhlln8 l M le lnf0tmadon .,_ MAt.: UTAT'I MQUNT9 ....... TNll1ee _.., 11111 Tl-..._.! .,. The....,..,. --.. a.ctton U5l4 ot IN c-. ~ °'*1Ct Mo. t llgue, -~. CtlfDI•• OOt• oartllln 0.... of T,,.. •· t;;;;;;:::-W ~---, tornle Str99tl MCI Hlghwe~ PtaJC ll)TIC[ INtewtth, .. puf'9u9nt to the .., Ulled O.. IOIC!ltaf .. porat6on, • ..._ "" 111'-d ....... br m• I. I.OWi ~OM CHMTIM ~OTTI •UllN ... CocM; MCI ~ MCI LIQlltlnQ ooneeto de un ~ en 'rt'*-_.., ............ ANO NAHCY C. L<>Wa, • •'I! WHEAIAI, Mid report NOTICI fl* Ac1 of 1t72: MCI 9te llMlto • ..,.,. NIOMO to the PGWel' of ... ~ HtM8AHO ANO WIN. ,.. a A_...Celf--=· '-~:'1:0 ::c:~ Mlbwlpreptiredendllled DUntM WHEAEAS.tNCltyCoun-ln!Mdlatainent•. de -· twredlnltletoeNll!o.dof oonted~l.11M.J• a..::~ J niuoom -c.li .-~ with. IN City counoll: MCI "°""" ..,.., citl of the City of IMne, by mene re, t u rHpuHta Truet elleouted by JOHN I . "'*""-" No. ~1•14, A,,.,.lda i .. v.-o/" len Wli.M Peotflo. tno. Mor·' WHERE.At, tN Cit)' Coun-ecM•• -"-*'tlon Ho. If-adopted eeortt .. et hay tlguna. l)Utde GOLIATH. A llr9e W. ,.. of Offto6ll flleoordl of Or· a.--. CllM tllft ate tlOS AwooedO AV9 at haup9rOY9d utd rwipon AND fl* NlllllON oil AS>t" 22, tHI, ordered Mi' reQlltrecfu ltempo. oorded ~ tO. tMI, .,._County, ..... of 0.. Thie ~ n· ..._, ca.t' uni.ct: TOAll•llT'IR t'1• Superinte ndent or t.t()THIAUPONOfNT: In the offlot of the~ forilla. ~.,_pow of dllOted lftttdwt~IJeloon· J::>Newpott . ' NOW, THEAIFOAIE, llE IT HTATW NO A11Dt1 St,..... to~· 1'9t)011 f0f The petitioner Ml fllecl • Aecofder of Mid County, ..... ....., ~. .. =.:: J. .... ~ TIMI Welnw le oon RESOLVED THAT THE CITY To flit ,,..,. ~ ,,,. i.vy ~ oolec1ton of !*lllon concemlno yCMH Aeoofder'• IMtl'IM'Ot"t No. ..... putlllo IUOdon to .. "* ... • llMt ... .... duct..t by: • oorpotetlon • COUNCIL OF THE CITY Of crecmore end oonttnoeni 111111rr.nt1 within Mid Oleo mamaoe. ")'OU fllll to fllt • 9644 t2tl, by ,....,., of • ,,...... ......., for ...., « -"" .. ~a.ti of°" ww ... ....... va COSTAME8AOOESHEAE· ~ore and penlOnl who trlct;MCI ~within 30 deY9 of btMCttordeftutllnpeyment d-* .. U111Md ..... ,.._.... ... -·-• • BY FIND, DETERMINE. ANO may .,. °"* .... ln ..... ted WHEREAS. the Sus*· tN de• .,,.. ttMe IUmmOM Of ,.,totmance of h *" ._..... .... .,..of ... "" = -"F on .. I ,, ~It.wt ... ...., RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS: In the w1t1 f/NJ/Ot --ot: lntendent of 8tree11 hM IU•Wd on you.yow deftutl Qdof'I ...,,_, ~. lnoo l9WfUI mont¥ of .. UNted ,_.,. .. .,_County Clertl of Or· t. The City Council ~ A 0 8 E A T H I N A y ~ end tied with the may .,. en.., end the cMllna tNlt btMCtt or .. 81.-of Amertoe, wllMut "'*"'*' 0.... COlllt County on Aptl ti decl.,_ It.I Intention to '-"Y SCHAllEIN City Cleflc Ne ret)Oft (the court may enter • judgment r.utt, Hotloe of WNctl Wit ..minty ..,,_ Ot ...__. Oii)' Not Mey I, fl. ti 30 = ' end collect ...... ment9 A p«ttton hM been Med "Aet)ott") contlln~ the con .. lnl~ ln)unctlW or recorded~ .. eo W.. i.. pa11111l1111, 1... • • • ,. .. ~~~1;,~::12And~ :z~·~~ :itt~~~ :::,.,c:,pr~~.:: :,.:::~:.WILLSEU ~::::::::~:~ '·t'3 PublllNd Orqe ~ W8)'I Code of the Stat• of enoe County~ ,,,., 22547, .. directed by fllaaol· ~. cMd cuetody. cMd AT PU9UC AUCTION TO II .. Miii TNleee "' and to ~ ":.Mey n . '°· ~ Celtfor"'9 durlnQ fllcel )'Ml' Hamett M Sdlebleln ti. ap-utton. 1Ut)Or1, ettomey ,._, OCMU. THIE HIOHIE.IT llC>Ofl' FOR the followtftt deacrlbed "8JC ll)11C[ ' ' -Lt FORD Muatang '73 ltee-t7 within City ot Coate Pointed u perlONll res>-NOW. THEREFORE. the MCI ad! other rellef • may CASH, lawful ~ of the property lltuMed In the l"1R NABERS COfW, bMuty, low ml, ale, M. I. L. n d I c . p In Cl reMtlt•tlW to edmlnltter IN City Council of IN City of 1111 grlnted by.,,. court. The United Ila .... Of . CMtller'• tloreaeifd County MCI ,.... ·-.,. ~ u J am/fm CMa, alloy wtleela, Allelalnenl D11tr1ct Number •teta of tN deoedent lrvlne DOES HEAEBY AE· ~I or wt1QM. tale· OfleCk dr.-n on e _,. Of to wit: MAm ITA,_,. ~ nu 1 rK CADILLAC grHt graduation gift, t,locetedgenerllly1«1thor Th• petition req~a111 SOLVEulctlowa: fngot~orpr(lf*tyor natlonalbank,u tateort.d• LOT tS AND THE Tllefollowlntpenoneare " 997.6645, dlr, #6872. Sunn-Awnua and eMt *It~ to admlnleter tN SECTION t . The City otl'ler court euthorlted •al credit union, Of • ..... 80UTHIEALY 21.00 'fl'T dolna ~II: , ,....,..EST·SELECTION ---------of Smelley Road and more •tat• under tN lndepen-Col.Inell lletaby ac>Pf'OYel tN prootedlnQe may MIO,_,.., or federal MY1n01 end IOefl Of LOT t2, 11.0CK 20 ~ T .. CAPI COO AftAAT • um IT Am E rr l ~~ pwtlcuteny daecrlbed In the dent Admlnlalretton ot &-r9t)Ort 81 llled, lncludlnQ the MAY 7 fNt MIOClatlon domkitled In tHI TAACT 172, Al IHOWN OH MENT8. ~ W. tell "°90, The followlnQ pereont ortact:::,lntowOr~:c lllctlllll ret)Oft labeled Exhibit "A", tat• Ac1 •Umata of tN coet1 of ftn.. Or... •C. Y .. euwe, atete, 1111 peyallle at the t1iM A MAP .-eco.-DIO IN Anthelm, Celt. tal04 ~ ~ -c •Uached ll«ato and In· A NWino on tN '*"'°" Pfowmarlll MCI rnetnten-C--. Ir. .......... .,...... of ..... ell ttQM. tme MCI IOOK n . PAGO I ANO • Mary L. a NomWI E. D I! LT A , A c I f"f OJ CountytS..uat ayl corpotlled ll«aln by refer· wtllbel*donJUHE 4 tNe ance.thedlegremof tlledle-trQlfl lnterH t ~cf by It, .. OF MISCILLAHfOU8 ~. 2117...,.,,. Or .. ~. 16620 fll01lk> 1.410 1100 enc.. 119:30 A.M. tn Deot . ..0. 3 •• 1rtet. and IN aMM1Mnt ot JaoobY a~ Lew Of. Truatee. tn t11at ,..i property MAPS, AEOOfllDI ~ ~ 9elboa. Celt. HMt fleld ltwd •• ate. o. ~ • • 2. A general deectlptlon ot 700 CMc Center Ortw W9t Mid C01t1. rtcel, 71,. IE. El Camino,_... lltuete In Mid County end ANOE COUNTY, CALI· Edwwd L. a Nonna K. Celt. 12111 b the lmprOYerMnl• ~· Sant• Ana. CA 92702. • SECJION 2. The Clly .... Sunnyv961, CA t40l7 Stat•. dW:rtbed .. 1o1ows: FOANIA. EXCIPTINQ Moyer, IOO lrvlne Of.. Jetrt Gell HurlWNt. ... 2800 Hatbof BMS. COSTA MESA to uld dlatr1c:t II .. follOwl: IF YOU 08JIECT lo the Coundl het.oy ~ "' Putllehed Orenoe COeat Peroll t: TH IE A IE FA 0 .. THE lurtlenll. CllM. t1504 Hunter, !MM. Calf. t2tlf• The malntanence and Pott-grantlnQ of the petition, you Intention to order the '-"Y Delly Piiot Mey US, 23, IO, MundMded 1/t2 lntl(eet SOUTHEALY 20.00 flEl'T TNI ~ II oon-~ Gtll ~ • CADILLAC '79 S.vllle, iMlll""".,llble Mura ret)lacemenl ot ~ ltt'-..,.,.,., at tM MCI eollectton ot 1'*llal June t . lMI In Ind to Lot 2 of Trec1 No. OF LOT 13. ducted b'J: •n unln· Tiiie ......,,.,_. ... ~ toeded, IMtl'ler tntertor. .... aaw ... lendlCePfnO end any raci111-llMrlno end 1tete ~ob-11 .... ment1 for tN coetl not t03t7, In the City of IMrle, TM total amount of tM corpor•t• HIOCl•tlon wlV\ tM Couney a.ti olJOt new paint. 17500. 0.8.0. -•• ~-Itel wtltcn .,, appurtenant jactlonl Of Ne written otiiec-and lneldentel expenMt Of County Of Orainge, State of unpe6d pr1nClpel belanoe. other tNrl •pert!..,.,,., -. County on~ t . 1IN M0-1598 ~ hr9. 3DR Hatc:tlback. Lota of tharato. or which ere tton• with the court before ln1t1lllng, con1truot1no. rt8.IC NOTICE Ctllfornta. eccof'ldnCI to IN tnt.-tMraon. together Mary L ~ ,....... n power equipment. L.ow necMNty or con11an1ant for tN hearing. Ywr ..,.,._,. maintaining MCI wvlclng map flled In 8oolt 4t0, peoea with rwontbly ...,,....., Tiiie ~ .,.. tied .... a H1ll 1...., -WIUYILLIUD mll•. (IHJC357) '5995. tNmalnlananceorpoMtbte ancemayti.lnpareonorby public llQhtlng f1cllttle1 ACTTnOUaeueMU 20 10 25 lnCJlullv9, of Mi. coeta. ~ MCI .,_ wlttltheCoutltyClertlofOr·.......,. C..... Dr.-. USED CARS & TRUCKS Johnaon & Son Linc. Mure ~I IMNOf, your 1ttomey. along ltrMll and public ..._ ITA,_, cflllaneoue Mapa, In the of. Vancel et IN time of the In-qe County on Apttl H , -...,_. ..... Olm. COME IN OR CALL FOR Mere. 5-40-5&30. lncludlng removal ol ci.bfll, IF YOU ARE A CAEOOOA placel within the Ctty. TM f .,. floe ot U'9 County Aecotder lttel publlctilon of 11161 Hoo t... --nn 1waaea1 and maintenance 111<1 ,..,.ir or • contingent creditor of SECTION 3. The publlc dell"";::::::~ ot Mid County. tic•.,. 1134.621.27. ,.,_ P ?=Ill Or-.. C.... ~ lllS '11 or water lrrlg1tlon or IN c1ec11111s, you mull Ne llghtlng fedlltlel to be In-FASHION ISL.AND PRINT· EXCEPTING THEAE· Outrentty dea.d 0...... Putllelled Orenge COlllt Di.er 1i111J a.-..---CUTLASS SUPREME LS • dfelnaga llldlltlel on let· your deltn with the coun or ltalled. conatructed, malft.. ERS 120 Newport Center FROM Unlt1 30 to 41, In-Chee*• or Cer1Mad Ctlec*I Dally Plot Mey 9, 1t , 23, 30, I, 1t ._ l -·-• 40R k>ac*j With power tered Loll Band C or Tract pteMnt It to the perlONll tlllned MCI Mrvlced wtll In-C>ffl9 Suite 140 ...__. c:lulfW, .. lhoWi1 end -. peyatM to the T"*-or 1... ,_.... 11211 BEACH BLVD. 1' I ~tlful 9901. end lettered Loll A rapr...,,tatl\oe llpt>Olnted by dude all wor'kl Of lmpr~ • • ·--· fined In the Conck>n*Wum bklder .,. ~llble 10 F-1• • HUNTINGTON BEACH ~~ ~h Interior. end B of Tre1 t201 t No the eourt within tour rnontt11 mentl UMd 0t UMflll for the a.:"~· 'o~ 3702 PW1 rec:ofded M.,Ctl 9, ~U:..f:,ovlcMd pr°'* ,-y; Ml .... l Ml Ill 1 Und« 40,000 mllee. Uk• 1Ub1tant111 ch1ngH .,. from tN data ot flrlt • llQfltlnQ of any publlc p6eeee, ~ Clrde L.ot ~t09 1"3, .. lnatNIMf'lt Ho. II evtllllble. Ml.JC ll)TJC( NlJC ll)TIC( •• ' . n. w M us T s E E propoaed to be made In •11· IUenCe or latterl .. ptovtded Inc I u d Ing • t •" d. rd I . Callf • • 83-1018 "· Offtclel Aeoofdl. From Information W1lldl PICnTIOUe = -••flUll 'I• (1lYL~) uses Joh,,.: lltlng 1mpro~t1 lln Seellon 700 or the 1um1na1r-. polee.1UPP0'11. OtWeldlneA om,. 3702 ALSO EXCEPTING the Tl\IM• dMfne......,.., ~!!,.IOUelTA~l·.r um1TA -··-" · 3 FWferance 11 hereby jProbate Code or Calltomla. tunnall. ~. veutt., C ' A1eintt THEREFAOM .. oll,QMend tMforwhldlTn.MeemeMa -·-+ Loaded wllh pow., '°" & Son Uoe. -~ .-e" '"'._,of"",,,,,_ ... _.._ .. ...-.-·-· -~ -Loo oo. --ond -"° _..,,.. °' -· ,,,. __ .. ~= .. , brak... Beauttrul two 540-5e30. Project Maneo« ral1t1ng to not axpirl prtor to four ductort, guy1, ltUbl, plet· Ttlii t>ulln•• 11 con· ri911t1, without eny right to rant)'. the ltl'MI addreal(•) dOlrlCI ~ aa: -~. 1 ee: tone paint, r/ral:k, cue-OLDSMOBILE •78 the Mid dlltrict. S11d report monthl from IN dlte of tN rorm1. brlCM. tranlformer9, enter upon IN 1111f1iee of Of CIC'-common 0-. THIE Glflll.Z, 111 3rd St., ty ~ ~ a tom whMI•. low mites Blue 2 dr h1rdtop eng r• 111 on me with the City Clertl hMtlng nouca it>ove. 1n1u11tor1. conta c 11. ®:J:·.r<:::!andwlt. Mid lend to exerciM Mid nation °' tN above -. Hunttnoton IMcl\, Callf. ~ gl ~Pool I and much more . • 01 the City of Colt• M... YOU MAY EXAMINE tN 1wltchH, c1p1cltor1. · ri911t1 .. ~by Tiie ICflbed property te: 424 t2t4t ...,_, t fowne • (2MV838) $.4995. ~~~ ~i~1t4~. and contlln1 1 lull, Cletllled flll kept by IN court. If you ma1er1. communlcetlon wit~~~-:"' a:.• of~ lrvlne 'Com9any. PAOSPICT aTfllfET, HEW· U.. Men. Dlleno, 3tl ::. ~7ownt It., John.on & Son Linc. Mere. • · · dMcrlptlOfl of Ille lmpr~ .,. • peracn 1ntereetad 1n c:lrcult1. apt>flancee. 1ttect1-• enoe County on APf1I 22 Parcel 2: PORT llEACH, CA 921a. . 3fd It., Huntington ...,,,, DNd v Foeken ·~I' 540-5830 PL YllMTI 'l l WAIN "*'''·the t>ound1rlal of the the •t•I• yoo may MIW mante, Md llPPIJrtenancM. tMI • Unit 33 • ltlOWll MCI -. Seid property II belno Cellf. t2t4t an • . New I need brak pr()t)OMd u1H1mant dll-upon the uec:utor or adf'll4n.. SECTION 4. Ref91aoca 111 t ,__., fined tn tN Conck>n*Wum aOICI for the put\)Oee ot pey--Nie AM loto. 27621 ~ at., Coeta ...... I rte, I .. trlct. and Ille ptopoMd lllrllOf ()( UC)On Iha ••• hereby made 10 IN repOt1 °' ,...,, ~ed to Pwcel A tno IN otllgettolll ....,,., SH"MP'I ara.. c:.pllllr1no ..... , I ' • 111• I 1.11h I '1l11t $500.854-7055 a11a11man u upon torney 'tor the MecutOf Of th• Superintendent of="'~ °'8"'f::t= .oove. byMNjo..cfofTNltlnc*ld-~.Cellf.'"24 .... ~~~~~ "" ,.-••SE 'II -..bla Iota Ind peroal9 edmtnlltrltOf, end Ne with S1reet1 on Ille with City Clertl ey • • • • Parcel 3: tno teaa and_,,.,.. of the fllle buelMM 11 con-._.._, w,. an " • ~ ol II/Id within City ol Coat• the COIJf1 with oof ol ... '°' I full delct1t>tlon of IN 18 Eaeement1 .... rOf'ttl In TNllM end of a.. duaed by. • oener• l*t· DeWI Vlft ,oetttn ~ ~ •1'1 Ht•,ult •l 'f\ .. I loeded w/power equip. M. I I L 1 n d I c Ip I I\ Cl Wle, I written~ Ital· Improvement• to be In· F-17111 ltleSectton enttttect "Cei181n De\ed: MAY 13, 1MI nerlNp TI* ~ ... 1lor1·11111' )11ur ment. 8Mu11ful beige. T-...........,.,,t011tr1ct Humbar tng that you 6911f'91'*llal llllled, conllructed, main.. ~tatorOwnerl"end CAL.,ORMIA RI· U..Martel>elano wtttltn.CountyClertl • t•r\ tt , •• , our t091. cu1tom WhMla. tow 1 Said ret)Oft 11 1ttectred notice of tN flllnQ of an in.-tatned MCI Mrvlced, the rt8.fC NOTICE "Sut>t>ort, e.nt.•••t end CC*VWYMIC8 COWNltf, Thie llatelftent w tied ~ County on Aptl~ (2AWA135)S8995. lncorpotated herein by ref· aatltaMMtioroftNpetlo-dl1trlctandanyzone1t,,.,. '1CTTnOU8-M Xlll entltted "&aementa"of ec.lf,ll11 ... 111~ ....... lllQ9 County on Apf1I IO, ... ~Or onnaon & Son Linc. M•c. erenca tlon• °'account• mentioned In, and th• propoH d MAm ITA,...,.., tN Dec4aretton ot COIW9-...._ •1 C... A...., tHI ~_, enee mll .. MUST SEE. ll«eto 11 Exhibit "A" and wntoryendapprtilaMlentof bOUndarteeortNpropoaed EncfoectltMnl" of Mlde • ... T ....... 9-wlttlU.CountyCtertlofOr· 1... ~ 540-5e30. 4. The C.lty Council hereby In Section 1200 and l200.5 of I I I. I Im. n I I up 0 n Tiie followtnQ per90nl .,. nant•. Condlttona MCI ..... , .. .,,_,., Cellf•r••• ,.,.. .OllltY ~Meyn. '°· ---------+---------ftx•ll:30p.m.,OfUIOonU theCllHomta~obat•Oode ........ bte IOtl end !*call dolngblJllMal u : llr1c:tlonareootdedMarcllt, tam, T111, ........ (I•) Pub!Wled °'** COlllt •• 1!.1-.Jt __ 1111 .............. poMlblelhefMfter,onJune ~M.O..W,A...,,.., oflMClwltlllntlleOletrlct. (•)FIRST WESTIEAN 1N3 ... lnltrument No. 191·111'1 OellyPMotMey 8, ll.n .IO, ~ SPECIAL SAVINGS ON QUALITY USED CARS 2. 1988. In the Coetl Meae ,., flelltl•ar, -City SECTION 5. Hottca ·11 GAOUP(b)FlASTWESTEAN 13-101112,0fftclel"9corda. Publlehed Orenoe COMt tee6 ----------City Council Chambarl, 77 Pwttw., w-. 14111e 1D. hereby Ql\oen that June tO, APPRAISAL (c)FIRST Parcel 4: Delly Plot M9Y 2', 30, Junt F-1ee IUlJC NOT1C[ l Fair Drive. Coate Mele. Cell>-Or-.., C....,,. -lNe, 118:30 p.m. or • IOCfl WESTEAN CONSTAUC· EMementl M aet tor1t1 In t . 1Mt •-II' llft'lll'r tomta, .. tne tim. end piece Pv~ Orenoe CoMt ther•ftlf .. pcaelbte, •t the TION (d)FIRST W£STfAH the At1tde entlttad "f.eee. F250 ,--.... ""'""" PICllltOUe W• for I hMrlng before 11111 Diiiy Pltoi Mey 14. 17 23 City Council Ctlen'lberl ot SERVICES (•)FIRST WUT· mentl" of the Dedetetlon of .. ICTITI .... _ --.. MAm IT•m•"1 • Councll on tN '-"Y 111<1 ~ t888 ' ' ' tN City of INIM. t7200 IEAN REAL ESTATE. 24931 ~ti. oondltlona end PtaJC ll)TJC( r• ---Tiie fo11ow1nQ ,,.,._.,.,. 19Ctlon of IN pre>pOMd FS.217 Jamboree Roed, lrvtne. ~ Monte Verde . L•oun1 Aeltrtcttona '900fded June MAm ITA~ =..., a1: ,,. ••111men11 within City of fomle, -hereby filled .. Nlguel. Cllllt. 82817 t , tt78, In le* 117et..,... " -~ ~ ~.,. • HOMIE·IUYEfll IN• Coet1 M-land1CaPlng PlllJC M)TIC[ thetltMandplecelor1put>-Copman COt)Y Center, 420, Offtclel Aeoofdl, uncfet fl'ICTmOUe.,...M -.. w.:---(b)TAO ...,I! AIMMmentDlltnctNumber llcl'IMrtngbytlleOltyCoun· Inc., Cellfornle, 248St tNSectlonhaadlngllnlUCll MAmlTA~ UAZS YAfllD CAfllE, INIPECTIONI (c)~fllO t,endherabyglYelnollca of FIC'T1T10Ue tueMU ell on the queatlon of IN la-Monte Verde. Legun1 ArtJde emitted .. folow9: The~ penone.,. 17S5Monr~CoetaMeaa. PROPERTY IN8PECTICMI Mid llMtlng. MAim ITA.,.....,. = of th• propoHd Ntouat. Callf. mn "Own1r1, Alollt• end doing~ ee: HI Tedi ~~~0~.7-..___ 17 .. S6I LI Per1e fltece. ~ 5. The City Clertl ltlell Tiie followlnQ per9on1 .,. al ....-mant. 'thl1 bu1lnea1 11 COl'I· Outlel'" utllltlel MCI Ceb1e Anchor Co .. 23122 Ao<*fteld ...,.. "-·-·· -MeM., Celt. tte27 ,., certify to the ldoptlon of thll dotno l>vllneu M: SECTION 8. Th• City ducted by: I corpotetton Televtelon" "8uflport end BIYd.; Sul1• IOt·H. Lale• monrovl•. Coi t• MeM, Oon A. ~ Slit' LAI '83 All>I 5000 TtltBO Raaolullon and ltlall <*IN I NAIL ZONE. , 88$0 Clark II hereby directed to De-Ad W. Bleca. AllletMt S•ltlen\enl," "Encroach· Foreat, CA'"'° ~:2!.~.~·---II oon-,.,.. ,.... eo9ta ._,., true and c0<ract C09Y ol thi. H1rbor Btvd C#e. Fountain give nottc. or Mid llaaring Secy. ment" and Community F• Alohatd Ofeon Mtoolatee, ........ ._ Celt 92927 1 RNolullon to be put>tllhed Valley,Callf.92708 bycalJllngthllAeaoluttonto Tt\11 ltetement wu flted ctlltlelEaeementa". tnoorpoteted. 22211 T,.. ~.!>Y:.~ ~ t>u .. nw 11 Wn- '84 TOYOTA W111 waflll. -. .,_. M •. kt """"· lta4e4! l.D.dS02l s9995 1984 CADILLAC BROUGHAM s13,995 ............ lullw (211123'6) 1981 CADILLAC SEVILLE $9,895 1t .... t 10 d1ya prior to Mid Tern ~ &. C.1ner1ne be publlehed. • requir.d by with IN County Clertl of Or· TM 1trM1 add,.. Of NdQe Lane, El Toro, CA ~ .:.o.:...::=:t-_ . ..,.. ducted 11y:.,, lndMdual° llMl'lng In the manner r• Hgv;en. -4&0 W Foothlll Streat• and HIQhweya Code. enoe County on Apf1I 25, other common ~ t2D • ·--··-·-· --._ Oon A. Alddte 'I: Quired by Section eotl1 of #110, pomona, Call! 817117 Section 2282t, and uc>on tMI Of the raal pr~ 011111 Che ta l, 11305 wlttl the County Clertl of Or· Tiiie ~ w .... tha GowrnmentCode.lnd Tlll1 bu11n .. 1 11 con-completlonofQMnQnottca, ,.,.., 1t>ov• d u orl bed 11 L.ambar1A"9.,IEJMonte,CA =County on Apf112t,wltlltheCounty~f'Or· to be posted on the t>uttetln ducted by: 1 general part. 111e City Ctettc ltllll llle, with Pvl:>lllhed Orenoe eoeat purported 10 be: n w11er-81732 .,. County on M9Y tHWd In the lobby of lN Mirltllp Ille Councll, I Dectar9tlon Delly Piiot May t . 11. 23. 30. wey. 22 Lono Sllote. IMne, Mid* Quay, 1236.....,.. . """' • Coet1 Meea City Hall Tam Nguyen MttlnQ forth tN lltM end ttM Celltornta. Rd .• T.,.,. Qty, CA 11790 Pvbllltled OrMQe Co.at PuDllMO Orqe Ollaet PASSED ANO ADOPTED Tilll ltattmenl wM ftlad manner of compllanca with F-172 TN undertlgned 11et.oy Albert Quay, IOI() Heft. = Piiot Mey I , il. 2S, IO, Delly Piiot Mey 23, 30, .Mw tlll1 t8th dey of M1y. tt88. with tN County Clertl of Or· Mid requirement. •-II' llftTIC[ dteclalme .. llablltty for at1y der90n St., L.ot AnQe1e9, CA F·t'"" t , 1S 1111 ..!..,. ATTHT:....., T. l!llett, anoe County on May t3, PASSED ANO ADOPTED r~""' lncorr9ctneee In Mid ..... 80832 -.-.-~ City Clartl of .,,. teae by IN City Council of tN eddr91e or °"* oommon Tilll t>ullneee II COft· CltY 9' Coeu .... f'-.n City or lrvtne 11 • regular '1CnTIOU9 eueMU dMIQnetton. ~ed 11y: 1 generll ,.,,. MUC llJTJC( ...._ HerU:o9. ~of Publlltled Orange Cout meeting held on the t3thd1Y MAm ITAT'I...,. 88Jd .-wt11 1111 made nerlfllp "';fA'?eofo~L=NIA) r,~~~~M•Y 23•30·June °'~:~~9::21.1888 ~==~.,. ===~~ o:n~: 1!:0h:r: ~A~.. l'ICTneoue.,... .. COUNTYOFOAANGE)CITY F-236 CITY cw lfllVINI, IJ A Fl c HITE c Tu AL ...ion' Of tneumtwMcaa Cleon Ctlalrmen . .. . . The followlno,.,..,,..,. um ITA~ ,o F COSTA MESA)... 111-11' Ml\T&l'r' I.AMARA PAL.tl«A. ~ GAAPHICS COMPANY, 179 lo .. ,..;y the pr1ncllMll.,.: Tilt9 ... ..,,.,,. ... tied ~~~ IUttP Tiie loltcMln9 ~~ I, EILEEN P. PHINNEY, I"_.,. nu1~ tyC'9rtl ArborSt.,CoeteMeM.Callf, anca of the Note Of CIC'-wlttltheCountya.tlolOr· LY.,. .. psL -w, L~ ck*la~ae: , ,. City Clertl and ••-officio Pvbltehad Orange Cout 92827 obllQetlon MCUrecl by Mid .. County on Mey ao • ~ _,...._ "AD a A I(. 2 2 ·'. Clark 01 tN City Councll of 'tCTTTIOUI IMl-U Delly Piiot Mey 23. ttee lob Gordon. 27552 Deed of Tl"Uet wlV\ im.... 1tl8 • del Mer, Celt. t2t21 Jooeeport L.l!·L.~-on Iha City of . Coet• Meea. MAim ITA,....,, F268 Maugon, MIMlon VleJo, MCI otw ~. PfOYlded ,_. Amolcl Henry, 304 Point· ...,,,, Celt . .,..,..... her•by certlfytlllllhalbove ThelollowtnQpenionl.,. Callf.t2et2 "*9n· plua ... ioee.. " Publlfled Orertge eo. Mtt'-,Corone~Mar.Cellf. luMn E. Adame. 2211a Ind roregoing R•oMton ~ bullneee M : f't&JC NOTICl Nell Ctlat)man, '71 ArDor WIY under IM..,;_ u..ot Delly PMot May n 30 June t2t21 Jon•., on L.n., ~°" No 88-48 wu duty and reo-VEELOVPIMOERNTMIESN:..,~~ .. L?s~·. '1CTTT10UI .UH•U St .. Colle MeH, C&llf. 11nc1' lnlereet on M:fl e6-8, 1,, 1111 ' • Mufte .... 2n1 MeM .._,,,, Cellf.1214t _... ul1r1y palMd and edot)ted """"' 92827 vane" end plu1 IMI f23e V.,. DrM !alt ID-t tO, Wwldlll A. Adame. ~132 by the Mid City Council al a lOtO PeclflcCout Hlghwey. ~TW Thll t>ulln ... 11 oon-c:Mreeellncl~ofth9 Coece MeM.. Celf.12121 JoilMPOl't L.n •• ~Ofl ragul1r meeting thereof held Huntington BMch, Cellr. doing;;;,; penionl.· are due1ed by: • general part· Trust• end or the truMI "8JC ll)TJC( Til4e buelneee II con-9Mcfl. Celt. 12641 I on the t8th day of May, t~!-S. Kif .... · tOtO FR"!D REYN~Os MAA-netthlp cneted by Mid Deed of ~by: 1 general l*t· .... ~~II~~ 19118 ,_ ET G ,... Ctlat>man Truet The total amount Of '1iCTllT.-.. -u11•M ,_ .. ..,.. ,,_,_ w,. • ----·· IN WITNESS WHEREOF I P1clllc CoHt HIQhwly, I( IN • t572 Ordlard #22, TIMI ltetement WM filed Mid . obi ...... ton tnclUdtno -----Amolcl Henry nertNp hive t1er11Un1o Mt my hMcs Huntington a .. ch. C•llf. Senti Ml ....,,, Callf. with the County Cleflc of Of• ,._,,,,biY!.tim.ted ,._ ,.::-~~ Tiiie ltetement Wiii rited Wendell A. Adami 1n<1 1mxe<1 the a... ot the 82148 t2107 enoe County on Aprtl 21, Ofltr and of ,,,e ............. .., ~ -wttti the County Clertl of Or· Tilll ttatament w. Ned .,_ _____ c'_"_'ic_d_"_'•-~_12_m904 __ 1 _____ -c City of Colt• M ... 11111 20th Thi• bu11ne11 11 con· Or=d H.•~i t~ 1811 T::C, lit U:C: lnlttel ~ bulli~':ie COM· rel: County on AcHtt 21, wttti.,,. County ca.ni OI Or· d,.::·~ 1888· c d~:.::s':'t<~Ufll Helahl•. Cellr.'t2707 Putllelled eranc:= publlcatlon of,,,.. Noclce, II PANY, 2907 W• fl90lfto ,..,,, ... County on Mey,•·, 1~ 1985 COUPE DE VILLE $12,995 1983 CADILLAC BROUGHAM s12,99 5 cwt and ~::::·c~ Thia 1tetamen1 ... Med Thie t>ullMM te con· OllltY Piiot MIY 8, te. n , 30, 134~:71· 20 tttl Coelt Hlgflw9y •I02 • ....,._ Publllfled °'** Coeat PublllNcl Ortnot eo.t of .,,. cny c--. .,. .._ with tN County Clertl of Or· ducted by: an lndMduet tee6 MAL· ::.¥Ari tKUM-Pono.IQ...,,,, ~ =Plot Mey•. ft, 22, ao, Dally Piiot Mey n . '°· June City of C..te ....... "1 =County on APf1t 21. ~~~WM fll9d f -171 T1191M~•C .. ar• lilifw..:. ltreM to t F·1l4 t .1i ttM = T. lmot1, OetMltr Cltr . ""111 with the County Ctertl or Or-MUC ll)TIC( :-r-:.r.·.:-:=1r. *·' I 11na. Celfl '''°' II.tat (The Proi«t Managar·1 Put>llthed Orqe Colet ange County on Mey 8, tlll -.; .... ., ...:; Tilll ~ II oon. Aepor1 and AIMMIMnt DI .. Delly Piiot Mey I , 11. 23. '°· Put)llthed Or "= f'ICTITIOUe ...... -..... AM. CA ... ~tcf'-~' _ _.. ............ ......,......, ...... _1 IUlJC ll)T1C( trlct Mep ere on flte In the Delly Piiot M9Y T. H IO MAm ITATW T ....... (114)..... Tiiie ......... wM ,._, ~;~ ~-4. eo.t P\lllC NOTIC( ' .1una 8, 1• · · · ~ =:: f:toM.. ~ ~ C: wlV\ tM couney an°' Or· Tiie followlr'O,.,....,. um ITAW Dally Piiot M1y 23. 1818 PUILJC NOTICI F· l93 JON>AN a AISOCIATfS. ~ ey • • .. Couney on -.. t• cSc*la ~ -The ...... ~.,. F247 NOTIC E 18 HIREIY •-II' llftnH' t31 Coto de cua, Trabuoo '213 M 1.. d,_,.I ,.. AAIZINI INOUI T.-111, ~~~ -.... ---------GIVEN lh•t on June 2. ttM, f'-""''~ Cenyon, Callf, He7t urtey, nae 0• • 410 w. c... Hwy,.,... A. PAHV '° .... ._ --P\8.IC M>TICE at 8:30 p.m .• Of .. IOOn '9CTTTIOUllMlll•M St•v• Jordln a Al· PtaJC ll)TJC( ~n.:':,c:·,:,: NewportheGfl.Celf.Hta .....on~~= therMfter u practtoebtt, In MAm lfATW aocl•t ... C•llfomla, t3t Celt' 11101 ' ~Gary Kling. J'1 Donald I. .... ~~ PUILJC NOTICI tN Coundl CflamWI Of TN rolowtng penon1 we Coto de Cen. TrebuCO 0... PICTITIOUe .,..... ~ n.-COlllt ,.,._Lon .. Coett MeM.. Calf. flowell Piao. N tt Notlee II hereby QIVen ltlet City Hell 17 Fw Dr1¥9, the cSc*la ~ M: ~. Calf. 12t7t MAim ITA~ Dally ,,.._..,.. 9*7 9Mcf1 Celt tala c I pubtlc ~';, Wtlt lie ~ Cott• ~City Council ... A8UT 8UILOINQ MAINo-Thll t>ullnw .. oon-TM ~ penlOnl .,. I . 11 =Mey n . 30• June Loull9 Mey Kling. 11 t w .;..,.-... --•1 by IN lty IN!ne .,.., conelder I,... lnCfMM for TEHANCE co .. Ht9 fllO. dueted by:. eotPOfetlon dOlrlCI ~ -• ,.ma ,.,.. Lon., eo.ca MeM.. Calf. Po~•ll Piece Nni.ott ~Of10the1Clty of IMnet.,.. certe ln towlnO MIVIC" lend A. Huntington 8eacll, at ... Jorden, PNlldant HCI TAAYll. MAHAOI· ~ .._,,, C4111f .ata r on ..,...,. • Ht. •t ·.-within IN City ot eo.ta Calf 12141 TNI ltatement .... ,._, MINT I ~ ClrQa, •,.. ~ II oon-Thie' t>ueln.. It _,.. p.m.0t•aoon theraaft••..... AOb«t lernQ;over 2t11 wlV\ the Countyoa.tll of Or· a ... 1'°. nw.. Celt. t27t4 P1'llJC ll)11C[ ..,._by:,.,....and-. ~by. _.., ,.,,: ~~ ~ .. .!-~Mnet7Clty NOTICI IS FU.-THEfll lnaland. Huftt!nglon e;.c,i\, anoe County on Aptl H , fll. CMton ..... I Ell· ~-Mey tClnt --... tW9Np •• ---.............. ....,_,..,..,, 200 OMN thet lit Mid ""'9 end c.lf. 12141 t... «Mtve ~ .... tto, ,,.. lleltn•it .. - W. ,.,_ ... .., .. 1 Jaml>of"· Interim CMc piece .. kit....._. ,_.one TN. t>uetneu 1e oon-,.,._ IMM, Celt. 12h4 wlttl tN County a.ti of Or-nill 11 "' ..,f ;f,. ..., Center, lrvtna, CA. mey eooeer tNJ 1111,_,., by ducMd W en lnclMdutl IC ........ Ila:; 1 w a Tiiie bue1nw 11 oon-Tiie ....... pereona .,. tnQt County on Apttl 2t, wlV\ the~ a.ti #Ot· The City cf lrvtne City the City Oounclt on 1,,. Aobert lemgtover y..,. ducted by: tn lndMduel doing bullf*9 M: 1tlt COUi'itY u-i I ,,,_ Councll la propoetno to ,._ etottn'llW'ltloned ttem. Tiiie _....,.,. w flled 0.. .. ,.._, ... -fll. c.tton Hall ,,_IDOM AllOCl.ATU, P91M tnlt on '"""1',.._ ~ un-IUDl P. ,, •• ..,, ~ with the County OWk of Or· ..,. ......, Celt. -TNt "8'91Mnt w ,._, aoo w• Comno:a.-i Putllelled °"'* COlllt ~ ~ °'*' ComfTlu1'lty 0.. Qlfl ange County on M9Y I tMt Putllelled °'** C0Mt w1t11 the Couney C1et11 of Or-Avenue, ,ullertOlt, Cafff. Delly Not Mey t. 1t. U . to. ~ PllOt Mtly U IO ""* v•topn . llook Oren I Publttled °" .. CoM1 ...... Dally PWO. Mey •. ll. n . 30, .. County on -11 1 .. tH32 1• •• tS tMI • • II monlee toe new proteot r0t Deify Plot Meyn ,... Putllelled Or-. ~ 1... ,_ 'ullel'1on l•Ylnt• ancs '·111 • II.Isl PUIJC M)TIC[ Iha Ille tcQulelllon end ' f2tQ Plot Mey 23 '° June F•t'Fa fl\itllelled Or ... C0111t Loen AMOCHtlon, Cell· IJ ., ... ~~~ ~~ ·-II' ~ 1, 1 1111 • • ·-.,. lift.._ o.1y 111t1ot Mey 11, n. ao. fofnl•, !!O .. W•t c!'"" MUC ll)11C[ •-.,. llftftlOr,. ,. -·-...,.,. .,,... ....... ....,... ,._ nut~ ,.J2t ~ nut~ June I , 1.. m~oa-.rl .. ..nue, rUll-~ ..,,_ I '1CTI'TlOUI 9llll•M men! of muttMamlty llOUelnQ ---------.-.... F-tt7 anon, Celt. tMU HClll ... 911 H•• :I MMmlTAW for tow MCI moder• In-'9ClntOUeMJllllM PWlJCll)TIC( PICTmOU9911 lllllM TI..-0. ...... •IM' MmlTAW Nlhli.. I Tiie ~ penone ere oomt fMl!flel. Md/or for MAm IT•CT n MAm ITAW fWl.lC ll)'flCI .,., ,.,,_of ..... ..._. nst ........ ,._..,. _.. ITA dOlng bullnw -Q(HIVA .,,. CONtn.ictton tNJ or ,.. TM IOllOwtr'f ,.,..,,. .. l'ICnnoul • • • •• The followlr'O ,.,...,. .. AMocla.... 4111 k•fl :: ....... -n. ...... l*eofllt .. MAlfKITINQ HAVICH. ,,..,._.ton of publlo r.-. ~~ • Ulm ITACT IT dolnl ~ M: '9Cnnou9 911 H •M ltr.... ~ 9Mctl, M VIOIO ~llllT dolnl ....... • 171 Al'ltOfl IOldF1t1d, Colla U. In the City of IMne The • HOM l ·IUYlfll IN• The'°'°'*"...,...,. CMATIVI COlC,,_ IYI-um ITAW Celt. tltlO ri:~ STM vmo, KIRAi l IMNll MeM.. CA 12t2t total retllocafton II ~ to I IONI (ttJ!"° HOM9 dolnl ""*-• TIMI, ,711 ~ A•, The,_...... pereona.,. ....... ..._...._ •IM' I071 9MI • .,.._ 790t "fir .... A'4.~· Oenev. a CMportlon, a I U14,Q7.00 ~II ... INIPl!OTIOHS. (C}T"Q JAMB It. IATCHll.Ofll CoettMeaa.Callf.tlll1 dolnlbullf.-• .,.,,.,._Of.._. ..... 10I, COeta ...... Celtf. lnf'onleadl.CllM. Celfomta ~etton 178 reprogrammed rtOltl ~· Pf'Ofl'IAT'Y MNCTIOHI, COMPAHV, T10t Wwrwt1 Heney.,._, 1221 '9M-If AN l'llNIY UN• AHOClatM, 4111 •trotl t2llt _ PaijlJ. O... • Anton 1ovi.va1d, Co11a penaect ldmlnlelret!V9 ~ W LAI ,_.. ~. eo.r.. AV9.. Hunttntton IMCtl. broM _~:.i... Newport 9Mdl. UMITID, • eon.-8t., ltrMI, .....,.,. lteeotl, ~ T. Ullo. 11,....,_ lloalioM, ..-., CllM. 7 4 MeM. CA tM2k MCI fl'om t propoee0 ..-MeM.. Celt. taa7 Cellt.1214'7 Celt. Wn11U Colle MeM.. Ollllf. tllr7 Cellf, tltlO lbw\,..-., Celt. ll'r1' ,_ T. 1arw Jr •• Thia bu91MM 19 oon-oen•proflbctwtlkll .. ._ ~A. ~ ... 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J .. J!I ~~.ti~, ;1 Voters shOuld soundly rej ect Proposition 49 To the annals of mythology we can now add this: Proposition 49 on the June ballot would keep nonpartisan elections nonpartisan. Jason and the · Argonauts might fall for that; the voters of California shouldn't. Proposition 49 would amend the state Constitution to prohibit political parties or central committees from endorsing, supporting or opposing a candidate for nonpartisan offices such as judge, city council, school 'board or county supervisor. In so doing, it would strip from those organizations and their members their constitutionally protected ri~t to free speech. Supporters of Proposiuon 49 argue that official party endorsements should be prohibited because they create an atmosphere in whichjud$es and locally elected officials might feel obligated to political parties and their philosophies. Understated naivete must be in this season. Few. if any, candidates for public office nonpartisan or otherwise -have no ties to a polittcal organization. Think about the judges you may know. Who are their friends, Republicans or Democrats? Do they ever attend political fund-raisers, play golf or sail with elected officials who are affiliated with one party or another? Are they registered members of political parties? What about our Orange County supervisors? Is there a clairvoyant in the community who mi~t divme the political affiliations of this nonpartisan qumtet? City councils and school boards likewise are composed . mostly of people who are familiar sojourners on the political pathways. · Supporters of Proposition 49 argue that the absence of political influence in the form of endorsements would allow voters to focus on the issues rather than follow the party line. Quite the opposite probably is true. The major parties tend to focus their financial resources on the major issues and present them to the largest possible audience. If one side tends to mis- represent an issue, the opposition will argue harder and louder to correct the perception. It is this kind of public debate that helps disseminate much of the information in a campaign. And, supporters of Proposition 49 ar$ue il would keep local offi cials' attention on issues hke housi ng. streets and schools. That is an optimistic assessment at best. Smart, diligent public officials will do their JObs - with or without political endorsements. Dumb. laz. ones won't. What Proposition 49 would do -all it would do - is place arbitrary restrictions on the nghts of some political organizations to participate full y m the political process while allowing other, similarly motivated political action committees free reign. That is undemocratic. Proposition 49 1s un- American and shoold be defeated. LETTERS I -- Monetary Fund at fault for Philippines ' collapse To the editor: The real credit tor the Jem1w ol Ferdinand Marco!>· go"ernm<·nt 1n the Ph1lipp1nes belongs largl'I> IU lhl lntemat1onal Moneta11 I untl Jnd th practice of "rescuing" pro-\l. e\ll·rn debtor go"emml'nl\ h\ <ll'\lrn-ving them From I <J? 5 lo I"!\ I Ilic J" crJ~l· eto nom 1r growth in the Ph1lipp1nl'' wa~ a health> 6 percent Thl' a' Jtl ab1ht ) of WC''ilern credit. how(.'\l'r -;aw Marco' -like 110 many other., - run up a quick $26 billion <khl lo rm} for sk) rockc:t1ng cnerg-v lO\h (not lo men11on the otl\ 1ouc,h e\cesc," l' Marcos lifcst)'le) In l9X2. 1hc IMI offered m assistamc and the I \ State Department urgcd thc I 1hp1no leader to take ad vantage of 11 llnfortunatel>. the mand:ucn~ .HI\· ttrtl) mea!>u res accompa nying the :ml 1mmt'd1atel} 'iCnt :1 1hn"1ng hu\1ne\\ cltmatl' mto a tail\f)1n When the s1tuat1on worsened 1n 1984 th r austerity measures wt:rc douhkd The IMf' demanded and got cur ren cy devaluation of 65 pcr<.t'nl. and TODAY IN HISTORY By lbe A11oclated Pre11 , 1nuim« 1,t\ 111crea\c!>ol mo1e than 40 peru•nt r lw () Pl'r<.cnl growth rate hcraml' .1 II percent downturn and. tx·rcw'>t' .all ol thl\ im pacted most he,I\ ti} on the m1ddk clas\ and hu\lnl'"" \Cl tor ... Marco\ lost 'upport to < llfJt•in \q1J1no in lhl'\l' critical .art·a.., T hl· I \11 kncl<. muncy to man} nation\, hut 11\ .1u\tl·rt1~ measures '>l'cm 111 h.1ve no dkc:1 on topphng < ommu111~t goH·rnmcnt~ In rl-cent )'Car\, howncr. ~cvcral pro-Western go"ern mcnt\ -'iudan. Argentina Hra1tl, Peru Jnd ( iuatemala -ha\'t' hccn replaced \.\.lthin month<, or · adopting IMf-1mpo\Cd 'iand1on., The U.S not onl> continues Hl < hamp1on tht: IM Fi s dead I) v.ork. b111 al\o o;upplte-. dire 11on for 11 via our ">late Dcpartme t Whtie no (om- munt!it nation 1s th1ea tcnC'd, the ncwc\t U.S tai: et turn" out to Ix• c 'htlc If the pat rn 1.on11nues. thl' IMI will !loon wo 11~ sin ister magic a[tatnc,t that an t1-C mun1<>t nation CiF.O GF HALLOCK c"'pon Beach Today 1~ Fnday. Ma~~ 1 the 14 ''d day of f YXti r h<·n· arr 222 da)'.., left in the year. Today·~ h1ghhght 1n h1\lory One M:iy 23, 1914 h.ink rohh<'.r\ Honn1t• l'arkcr and ( l)'<k B.trrov. wcrc- shot to death 1n a polal'.C ambu~h on I.I road 1n H1t•nv1lk Pamh I ~ Though1 for to<ia> "'The more nirrupl the 'il.'ltl: the more numerous the laws .. -c"'omchu' fac1tuli Roman ~nator and ht~toqan CAD t. S6-c 115) ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ,,.,,.lint £<1110t Tom Tett Me •IO"'Q [cMni 0-l'tlftWf °'' !°"°' T-C:lefllft "'-f4.10( c:, ... ....., J)Oflt fdot()f "-etJ C"wcfllftM Conltollel "°'*1 L CentNfl P1~1ion Mena~ TenJll.,,._ Cll'tUMltion Ma~ .... _._ .. ........,, "44tk•f'"O Dwet!Q( O~.-l-=-0t SHERIFF:S FIRING RANGE What Woodbridge began, others are emulating today Master-planned communities are becoming typical Exactl} 10 years ago next month, The Irvine Co. V1llage ofWoodbndge opened for ..ales -and more than 6.000 people par11c1patt'd 1n c,1x lottenes for about 245 houses The scene was ~o unusual 11 wac, captured b> the three national tek· "1s1on networks for their evening news programs and was co"ered by v1rtuall} l'\-CI] maJor news pubh· C3110n It wa'i ckur that after two years ut hou'i1ng slum p, 1974 and I '175. demand was inten'i<' by June of 1976 Woodbndge. of courM.', was and remains an exc1t1ng res1dent1al de· velopment. and sale'i remain strong as the last neighborhoods in the fourth and final quadrant are being sold ~uml' 9 000 hou~in$ unm later Two new res1dent1al develop- ments. strong!~ resembling Wood· bndge. ha ve opened one month apart and nearly e'lactly a dt"cade after Woodbnd$e In both rases, demand for homes 1s high and lot1t•rn:s !>1mllar to Woodbridge have been used lnterc'it1ngly, both of the new commun1t1e'i, Eastlake in San Diego Count )°'> Chula Vista and Rancho Santa Marganta 1n 'iOUth Orange ( ounl). ha'c several former ln1nc Co people 1nvoh cd at the top lc"elc, Eastlake 1'i bctng developed b~ Lane/Kuhn Pacific of Nev.port Beach: the fi rm's president is forml'f Irvine Co. re~1den11al cxccut1 ve David Kuhn Kuhn"\ vtec president in chargl' of Eastlake Development Co. 1~ Robcn Santos. another Irvine Co. alum. In fact. the brochure descnb1ng Eastlake carnes a note that "some MAR TIN BROWER pho1os were taken at Woodbndge in Irvine. Caltf. .. " Rancho Santa Marganta's loller) was held last Saturday. wtlh 10 d1fTerent sets of homes involved (an I I th project 1s for-rent apartments). This phase is the first 350 acres of a 5.000-acre master-planned com- munity being developed by Orange Coast resident Tony Moiso at Rancho Miss1on V1c10 south and nonh of the M1!>s1on V1c10 develop- ment. No. neither Tony Mo1so nor his executive vice president. Tom Blum. were with The Irvine C'o -the) were both with Mission VieJO. But Irvine Co. alumni include Senior Vice President, Planning. Richard Reese; Senior Vice Pres1· dent, Development. Stephen Schrank: Vice President. Construc- llon. Michael Babbiu; Vice President. Markelin$. Donald Moc: Vice Presi- dent. Pro1ect Development. Ronald White -and others. At both developments. homes are aimed strongly at the first-time home· buyer Rancho Santa Marganta 1s hoping to provide an alternative for people working tn Orange County and having to dn ve to R1vcrs1de and an Bernardino Counties for hous- 1 ng. Moreover, Rancho Santa Marganta will include a business park so that the dream of li ving and wo rking a few miles apart can be realized. In 1976. Orange County was hous- ing I 7 m1ll1 on resident\ Toda.,.. this number has mcreascd to 2.1 million. ThlS 1s an increase of 400.000 people who had to be housed in 148,000 add111onal housing units. During the next decade. from now until 1996, population 1s prOJCCted to increase by about 357.000. This w1ll require an add111onal 132.000 hous- ing units. Orange County, and especially the southern part of the county. has become known for its master- planned commun111es. While resi- denual growth will occur, it will not occur in a haphazard fashion. Most of the new residences will be in com- mun it1es with adequate traffic circulation, lakes. parks. schools and shopping. Of equal importance is that most of the future residenllal growth will include nearby employment centers, so that large segments of residents will not have to drive over heavily traveled artenaJ roads to aet to work. Rancho Santa Marganta 1s de· velop1ng a concurrent busine~ pai:k. M1ss1on VteJO ts now developing us business park. Mission Viejo Co.'s Altso Viejo. across the San Diego Freeway. has been planned with a central employment core. And. of course, the Irvi ne Co.'s Irvine Spec· trum will provide employment for 1 00.000-plu~ when it ts full y de- veloped. Orange County has grown over the past 10 years since Woodbridge began. and its planners and de- velopers have learned dunng the past decade. We arc fortunat~ that the same bnght people who brought us Woodbridge and Mission Viejo con- tinue to reside in Orange County and a~ applying lessons learned to cur· rent and future development. MartlJJ Brower pubU••e• lbe moatbly aewdetler "MartJa Bro.,,er'• Oraage CoOJJty Report." Officials grant Irvine Co. upper hand in tax dispute SACRAM ENTO -One of the odder and less seemly episodes in the recent pohucal history of Cahfomrn occurred in October 1984, when the state Board of Equalization approved an ou twardly small hut significunt change in its pohcy regarding prop- erty tax asSC!l'imcnts. Under Propo.s1t1on 13. enacted 111 1978. the va lud of propcnies for tax purposes were fixed at their I 97S· 76 leveb. e~cepl for a maximum 2 percent unnuul adjustment for infla- uon. unlei.\ the property changed hand~ •\t the tune ol a propcrt} tran~fer. under Propo\1t1on 11. ll'i value wa~ to be upgraded to the current market. which sometimes was the sales pnce but not alway!>. I he new value wa'I left to the Judgment of the county o~ses~ur In 1983. <iouthern California de· vdupment tycoon Donald Bren BC• qu11'C'd a controlhng interest 1n Or- ange County's huge lrv1ne Co. The Or.&nJe County assessor re- as~scd Irvine's property holdinas bttaust of the sale, pcgana them at S3 2 ballton, nearly thrtt times what Irvine officials 1ns1stcd the properties were worth The dispute was winding 1u wa> throucti the appellate process when three members of the Board of Equahntaon. acting over the obJCC· ti ons of the other two members, changed 1b policy to s•ve the property owner 1he upper hand m such disputes by putt1n1 the burden of proof on the a'~sor ~ What made the action quesuonable wa' not only 1h11 tt had occut'ffi:! 1n the m1d~t of the Irvine d1soute. with DAN WALTERS tens ot millions of tax dollars at stake. but that the prime mover behind the change. board member Ernest Oroncnburg, acknowledged that a fo rmer aide who later went to work for Irvi ne helped draft the rule change Oronenburg and his cohons in this <;mclly affair, Controller Ken Cory (an Cll·Orange County politician himself) and Conway Collis, insisted that the actions were just designed to help bcleaaured homeowners in dis- putes with arbitrary assessors but the fingcrpnnts of the Irvine Co. were everywheTC to be found. Dunn& the past few years, Irvine, Bren and a soc1atcd companies have pum~ mott than $900,000 into political campa1ans in the state and Bren hAs shown unmistakable SIJ"S of wantina to become a m~or behu\d-the-sccne\ poht1cal finanoer and kinpnakcr. The leader oflhe oppos1taon. board member William Btnneu. madt noises about lrvtne's role in the rvlc change. to no avail. At first, the Mate Office of Adm1rus· tratlve Law rejected the nilc chanic. but la51 year, It chanie<t its bureau· crattc mind and over the v1nuaUy unanimous obJections of the talc's propcny tax assessors, 1t became de facto la"' Clearly, the rule change would make 1l easier for corporate interests to avoid payin1 property taxes when, as often happens these days, com· panics arc acquired by or merged into other corporate cntiltes. They could. and woufd. simply tePort low prop- erty values as part of the overall transaction and force county assessors to overcome the burden of proof to declare hiJher values -a swcc1enin1 or the property tax break gi ven by Proposjtion t 3. This corporate raid on the pubhc tr~ury, however. may be com- pounded by still another political move. Last week, another Oranac County politico. Rcpubhcan Sen. John Seymour, introduced a constitutional amendment that would cnaravc the new property tax rule into the state's constitution, thus making it virtually unchanaeablt. Seymour not only introduced the measure. A42, but asked that Senate rules be waived for fast-track haodhna &1mcd at placina 1t on the November ballot. Seymour repQn.ed· ly wants a Senate Revenue and Tuat1on Committee hearina as early as this wttk. Why the rush? It's impossible to say for ccna111. but a reasonable 1uc s would be that the corporate inte~sts that souctit the rule chanac in the first place have awakened to the possibility that 1t could be revoked by a rcconstitulcd Board of Equali1.1t1on afUr this year's clcct1on o.. Wlllt~n I• • •yN/akltl colrum.hlr. -_J_ - JACK AIDEISOI and DAU VAN A TT A ( I I l ll Soviet forces ·harass Sweden WASHINGTON -Nol since "The Man in the Iron Mask'• has there been such a bizarre plot: abduction ofthcSwcdisb royal family by Soviet commandos to usure Sweden's neutrality in case of an East· West war. f, The kidnap plot is revealed In a recent. highly sensitive U.S.'" in- telligence report on the Spetsnu, as the Soviet special fore.cs are called. The purpose of seizing the royal family, the report explains, would be to sow confusion io Sweden and stint any notion its poHticaJ leaders mi~t have of joining NA TO countnes against the Soviet Union. For their own mysterious reason,, the Soviets have targeted Swedeft for a wide range of harassment, es- pionage and apparent traioioJ missions for the Spetsnaz. T)eir arropncc is sometimes unbeHev•ble. Two years aio. the Swe<tish army bad to use machine guns and grenades io repel Soviet frogmen who had la.Qded on the island of Almoe. near the Swedes' K.arlsk:rona naval base. Over the last five years, in .fact, Sweden has been "invaded" rJl..Orc than .I 00 times by Spetsnaz ~ni· submarines -code-named ~us (the manned version) and Zbuk (l;be remote-controlled drone). These 6S· foot mini-subs are launched from a mother submarine and can cr,wl aJong the seabed on their tanklikc tracks or slum through the water by propeller. They have a maxim\tm operating depth of 344 feet. The m1m-subs arc used by the four Spetsnaz naval brigades -which reP.Ort to the GRU, the Soviet m1htary intelligence organiz.a~on. "GRU naval Spetsnaz concen- trates on attacking enemy seaborne nuclear delivery systems or support facilities," a secret Pentagon rcPort explains ... They can be used to attack shoreline tarJcts or can be used against intenor targets wben sea infiltration is preferred." In fact, the mint-subs have already made it into Stockholm harbor to within a mile of the royal palace. The Pentagon report also notes: "Both ground (forces) and (the 2,000 men of) naval Spetsnaz can (in- filtrate) ... various vessels, including merchant ships, high-speed craft or su bmari ncs. Min i-su bmcrsi blcs launched from either subs or surl'ace craft can be used either to infiltrate teams or to conduct an underwater attack against ships, shorclfoc or underwater targets." In Sweden's case, the mini-subs arc undoubtedly conducting reconnais- sance and traming activities. Their frequent and flagrant intrusions have been understandably demoralizing to the Swedish navy. One naval officer, Capt. Hans von Hofsten, has publicly complained: "Defense policy has too long been based on ignoring the facts. The extent. intensity and seriousness of the submarine operations in our waters arc passed over in silence. belillled or even ridiculed (by civilian leaders)." Another Swedish naval officer. Capt. Gocran Frisk, reported that he had made contact several times with submarine intruders, but could not take effective action because be had no anti-submarine helicopters on his ship. Meanwhile. the Spetsnaz mini- subs' distinctive tracks have been showing up 1n strategic locations all over the world. Tracks identical to those left on the Swedish seabed hAve been found off Gibraltar and near Japanese naval bases. Some were detected m the Soya Straight between the Japanese northern island of Hokkaido and Soviet Sakhalin Island -the route Soviet warships take to reach the Pacific from Vladivosrok. There arc even unconfirmed re- pons that the telltale Spctsnaz mini- sub u·acks were SPotted on the floor of San Francisco Bay last summer. Footnote: The Soviets' intended 1ntim1dation of Sweden appears to have backfired. Thoush determined· ly neutral for the better part of two centuries., Sweden has asked NA TO for help in _patrolling Swedish waten for Soviet Spetsnaz submarines. MINl-EDTTORIAL: b Harvard aenina senile? The distiOiuishcd univcnity. now celebrating 3SO years of someumcs prickly lndependenoc. knuckled under last week to Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of at.ate for inter.American afTain. As is bis custom. Abrams refused to sl\a..re a platform with an administtataon critic. in thi case former Ambau.dor Robert White. So Harvard disinvitcd White. uch rqrctt.ablc behavior can be expected from aeolosists like Abrams.. but we can t supp~ a feelin1 of disappQintment that Harvard officials seem to have for· JOtlcn that t~c rree cxchanJc of ideal 1s an amponant part of the un1ver- 1Jty'.s trad1t1on. J•d MNIUHe ul Dal~ Vu A 1111 an ITHl~•IH C9/t..Uu. Lewis decides on UCI By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS °' .. ..,......... . Confirmina weeks of rumors, Tom Lewis made it offictal Thursday, stating he intended to continue rus academic and basketball career at UC Irvine. Lewis, whose USC basketball scholarship was not renewed, was the Trojans' top scorer last season and • had narrowed his selection to five schools -Maryland. Syracuse, Ken- tucky, Wake Forest and UCI. The 6-7, 200-pound ex-Monarch standout had been the subject of transfer rumors ever since former Trojan Coach Stan Morrison re- signed to accept another position in the USC athletic department He, along with fellow freshmen Hank Gathers and Bo Kimble, had been very outspoken in expressing desire to have a West Coach coach succeed Morrison. George Raveling, former coach at Iowa and Washington State, was named to replace Mom son on March 27. The three freshmen, all projected as stances next year, were given a deadline to inform Raveling if they would remain with the USC program. The trio failed to honor the dead- line and Raveling then informed them that he would recommend to Athletic Director Mike McGee that their scholarships would not be renewed. Gathers and Kimble. both of Philadelphia, announced on May 9 that they would be attending Loyola Mary1nount next year. "We were in the hunt for him (Lewis) before and he played in the same summer league as Johnny R<>Jers, so be knows us," said UC Irvine Coach Bill Mulligan. "I think he feels comfortable here. He knows tbe players and he's been coming to our games here for quite awhile." Because of NCAA rules. Lewis will be forced to sit out a year, but he wall be eligible to practice with the team. And. when he is able to play. he will have sophomore status with the Anteaters. "I think (sitting out) will be good for him," said Mulligan. "It will g.ive h.im a chance to unwind a little bit. He's been under quite a bat of pressure." Mulligan. who will lose his top two scorers. Tod Murphy and Rogers, to graduation. admits that he has de- veloped quite a reputation for acquir- ing transfer players. "Some guys don't want to take 'cm. but I'm not one of them," he said. Lake rs weren't in 'hunt' Rockets were rtght on targef in ending LA· s bid to repeat INGLEWOOD (AP) -Again, as has been the case since the early 1970s. a defending NBA champion has failed in its quest to win two titles in a row. Coach Pat Riley of the Los Angeles Lakers has an intriguing eitplanataon for this long run of frustration. "Sometimes it's easier to be the hunter." Riley said. "We teamed that last year when we were the stalker. This year we were stalked by a good team, the Rockets." Riley's Lakcrs were the hunted this year. rather than the hunter, because they foiled the Boston Celtics' at- tempt to repeat as NBA champions last spnng. The l.akers began defense of their championship by overwhelming San Anto nio. sweeping a best-of-five sencs in three games. but they struggled against the Dallas Mavericks before wanning that best- of-seven scncs, 4-2. That turned out 10 be a sign of things 10 come. The l.akcrs beat Houston 1n the opener of the Western Conference finals, but the upstart Rockets captured the next four games to cam a berth opposite the Celtics in the NBA final s. Thai makes it 17 years since an NBA champion has successfully de- fended its crown -the Celtics accomplished such a feat in 1969. The New York Knicks won tn 1970, but failed to defend the folloWlng year and the stnng was staned. "Sometimes at takes a miracle to beat the world champions," Riley said aner the Rockets ended the scncs on a miraculous shot by Ralph Sampson Wcdne'Kiay n1fht which p vc Houston a 114-1 12 tnumP.h. "It JUSt wasn't our )'Cat You cant beat fate." Sampwn, who had been the le ser- noticcd of the Rocket • Twin Towers in the sene . scaled the l.aken' fate when his humcd. ofT~balance shot from about I 0 fttt out dropped at the buuer to 11 ve Hou4'ton its first lead of the aame. So 1t will the Rockets, not the Lokc~. at the Bo~ton Garden next FRIDAY, MAV 23, 1988 Founl81nV811eJedvMClllnCFIOftlNlll .......... CI. Gl•nt8 Mnd Goodin 1100.'ld..,...... la11, 10-2. ca. Al' 1 I pl Ill Lynn lifts Orioles ·by Angels, .6-3 Joyner injured by grounder, will be out about one week BALTJMORE(AP)-Even witha .464 lifetime battl.Og averaae against Jim Slaton, Fred Lynn needed a little help on bis three-run homer off the Anaels' pitcher. .. It wasn't bit that well, but I hit it in the riaht spot," L~n said of his fint- innina homer which barely made the left-field seats and helpeo the Balti- more Orioles to a 6-3 vtctory over the Anaels on Thursday. "I thouaht it was going to be a sacrifice tly, actually," Lynn said. "Then it started curv1na toward the line and it just bad a shorter distance to go. That's just sman hitting." Slaton contended he bad should have had Lynn struck out on an inside fastball delivery before the homer. · "but the umpire didn't call n." "He (Lynn) must see the ball very well off me," Slaton saa~ "and that's why I was concentrating on making good pitches. But if they don't gjve you the pitch. what can you do? "If a left-handed hjtter like Lynn hits the ball 310 feet down the line, with the Wln~ you feel you've reaJJy taken the sting out ofh1s bat." Toa'611t'•6aJJe A111el1 (Sutton 2-3) at New Yorkl'anxet1(Rasmussen 4-1 ). Time: 4:JS. TV: Cha.noel S. Radio: KMPC'(710). Saturday's pmc: AnJCls at New York Yanket1, 10:20 a.m. aft.er tbe Anaels bad scored twice in the SJxth. It wu Bordi's second uve. The Orioles, who have won JO of their last 12 pmes, took a 3-1 lead when Lynn hit his fourth homer of the season followin&. singles by Juan Bonilla and Jim Dwyer. Owyer's bard grounder struck fint baseman Wally Joyner and forced the Anaels' sensational rookie to leave the game. Precautionary X-rays proved negative, but Joyner suffered a severely bruised tendon below his left kneecap. He is expected to be out for about one week. Lynn, who finished the same Wt th a 26 for S6 career mark against Slaton, also singled in the fourth and eventu- ally scored on an RBI sinaJe by Larry Sheets. The Orioles loaded the bases tn the fifth on two walks and a hit batsman before Eddie Murray looped a two- run double to front of the d1vtna left fielder Brian Downing. Wally Joyner l.8 helped off field by Aneela' trainer Ned Bergert after he wu hit ln left kn=.!I a Jlm Dwyer &roander. Joyner la to be oat aboat one week. Scott McOreaor, 4-3, improved his career mark apinst the Angels to 18-6, with rchcf help from Rich Bordi, who fanned pinch-hitter Reg- gie Jackson with the bases loaded Murray. wbo has 14 career &rand slams, bas a career batt.101 averaae of .45S m bases-loaded situations, with 56 hits in 123 at-bats. Expo sub robs Dodgers, saves game with catch LOS ANGELES (AP) -When Bob Welch's fa stball slammed into Mitch Webster's arm. the ensuing result inflicted even more pain on the Dodgers. for them," Winningham said. "At first, I didn't think he hit it that well, but it kept on going. It was a goinJ to be homer." Winningham, a first-round draft pick by the New York Mets in the secondary phase of the Jan. 1981 draf\, came to MontrcaJ with shonstop Hubie Brooks and catcher Mike Fitzgerald last year in the celebrated deal for Gary Caner. It 1s his defensive abilities and bis speed in the outfield that made hjm more than a throw-in. Toal6llt'• game Philadelphia (Rawley 4-4) at Dodaen off Montrul starter Joe Hesketh, 3-3. aot the tying run in the next annina when Mike Scioscia walked and scored on Hcsketh's wild pitch. But rookie Rcgae Williams, who bad doubled behjnd SClosaa. got trapped too far offthjrd on the sconng play and was taacd out at third. ending the thrcaL Webster stayed in the game long enough to sc-0re a run an the first inning of the Montreal Expos' 5-2 victory Thursday night, but he was taken out of the game for precautionary reasons an inning later. Hcrm Winningham replaced Webster an center field and pulled a founh-inning home run bid by Enos Cabell back into the park. At the tame, 1t onl y preserved a 2-1 Montreal lead. But it was the type of play that turns games around. (Reuss 2-2). Time: 7:3S. TV: None. Radio: KABC (790). Saturday's game: Ph1ladelph1a at DodgeB, 7:05 p.m. "Those three plays were the bia ones for us," Rodgers said of Winningham's catch, Williams' hue-running blunder and Hesketh's piclcoff of Scloscia at tint base in the JCC<>nd mnini. "I keep telling all our pitchers to let them hit it out there," Winningham sajd, "and if it stays in the ballpark, I'm aoina to get it." "He looked like he non-chalanted it." mnaham's leapinJ. grab at the 395 s.ign an lcft- centcr. "But I don t question him. He makes the catches." "Maybe 11 could have sparked a b1~ inning Expos Manager Buck Rodgers said of Win-The Dodgers. who collected onJy three hits Sciosc1a's mistaJce came with Cabell at third base and one out and the Dod4ers trailini, 2-1. Hesketh then walked Williams 1ntent1onal- ly to get to Welch. who grounded out. Bouton'• Ralph Sam peon •hot the Laken rl&ht oat of the P.layoff• Wed.needay. Monday to face the Celtics in the opener of the NBA finals. The Rockets were able 10 wan despite the loss of Akeem OlaJuwon with 5: 14 remaining. OlaJuwon. who led Houston with 30 points and <;even rebounds, was e1ected along wilh Milch Kupchak of the Lakcrs for fiahting. After Byron Ott of the l.akers m1s'lCd a jumper and the Rockets rebounded and called timeout with one second left. Houston's Rodney McCray inbounded the ball with a long pass to Sampson. SamJ™>n. who scored 10 of his 29 points 1n the clo ma moments. barely ara ped the ball before putting up his hot. which hi1 the front nm. bounced hiah and dropped into the ba ket. "I think we had a Jood year I hope to play a little more m the po tseason next year," ~ad Lake" center Kareem Adbul·Jabbar "I do n't think we pll\ycd up to our potential Or maybe we, did -end mayhc we 1u'lt didn't have the aoods " T ENNI S --- Miraleste strings up Uni in semis, 13-5 Trojans· hopes, rackets broken in CIF playoffs crunched University an singles and had no problem getting the better end of the deal in doubles as they advanc.ed to the finals of the CIF 4- A playoffs agamst top-seeded Santa Barbara wath a 13-5 win Thursday on the Trojans' coun. .. That kills you when you lose an first team doubles." sajd Sisel. .. But in all the years I've ever coached ( 18). I've never seen rackets break hke that. "It's not an excuse and 1t shouldn't affect the players. They werc JUSt a better tennis team -they won all the close matches." By RICHARD DUNN o.11J ,.._. Cert111 •11A It didn't take long for Un1vers1ty High tennis coach Gary Sisel to figure out it was goina to be a distressing afternoon. It began when the Trojans' No. I doubles team of Mike Hin and Paul Corkery had four tennis rackets break and ended when second-seeded Miraleste swept to a CIF 4-A scmifinat victory. "Hin and Corkery went through four rackets in the first match," S1scl said. "They're the best doubles team I've ever had. It's not an alibi, but 1t was kind of an ominous start." Indeed it was as University ( 17-5-1 ). which tied Laguna Beach as champions of the Sea View League, couJd do nothinJ more against highly- regarded MiraJeste than np i1s stnngs apan with frustration. Hoffmann felt the disappointment first. He was down 3-2 in No. I singles to Pete Fitzpatrick before gaining momentum and the lead. 5-3. only to sec Fitzpatrick, who also defeated John Pinches (6-1) and freshman Ramesh Rao (6-4). come back to win four straight. "They're a good team," Sise I said. "And they're flat out better than we are." M1ralcste proved at, too. The Marauders Hin and Corkery were swept, 6-3. 6-1, 6-3. and Ca.rsten Hoffmann, Un i's No. I singles player. lost two out of three matches. 7-5, 6-4. J.-6. 0aV1d Bier. M1raJesl('s No. 2 singles player, also swept three straight sets. Only Jett' KJzcr and (Pleue eee UNJ/C2) Man Son Hing ousted from NCAA tennis ATHENS, Ga. -Bruce Man Son Hing, UC Irvine's lone entry in the NCAA tennis cham- pionships here, made a quack citit Thursday. The senior Anteater fell to Roben-Jan Biercns of Bn&ham Young University, 6-2, 2-6. 7-6 in the opcnina round. "h was disappointing fo r Bruce, but it was an exciting match." said UCl Coach Greg Patton. "Bruce aot off to a haky stan. then staned attack1na. ser- ving and volleying to get back an the match. But then Biercns hit some great shots to win 1t. B1crcns pla}ed very well." Man Son Hing had two match points and aJso held off two match points beforc finally los- ing. The tie-breaker score was 10..8. "Bruce had a grca1 cal"t'Cr at UCI. h's really 1hc end of an era," ~1d Patton. "He's one of those kids 1hat doesn't come alona very often. He's one of the nice t kids you want to meet, and, he's one of the hardest workana players I've ever met He's 101 a lucrauve professional career ahead of him." Man Son Hing 11 expected lo tum pro in the near future. Baerens, a freshman. 1s ranked 50tb in the latest collqe rat1np while Man Son Hina is 3'4th. Man Son H1na finished the season with a ~l6 record as UCl'1 No I 11naJes playtt Crash mars Indy practice Drivers Firestone, Snldersuff er minor injuries in 4-car mishap INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A wild, four-car accident durina Thursday's final practice session for the In- dianapolis 500 left dnvers Dennis Firestone and George Snider and three other people with manor anJuries and jua&Jed the lineup for Sunday's race. Firestone suffered small cuts and bruises on his left knee and riabt arm and was taken to Methodist Hospital for precautionary X-rays. He was released later Thursday in aood condition, the pecdway re~ned. mder was treated for scrapes and bruises at the infield hosp1taJ and released. Two pit crewmen, 1denuficd as DonaJd Coll, 60. of Poland, Ind., and Michael Arnold. 30. of Albuquerque. were injured in the melcc. Cox, a crewman for the Machinists Union team. suffered a scalp cut and pass1ble ankle injury and was taken to Methodist Hospital for X-rays. He also was 1n aood conditfon Thursday. Arnold, a member of drive r Pancho Caner's team. was uated at the infield hosp1tal for a cul to has naht lea and bruised riaht hip and rckued A n>eetator. Fred Haaer. 75, of Memphis, sufferl'd bnuses to his lef\ lea and knee when he was struck by a Ure ftom one of the wrecked can. He also was treated at the infield hospital and rcteued. The cars dnven by Firestone. n1der and Roberto Moreno of Brazil ~ badly damaaed. Tom Binford. chief steward for the race, said Thursday that both nider and Moreno had notified him of their intention to withdraw the damaacd cars and tan their backup cal"I from the rcar oft he 33-ar field. He wd Fifntone'1 Pace Electronics team found itself wtth no backup car and would be unable to Stan the race unlcn thty could rcpan lhc bedly dam.,cd ractr Dave Thomu_ Firestone's crtw chief. said, "We have to rebuild the C'l'Uhed car to bt 1n the rlC!t' Wt '\e made arranaement with Lola (Lht r manufllcturcr) to Oy in some paru from England " Dennla FU.tone Oeorce 8Dlder A kcd 1f he believes the team can repau the battered car by unday at 7:45 a.m .. when the entnes must be rolled onto the track. Thoma~ said. "It's aonn1 be mara.anal. We're just ao1ng to have to work at 1t unul 11 1' done. "The rear su pension had Quite a bit of damqc and the lef\ side of the tub (the main component of the car an which the dn ver \Jt~) was badly damaicd. We'U rcplacc that pan of 1L It was a prctt)' nous accident actual!) That S&)'1 a lot for the construction of these cars" Thomas said ciaht or I 0 people, ancludan& some Lola cmplo)'CCS. will wor\ around·tht-elock on the car "We're getuna bm we-need from other Lola teams. too;· Thomas added "We're 1ening help from eva')- body .. lfthecar1srcpa1rtd 1n ttme. F1rcstone would st.att on the outside of the tcventh row If not. Dtck 1mon, the onl y dnver bumped (n)m the hneup lhts year 1n quahfyana. would \tan a the ahematc in .. I.be .l3rd posmon h wa rtpontd that 1mon bad offel"d to pht b11 purse w11h the ~ Elttlr'Onics team,~1r they ould withdraw lheu car and allow him 10 'tan the race. "The ot~er car (they have} 11not 1 backup," B1nfotd ~•d. "Thty (Funtont s team) thouJht 1t Wfl . ~' It V.I n•t " With Oakland, Andujar says he's out o( his l eague Joaqwn And~ar 15 alive and profeu-ma to be unhappy an the Amcncan Leaauc. He McC"S Oakland. He lakes the A's. He like$ their fans, and he likes Manager Jackie Moore. He says be Just d~n't hke the league And he m1\~S Manager Whitey Herzog and his old St LA>u1~ ( ard1nals teammate "The only d1fTercnce 1n the Amcncan league 1), I don't like 1t," Andujar sa) s. ··1 can't pitch the way l used to. The aam~ arc bonng. They make me go to strep. "fhey don't play the way they do in the National League. There arc too many power hmers and softball stadiums in the American League." He docl>n't hke the designated hitter because he: no longer gets to bat And, he sa:rs, he is homesick for "St Louis, While:) Herzog and all m) teammate.~ Don't foriet. Whney as m) dadd). Don't forget tbal. .. Andu1ar wu traded from St Louts to Oakland la\I December under douded circumstances. . G•' mgupcatchcr Mike Heath, thc:A's got m{~wm a pitcher wh o began the scat.On under suspension tor bumping umpire Don Denk1nger in the last year's World Sencs a pitcher who had been d1sc1pltned b:r Comm1ss1oncr Peter Ucberroth tor allegauons of drug use They got a hot-tempered player with a history of trouble. but the:) also got a pitcher who had won 41 games in the pa1ot two seasons. "The bo1tom line ID our business 1s to win," Moore sa)S. "If we can pH.le up a player who has won more games 1n the pa'>t two yea rs than anyone cl!..C, OK. Ma)be he doc!> have a datlercnt personaht>. When Dave Kingman came hcrc. he had a d ifferent personal11> but he lit 1n · Quote of the day Joaquin Andujar, the Oakland A's patcher. after \tepp1 ng onto the field a1 Fenwa> Park 1n Boston and gett ing h1!> first look at the Green Monster the 37-foot fence 1n left field that 1s 315 feet from home plate: "I thought we were going to play wftball when I saw the wall " Babas hoff wins 800 meters Fountain Valle~ ll 1gh sophomore 13 Debbie BabashofT and Dan Jorgen!>Cn of San Otego each won a d1\1s1on of the 800- meter freestyle Thur!>da) at the M1~s1on VieJO Swim Meet of Champion'> Jorgensen won the men's d1 v1!>1on w11h a lime ol 8:09.91 , while Babashoff tnumphcd tn the women's d1v1!>1on with a 8 43 36 time Each d1v1\1on held 1o·ur 11mcd final heat\ The meet lont1nuc' th ro ugh ~unday at thl· Marguerite Rcncataon Center hnals in fi ve event!> for both the men and women arc ~hcdulcd for toda:r caaacllenawinonlategoal Masters IDe.ets set MONTREAL -Rookit' Claude ~ Lcmaeuucored at I l:IOoftheth1rd ~nod • ordcrtobecbpbleand\botewhodo on a hard .shot from the 1Jot, hft1n1 the UCI, Golde n West nothaveacardca1'purdweonell MonltCaJ Canadacns to a J.() victory over tbcmeetforS6 the Calaar> Flomcs Thu™1ay "'"''and. oommandana com petJ Uon s ites RossCarter,·72, from ~n. the )... l lead in thcu tan Icy Cup final iCf1es.. h 1 world record-bolder for hit The C'an.ad1ens can eltoch their 23rd Cup when Lhe n ext 2 weekends ~g~~uwill be on band. Mike teams ~tum ~ alga')' for pmc five tu~y na&ht. Caswed.a 66, president of the Lemieux ~ goal a.me a C'alpry s Ooua Southern C&l~fomia Strickn. will a.lJo Rascborouah attempted adcann&~s an the MontruJ Twoan=amuterslr"ldtmeetswill bethrowinathclhotand theditcus. end and &be puck ~unced t<? Lcm1t'ux m the high slot. besiucddurinalhe next two week· Cuweda holds the American record The Canadacns naht wan& then connected f~r bas ends, liostcd by UC Irvine and in the S·kiloand4-kilo weijhts. 10th goal of the playom on a 35-foo.ter that shpped Golckn WcstColleae. Dan Aldrich retiredchan~11orat under the ICJS of flames goaltender Mike Vernon. This weekend, the Anteaters Mas-formoreinfonnation,phonc UCI will beo"'handandalsoinvit.ed ten Track and Field Clusac will take 6 73-202S. toco'mpetewill be Hal Connelly, UCLA tripped by Hawaii, 6 -3 LO ANGELE -Robert • Muhammed scored on a wild pitch 1n the mnth 1nnana to snap a}-) tie Thursday and Hawa11 went on to defeat thtrd-ranked UCLA. 6-3, 1n a first-round game of the NCAA West Regional baseball toumamenl. Earlier Thur5day, eighth-ranked UC" nta Barbara ~ored six runs in the I 0th inning and went on to defeat SCHnth-ranked Loyola Marymount, J 1-S, an the o~nana game The doublc~hm1na11on ba~ball tournament will tina!>h either aturday or ~unday and the winner will advance to the College World Scnes at Omaha Nicklaus 1 back at own c o urse Canadian Dan HaUdoraon used a burst l!I offive b1rd1es 1n sax holes to edge past host Jack Nlcklaa1 and take a I-shot lead Thursda) 1n the first round of the Memonal tournament in Dublin, Ohio. Halldorson contnved a 7-undcr-par 65 an M>methmg approaching privacy. whale Nicklaus was trailed by a vast gallery of old friends and former neighbors as he put to~ether a 66. "The cond1t1on~ were Just nght for 'ICoring, • Nicklaus said of the <..ool. overcast weather and the beauufully co nd1taoned Mu1rfield Village Golf Oub cour;c he designed In the LPGA event 1n Coming, N. Y .. Beth Daniel had fou r b1rd1es on the front nine en route to a five-under-par 67 to take the first-round lead with five golfer!> ucd for ..ccond three strokes behind. Daniel, who ha~n't won on the LPGA Tour this season. had birdies on Nos 4. 5. 7 and 8 and finished the front nine at 32 Television, radio TELEVISION 4.30 pm -BASEBALL. Angels at New York Yankees, Channel 5 ts p.m -WRESTLING. C hannel 56. 9 p.m -BOXING Ronnie \h1clds v~ Jon Manic) u1 IBF Junior wclterv.c1gh1 title clim1na- t1on bout, 12 rounds. from Atlan11c C 11)" N.J (dela)'ed). Channel 56. RADIO 4 30 p.m. -BASEBALL AnKels at New York Yankees. KMPC (710). 7 30 p.m. -BASEBALL Phlladclph1a al Dodgers, KABC <790). I place on Saturday at UCJ. * * * Olymp11n and world record hammer Senator Alan Cranston ise"pccled The Southern California Stnderl thrower. 10 attend the meet to run in the I 00 Masten will be held Saturday, May Anyone intercttcd injoinana the and 200 meters in the e~~nt whtch 31 , at Golden West. Southern California Masters Striders features athletes be&wecn the ages or The pre-rqislration deadline for track and field club should cont.act 30and 87. the event is Monday. Mike Castaneda, presidentat The meet will be divided into five-Fee for the first event is$8and 974-6499or Jerry Withers, member· year age groups, beainnil\twith the additionalcvcnts$4andS20for relay ship chairman at(ll 3)670-3376. submasters between the ages of30 teams. The Suidcrs compete in regionals, and34and 3Sand 39. Men and women in five-ycaraae state and nation, as well asinter- The run}li:.aevcnts include the groups from age 30 are eligible and a national competition. 5.~meier race walk., the steeple· medallion will be awan1ed to the first * * * chase; the 4()().meterrelay, the I 00, three pl.aces. • 200,400,800, l,S00and3,000meter Tbemcctwillst.artat JOa.m. wttha ll--adl•.,._ runs, and the I lOhi&hburdJcsand Skrun. Manyoftbeathlctespart1ci-...... ..-..T~:.V••-hvlluuo 400-meter low hurdles. pated in the World Masters Games in • m.al Tooanee '9al• Paftl. Eltlrtmtlv The field events will include the Rome, which attracted more than Cf\ellenelne, w:.n1<coursun 1111t1ne and 11re 1ralh < ()()() hi ,., SOdiffi FM l••llwllllT-t11l11 . .00 ranleatvea1. hammer,Javehn, shot put and discus. .J, at etes 1rom crcnt Proceedt benefit T..,.. w-·· cklll. F0< as well a.s the long and triple jumps countries in June 1985. more1n1otma11on, "'-Warren Chase •• mJ> I Th d re 4!S-nJt and the pole vau t. ese aame men an women a ,._.. ._...,... ...... •• s.,... ._ _ A wards will be prescn ted to the first now prepari na for the World Games &eeln• 1 am •' eas1 1..o. _..,..... coeeee FM,, three places in each event. The entry that will be run in the Olympic 11w1111 T-111111 enc1 MwllhoWw1111u1e1e .... For fee is SS for the first event and $3 for Stadium in Melbourne, Australia in rnore tnformai1on. ~~~ m-1751 cachadditionalevent with aS2 late November and December, 1987. Ttfllll~ ......... s_, ••-1e111na1 en ti fee. This isa TAC sanctioned meet and • m. <~> andU!a.m. 110kl at Sen v1c:ien1e f 0 ffi al ·11 be 8oui.vera end 8atrlnv1on, 8rentwoocs. Flet, T e meet 1s co-sponsored by the many o the lympac o 1c1 s wa aouoi. 100c» Q>Vr ... ~lfled _, .. nctloned F• Coronadcl Mar Track Ouband UC on hand tooffic1ate. Everybody must 1u u w1111T·"''" Forrnoretmorma11on.~ lrv10e. have a TAC membership card an <213> no-7su Fountain Vall ey bla nks El D orado t o r each se111 is Top-seeded Fountain Valley ad- vanced to the sem ifinal round of the CIF 4-A softball playoffs Thursday afternoon with a 2-0 victory over host El Dorado. The Barons made 11 look -preny easy en route to their second shutout of the playoffs, th as one at the ex pen~ of the host Golden Hawks ID the q uartcrfi nals Fountaan Valley advances to meet Cemtos Tuesday at a sate to be determined. Against El Dorado. ace Patti Taylor struck out seven and allowed only one htt (in the bottom of the seventh Wlth none out ) an 1mprov1ng her record to 18-3 and Fountain Valley's to 24-4 The Barons scored both runs an the fourth 1Dning. Lon Peterson singled to lead off the inning, took second on a botched pickoff attempt and moved to third on Lea Young's single to center field. Taylor hat a long drive to center to score Peterson, and Laurie AJvarei's hit to left-eentcr was bobbled, allow- ing Young to score. El Dorado (2 1-6) had one runner reach th a rd w11h two out ID the fourth. but a stnkeout ended the threat * The CIF 3-A quarterfinals are on tap today with a pair of Sea View League teams in action. Woodbridge, the top seed an the tournament, 1s on the road to face Arcadia. whale Estancia has drawn a home date against Sonora. Estanlia 's 3: 15 game wtll be held at TcW1Dklc Park an Costa Mesa. UNI •.• From Cl Robbie Finlay, University's No. 2 doubles learn, won twice. Hoffmann and Rao upended Bob Langley, both by 6-3 scores, to give the Trojans their only singles vic- tories as the Marauders won seven of the nine matches. Kizer and Finlay defeated No. I Rex Hoffman and Morris Gitter. 6-2, and No. 2 G reg Po and Marcus Chen, 7-5, to gi ve Una two of its three doubles vactones. Pete Bohan and Steve Lappin, Uni's ~o. 3 doubles team, also knocked o.ff' Hoffman- Gi11er (7-S) for the Trojans' third win. "I didn't even think we'd get through our league," said Sascl. whose cl ub held ofT powerhouse Corona dcl Mar this spnng to win their second consccuu ve league utlc. "And then it ends up we lost m the semifinals against a great team.•· Sports on TV for weekend Saturday Sunday & BINOCULAR SALE ~ 50% llF ~/\~IJJJJJIJJJll TELEVISION 9·30 a.m -BASEBALL: This week ID base ball. Channel 4 9· 30 a.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Spnnt car racing. from Rossburg, Ohio. Channel 9. TELEVISION 8 a.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Indianapolis 500. Channel 7. 10:30 a.m. -BASE BALL: Angels at New York Yankees, Channel 5. HUGE SAVINGS ON f ELESCOPES, BINOCULARS, SPOT11NG SCOPES. TELEPHOTOS ANO ACCESSORIES EXPERT tfl P I' ' 10 a.m. -BASEBALL. Angels al New York Yankees, Channel 4. 10 a.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 56. Noon -WRESTLING: Channel 9. I p.m. -WR ESTLING: Channel 56. I p.m. -BOWLING: National doubles cham- p1onsh1p, from Reno (delayed), Channel 4. 2 p.m. -WATER SPORTS: Drag boat champion Tim Morgan bids for a world speed record on water, Channel 4 2:30 p.m. -WAR OF THE STARS: Channel 7. 3 p.m. -GOLF: PGA Memonal Tournament, from Dublin. Ohio (delayed), Channel 2. 4 p.m -GREATESTSPORTS LEGENDS:Channel 7 4 p.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Speedway Amcnca. Channel 56. 4:30 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Formula One Grand Pnx of Monaco auto race; Amcnca's Race, a I Ok road race for amateur men and women, one of each from the 50 t.tatcs. from Lake Tahoe. Calif.; a report on the Indianapolis 500 (tape). Channel 7. RADIO I 0.15 a.m. -BASE BALL: Angels at New York Yankees, KMPC (7 10). 7 p.m -BASEBALL Ph1ladelph1a at Dodgers. KABC(790). 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: New York Mets at San Diego, KNX (1070). Noon -GOLF: PGA Memonal tournament. from Dublin, Ohio, Channel 2. I p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Cannonball One-Lap of America (tape), Channel 4. I p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Top motocross riders in the I 25cc and 250cc divisions compete, from Anaheim, Channel 9. 2 p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Big League Baseball Decathlon Challenge, featuring top players from the Amcncan and National leagues competing in 10 events, Channel 4. RADIO 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New York Yankees, KMPC (710). I p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at Dodgers. KABC(790). Monday TELEVISION 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New York Yankees, Channel 5. Noon -PRO BASKETBALL: Houston at Boston in first game of NBA championship series, Channel 2. RADIO 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New York Yankees, K.MPC (7 10). Woven s b y • • • e Portofino shawl t.aaael available in bl•ck, mushroom, brandy, hurgun<ly and white. The cJ& le Venetian in natural butterscotch. Mll9 Faabion laland •Newport Beach• 759-l 822 •Bullock• WllahJre Wln1 ' -. • Or.noe CoMt DAU .. y PILOT /MMlt. -n. 1• ca Gooden, !\'Jets rocked by Giants, 10~2 Fr..a AP ..... k•es SAN FRANCISCO-Could at be? Dwiabt Oooden i1 in a slump. . The New York Meta phenomenal naht·banckr lost his le'COnd 1trai&ht decision Tburaday, 10.2, to the Sitn Franciaco Oiants. Gooden went into the game with the National Leaaue'1 best earned run a~e~, 1.2$. l.tjum~to l.96wi'tha naoe·hit battenna, u he was charged with seven runs, sill oflbem earned. It was Oooden'1 wont outing since his rookie year, when he allowed I 0 hit~ * ............. 2 PMM.AD•LPMIA SAN OlaGO •r11111 •rlllll ) 0 I 0 ltOVtltl' 3o 4 I I 0 • 0 I I Tlnfllln u 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 GwyfWI rt 3 I o O 4 I I I Gervev lb , I I I 4 0 0 0 McaY1d d ) I I 2 4 010 Boc:llY t •Oil 4 0 0 0 Merlini If 3 I 0 0 3 1 20 Wvnne ci 1000 2 0 I 0 FlanN't lb 3 I I 1 0 0 0 0 Hewkin• p 1 o O O I 0 0 0 Lefferll P I 0 0 0 0000 )I ' 1 ' » J 7 2 T .... k ... ., ....... .,........... ..I 001 __ , s.oe.. • 021 nx-• 0-Wlnnlne ltlt -Flennerv (4) E-FO!ev 2, Gervev. OP-f'fll .. ~le I, ~n OletO I. LOl-PM.delolll• S, San Ole9o 4 2a-lltov11tr. G WllM>n. Hlt-Mdtevnokb (7), Flanntrv m, Scilmldt (6), G•rvev (I) SI-FOiey II), Gwynn (S). SF-Mcltevnolcls ·~ " ••••• so ............ Cerlton L,2·6 • S • 3 J Teltutve 1 2 1 0 0 ....... H•wkln• W,3·3 6 1 2 1 1 J Lefferh S, 1 -3 0 0 0 0 3 H•wttln• Pllt hed to I beller In the 7th Umolrn-Home, Pu!l'· Fl"'· Wfll, S.C:OM, I . WIUl•m1, Third, ltlpptey T-1 S7 A-21,173 ....... ~ .... 4 CIMCOfNATl n . LOUt1 T Jones If EDavl\ II" ltltoonsn P ltunne412b Mllnerd ,..,...,rl EMtllylb ... )I> CncllOI H 8Dla1 c 0..ltr2b FrencoP Soto p V-*" •rllllll 3 l I ) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 , I 0 • I 2 I 2 I I I 0000 , 0 0 0 I l 0 0 Coi.m.n" McGeeci Herr 2b JClerll ID VenSl'(tl rf Pnclltn JC> Lvllr•t LeWltH II" HMthc OSmlthu Co• P Hortonp Hurdle Pl\ e.roerp WhlltPI\ • 6 SS T...., Sat'e Irv """"' Mrlllll S I 3 I S I 2 2 S 0 0 I ) 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 • 0 l 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 I I 0 1 I I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 0000 3S • '. CllKINwtl I• OIO 400-6 It L.MI 003 .. 100-• Geme Wlnnfne ltll -T JonH (7) E-Colemen. OP-SI Louis I 1..01--Clncinnelf 3, SI. LOUii 9 28-T Jonfl, ~. Cox. o. Smith. Pl!ldltlon 38-Mc:GM, Co4amen SB-T JonH (41, Colem•n (15) SF-<>t\ter. I~ " ••••• so caca.-• SoloW.3·• 4 S 3 J l R ltOOlnlOI\ 1 l I I 2 Fr•rlCO $,7 I I 0 0 0 It.~ Coa L,0-4 '2·J 4 6 6 S l Honon 1·3 o o o o o eer .. r 1 I 0 0 0 0 It ltoblntoft pfltned 10 I beller In Int tt11 WP-Coa UIT\Plr..-..-. Qvlrt, Flr11. Runge, 5«· ones. P•llCIN. Thwd, Eno.I T-1 Cl A-26.791 and seven runsto St. Louis on Aua. l, 1984. Elsewhere in the National Lcque: A1tro1 c, Plretea t: Bob Knepper shut out Pmsburp oo Jeven bits 10 become the major leaaue't firtt eiaht· game winner and drove in a run with a Ji~e. leadina Houtton past the visiting Pirates. Braves 2, C.bs t: Joe Johnson pitched a five-bitter over 81/J inn1np and Bob Homer broke a scorele s tJe wilh a double as host Atlanta ex- tended the winnina streak to seven games with a victory over Chicago. * 0...... ,., M9tl 2 N•W YottK IAN 'IUNCISCO MWllSoci 8tl\mn2b Hrnncll lb StrwbrY rt Cerlert Fos1er.i Knight 3b HJOllsn H Aeuller• o Ovk1lr Oii Sisk p Goodell p Mllci.tl n Tlltllh •r11111 •rllllll ~ 1 I 0 GledOln cf 4 I 0 0 > 0 0 0 VKlert.. lb S I 2 0 :I I 1 , Cltrow11 >ti s J J o 3 0 0 0 LAoneTd If S 2 1 I 3 O o o COevls rt • J • 4 3 O O O lrenl'I c S O o o 3 0 0 0 ltTllOtrl 2tl 'l I 0 0 2 0 0 0 Uribe u 4 0 2 , 0 0 0 0 l(rullow p 2 0 0 I 1000 MlclftdoPI\ 1000 0000 MlnlOftP 0000 I 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 ll 2 2 2 Tlltllh k.-.lrv ..... 17 11 u I NewYen --OIO-2 Sen 1"'1111ds<.e OIO W lb-IO G•me Wlnnlnsi lt81 -Krukow (1) E-<iooden, M. WllMlll. L09-~n Frentl•co I. 29-C. O•vls. Hlt-Hernendea (7) S8-C Brown (4). Uribe (7), C Devi• (SI S.-B•c«man, Krul<ow tr " ••••• so ~·I, Car4Jule t: Roewe Tracy Jones' beteS-loaded double drove in three Nnl to cap a four-run seventh· innina tally u vilitina Ci ncinnati sent St. Louis to its 2111 loss in 28 pme1. Pafrel I . P1d1Uet I : Kevin McReynolds, Tim Aannery and Skve Garvey each homered to power San Dieao over viaitina Philadelphia. In the Amencan Leque: MarlDert '· Tl1en I: Alvin Davis scored one run and drove in another u Seattle defeated host Detroit. IMJ&a1 5, Brewen C: Brett Butler's m11judaed three-run triple to riaht field capped a four·run acveland sixth mnana as the viJitfo& Indians defeated Milwaukee. ...... ~. l"tTTRUltGH ltOUSlOM AJmonK l(llellf• u MOier on ClnlntaP 0.Leof'IP Maull•ci Marown rt Bream lb TPeflec Morrl1n Jb 8elllerd 2b R..,2b R9U.cl\elp ltlttvldt If T.-.. ... , ..... • 0, 0 ) 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0000 0 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Oor•n 2t> .v.i rl W ..... ci Walllne 3b G-lb CrutK H•ldltr If B•n d GOavlt lb Cltenld•u ••llevc l("""'p » 0 7 0 T ..... kwelrv ... •rlllll • 0 0 0 3 l I 0 0 I 0 0 3 0 I 0 0 l 0 0 l 0 2 l 0 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 I 0 J 0 I 0 J I I I 4 0 I I )I 4' 3 ~~ ooo ooo oeo-o "•'""" -110 Ob-4 NewYri Gooden L,S·2 Aguilera • 3 O•me Wlnnlno lt8 1 -None. 9 1 ' 1 l E-Ooren OP-f>llltbufVh 1, Hou11on 2 l I O I 2 LOl-Plll1bur9h 1, Hou1I011 I l8-8aliev 3 7 1 I I . Jl-T p.,,. 5111< Slnl"rMChce I Kr\ill.owW,4·3 I 1 1 1 0 Minton I 0000 Gooo.n PHthed lo 4 belltrs In ,,,. Siii WP-Aoullt<•. 81111-Aoullera Ume>lre1-Home, Harvey; Flr1t, Stello, Set ond, Grego, Third, Devl1 T-,:52 A-27.442 CHICAGO 80\ltY rf Beller P Fontenor p Mallllw•lf TrlllO pr SndbrO 1b Morino JC> LOPtl pr Durtlm lb Soaler 1111 Mur>Mv ci JOn ls t Dunston u Trourp Ct vllll Dt<nler Cf T9'9h * Bnvn 2, Cubt 0 MHlllll • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 J 0, 0 I 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 ATLANTA S.""'"9 rf ATllO<'n1 n MvKOllY Cf Horner lb It.min lt> Oberkfl JC> HerPerlf Morano" a.n.dk:I C HuDOrd1b JoJl'ln1n P 2' 0 S 0 Tlhh Start ltY ~ •II r 11111 l 0 0 0 '0 0 0 1 I I 0 l 0 I I 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I I I 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 I 24 2 J 2 Cl!k.a.. --000-0 AtteMI 000 1• Ola-2 Game Wfnnlnv 1181 -Horner ISi E-Mortlan<t OP-Chicago l. Atlente 2 LOB-Chicago s. Allen!• l . 28-ttornef, Mortno. S-Troot, 8tnedk:I SF-Jo JOMMlll ~ Troor L,7·1 Baller Fonrenor ASM!ta ·~ " ••••• so 1 2 I I I • 1·3 I I 1 I 0 1·3 0 0 0 0 0 JO JoMIOll W,4·3 I l·J S 0 0 1 4 Alwnmet,.,... S,4 7·) 0 0 0 0 0 HBP-HuDOerd bv Beller Umplrfl-Home, Cr•wlord. F1rS1. C Wllllem1. Setoncs. WtnOtl\ltcll Tnfrd, Tare T-2 10 A-14,"6 ~ltfMurtll lteuKhal L ,l ·• Clemen" OeL- Hw1tM ·~ 7 0 I " ..... so I 1 2 I I I 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 2 I l(M""' W,1·2 f 7 0 0 I S Ciem.nll PllCMd lo J belltn In lhe Ith Ume>lrtt-Home. F~lne. First, Marth, Setond. Oevldt.on, Tnlrd, Kllller T-2:29 A-4,714 A9Ym s,"\.....,.. 4 KANSAS CfTY HXAS Wll\Ond Or•• dll Mtlltet"" Lew" Breit lb Wh11•2b Qvlrk lb SunclbrO t Motley rf AS.learn TeQih .. , ..... SI 2 I McOwet ci 4 I 2 3 Ward If I 0 0 0 <>eri.n lb s o 1 o lncvolle rt 3 0 0 0 P~dtt 4 I I I Harrah 2b l 0 0 0 8uec:Na 311> • 0 2 0 Wlllt"" " • 2 2 0 Mlft·~t 1 0 0 0 Fleleflr u J.5 SIO S T ..... 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YaMeet C, A'1 I: At Yankee Stadium, Dan Puqu.a's second home ruo and third io two pmcs tied the score leadin• ofJ'the ninth innina. and Mike Pqharulo'• 400-foot sjn&Je over a drawn-in outfield in the I fth pve New York the victory over Oakland. IMYI JeYtS~S-0 TC.ONTO CHICA.O Gercle 211 MoMO'ld UPillew ID Joflnlndll a.rfleld rl LMdlM M41Mr1ks Jb lorO )b Whlll t Fernncta u .., .. _. '0, 0 s 0 l 0 4 0 1 0 3 l I 0 • I 2 0 4 1 0 0 I I 0 0 I 0 0 0 l I 2 4 • 0 0 0 TOl!esn Jo H_.llb .. IMsrt ~d fl'llkt ~t GWelk.r lb Kittle dll •eonut• If Hldlolt ci Gullltn n Helr\ln rl ~S t• T ... sar..w .... .. , .. _. '0 0 0 • 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 , 0 00 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 a I I 0 T...... '1t -•-s CMcffl • - ---0 O•me WIMlno llll -None E-Fl•k OP-Chlceoo I LOB-Tcwonto 6, Cllleego S. 11-Whlll. Hlt-Wlllll (4). 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Open S un. 11-5 VISA -MC NEW From J..Mi I SUBISI If The Very Latest in Compact Disc Technology • lOOWattsRMS • 10 Bond G raphic Equalizer • 7 AM·FM Presets on Tuner • Oval Coslette Deck witti Hioh Speed Oubbino, Continuous Ploybock and Oolby C • Auto Return Turntable • 12" 3-Woy Speoken s59900 ... or for your convenience •2s.oo per month * ASK ABOUT OUR LOW PRICE GUARANTEE ASSEMBLY ANO DELIVERY AVAILABLE BY APPOINTMENT EVENINGS ANO WEEKENDS AT YOUR CONVENIENCE. 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IN THE SOUTH COAST AIEA AVAILABLE FROM '1"9°° i'a. ..,.....Remote • l().l(eybootd TunlnQ & ~Scon Tunino Up/Down • CNick·V-TunlnQ • ,._,Oil/Off • v~ Up/Down, M4ltt • Sttffo/SA,. • Off·f- VS-383R HO UISs MON-fl l • I AT SU N lo-9 lC).6 11-6 With Oakland, Andujar says he's out ol his league From AP cll1palelae1 Joaquin Andijja.r is alive and profess- ing to be unhapp> in the Amencan Leaaue. He likes Oakland. He likes the A's. He hkes their fans, and he likes Manager Jack1e Moore. He says he JUSt doesn't hke the lea$UC And he misses Manager Whiley Herzog and his old St. Louis Cardinals teammates. "The only difference in the Amencan League as. I don't like it," Andujar says. "I t,-an't pitch the way I used to. The games are bonng. They make me go to sleep. "They don't play the way they do in the National League. There are too many power hitters and softball stadiums in the l\mencan League." He doesn't lake the designated hiner because he no longer gets to bat. And, he says. he as homesick tor "St Louis, Whitey Herzog and all my teammate s. Don't forget. Whitey 1s my daddy. Don't forget that." Andujar was traded from St. Louis to Oakland last December under clouded circumstances G1v1 ng up catcher Mike Heath, the A· got in return a pitcher who began the season under suspension for bumping umpire Don Denkinger an the last year's World Series; a pitcher who had been d1sc1phned by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth for aJle¥-3t1 ons of drug use. The)' got a hot-tempered player with a history of trouble, but they also got a pitcher who had won 41 games in the past two seasons. "The bottom line an our business 1s to wan," Moo~ says. "If we can pacl. up a player who has won more games an the past t""o years than anyone else. OK. Maybe he docs haH' a different personalat). When Dave Kingman came here, he had a different personality. but he fit in " Quote of the day Joaquin Andujar, the Oaldand A's pitrha. after stepping onto the field at Fenwa> ParJ.. 1n Boston and getting his first look at the Green Monster. the 37-foot fence in left field that as 315 feet from home plate· "I thought we were going to pla)' oftball when I sa..,. the .... all. .. Babashoff wins 800 meters Fountain Valle~ High sophomore 13 Debbie BabashofT and Dan Jorgensen of San Diego each \\Octa d1\1sion of the 800- meter freest \ le Thursda' at the M 1ss1on Viejo Swim Meet of Champions Jorgensen "'on the men's dl\1s1on 1.1.ath a tame of ~:09. 91, while BabashofT tnumphed an the women ·s division with a 8:4J.36 11mc. Fach dm)ton held four timed final heats The meet continue-. through ~unda~ at the Marguente Recreation Center. hnal'i an five e'cnts for both the men and women arc )Chcdukd for toda> CanadJenewinonlategoal Masters 1neets se MONTREAL -Rookie Claude ~ lcmieuocoreda1 ll:lOof1hethirdpe1'lod , --ordertobeeha.ibleand on a hard shot from the slot. lil\Jng the UCI, Golden West nothaveacardcanpu Montreal C'anadaen~ to a 1-0 v1c1ory over ------themeetforS6 the Calgary Fl~mesThu~ay mghta~dacommandina competition sites DDlllS RossCartcr)2,fro• 3-1 lead m their Stanley Cup final scnes. shot ut world rccord- The Canadie.ns can clinch th~i! 23rd CUp when the next 2 Weekends ~ou~. will be on hand 1eams re1um !O (alga'} for gam~ five , tu~y n1a.ht BIOST£IMUS Castaneda 66 preside Lemieux s goal came as < algary s Dou~ Sou them CalifomiaSt Riseborough uttempttd a cleanng pass an the Montrca Two area masters track meeis wtll be t.hrowing the shot IJ end and the puck bounced to Lemieux in the high lot. be staged dunna the next two week· Castaneda holds the A The Canad1ens' nght wing I hen connected for his ends, hosted by UC Jrvmc and · n the S-kiloand 4-kilo I Ot.h goal of the plnomi on 3 35-footer that slipped Golden West College. 1 Dan Aldrich retired under the legs of names goaltender M 1!1.e V crnon This weekend, the Anteaters Mas-For more infonnation, phone UCI wdl be on.hand a1 UCLA tripped by Hawaii, 6 -3 LOS ANGELE -Robt>rt • Muhammed scored on a wild pitch an the nan th inning to snap a 3-3 11e Thursda> and Hawaii went on to defeat third-ranked UCLA. b-3. in a first-round game of the NC' AA West Regional baseball tournament. Earlier Thursday. e1gh1h-ranked UC Santa Barbara scored six runs 1n the 10th inning and went on to defeat seventh-ranked Loyola Marymount. 11-5. an 1he opening game. The double-elimination baseball tournament wall finish either Saturday or unda> and the wanner ..,. 111 advance to the Collegc World Senes at Omaha. Nicklaus 1 back at own course Canadian Dao Halldorson used a burst !I offivc birdies in six holes to edge past host Jack Nicklaus and take a I -shot lead Thursda) in the first round of the Memonal tournament 1n Dublin. Ohio. Halldorson contnved a 7-under-par 65 in something approaching privacy. "htle NickJaus was 1ra1lcd by a vast gallery of old fnends and former neighbors as he put together a 66. ·· fhe conditions were just nght for sconng." Nicklaus said of the cool. overcast weather and the beautifully cond1t1oned Muarfield Village Golf Club course he designed . In the LPGA e'ent 1n Coming. N.Y .. Betb Daniel had four birdies on the front nine en route to a five-under-par 67 to take the first-round lead with five golfers tied for second three strokes behind. Daniel. .... ho hasn't \\On on the LPG:\ four this season. had b1rd1e s on Nos 4. 5. 7 and 8 and finished the front nine at 31. Television, radio TELEVISIO 4.30 p.m -BASEBALL . .\ngels at Ne\\ York Yankees, Channel 5. 8 p.m. -WRESTLING: <. hanncl 56 9 p.m. -BOXING Ronnie Shields vs. Jon Manie) in IBF Junior wclterv.c1gh1 title elimina- tion bout. 12 rounds. from .\1lant1c Ctt\. 1'4.J. (dela)ed) Channel 56 · RADIO 4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: .\ngcls at N~w York Yankees. KMPC'(710). 7 30 p.m. -BASEBALL Ph1ladclph1a at Dodgers. KABC' (7QO) tcrsTrack and Field Classic will take 6 73-2025. tocom(>CtC will be Hal place on Saturday at UCI. * * * Olympian and world rt Senator Alan Cranston is e"pected The Sou them California St riders ' thrower. to attend the meet to run in the 100 Masters will be held Saturday, May Anyone interested 11 and 200 meters in the event which 31, at Golden West. Southern California M features athletes between the ages of The pre-registration deadline for track and field club she 30and 87. the event is Monday. Mike Castaneda, prcsi• The meet will be divided into five-Fee forthe first event 1sS8 and 974-6499 or Jerry Witt year age groups, beginning with the addttionaJ events S4 and $20 for relay ship chairman at (213) submasters between the ages of 30 teams. The St riders compel and 34and 35 and 39. Men and women in five-year age state and nation.as wel The running events include the groups from afc 30 are eligible and a national compctit1or1" 5.()()()..meter race walk, the steeple-medallion wil be awarded to the first * * chase, the 400-meter relay, the I 00. three places. • 100. 400, 800, 1,500 and 3,000 meter The meet will start at I 0 a. m. wit I\ a A.,...,. ICM runs. and the 11 O high hurdles and 5k run. Many of the athletes panici-•llMI ._. ~~~ 400.meter low hurdles. pated in the World Masters Games in •.m.•• Tooeno• S••11 Perk. e The field events will include the Rome. which attracted more than cNllel!Olno, ~le: cours.an t ()()() h I". 5Qd0fli l=Hl1SllwltnT-slllrt 400ren hammer.Javelin. shot put and djscus. 5. at letes 1rom 1 ercnt Proceeos Dtntfl1 r-no• wo as weJJ as the long and triple jumps countries in June 1985. mor1 lnforme11on. PhoneW•ri Th d a C 455-2339. and the pole vault. ese same men an women r l"Wf1fl ._ .. AitlP HMfl Awards will be presented to the first now preparing for the World Games e191ns 1e m 11 ees1 LOI Anot three places 1n each event. The entry that will be run in the Olympic "•"" T-s111r1 •nd M wuhOut • fee is $5 for the first event and SJ for Stadium in Melbourne, Aust rah a in more infortn4tlo!'I, ~J~~ each addttional event with a $2 late November and December. 1987. r.m11 Annuel .,..._..,. s 1 entry fl"". ThisisaTACsanctionedm~tand em CSlll•nd ••S.m (IOkht ,..... f 0 ffi aJ II be &outeverd tnd Berrlngton. art The meet is co-sponsored by the manyo the lymp1co 1c1 s w1 C10u1>11klOl)courH,cert1fled •r Coronadel Mar Track Club and UC on hand to officiate. Everybody must 11113 with T·shlrt For mor•ll\ Irvine. haveaTACmembershipcardtn cml820-7ses Fountain Valley blanks El Dorado to reach se111is Top-seeded Fountain Valley ad- vanced to the semifinal round of the Cl F 4-A softball playoffs Thursday afternoon wuh a 2-0 victory over host El Dorado. The Barons made It look preny easy en route to their second shutout of the playoffs, 1h1s one at the expense of the host Golden Hawks in the quarterfinals. Fountain Valle\ advances to meet Cemlo!t Tuesda} at a sate to be determined. .\gainst El Dorado.ace Patu Ta)lor s1ruck out seven and allowed onl)' one hit (an the bottom of the seventh w11h none out) an 1mprov1ng her record to 18-' and Fountain Valle) 's to 2+4 The Barons scored both runs an the lourth mnang. Lon Peterson singled to lead off the inning, took second on a botched pickoff attempt and moved to third on Lea Young's single to center field . Taylor hat a long dnve to center to score Peterson. and Laurie Alvarez's hit to left-center was bobbled. allow- ing Young to score. El Dorado (21 -6) had one runner reach third with two out in the fourth. but a strikeout ended the threat * The CIF 3-A quarterfinals are on tap toda)' wuh a pair of Sea 1ew League teams an action. Woodbndge. the top seed in the tournament. is on the road to face Arcadia. whale Estancia has drawn a home date against Sonora. Estanua's 3: 15 game will be held at TeW1nltle Park in Costa Mesa. UNI ••• From Cl Robbie Finlay, Univc doubles team. won tw1• Hoffmann and Rao Langley. both by 6-3 ! the Trojans their onl tones as the Marauder! the nine matches. K.Jzcr and Finlay d1 Rex Hoffman and Mor and No. 2 Greg Po and 7-5. to give Uni two doubles victories. Pet Steve Lappin. Uni's t team . also knocked • Gatter(7-5) for the Tro1. "I didn't even tht through our league:· sa1 club held otT powerhou Mar this spnng to wan consecutive league title ends up we lost in t against a great team ·· Sports on TV for weekel Saturday Sunday & BINOCUlAR SALE ~ 60% llF ~ TELEVISION 9:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: This week 1n baseball. Channel 4 9:30 a.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Sprint car racing. from Rossburg. Ohio. Channel 9. TELEVISION 8 am -MOTOR SPORTS: India Channel 7 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL. Angels a Yankees. Channel 5. HUGE SAVINGS ON TELESCOPES, BINOCULARS, SPOTTING SCOPES. TELEPHOTOS AND ACCESSORIES. EXPERT HELP ~.AN\JJ.JJJJJJJJ I r _r\ S Clt ,. VISIT Tt£ l.ARGEST All> MOST C<M'Ult f ~?!~ ~ ... _:::--~::::::-0 • 3033 Bt•llOI 3 137 Pacohc Coat Hwy 6711 Ea5y S11ee1 •Sm• D>eQO rwy 10 B••JI04 •••I 2 Btoco SOU!nl 1San D+eoo Fwy to Cren~ eall Soutn ($1m1Fwy10 Flrtt StrMt •••t South • M11~ 17 t•• 957 11900 West on Pacihc CoHt Hwy 3 Btockll Flighl on INY •••Mt 7 ()IQCl<tl (2131376-3251 !&OSI 5226&66 10 a.m. -BASEBALL: A.ngcls al New York Yankees, Channel 4. 10 a.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 56. Noon -WRESTLING: Channel 9. Ip m -WRESTLING: Channel 56. I p.m. -BOWLING : National doubles cham· p1onship. from Reno (delayed). Channel 4. 2 p.m -WATER SPORTS: Drag boat champion Tim Morgan bids for a world speed record on water. (. hannel 4. 2:30 p.m. -WAR OF THE STARS: Channel 7. 3 p.m -GOLF: PGA Memonal Tournament. from Dublin. Ohio (delayed). Channel 2. 4 pm. -GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS: Channel 7 4 p.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Speedwa y Amenca. Channel 56 Noon -GOLF: PGA Memonal tourr Dublin. Ohio. Channel 2. I p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Cannonba Amenca (tape). Channel 4. I p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Top motoc the 125cc and 250cc dtv1s1ons compete. frc Channel 9. 2 p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Big Lea Decathlon Challenge. featunng top playc Amencan and National leagues competing Channel 4. RADIO 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels a Yankees. KMPC (7 10). I p.m. -BASEBALL: Ph1ladelph1a KABC' (790). Monday TELEVlSION 4:30 p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Formula One Grand Pn:\ of Monaco auto race: Amenca's Race, a I Ok road race for amateur men and women. one of each from the 50 states. from Lake Tahoe. Calaf.; a report on the Indianapolis 500 (tape). Channel 7. RADIO 10:30 a.m. BASEBALL: Angels at QUALITY l\1AllE AFFORl>ABLE (714) 675-2550 12.\ 2Llli1 SI . • Nf'"por1 Buch, CA ' 10: 15 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New York Yankees, KMPC (7 10). 7 p.m -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at Dodgers. KABC (790) 7 p.m -BASEBALL. New York Mets at San Diego. KNX (1070). Yankees. Channel 5. Noon -PRO BASKETBALL: Houston first game of NBA championship series. Chi RADIO 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels al Yankees, KMPC (7 10). Wovens by ... Portofino hawl tassel available in black, mushr<X hrandy, burgundy and white. Th@ eta ic Venetian natural butter cotch. ZT 119 Fuhion llland •Newport Beach• 769-1622 • Bullooke Wlt.htr«i Wh ------ ... ~t thosewbo do 'Chase one at 11 Oreion. the 1olderforhis Mike ntofthc nders. will also 1d the discus. nerican record weights. chancellor at 1d also invited :::onnelly, :cord hammer joining the asters St riders uldcontact !cntat crs. member· 670..3376. ~in regjonals, I as inter· * Me , Rllft-8eolt\s t ·30 e1rtme1v lklne end fire Ir ells leslvMr nen's CIUCI For ... CNM al (213) 'RllftSMll loer - les C011e91. FM 11 11111 U lete fM For 26.S·•m ofld 1oer -Beoln1 e Sen lllcente ntwood Flel, d lencilol\ed FM orme11on. Phone rsity's No. 2 :.c. upended Bob cores, to give 1 singles vic- won seven of :feated No. I ;s Gitter. 6-2, 'darcus Chen, of its three ~ Bohan and lo. 3 doubles 1ff HofTman- ms' third win. nk we'd get d Si sci. whose >e Corona dcl their second .. And then ll 1e semifinals Bd napohs 500, t New York ament, from I One-Lap of ross riders in m Anaheim. ~ue Baseball rs from the in I 0 events. New York at Dodgers. New York at Boston m .nnel 2. New York m, in ,, -Ora.Coe Gooden, Mets ·rocked byGian1 From AP dJ1pa&d1e. SAN FRANCISCO -Could 1t be? Dwight Gooden is in a slump. The New York Mets phenomenal riaht·hander lost his second strai&ht de'cision Thursday, 10..2. to the San Francisco Giants. Gooden went mto the game with the National League's best earned run average, 1.2$. It jumped to l. 96 with a nme-hit battering, as he was charged with seven runs, il of them earned. It was Gooden's wor'$t outmg since his rookie year. when he allowed 10 hits • ftedrn 6,,...... 2 f"fflLAD8LPHIA SAN DIEGO GOroulf lloenlcll Ci S.mue42b Sctlrndt lb Hnat lb GWlltor1 rt Oeulton c FOlevu Cerllon P Stone Ph SdlU °" Tellulve o r ..... •rlltM ebrllbl 3 O 1 O Ron ter )b ' I 1 o •Oil Trl\Pltnn 4 0'0 4 0 0 0 GwyM rt J I 0 0 4 I I 1 Garvev lb J I I I ' 0 0 0 McR\111.1 cf 3 l l 2 4 0 I 0 &ocfly c 4 0 1 I 4 0 0 0 Merlini II l 1 o o 3 120 'Wvnn.ct 1000 2 0 1 0 Flennrt 21) l I I 2 0 0 0 0 Hewklns p 2 O o O I 0 0 0 Leffefll p I 0 0 0 0000 » 2 7 2 Tetlh ker•llV .,._ ll ' 1 • "nllltlllk .. 1 001 __ , SM 0.... -Oll nx-6 Game WIM!ne Riii -Fle~y (0 E-Foi.v 2. Gervev OP-Pnlteoe~le I, Sa n Dleeo 1 L09-P?IHedell>llle S, Sen Dle9o 4 28-ltoy11w. G Wlltor1. HR-McRevnolch (7), Flann«v 121. Scllmldl (6), Garvev (8) S&-Folev (11, Gwvnn (5) SF-McRevnolcl1 .......... I~ 11 R Ell 98 SO Cerlton L,2·& s 4 3 l fekutv• 2 2 0 0 SMO.... Hawkll'll W,3·3 6 1 2 I 3 Leffet'11 S.I l O 0 0 0 l Hawkln1 PllCllecl to I O.llW In Ille 7111 Umc>lfet~ome. PvMI, Finl, Weil, S«ond. B Wllllem1. TP\lrd, Rl1>1>1ev T-1 SJ 4 -21.1n Recb6,~4 CINCINNATI ST. LOUfS T JOMI If EOevl1o< RRoon1n P Runnels lb Miiner cf ~rile< rf E1uk'f lb Bell lb Cncpenu 8Dlatc Otlltf 2t> Frencop Sotop V-Cllelt T9'ltl ebrllbl l 1 I 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 2 I 0 4 I 2 I , ' 1 ' 0 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I I 0 0 COiemen If McGHCf Hen 2b JClark lb llanSIYk rf Pndlln 30 Lvllre c Lawin\ or Heatnc OSmllll u Coxp HorlonP Hurole on 8wo•r 11 Wlllle Oil JO 6 SS T9'ltl Seen bV ""*"" arl\bl S I l I S I 2 1 S 0 0 I 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 3 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0000 4 I I 0 1 I I 0 0000 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 lS 4 t 4 ~" 100 010 400-• JI. Leun 003 000 100-• Game Wlnnlno RBI -T Jones (7). E-Colemen OP-St Louis I LO&-<lnclnn•ll 3, St. Louis 9 2B-T Jones, M<:Gff. Cox, 0 SmllP\, Pene1i.1on 3&-McGff, COieman S8-T Jonfl (41 Colemen ( ISi SF-0.stw Clndfww11 Solo W,3·6 R ROOlnson Franco S,1 St.~ ~ H R ER 1111 SO ' , I s 3 3 3 3 l I I 1 I 1 0 0 0 2 Cox L,0-4 62·3 4 6 6 S 3 HOf'1on l·l 0 0 0 0 0 8aroar 2 I 0 0 0 0 R Robinson e>lldled 10 I Daile< 1n 11141 9th WP-cox UmPlfH--+fl>me, Quick, First, Runge, Sec- ond. Pallone, Tlllrd. Enoel T-N3 A-26,791 and ~ven runs to St. Louis on Aug. I, 1984. Elsewhere m the National ~ague: A1tro1 41 Pirate• t: Bob Knepper hut out Pittsburab oo seven bits to become the major leaaue's first ciaht· game winnrr and drove in a run with a single, leadina Houston past the visiting Pirates. Brave1 2, C.bt 0: Joe John$0n patched a five-hiuer over 8V> inmnfS· and Bob Homer broke a scoreleu ue with a double as host Atlanta ex- tended the wmning streak to seven games w11h a victory over Chicago. * ~"" 10, Meta 2 NaW Y~IC. $A.N PRANCISCO MWll1ncf llellmn 2b Hrnncu lb Strwbrv rl Carter c Fotter H Knlon1 lb HJOl\ln U A9Ullere P Dvk11r on Sisk P Gooden P Mflcllell n Tef9h •rlltM aerllbl 4 1 I 0 GledOanct 4 I 0 0 3 0 0 0 WCllirll lb S I 1 0 l 1 I 2 Cllrow11 )I) 5 1 3 O 3 O 0 0 Leonard " S 1 1 I 3 0 0 0 COavlt r1 4 3 4 '" l O O o Bret1lv c S O o o l 0 0 0 RTl\psn 2t> 2 I 0 0 2 o O O Uribe u • 0 1 2 O O O O Krukow p 1 O O I 1000 Ml<ln401>11 1000 0 O O O Minton P O O O O l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 21 2 2 2 r.-.s kenb¥....._ l710 u. ...-.YMI 206 OIO --2 Sen Pr1ne1Ke 010 >40 lb-10 Ga me Wlnnln9 RBI -ICrukow (I) E-Gooden, M Wiison LOB-Sen Fr•ncl1co I 111-C Oe11l1.. Hlt-Hernendei 12) SB-C. Brown (4), Urlllt (1), C. Oa1tl1 ISi. S-Backmen, Krukow. IP H R ER 911 SO New Yorlr Gooo.n L,H 9 7 6 3 Agull•re I I 0 1 ~k ) 2 2 ' Sain ,rencls<• Krull.ow W.6·) 8 2 2 1 0 Minion I 0 O o O Gooden ollcllecl to 4 o.ners 1n tt>e Str1 WP-Aguilera Belk-Aou•le<e UmP1res-Home, HeN ev, First, SletlO, SK ond. Grtvo, Tlllrd, Devis. T-2·S2 A-27 442 * Bravn 2, Cubs 0 CHICAGO ATLANTA Bo11av rf Baller P Fontenot" Mall'1w1W Trllto pr Sndt>rg 2b MOrlnel lD Loci.so< O\INlmlb soei.r on Muonrvcf JDavis c Dunston n Trout P Cev on Oern1er ct Tet•b abrl\111 '0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 O' 0 0 l 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 ) 0 2 0 I 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 S.mc>la rf AT110m1 u Muronv C1 Horner ID Ramlri 3C> Obefkll lo Haroer H Mo<enoH a.neo1c1 c Hut>e>rd 2t> JoJMsn P :rt 0 S 0 Totab kere bv '"'*191 ebrl\bl • ) 0 0 0 .. 0 0 0 2 I I 0 l 0 I I 3 0 0 0 0000 2 0 0 0 I I I 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 I l4 1 ') , Giiie.a.. 000 000 000-0 A .. nt. 000 100 0111 -l Game Wlnnlnv RBI -Horner ISi E-Moreten<t OP-CP\kevo 3. Atlanta 1 LOB-Cllicego S. Atlanta l 2B--ttorner, MorttnO S-Troul. Befledlct SF-Jo Jonnson Ciika .. Trout L.2·2 Beller Fontenot Al&aMa IP H R liR 88 SO 1 2 1·3 1 2·J 0 I I I • I I I 0 0 0 0 0 JO JoM1on W,6·3 • l·J s 0 0 2 4 41~ec11er S,4 2·3 0 0 0 0 0 H8P-HuOOard bY Baller. Umplres-H-Crewl«d, Fir\!, c Wllllams. S«ond. Wen<lef\ledl. TlllfO. T .,. T-2 10 A-1•.6'6 ""' I, CaN1u.l.t •; Rook.Jc 1 racy Jones' be!IC$ooloaded double drove an three runs to cap 1 four-run seventh· 1nnanj rally as visitina Cincmnata sent St. Louis to its 21st lo 1n 28 games. Padre. I , P'11Uet t : Kevan McRernotds. Tim Flannery and St.eve Garvey each homered to power San Diego over visitfoa Philadelphia. In the Amencan League: Mart.Den 5, Tt1en S: Alvin Davis scored one run and drove 1n another as Seattle defeated host Detroit. ID41aa1 5, Brewen 4: Brett Butler;$ misJudged three-run triple to right field capped a four-run Cleveland sixth inning as the visiuna Indians defeated Milwaukee. A,.,.. 4:"',.,etn 0 ~ITTS8UtlG" HOUSTON Almotl If Kllallfa u MOlu on Clmnll o 0.Leonp M9Ullll d MBrownr1 llrHm ID TP-c Morrlsn lb 8alllard ti> R9'1'2D ReuschelP RRevld1 It Teteb alHI\~ • 0 l 0 •Doren 2t> 3010 Puhlrt I 0 0 0 Welke< cf 0 0 0 0 WeNlne 3b 0 0 0 0 G81'ne< lb 4 O 1 0 Crut If • 0 0 0 Hal<Mr " • O O o 8eucf 4 O 1 O GDevl1 lb l 0 0 0 Cltelll01 n 2000 8-llevc 100 0 K-D 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ll 0 7 0 T.-n k#ebV ... elH II bl 4 0 0 0 ) I I 0 0 I 0 0 l 0 I 0 0 I 0 0 l 0 2 I 0000 4 0 I 0 4 0 I 0 l 0 I 0 3 I I 1 4 0 I I JI 4 t 3 "l!tlbwtfl 000 000 000-0 Heus"9ft 000 110 Ob-• Ge~ Wlnn1no Riii -None E-Ooran DP....Pl11111u<oh 2. H0111ton 2 LO&-Plllst>uroll 7. Houston I 2B-8ellev lB-T P..,. ~""°"""' RevscM! L,J·4 Clements OeL- l1eu1"9ft IP 11 R ER H SO 1 0 I • 2 2 I 2 l 0 0 0 I I 2 0 2 I K-W,8·2 9 1 0 0 I Clemenll Piie,..., 10 J O.lltn In Ille t th Umoirei-+4ome. Froemml119, First, Merv1, Second. Oevlcll0<1, Third. Kibler T-2 29 A-4,784 * Roni• s, RllM8M 4 KANSAS CrTY TaXAS Wiison cf Ori• dh McltHl>h Lewtf 8re11 30 White tD Quirk lb Sunc:lbrg c MolleY rt AS.latr u T.,..• ab r I\ bl S I 2 I McDwet cf 4 I 2 3 Werd If I 0 0 0 O&rle!I lb S 0 I 0 tncvotie rf 3 0 0 0 Paclorll. dll • 1 1 1 Herran 2tl ) 0 0 0 8U«l'tle 30 4 O 2 O Wiiier'" u 4 2 2 O Merc.ooc 2 0 0 0 FletcN u lS S 10 S T.-n Swr•llV ....... • ••rh• • 1 0 0 S 0 I I S I I 0 3 I '1 0 ' 1 2 0 l 0 I 2 4 0 I I 0 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 "4 t. KaM111 CltY 011 010 001-S THH 000 000 301-4 Ge~ Wlnnl119 RBI -Wllllt (21 OP-l(en1u Cllv 2 L09-Ken1es Cltv 7, Tuas I. 2B-Sundberg, Orta, Mollev HR-Wllil• (S), Ori• ti) S-A S.i.1ar 2. MercedO Kans.al Cltv DJac:kson W .2·0 Qu•senoe<rv Bleck S.2 Te11as HOUOfl L 2·2 M Wiiiiams HBP-Harrel\ WP-0 Jeckson I~ H R ER 811 SO 62·3 1 ' 1 l·l 0 11·3 2·) DY l ) I I 0 0 l ' I I 0 0 s ~ 2 s 0 0 0 0 Oul'811ber,.. UmolrH-+4ome. PlllUI°', Flr11. McCov, Sec· ond, Stoll, T'1lrd, Wetkt T-2 ., A-11.064 Bh1e Jay1 I, Wl.l&e Sox t : Jimmy Key, backed by Ernie Whm'a ieCOnd e&rttr arand slam. pitched a one-- hatter fo r his first m1.1or-lcque shutout, leadma visitina Toronto overCh1caao. Royala 11 Rusen •: In Arhng10n. Jorae Orta knocked in three runs with a solo homer and a two-run double.. and Frank White also homered as Kansas City cd.aed Texas. Y ... ttt '· A'• J: At Yankee Stadium. Dan Pasqua's second bomr run and third an two games tied the score leadii:iJoffthe ninth annang, and Mike Pag.h arulo's 400-fool single over a drawn-in outfield LO the 11 lh gave New York the victory over Oakland. * ..,_Jan S, WNte s.x o TORONTO CHICAGO Gercla 21> MoiaOVcf UPsllaw ID JOflnsn dfl 8arfleld rt LMGllH Mu11M1lb lor9 311 Wnlltc Fe<nndl u Tet9h .. , .... • 0, 0 s 0 1 0 • 0 I 0 3 l ' 0 • I 2 0 4 I 0 0 I I 0 0 I 0 0 0 3 I 1 4 4 0 0 0 TollHn lb Hulell 2t> kine• rt ~cf Fisk c Slllnner c GWellv ID Klmedfl 88on1Aa If HlcNitl cf Gulllen u Helrsln rt ll St 4 T.._ SC... bV"""""' •rlllll • o·o o • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 )000 1 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 , 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 • ti. T.,.... 010 -•-S Qiu.. -... --· Gema Wlnnlno RBI -None E-Fl1k OP-Clllca11<> I LOB-Toronto 6, Chic.ego S. 28-Whlll HR-Wlllll (4), SB-Garcia C4I T.,.... Kev W,l·l CMcffa Doi'°" L,1 4 ci.n. o ......... J ames ·~ " ••••• so t ) 2·J 1 3 l·l 0 1 I I I g 0 l • S 4 • I 0 0 I 2 H9P-ee1ne\ Dv Kev 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP-OolM>n PB-Fisk UmolrM-t-lome, Brlnk~n. Fir11, K•ilaf', Second, COOMv, Tlllrd, Pale<mo. T-2 ol6 A-11,60S. Indians s,"\r...n • CLEVELAND MILWAUKEE Butie<cf Francou Carter tf Tllrntn dll Table< lD Jecoov lb CCa lllM rf Nixon II Btrnird 2t> Allenson c Tetah ebrllbl Ml r l\~ 4 0 l l Reedv If S O O O S 11 I CMoorec SO? I SOIO C-dll Sl20 2 I 0 0 Mennno or 0 0 0 0 4 I I 0 Sdlrodr lb • 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 Yount or 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 Sveum 30 4 I 1 0 I 0 0 0 Ganlnr 21> S 0 0 1 )110 Oeerrf 21 1 0 4 I 0 0 H181\k:!ref 1 0 0 0 JCetUM u J I 2 2 lS S S 4 Tehlh lS 4 10 4 ScenbV ...... Otlltllllnd 001 004 ooo-s MlwellllM 010 001 100-4 Game Winning R8t -Buller (J). E-J Caslllto 2, Allanson. Sveum LOB-Cleveland 7, MllwaukM II 28-Tebler. Sveum 3B-Buller HR-Franco (4). S8-Sveum tll, Frenco Ill. Bulle< (10) S-Hovs.e!IOld« Ot¥t6end HHtonW,2·) Yell 8elle\S 4 Mllwautr .. H•OuefaL.S·4 Claer WP-Yell ·~ 11 ••••• so Sl·l s 2-l 1 1?·) 4 l l 3 ) I I 2 0 0 0 1 I • 1 S S I • 0 0 l 7 l , Umolrtt-Home. 8-rnell, Firll, Bremloen. S«Of\d, Hlrlhtleck, Tlllfd, Roe T-3-Gl A-11,'44 * Yllllll-. ~A's J OAKLAND .... YORK P'Milftl Jtl C>+41n 2V C.nMCort l(Mf'\11 Oii L.en1lrd lb Dulakr II Petws" Griffin I\ .. Ill•< Jev.., ct ., ..... S I I 0 s l ) 0 ' I 1 l • 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 """°'"Cf Rnclll>ll 21> Mlnol'f l• P-11 Wlnfleld rt EeMlrdh WYM98r c "91rllkllb w..cnm '' ........ "" FlicNln u Gl'~v on llefre n >t J 7) T..- k ere bV ....... ~... 100 001 oc ..... YMI t it 1 .. 01 Ont °"' wl'len w1M•l\ll run Kored Cieme w1nn1119 ltlll -Peet•81ulo 12 E-P•g11erul0 F1sc1111n OP-<>ellle Yor~ I LO&--Oelll•ncl '· New 28-Jevier Eeller Wlnflelcl. Hlt-f>aMI Wlnfi.id tSl Cen..co 113) Sll-tt ~· (J I) SF-Ce n1eco tr H R aa Oeklal'ld Anc:luter 6 Oflllve•o' l 1·3 J HOwetl L 0 l 2·3 ,.._Yen Slllrlev t 1 J ) Rlglle11. W ) I 1 0 0 0 HBP-1(1ngman Dv ~,......, UmP,,et-Home Re•ttv. Flr11 c- McCle'tencl T111rd 0ent.1119ef A-20,~ fle\vport· M . . -.. · KEEP IT WET K•w•eakl Model J8300 Sele s1795 REG . PRICE 52099 NO DOWN FINANCING c Open Sun. 1'1-5 VISA · MC 1880 Newport Boule NEW From J.Mi I SUBISI If The Very Latest in Compact f • 100 Wott1 RMS • 10 Bond Grophic Equalizer • 7 AM-FM Pres&ts on Tuner • Dual Cossette Oe<k with High Speed Dubbing. Continuous Playback and Dolby c • Auto Return T urntoble • 12" 3-Woy Speakers s59900 ... or for your convenience •25.00 per month * ASK ABOUT OUR LOW PRICE GUARANTEE ASSEMBLY ANO DELIVERY AVAILABLE BY APPOINTMENT EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS AT YOUR CONVENIENCE .. .or for your convenience 125.00 per month * ASK ABOUT OUR LOW PRICE GUARANTEE DP-40 Aemotet Compact 5-Disc, Avto1 Pr<>Qromm'" Random Ace Optica l lo~ • 2 Repem Iv ployboclo 6 LARGEST SELECTION OF J...MITSUBISfl• P i°& IN THE SOUTH COAST AREA AV AILAJ J...fJnstllSlrQuallty at an Affordable Price wtreleU ".mot• • I O. Keyboof d T unlr>Q & Memory· Sc on T 11""'9 Up/Down WIRSL•H "EMOTI: • Up/Do"""' Scan Tun.no • ,._On/Ott • TV/Video • "°Y. lleco<d, Stop, lleww>d. Fcnt,fOtWOfd • '°'1w/Stt" • s.-d-dl (~d/lt .... nel HS-328UR Video C••Htte Recorder s37900 HCl Speed·seorch (SP /EP) • Still-frome (SP-EP) VHS. rlJl1C1 HO system • Automatic 1..I.1!2J front·lood mechonism. TUNING: 105-chonnel, coble- compatible • Voltog• syntf'testzer, scan up/down to 16 pres.ts • 12-funcnon Wireless Remote FEATURES: 8-EYeflt, 2-Weeit PrOQrommobtlity • bponded One-Touch R0<ordin9 • Electronic digital counter /pr0Qrommin9 ditploy ... or for your convenience • Counter Memory • Pktvre '25 00 h Control • Automatic Rewind • • per mont * Couette~ded/Runnin9 • Oud.·V',.w T untt19 • Pow.r On/Ott • llolvtM Up/Down Mvt. • S....0/SAP • oo.r,,..., s1999oo ... or for your convenience •59eoo per month * ASK ABOUT OUR LOW DELIVERY A\MILABLE ASK ABOUT OUR LOW PRICE GUARANTEE Indicator • PRICE GUARANTEE ~m111~~~~u BY APPOINTMENT EVENING ANO WEEKENDS AT YOUR CONVENIENCE OUR PLEDGE TO YOU-NO COMPROMISE ON QUALITY, SERVI< •oN APPROVED CREDIT LID ~ ~E TV·AUDID 3930 South Brlatol, San, ta Ana 92704 (NOttTHWE•T cOM1" °' ••TOL a 1UNA.owe.--enwuN ucONC11t1Z2A AHO TME aOU>EN 11 I U•" •no el u C"•C~llO et K• . ,, .... , • ' \ < Beltt""v't' 01 s. fl. '' ' • rnc; r , . •1·4 .,.. • 0 ..... ...~, ., u 6 s 110 $ • vo .. ' ~· At ~-·a d i \• '• .. ~· .. , ....... 10Q ' -... ,,. •tr,nt ns,,e, l '• \ "' '10 ... .1nct.v's G•m•~ Lou 11 .s .,,,lb ( ~'"" It' ,.,,,..,_ ' ·' ,. r. .. \ 'I .. L ,, ' ft I ~ LIAOUE LIAOIR5 Amertcaft LM 9U't (TllrWlfl Tt\WMllV'\ GMTW\) BA TTtNG 17' at ~"l-B090\ 8o•IOn 31? _,, Milw•u""· )11 P\Kktll MIN\e\OI• oS. 0 8t1t11 ftu• "6 Pfll•t1p\ O.\i.nO '31 ltUNS-R H..,d<tfwn. Ntw YO<\ l7 •<'-•" 11111nnn ote J~ J)tl11t1P\ o.i.i.nc :M • .,._, ""991•, 111 0 Brien. Texu. )1 Riii -<:tn•tco o e .. land )'I JtVMf, ~ 11 LA Perrtlh Te~•• l1 llllurr•v Belttmort , 111\tlllnOIY Ntw Vot ~ )() Puc kt II Minne ,,. )() HITS Pucl\ttt Ml1111 .. o•• •2 111\tlllr>QIY, ,.,. Yor-.. SS ecx111\ eo,1on ~ Je~. ,_~ 541 Mo•tov Toronto. ~ 00U8LES-lllltlllngly Ntw Yor\ 16. t10111n. 1\lon lS Tet>ltr Clt•elend. !~ Ouc\ntf'. 1\ll)n t), Dewnlne, An991•. IJ1 Ow Even•, •••on IJ lllt~Ll5 6errtlf Botton ) Flttch«, f'IH ) Lew M.onH\ C11v l TOllHOf'I, ilce110 l 19 ore 11ec w11n 2 HOME RUNS -Jtvntf', Al\tltl\, IS, C afl•IKO 1k1en<1 13 PuC\111 Mtnnuot• J Geelh lnn•tota ll 8arlitlO Toronto 9 Oa E •ant tlrOll 9 STOLEN 8ASES A Hend•non New Yor\, CenQt10t 1 Ct11<11110 21 MOHO• Tornnto 12 1111111> Be llmort 11 !lull•• (lt••lend 10 "'"•"' l or onto 10 PITCHING (4 decltion\) .Clement llo"on p 191, Muon r e,H. 4•0 l 00 Haat '"''•no I· I 1 ~ Terre ' Oerro11 s t 4 ?t, JOO<•., B•u•rnort 4· t l O Ne •on Cr.1ui110. I llOO 2 .0 R .. muuen New Yorio. ' I • 14 SfRlk EOUf S Hurl! 60\1011 JI Ctem~• .,,, I.) rl•11u•ra M•lwdlulo.H JO ~l!O •"-'"''° ~ Win, A,,...,, Sl ~AVE.\ Aate Be ltmort 10 R1gr.e11 New ~·· 10 M .otrt, A"9111l, 7; JafT'f\ ( '''""'' 1 "rr • "'" • tn 6 Nattonal LHVUt I T"roull!fl Ttwru1av•1 Game1 I 8 ... TTINC. 178 dll Oaf\l-Cwv11n \•" 0·•110, .~ Ro Pllf\bur11" l'>O Br ><>•' M<>"" .,.,, to O~r\lft """ I\ 136 9,, "" Sen '"' '''0 llJ RUNS-W Clark Sa" Fra11c11eo 18 (,1od· n ~on Frencl\co, 11 G wvnn Sal' Olltilv 27, tlntl 1\1\ol'trfdll 26 M11r n11,.df1 N•w Vo••. 2S, .. rwl. OodMn. u, MurClh\f 41.an10, 2) R81-8roolo.\ MO'l lrt81 }) MarUIAI, odtltf\, l31 Hoi M r Allellla )() SOH•llOI, 1il11delPhla ?9 L ll'Ol'lar ll San r ( anCl\ttr 21 HITS --Gwvnn \an 011•110 ,, Ra1nll'\ Mon· re • 48 i;to• P1ll\bu•\lh ~8 B•<><>•• Montreal lP011M O ~en rr .. ntl\u ~o Sal, Ooootn, OOUIH E' H<h U p,.,l&Oflp1>1 0 13 •rf\&nOfl Nf'l'w Voo. I] Ro rl4U Monrrt~I 11 f&n"l P '''l\"''"'' t t R Revnot,u P,u,bu,JJn S•,,aO.rlJ t ,,,, tttJ· 11 TA tPL I'\ ( Ol~me'> Sr l i.lu•• ' M<J't'l10 Mtot• • R• r f'\ Mo..,,, • ., 4 8 r..x1'-. \. M lfl ffl l I art 1 .. o w '" 2 HO'll\E RUN:.-MenNll, DOdotf"• II; oo• \ Monlree1 10 o .... ,. " Mor•rt-~ • 1t\I'• ~ Se,, 0 tttJ• 8 M •'l""v At,,,..,, I ''"t' ( '"'•" ., • s I )l J N l\•SE. Ounon. Oodot-f\ "' I,.~. '11\0"" ... le Co••"'"' S• u' IS 1ra1 H()"''"" I] Ov .. •lr& l'aw Vori. Pl urNG ~ CH"C. \10.,\) Oa' .,~ Nttw 'f .,"" ) l 1 0·~ Nr" Vor' ~ o• F1" •8 n0f'I •w ~ .. 4 Ir KoePPer Ho,,\10'1 1-1 ) •{ Cll\ .an I dnCllCO • I I 66 s r11 • E OIJ f ~ ~c " H' \!Or> 11 ,..,.,., .. a, Ooelotn •1, Wel<tl, Doaotn. 411 en .. , wt •on Sl I S "'''" A 11~n111 ~I SA ' " O Sn 11 H"ust 11 10 C.O\\.SJI' '.'l<tn tQO ' Qur '°" Mon•re&• ! ~ ""''0 C ''"" 11 7 Ou o N~w Y<>rk 6 C01999 NCAA WEST REGIONA LS ta! LOI AllMMl l Fin l Rtuncl Sc0t•• Ho~ b UCl.A l UC • ''" Baro11t" \ l c1vo11t Y.tt,., -W:Hif'll .,.,. COMMUNITY COLLEGE Sta~ rou~mem TO<leY'l Gamt1 I•' Blair F,..o, L-B ... ch J ''" "'"''~' '10 I '' \o" 0•!'110 "A ' ( , "'' "' "'" C.onvon, )~ S v. ... o '~' "'"' 11 H "•<> uS~ecr I ar Lonv llte ell Slit It I 0 • lit ,,. ,. \""'•&~Ci 10 8 ./\ M PU ed 11 1 flil'tn 'l \""'\t ~" Mf"'fC.f'd tVS .. f .. , 'I.&'~ 'l C ·~; M•se ,. Satvre1av·1 Geme\ lei Blair F ... d l 0 ~ Qan.i,. ~ant1ev "Af'rC:t-'1 """''""'f!f ~" M•'•' ~" ..J "'\JO "-\it-\a ""'"""' .' r r. <-•nvori' 8utr• w.,,nt·r "'~ ~er• .,. ong 8e•c,, w 1nl\t-r (at L-BM<" Sfaltl Cotn•""'' Bullt IO\tr "' Seer,.,.,.,., to r IO\f'r 'un oroc_.,, g.ime Sun<laV'l c;ame1 lat Bla ir Fleldl 1t" J'l.(H\ orac--.t ' \iil4 .. "' f"t IY """' \ tH at i-.111 VOt"l"I• Mon<laY'\ (;•m•l lat lllalr Fl•d) C' ' C. o rno•uni t\1t1 VM ,., ""• 1HtS "",...'" "' """ .,. t"S\ar ... NBA PLAYOFFS CtnmDlonshlp serlu lllt\I of-Sev..,l HOllSTON VS BOSTON I Al ~mn on Chenntl 11 "'0'>06 •ou,•o 41 Bo\I Tnur\tJ'h' UOuS' ,,, 41 8 1\' ~ l '" Su"'3" J~"'r I 8o\'O 61 H \IQ" /JO .... T "'""' ,IMl,.f' J Bo\IOn 41• ••.-..w\•nl"! 6-P f1"'! f" •\QAy Jur" 80,IQr 41 llOo;\IQn 6 'Tl ' ,.r "''"' ~oi...: dov Ju •• .,., \IUn,.1 e_,,,a, \()!\., fl.f tr\\,•rv :./11'1~ •\ 1•v Ji..t" i•ou\•on "' 6 \1~· 6 ~ I ~C f'\\#lf r A.1 '"r\ JJU" I ' •• OHO SH fh,hlnQ NEWPORT LANDING 7 , ~ 1 ·i. JO ""' .J 4 M \\I ~ t:M\~ I/ ,\'\ t J•o1n ~ , Iii,. ,.. DAVEY'\ LOCl'EA 1,.ewoon l\•.,Hhl 9 11l•n • 1 1 r 11 , .11,. '"' , ent \ \ftl"I t '-' • • • .. ,, ,..,..l•' f .... .j 1ltl ' rt\ II ''"n •n 1h M 1cilftrr ~ ' ,. )' ... \• ,_ ..... O•AH<'.E SAN Oil(;() lld SAHT A 8 AIUI AR A ~ ..... VENTURA "la t • • '\.11tnt1' P&ylb "~ KEAN AiOf" _.. l:• •• c:iar ( ,,.... r ., ... '"' •.-r. ... ,, Q,y.f c.;, .. ,.,., •• '"" o,, ,. .,, •' .... J\9 Jn~H\\Of'\t1,, • 8r~c1v., t11 J; "''' • .. ~ oe Yt>1J"CI <.r....-., ,.rnc .. r,...1nt ,r, .,., l 'O°""f' PQ\O rr_.f!.._ t.,nu1f'1 (re~,_ f J a.o ~ """ 1na~• 'u'" "'O''h Ar tt \6'""'" -,~ .. ' '" r .. 1"' 'SfOC>49 -.r ft\ ..,,._, '• fl .. , Al.PINE ( ,, '"' II ''" -ei• •~rJ ""~'' '') M•rll fit"dlf' C'~lil rt PIUt$1'11 I•''• .. 11 s ••• , ,, .... INYO 611••· tie'"• f11y r "" • •r"' ~p Ctfllf"Jo ~W•f ,.,. th11• \(11:,ln AM(1 ,,..., .... Gtt>•on r ,..,., ",1•P<tn<I•""' C•tt-• l v•• • CrH• Owen• II .,_, l~~w r.~,.m..-• "' 11•011'" oownt1tf'em 10 S1tw"'1 L.••• •cmtrdt C•Hlo. T11b«•• (t.... T .. , .. ,,,.,,11 ., .. full• {•ff., MONO • 8r 00fl)O'' P~vo r 8u<.•tv• .. (Of'VI<. er... (Ofty ,, L•lo.• 0•••1"'•"' t k Gtao Crff\ G1e111 l •~• Gt~ (•H' La•t Ju,,. Lallt, LH Vll••"O Cr"'• L•ll,. 1 lo.ti l•~• l 1111• W •er lt••tr Lundv L"' 1rnmo111 C•H•, Mc(#" Cr..,.. ""'" Cr- '"' lt1v., ll t nlon (ron 1ng •nd 8111 ~or n1n1 •Cr_.. Pl•uent Vll•ltv Rewrvo•r Ahtne •• ""°'"'°" C r•t1< l'u\ll CrHll ltoc~ ,.. (Pertd'" Cemo to ,..,,,.,., P'ttt Tom J .ca uD\lrttm lo ltOt'll CrHI! Lt••> .,~win tk Sttv•r L•l11 SwtwlHtf CrH• Tw•ll LtllH '10111>ort lv1>0.r •no towt r l Vlfo,nl11 ,,._. •••r ltlvtr 1Cr.rit "''•' C11moo~oond 10 town ot lllH' l •••'" M•11M "'' Camooro""CI 1., "'"' D•lllu,, Men's golf results Memet1ll Twmetnent <at ow., Ollie) Oan Haffoor\On >4·31-tS J•Cll Ntc"laul ll-~ Peter Jecocuen ll·l>-66 0ouo TtweH ll·~ Lannv Wt4kln\ ll·:U-.7 ,.., McGowan 33 34-67 Mac O'Greov 36 31--61 Mark O'MHre 3• Jf-U Tom Purller H ~ JoM Mellalftv 32·~ H•I SUiton JS J>--61 C .. rtftCt ROH 36 ll-49 Phll B1ec1<mar 33·36-69 Gtoroe Burns lS J.--69 Larry Mize 3• · Js-69 Lennie Cl•men1, 33·36-49 Oo,._.POOlt v 34 lS-69 llruct Llt ll .. t 3t ·33-69 Lou Grah6m JS·lS-10 Oave Berr 37 lJ-10 Jav HHt 37 ll-10 Rev FIOvd 36 Jt-70 Tom Slaclo.mann l6 ~70 Boo Twev 37 ll-70 Johnnv M11141t lS 3S-70 S<o11 s1mo1on lS·lS-70 c.11 Motgen 36 34-70 Ken GrN n 3S U -70 Mike Sulhven 37 ~11 Larry NtllOfl 3'·33-71 FullY Z~ltr )7 )4-71 B1" GleslO<I J7 J<l-7 t 81H Roo•n lS 36-71 JlmSlmont Ciiio lltcll koll~" Joey SlllOtlar RO@tf'MattOI• D A Wtlbrlno C•tvln PM•• Pavne Sl4twart Kennv Knoll '"'I',._, .. Da vi\ Lovt tll Oen Pohl 8 rt lf Uoper Oavlo rrou Ptltr St nlo• Mlkt Smltn • fd F1or1 !loo Lonr Ron Streclo. Pt ul A1ln11er JodltMu<ld Hul)tf'I GrNn !lob MurPhv Jtck A..,ntr Andy Nc><lh Andy 6ffn Cra ig Sltdlt• Tomllvrum Barrv Jaec~"' Oavld EdwarO\ OenFonmen C.reo Norman Mlkt Hvll>tll Ml\f Rt1CI Tonv Sill\ )7 34-71 34·)7-71 36·3S-71 ll·lJ-11 lS·)6.-11 u -11-n 34-36-n 36·36-n M·~n 35·31-n :u-36-n 39"»-n 36·36-n 36-u-n 36-u-n »·34-n 37-n -n Jt-~n 36-36-11 34·31-n 36·36-n 33·3t-n J•·Je-n 34 ll~n 11·Js-n 34·3'-7? lS·37-72 JS-37-72 )6·37-13 JS·Jt-13 lS·38-n 36·>7-13 Hlt-n J9·lA--1l lS·Ja 7) Jiii'\ T norri. Oavlcl Granam Garv Koc" Merk McCumoer Tim~"'°'°" Jotln COOk Mauv Kur•mo•o FultonAtttm Lerry ltlnktr Oannv 6dwere11 KtUl'I FtrQut Fre<1 C0<.tolu H•tt trwln Mark L\oe Tom Kitt Wlllle WOOd Jim COll>trt Mark Wleoe Otnl\ W'"°" WOOCIV Blackl>Urn Nie., Price Bobbv Wadkln1 Curtl1 Str•llllt Ro«>«to a. Vk en10 Merk HIVtl Ronn1e B1ao Lon Hlnt11t Ou1e~e Buddv Gardntt Olc1< 1111t11 l om Wtll kOC>f !lob Etl•wOOd SttVt Pete 8111 Krelltrt )1 36-13 37 36 73 lt lS-73 37 llo-7l 41 U--74 :U·ll-74 37 37-74 37·31-74 3'·36-74 3' lS-74 le·:U.-7• 36·3t-1S lH0-75 37·39-75 39·36-1S 37 3t-1S tO·lS-lS 3'·36-7S 3S·40-1S »·ll-7' ll·lt-7• )7 ,,_,. 41•3S-I• 37 .... 71 )8 )9-17 35·4,_17 •I 31-1• .O-lt-1• •t·lt-19 tO 40-I() 3'4~ 4() 4o-tO '1·41>-tl '4·31-t.4 Women 's golf results L~OA *6rnament (at Ctrftllle, N.Y.) Nlnt FO<.t'I Btln Sotomon 8e1h Oenltt l? 35'-67 Val S1o.lnner 34 3'-70 Ok·HH IC.u 35·3S-70 Sl'!trrln Smvtrs lS·lS-70 Pat Br•cttev 3o·3A--70 ~Uce Rlllma n 36 3<1-70 Clndv Rarlcl< JA 37-11 Pe111 Rlu o :J.4·37-71 S.llv Quinlan 3S·l6-71 Cl'lrl1 JOMlon 36·JS-71 Ptnnv Hammel lS·3'-71 Lynn Adam' 36•3S-1t Judv 0 1cklnton 3S·l6-7 t Stlerri furntr )4·31-11 Denise Streolg 3S·l6-7 t M Flouere•·Do111 Ja ne Gt<IOH Nancv Ltdb4tller Clndv 1111tc1o.ev lltckv PH'5on Berl>ar e Berrow At1ullo Hlk•g• C•lhv MorH Terrv·Jo Mlltf'l Gell LH Hirata Merv Owver Debolt Me1s1tr11n Jecll.le 8trf\Ch Ke v Kennecv Otbblt HeU 36·38-14 39 ·3S.-74 3S 39-74 31-36--74 31·37-H 36·38-74 39-3S.-7C 36·3&-74 38·36-7' 31·31-14 37·37-74 36·38-74 36·3'--75 31·37-15 38·31-7S 31·38-7S 3S·~7S 36-)9-75 37 38-7S 37·38-15 37·3&-75 40-3.S.-7 s l6-l'>--1S 31·38-15 31·37-IS 36·3'--TS 31·37-7S 41·3S-16 37·3'>--76 37·3'--76 37-)9-16 le·l&-76 31·31-76 36·'°"""76 17·39-76 37-39-76 36-~76 39·37-76 36 .... ,. Pellv Sllffr.en Jun'"''''' CathvMenl Jl ] 16 36·~76 38 38-76 Dianne Oellev 38·)9-77 Calhv Revnolds ..0-37-17 M Soenctr Devlin 31·~11 Alexandre Reinhardt 36·41-77 C Montgomery 39·lt-11 AIHton Flnnev 16·41-77 Merci 801erlh 39·31~77 Catr.v Jonn11on 38·39-17 Mellua Whitmire l9·lt-11 Nancv Scren1on 38 39-11 Ce11iv Krelltrt 31·40-11 Krtlll Amnoton 36·• 1-17 LenoreMuraoll.e 36·•t-77 Sulle McAlll\ter 41 3'.-77 Jant l COiet JS·3'-71 Jent Crelltt 36·36-72 Lauri Pettrson JS·J7-n Barb Buni.ow\l\\o JS·l7-72 Avello Oumo10 3S·J1-71 JoAnneCarner 36·3'-71 Mluie Ber1eo111 ll-3t-n Oelt fo~•·no l7·3S-72 Sl llY Lllllt Am• Benz 1<.erln Mundlnoer CerOlvn Hiit Da wn Cot Ot o IUcherd Karen Ptrmeitt Clndv F•rro Sandre Sou11cn l7·41-78 Morgaret Waro l8 ._.,, Berbora Penoergell 37 0 -18 B•llv Barrett 39·39-18 11111n 1e McGeor~ 37 • 1-71 Laura Hurtt>ol 36 •2 71 Mlndv Moore 4 I 31-19 Kathv Po111twt11 ll 3A--n Su1le Beroov lS 37-n Mvrt 61ec\wtldt• Pennv Pull Marv Muroriv 39 ~79 LuLono Aeoitr 41 ll-19 Shelltv Hamlin lS·J7-n Laurie Rlntie;-31 JS-17 Rot>ln Wallon 36·3'.-12 Kalhrvn Young 37 3S-72 Sneron Berrett 37 JS-72 M 8 Zlmmermen 36·36-72 Ju nnelle Konlhee1 36 30-71 Lauren Howe 36·36-12 Ktm Shipma n Loretta Aldertle Sut F0014tman SuH n Tonio.In P•I Mevers COllttn Walke< Jtrllvn Bfll1 Lindt HUnl 0 Howe Cht nctltor l9 40-19 Kathv Beller 39 41-tO 111\al"lllO NIU~ 44·36-tO Marv Ot Long •2·lf-IO ClndV Figg t0·40-t0 J041n Oefk 36· ......0 Connie (1111\em• 41 39-tO Joen Jovct t0·41--t1 HH lll., Ferr 36 3'-72 Oee6te Luker )7 3'.-73 Sntrrt S1tlnnautr Pam Allen Nencv Tomlcn 4'·39-11 Lvnn Connellv ll·fl--tl MIUI Edoe 35-31-73 C.nov Hill 36·37-73 1.eAnn Ceu eoev ll·JS-13 Oebole Aui11n 37 36-13 S1ilan Seneerl 38· 3S-73 Sue Ertl 3S·31-73 V1Cll.I Teoor 37 36-73 Carolln11 C.owan 36·37-73 Lori Ge rDac1 l9·3S-14 Jo AM We•nam 3'·36-7• Kelhy Hitt! JS 39-14 ~~ -· Nancy Ruoln e lt lne Cro\bV N W"llt·B<ewer Vicki Fergon Lori Broe" M J Smlltl Snlrlev F urtono Sen4re Palmer HeetnerOrew Janel Anc.r,on 1<.rl1 Monaghan lnctV soo SUNDAY'S STARTI NG FIELD O• ••' nometown, c.or numoer cha\SI\ ""o•nt' and IOI.Ir 1ap overage Quot t.ca1oon \Off'<I ,n m1 ~' oer nour <R rookie ROW t I Rl(1o. Meart Bake< ,11e•d No 4 111\ercPI Co\wortn. 216128 1 Oannv Sulll•on LO\Jtlv11i. No (O\wOrll'I 21S 317 Maren l M1chetl Anorelll Ne1er1Plh Pa No 11 Merch·Co,worlh, 2 t• S2' ROW 2 • 8obov Renel Ouo1111 On10 NO 3 March COlWOrtl'\ 213 sso S Al Unt•r AIOuoueroue No 11 Pen,ke Cl'levro••• 212 29S 6 ~e• n Cogan Qedondo Bt<'Cf\ No Merci'\ (O\WOrltl 111 917 ROW l 1 Tom Sneva , PoradlH Valle• Ar11 , No 33. March Co1worth 21 t 818 8 Aoo.rlo Guerrero Colombia No 111\arc.h Colwor lh, 11 I S76 9 "'' Un\er J r AlbuQutrQuf' No 30 Lole (Ol"'Orlh 211 !>lJ ROW 4 10 Eo P1mm Ouo11n On10 No 66 Mercn Co1worlh 110 914 II EmertonFllllPeldl BrtUll Nn 40 Marth Co1worm 110 231 12 Jonnnv Rutl>erlord. Fc><t Worir. No ?I Mercn·Co1w0<th '10 no ROW S I) II Aendv Lanltf' Oev1e F111 No 11 Merch·Cotwortn 209 91M 14 Pencno C•rter Brown,burg 1no No IS LOla Cot .... orth, 209 6JS IS It· Jacque\ Villeneuve Can.ta• No 11 Merch·Co•wc><lh 109 397 ROW 6 16 Oenn• Ongal\ Senta AM N<> 2) Mercn· Buie II. 209 I SI 17 JOHle Gerla MUICO No SS Merch• Colwortn 20I 939 11 Tonv Bett•nhausen tna1aneoollt No 16 March·CO\..,Orlh 20l 9ll ltOW 1 19 Arie LuvenOvk Holland No 61 Loia C:a .. ortn 207 81 l 20 Otnnts Firt1lone Pomona. No 36 l ol& Cotworlll, 207 471 36·•0-76 37·39-16 40-36-76 3'·38-76 37·39-16 31·39-76 39·37-76 37·39-76 39·31-76 J041nne Ptcllto 40 • 1--t I SuH n Smith •1·39--tl Petlv HllYel '3·39-t? Sit Seman '3·._83 Sulle Pegtr •<>-43-83 BKl<Y La"on 41·4i-tJ e·Merltne Brocw• l l ·•s.-tl e-Pelll Butcher 4S·40-8S StePl>eni• Farwrg '3 0 -8S Pe1111 Joraon •2· 4S.-87 e-denole~ amettur 21 GeoH 8raonem Auttral«l NO a LOI" COhllOrlh 101 081 ROW I 21 A J Fovl Houtlon No I• Mercn Co\wOrlh 1 I) 717 2l Reu Bo.le· Bru ll No 12 LOI• Cot worrn. 2 ll 101 1• Sco11 Brovton Coiowa•tr Moen No II ~orch 8u1Clo. 70ll 019 ROW t ~~ R·Ph1 KrutG•~ lndttne004'J No O 198S Morcn-Co,wor1h. 101 948 76 '"'P Genou1 P•lftburo" No S9 Marc11 (O\WO•lh 207 S90 11 Jom Cra..ioro !.<0111Ml Nu )t Maren Bu1Clt. 108 911 ROW 10 21 Rich Vogler lndlanePOh,, No 6 Moren Co\wort'1 70ll 0'9 ?9 Jonnnv Pa r\onl Brownttiorg Ind No 9S Marc1>·Co1wonh 101 '94 lO C.orv 6ettenhau•en Monrov1e Ind No 2• Marc.,·Cotworltl, 209 7S6 ROW 11 11 •-Mario A.norelli Naze•etn Pe Nil J LOia ·COiWOrlh, 212 300 12 George Snfoer Balo.er '"''d No e• Marcn·Co\worlh, 209 02S lJ R·Rooerto Moreno Braz11 No 9 Lola Co1worth, 209 '69 Average lor 33 ouellllen -A.cord 710 l'tf mPtl (evtrage 111 19tlS -2ot 1381 a-Andret11 oua1lfle<1111111 Dul ca r demegfd 1n \uD•eouen1 U lllh In precllce and oec~uP wo•lllulM tor race NHL P LAYOFFS Stlt,,..Y Cup ftnefi ( Bes I tf MVeft I CAI.GARY VS. MONTIUoAL Ct lOerv S, Montrtel , Montreal 3. Catu11 rv , (Oii Monlrtt l S. Catgarv J Tnur$dev ' 1C0<-Montret l t eloerv 0 (Montrt•I IHOI ~·In, 3· 11 Salurdev-MontrH I al C•lgerv Mondev--<:etoarv a t Montrttl (II necener vi Weontsoav-Montreel a t Celoerv l•f neceuervl ~ • • • " . S0"8ALL """ MMet CtP •·A "LAYO"'I Ptunflllll V...., 1. II OetNt O 'ounfe ln Vellev 000 100 0-2 3 t ~ t Doraoo 000 000 o-o 1 1 Tt vlOf •nd Allltr91, 8 ra4eeh tnd GtombOlll• W-Tevlor. 11 l L-Brtda<ll, 21•6 Cl' 4·A SCOttH C Ou.rltrllntl•) Founl•ln ll•lleY 2, e1 OoraCIO 0 Cerrlto' t, ltlontlll o Downey f, E41'0ft 2 SI JOltClfl'l 0, Gehr O (11 1nn1no,, 08"'41 to~ resumed toelev) TENNIS Hltb ldlocll C" 4· A jtLA YOl"f'S • Mlt*!itt 11, UlllWnlfY s ~· Holtmann tUl toll 10 Fi11oatr1e i.., 5·7 B•e• ' • de! Longtev ' l Pfncllel CU> IOSI ,.,, •-6 1 o Reo IUI to\! 4·6. 1·•. won. 6-3 OtutlMl H"I Cor1.erv IUI IO\I 10 Hoffmon·C.llter, 3·o, Po Cl'len I 6 S Hen1t n·M HenHn, 3·6, Klzer- F'1"1ev IUI won, 6-2, 7-5, tost 3·6 Bo'1en·LePPln 1 U I won 7 S '°'' l·6, 0-6 Cll' SCOltES (Semlflnah l 4·A Seni11 Saroara 14, 6evtrlv Hill• 4 11111ra1111e 13 Unlvtrtltv S J·A Ce lD•"'' 11 Ceotllrano V&lltv Oene H111, •• Los Alt mllO• • 2·A Lovole u Veltncie 4 11\0tO 11 Olomond Bar 7 SWIMMING ~ of Qernpklns (et Mhl141n Vlele) MEN llOO fr-1 Oen Jore>enHn rSan Oleo<>) e 09 91 1 Artnur Wo.oa t tMlu lon Vlt iol, a 10 81 3 Jonn w11c11e1 !Clncinnelll, I 11 97 4 Sl\104!0 ()gate (Santo Ctaral 8 2143, S Lei\ Jc><~Hn !>en Oleoo> ! 2• •S WOMEN eoo •r-1 Oebble Beoul'IOtt IMlulon v1e101 8 '3 36. 2 Jen•• Evens (Fullerton) • 4." J Merv T M«tllt\tf (LOUISYlile) • s I •S, 4 L•te Gllle\Plt llnou11rv Hllll) I S3 45, S Stecv ~r.uot I lndullrv Hill•), t S6 2S Thur141V's tnmacftons BASEBALL American LN- (Hl( AC.0 WHITE SOX-Plac~ Tom S4!o 1er oolcher on ll'>e IS·da v d1w !>la<I ''" PurchnM Brvan C1ar• e>11c1>•r from BulfalO ol '"' A,,,.rican Anoclellon Cl.EVELAND tNOt•NS-Pteceo Oen Ronn l,,,,.,Otr on '"' IS Oey <l•H b<eo l1tl ACQUlrlHJ co'ltract 01 Fr en Mu'"'' 1nt,.IOtr from Mei,,. 01 the lnttrn••ionat Ltellut MILWAUl<.EE BREWERS-Sen! Mll<e Fetdtr oull1elder 10 Et Pew ot tnt T'"H LHOut OAtc.1.ANO A S-S1gneo Oe ve Slewarl pitch er to a contract w11r. Tecorne 01 !M Peclf1c Coe'I Lt89Ue SE AHLE M•RINERS-Rtturn~ L•e C.uet· '""'•" P•tcner IO C•IQ•t• OI tne Pecll1c Co1111 Leegue TE XA$ RANGERS-Plot~ Lorrv Parmh dU•OMltd hllltr On ,.,. lS·dev dfHbleo 11\1 re1roac11v1 lo Mev 20 Purchutd lhe contrec1 of 8obb11 Jontt ourlleloer. lrom Olllenome Citv of fhe American Auoclellon llASKETBAl.L NttlONf llAllrettNll Anoc:laflen Ul AH JAZZ-Announced lh•• wlli no! 01c\ uP the oPl•on veer on '"' contract 01 Sle•e HavH center but will r•neoo11a1e a new contreCI FOOTBALi. N1tl«lal FM1bal LN - Ml AMI OOLPHINS-S1gntO Tron Arm11rono .., . .,. •ecelwtr NEW YORK C.tANTS-Welver 8111 Curr.er ''" ••felv NEW YORK JETS-Slg...C Sal CeH rlo cH'ft"5tve oeck PHILADELPHIA f,.C.LES-Announceo tne re\IOnallon ol L vnn Sllles director of !>lever oer\Onn•I IMmeo Jo. W0041tv olreclO<' of Plavtr HOCKEY Nttltftal Hoc:lrtV LM- NE W YORK RANGERS-SrGneo Ken Ouu- oan, C.fenHmen COi.i.EGE GEORGIA TECH-AdOed wt1~11 u a women·, vartllv 1oor1 JACl<.SONVILLE-Nomeo Jene s Biii' Robtrl\on lnterl"' aOllellc direc1or ST ANSELM-Announce<! rtllremenl ot Bob Brown 08\\tlOAli coecn Namtd IC.ellh Olcoon DHktlba ll coecn Horse racing results HolVWOOd Park THURSDAY'S RESULTS (2'.lncl of '1 ·dtY flltrWtflbn G "'"""9) f'IRST RACE. 6 lurtong\ SI.IP SCllOon (Plnuvl Summer C.IOw IMtie> Ouchen l entne IOr•tuel Time 111 SECOND ltACE. 4 lurlOng, Ru11ng Position <1C.•t1...i1 Sir fdller Allan IPlnctvl ~ur>ning OtOonelr IV01en1ua1e1 Time I II 4 S 4 •O 300 2,0 320 , 4() no noo 120 St.O -460 J10 ] 60 S2 DAii. Y DOUl l.IE <I el Pt •d I 104 AO THIRD R.ACE. I turtongt Eatl TullP IMt1a> 1111.emt Kkl ISoll1) 7140 9'° 140 1140 10.0 1060 Htarll>rN ll O•nctr IHtrnanot1 I Time I 2• 4 S S2 IXACTA 11 61 Plld '32•llO FOURTH RAC&. Ont m l .. Our S.wffl Shem (~10) VIOiin MtlO<lv (Slt•tnl) StOPOll\Q Time (Blaek) Time 1 3' ?1S TIO 360 J20 3 00 210 s 4() U EXACTA (7 II oe ld '7000 '1f'TH •ACI. S tu•long\ Purdue Qvffn ISlt VtnS) Rornen Gem IOtlel'IOuU•V•I Ptrchence 10 OrNm ISlout•> Tim• se l ·S UO J 40 HO 400 )60 on SS EXACT A IS 1> 11t ld $0 )() SIX TH R.ACIE. I luflOngl 4cll•t ltomen IBio11c111 111\tvl>tfrv's Meonttt ($010) P1er11v of PHIHutt tllelen1uelol Time I 7S 10.0 460 ''° ) 00 260 l fO SS l.XACTA (I It I oalo '14 00 SIEVINTM •ACIE. ' turlonO\ Bu•l•on (l>fncev) 1 10 S 00 4 tO Alltl VIit IPelltrlO<I) Jl '° 15 60 Outct Vino IGa,,dlol 1110 Time 1 11 •1S lS IEXACTA 11 )I OtlCI ~ 00 U ~I( SIX (1·1-7 i·l •1l otkl Sl4,l .. IO 10 l•vt Wll\tltng llcllttt ltlvt l\O(\,fl) C:trf'l'OYtf POOi 170. 7lA ,, llOMTH •ACI. Ont IYlllt on turf N.tllm !Solll l 7U0 1100 •OO OleolllvOl\ArCI l~t\t< I l 60 2 IO ltlvw DrUll'ltNr <T~o> 160 Ttmt-1 lof t• J IS •XACTA IM l CWHI onoo NINTM • ACI I t " mllet On lurf l<rMfl'\tl II le I 6 .0 • 10 J IO Ouf Lulka <Ollvart\ I S IO 4 60 Wecldtl\9 Ot l'l(tl tVe l4ln1utlal e fO Tlmt 1 41 )1~ U IXACTA II t 1 r1td II)()~ Alltn<11nr• 11 •~t Falrptex Park (at P-) THURSDAY'S R.IESUL TS (l41t1 of 4S·l\llflf "'"'"' ~I FIRST RACE. One mile pace Flvlng Stallion (Pitf'ctl 3 00 £:mperor Hunter IGruncv) Orew F'le v (Valiendtngnam l Tirnt 20S S2 EXACTA 16-ll Pl •d l lU O SECOND ltACE. Ont mlle Pact Miu Roe.c> Drive ITrtmDlevl 2060 1<.t nttv Beroneu Cl<utl>ltr'J Kevt Doolan (Pierce) ) 00 ' 10 6 00 120 2 10 f 00 HO HO )60 ? IO ,, DAILY DOUI LE (6· 71 oelel S1t 00 n EXACTA 17·1) oeld \l?l)O THIRD RACIE. Ont m11e trot tmperlel Gto<y (l'i1co> •XI Rowdv Sharon !Pie rce> Lllflt HOUH (Wltkel Sl EXACTA 11·•1 04lld l3900 l'OUltTH ltACE. One mile Peet ))0 , 60 S.0 HO 210 Monrertv Mlfeot 1v1ncnohm1 ''° )20 7.0 The Comoann Gold I Kuebler) 2 60 2 60 OtHr I Son I Pierce) ) 110 l'tl"TH RACE. On• mllt oect Wlllrlna (OtlQmtr) S 00 Otrov Game IH•IM M1nllu ITo<ld) U EXACTA 13 11 oelel H900 SIXTH ftAC&. One mile oece Gtnlle Sl\loPtr < llulltr > ll IO Gttn MIObY IPerkerl Ct lflornl• Ane>ef (P111no1 U IXACTA () 0 oetd 1102 SO SIVINTH RACI. Ont mile pt~· Sklt>Cltr11rle <Parker) j 00 Llnoen GUt IOt\On\tf') All>Awoo IMaltf'l U •XACTA II JI oe1<1 Ml SO llOHTM R ACIE. Ont mitt trot Noble Arntlle (Al\dtf'Oftl S 60 111..cM CFll(OJ \atan' Aoe>renllce IWlll\erol Ttme 204 1 S lJ I XACTA It SI H lcl •11tO NINTH •ACI Ont ""• oeet l to hO 9eo >20 )00 900 410 320 160 uo 320 JOO JllO 160 .. o )()() f.0 >IO 140 0 0 C1111•10 I~> 14 tO t tO > .0 COlun>bl• ltfon <Cr•1t l ll IO 10 20 Mar111er1 0-vllfOlt IAnctraon> l 60 U IXACTA <1·)) Nod al6SOO " f'te:K SIX It-) °' t -3-1 • » oelcJ u~ 00 to nlr>t wtnnlrie liCkth ll•ve l'IOt,.tl Ca rrvovtr _, tJ.llS" f11NTI4 ltACa Ont ""'-oart HaClll\' Scoh rr,.ml>ltvl •l .O 01< It IOl'lfl•t ( At!CMr '°"I lurl\ o 011 r ~noon> u IXACTA (• ti Peto '"IO Alltnd.IM.t 1.1 14 \20 StO uo uo \IO Los A .. mltol THURSDAY'S RIESUL TS < JOtfl tf Sl·nltflf quantftltrw "'"""91 P'NUT RACIE. 400 v•rd' Rkh lluCk (Crteger I Total Tan (Hartl Rlch1 &ad Bov lllerd> 1160 880 100 460 l 00 uo Time 20 23 U IEXACTA IS·6J oard $6.> .0 SECOND ltACIE. 3SO vard~ Kt!Ch Mv (OPV C8roOI" SounO Ct otr (8erd) ~OC"•' Afl (Car<IOH ) seo seo 320 120 ao l tO U IEXACTA 11·6) PA•d Sll 00 THIRD RACE. 3SO verdt Sllllnonel!Oldmlne ICrdl) Cercnem And Cu hll <Orck1nt HtH Tru Rtbtl IMvlel) llfO S60 HO 110 H O 3 70 U IEXACTA (6·71 Paid Ill 00 l'OUltTH RACE. 3SO ya rd\ T •rr 1hc NePnew I H•rll 5'011 Wtob (Cercozal True Wind IBrooll\). Time 1'13 l"IP'TH ltACIE. 400 verd' A•11man1a IP11 u1lne> OH Mal Eetv ll lt l8 r00k1l OH Chri1 St n1 ILackt vl 680 HO 2'0 no ,20 , '° 2.60 IXACTA n IEXACTA (6·S) Ollld suo. n 1'·71 oalel '9 60 SIXTH ltACI. 3S0 verd1 AnH d Of The Game ICrd1l Tiit Ooclora lt IMltchttil Im A Live Ont IB1rct) 12 IEXACTA 1• JI Pt ld HHO SIVIENl'H IUCI. ao Ytrdl 100 4 '° 300 J 6() 611() 660 Coit 0 A1u•t <lard> 9 60 Siii $"Ian !Meler> Oerll lvorv (Hart> n IEXACTA (7 jJ oa•d 1•1 '° llOHTH R.ACI. l'° verd1 Pint\ Tlmt ( H Oarcla I "'•v Lln<le (H•rl) Mt rrlt ll Go (CrHw I Time 17 n U IXACTA 0 .. 1 0411d t7 to ..... TH ltACI. 3.SO Ytfd\ f rulv A Helg"oor ( P\lf'('.jlll > GOOd Ard ,,._."" lltc'-•vl ArlMI• (Cr.-wl Time 11 eo U IEXACTA IH I Ot·d '31 20 4 20 HO 140 1'0 120 HO ,., 1eo ao 4'0 , .0 , 20 U ~K SIX <' • t I 1 SI oe>d \)4,114 00 lo 1wo wlnnll'IO 11(11tt\ Isl-. ~"') $1 "'" Sh1 con.otellon "'"' '11 '10 '° IO 77 WIMll\O f!O.tf\ lllVI l\OOtl) TINTH •ACI. 4IOI vetdl ~. Ottt <COie> AClminlttr•IO!' I O+c.r ICllwtnl Wlllll Oii Air 1£ Gare••> ''"" 10 ,, U UC ACTA II 41 1111<1 \91 tO A llenclanc4t l f If Celtics have new c hallenge It w on't be the sam e without Lak ers, but Boston up for Rock et s BOSTON (AP) -It jus1 won'l be the same. Another spnng vi 1t by the Los AnJCles Laker\? A fourth straighl senes again t an outmanned oppo- nent? A cakewalk over one mo~ playofTv1ct1m? Or none of the above'' No. 1tJUSt won'l be the same for the Boston Ceh1c when they meet the Houston Rockets in Monday's open- er of the NBA championship senes. '"If the fans want a cakewalk then let them come out here and play," Bocton auard Denni~ Johnson said Thursday "Let them come out here and walk over the cake. We're not rnto walking over cakes. We're 1n10 winning." In 1 9~4. the Celtics did that. beatmg the Lakcrs in the utle senes In 1985, they didn't, losing to the Lakers in the title series. In 1986. it was uncertain whether they would w in or lose that series . What seemed more certain was 1hat they would again face Che Lakcrs. who had the best regular-season record in the Western Conference, and have a c-hnnce for revenge. "Everybody wa s talking about LA and the Celtics except the Celtic" themselves," Boston Coach K C Jones said. "I didn't care. I know people talked about the revenge factor. I know about revenge facton and they don ·1 work.·· The Rockets became Boston's sur- pnse opponent 1n the be~t-of-seven finals when they beat Los Angeles I 14-112 Wednesday night to win the Western Conference tttle tn the games. ··1 don't really feel sorry for the Laker; and I'm not disappointed," Boston forward Larry Bird said. "My heart reall y doesn't bleed for Phi la· dl'lphrn and LA when they get beat. I'm sort of elated about 11 because I know the Lakers would nsc to the occasion and play very well against us." Garvey testifies at trial NEW 'ORK (AP) -Ed Gal"\t). thl' lormt'r hl'ad of the NFL Players union. tc~t1fied Thursda) that he believes the '/FL uses the Super Bowl as leverage to gain control in Its relat1onsh1p with ABC. C'RS and NBC'. Howc\.er. Ciarvc) acknowledged under cross-c,ammat1on that the networks al\o benelircd from the arrangement Garve~. now a candidate for the I 1.S. Se nate from Wi sconsin. was the <.ccond wttncss C4llled by the United States Football League (USFL) 1n 1t~ SI S hilhon an titrust suit against the N f l . .wh t<'h a!>ks that the older league be excluded from at least one of those three maJor network s. Ht.· followed NFL Commissioner Pelc Ro1cllc. who began the day on the w11nes'i stand for his sill.th da> of lc~t1mon) But Roulle remained there onl) tivl' minutes to correct tesumon)' ht· gave Wednesday about a telephone call he had received from an un· named intermediary rela ying Donald Trump's interest 1n buying the NFL Baltimore Colts. Ro1cllc said that he re membered overnight that the call about Trump. now the owner of the U. FL New Jersey Generals. came in 1981 , not 1983 as he had testified. Then came Garvey. who resigned as head of the N Fl Players Assoc1a· t1on after the I <>M2 stnke was settled. an(i entered politic~. He discussed his relat1onsh1p with tht• NFL and its Management C'oun- Cll during contract ncJOtiat1ons and he also told of the union's efforts to get copies oft he NFL's coniracts with the networks. Then Harvey Myerson. the USFl \ lawyer. asked Garvey about com· pcllt1ve bidding fo r the Super Bowl. which Myerson had asked Rozelle about \C.'veral 11me Th,· comm1ss1oner maintained that while there had been co mpet1tt ve b1dd1ng for NFL champ1onsh1p ga mes before the merger of the NFL and the Amencnn Football League in 1966. the Super Bowl had always been included in the overall contmct wi1h th e networks Cook returns t o s peedway Costa Mc n's John Cook. who returned from British t..uaue ra cing last week. hu indicated he will make another appearance tooiaJn in the weekly peedway motorcycle racing proaram at the Oranae County fair· arounds 1n \osu1 Mes:s The racing 1~ \Ct for ton1gh1 with the ptesopen1naat 6 10. nd 1he fi~t race sh11cd for 8 uas1 week. C'0<1k. who hadn't competed in Southern Cahforn1a in mott than a year. 1mprc~~ the local speedway fan by cam1naa spot 1n the scnuch main even• at o ta Meu and San Bernarchno. 1n add1t1on to thr hand.Jc,\p main at i.cot The scratch pon1011 or the \o ta Me!itl raCln& pf'OJTlrn ha~ conttnucd to be very rompct1t1.,.c W1th ~.,.en !eparatc main event Wlnncrs 1n the fint mnr "eeks of the SC'aso n. a - l II ncx. star eve pan forr e firs1 fort and Shi' 1hc SA. T detc to P. ch1I T sigr neo low tho: Roi rea pri\ pen T you baSt retu th(' !~ Ar~ Al t All t Avnh l:C> Ire no Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Frio.y, ~ 23, 1... Cl COMPLETE NYSE COMP081TE TRAN8ACTIONI, Cl MONEY SENSE Jarents should check out college loan options your child will enter college in the t year or two and you haven't ted a savings plan to meet the ·-risina cost of education. don't ic. You might qualify for ~omc i of financial assistance. ut be rudy to pend some time with the leng1hy fioanc1al :ud , which 1s distributed. collected analyzed by lhc College Scholar- ' Service of the College Board - :>rpnizat1on that administers tbc -tests. he FAF is the biggest factor in rmining how much you will have iyout ofyourown pocket for your j s cduea11on. he financial aid 'iystcm 1~ de- ed to provide assistance where ied. Though skewed toward :r-incomc families. 11 also helps .c ~II above the povt'ny lane. .ptly half of all undergraduates 1vc some financial assistance; at ate colleges, the leve l is 65 cnt. he FAF asks for information on r income and expenses (much of it ·d on recent federal income tax rns). your assets and liabilities. itudent's income and assets, bow OvER THE CouNTER MARY RUDIE many other people yo.u suppon and how many of those arc full-ume college students, Analysis of your answers to the more than 60 "ques- tions -many with a dozen or more subsets -results in a Student Aid Index The index determines clig.ib1h- 1y. first for federally subsidized Pell Grants of up to S2;t 00 per year. The analysis 1s then forwarded to each college the student lists (the hstang fee 1s S7 each). Each college uses the FAF as a guideline to structure a financial aid package, made up of scholarships. loans and campus employment. The college also may ask for your most recent tax returns. Some words of ad vice: If you ha vc been savrng monc-y 1n your child's name, and takina possible advantage of the child's favorable tax rate on interest earned, you should think about moving that money out of lhe child's name 1f lrplly po ibtc. Financ1i) a.id formulas presume a contnbuuon of 3S percent of a stodent apphC3nt's assets eoch year, wh1lt parents arc required 10 con· tnbutc 12 percent or less. Al~o be aware that life insurance policies with cash accumulation provisions arc not included in FAF calculations. for those who qualify, financial aid loans with attractive terms ex1s1: •The National Direct Student Loan provides up to $6,000 at S percent for a term of I 0 years; •Guaranteed Student Loan offers up to $2,SOO a year at 8 percent for I 0 )'Can, •Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students provides up to S 12,500 at 12 percent for 10 years. Many states also offer loans at favorable rates to students or their families. And don't overlook the private sector as a source for grant or loan money. Some bank'i and full- scrvice brokerage firms let you bor- row apinat fixed assets -the equity in your home. for eumplc -to pay colleae cosu. Your home can be tapped for up to 80 percent of its equity (appraised value minus the remainder of your mortpge). You can withdraw the money as a lump sum or cuablish a hnc of credit that you can use when needed. You can also borrow against fixed assets with delayed payouts, such as hfe 1n· surance policies or pension and profit-sharing plans. Many large corporations offer scholarships and have low or no- mtcrest loans ava1labk to employees. so check with youf com'pa.ny's per- sonnel office. The same 1s true of many unions. professional and tratcmal orpn1zat1ons. Some colleges allow monthly oe>-· men~ an stead of the burden of a lump sum payment. ScveraJ nataonal financial services compan1e will meet your payments. and allow you to repay wtth interest an installments Inquire at lhe college's finanC'lal aid office for details. A helpful reference book on pn· vate-sector funds, Financial Aid for ll1Jher Education by Orcon Kccslar (published by Wilham C. Brown), 1s available at public libraries. Other useful source$ arc the C'ollege Blue Book: Scholarships, Fcll9wsh1ps, Grants and Loans by MacMiiian; lhe Grants Register b~ Lerner and Turn- er. and Scholarships, Fellowships & Loans by Feinaold and Fe1n,old. Bear in mind that you mu.a' complete the FAF each year you have children 1n colleae and ll«k aid. The financial a.ad offices want your peck- •&e to reflect your curttat needs and feel those needs mu t be ~tned annually. So. 1f you have a WJodfaU 1noomc one year. consider puttioasome of the bonania away for ncu year's tuition; your required contribution wrn mott likely be incrca5ed to reflect your good fonune. Mary J. Ra4le 11 vice presi4etit ... mua1er of coan.mer laf•rmaU. services for Merrlll LYK•· Piatt, F'n.oer 6 Sm1G loc. -c1Jll1Jillutfl.'J$11·~---------------- NEW YO"K (~Pl -T"e fotlowlr19 list allows lhe Over • lhe • Coun1er slocks end -~errant' that heve gone up the most env oown the moit bllsed on percent of ctwtnoe tor ThurSdey No s.curlllft lredlr19 belOw s2 or 1000 shares ere lnduded. N•t end ~centeoe chanoes ere the dlffe!'tnet betw"" lht previous cioilno Pt'k:e encl Thur~~ IHI or bid price. Net"M Le't C1'19 Pct 1 =rlOlt s 9'h 1 2\\ UP ft·, nlecom s 9-6 • I UP . i nlerteull un 101: t J.3~ UP S.6 NEW YO"I( (AP) -The follOwlno l!St "1ow1 the New York Stock Exchenoe stoctu encl werrent1 lhet heve gone up Ille most end oown the mosl based on perCtilt of ch81111e reoerdlfts of volume for Thur~. No ~ t tredlno t>etow n art Ind· Neme ·uded. N•I • l*'Ctnlege changes ere the l ~etn U11J1 . differ~ betw..n the previous doslr19 vln 1 50of IH'k:e encl ThurMSey's 2 p,m. price. rlllJtiLiid u" 4 lllstoo Co Heme LHI ere. Pct s °'.!f.~d l ~TA~~lnl wl 'itt :\ti ~: ln1 ·: 9 A~JJW'. v~I pf ~ v f Am 2'~ '~ Up 1 ' Rlver?.tk i ~.~P Cp ft1! l~ 8: : 11 ~!!."l~t ~ pf tdm~n Ind 'h ~ UP ,. illev Ind lnlCl>fl rol 'h 2:\ti UP .4 hrlsllene I ~r::.~~ rl v. l:\ti Up .3 McL1•r wt ll~I ~1*,:w' ~ l~ ~i r~11 ~r.~~uft-1 Armsiiltub 1 Ue> 6., ~-Ir ~erllty Inc :\ti Up 6. o leMfQ m Motor_> 4 '.4 Ue> 6. e l.OOOc>f ~ vnea.ci Ce> l"' l'AI ~O 6.7 NuO w t A~~Pc:I s 1m\'t ~ Ug ':'t ~~-n Detepnt n v. 'h Up 6. 4 lS8n1e11nc1 Lorel 4 234 uo 6. s verco Hlfl'l bAoc>CI prnM.tn can br roouotlcd lb lntn how all \&A Of~ Pa ~·•• L .. t Che e?]~·l .,~ a liunl • ~~::f.1 ,-12 • " -1-1 -I~ ''f \1. ''\t I~~ °' ~~65 ,, :• I~~ 1 ! f ~;' nJ• '>+I .. T P~ J U nt'4 '·ii I;! ·;1 ·;, ~ 11~: :l! i ~+ .. l Pow.., ~· l 1'>-" Po '"+' l~;:,,11 u 1t u~ ~ ,~~a n ,,64 !a.. :~rrn4H 10 ~ ti : ln .. c~ j°" 4 '. :~pf l ,, ~t '~ ·~free 11 'Tj;+ • 11110~:1 pf4.7~ ? s l 1._ ln1llco 1 1S ~ jl' • t 111\Plh S -• lnle!hc I• s 24 7-" lnlgR OIS. l• n•, 1-, In!~ of OS 120 4 "I..-'> Ill n 1) IOll I >.. 1-"' nt of! 10 9 I "' 1n111 n 27 ~··-• l1~~:,<.0 2)1~ IS •,'Sf "'t g: nltf pf7 1 '·" +' '"""' 10 164 ls ,,.. lnlrtk 1 11 ~s ~"'+ 1 lntmeo 11 I "" lnlAlU 77 ll 4 1'0-t '• 18~ uo 13 "'" l,+ '- '"' trl ~ " " 1t ... Int ~· I Ii j4 1947 47'r-l :~:~~II I 16 d i:S t -f ~ ln1P1or ? .0 26 1~ S ''t ~ tntRc ' "-'• IT~ l4114 H'• 1n•raP , 20 11 Kt ., ·~ + , ... 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M I SO 19 I~ '!<\ , MLCvCn 26 " • ML Cvl n l9e I• ._ MB Lt 11 2Sr 24''>-Ii. Macrnl1 60 14 ~ u49''> + •• M•crc 1 ,~ 11 ,304 ~~ • ~~~¥\I~;: m~. g13:~1:i ~npwrS2t 1 uJ~t .... M •H•n 324 6 I I.It r1-4 OIS 311e ~ t 19 MlrH OIS l• .0 Sl~+ '• ~j~nv1 t4)f i"-• 'IJ..'t.P.''U' I 11 2~; !; _! ':; ~;~:;. 2~11-,::-1-1. MarMl4 204 I fl t I'" M1rlon 34 S4 1 ' .,__ • M./jft' WI 'it! t • Marl<C 11 JI 6 -..+ • M9rk pl I 10 3 \I ~;ri:1 " 27 ltt 'n t ~ MrsnM s I 10 7S »4 U•.,_ ' ~~~~ • t l61ti 7~S~ ~ ~K~/ ~ ~-! Ml~o ~ l ~+ .,.. MUii\(; 13 l ._ '1 MilluE 13 U 11)+ 'l Miiiet IS7 4" Mla!>m ~7 +I ~~i r: :~J ~ ~ $~ ~tij,~ Wtl ~ l:t~tl~:·,~ t~:~ ~'"' -'\ Meclfrn ~ 2• • .., ... ._ Mellotl tiff '° .. + l'f ~ -\~'" 11 ~I J~+ ~ ~"· \I ~+\ ~~~1,. ,J\ ul ::i I~ =1\tCll t ~ ~ ~~ .~~ j~ ,._ $! 1 •11 ,, ~ '1~1 ·! ~~£ ": ~~~: ~~~. 32 1t 1. ', .. 01• ~t ~ .. , lUl Chq =~~~~ i,J ri 1l~ I,~ t I • Mr.1fitw1 u , 1 .~ 1! ~1,l ~fl:~r:~ !:1,' no 1l al 1 ~ •! rt::r: 1 ~ ~ 4f I) ;,: t ~ . 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Ne•P ot t100 ff . t , N•vPtt 9S ti .,.._ Nt•S• 60 a t 2 ~~~~ P1 Ir I ~ w• + I 0 NJll>c ~ ~ t~ I) 71'' + • ~~1Epy J tt ,m ~ I 2 • NY ol 880 lSOO t 11• NV of03 15 11 l -• Newell 70 'f 334 l2 • " Nwn.11 > 40 I 131 40.,, t -.. Ntwnll 6.~ 19 17 't o 11jwt1llh lh 6 IS I •-• Newmf l S.J 41 • Nwpart.. 117' 9· 16 N~w\Ld n 246 l I 1 t ' N •MP 2 ~ • 1240 H"' + • N 9MOI ) rl90 •-• NjeMDI ~. S 17S0 • '• "aM on 51t n 26"' • Nla11Sh 1 Tie It 1 16 , Nlc;,oi.1 n JI ilL " • NICOR l to 917 •1 77 1 t .... NOC>IAI 17b 1200 Ii t .... ~~,k~3~ n i:un' ·t," Norw ' 1 at I~ IS l'-~t~k I I SO 11 'tl r: 1 • NAPl>°ti I If 1217 41 • + ... NEvO 2 •~ 20 18'11 Noe\IUI 1 I d211l 19•, + • NlnOPS I. I 11 1109 12 N~SlPw 3 S? 10 219 u .+ "' N Pw ol6.80 140 1 Nl>wot1•4 zSO -11 Norh• 40 1108 ~ , Nlngel 11 II 3 •-• NorlrP 1 ?O ll •st ""' '• NwSlW 32 ''"' + • NOffQn 2 ffi 40 Norw'' t to 17 31•. I " Nw•f olS~ 6S S2•• '• NO•O 1' •15 31 Nucor ' 16 lOO 08 I I • N1><r WI I 4S l • I ~~~~~ \ Oii 11 16~ u6~ ... ' -o-o -m~ll\d '"' t. e11.1teP 1 S7 I• 13 29 • c1Ptt 1 SO 6 •S7l 21 • ell> wl 406 11 ell> pt6 1S 37 S6 lgir'pt" ~! a~ m~: : ECO 40 St 200 13 , • • den I ~ 679 lJ • I "' IEd I a 1677 19 d Dfl I~ U ti• d Pf 1 24 l 10 • i I • dDf7~ I I+,;) I doll lO • • <!0<'3 Ol3t~ l~g ~: J f, ·m4 !!.: ~ of 10 76 I 99 '• Meir 40 0 IS ...... t "' Pol 80. 11012>1 1 l>~!G2ti UI • • t .. a E 2 11 m I '• • ot 1 t~1 , t " I\ ' .. 4 I I.. t ncrt 38 ) • + '-le~d~K 1 ~ tt l~ ~:: enRk 7 t• 11 437 )01~ • , 4ng~ ., • ion 76 41 )6•.11 Ion ptl 17 2• )0 .. 0 "' ton 326 U • •o" ol 10 n '"' t0n pf 115 J1 l1'-' • lbdM 6' 23 2•S 3S •• -._ ~rnT ' ~ n 1041 F'-" • 5e~~ I 40 ~~ .'11i1, J' :-I;, enlll t 90 ll 2504 n , • I • n11 pf • '' 1S nil 014 7S •I 111 • , rora '4 2• 102 11 , PHH -, ~·~9l J•'• t • Pl>C. I 9? 14 667 64 I '• PSA 60 13 860 79• ~=~~~ l ~ 11J? w: . l>acl,.19 ) 48 63 SS7 SI , I 111 l>ecRt• II,,, IS ··· Pecll> pt 2 SO H • I \w PatSc1 •O 17 }O 11 l>•c Tei. 6 oe II l?Sfi 9'1 •, l>acTI w1 IS SO 1 PacT1n 40 " S 11 .. Pec1lco 7 40 10 I •9S 11 1• ~ • Patil pf 4 01 27 32 , Pa1nWD 60 13 1\01 J7 1.+t ... PelnW Oil JS l~ l 1 • • l>anAm ll '3SO 6 •-• Pan• wt •$ l" Pand~k n 20 19 2tA 7 • ~ PaMEC 2 lO 16 l'4l ) , t Pansl)ll 11 24 J4 • Pardvn 86.J 10'• • • Par11Ef ft 10 1' II ' • Perk011 S.O • • • Par11H I U 111 41 • Pe1P11 ' ~ l , • PevNP 6-4 13 It• \;o PevC•n 16 13 11 16 > ~ PtnQO 2g S • 16 Penc... 1S ,, SI • I, ... Pet1ntv 2 4' 14 7S44 '9 ' ' PaPL 1 ~ f) 7'4 3'\;o , • P•PL pf • ~ I~ 41 1 • 1 1 PePL pf a , , 97 I Pal>L pf. 1 r I~ I PePL or J iSO 1 ·, PaPL pr l rSO 1 , I I l>•l>L or t 1110 'l' 1 7, l>tnwlt 2 2'0 44 S 1 t J Ptnw pf I 60 13 3 ' > l>•nntol 1 20 11 11Sll S , Peoc>En 131 9 ?JS 21.•" PePB'!' l n 1S if" 32 ·-• PtP•ICo I 9? l6 ~ t1 , • Peo•I( wl 31 P«<~EI 60 18 S • 3~ • I ~~~·g\ 1 '[ ,: -~~· 18' • -;-.: 1>e1r1e ' 19 lt , .. 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Prm , ··+ 4 f>ru(11 "' Ptu I II ~ r>,I S I t + • O! : l~ ''-ltlo + .. fil ·~: ~:I~;~ ~a . \41 t 4 NH~ r '-H c• + \ • H • t'4 " NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION S FllllY'I OLOllll PllDll Market rally continues NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market pushC'd ahead again Friday, extending the rally tllat began on Thursday. Analysts said there was no readily apparent news development 10 account for the market's revival 1:hursday But in the view of many Wall Streeters raJhe!> that have no convenient "explanation" a~ often s1gn1ficant" because they can represent something more than Just a shon-tcrm response to some news Item. Fnday, Albert WoJntlowcr, economist at First Boston Corp .. predicted funher declines in open· market interest rates this year. In a spe~ch delivered .at a mceung of bond dealers 1n Singapore, WoJntlowcr also said he expected the Federal Reserve to lower tts di~ounl rate at least one more time. By 1987, however. he said ccono~1c growth and inflation arc likely to heat up. leading to an upswing in long-term interest rates WHAT AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE Om NEW YORK IAP) Mav 23 Prev. TOda~ oav Advonced 3 9 m Declined 240 unchanged 21S ~1 Total iuuu 794 New 111011, .... New lows 6 s AMEX LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) -S.lfl, 4 p,m. price and net chanoe of the ten most octlve American Stock Exctianoe lnues, 1r 11d ln11 nallonallv at more man Sl Na ma OomePtrt Wickes AmExoFFd WI Hasbro FtAustPr n T exuAlrCP ICH Cps LorlmarTel n Wan11Lab8 BAT Ind v~" ust OWL 213w· , -J-f6 I, 1 , 61/• ,~7 4~ + 119 ' '9 -~ 4 ' 1~ -'lit m, 33~ +l'I• , 2S + 1,;, , JQVtt -n• •.100 16~ -1/e 275,900 Sitt +J-16 CoLD QuoTEs NEW YORK (AP) Mav 23 Prev. TOd~la dav Adv~nced 1218 Deci ned 611 452 ¥nchanoed ~r ,m otat l~sues New ti ohs New lows 11 NYSE LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) -s.tn, 4 p.m, llf1C.e and net ch•ft9!t of tti• mt.en "'°'' lctlW ... ., Y911r Stoclt Ex<Nnee luu••• tr1dlnt nationally et ~ ttlan '1. Name Noea$1 Utll OartKr'ft 18M lnlerfsl Amer T&T Est Kodak lrvnoBk OomlnRtsc Phlla Elec -f ~ 'v. .,. Sa few av MorganJP Chrysi.r s McDermtnt Comw Edis GenEt.c Dow JoNEs AvERAGES NEW YORK (AP) -Flnal Dow-Jones miaoH for Mey 23. kl °'*' Hkllh Low OeM 019 nd 1112"25 , ... m.14 1169 18~.29! li.99 ~ Trn 7%t·~i .97 .73 { .9f 94 6~ ~,'~ JM:46 :ro l :U 1 •j1 i: 7 tridus 12,662, T~n 3166 Ullls 3 084 300 65 Stk 1t,913',600 ,.::~ , ....... ---·~--·· ~-Im~ i iJJ • liifofoffli Alum"""" SJ 10 oentt p., pound. NY eom.x 1p01 METALS QuorEs mon1h ctOMO rnu NEW YORK l AP) -Most active over· c.,,._ · 811-M"' oen11 • pouno, us ~aun•tton• ·ltle·counter slocks su~le<t bv NASO Copper • 87 00 oenta per POUnc1 NY C<>IM• apot Ult Of' mQnth CIOMd Thu Name V Bid A$1ted C"9. Leed · 19.~ Q<lntt • POU'1C! Quolrn 61 lf Zinc · 3S oe1111 • Pout>d, dt11-e0 l_flltcm 2 S 9~6 + 1 J· 16 Tin clOMd ,,,,.1'1t W-come>0•1t• e>r-p.i lb 1 MCI ,. , anv .. • U 1eo per oun<l• Handy & HArman Htnlev , , ¥t -"II 11...., • 15 040 pw 1roy ou.-, NY Come• tPOt mootn !SI Lg ' , , j ;J,lo + 11'> ctOMG r11u ear Au I' 1 ,,., 13~ ,,...,CIH'I s210 oo-s2e5 oo Pit' 78 •b n~. ~ v0r• rosGo , , 1 -"- Jtt.ttn....,. s41s 00-s• •ll OO dom ... 11<: ....,cnen11roy eechm • .• ff 61-16 +7·32 C>ul'le<I N v AppleC "" -If• AmCarr 91 Y,400 4lt4 + 31. ~wpart. ba.(leh ~'t ~ehlon ~\ond., '1l1t;&-tl\ 5070 \MZ..O(.wood V1 \ \tigct 100\ ~ bl\d • 2 l!Y2Ce· Sl.7 ~ pooodcim 52~5out.h laka.ow. ,818/30'i 9~~~ mont.nn.dh l0t.o9.~t.urcksy10to6 l ~ncxmlcl~ Sat•rday.~ay!4 ARIES (M~rch ~1-Apn.J 19): Emphasis oo philosophy, the abstract. sense of perception, UlSt&ht into your own future. You'll be nd of burden, )'ou'll also ~riously examine opportunity to travel. Libra and another Aries figure prominently. !~URU~ (April 20-May 2Q): Emphasis on new starts. 1Ddcpendencc. creauvny, wi.lhng~e ~o fight 1f cause is right. You'll learn more about n:to~ey. possible m~entancc, tu and license requirements. Love plays s1gruficant role. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll learn by teaching, family member makes concession, your 1Dtu1tion will be on target. Focus also on possible ------------- partnenhip, COO{>Crative efforts, clash of ideas and scnous cons1derat1on of marriage. SYDNEY 0MARR CANCER (June 21-July 22): Forces tend to be scattered -perceive picture an its entirety, leave details for another time. Keep resolutions concern1Dg diet, nutrition, general health. Satisfy ••••••••••••• curiosity concerning ttlative in transit. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Build on a solid base, realize that restlessness can partially be attributed to flow of"creativejuices.'' Member ofopposjte sex is drawn to you, docs not intend to make secret of it. Scorpio plays paramount role. VIRGO (Aug, 23-Scpt. 22): Dialogue cooccmmg spectal perm1ss1ons. land rights, property dominates scenario. Be ready for surprises, lon~­ distancc communjcatioo, unusual request from relatives. Sagitt.arian wtll play featured role. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Appearance of ho me is due to change - relative who feels urge to decorate plays paramount role. S~tli&ht on variety, curiosity, innovations and unusual designs. Taurus individual does care and will prove it. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Look behind scenes. define terms. realize that lost object will soon be located. Pertinent information is available if you will but seek it. Cycle high, you're due to emerge victorious. Pisces plays role. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 2 1): This can be your power-play day. Take initiative, make new start, get to heart of matters. Trust your own Judgment, display courage of convictions. Money comes from unusual source. Capricorn plays role. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What seemed lost will be recovered. You'll reach more people. spints soar and self-esteem becomes evident. You'll complete assignment, receive plaudits and might be asked to appear before the media. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on intensified love rela- tionship, powers of persuasion, ability to tum an "wanning performance." Members of opposite sex are drawn to you, seek your counsel and approval. Leo native figures prominently. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Sense of direction 1s restored -you no lonJer need "zigzag." Aim toward goal, refuse to be 1nt1m1dated by bellicose 1nd1vidual. Focus on secunty, land, property, family reunion. Cancer nauve plays role. IF MAY UIS YOUR BlRTHDA Y current cycle 1s dynamic. dramatic and can prove profitable. You could marry, there might be an add1t1on to family and you arc likely to go an to business for yourself. You are creative, sensitive. have unusual speaking or singing vo1~. You appreciate luxury, art, music. can be self-indulgent and must be wary concerning your ··sweet tooth." Taurus. Libra. Scorpio people play important roles in your life. September will be your most memorable month of 1986. Women brifi{hten as mengrowdlmmer A scholar named Theodore Lang contends a woman's 1ntellectual per- formance is at its lowest during the years she's marrying and hav1Dg children. Later on, she brightens up considerably, he says. But a man's peaJc intellectual power, he claims, comes along in his twenties. and thereafter dissipates. Lang was not at his intellectual peak when he wrote that, possibly. You remember Lang. He was the fellow who said no woman ever invented a good musical IDStru- ment. Rarely in history has a connoisseur of fine food been lost in the woods long enough to survive on barbecued mountain lion. But one who has done so contends that fierce delicacy has the most nch and delicate flavor of all mammal meats. It's now said more than half the c11y dwellers nationwide have never seen an elevator operator. Q. What killed the most o;old1crs dunng the Civil War'? A. Jntestmal trouble. Of the 618.000 who didn't make 1t. about 400.000 died of something other than combat wounds. and half of tho e. of dysentery. Q . What's the lightest of all solids'> A. A metal, surprisingly. L.1th1um. Weighs 33 pounds per cubit: foot. Aluminum weighs 169 pounds per cubic foot. Q. What was the first dom e t1cated bird? L.M. Bovo A. The goose. Geese were even trained to tend heep once. inciden- tally. Ostnches have been trained to do that, too. It was 1n 1401 that the Enghsh Parliament ruled that anyone caught ID possession of a copy of the Bible written in English should be burned ahve Was none other than Clare Boothe Luce who said. "A man's home as his nursery." Last I read there were nationwide SJ acupunc ture veterinarians cenified to stick needles ID cats. dogs. whatever. C'unous how few regular card players can tell you otThand which of the deck's kings has no mustache. "Woo" 1s the Pohsh equivalent of •·wow." A scallop has 3S eye~. I'm told. L.M. Boyd Is a syadlcated col11m11/11. Swaziland witches recognized medics Thinp I uamed En Route IO Lookin1 Up Other Thiap: •That the kingdom ofSwuiland ID Africa has S,000 tnditional healers- wizards and witches called tinyanga -who are recognized by the state health system and can check their pauents into hospitals just as legit- imately as conventional doctors of medicine. •That more than 3,000 earth- quakes shake up the earth's crust each year, of which 700 -or more than two per day -are classified as major disasters. resulting in significant loss of life or property. •That ID Israel. "cards of identity" arc issued for all that country's 300.000 head of cattJe. •That while New York City has only 3 percent of all U.S. housing, 1t has 9 percent of' all the nation's dilapidated housing. •That the so-called "black box" flight recorder on commercial auhnes is never black. but is brightly colored to make it easier for investigators to spot after a crash. •That not onJy San Francisco, but Santa Fe and Los Angeles were originally named in honor of Samt Francis. (lo fact, the full official name of the capital of New Mexico is la Villa de Santa Fe de San Francisco - "The T~~n of the Holy FaJlh of Saint Francis. . •That the thymus gland (which plays a central role in the body's immune system) exhibits one of the most dramatic changes as we age: from the time we arc about I 3 years old. 1t begins to shrink, so that by adulthood the organ is so shriveled StDIEY Hu11s that it can hardly be detected. •That the film producer, Sam Goldwyn. bad an unprecedented "sandtrap" insUllled on his home croquet court expressly to thwart the better-playin1 Louis Jourdan •That red blood cells h ve 1n the circulatory system for only four months. after which they arc "old" and annihilated by special scavenger cells. •That Katharine Lee Bates, re- membered now only as the wnter of the lyncs for "America the Beauti- ful," was the author of 32 now- forgotten books. •That the "hum" of a hum- mingbird comes not from its throat, but from its wmgs beatin& 70 times a second in flight. (Hummanfbirds arc so pugnacious that they wal dnve off birds a hundred times their size.) •That while Shakespeare wrote only 36 plays, Lope de Vega, the Spanish dramatist who was born two years earlier. wrote more than l,SOO stage pieces. of which about 470 survive in print. Sldaey Hurls I• • 1yadlc•led colomai•t. Surivors deal with suicide of parents DEAR READERS: Recently a Mobile woman wrote to say sbe had read a great deal aboat bow parents cope wltb dle saJclde of dlelr cltll- dreo, bat sbe laad never seen uyUtl.Dg by cllildren wbose pareots had killed dlemselvet. "Please ask yoar read- ers bow tlley dealt wltb tlals tragedy," sbe wrote. "I need belp." I was 1ta11ered by tbe respon1es. Tile letters were extremely poignant and lnslptfal. Here are some ex- cerpts. FROM C HICAGO: Maybe I can help the woman in Mobile. My dad packed Father's Day to kill himself. His choice of the date. (felt, earned a special message for me. l was has only child. Afier my parents were divorced. I saw very little of Dad. but at was his choice. not mine. Almost every attempt 1 made was rebuffed. When we were together he did everyth1n$ possible to make me feel rotten. His suicide sent me into a hellish depression. Thank God I found a marvelous therapist who helped me understand that I must not let my father punish me from the grave as he did in life. I owe my san1t)' to that wonderf~I f sichiatrist. FROM TUCSON: My mother killed herself eight years ago when I was 16. She had made several attempts. but we always managed to get her to the hospital in time. I knew one day she would succeed, but when it happened, I was not prepared for the shock. Our family doctor pulled me through. He made me understand that if a person 1s determined to end 1l all. nothing can be done to change the course of events. • • • FROM MINNEAPOLIS: M) mother-in-law shot herself on Chnstmas Day. She left behmd a husband who blamed himself (un- JUStifiably), children who were devas- tated because they had no idea she was contemplating such a th1n$. and grandchildren who keep asklDg if suicide as hereditary. No one can understand why she did it. How sad that she didn't stick around to enJOY her beautiful grandchildren. es- pecially the one who looks exactly hke A111 UllDEIS her. She would have been so proud. • • • FROM NEW ORLEANS: Four years ago m y mother took I SO sleeping pills and d ied in the night. Three months later my father hanged himself in the garage. I was the eldest child and my reaction was tremen- dous rage. How could they have let\ me wt th the rcspons1b1lity of raising three younger brothers? Our pastor (a woman) pulled me through. She counseled me four times a week for 2 12 years. I am no longer angry. Just sad. I am also convinced that anyone who takes his or her own hfe ill mentally ill. • • • FROM SACRAMENTO· 1 tned suicide twice but I'll never tf') at again because of what a woman wrote in Newsweek Feb. 7 Anne-Grace Schemm. a mamc-depress1ve hke her mother. tned several 11mes to kill herself. When her mother was found dead of asphyxiation an the garage. she vowed she would go on hvmg no matter what. Her words convinced me that I would. too. Here. they are: "Suicide doesn't end pain. It o nly lays 1t on the broken shoulders of those left behind.'' • • • FROM DENVER: I was 13 when m)' mother killed herself. For 14 years my attitude was pure hos11ht). " he didn't need me so I don't need her." I felt abandoned. After ruining a good marriage. J finally decided I needed help. My therapist was temfic. After two months he advised me to go 10 my mother's grave, cuss her out and then say. "I love you anyway. Mom." 1 dad Just that and at was:i miraculous cure for my sick soul I recommend this to Mobile. It made a d1fTercnt per..on out of me Donahue, taunter meet to 'mediate' By tbe A11oclated Preu NEW YORK -Telev1s1on talk <;how host Pbll Ooaabue and the man he brawled with m an a1pon met before a mediator to discuss the fray but they didn't exactly bury the hatchet. Donahue. SO. and Wilham Ferauson. 24. met for about an hour with mediator Elaine Palevsky. Soyke ~1d. "Whatever went on inside must be held confidential." hua1d, add1na that Donahue and Ferguson lcf\ calm· ly. Donahue and Ferguson. a ~up­ porter of political extremist Lyn don LaRouchc. fought 1n Lo Guardia Airpon on Ma y 11 Donahue said Fergu on $hOutcd abuse at him as he wnlkcd by Seuu homecoming SPRINGFIELD, Ma -Dr. Seuss, wbosc books arc beloved by chaldrcn. came back to hls hometown to rcvu1t b1 boyhood home and Mulberry trtet, the scttint for his first ue«uful Dr. Seu.M book Etgtn·year·old Joel • enez, who$t family hves in the old homestead of fteodor SHH Oelael, learned from the author that under the wallpaper m what 1s now his bedroom arc ch1ld1sh doodhn o( early 'ers1ons of his famou' imaginary animals. The old Geisel home 1s JUSt a few miles from the city's Mulber- ry St~t. the scmng for "And To Th1nlt l Saw h On Mulbcrr) trcet." where nur1y 200 chil- dren turned OU\ to IJ"CCt Dr. UU on has v1 1t. Gc1~l. 82. oow hvr' an La Jolla. Calaf. Yoko hangs on MONTREAL -Yoko Ono says that despite ad\ ice to call off her North Amencan tour bccausr tickets have sold poor!). she ms1sted on perfonnmg m som~ c1t1es for scnumental r(flSOM . 1ncludiot Montreal "This 1s whcrr 'Give Peace n Chance' wa<\ made and I have an 1ncred1ble memof) of that," <\h<' said at a news conference at a hotel onl) a k1o1. block\ from where 5he staged a wcll-pubh· c11ed 10-da) "~·ID" for peacr with her husband John unnon an 1969 honly ofler Lennon'" murder in t 980 she &au.I '"he contude~d \lagina another bed-10 for peace bv herself with An empty p1llO'-" be 1de her to ~ymbohu that "he and he were still together "But I thou&ht the '80s chma1t was not able 10 that. " KAPLAN TEAM WlN VANDEl8lLT ~eat her 1,•ulnerabl<' W1~t deals NORTH WEST •8 •AK 10• Q A9 3 <>Vold •AQJ 1084 EAST •6 2 : Q62 ..t AQ876 62 •K 9 KJ 76 < KJ943 •76 SOUTH •QJ971S3 .,., 10 8 4 \.-10 •6 32 Thi' hlddlnl( West North East I Ohle 1 2 ~ 5 NT Pa.s.s Pass 7 • Pau Pass Opemn~ ll'ad Two of ";' South I+ 6 + Pus Tlw most ~ul'n's.,ful team in Americ·an compettt1on rn recent ycurs, Ed~ar Kaplan of ~ew York, 1\orman Kay of Narberth. Pa .. U1ll Root of Boca Raton, Fla , and Rich- ard Pavlicek of 1-"'t Lauderdale, Fla added another title to their <·ollection when they won the \'an- dPrbalt Team o f Four event at the recent Sprang ?\orth American Champ1on~h1ps an Portland. Ore In so doin~ thl'y earned a spot in the playoff to determine the l'.S. team for tht• 1987 World Cham pionsh1 p The Kaplan team trailed by 11 Inte rnational Match Points going into the fourth quarter of the fi. nals against a quintet led by Jim Whitaker of Warner Robins. Ga. However. they ~amcd 40 !MPs over the last boards to wm com- fortably. This hand early m the CHULES Go1E1 0111 SUllF final M'l paved the way to victory When Kay bad one spade freely over East's one hean., Kaplan im- mediately envisioned a ttrand ltm. Kaplan judged brilliantly that. If his partner held the queen of spades, the choice was not between a small and a grand slam, but be- t ween a game and a grand He rea- lized that if the club finesse wen-to fail. even 12 tricks would not be available after a heart lead His leap to five no trump was the Grand Slam Force. ln their meth- od , Kay's response showed a good sun headed by one of the three tOP honors, and Kaplan went on to seven. The play went as Kaplan visU91 · 1~d. Kay won the heart openJng, cashed the king and queen of trump and nnessed in dubs. Ht returned LO his hand with a trump to repeat the finesse and claimed when the kmg appeared. In the other room the contract was six spades. and the Kaplan team picked up 11 IMPs. '::~:~.~· S©R~lA-zt c!fs· .... .. .. -----14i<o4 •• CIA'f I l'OUAH ----- 0 ~~~~-.b ':·~~~' :-'°'"'"' '0 tcv,.. foi..t• ••o•• WO'ch I RA W E V \ 8 h ;.ES~ ~~:~~/''m .. I' I' I' I' r r I 6 .. ':;t1 .. ~!.r;r 1 "1•s I I I I I I I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Carpel 1ype 5 Spit out 9 Athletic groups 14 Observe 15 Wood 16 01 blood 17 Eventually 18 Habllual 20 -Derby 22 Horsted 23 Slorm center 24 Spanish k1n9 25 Loathings 26 Whim 27 Drench 28 Clique 31 Example 34 Unlr1vo1ous 35 Stowe's Little 36 De nova 37 Mar 38 lnsec1 39 Pronoun 40 Allltude 4 1 Heading 42 Fawn s par en I 43 Small 44 Moor 45 Durnb one 2 14 36 39 42 5 1 52 55 58 Ill 4 7 Beaufort or Benno 48 Through 51 Blanket 53 Excellenl 55 Spelled out 57 German king 58 Fur merchant 59 Ormce 60 Animal home 61 Unpleasant expressions 62 Obliged Oni! 63 Ex1erm1nate DOWN 1 Aepllle 2 Lover s word 3 Make amends 4 Fellow 5 Seasoned 6 F1nge< 7 Deadly sin 8 D1m1nu11ve 9 T of ETO 10 Oeathhke 1 1 Collecllon 12 Companion 13 Hill vehicle 19 Journey 2 1 Soviet r1ver 25 ont ~EVtOUI NZZLE IOl V£D 26 Small number 27 Tetched 29 Woodbine or Hialeah 30 Take away 31 Servant 32 Upon 33 Defile 34 Punish 37 Culler 38 Strong d rink 40 Comas 41 Spree 44 Trlbu1ary 46 Work 47 Metric unit 48 Kind of SlalllllC 49 Within pref 50 T or,,,.nt 51 Make secure 52 If no1 53 Store 54 Tennis shots 56 GI mall drop 10 ,, 12 13 . a THE J'AMJJ,Y CIRCUS by 811 Keane BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VI P) .. BLOOM COUNTY ~ ;;;--· .. - 1J U.S. ACRES "Daddy! There's a funny new show on called 'Leave it to Beaver'!" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "I only ride sidesaddle." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE .. ...... ... "Motes gophers .a whim who knows?" PEANUTS GARFIELD IT'!> MARli' TO BELIEVE 50 MANY PEOPLE CAN GE.T CAOG~T IN AN ORDINAR'-' WINli'OW BLINP TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE u~ o~ 1 N~E.r1 A. NUM&.R i lL.O Y'E.NCH- TO T~KE­ f~lt; f.J(.i\M ROSE IS ROSE SEE~ I HANo y.,y l-IEAC' IN 51.lMr\E ,-( HOW ARE. WE CtOINv TO GEi our Of' ~'"''-IMI~ THINu? ..-u~~~-~\ ~-r---->:..- by Charles M. Schulz by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan ~ow ~0001 Two NIJMeE.R ONf.tj I by Pat Brady SHOE r VVE. TO™£ MAiURE SUBJECT ~TTEI<. IN 'TUE FaWWING 5~ . PA~MA~ Pl~/ON 15 AD't'ISED ... itlUt.lrARD l-llM ,eor'~ ... ••' r..., ........ ,._~ .-. ... ,.. .. "-.. ..... JUDGE PARKER SHE SHOVLO eE HERE KIM WON'T NEEO TO eE NO LESS lWW THREE HERE MORE THAN THREE we•t<S. MRS. OR FOUR DAYS, WILL WARNER ! SHE. DOCTOR ? FUNKY WINKERBEAN .> l) lNCIOE;NTALL 'I', I WOULD UKE TO TALK WITH YOU~ HUSBAND SOME· TIME SOON, IF IT'S COf'NENIENT' BOi DURING 1HE PAbi £;EAR ... , .. DOONESBURY by Berke Breathed ~--I _; ...... ...by Jim Davrs -._._., - by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally by Harold Le Doux WELL, HANK IS ON A eu51NES6 TRIP RIGHT ~ ... ANO I'M MOT SURE WHEN HE'LL ee e.t.CK ! evr I DO HOPE THAT KIM WON'T NEEO lO STAY .-ERE TOO LONG ' l KNOW SHE'U. ee TERRleLY l..f"SET TO THINK I 'VE PUT HER. IN A PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL! by Tom Batiuk IE.N OF -rnE KIO$ HAD 1HEIR AU.OWANCESIAKEN 10 ARBl"TRA1iON ! by Gary Trudeau MAY23,1986 IWLY Pllfil ENfERfAINMENf GUIDE \OL.2/N0.20 I '~ J i .. I . Kids' theater goes first class at SCR Children's theater is a long way from "kid stuff' at South Coast Repenory. The actors may be teen-agers performing for the pure dellgh1 of it. but everything around them -set design, lighting. propcntl''>. music choreography and the stage direction that pull~ these ..,ancd elements together -will be of professional quality when SCR 's Young Conservatory Players open their two-weekend engagement of"The Phantom Tollbooth" Saturday afternoon. It's the last YCP production on the Second Stage of the SCR ------------theater. which is no cause for Toi Trrus distress. Beginning next fal l. th e Young Conservator) gang wall put on their shows across th1: street-in the brand nl·w Orange County Performing •\rts Center And since it's a la\t hurrah ol sorts. director Daanl Doyk and •••••••••••• her staff are pushing to make ''The Phantom Tollbooth" the biggest children's sho"' )Ct. "This as the 'As You Like tr ofYCP," Doyle says referring to the early technically magnificent production of the Shal..l·spe~rcan play on the SCR main stage. "It's the most ambitious project wt·'v1: attempted since we started in 1978" -the year the prt'<.cnt theater went into operation. The Young Conservatory has been around longer hut before J 978 at was only as a school. training performers from I'> 10 18 )car-, of age. When SCR moved into its present two-theater (Omplex the pla~ers· group was formed. with two years of conservator) training required before an actor could audauon. ror the past six years. Doyle (whose husband, R ll hard . 1\ a fo unding member of the Costa Mesa company) has J1rl·ctcd tht· Young Conservatory and put on three shows a \l'Jr. ~ 11h "Tollbooth," she reaches new frontiers - a cast 111 28 younl' people. over 100 props and three racks of costumes. Ha ving such artistic and technical support at her 11mmand Do~ le hasn't lost sight of the "real world." She also 1\ .1 llaCht•r at Ncwpon Elementary School where her theatncal prol.l uctmn' often are one-woman efforts. Her most recent ... 11. 1\\. thal· "Wheels," in volved 300 youngsters -which gave hl:r a firm apprec1at1on of her SCR position. .\t SCR she often adapts children's literature lor the stagL o;omethangshe says she would have loved to do with Ncir111n Justu,· .. Phantom Tollbooth" -but playwright Susan Nanu J l.1 11 tif'll Her C\es widen as she descnbes the show: .:lt'c; lake the best of'Ahcc in Wonderland' and 'Thl \\ wml of Oz' rolled into one. It's fantasy. and fa ntasy is best eni• 'rd b) tlw auci1cnLc that wallingly abandons themselves to the am\ ll\ on 1hr \tage Part of the theater's mag.ac is its ability to transpnrr us from the everyday to the fantastic. with the help ol our mH1 1magmat1ons, and this requires a special kind of creat1 \ l 1nterpla\ between actors and audience that we seek m 'l r. 't c I' production." · Kids of all ages can catch the show this weeke nd .md nn 1 Saturdays at I and 3 p.m. and Sundays at 3 and 5 pm on thl Second Stage of the theater, 655 Town Center Drive.< nc;ta M e,,1 The second weekend is virtually sold out. but tick1·f\ for tlm weekend can be reserved by calling the box office at 9" 1 -HB3 .. Publisher. Karen A. Wittmer &Jitor Frank Zana Darebook Ed110r: Di:ue Lindsay An Drrecror: Steven Hou(l.h Orcu/atJon Manager Terry Kandlc Product/on Manager Roben L Cantrell K Datebook is published c"el) Fnda)' b) the Oranar Coast P11hh\h1na 1 11 P 0 Box 1560. 330 W Ba)' S1 ( osta Mesa. CA 92626 Tele-phone (7 J -H 642--4321 Rc:.ular business hou" arc 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .. Monda~ through Fnday Dcadhnc for calendar of events ttems and letters 1s S pm \llonda~ The e nlrrt conlents of Datcbook arc copynghted b)' the 11rnngc Co;nr Pubh1hin1 Co. All n&hts arc reserved a Dally Piiot Oateboc>k/ Friday, May 23. 1986 Contents OnStage BALLET PA This version of L graphed by Comr will also feature ··~ part of Ballet Pa< shown both Saturi Theater in Lagum Preview LEVEL 42 C ••.....•..••.•..•. Bf RANDY JJ- chck .... SomewhL'r• miserable conner Coach House ~u Though the band 1 will probabl } Ix· surroundings. T hl on B1llboard'c; l 01 'HEART' S'I By PHIL SNEID declared dead h\ astoni shing comd new album that'-.• sisters fro m tht· Amphitheatre la-. lingcnng douht-. surpnses and pl,1 enthusia sm and 11 easil y won oH·r ti TICKTOCI IRVINE AN Ticktockcrs and gatherings rect·n1 The Ticktockcr'I branch of the ~ completed six ye Departmer TOP BILLIJ RESTAUR.1 RESTAUR. 1 :J ORMA'"f :""\~ 1 f1 A. \.#l1 t • ••• ••••I • ... ' - I I .. . . ... 1 • ; • .. f\I , .. II •• 11 t I \1 1/ ~ 11 \ \I 11 I ' 'I '-111nl~} .tllt t I wltl 11 r I I 1111<> I ' II '· ,, 11 ..,, 1.1 I ' 'lJ .. .1 I {\ l•' ,. It H ~ l ' ''II \ II ,.. p ... . •'I J" 1 I~ I r I I I ' < II ... E " '· • ' v- rJt 11 •I " ~ A r\ , 'rt I I ' I . • l . I 1'' : . ·' I• r1 L: ., ti I . .. ,, f I• " ' I I I• I . "' ) 4 ,, t .. . --r -..,iliJ~ren ca " 11 oe •bowl,.,. . .,, s .. ti...... - l ,., I L I I • • I I\ ~II • 'H It l 111• • r '• . . . . ' , ' <)\ ( I I ·<IA. 1. j I .• I I u 1"t r .x ! ~· • , ! °'I . [ rht • ''" ' . ~' ' 1, .. < l I ., •'' . .. \ \, i .. '•I l I 1 ' r r ' ' "' .• t ,, \ ( ' I I ~ I • ~ •I - r c ,, -_ -· ,ers .. I I ' • I 'lh "Lt "'t"'IE' , JI 1(1 0 1\E ~. . 1r l ro A1 AYSI JUNE .1 d1rch St N c111xxu ~.,.__ .. \ I ---~ ~ \R ED Grand Dinner 1st1ng. th Coast Reper· g. "at the Curtain ·r. Sec Friday CLASS" at the Playhouse. Sec IE FLOREN· s West Dmncr y lls11ng. FESTIVAL .it •RMANCE Make-Up, >O. AY,MAY'lS. CENTER ·1203 LEGE Mesa nderson •erst em JNE 7 'IE 8 l\clult<t, "" .LEGE e Mr.<W le'r~l ~-·1 . ~ Orange Coast College. See Fnday lasting. "TBE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH" by the Young Coruervatory Players o n the Second s~ of South Coast Repenory, 6SS Town Center Dnve. Costa Mesa (957-4033), Saturdays at I and 3 p.m., Sundaysat 3 and 5 p.m lhrouah June I. "SIDE BY SIDE BY SONDHEIM" at the Newport Theater Arts Center. See Fnday listing.. "THE SOUND OF MUSIC" by the Fullerton Civic Light Opera. Sec Fnday listing. "TARTUFFE" at Chr l . Irvine. See Fnday listing. Sunday "EVITA" at the Grand ninner Theater. Sec Fnday listmg. "JJTrERS" at South Coa t r- tory. See Friday ltstinf. ''THE I.ING AND I ' at the Curtain CaJI Dinner Theater .. See Friday listinJ. .. "I.AST OP THE a..ASS" 11 the Harlequin Oioncr PlayboUJC. See Fnday listina. "LEONAllDO THE FLOREN- TINE" at Sebl.stian's West Dinner Playhouse. See Friday listina. "THE PBAHTOM TOLLBOOTH" by the Youna Conscrvato?' Players on South Coast Repertory s Second Stagr. See Saturday lasting. ''T AllTUFPE" at Christ College Irvine. See Friday listjng. TueM&y "EVITA" at tbe Grand Dinner Thcatet'. See Friday listing. "LA.ST OF THE a.ASS" at the Harlcqufo Dinner Playhouse. Sec Fnday listing. "THE mREE SISTERS" in the Fine Arts Concert HaJI at UC Irvine (~56-6617), toniaht through Saturday at 1$ p.m. Wecbl•day .. EVn.l" at I.be Grand Dinner Tbeatet'. Sec Friday listing. .. llTl'ERS .. at South Coast Reper- tory.. Sec Friday llSting. LA.ST OF 'l'BE CLASS" at the Karlequm Dinner Theater. Sec Fn- day listing. "LEONARDO THE FLOREN· TINE" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. Sec Friday bstinc. "THE TBBEE SISTERS" at UC Irvine. Sec Tuesday listing. Thanclay "EVITA" at the Grand Dinner Theater. Sec Friday listing. th Coast Repertory. Sec Friday list- ing. "LAST OF THE CLASS" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhou~. See Friday listing. Preconceived Notions: 0 ;: Planning a Family ~~J -~ Planning a family? Considering the pros and ooos of pregnancy an:! parenthood? TbJs free seminar can help answer your questions. -Seminar Topia and Spaakers - Maximizing F ,a 'ility Michael T. laodd, M.D. Getting in Shape for Pregnancy Susan Krolmlddt, Pr "''*" 11llrnpy Combining Motberhoocl and Fatbcrbood with Other Careers George Jayatilalla , M.D. PeAlbb 7 p.m. -9: 30 p.m . Oass size is limited. Please call for reservations. (7 14) 895-6636 ext. 627 1'llil ballh doc:adon ,,..... .. otrtte.'d frtt ol ch*lf 11 • conamunJty la'Vict. Daily Pilot Datebook/ Friday. May 23. 1986 •~ CONTINUED "LEONARDO THE FWREN- TINE" at Sebastian's West Dinner Pia) house. Sec Friday listing. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. 606 Laguna Can)On Road. Laguna Beach (..t94-0743). Tuesdays through Satur- da)S at 8 p.m .. Sundays at ~:30 through June :n. ''OK.LAHOMA" at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater. 690 El Camino Real. Tustin (838-1 540). nightly except Monda)'s at varying curtain limes through .\ug. 17. "THE SOUND OF MUSIC" by tht• Fullenon Civic Light Opera. See Fnda) listing. "THE THREE SISTERS" at L'{ Irvine See Tuesday hsl1ng. DANCE Friday THE AMERICAN INTER- NATIONAL DANCE CO. presents a swing class at 8 p.m. each Friday followed by a dance social from 9-10:30 p.m.; a jitterbug class each Monday at 8 p.m.; and a ballroom and Latin class each Wednesday at 8 p.m. S20 for S<"vcn lessons. 6S0-3048. Saturday BALLET PA Cl Fl CA'S "PINOC- CHJO today at 3:30 p.m. and tomor- row at I :30 and 3:30 p.m. at the Fcst1val of Arts Forum Theatre. 650 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. Also on the program is Kathy Kahn's delightful .. Mi xed Vegetables." where an onion, some potatoes. carrots and even hot peppers cavort memly "Pinocchio.. has been choreographed for Ballet Pacifica b) Conone Calamaro to a compiled score. Tickets at SS arc available at the box office For funher 1nfor- mat1on. call Ballet Pacifica in Laguna Beach at 494-7271. Monday MARTIN & TONJ'S Swing Dance Club meets each Monday at the Hot Spot, 7492 ~inger Ave., Huntington *MEA * lfUll'TllllCTOll NAClf LACUllA HACH CNIANGi '°"'""' on-111 UM'T10 Mann '"'° Pl&U SDSJJ8 OAll.Y 1 I JO 1 JO J JO SJO 14S tOOO *CIOITA MESA £4-.rGJ H¥l>Of l'Wlll 831 3.901 °""" • ,, • ,, 1000 SolT -!ZOO 100 400 ••• ,,, 1000 IA. TOiiO !.dw-Sac1<11e-1c Sit 5llO DAILY f 15 t IS 1000 SAT WOii 1i '' I 1t t tS llJllJ IOOO [dW ... CJl4'fUf CAfttn tdw•rOJ South c.at .. I (1170 •07 1111 DAll.V 7 00&100 DAILY f 45 9 45 10 JO SAT "°" I 00 JOO SAT -1Z45 14' 500 700 100 445 945 A•S IOJO ntl&SATl.61'tlHOW 1041 *MISSIOtl VIUO • 111v1111 E4wa~1 v._io TW;11 to_ .. Wooctbt~ 1JO-ee90 SS1 oess OAll.,. • 45 • 45 I 0 JO OAll.Y •• •JO 101t SAT -oiu zo SAT -11-JO IJO 445 54' 10 tOJO •JO IJO tlO 1015 •LAMIMOA ·=. Pec1f1< t Lot loloredJI I)<! US3 194.2AOO DAll.Y I 00 J IS ~:".~':~~uo 510 HS IOI» WUllDAYS I 00 WUIWfOS T JO •UllTA AJIA Edwerds lrlttol ~, ... OAll.Y t JO •30 10 IS SAT -1110 ZJO 4 30 f.>O I JO 10 IS WUTllllllTlll PIC'tflc"t HI Wty '8 ~111•1 *3 _,,_n•ll'l'S ATOUSll •caMiifeiOVf u-vm.,.c... ... ... OM'7 °""-¥ t JO t JO U)I S SAT WOii IUO UO •.JO IJo tlO ( :':°OC::) • Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Frtdey, May 23. 1986 Beach. 7 p.m. features Beginning West Coast Swing. 8 p.m. offers Intermediate Swing. and 9 p.m bnng.s S0C1al dancing Wlth a SI 00 swing dance contest. $4 class lesson includes cover charge of SJ 840-JS 18. Tue9day WEEllL Y SENIOR DANCES arc presented by the Costa Mesa Seniors from 8-11 p.m. featured 1s li ve band music and a large. wooden dance floor. Costa Mesa Women's Club, 61 O w. 18th St., Costa Mesa. $2 donation SEIVllNARS Comln& May 27-29 AARP CONVENTION AT ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER The 21-milhon member Amcncan Assoc1a11on of Reured Persons will meet in Anaheim to discuss the future of social secunty. pohucs and the presidency. Keynote speaker former congresswoman Shirk) C h1shotm. 1elev1s1on commentator lrtc Scvare1d, and cartoon 1st Jeff Mac Nel- ly. creator of "Shoc" will help wi th a series of free. open forums throu1Y1- out the convention. dealing with tcgislauon and public affairs On Tuesday. May 27. Shirley Chisholm will give the keynote address at 9:4S a m .• WiJburCohenand Petti.Ferrara host a discussion on Social SCcurity, Its Future and Faimes.s at 10:30 a.m. On Wednesday. May 28, at 9:4S. The Inside View -Our Political System, and at 11, The Bu~t Deficit. Thu~y. May 29. Eric Scvareid presents A V 1ew From the Front at I 0 a.m. and there will be a discussion of health care costs at 11: l S a. m. HEALTH AND WHOLENESS EXPO AT THE BEAUX CENTER JUNE 1 23732 Birtcher Drive. El Toro, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. For an adm1ss1on fee of SS (under 12 free) you can spend the day 1n frtt lec1ures. expcrienc:e therapies. body work and dtllj.nostic techniques at a fracuon of their normal cost. enJOY professional readings 1n astrology. numerolOjY. handwnting analysis and med1cme wheel all at less than pyschic fau rates. Also browse the shopping area for crystals. Nati ve American ba.slcctf). herbs. Bach Flower rem- edies. exotic handcrafis and more Call 859-7940 for more information. SING• ES Friday THE CARTIERS AND 14 KARAT CLUB for singles gathers for ps)Ch1 c fa1rcs. dance'>. and hou~ parties at 8 p.m. each Fri. in Ncwpon Beach 641-3987. CLASSIC F1llENDS. for ages 4S 0t over. meet for Happy Hour 11 the Seventh Aoor Restaurant, 2386 1 El Toro Road in El Toro .. S44-92S9 POCUS H , a sroup of singles aics 20.29. meet at 7:30 p.m. at tfic South Coast Community Chu~h. Sl20 Bonita Cuyon Dr., Irvine. 8S4-7600. PARENTS WITHOUT PART· NERS bolds their monthly dance at 9 p.m. An onental1on for new mcmben 1s at 8: I 5 p.m. sharp. llamada Inn. JS Calle de Industrias, San Clemente. 586-9183. WHEEL OF FIUENDSHJP, for s1n&les over 45. mectsat the R11,. ( 1nll in typrcss for T.G.l.F, at S. '" p.m 524-51 48. Saturday WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP, for singles over 4S. meets at 7 p m for dinner at the Overland Stagl· 1n Anaheim. 524-5148. Sunday FOCUS H. a grnup ot singk\ .tgrs 30-39. meet at 11 .30 a.m. at the: \outh Coast Community Church. ~ 120 Bonita Canyon Dr .. Irvine. 854-7f.{X) WHEEL OP FRIENDSHIP. for singles over 45. meets 11 11 'o .i m for a champagne brunch at {,m~n\. Grand Hotel. 524-5148. OSKO'S CLUB MARINA < Ian· net1st Bob Keane and 10-picte 11r· chestra fordancmgand hsteninJ, from 4.30 to 8:30 p.m. $4 co.,,e1 \ har~ includesappet1zcrbuffct. 190 MJnna Dnvc. Seaport Villaae. Long lkoi,h (213) 49~6444. CLASSIC FRIENDS for sin~ll' ~5 and over, meets at the Cro"'n lluu\C' Restaurant. 32802 Pac1fir < 0:1\1 High way m South Laguna al I pm for a Sunda) brunch 544-9.'!5'1 Tue.day THE NEWPORT IRVINE CHAPTER of Parents ~11hout l'.irt· ners pre5ents their Newrnmt'r\' Orientation each Tuesda) trom S.9: IS p.m .. followed by coflrt' Jnd conversation. Call 549-11 JS tnr further information. CLASSIC FRIENDS, for age\ -l ur over. meets for Happy Hour from '\. 7 p.m. at Bobby McGee's Restaurant. 28471 Mar&ucri~ Pkwy . Ml\\1on VieJO. 544-9259. Wedneeday WHEEL OF f'RJENDSHI P for singles over 45, meets at the Keuk m Anaheim for dinner at 6:30 pm. S24-Sl48 for reservations and 1nlor· mauon Tbunday THE THURSDAY NIGHT CLl'B meets from S:J0.8:30 p.m. wce~h 3t vanous locations throughout the area. Parties include dancing. hors d'ocuvres and door pnzcs .. 534-21 W BATOIU appears Wcd.-Fn. from ll p.m.-12:30 a.m. at the Sheraton Newport Hotel, 454S MacArthur Blvd.. Newport Beach. 833-0570 Pl\AN MUTIN performs ea') listening, contemporary music on the pianQ. Dancina available. Tucs.-l·n. 7:30-10:30 p.m .• Holiday Inn. Bn~tol Ave., Costa Mesa. nu; BOP ~ts dancing music by emcee Fch11 Lane Fri.-Sat.: ··The Authcntics." a live SO's dan« band. Sun. at 8:30 p.m.; "Rock 'N Roll Heaven," a live show tribute to the lqends fcatu.nna Bob Oully, Mon 31 8 p.m.; "Rock Around the Cloclc." a history of rock and roll f~tunng 1&$0n Chase. Tues. at 8 p.m .. and Crazy Contest$, includina Up S) nc. ' ... C 0 N T I N U E ~ D Limbo, and Basketball Shoot, Thurs. 18774 Brookburst. Fountain Valley. 963-2366. THE FIR.M AT THE P ACIFJC AMPJTBEA TllE ton1&ht at 7:30. Jimmy Page and Paul Rodicn. two of rock's most ill ustnous figures merge their musical talents and arc Joined by Tony Franklin and Cbns Slade. Tickets available at the Pacific Ampilhcatre ticket office. and Jonathan Lewis, along with Joey Phillips and vocalist Barbara Weathers. Admission to K.nou's Berry Fann includes the AtJanuc Starr performances as well as un- limited use of the 165 rides, shows and attractions. 8039 Beach Blvd, Buena Park. 827-1776. Sunday Saturday THE HOP, see Friday lisung. ATLANTIC STARR AT KNO'M''S BERRY FARM appearing at the Toyota Good Times Theatre 5 and 8 p.m. today and Sunday, will bring their smooth sounds from their hit album "As the Band Tums." The band features brothers David. Wayne THE BOP, sec Friday listing. ATLANTIC STARR AT KNO'M''S BERRY FARM sec Saturday's list- ing. Monday THE BOP, sec Friday listing. Tuaday e a wa• .. MATWa MONDAY THAU 8 ATUAOAY IST 2 PE-.a...M ANCE6 LAKEWOOD "''' car S IN-UI lb4J .... liU wtK oun111 _ .. u 1•1t LAKEWO D c ...... s..u•h 1101114 1111 '•'""' • o~ ""'" flll WITH flll ,...1>1 1us .... •u llUI CITY II> tu..,. lt>4J SAY YIS .,.._.,, .... 1:41 ,,.. , .. -.... 90UY ITtlllO _,... AT CLOSI IAHGI.., ·~,,...,. .. ,_ ANAHEIM '°'"'' sn1:to '°'-TIIOllST th THI OTHll SfDC l"-1>1 IUe 1'• Ut -e.4J te<Jt OOlt'f Jn•tOlfOM c.•UtM TM OUN tNI ',.. l:1t ,,.. ...... P1V1 lMITTIMKM SHOltl ceacun '"' 11es 1111 ••• ,,., •- ~ SAY YIS ~Ul ,,_,. "".,. "" ,, .. , ... I MUON WATS tO Dll 111 I U-1•4J '"Ill ...... " ,.nTY IN •INK ~UI lti» 4'U IM lUCAS 1,._1)1 _..,",_ t114111t !Uflll!M "'"* fn m •IU I 1'71/l••O•• ••• hen SAlYADOtl Ill l:JS &iU ..... t:tt II IS STIUO IOUND SYLVUlft "~LONI COIU twl ,.,. ,,. ,.., ,,.. '"" snuo--snvum STAUONI C09U tw1 hM l:M J;4$ ,,._ ll!IS 00\.aY mH0 ....,.,._ AT ClOSI UHOI 111 .................. , -AlM SWHT LtlHn f"I I <le l::4t -&.'11 I II M • N " ,o NO H Al 1 V "' I "" ~ >I """"'° H .. , ..aof: £ "6 CHE '' SOUHO " AU SCIOll C"6 SAY YIS.,.111 IACHILC>a •MTY 111 1. flal wt'TM , ... tM-UI 2. MONIT M 1N1 ). JOY Oii ID 411 ORANGE '1"! UWlllll 1 ,., • C..,... -au.II TOfl OUN,.. OmtNO IVIN ll:I '""' ..nn ..... IHCMIT ClllCUfT 1N1 110.. IMM.1 ... ltl • ...... "''°' JO JO MNCll. YOUI U.I ti CAWNO Cl> OMOIT WAH.loa Oil .... _.. swtn Ltaarn ... DOWlit AND OUT tH llVllll Y MtLLS Ill) """_,...... IHCMIT CllCUfT 4"' lllOH IMM.I "°"' loHABR A .• ,. •• iIUII i~ .•. l.'"9 ..,.,. •HI IHOtlf CllCUIT ,.. .. °" 1MU,.._u1 IYLW:lnll ITMlONI COMA 1111 •ttOttCTOI 111 f'OlTlaGllSl II: THI OTHH SIDI IN-Ill CAT'S IYl .... 1>1 SAY YIS ,..UI LAI T 11 IOltf tll SNEil PREVIEW performs lave each Tuesday from 8 p.m.-12:30a.m. at the Sbctaton Ncwpon Hotel, 4545 MacAnhur Blvd., Newpon Beach. 83).-0570. THE BOP, sec Fnday lasting. FRAN MARTIN, sec Fnday listang. Wedneeday HATORI, sec Fnday usting. PllA.N MARTIN, sec Friday Listing. Thanday HATORI, see Friday listing. FRAN MARTIN, sec Friday listing. THE BOP, sec Fnday listing. Friday JORN ANEU.O JR. and the Band oerform Tues.-Sat. in the Lobby Bar. k yatt Rescncy Hotel, 200 S. Pine St.. long Beach. No cover charge. --CAFE LIDO presents Judi Lee, piano and vocals. from 5-8 p.m.; the Lido Jazz AU Stars Thurs.-Sat. from 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd._675-2968. Satvday JOHNNY OTIS, famed mu- sician, bandlcader and radio per- sonality, performs two shows at 8 and 11 _p.m. He has been a fixture on the Jazz and rhythm and blues national scene for over four decades. Del Rae Restaurant. 2151 N. Harbor B. vd, Fullen.on. Sl2.50admission. 870.1711. Suday CAFEUOO .. Freeway,·· featur- ing Max Bennett, from 9 p.m. to I a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd. OCC JAr/. FESTIVAL con- tinues tonight at 8 with the Bobby Hutcherson Quartet featuring George Cables. At the Fine Arts Recital Hall 119. General ad- mission is $10. 423-5819, the OCC Jazz office or the OCC tic~et offioc 432-SS27 for mo~ infOr· mation. ~., CAFE UDO ''lnlC'rsectJon, .. with Wayne Wayne, from 9 p.m to 1:30 a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd. JOHN ANELLO JR., see Friday lisung. Wedaaday JOHN ANELLO IB~, sec Friday listing. COi SAWYEJl BROWN appears at 8 p.m. at the Loni Beach Arma. (213) 436-3661. 'hie.day EXD..E appears at 1 and 10 p.m. tonight. at the Crazy Hone, I 580 Last year, a n independent research firm interviewed hundreds of you. A who in 84% of you who had tried BULLFROG® considered it better than anything you had ever tried. "We need a larger more economical size to go with the pocket size:• Your wi sh is our command! BULLFROG AMPHIBIOUS FORMULA SUNBLOCK Patmt ~dina-SPF IH21ll 373-6~9 is! Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, May 23. 1986 7 c 0 N T IN U E D Brookhollow Dr. in Santa Ana. S49-1 Sl2. Wedneeday Tbe Cruy Bone ,S.a free c:oa.nt:ry dance lee90U by Roa and Ooaaa at 7:30 e•ery Wed neaday nlCbt. 1580 Brookbollow Dr. la 8uata Ana. 54&-1512. EiC. Friday CAFE MOZART features classical ptano Wed. evening. and piano or guitar. pop. and show-tunes Thurs.- Sat. evenings. All music is performed during dinner. Also featured is music at Sunday brunch. 3 l 9S2 Camino Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano. 496-0212. THE LAFF STOP. a premiere comedy night club. features Bobby Gaylor and Scott Shaw. 2122 S. East Bnstol. Newport Beach. 8S2-8762. LAGUNA POETS meet each Fn. at 8 p.m. for scheduled and open readings at the Laguna Beach Pubhc Library. Tonight hear Terri Bnnt Joseph. an instructor at Chapman College in E~ish and comparative literature. Pulished in "Los" ... North mencan Mentor'°. "The Archer," ..Poetry of the Year," .. Best an Poetry" and .. New Woman ... 494-9550 or 494-8375. ROBERT DUQUESNEL enter- tains on the piano with a wide vanety of musical selections Tues.-Sat. from S-9 p.m. Irvine Hilton and Towers· Lobby Lounge. 17900 Jambortt Blvd .. Irvine. 863-3111. CONFREY PllD..LIPS features renditions of Cole Poner, Gershwin and contemporary favorites Tues.- Thurs. beginning at 9 p.m., and Fri.- Sat. beginning at I 0 p.m. Also, the Brazilian songstress, Nilsa.joins him on Wed. and Thurs. evenings. Oup Copa. 633 Anton Blvd .• Costa Mesa. 662-2672. ERIC lAN SCHNEIDER.· song- wnter/folksmger, performs from 8-11 p.m. at Finally A Unicom. an informal coffee house. 214 Main St., HuntinJ1on Beach. No cover charge. SI minimum. 969-1794. Saturday STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL AND PARADE IN GARDEN GROVE: The 28th annual Strawberry festival par- ade will feature Grand Marshals Lyle Alzado of the Los Angeles Raiders and Richard Moll of TV's .. Night Court" as well as cast members of such TV shows as "Hill Street Blues," -faJcon Crest," and "Dynasty" as well as members of the Dodgers and tt tSWEET LIBERTY' IS A SWEETHEART O F A MOVIE.'' -Gene Shal1t, TI-IE TODAY SHOW "THE PERFECT STAR-SPANGLED SUMMER ENTERTAINMENT. Alan Aida's 'Sweet Liberty' is a Yankee Docxllc dandy." -Ru Rttd, NEW YORK POST _,. CC>ef A -.aA I.IA-~1-c... ....ot• n.~, .. ~...,,,,,. &TOflO \IA...,_ ,_flln ~ .. , .. _....,. ............. °"""41.,... • Deity Pilot Oatebook/ Friday. M•y 2.3. 1986 Angels baseball teams. The straw· berry festival is the second-largest community sponsored event in the western U.S. surpassed only by the Rose Parade. It runs throUJ.h Monday at the Village Green in Garden Grove. CAFE MOZART, sec Friday lisllng. CONFREY PHILLIPS, sec Fnday listing. THE RENAJ.SSANCE PLEASURE FAIRE closes May 26. An array of fine Elizabethan wares from 200 artisans arc for admiring and buying. Old Paramount Ranch, Agoura .. $1 2.SO adult admilsion. (213) 202-8S87. ROBERT DUQ~NEL, sec Fn· day listing. THE LA.FF STOP, sec Friday listing. 5ftla ANNUAL SCO'ITISH GAMES . AT ORANGE COUNTY FAIR· GROUNDS: today and Sunday 9 a.m. to S p.m. with Scotllsh entertainer Alex Beaton. mus bagpipe bands, athletics. dancing and family fun, including children's games. Two day ticket admission for adults is S 10. Seniors, $5. One day only: adults. $7, Seniors SS and children $2. For 1nformatton call 213-37(}.9887 or 213-370-1797, or 714-998-7857. SUPER STAR FANTASY for tnb- ute to "Hands Across America" at Santa Ana Stadium's Eddie West Field. Showtime 1s 8 p.m. with a portion of the proceeds ~oing to ''Hands Across America." Tickets arc available at aJI T1cketmastcr outlets and at the gate. The event 1s sponsor- ed by radio station KEZY. Photomat Stores. Orange County Stewan Anderson's Restaurants and Super Saver. Cclebnty lookalikes give high energy performances. impersonating such stars as Michael Jackson. Rod Stewart. Lionel R1ch1e, Pnncc and Tina Turner. ARTHUR ASHE AT THE SOUTH· LAND TENNIS CLINIC today at 9:30 Lm. at Nordstrom's South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bnstol St. in Costa Mesa. Ashe will demonstrate hi s winning technique on the new Matchmaker tenms rebound device. Selected at· tendecs will be able to part1c1pate in a hitti~ clinic with Ashe. Followina the chnic, Ashe will sign autottaphs and a drawing will be held for door prizes. The clinic is free. For more: informaoon. caJI 549-8300, exL 121 S. Sanday CAFEMOZART,ICIC Friday h ting. .... ANNUAL SC01TISB G~ AT OR.ANGE COUNTY FAIR- GROUNDS: Sec Saturday listing. THE LAJl'F STOP presents 10 comics. 2\22 S.E. Bnstol. Newport Beach. 852-8762. THE RENAISSANCE PLEASURE FAIRE, sec Saturday listing. Monday SCRABBLE as played each Mon- day at I p.m. at the leisure: World clubhouse 2 on Moulton f>arlcway an Laguna .Hills. C'.all 837-7223 for 1nformat1on THE LAFF STOP presents an all· male comedy dance revue. 2122 S.E. Bnstol, Newport Beach. 852-8762. MAGIC NIGHT is fcatuttd each Monday at 8:30 p.m. Bogie's. The Best Western Hununiton Beach Inn. 2111 2 Pacific Coast Hwy .. Hunt· ington Beach. S36-1421. Tueeday THE LA.FF STOP presents Mike Rapport and Jim Ridgely. 2122 S.E. Bnstol, Newport Beach. 852-8762. CONFREY PllllJ.IPS, sec Friday It sting. SCRABBLE IS played each Tun. day at 6:30 p.m. at Home Federal Savings. on Calle de la Plata at Pasco de Valencia, Laguna Hills. C'.all 586-2378 for mformauon. ROBERT DUQUESNEL. sec Fn- day hsung. LOUCH.UN, hypnotist. appears each Tuesday with audience part1c1- pat1on for adults ages 21 and over. Seating begins at 6 p.m., showume 1s at 8 p.m. The Best Western Hunt· 1ngton Beach Inn. 21112 Pacific Coast Hwy . Hun11ngton Beach S36-1421. w ecl.oe.day SCRABBLE 1s played o n the first Jonathan Winters has~ million that says his grandson can't get married by morning. I~ WM, AJtl IU .... lll r l •Xollr. •Al\4\1 I ... •ll'IAnlM'! '*1"'1Tll'> .... --·-°' -· l!tllJl)jll ~"""-""' Y, •,, • _., MAJGAl.El MOIUU'ION .... __ .. t Ml't v11'1 r -.. .:ll'il:MAllY l r llO'I IAYNC." 11\AJ!V YI m •--~YUllOYIAl"'k,1 ... .,..,l-'llll') ~ ( JNI 11 If RM'> NOW PLAYI NG . and thud Wodaesdays of each moo at 7 p.m. at the Newpon Tennis Cub, 2601 EutblufT Drive NCWl)0'1 Beach. Call 979-1321 fi infonmtioo .. CAR lllOZ.UlT, ICC fnday hiu.._ CONP'llEY PBILLIPS, see Ftlday hsting. CRDBAGE is played on the ICC· o nd aod fourth Wed. each month at 1 p.m. Oasis C.c:nter, Room I A-81 Sth and Marsucritr. Corona del Mat 644-4138. Call for information. ' ROBDT DUQUESNEL, c.ee Fn- day list.in.a, THE LAJl'F STOP, KC Tu~y I AAllP PITNF.88 WALi Tbe American Aslociation of Rctual People aloQ& with Scholl, Inc. will hold a WaJJc for Fitness beginniniat 7 a.m. at the Anaheim Convention Center. The walk will be led by spons ct'lebrity Rosey Grier. In addiuon to the 1.5 kilometer walk. ups for walk.in& will be offered by Howard Johnson, executive dtrec1or of lhc Walker's C ub of America. Breakfast wall be served immediate!~ after the outin ... PSeue call (213) 427-9611 for more mfonnation. Tllanday OU AND BAASS PROMOTIONS ANTIQUE SHOW AND SALE IOa.m. to 9 p.m. at IC..nO(fs Marke1pl1cc. between Beach Blvd. and Knoll Aic. 1n Buena Putt. The s.how fea1urcs antique fumiture, unusual lamps, coUcctible photos. vintage glus. pnm1uves and much more Thert 1s no adm1uioo fee and a drawing will tx held June 1 for a $2,000 ~room set. Free entry blanks are available The show runs dally until Ju ne I Call (2 13) 46S-0049. Amll\._l\rE Ad Ya.Dee CIIARLI BROWN'S SINGLES NJGRT June 5th from 7 to 11 pm. Dancing in Disco in a fabulous bays1de loungr with a view of l'ocw· port Bay -Promises, 3333 W. C uast H11thway, Newpon Beach Mrmbers $10. Guests $15. Rcwrvat10M rt· qu1ttd: Call 7~78. Send )Our check to Charli Brown, P.O Bo~ 7704. Newport Beach. 92MO \p- pet1zcrs. no host bar, valet par\.ing and a arcat place to meet all thost special people who appreciate and share bein& singk. WORLD RENOWNED MEZZO SOPRANO ~ALL WHEELER wilJ appear with the Orange Count) Oiarnber Orchcstra Sunday. Junt: I at the Oranae County Campu' or Loyola Marymount Univers1t). ,ind on June 2 at South Coast Reprr11m Theater m Costa Mesa. TicketholJcr~ will be invited to a post<OOl'trt recep11on for Sund.ay'sa event and a prc~ncert rueption for Monda~. bqlnoma at 6:30 p.m. In add1t1c.>n there will be an art display from \ n1ta Neal Contemporary An Galkrv of Laguna Bcach. For further 1nlor· malion, call 777-5590. l.AltE BILLS COMM UNITY CRUllClt MATUU SINGLES 1n' tit' all s1naJcs over 40 to attend a dinner mcctina rqardkss of church affiha· tion. An out1tandin1 musical pro- aram ii planllCd. 7 p.m., May 30 l.Jkt' Hills Fellowthip Hall. 1 "ll Moulton Pkwy .. Lquna Hills SX rcr person. Call by May 28 for rl'-.tr· vations. 137-1729. GOVERNOR and Mrs. (,C'org.c Dcukmcjian are Honorary Cha1m1c~ of the Newpoe1 Hu1>0f Art Muse um s summer pany cddJnuaa the unveil· i"I of the rcstomt Statue of Liberty Tht "ubc!~y" . takes pbcC July 3 on lbc of the 'New· New· pon.cr cson. -- 'Heart' is as good as ever By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OfhOlllJ,... .... Heart, the decade-old band that wa~ declared dead by music writers JUSI a year ago. has staged an astonishing comeback on the strength of some splashy videos and a new album that's pumped out four hll singles. been colorful videos built around lead singer Ann Wilson's black-robed witch-hke appearance and guitarist Nancy Wilson's lush blond hair, cleavage and vigorous sta,ae moves. Some heavy-metal postunng with a fem1n1ne accent helped the band general~ new fans among the MTV generation. On stage at lrv10c Meadows, the sisters and their bandmates were attired m their familiar video .. Nothm' Al All " It was no surprise tba1 the concert's clos1na song was Led Zeppelin's "Rock and Roll," which Heart has Iona used as a rousing crowd-pleaser. But the band preceded that tune with a scorching version of its own "Crazy on You." Though it dated back 10 yean to Heart' debut album, the song sounded as strong and as cootem· porary as ever. The same could be said about the band. The band. led by two sjsters from the Pacific Northwest, came to Jrv10e Meadows Amphllhtatrc last Sunday for a sell-out concert that dispelled any lingering doubts about Heart's vitality. The show was short on surpnscs and plagued by a few sound problems. but the band's enthusuum and its skillful reproduction of the Hean catalog of hits easily won over the audience. fashions, talung the stage amid blue r===========-------.;.;.... __ ....;;;._...;,,.;;====-===----======-===== smoke and soni.c overkill. Heavy tounngappcared not to have dimmed the power of Ann Wilson's voe.al chords, though her garish makeup, hairdo and outfit made her resemble a nightmansh version of Elvira. Sister Nancy provided strong support on gu.1tar and vocal harmony. She also m1m1cked a recent video when she slapped a few outstretched hands in Founded by sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson. Hean invaded the chans 1976 with the powerhouse debut album, .. Dreamboat Annie." The Wilson sisters' music immediately displayed an impressive range, from the folk-oriented title tune to Led Zcppchn-iofluenccd rockers like .. Magic Man." Followmg the debut album, the band underwent pcrsonnel changes but conunued to produce plenty of hits. Then came a dry spell marked by the lackJustcr sales of the .. Pnvate Audition" and "Passionworks" front of the stage. Dunng bombastic early numbers like "If Looks Could KiU" and "Shell Shock," Ann Wilson's vocals were a barely intelhgible shretk within the muddy milt. Subtlety was not the band's strong suit, especially when Denny Carmass1's overamplificd snare drum shots obliterated the delicate lyrics of" Dog and Butterfly." albums. The mus1c1ans showed more rc- Thc turning point proved to be a straint when lead guitanst Howard record label switch and last June's Leese stepped behind a synthesizer release of the band's ninth album. and Nancy Wilson took center st.age titled simply .. Hean ... That album to sing the 1mprcss1omsuc "These cont1nucSlo hover near the top of the Dreams."·Ann Wilson and the mu- charu. sic1ans also downshifted. to fine Bolstcnng the record sales have -effect. on the current mid-tempo hit. The Irvine Hilton displays art work f-or a first-hand look at some of the best and most dramatic work he1ng done 1n contemporary American art, Ir) the complimentary art tour at The In inc Hilton and To""crs. The hotel has on permanent d1spla) maJor works b) 20 Amencan artists. INllh special emphasis on 1mponant artists living and working in Irvine and Southern Cahforn1a .. It really 1s a cross-secuon of some of 1he finest work being done b> con1cmporary Amencan artists:· said Irvine Hilton general mana~er Dennis Clarke. ..and The Irvine Hilton and Towers 1s a great place to sec these artworks. The subtle, muted colors and soft hghting at the hotel bnng out the best in these works of contemporary an .. Several of the artists represented arc associated with the University of California. Irvine campus. according 10 Clark Craig Kauffman, for eum- ple. 1s Professor of An at UCI, two of his works -"Kobo" (1978) and "Dragon Stand" ( 1980) -arc in- cluded in the collection. Tony Delap, whose "Gambler's Rose (1981) 1s exh1b1ted. is currently the senior faculty member at ucrs School of Fine Ans. Other artists, such as the mter- nat1onaJly known Ed Moses and Guy W1lhams. ~ former faculty mem- bers at UCI. ·~-........ ~ ........ --..,_.... ""°"'°"~-_,_'51 .. 3 -IS4-llll ~ -1111.1 137.1340 ua.-sa m.a tlllOSIT\' AMCcaMlllMU ...,. ma u1.JS01 u ... m.1111 -534-Jtll EDWMOS ..-.. TWll HClf1C CAmMl llA cm CllntJ L...a &LI 7'1 ... 11 ... , ... MMJll EDIND/10 CAL wa1-1an1.Jt3' EDWMDS IUITlllilCll LMUMMlUMAll l'llWMDS ell:. lllOT ll •. 1'1111 .... ,.,.. lllTI •a& 751-4114 EDWMOS T<>Mt CDml .... 634-2553 CllD<K ..... 639-8770 STADUMDlt-• •U 529-5339 liWlf BIEA PUlA • STARTS TODAY! ....aPAM952..C993 UA ll>VES a ...sTI llSA 979..Cl41 EDWMDS CIDA COfTD 1L 1'MI Sil .9500 EDWMOS n TC.O .. ._ SSC-1111 EDWMDS tllV9SfTl t1.A UIU (213) 691·0633 MIC FAH* SQUM£ .,.111111. II.TU l1llR ......... 497-1711 EDWMOS SO. COAST LAQN t1.A ... 523-1611 PACl'M: 6ATtWAY . .......... 364-6220 EDWMOS MISSION VI.JO MAU -st .... 191-0567 EDWMDS VU.AGE COOlJ WUTWTU 191-3693 PACflC ..WAY 39 Dlt·• 9WllT'msnl • UA IEWTO TWll 195-5333 Daily Piiot Datebook/ Friday, May 23, 1986 • Movie Briefs ABSOLUTE BEGINNERS: A pop musical about aspiring mu- sicians of the 50s starring David Bowi e. James Fox. Eddie O'Connel, Patsy Kens1t, and Ray Davies. Rated PG-13. RAW DEAL: A drama set tn Chicago revolving around a for- mer FBI agent now serving as a sheri ff in a small North Carolina 1own . Due to his thwarted career and increasingly unhappy mar- riage. the former agent (played by i.\rnold Schwarzene8$cr) takes on an undercover assignment to infiltrate the mob. Kathryn Har- rold co-stars. THE MANH~TTAN PRO- JECT: A contemporary adven- ture about a resourceful high school student who sets out to J01n the most exclusive cl ub in the world. Christopher Collet. who portrays 17-year-old Paul Stevens. sets out to build an extraordinary sc ience project and ends up manufacturing a nuclear device. John L1thgow and Jill Eikenberry also star. Kelly McGUU. 'Top Gun' POLTERGEIST II: THE OTHER SIDE: Although the Frec- ting-famtly thought they escaped from their nightmare four years ago after their house was de- stroyed in a violent episode of psychic act1vtty tn 1982. their nightmare is about 10 begtn again 1n thi s \equel. Craig Nelson, Jobeth W1ll1am,, Heather o· Rourke and Olt vcr Robtns \tar...again MY UTI'LE PONY: THE MOVIE At the annual spring fest1"'al 1n Ponyland. all the little ponies celebrate the end of winter wtth a happy pageant of song and dance. But, whale th ey play, wicked witch Hydw (played by Cloris Leachman) and her equall) nasty daughters hatch a plot 10 turn Ponyland into a dark. drear) wasteland. TOP GUN: A contemporary action drama set at the Na vy's prestigious Fighter Weapon'> School. Top Gun. where the nation's most elite corp of fighter pilots train to be the best or the best. Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis star. Rated PG. DANGEROUSLY CLOSE: A suspense thriller that focuses on a clique of students in an upscale high school who have banded together to rid the school of undesirable elements. The games played by the teens get out of hand, escalating to murder. John Stockwell. Carey Lowell. Brad- ford Bancroft and J. Eddie Pec k star. Robert Palmer's .. Addicted To Love," is featured, along with music by Depeche Mode. Black Uhuru, and the Smithereens. FIRE WITH FIRE: A 17-year- old Catholic school girl becomes involved in a love affair wlth a teen-a~erserving time 10 an honor detention camp. Virginia Madsen and Craig Sheffer star. SWEET LIBERTY: Alan Alda stars tn this film, play10g a historian who has written an eanhy book about the American Revolution that becomes a best seller and is sold to Hollywood When the movie company comes to town to begin filming his book, Alda realizes he's made a big mistake. Also starrin~ Michael Caine. Michelle Pfeiffer, Bob Hoskms and Saul Rubinek. JO JO DANCER, YOUR LIFE JS CALLING: Ri chard Pryor stars as a well-known entertainer at the peak of his popularity and the bottom rung of his self-esteem. When an accident occurs at his Cal ifornia mansion. he 1s rushed to a local bum ward and con- nected to ltfe support systems. Jo Jo. under sedauon. takcc; a journey through the past. and what he finds there will determtne whethOf he It ves or dies. BLUE CITY: Judd Nelson ponrays Billy Turner. who re- turns to his home to make peace with his father, only to find that the man had been murdered. Billy turns to his two friends, Annie (Ally Sheedy) and her brother Joey (David Caruso) and then finds a cham of corruption that ends up almost costing him his life. Rated R. WISE GUYS: An unusual com- edy about two hfe long buddies from New Jersey whodecide ltfc won't be worth living 1f their abusive boss carries through with his plans to kill them. Dann) De Vito plays Harry Valentine. and Joe P1~opo pla y'> his pal. Moc Di ckstein. AT CLOSE RANGE: This drama involves a high school drop-out who yearns for a way out of his dead end ex1stance. He JOI ns up wtth ht'> long lost outlaw father and eventuall y has to face htm 10 a ltfe or death showdown. Stamng Christopher Walken, Sean Penn and Christopher Penn. P.O.W. THE ESCAPE: An ex- plos1 ve war drama set 10 1972 dunng the Vietnam War, P.0 .W. The Escape 1s the tale of one man's determination to rescue 1 e Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Frlday. May 23, 1986 Amencan pnsoners of war before the cease-fire accord s take effect. David Carradine stars as Col. James Cooper. a high ranking omcer who takes a small group of GJ's into North Vietnam MURPHY'S LAW: A 1hnlkr starring Charles Bronson as Jack 'My Little Pony' Murphy, a 16-yea r veteran of the Los Angeles Poltce Department's Homicide Bu reau. who 1s fram ed for the murder of his ex-wife. After he is arraigned on fim- degree murder charges. Murph) realizes the onl) way he can clear his name is to track down the actual killer.. Also c;tamng Kathleen Wllho 1te, Carrie Snodgress and Robert F. Lyons. VIOLETS ARE BLUE: An adult love story about a succcssf ul photOJOumaltst who returns to her hometown of Ocean City. Maryland. for a much needed vacation. Gussie Sawyer, played b) Sissy Spacek. meets Henf) Freell.aC Family 'Polterlel•t D' Squires {ptaycdr Kc vm Kltne). who was her hi school sweet- heart from I years earlier. Although thei r attraction 1s sll ll strong. there are obstacles to picking up the old relationship. THE MONEY PIT: A Steven Spielberg presentauon of a Rich- ard BenJam1n fi lm , stamng Tom Hanks. Shelle) Long. Alexander God uno v . an d Maureen Stapleton. this film deals with love and the pitfalls of homt: ownership APRIL FOOL'S DAY: A con- temporary suspense thnller star- ring Ja) Baker. Deborah Fore- man. Deborah Goodnch. Ken Olandt. and Am y Steel. The story revolves around an Apnl Fool'!. Da) part) and what happens v. hen a JOke gets earned too far . CARE BEARS MOVIE II: .\ c;tol') about the ong10 of the Cart: Bare Fam tl ). introducing the Care Bear ( ubs and the Care Cousin ( ubs and ho"' the) became champions of caring There are six ongrnal songs 1n thl\ children's film. LUCAS: Lucac, is the story ot a \punky teen-age ind1 v1dualtst v. ho nsks hie; nee~ -and his sen!><! of \aluc.·s -for lme. Lucas Bl)C. 14. 1c; not ltk l' the other kids in o;chool .\ loner. he linalh meets a 16-ycar-o ld girl jnd h1\ ltfc change'> Starring ( ore~ Ha1m. Kem Green. < 'harltc Sheen and ( ourtnC) Thorn c- m1th . JUST BETWEEN FRIENDS: Mary Tyler Moore plays Holl ) Davis. a caree r housewife who befriends a female tl'IC\ l'>t<>n anchol"\\<oma n v. ho turns out to be ha-.rng an affa ir v.1th \.1oort.··c; husband. ( hmt1nc I ah11 pla"s Moore·s nn~ fnend Sand) Dunlap. CROSSROAD : -\drama about ..1 gifted )Ounggu1LJnst on the trail of a lcgcndar) blu es '>ong that ht' fceb will pro pel him to c;tc1rdom The guitarist. pla)ed tn Ra lph Macchio. rcccl\csa prom1 <>e from an aging bluesrnan that he "''II tx· \hown the crossroads 1n M 1sw,. s1pp1. l\ccord1ng 10 blues lore. thl· crossroads I!> the plate v. hac aspmng mu<,1c1ans male a deal wtth the de"' II -barga1n1ng their ~ouls for fame and fortune. Al so starring Jami Ciert1 anll Jex· Seneca. GUNG HO: A corned"' ahout thl· culture clash that results v.hen a Japanese motor compan) takes over an auto factor; tn a small Pennsylvania town Coitamng M 1chael Kea ton . Gc dde Watanabe. M1m1 Rogerc; and George Wendt. directed hy Ron Howard . PRETI'Y IN PINK: A lOntcm porary comedy/drama about a girl from the 'wrong side of the tracks' who is stru~ltng to fit tn with the rich kids and still maintain her sense of pnde and tnd1viduahty. Stamng Moll)' Ringwald. Harry Dean Stanton. Jon Cryer and Annie Potts. HANNAH AND HER SISTERS: A comedy wntten and directed by and stamng Woody Allen which explores the lives of three sisters and an adulterous man. Also stanina Micahcl Carne. Mia Far- row.· Came Fisher. Barbara Hershey, Lloyd Nolan, Maurttn O'Sullivan, Daniel Stem. Ma~ Von Sydow and Dianne Wiest. BRAZIL: Terry Gilham\ con. trovers1al comedic n1gh1mart about the human condtt1on \laI· nng Jonathan Pryce. Robert De Niro. Michael Palin, Kathcnne Hclmond. Ian Holm. Bob Hoskms and Kim Greist The story 1s set in a time v.here computers can get fudged ~11h homfic consequences. v.hcre every home has unreltabk mu nic1pal services and when· the public seems not to ~arc Screenplay by Terr) <i tlltam Tom Stoppard and < hark\ Mc: Keown. John LlU.,ow 'The Manhattan Project' MURPHY'S ROMANCE: I ht o;tof) of Emma Monart} (\,il h Field). a divorcee out to ma\..1• II un her own on an An1ona h11N' ranch. and local pharma. l\t Murphy Jones (James Garn et 1 ,1 take-1H n·stridc. middle .1g, d man rea dy to exP.l or(' m:v. n~ portunit1es in his ltfe. Directl·ll t" \fan1n Ritt. Scrcenpla) b~ H 11 net Frank. Jr. and Irving Ra H·t. '1 Ba~d on the novella b~ '1." Schon. WATER: Mi chael Caine pla" J ~ovemor of a Bnt1sh prOtl'd I island who ts interrupted v.h,·n the island 1s invaded by (uh.in revoluttonanes and U.S. bu" nessmen. Valerie Pemne ah· stars. Ol1TOF AFRICA: Mcr.l '\11l( I' and Robert Redford star 1n tht' Sydney Pollack film about .1 Danish wnter's account of her htr on a Kenya n coffee farm 1n thl early part of this century. 83\lu on a novel by Isak Dinescn. R:.itrd PG. THE COLOR PURPLE: \ Stephen 1pielberg film of .\htl Wal ker's Pulitzer Pnzc w1n n1n1? novel about the struggles ot an early 20th Century Sou them fa m· tl y. tarring Danny GIOH'I Adolph Caesar, Maragaret A "en Rae Dawn ChonJ, Oprah Win frcy, Akoi1ua Bus1a and Willard Pu&h and introducing Wh OOJ'lH' Goldberg. Intae Tlcktocken. Back row, from left: Katherine Anna J ohn110n, Stacy Diann Ber&er. VaneM& Elaine Martin, Nicole Marcotte llWer, Rachel Hauck, Daryl Aabley Kine. Jennlfer Lynn Stewart, and Deborah Alli80n Pope. Front row, from left: Janet Pauline Butterfield, EllH Lynn Enomoto. Leelle Sherrill Du1Cher, lrelle Marta Hoek, Sarah Wray Selman, Lealyn 11.lu Nitta, and Caprice Catherine Plaua. Irvine, Newport Ticktockers in the spotlight By VIDA DEAN OillMO..,. .......... Tht' T 1ck1ocker program 1s the Jaughtcr pon1on of the mother- daughtcrchantablc organization. Na- 11onal C'hanty League. The spotlight was recently on two groups ofT 1cktockcrs -the Irvine Chapter and the Newpon Chaptcr- ~oung women who completed six \Cars of service to their communities F1 fteen senior T 1clctockers ofl rvinc ~ere presented dunnga luncheon at the Rtll Carlton and 24 young women ~ho w1ll maJcc their debut Nov. 29 ~ere introduced at an announcement tea held in Sherman Library and Gardens in Corona del Mar. At the luncheon JSOgathered 1n the hotel counyard fora social hour before v1ew1ng the Ticktockcrs 1n a fashion show featuring styles from A 'Marccs's. Aue Miller was chair- man for the affair. After luncheon. Llada Kill1, found- ing member of the Irvine Chapter and its first president introduced the T1cktockcrs, who were csconed by their fathers. and noted their com- munity involvment and future schooh ng plans. Honored were Kat•erille Aue Joluaaoa, daughter ofMr. ud Mn. JamH Joluatoa;Stacy Dlau Ber1er, Mr. ud Mn. Rlcbrd Ber1er; Vu- essa EJalH Martln, Mr. ud Mn. Rlc ... nl Martie; Nicole Marcotte Miiier, Mr.ud Mn. Altdrew Miiier; Raebel Ha11elk, Mr. a.ad Mrs. Eldon HHcik; Daryl AJkley Kills, Mr. and Mrs. JoseP' McNeil; JeuJJer Lyu Stewart, Mr. ud Mn. Lee Stewart; Deboru Alllsoa Pope, ~e Job Popa; &M Juet Paallae B•tterfleld, Llnda Blankellhom, at left, wt th Bnoke Stanley and Rhoda Stanley. daapter of Carleea Batterfleld. Also, Elise Lyu Eaomoto, da•gll· ter of tbe Tllomas Enomotos; Leslie Sherrill Datd1er, Cyllt•ta O.tclter and Brace Datcller; lreme Marla Hoek, Mr. aacl Mrs. Manlll Boelk; Sarali Wray Selmu, Mr. ud Mrs. Jack Selma.a; Leslya Mita Nitta, Mr. and Mn. Sa ton Nitta ud Caprice Catberille Plaua, dH&•ter of Carol ya Plana. More than 400 Newpon league members, family and fneods were grttted by Newpon chapter p~ident Rboda Stuley and UDda Blulkenon, director of the debu- tante ball committee at the gardens. Blanken horn introduced each debutante and highlighted personal accomphshementsas they stepped through a lattice arch which was interwoven with blossoms of white stock and draped wt th sm1lu. Each daughter presented her niother wt th the long stemmed rose she was carrying and mothers in tum gavedaughtcrs the gold medal hon to be worn the first time at the debutantc ball. Being congratulated were Brudy Byrd Beuett,dHpterofMr.ud Mn. lloaald Bene«; Dawu Jue Cooa. Mr. ud Mn. Geor1eCoo11 Jr.; NucyLoelseCoyae,Mr.udMn. Jeb Coyae; Corey Fruces Cro.k, Mr. ud Mn. Fre4erlclk Crook; Tlltte- sa Lyu E1u, Dr. u41 Mrs. Jou Roben Eau; Jta~eee Mldlele For- rest, Mr. ud Mn. Gerald Forrest; Jlllle Allaoe Garren, Mr. ud Mn. Ro1er Garrett; Seau Cathrine Gar· rett, tlte Job Garret ts; Victoria Aue ltrasel, Mr. ud Mrs. Gre1ory Kruel, ud Katbrya Aue lt.tua, Dr. ud Mn. Palllltm. Also, Jua Dia.De Lledlty, da•&bler of Mr. ud Mn. Doq.la1 Uec•ty; KJmberly Lyu McG•iDeH, Mr. ud Mrs. Vlattat McG•lue11; JeuJfer Aya MerreU,daepterof JHJ~ Merrell; S.su Oare PHlsea, Mr. ud Mn. Scott Pnlsea; Jenifer D' Altdrea Retoske, Mr. ud Mn. Deals Retoslke; Trislaa Mtc•eUe Roys, Dr. ud Mn. Gilbert Roys; Jiil.ie Betb Rldl. Dr. ud Mrs. Jama RI~ Hehll Marte Sdlmldt, Mr. ud Mn. Wllliam SdimJdt, aJHI Aue Ellubetb Scfaock. Mr. ud Mn. T\omu Sdioclk. Other'86debutantesand parents arcS...U.aSuuaeSdioles,Mr.and Mn. William Sc"le•; SydDey Ellu- be~ Spradns, Mr. ud Mn. George Spra«las; Brooke Karea Stuley. Mr aacl Mrs. E. JamH Staaley; Jill Lynn Tyler,Mr.ud Mn. Walter Tyler. Jue Terese VuSteealaay1e, Mr. ud Mn. Earl VuStffd•)'te. Corey Crook, Vickie Kruel and Heidi Schmidt. ..., ............. .,, ""'~ From left, Suan Garrett, Saale Paaleen. Kathy Kahn and Jane Van St-eenhayee. Dally Pilot Oatebook/ Friday, May 23, 1986 11 .. I I • • -8:30- G IC HEWS m TOO CLOSE~ COMF-ORT .., JS)PNfJY • MACNBL. I l.BilU NEWSHOUR 61!> NWI SMmi'S MONEY W(RD @ HEWS ~llENSOf' $)MOYE • • • "The L1111e Prince I 197•1 Rctlard ~. Gene Wlldel -7:00- f) C8S HEWS II ltl omRTAINMEHT TONIGHT llAICHEWSQ 0 LOYE COtlECTION NEWS m Tll&'S COMPN<Y m 8 WHEEL Of FORTUN£ 61!> llU8INES8 REPORT PMMAGAZINE 6J.i) PRAISE THE LOAD '1' DAAK SHADOWS rp J IH09£HDENT NEWS -7:30- fJ FRIDAY AT SUNSET II PRICE IS RIGHT 0 WHATS HAPPENING NOWll u f\. Y1NO FORTieS eMDYE • • • 14 "Young franken1ttln" (19790.. Wlds,,..., eo,.. I WIEM ••mw.> = .. CICNNATI ** • "Tha GetlWIY'' (1972) SteYe Mc:Oueen. Al MICGttw • WASt9«JTON Wm< .. AEWWQ Tom Crulae la Stef, a bJCh blm. and Lea Tbompeon and echool eenior who wanta more b.la ,Ulfrtend, Liaa, In ALL from lite than ht• Penn· THE RIGHT llOVES, to be 1ylvanla 1teel town can 1tve broadcut tontcht at 9 p.m . ~)HEWS fill> WAU STREET WEE< (Z) MOYE GD PM'8E THE LOAD • * "Ziggy Stardus1 And The S111-tD WMSTUNQ Clefs from Mars" 119831 Oe'lld CC) MOYE Bow!e. * * * "Once Upon A Timi In Amen-~ ca" (1984) Robet1 De Niro. James fJ (J) AMEAICAH TEEHAGEA Woods I P..M.IMGAZN WAU STREET WEE< Al COOPEM'S OAANGE OCUfTY Cl> HONEY'MOOHER8 -t.00-9 (J) WOYIE 8MCME "Long Tlme Gone" (Prlmilre) PIUI LAMll. Wll Wllelton ·= • • 14 "My Tutor" ( 1983) Clten ~. Matt l.attlnZI • 0-DAY: THE &..eEMOON Of FMNCE CDFRNBUNE @ MOYIE • • t,; "The Jeyne Mll\Slleld Story" ( 1980) lonl Anderson, Arnold ~~LOAD ~5;ne •• "Gtec:e Quigley" ( 1984) KllM-nne Hepburn, NiCll Nolt• -t:30- MOYIE • * •.; "The Pri¥1tt r• Of J Edgar H00\'11 I 1978) Btodendt CrlWford • ~ftrTtr MOYIE * ••.; "Tiit Am!>lludor" (1984J Robet1 Mlldlum. Elln Blntyn -t:A0- (.1) COtiE1'r Cl08E\JP 0 11,0001000 CtWa Of A 0 8 DISNEYl.ANO'S StJMM9' MOYIE VACAOON PAlffY • * "Grace Quigley" (1984) Katl\a- • ** "Al The Right Moves" (1983) Tom en-. Crllg T Nelson Sport the Look II s r .rO<:Ny II c, Hip' :.0tc.t·10 surt trunks and 1 shirts 8~~@~ 56 FASHION ISLAND · NEWPORT BEACH · (714) 644-5070 12 Daily Pilot Oatebook/ Friday, May 23. 1986 "A ClEVERl Y ENGINEERED COMEDY, A WARM-HEARTED FARCE-FANTASY." -CHARLES CHAMPllN IOS ANGELES rlMES Fii 1:00, 1:15, 10:15 SAT.-. 12:00, 2:00 4:00, 6:00, 1:15, 10:15 edwards LIDO CINEMA ~~ ... 673.t350 'X' film is visual blitz By DAVID BARTON Mee-, ............ The four albums by the Los Angele\ rock group X have indeed gone large!)' unheard. The group's mu'i1c, formed tn the cauldron that was 1h1: la1e '70s Los Angeles punk scene. 1s har5h. an11-soc1al and often disso- nant. The lyn cs, by lead smirr Exene Cervenka, are the ugl)', cynical cncs of a wounded hcan "The Unheard Music," a film aboul x. tncs 10 translate x ·s music into visual 1maJCS. The film 1s Iese, "rockumentary' than 11 1s an an school graduate's stab at rock video crossed wuh a punk-era recasting of 1he Beatles· "'A Hard Day's N1aht." Although the film returns rqularl) to hve performances b) the band. this 1s not a concen movie. The music 1\ unponant lO lhe film. but IS not m only. or even tts pnmary, attraction Most of1he credit for what interest the mo"1e sustains belongs to wnter and director W.T. Morpn, who pieced together a nearly non-sto p montage of old television shows and eommerc1als, a mmauon, home mo,. 1es. newsreels and ch1ss1c films. W11h this matenal, Morgan draws funn~ telhng ponra1ts of group member' and. more tntereM1ngly. the soc1et) the) have made their bus1ncc,s to upset His quick cutung 1cchn1que '' remm1SC'ent of rod . videos. but lad.\ their slickness, perhaps due an pan tu the cut-and-paste to ne of the film which was filmed and put logcth~r O\.·er a fi, e-)ear penod as the small budget allowed Funn). pointed ~qucnccs t>I. cas1onall) emerge from thl\ .. audio.., 1sual blizzard ... ~uc ha' o ne an which a maJor record com pan) head eitplainswh~ hed1dn't 1htnL. X "'ould sell enough records to be profitable The executive descn~ a new group Point Blank, that the label plan'> 111 launch. but which (the viewer ma~ know) never caught o n. "A MUST SEE FILM.'' "SIZZLING AND TENDER. A lu\t' 4ff41r bt't\totcn '"'" womtn d• lllt' wu h ~!~It .rnd punuu~tt·cl wn h homor \\ ll•m \I.oil 1,..,,,111 ""'' \lll\111 FRI 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 SAT ·MON 1:4S, 3:45 5:45. 7:45, 9:45 edwards TO WN CFNTFR • ' . ' " . 7 5 184 .. (~\~ •.... ~.. 1-4 --~--------------------------------------·...._ -HneArts~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'Voices of the World 'an intense experience Friday evenina. lbe Pacific ChoraJc. under lhe direction of Maestro John Aleunder, performed a con<lCrt of North and Soulh Ameri- can music al SL Andrew's Presby- quality and an alen 1ensitivity to joy{uJ noile" wu strictly obeyed. joyed l.be powerful setting of th.is ten balance within the Cltorale. Ofno1e in the OUcbesier Psalms is This cooc:ert was of pat interest terian Church in~ Beach.. The concert o wilh Norman Delio Joio's " na of l.be Open Road." bued on a poem ofl.be same name by Walt Whitman. The poen is in the first person, wilh the narrator calling others to travel wilb him l.be open roads of .. America. .. There is • subtle intensity to the pe>em. And indeed. the OM>BJc sans wilh intensi- Ciiis , ..... The work beaim its various 9C()-1 ooauut between joy and qWet for its prosranunin,. It was the last of tions wilh a priest's ~t, ~with retlcctioa. between theqWetprayerof the PKific Chorale's ls..86 ICUOn.. an angelic: sobdety of expression by a siDlle boy topra.DO-!Dlllliticently Next year, l.be orpnjz.atioo will sine Tenor Paul Harms. The chorus suns for us by COWlter-teoor Frank in the new Perfonning Arts Ce1ner, a follows, in this cue devel~ng lhe Atvallo _ and the bombut of full marked improvement in terms of chant wilh technjcaJ P"CcisJon and chorus wilh orpn. hs e.uemes of comfort -and, one-would expect - areal attention to ensemble. ditlonanoe made IOme in the au-acoustica. Let usall hope that Friday's- Throuahout the coDCCl'l, when the dieDce uOClOlllfortable. Thole more audieoce of sipificantJy la& than multiply bdOre next ltalOD oe>Cf'S 1n a.oralC sane softly, this same weU-f&miliar with Bernsaein's WOf'k eo-3,000 will go fonh and be fruitful and the tarp ball. balanced ensemble was evident. ----------------------------------------- ty .But the music itself failed to rin& true. From the tint note, one was struck by an overpowering fullness of sound. uncharacteristic of l.be free spirit of the OUT1tor. Perhaps lhis work was intended for a much smaller chorus. Thelonecallofuolotrumpet between ~oz.as was refreshingly reflective, and 1u beautifully-focused tone would have seemed less out of place set apinst the sound of a chamber choir. This work was followed by Jean Berger's ''Psalmo Bra.sjleiro... a sacrtd work based on Brazilian rhythms, and then by a .. Magnificat" of Francisco Lopez y Capilla. The .. Magnificat.. was the Chorale's most touchina rendering of the evening. In order to a~oximate the sound of the Mexico City Ca- thedral for which the work was composed. Maestro Aleundcr dis- persed the chorus into the audience. and proceeded to surround us with sound. There was a warmth of tone There was, however, a threlhbold of volume beyond wbicb the sound lost iu focus and balance. Did the hall's sli&ht echo distort loud sounds? Or did it become difficult for the mu- sicians lo bear one anothd'l The source of lhe distortion is hard to pinpoint It would have been interest- ' ng to hear lhe group a 1CCOnd ti me on Saturday evening under different conditions al Chapman Collqe. The first half of the coooert ended wilh the .. Misa Criolla .. of Ariel Rammz, sung t>Y l.be Pacific Sin.~ a Chamber Choir composed of Chorale members. Of great interest was \be Gloria of this Mass. which was highly rhythmic, then introspec- tive, and then again highJy rhythmic. The five soloisu sang with clanty and blended well with the texture of the iargtT chorus. Two distinctive works by Aaron Copland opened the second half of the concert. which concluded with Leonard Bernstein's Chichester P1alms. Bernstein took senously the lex\ to which he set the psalms in Hebrew: \be injunction to .. m.ake a __ , __ .. ... __ _ °''° ___ __ -a. ...... .,,.._ .. _ --=----""""'Cl-..,_ -.,,__ -· .._. ... ..,., _ _,.._ .. ..... ____ _ _ _.._.., ~--.. 9""-"' -~---.. lnO _.. ...,_ OUI ~ .,...,_, __ ...,._. ...,..,, _ _,,gooll- *'0-_.,.,,_ ~--"ON-..... -------·-· .. ~·­Oil .. ~·,.()Oji I ............ ~---_.., ____ .. ---..... .._...._ ... .......,._,,_ aitoirt tn .. tong ""' ft'• -- -CINE·FI GOHE - a-EAKERS ARE BACK STADIUm a S ••on c•• .... SHOWS AT 1:401141. 9:10 ... ......... " .,..., .. 1:00 1 :00 10:00 WI Ill\/! ..... !w ,....... s fVl.Taa&adr a ....,. ~UI Cat"• tye 7~ OUT ':ows AT ... , l 1Sl 1 :ff 6 1e11e __ MD..._1. 7 :20 P'ollce AllH-Y J (f'O) 1:10 .. 9 :40 cEnr u~ crneoome C Hl/Cll..,...., s. .. 4"41 fwy (1 I t~ ,.~ar.\ ... No l1le l tff ttitO PH-... 1.MM 9MOltT CtM:UIT •t SHOWS AT (hH)iJ:to) l :JS 1t40 & t"t I ~ ..... , SHOWS AT tllff) (JtU l :JO 1:4t .. 1t:•I (P'O·ll) M>IOOAJ C•RCltt ~ut eo-t41t ,._... lltt99("I ....-a OUT• .,,..\... MK.LS ... -.T ~ ... ......,, NT ra1 TIH Coter ~rp .. (PG· fl) SHOWS AT (11H (J1Mi HOWS AT tt•ll),J:SI ,, .. 7110 .. •••ff l :ll 1 :1S .. f l • .... .... ._ ~,':11 ~JfllD()fl[)( GAN £ ~~:?en u111t•tn ~ r• HOOlll '"° . .,, 1DtUVt.S.,_l ....... /7 .• .._I U.-IZ FllU U....lle_. I =-- "Sanmoltwmmit ........ ~-- ........ ......, Md ........... . two haura ol P'ft powf .. ----.~~ -..... ..:tdng ... tlf'rtlc .......... -· .. , ... lncHdllte. 1UP CUI la .. n -. ..... tape!" ----....en "1UP OUN la_..__,, ..... lh "-'· •.• A ...... &,~ ... -.. ......... big ecnen ........... ft __ ........ ltleC.t't .. lOPOUNglta.,I ... ~IPMd.~ ... tp•decurer.ft ___, ........... u.;..tY ...... OeMy PMot Datebook/ Friday, May 23. 1986 11 • ... lt ••nm ana m.e l'fl...,.ITIL&m ''cml".., .......... 1 ... -...nan IUI lllli "11ftfllmlll""I •1 ........ edwarosBRISTOL 540·7444 BA~TOLAIYACAAIMUA ~A~'AA~A ._ . .,.. .. ,., .... "ATClmum"fll , .. ........ .,... ...... , ... ", .... .. lllCll'' •• , .... '?lfm.,.... ..... , .. , ... ,,, ........... 111 ... • ..., PIT'' f1IJ ... .......... 111 .... .... edw8'd• CHlRl(R W~IRE 841-ono •U•U ' 1111 " "4JITlllC TOii BUCH ....... .,.. --.. , ..... '", ......... 1111• .............. 1111,Me (N) "WTltmr"flJ .. .UIU'1 ----eowaros CINEMA WEST S91 ·393S "(S'WllllS 'I A A' ·,c. D(,.W( \' "'I~ •y ~-. · t M ~""'" ... .._ ....... ... "ATClm.-"111 , .. "WT • .,_."'"9 ... ·~·-·111 ..... ,... '1WWITilf91" .. tN-11) Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, May 23. 1988 ....,.,_ --·•ma." ...... .... eowaros uN1VERs1n 8S4·8811 :AMP•JS :>R "ll' Ji ~ .t .. & .. J i.t..r,y -- "RllP ... '111 ... ·..-amnar· ....... ~ll) . .__,•cuzr· ""'") ''T9TI II IN" ....... (N) edwards WOODBRIDGE SS 1-0655 hA.fll• A•• t. · ,:,.,,,. ,•, t. · f Jo • • • '. MU_, ~ .... ,.., ......... , ... ..,.. ......-. • ._.,PIT" '"1 'ft(Tll. ,_.. ''Nlnmlll r · .... ,... we. ... ,..11) , ..... , ................... . ........ ,.,. ... ... , ..... edwards SAOOLEBACK S81 ·5880 (LfOROPVA:••'Q".:1(11' (.: E~ ·sw:, "9mYPlr,.. ........ . ._ ... ,.., .. ... ''IUZll" llJ ......... _ _,•cun·· llM(N ) edwards EL TORv 58' 9500 t •Ii' '' ,\ • /, "'l I t. • · •': •' ....... .,_ ---m.wman&&.19 ... ,_. "Clml" Ill .._.,__..,.. ....... ,.. ........... ... .,.. .... .,.. .,....,. .... I:"' mftlfll IT'"'9 .... "Cml''.., 'WllT tmlll'' ... . ' \. ............ 11tl. .. IN) Clim"•~ edwards VIEJO TWIN 830-6990 SA .. 01[(..Qr#ft T(.\.APAl& ·""''° ·~·.a .. ' ' . { .... "IWHT lmlTY'' "I ..... ll,11111 --... ~ . .,.~r ......... ~..., edwards MISSION VIEJO "4A •• so rw• -~ CR{Jw .. ,,,,(• 8E""[[" .. !l' ' ...... ..... .,.. ·~ C8CllT"IPll ltllt. ,,, ... ,. ......... .... a.a --.......... l:MtUI. ... . ., .... edwards SOUTHCOAS'LAGuliA 497 1 7 '1 ~OIJH1!,,.(•15~H\ffY ATBROAOWA • A .... tj[A ... -----,., ... .... ... .... ,. ·---......... ..,.~r ... ..... (Pa.U• -=_..l._.__ _ _:-"".-1 ----"' --~ ---=---- ANGELS BASEBALL ••• From Paces "It goes back to what we're all about," says John Trosper, con- cessions manager. "We always want to give the people a variety, somc- thina a httle extra." The added food st.ands include a potato hut that features cooked potatoes that can be stuffed with toppings ranging from broccoli to bacon bats. There are also stands sclhng cinnamon rolls. cookies, pizza, sausages and a Mex1c.an food stand called the Old El Paso C'antinl'. But the favorite food items. Trosper says. remain hot dogs and peanuts, which sell for Sl.25 and SI respectively. Beer. aJso a favon1e seller. goes for $2 and $2. 75, depend· ang on how much Budweiser you want. Inside the stadium. fan s panac1pa1c an everything from spontaneous cheers and JCCrs 10 tht' cvcr-popular wave to the scventh-1nn1ng stretch sangalong, "Take Mc Out to the Ball Game." Attcndang a baseball game has several advantages over other maJor professional sports. Mead says. In addition to tht' unhurried pace of the garre itself, baseball offers a far more affordable ticket. which makes 111dcal for family outangs. "Bascball 1s very fam1ly-0ncnted," he says. "We don't k~~ speclfk figurcs on the number ofchaldren. but anyone who has been to a game knows how man) kids come out .. Although about 17 .500 of the stadium's 65,000 seats arc rt\Cncd for scason-11cket holders. Mead says there arc thousands of good seats ava.ilable to those who walk up to the ticket booth the day of the Jame And Wlth the narrow foul 1em1ones and quickly nsingdecks. spectators have a wide choice of good scats. "We have a very accessible stadium with a good view from C"Cf) sut," Mead says . Anaheim Stadium, completed tn 1966 for $24 million, features a threc- lcvels structure and a I 5,000.spacc parking lot on 140 acres of Anaheim. The giant A-frame scoreboard stand- ing 230-feet tall is the source of the stadium's nickname, the Big A. Longtime Angel fans recall that 1hc <Jt.adium initially accommodated slightly more than 43,000 spectators. But to prepare for the Rams move to Anaheim, stadium offiClals enclosed the outfield an 1979 with add111onal seating to bring the seating capacny to more than 65.000. Other changes include the 1nstalla • lion of a video scoreboard m 1980 on the facade of the lt'ft-centerticld roof . Also added were I 06 executivc- stylc View boxes. ranging in pnce from S 16.000 to $50,000, surround the rear of the (1ub Level. And tn addition to the Stadium Club. there arc several pnvate dining areas for aroups. Sm&le~me uckcts sell for S3 to $8. depending on location and parking 1s NIGHT TIME IS THE RIGHT TIME SH YOUR DATIBOOll $3. Group rates also are available But it's the game of baseball Itself that makes a ticket one of the best entertainment bargains available Mead says. "Some people look at t~ athletr\ and sec onl)' overpaid pnma don- nas." he says. "But 1f you really stud) the game. )ou'll sec 1n the course of nine innings the deep love ahd intensity thest players have for th<.' game of baseball. "You'll see 1t in a tight, when the} run into the wall to catch a fly. when they're shd1ng into second base or when they're throwing runners ou1 at third base. At those 11mes, they're not thanking about anything but what they're doing." Mead. lake countless other fan\, secs baseball as "a thinkJng man's game. Everythm& 1s well thou&Jlt-ou1 and calculated. No one can do the thinkang for the player in baseball.'' AddinJ to the appeal of baseball in general 1s the performance specifi- cally of several key playerumong the .\ngels. which should make 1he coming weeks especially cxc11mg. Mead says. .\s of Wednesday. rookie fi~t­ bascman Wally Joyner was leading no1 onJy the team. but the cnllrt' ma1or leagues with IS homes runs and 38 runs batted tn (RBI). Joynt'r also 1s tied for fourth in the American League with 30 f\U\S and is second an slugging perl'entagc. which is boosted b> has extra-base hits. The 23-year- old has been a pleasant surprise for the team which was counting on him 10 fill 1he shoes of 1hc departed Rod Carew. a seven-tame batting cham- pion. Mc~d says. "Everybody kntw he was going 10 be good. But how good he was going 10 be was up to him," Mead sa)'s "He's obviously performed well. but you ha ve to remember that ht:'\ human and he's eventually going to havt a down penod." Another bnght spot in the hnc-up 1s tht' return this year of shonstop Rick Burleson, who missed the entire 1985 season af\er suffering a shoulder ~paration. In add1t1on. the performanct of relief pi tcher Donnae Moore. who 1~ amon' the league leaders tn saves, 1\ estabhsbina him as the ballclub's first real buJlpen star, Mead says. Reggie Jackson. a longtime favont<' among An~I fans. turned 4() th1\ Wttk and continues to play well. Although primarily a slugcr. Jac~son was among the league leadtrs 1n batting with a .330 avcraac as of Wtdncsday. Pitcher Don Sutton. acquircd from Oakland in the ofT-scason. 1s onl' three W1ns shy of 300 career wins. Other Angel . stars include th1rd- baseman Dou& OcCinccs. anfieldtr Bobby Grich and ou1fielders Gal"\ Pettis and Brian Downin& If they don't win it's a shame. Out On The Town BJ CBJUS CRA WPOllD IWIJ .... C.1 S • I Mary Hendricks serves as Manager of Group Sales, Banquets, and Public Relations for The Warehouse Restaurant Newpon Beach. A 1984 graduate oi"Cal Poly Pomona with a degree in Hotel and Restaurant Manqement, Mary inter- ' 1ewed for her current position while still a senior. "Some of my instructors said that Burt Hixson (former owner of The Warehouse) was going to be 1nterv1ewing for a manqer. So I went to the Career Center, filled out the papers, and then was interviewed and hired right on campus. It was nice knowing that I had a JOb before I graduated, and also nice that it was for banquet manager, which had always been my goal 1hroughout collqe." During her two years at The Warehouse, Mary has been in charge of all ki nds of banquets: sorority and fraiemitr parties, bar mitzvahs,' retirement parties, rchearsa dinners, and wedding receptions. "It's fun doing the banquets," she said. "especiall y 1hc weddi ng receptions. A lot of brides these days arc am ving here by boat, and then they just walk on up the dock and have their wedding reception on the patio, which is a beautiful place for a reception, and 1t can accommodate about I SO people." Currently, Mary is maktng plans for a very important event to be held July 19. Following her wedding to fiance David on that date, they wilt have their reccrtion at The Wareho use. The bride and groom wil arrive by gondola, and the rest of the party will be in a boat following them . .. I. ve done these receptions for everyone else." she said ... and now I get to do my own!" Another popular use of the restaurant ts for viewing the annual Christmas Boat Parade. "The Warehouse sits right in front of the halfway mark of the parade." said Mary, "so diners see all the boats as they make U-tums to contmue the route." Earlier this month. Mary's former boss Burt Hixson sold the restaurant to Cohn Berger and Percy Hendler. who plan to make major changes 1n design. decor. and menu. When everythinJ tS completed, .. we believe 1t will become one of the pnncipal restaurant establishments in the Newport Beach area." said Hendler. One of the changes which is available now, he added. is the restaurant's boat cruises. "We are using some of the major charter boats. and can cater to any possibility -sunset cruises. dinner cruises. and other packages for .small or large groups -within the confines of the harbor." Plans also call for a Happy Hour in the bar a rea where an eight-foot television screen will be installed. During the next two months. new lunch and dinner menus will be developed which will enlarge upon the restaurant's current seafood offerings. and wi ll specialize in shrimp dishes. "We're aoing to show shnmp in a number of different ways. including some F T t-ilfE WEEK LOBSTER BARIA 3 cwps ..._ rolls, tt9mble4 1 ~ C11pt bey Wimp I ~ npt uow u.IJ meat 1 cwpcream 1 C11J 6!M CMkN ea.loa 1 C1IJ tlke4 ~ srea OD1oD Pf. &a.,11. aalt 'ril lea.,.. dry mHtanl !C9P1mlllr "" ta.,.. CVl'J OF THE WEEK HURRICANE southern European methods of serving shrimp that have never been done before in the U.S.," he said. "But we'll have aJJ the old standby favorites as well." As part of the expanded seafood choices, the oyster bar menu wilt be enlarged as well, .. and people will have an opportunity to 'graze' thcre!racticaJly from when we open to when we close," sai Hendler. In addition to many more seafood choices, the restaurant's new menus will also feature pasta. "I think pasta has become Americanized now," said Hendler. ..,t no longer just appears in Italian restaurants; it has become part of the American restaurant scene." The restaurant's popular Sunday brunch will remain the same. said Hendler. The brunch is $12.95 for adults, $6. 95 for children 6 • I 2. free for those under 6. As for entertainment. offered nightly from 9 p.m., he said, "we're going to continue the Top 40 groups, but we'll only be having the top Orange County bands." The restaurant's operating staff will remain the same, he said, including bead chef Charles Kalagian. The Warehouse is located at 3450 Via Oporto, Lido Village, in Newport Beach (714-673-4700). Four hours of validated parking is a vailable in the nearby parking structure. Boat slips next to the restaurant arc available by reservation. i,i, teaspoon mace 1 bay leaf i,i, cap allerry 'ril tea1poo11 lemon jalce ~ ouce ~cken stock 'ril e.,wa&er $ to 7 lobtten Hollu4alae aaace Remove lobsters from shells. making sure shells remain intact. Mix together aJI ingredients (except Hollandaise) to make stuffing. Fill shells with mixture and bake at 350 degrees for 5 to I 0 minutes. Top with some Hollandaise sauce, and broil for 2 minutes. Baste lobsters with butter, bake at 350 degrees for 5 lo IO minutes. Serve lobster and stuffed shell together on a plate. Serves 5 to 7. Cocktail of the Week I oucellptnm 1 CMDCepa Spla .. el triple sec Spla .. of IWff& 1D IM.r Spluat ef ,.co loco Pack glass with crushed ice and pour mixture over 1t. Top with a twist of lemon. These recipes were submitted by The Warehouse, Newport Beach. F,_,, Hallbtlt Ste•lr Crllled or S.uteed to Your Taste, Topped with Fresh Herb Butter. Served with Frnh Carden Ve,etables. 13.50 Old FultlolHd Chlclteo & Dumpling• With Carden Fresh Vetetables. 9.95 New Yorlr StNlr. /llf•ltre D'Hotel 8l'Olled to Perfection, with Sautttd Mushroom C.ps, Lyonnalse Potatoes, Cre61 Beans Amandlne 16.75 Deity PllOt Oatebook/ Friday, May 23, 1986 15 ,_' -· .. England's unique Level 42 to play Coach House T he group pla ys s m all clubs this time, but will be in la rge-a ren as in t he fu tu re By RANDY JAY MATIN 0.., ,_ Ceu I 0 I .. Slap-crackJe!-wtur-buzzzuzcl1ck chck .... Somewhere in a New York hotel room on the other end of a m1scrableconnecuon, Boon Gould of Level 42 -who play the Coach House Sunday -was patiently attemptmg to converse. Though the band is playing the club c1rcu1ts here for the first ume 1t will probably be the last chance to catch Level 42 in intimate surroundings. Their current aJbum "World Ma- chine' 1s doi11g well on Billboard's Top Album cbaru. According to guitarist Boon. who formed the band w11h brother Phil Gould 1n 1980 ... It 1s kind of a nice change. It has been five )Cars since we played clubs." A much bigger attraction in the group's native England. Level 42 has had mixed !>ucccss trying to capture an audience ~1atcs1de. While the maJonty of English rock bands e<>ntmue to cue Amencan R&B as their main influences. Gould reporu that his maJor influences were early American fusion projects such as Miles Dav1s' "Bitches Brew," Ch ick Corca's "Return To Forever- and Herbie Hancock's "Head Hunt- ers." When we put this band together," said Gould, "we did not try to sound hke those artists. rather, that was our point of departure. This got us labeled as a Jazz/funk unit and that was never really true." Currently Level 42 is working w11h synthesizer an.st/producer Wally Badarou who also acted as oo-wnter. "We met Wally in 1979 when he was doing session with M ("Pop Music")," Gould said. "He has his own studio 1n Nassau but we recorded "World Machine" in London to save being away from home for a three month stretch. With all the road ttme spent touring you get a bit jaded about being away so much. You get used to Marcello'• now fMtu.r .. ttu. mapificent m ural .._. the front ol the build.int ln Huntinston a..ch. U you don't ha-• lot ol estra time for lu.neh, Mareello'1 now ....,. an all you can Mt Lunct-1 Buffet for U...ZS. Aleo, .,_..... tMir resuJu ~ .-nu. Mare.Uo'1 offera Early Bird Dinnen (e«nplete 4 eourM maele) f• N.25 ¥.30-7:30-.i da a w..IL 17502 Beach Bl•cl. MJ..SMS.. Group Dl9COunt• I n2-3220 _ The Dinner Theatre Premiere of P Musical 7 YEARS ON BROADWAY WINNER OF 7 TONY AWARDS WITH THE HIT SONG "DON'T CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA" EVITA -TIUU Niiiw WM>~WC&B• • • oauy Pilot DatM>ook/ Friday, May 23, 1986 a life of traveling, somewhat. but after five or sill years of the cycle: we prefer to stay closer to home when poss- ible." -0n World Machine.. one can detect traces of everything from E&nh. Wind and Fire to Howard Jones. The former influence no doubt is a holdover from having worked with producers Larry Dunn and Vttdin White ofEWF on the group's previous outing. "Standing lo The Light." After the band was dropped by the label. their second album was re- leased on A&M and as fate o r business would have it they arc now back on Polygram. "One problem with break.tng in the Amencan market." said GouJd. "was tryinJ to decide which direction to take 10 marketing our sound. Funny thou&}\. as much as we have been categorized, I llave been somewbat Jaded in what I considered to be valid forms of music. Now I go back and listen to the Sell Pistols and realize what a truly dynamic outfit they were. I llave realized that there arc worth- while aspects to all forms of music." ..£a~t of tfu: eta~~ ~ Fred Camtld .... Clanlc Comedy ~.;. &ISINIC uoDLD LICE -·~ ··RUBY PAIACE -~ Mandarin & Sz.echwan Cuisine 3 Generation• of Chlncac Family Cooking DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS PCH (714) 848--6088 18830 8-ch Blvd. Hundngtoft Beach Sun-Thun 11 am-10 pm Frt &: Sat 11 arn.10:30 pm '""-a.Mt. ...... ,,_ w ..... ,...., ,..,,._., ...... W.. .. •U..6*1 I t 8 A.M. -2 A.M. Deity Sunday 8 A.M. to 12 Midnight 428 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 7 14-&0-1750 at Paulson Vineyards wins 'best of show' 1'.11 Paulsen Vineyards cap1urcd i: ··Rest ofShow" award for llS 1983 ~we Souled Cabernet Sauv1gnon d more than 2.000 pan1C1 paots J'>H'd four days of wine tastings. 1nl' ~m1nars. coolung demon- 1..111ons and la\'1sh dining dunng the u·nt Wine Adventure at Harrah's VinC)ard. He predicted a ratural progression in consumer wine tastes which w1JJ produce increased ulcs of Cabernet and Chardonna)' wines. of its new winemakers and the uSt' of new wincmaluog techniques .. w,. have science, cunosny and boldness behind us," he said. Oregon wines will begin to be acknowledged in the same class as any world-class wines. predicted Stephen Cary of Cary Oregon WUles. said rC1tauratcur Narsa1 David , who added that 1t 1s equally 1mporunt to lcecp meuculous inventory records so you can call up a wme you want when you want 1t. The truepleasureofstocl.mga wine cchar, agreed White House wine consult.ant David Berkley and Wlnc ed11or Harvey Stcunan, 1s being able to en1oy the mcn:asingly comple>. llavo~ or W\OCS at different Stages of their m.atunty Reno Wine Adventure V was c~ sponsored by Harrah's Reno Hotel and Casino and 1he Nonhem Nevada Wine Assoc1atton. l.'no Hotel and Casino. C umedaan Pat Paulsen, who was niw:1r1ng with the Smothers The sclltng of wine by the glass 1n restaurants will gi ve a significant boost to wine sales as customers take advantage of the opponun1ty to sample new wines, said Frank Woods. president of Clos du Bois W1ntt Ht noted that custo mer demand will also increase the number of half bo11les of wine produced and then sold 1n restaurants He funher predicted that the state's fip;;;;;;==-..ii~=~=========~~~-=----::::-:-:-:1 SI winenes Wlll double in number 1n the next decade uBob Burns: till ru1hcr\ 1n Harrah's Headliner cmm. accep ted the "Ben of Show" "ard on behalf of his Wlnery. which ''tcd 339 other entnes worldwide in <mah'\ Nattonal Wine Compcu- on Paulsen, 1n his characten s11c The pos1uve efTeC1s of wine on Great ···" he-allh were touted by cardiologist· &H•rly Bu.th Smith wine conno1s~ur Kosta Argcr who Dailr Pilm cadpan ,tyle. asked officials to unlh an .. investigation" into his 1nn1ng The Wine Compct1t1on. focusing Noting that only "IS percent or aJI Amencans ever touch a wine bottle," Leo McCloskey, president of Ft'lton· Empire Vineya rds, said he foresees the sclh ng or packaged. non-alcoholic wme grape JUi~ in a manner s1m1lar to that o f other packaged fruit 1u1cces. noted ... , here 1s much more food value in a glass of W1ne than there 1s in a glass of. distilled spirits." The phys1c1an cited the proven positive effects of moderate wine dnnking o n cholesterol and blood pressure levels. Lunch • Dinner • Cocktails n < abemet Sauv1g.nons. also be· to~cd .. Best of Class" honors 1n hrce pn~ range catcgorie1. Smith &. A second seminar on new wine regJOns 1n tht' '80s focused on Idaho, Oregon, and the Lake County. Monterey and San Luis Ob1spo rcg1ons of California, all of them praised for the coolness of their ch mates which allows wme grapes to npen gradually A guide 10 crca11ng and main· taming a home wine cellaI rounded lNTERT AINM ENT N IG HTLY • BANQ UETS ()(l~ Winery of Monterey County on for its 1983 Goal vintage in the out the Wine Adventure's four ~m-37 Fashion Island Newpo rt Beach 644-2030 mars Step one, according ti) Kosta ~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ nl''pcns1ve ($8 and under) category; JI Paulson Vineyards' "Best of ho~" entry from Alexander Valley on m the Moderate ($8.01 to 11 1/5) category; and Shafer me)ards captured the Premium S 12 and above) category for its 1983 .ipa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. The emergence of new wine prod· ct!> in the '80s, including wine oolers, "blush" wines and non- lcohohc wines. took the spotlight in he first of two wine industry-related The Amencan public needs to reahzc that wine 1s as Amencan as beer. according to panehst Jess Jack- son of Kendall-Jackson Winery, who added that the wine industry needs to "Amencanize the product." Jackson said that the Wlne industry 1s groWlng in quality, due to the talent Aricr. 1s to find a knowledgeable, Ii reliable wine merchant who can advise you on the best wines to buy. aep two 1s to establish the style and pnce rang<.' of wines that you like "A wine cellar docs not have to be extensive to be good," Arger con- 11nued. "But It should be a 'worlung' wine cellar, one that you draw from frequently " It is important to maintain a constant temperature for your W1ncs, em1nars r~-;;:=================================================;1 .. Wtne coolers arc the most refresh· ng product to eme~e in the wine ndustry in a decade, • said panelist a1r1c1a Quyle, assistant marketing anager of \ahfomia Cooler. "and ould be the hottest beverage henomenon 1n history Coolers are Now Featuring A Special Lighter, Late-Night Dining Menu (new Items monthlyl Entertainment Tues.-Sun , Cocktails with complimen- tary hors d' oeuvres from 4·JO. Dinner from '>:JO enainl)" not a fad " Qu)le added that the public's ~o~~ rcep11on of the wine cooler as a ea tl 'healthy"' alcoholic dnnk has made 11 / ~~ '-"1despread ··entry-level" product or new "1ne dnnkers, prov1dtng the J J ·m1\smg 1ink" bctWttn wrne. t>ccr Northern /ta ian Continenta Cuisine nd soft dnnks • ~ The phenomenal populanty of 3520 F.as t Coast Hwy., Coro na de l Mar 675-1922 'h11e Z1nfandel wine was deuuled b)' ~~~j=J~~~jj~~~~~~!!~~7.iiii~i!!!!!~~~~ panelist Roger Tnnchero of uller I ~.· Home Winery, which he predicted ... "111 S<'ll 1.6 m1lhon cases of the •1 \ anetal th1<. year He described White Zinfandcl J S ,.a wine the consumer bu1h." ··The customer 1s the most 1mpon- ant thing 10 the world for a wine· maker:· he said. "'You must consider the consumer as the ultimate JUdgc." Marketing and market assessment 1s extremely im porunt to the success of a winery, said panelist Mike ~zi er of Glen Ellen Wine and Now Serving COUNTRY STYLE SUIDIY $199 IRllCH Includes Beverage Well Drink or Beer . 9:00 Al to 1:00 PM 845-8091 1712 Placentia CoataM ... o Celebrate 0 MEMORIAL DAY Sunday, May 25 & Monday, May 26 at EI Matador ·~·- Sundoy Chompo1n• lrunch •1• Margarito• All Doy 5undoy & Monday with ony comblnotlon plot• or our delldou• f!ollt•• (chicken, beef, pork & •hrlmp.) On Monday olto order from our new lunch menu & receive o mor9arlto for lu•t '1'°1 • 1 •-a a... .. lwrlt• -4 •~ a .. _, ..... · · · · · · · ., .. .7S extre ,_ IMf., a.ti.., e 1 Chee .. lnchllodo and lie• & leans •... · . · t-3• .7S ntnt f., IMf • CNdoet1 • 1 Ground leef Toco ond l ie• & lean• . • · . • • •3• .75 ••tre Stw11lilul 1Mf., CMdiet1 e 1 leon Tostado ond lie• & leans .•••.... · · '4" ,7S ..:tNf.,1MferO!tdiet1 • 1 Chll• lell•no and llce & leans • . . • . • • . . . •3• Al10 Our •••"''" Open 11 · I 1 Mon Sot Lundt Sp•dol 10-10 Sun 1 Chee•• l~h4o, 1 o--4 .... Tee•, ake w I•-• 17 68 Newporl Blvd. Cosio Meso 645-0324 • WE PROMISE YOU GOOD CHINESE FOOD I UNCHES DINNERS. TROP!CAL I COCl<T AILS BANOUEi f ACILITIES I ' CATERING FOOO TO GO OPEN 7 DAYS ··SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON FOOD TO GO 3 " Beech Blvd Near Knoll'$ Anahetm 827· 1210 99f>.992Q GULLIVER'S Had Any Rea lly Grear PRIME RIB OF B EEF Lately ? 833-8411 18482 MAC ARTHUR IRVINE Dally Pilot Oatebook/ Friday. May 23, 1986 17 Out On The Town THE JOLLY ROGER Launches Senior Olscoaat Clab Delicious. health) ea11ns and d1s- l'Oun1 pnces for Senior C1111ens no" ~o hand-in-hand at all Jolly Koger lh''>taurants. Beginning this month lUStome~ 01;er the age of <.1'<1) can now d111e and n.'CCl\'C 21) per CCnl ofl thl·1r meal. And. what makes thl\ offer different from other senior d1 .. c:oun1 programs IS that II al\l.l .1pphes 10 other member~. up to four per~ons. dining w11h them Hcalth-con'>c1ou' perwn'> of all ages find The Jolly Roger Restaurant a dchghtful c:>.pencnu: lnnova11ve mt:nus ha' e hcen designed to plea!>C the palate. fcatunng fresh )Cafood and hean} meat entrees cmp)' salad'>. 1.1.hole .. omc soup'> and garden "eg- l'IJhles 10 prO\ 1de 03\ orful. \Cl noun'>hing. d1n1ng '"Fre'>h .. 1s the c:mpham for fhl· loll~ Roger\ 1emp11n~ hill ol larl' . ind man) of the 11em<, rag.ht down w lhl· 1u1q hamhurgc:·r arc:· prepared lh.'\h da1h An c\ampll· of lht·ir \IX'l 1alt~ ofTcnngs" thl· flak ) home· '" k c h1ckcn Pot l>1c lrl'\hh hal..t·d 1na pufkd pastn '!>hdl .ind brimming v. tth tender c:h1l l..cn pea' c:clcr. t.irrol\ and mu<,hrrnim' in .1 <.ream\ \JUle Fur pa'>lcl IU\l'I\ thl' ( h1lkl'll l'nm.1' era v.1th tt·nder <:hie l..t:n trc\h hrnttofl and mu,hrtH)ffi\ I\ Jl"J" p<tpulJr F-or hghtn dPf>4.'llll'' lht· I re\h \pma< h l)alad. C ohh \JIJd. Jnd thl' C rJh Melt Sandw1l h arc \urc to ph:a'>e an) appetttc •\nd lor thow lil'\lnng a rnmpk1t• d1nnc1 , lhc lnlh l<ngcr's selection ol l'ntrec\ on thl'lf d1nnl·r menu seem\ endlc\\ &cl lcnen. will cnJ(I} the S1rlom \teak broiled to order or the Rna'it Pnme ft1h served au JU~ and C h1ckcn I emak1 and the \ca food < omb1na- 11on Plate are othrr "<. rumpt1ous < ho1ccs Other favontc\ include \camp1 Alfredo Styk and Fettucin1 \lfredo .\ new addt11on at The Jolly Ro~t·r ''their table top feature board which list<, all of the fresh daily specials that have been prepared. Tempting choices such as fresh li~h. cntrec'> \lll'h a~ Apm:ot ( h1cken frc\h ap- pet11C'r!> like sautced mushroom., and L·,cn premium wines !>ervcd h) the g)as!>. all head the daily hst of \pee 1als for lunch and dinner Membership cards arc no"" hc1ng t\\ued free at the restaurant for thc \cn1or C.11zens 10% Discount < luh r he discount applies between ) and fi pm daily on all food and dnnk. e\cept alcoholic beverage' Arrange- ment\ to d1s1nbut<.' the cards to \cnior's groupc. Lan be madc upon 'ipcc1al request rn fht• foll~ Roger Rc\taurant Open daily for hrt·:1Jda~l lunch Jnd dtnner. and a -I to 7 pm tfapp)' Hour the Joll~ K1>gcr Rc\taura.!!_!s provide good food and fnendly service at an unbeatable 'alue. The Jolly Roger now operates almo~t 50 restaurants throughout C'ahfomm and Hawa1. with •nearb\-loca11ons sn Irvine. Dana Point, Balboa Island. Anaheim Buena Park. and Lake Forei.t BOB BURNS RESTAURANT New Menu Additions Onl· thing that's a cons1<1tcnt mark of a 'uuessful re-staurant 1s its ab1ht) to ma1n1a1n a creative menu. and a glann· at some of the menu cxtros at Bob Burn\ Restaurant will give you an idea wh) cu .. tomers return rcg- ularh D1.nncr a11rac11on-; ms~ht 1ndudl' sut:h t'\tra\ as Fresh "orwcgian Salmon finished w11h ll loh,tcr chardonna11 butler \aucc. f-re~h <. atahna l~IJnd swordfish done with ~nta Fe s"'ecl Holland yrllow. red . and green peppers and o;autcl'd shal- IOt\, fresh basil. lemon. butter and \\1ne. Frc~h New Zealand John Dor, in u hght ginger marinade on a hcd of \:.suwetl "vlau1 onion\ and J-rc'>h < hannel !\land Pink Abalone sautced 1n J ( ahtorn1a chardonn<t}. \\\l't'I hulll'r and lemon toprx·d v.-1th toa,tt•d ( ahlom1J almond, Art· \OU hungn }ct'' Wdl huv. .iboul '>ome DcnH'r lamh dwJ'l' three douhlt' cut chop\ hroilcd anJ hru\hl·d "1th herb bu11cr < h1ckt•n I )l'j11n1\l' hri11led hrea\t ol c h1t:kcn on a bed 11f lrc:•,h sautced -.r1nal h J01! topped"' 1th a llCJon mu\tard "3Ule nr Coullote ')teak hro1led to vour de<..rt· and lin1shcu with Mada&awa1 g1wn peppercorn sau<.c Naturall>. not all of the"c l'XlrJ<; arl' available at each locallon each da} But you will alwa)S find plenl) ol fresh fish and other C"rca11 .. c ··chef\ spec1alt1rs·· at Bob Bums Restaurant The family-owned rco;taurant " elegantly and inllmatel)' decorated w1tha personal Oair. Entenammcnt '" featured in the lounge. Bob Bums Restaurant 1s located with Fashion Island shopping plain Phone 644-2030 for reservations. NEWPORT OYSTER BAR ANO GRILL Opens at Newport Pier l<cx C handler is proud to announce the opentng of the Newpon O)'ster Bar and (inll located 1n thl' 'Mime landmark ltuild1ng a~ h1' award- w1nning Rex Restaurant at the New- pon Pier The Ncw1l0n Oy$tcr Bar and ( i11ll will feature fresh ~afoocl from around thr world at rea\OnablC' pntl'' To mention hut a ft·w Ncw Zealand Mu\~l'i. Maryland ~fl lihell < rJb. Long l\land Allantll' Halibut. Rocky Mountain 1 rout. and Presents LTVE DIXIELAND J AZZ featuring l [GILDED CACE 1714 Placentia Costa Mesa Call 645-8091 for information The Bourbon Street Dixieland Ja:r.z Group ·rhursday, Friday & Saturday from 8 p.m DA NC ING Complete Dinners Only $4.95 Broasted Chi cken- Our Specialty -- 11 Oalty Piiot Datebook/ Friday. May 23. 1986 Ah1 from the Hawauan l!>land\. with authentic sourdough bread from ~an Franc1..co The menu will h1ghhgh1 Nt·wf>4.)n Hean} RC'd Chowder (ltahan \l\k lish chowdc1 made fresh) "lew Fng- land st:,. le (lam Chowder and "O) tt•1 Stew Made Just for You." lshulked O) ster1 in fresh cream. butter Jnd spices prepared to ind1.,.1dual ord er) In add111on ... Basket Lunl hc' ' of Calaman. i:;"h and Chips. and r l'm· pura Shnmp arc featured. Specials"' 111 change da1lv umkr thl' w:uchful eye of Chef Kl·cft•r a' to frshnesi. and ava1lab1ht) Beer. wine. and an eitten'i1\.C l1c.111I non-alcohohl· beveragc~ w1ll rnmpll- mcn1 this dchghtful menu .\ spc.-t.131 en tree. "Surfer Hluc: l'IJte pec1al.. ad.nowlcd&es the ven popular local spot This dish rnnmt' of tempura \Cafood wllh s"'ect and <,our \Jucc and can be enJ01red for JU'-I $195 DaH' Manel. C1cnL·ral M.rnager bnng\ o .. er 1wch e }t'ar\ ol tl'\laurant cxpencnce w11h him. H l\ du11e' cncompas<, the 1ntcrv1cw1ng h111ng and training ol all staff 3\ "di J<, o"erc,cemg all pha\C\ of oix·rat1on\ 111 the (h\tcr Bar :ind C 1nll .\ "'arm and cxc11ing lotal pn \OnJhl' Lnov.n 1hroughout B.Jlh4>J "'111 act as Host and C1rel·ter of tht: h.tr and gnll amm\ ~1 ilkr ·· 11on11rar\> Ma,or of BalhoJ.'. \I.Ill add t'H'n more charm Ill thl\ Ol'\\ i.:a,u:il mec.-ting place tor rl•s'1dl•nt' .ind 'l\1tor\ alike. f·urthermo re. an extcn\t\C 'ekl'- uon of fre'lh. gourmt:t, anll II\ 1· 'ea food' will be available da1l~ Ill the retail fishmarket located at thr l'n- trance of the C)yster Bar and <.inll .\nd. lor tho\C v.-ho prefer ta kt• out orders to go can be called ahead 10 (714) 675-Q977 Hours of operation "''II be IO a. m to 9 pm for the F1sh mark<'t with thr Bar and (;nil open from 11 am to m1dn1ght daily. Dave Mand states. "Our dedt· cation 1s to olfer our commun1t)' an authen11c seafood cafe Wlth a vaned menu of fre~h ~afood from around the world We have a commitment to freshness and servtce that Rex ( han- dler has built h1'i award-winning reputation on over the years .. Rex ('handler adds "Our goal 1<, lo keep all menu 1tt'ms undcrS 10 b)' u\C of 1mag1na11on coupled w11h ovt'r 15 }ear' of e1tpenencc in the c,cafood hU\IOeSS" MORELL'S Cooks Up New Menu Morell's, the elegant gourmet re~­ taurant at The Irvine Hilton and Tower-; ha-; tntroduced a new menu of tempting Cahfom1a Cu1s1ne dishes and dellcac1cs Many of the item~ and ,pe,·1al\ on the new dinner menu arc de,t'lop- rncnt~ of the re!.l.lurant'\ Lcslec "vlendel. chef de panic who 101ned the Morcll''i 'it.affin DeLember James ..\chramow1n. l>Ous chef, \upcn 1\Cd the complete ne"' menu proJl't'l .. I he ne1.1. mt'nu ttCm\ i1t Morell ' represent an e~cat1ng added d1mcns1on to the rt:\l.Juran1'<, cuisine.'· \aid Don Ohv1l•r. thc hotel\ director of food and hcHrage opn- at1ons ··These new oOcnng\ arc deflC'ate and delcl·tablc cn1rce\ .rnd appet11er.. that l'Xpand the c·on- \umcr\ lho1cc" nt Mordl'c, The<oc e'l1t1ng ncv. menu item' arc av;ul- able at both dinner and lunchC'on Morell''> f<X u\ continue~ 10 he.· "C ahl11m1a C'u1stne .. which inH>hc' e\IC'n\1 \ e U\C of the fre\hl'\I inttn·· d1ent\ CC ahforn1a 'cgetable\ lrum meat\ and lii.h). 1maginat1\.t' Jrltl \tnl..1ng pre!'>t'ntat1on\. and unu,u.il rnmb1na11on<.. The resul11ng "" ll· 1\ hoth dehlate and "avor) 'It•" en tree~ ft•uturc fi, c t'\llllntr. nt·\\ "4;atood dt\ht'\ an op;1t.a ri.11..a hral\cd tn lhampa~ne v.11h p.ipa\J \l'3 has\ SJUlCl·d With f)llH' n11l\ prn1lhed salmon 1.1.tth Jill .ind uhJ "-!Ule pra" ns "'1th 1t·4uil.1 .mtl 1111 I.. kd 1oma11llo\ and lolll' "'rapp...-J 1n labbagc lcaq,·, < >thcr add1tmn\ indulll' a lahul11u' hlct mignon v.11h ral\tO' .ind 10111 JX-f)pcrrnrn ..auce ,ind a trn1ptmg hrca\l of dutkling dl\h "'1th hlal i,. C'urr.:int\ and onwn mJrmalalll' Ne"' <1ppe111ers also '>lrt.''' tkhrall' lla,or' \ut·ha\ thr n1·"' (onlit of duck. 1.1. 1th hah~ grt·en bt·Jn\ and walnut dre\'11ng or the \onoma C nunt) C'hevre m phyllo pon .ind H1gun l\3ute Ne"' soup\ arc a dchcatel) fla,ored Kallop and ~flron \oup and a pheasant con\ommc v.11h wild mushroom qucnclle\ Mon~ll's 1s open fot lunC'heon from 11 JO a m. to 2 p.m. Monda) through Fnda)'. for dinner 6 to 10 pm. through the week. and to 11 p m on Saturda'r For rc\crva1111n,. rnll 116 '· 31 I I EMERALD OF ANAHEIM SlnllJag Summer Rates Join all the summer fun at 01\- nl') land w11h dC'luxr accommo- dations nght next door. at the new Emerald of Anaheim I lotcl from June I to August 31 . the Emerald's s1nhng summer \pec1al offers a complete bed and breakfast packaitr for $44. per perwn, double o<"Cupan· n . Children under 12 \tav fret• w11h 1he1r parents · Upon arnval, the Emerald wrl come' you with a comphmt•ntar> crwk1a1I or beverage to cool )'OU down from the hot summer \un Alter you check tn, you're welcome to rcla' sn 17502 Beach Blvd. at Slater Huntington Beach (714) 142·5505 ......................................... .-.. .-.---------------------------~~~~~--~-~ • yo ur spacious. afr<ond111oncd room take a refreshing d ip 1n our third floor pool. or 'lqut'etc 1n a Quick game ol tennis before dinner You'll wan1 to plan on spending one ~pec1al <'' enang d1nmg 1n the gourmet. award.win n1ni' The Third Floor re~taurant which features fresh C on11ncnt;i l C u1'i1ne and fine wine\ With l>1!>nC) land IU5t a \hurl Monorail hop awa:y, >Ou'll be tempt· cd to spend your cnltre vaca1ton at thl· "happiest place on eanh .. And wh \ not' With the-summer debut of the all nc" "Totally M1nn1e" parade (Mtn· n1c <,tar' tn her own roe:!.. \ldeo \\llh Pluto and M1lkC) 's help). the n1st11h firework\ ntr<ivap.nla and lhl· rnchanttng"flectncal light PJT'alk H>u'll finQit tough to find time for .. 11 'our fa.,.ontt· ndc'' Hut dun't lorgct ti.not!'\ Bcm F-arm 'unsh1nc-filled bt'Jlht·' deg.1n1 mu~um' ;,ind shoppin~ lentef\ arc all 1us1 mmute'I from 1rou1 \111lmg \umm<·1 hcadquancf\. 1h,· l mcrald of •\nahe1m htr n·M:l\at1011\ .mt.I package J, tall\ . ..ee >our tra,el agent or rall wll ltct• ( XflCI> l~ 1-XY1n The [mt•rJld 111 -\nahe1m "1<11.atcd at 1717 ~ '-'l·,1 '°11 -\nJhl'llll T R A r... S P A (' I t• I (' R t: ~ TAl1RANTS C>onat~• to l lnitf'd Way I rans Pac1hc Rc,tJurJnt' In, rcu·ntl\ donatcd Sti I, K~~ O~ 111 th1 t nttcd· '-"a:r of Orang<' ( ount} JnJ 1fJwa11 [mph>} t't' ('(lntnbutton•<H t·umulated throughout I qg 'i. r>lll\ JO add111onal 25 percent from the In IOl' based <"orpora11un . matll Tram/Pac1tic Re,taur;rnt., one ol 1h1 nauon\ leading thamablc con inbutof\ 1n the fulhen ice rc~tauranl 1ndustn "Our emplmec\ tn hoth Cahfom1J and Hawa11 t.Jvc ccruunl) pru.,.l·n that .. olunteensm 1s .111' c and well m l\menca." said Ronald F Hrggin' rnmpam president and chief e' ecu11ve ~>fficcr. at the formal cht't~ rire'K'ntallon. Trans/Pac·fil''c. annual parttn · ratton Ill the United Way campaign dm e wa' launched in earl) 1985 b' Chairman of the Board. Dou&la11 I \ahsbun "\our donation w1lf make a d1fTcrencr.'' he wrott' in a spmtcd pka for suppon and pledge for lhl! corporate rnntnbutton Emplo~cc responS(' followed 1mmcd1atel:y and was vc11 generous. Trans/Pacific emplo)ees sn ( ahfom1a donated S27,46 23. while the Hawa11 em· plo)'ce~ contributed S.!J.Q9 1.41. and the compan) matched the total with S 11.JM 41 . With plan~ to exceed 1h1' )'ear's amount. Trans/Pacific prOJCl't' mak.1ng a con1nhut1on over $85.CXlo tn 1986 T r-t1n\/Pac1fa Rc<;taurnnt~ opcratl'\ ncarl) 60 rc~taurants 1n ( ahforni.s and Hawa11. including the Jolh Roger. Monter\') Ba) <. anners. Yum \um Tree. and Sp1ndriftcr Thl· compan} 1s alM> the Cl(clus1H franchisee for S111lcr Re\taurants in Hawa11 SOMETHING TO DO? VISIT ART ALLERIES! T llE BARN H 11 ve thl' prime Ctf your life chootnng tr11m the extensive 25 item menu. "tt'11ks. i;eafood. BBQ, Mexican di1- h1·• inrluding aalad bar, and more. \~ .. ,tt>rn charm and country am- l11nnrt Breakfast. M·5 6·30-11:00. I •JOl'h M-F 11:00-2:30, Omner 7 r111:ht., from 5:00 p.m. Happy hour \1 f 4 :m 7 p.m. Satellite diAh. Liv" 1 11teru11nment and dancing Ban 1p111 raciliues. 14982 Redhill, l1htln j\(){)ll f; I HF. ORIGI NAL BAR N 1-.\RMER STEAKHOUSE ~ ,.,• Thl'y are the original. Famou~ '"' thtir one and·a·half pound I' •rlt!rhuu...-at.eeks and featurinit •fr ... pla\ bruil1ng Proudly servml( for 'I \t'8f" Lunch Mon.-Fri 11 ·2. Din· rwr nsghtl~· Mnn .• f'ri. Crom 6 p.m .., 11 l'· ~on lrom 4 pm 2001 Harbor llh!I ( ""'" '\1h8 642-9i77 Bfo.~~IGAN'S ~ r.-~h luod erved with a side of fun \ll•nu fl'11tu re11 unique appetizers, ,,1lucb , 'eafood, croiuant 11&nd \I.I• hP ... , hurger'I, Mexican dishes, 111rJ on t'lcit1n1 brunch menu I unc h 1md dinntr from 11 a.m _., ... kdnv" Hrunch 9 3 on weekends. ~ 1111 l13r with a~cialty drinks. H11ppy hour 4 7 weekda}'11. In <'otta "1f',ll. South <'out Plaza park mg lot i., "ak\ Fifth Avenue 24 l ·39:l8 In \\ ""' m1n&lt'r, 54h We1tm1nater \t111l H!H 4522 Duncmg evenings in \\ l'•tmin'iler loc•8tion BOO BU RNS :0-.uperb 1~ the weird to deecnbe this tm1> dininic establ11hment. Servinic '""'J>C•rl for 18 years, specuilizmg in \nKU'< raised beef. the finest you 11111 KeL AIM> featuring fret1h fieh, '«'111 and chicken. The linen covered t9nlt'i., c11ndltt and Crnh nowers itdli to the elegance. with booth.a and h11d1 back chai~ for privacy. Flir kettng lantem11 and cluaiul mu~1c capture the charming and w11rm atm011phere. Open for lunch. liinner and their splendiferoUJJ Sun· day brunch. Extensive wine li1t. 37 Ftu1h11>n l~land. 644-2030. RRISTOL BAR a GRI LL - At Rollday Ina Tradlt.1on1tlly a.n all Amerk1n favorite pl~e to eat nnd priced for family dinin1. ~very· thing from 1uicy at.e1da a.nd ehos» to ~pecjaJ chicken di.ahM and rrt111h ~afood. Bounteous l&lad bar. Sumptuous daily luncheon buffet. Open dally for dinln1 and cocktails. 3131 Briatol St., Coat.a Meaa. !>57·3000. DILLMAN' The Dillman fa.mil)' la tamOUI for their traditional warm hoepltallty and fine food. Fineat prime rib in Balboa and frtsh fish daily. Com- plete dinner 1peciat. daily. Friendly service and a fun, delightfuJ at· m01phere. Open daily for lunch and dinner. Brunch Sat. and Sun. 801 E Balboa. 673-7726. THE HIDE-A WAY Tired of eating out at places with no priv1tcy" Search no more' The Hide away provides privacy with it.8 hooths and partitions, perfect for butineu luncheons and romaMic dmmg All newly decorated offering a rela.xing atm<l!lphue. The Spe<"1al t1et1 are seafood and st.eaka. Af fordable dining for the whole ram tly. Variety of daily specials. Home· made soups and sauct1. Beer & wine served also. 5874 F,dinger at Spring· dale m Marina Shopping Village Hunlinl(ton FWnr h R40 6f>l~ JOLLY ROGER Great American food an<l at the best price11. The Jolly Roger h& alway~ been known a.s a good family vaJue rtttaurant. Tht' menu features brukfast, lunch and dinner with a large variety of d1she11 w choo.<1e from. From egg dishes, griddle 1."ake11. burgers, sandwiche&, saladb to romple~ dinner of seafood. !f~aka. chicken and delicious de~ wru Family owned for :i5 ye1r-; with the friendlit'lll 11erv1re in town 400 S Coast Hwv .. Lal('una Reach 494 3137 CALFORNIAN PA TEL'S The newej\t event in dining in the Newport ut!a Featuring a ll~cial blend Qf culinary creations from California and the rest of the world Such tantal1i1ng items a11, marinated shrimp and 11Callop'! in a ginger vinaigreUe 11alad. Mouth· watering pasta like angel hair with seafood and fretih tomato. Pizz.u baked in an authentic Italian wo<Jd burning oven, the only one in New port. And a variety of Grilla~es s~cialtiea. Dinner served daily (cloeed Monday) and Happy Hour. Reeervationa recommended. l620 W. Coe.st Highway, Newport Beach (714) &48·7167. BUBBLES BALBOA CLUB Bubbles iJI a treuure. a 30's ~tyle aupper club done with fanwy 1tnd wit. The Champagne ice bucket.a. are ahaped like top h3ta and the hrht firtwn like martini f[luses. Thr walll are huntt with original 1930'• art anit the reat.room11 att tru! to deco 1tyle. The cuisine comb.1nee Fnnch and llA.lian element.a in a homey Americ.9n contexL Open ~or dinner Mon.· Thur•. 5:30· I O .• JO p.m.; 6· t 1 p.m. Fri., Sat., Sun. un day Brunch 10 a.m. 3 p.m. ~Hr· vatlona are euneeted Oinner fr<im 19.95«>116.95. Full Bar. Viall, Mu- terCard, American E.preM. Bub- ble. ia located at 111 Palm Street. in Balboa at the comer of Palm and Balboa: Call 676·9093. INDIAN ROY AL KHYBER RESTAURANT 1000 North Bristol Street, Newport Beach, (at Jamboree) 714·752-5200. Lu.nch·Dinner, eaquiait.e dining in the midst of a gleaming white Taj MahaJ ouia. Featuring award win- ning northern Indian cuisine elegantly preeented in the MoghuJ trl\diuon. Hora d'oeuvre., aerved Mon-Fri 5:00·6·00, Lunch Mon-Fri I l ·2:30, Sat & Sun cha.mJ>a«lle brunch 1 I ·3:00, Dinner Sun·Thurs 5:30-10:30, Fri·Sat until ll:30: Ra- ervauons accepted, Ma.et.erCard, Visa, Americ;a.n Expre11a. Gourmet catering, weddings, private parties. and corporate accomodauorui. ITAUAN CARMELO'S This uJtra-1mart haven of excep- tional Italian and Continental Cuisine is one of the more rewarding places to dine. Fresh put.a and special "light" sauces are carefully prepared by three of the finest Ital- ian chefs. Piano bar entertainment complement.a the fun atmosphere. Alfresco dining lweathtr per- mitting) Open Tuea.-Sun. Crom 6:00 p.m. for dinner. 3.'l20 E. Coast Uwy, Corone del Mar. 67[) 192:.!. MARCELLO'S This award winner <>ffeni an ex· tensive menu specializing in pastas, veal, cioppino and their famou.a handmade piua. Eiitabli11hed since 1973. thiJI family owned rettaurant has captured the heart.a or Italian food lovers. Lunch Mon. Fri • Din· ner 7 nighu a week 17502 Beach at Slater , Huntington Beach. B42·550fi VILLA ~OVA i\ lwa111tful h11\ v1t>w c-rente the rnm11n111 '<t'llllllC that ha11 made the \·111 .. N""" 11 ""llf'l'1al kind of pla<'e" rur m·n 1111' \'t'&r~ Supt>rh nmiine trum ( i-n1 r.1I and Nnrthern Italy ..c·rHd 111 Clld W urld charm Ex 1t-n<.1H wmr 11 .. t Dinner n11(hllv 1'1111111 h11r 1-'ull menu 1111 1.00 ft m. .11 :11 \\1·~1 l'oa,;t Hwv . Nrwport Ht'adi 1112 i l!X.l. LI'S RESTAURANT If you love Chinese food. you 're sure to enjoy dining he!e, u .L1'1 prom- iMl:I truly authentic Chint!B4! food. The menu offen a wide variety of exotic di1h~. from a la carte t.o combination11 including Cantoneee & Stechuan 11tyle. Breathtaking decor in a supremely beautiful at· mt>11phere. Tropical drink11 to quench your th1rat. Open ~ven da)"tl a week for lunch and dinne r. 8961 Adam•, Hunt ington Auch. 961-9116. 314 N, Beach Blvd., Anaheim. 827 1210. THE LOTUS Enter the Orient and ex~nence tht excellence of Mandarin and Szechwan Cuisinea. Authentic Chi· 11t'11e dishe!> especially prepared by me .. ter chef Liu. The Lotwi can ei((er culinary mHterpieces to your liking. The lov•IY dining area 11 dominated with pictures of the Lotus nower· the aymbol of purity in Chinese culture. Enjoy fine Chi neu dining as well as wine, spirita and hospitality at the Lotu1. U'ICated in Harbor Center at 2300 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Call 54.';.:nu MANDARIN GOURMET A truly special place t.o dine, the Mnndann Gourmet ha.s been a gold award winner and owner. Michael Chiang was voted Restaurateur of the Year Speciahzang in Peking, Sh1rnrcha1, Sr.echwan and Hunan rn1iones., they offer an array of deli l&de., including Peking Duck. dumpl1ngi.. wholl" fish and mort' "umptiou" dishe11 Elegant at· 1no1tµhere. impeccable lol'TVlCl' and 1·xten"1"e wine l1!ill 1500 Adams, C'o'lta Mesa.. 540· 19:17 CONTll\ENTAL MEDITERRANEAN ROOM Airporter Inn Hotel C'nngenial and secluded from the hu-.-. airport '!Urruundingi. Tht> "1ed1terranean Ro•>m offer-11u~rb r11nlinental ('U1'11ne for lunch. din nrr and Sunday brunch Tllp enter rninment nightly 1n lht' Cabaret Lounf(e The Captain'11 Table 1~ uren r11r dinmg 24 hout<1. Perfect for watl.'hinK California Run~u. l'I the Fhicht Dt!<·k Lounge The A1rporter Inn 1-. ltl('81M 111 18ill0 MacArthur Bhd 111 lr.,,1ne 1i:t1 :.!770 PUFFI N'S t\n adventure 111 nit~ural eat1n11 Fr .. .,h quailtv mgred1enu prepared 1n a 'imple yet elegant way Award 14111nm1t recipes. (;arden setting 1n o European Cafe stvle atmosphere C'1111ual brealtfa.'ll end lunch. Formal c.l1mn11 ror dinner Sun. ThuN 7 11 m 10 pm, Fri & Sat till l I p .m :111:111 K Coast Hw\ C'orona del \for !HO· I '>i:l IUVIERA Hl'l1tx 10 1tracmu'> "l"rv1ce 111 11n t-leican t, intimste atmosphere. ":" pt'rth prepared t'<mlinental di11he II\ Chet Richard Rergner, SlnCf' ltl7ll This award winning re!I 1.1uranl ali;o offeri. 1111 ext.en111ve w111e li~I . nnd excel~ in table11ide prf'p 11rutmn11 and Oambe11. Open for l.11n<'h 11 ::lO 3 p.m , Dinner from !; I'm Excellent banquet fac1\1tir<. C'h~I Sun 11ncl holiday a;l:i;i S Bri.,tul. <'lftJt8 MtM ~40-:\840 FRENCH LE C HATEAU A touch or the F~nch country111dt> ha• come w Newport. lk11ch, with t.he opening of the C-Ountry Side Inn at the comer of Briat.ol a.od R«-dhill Avenue. Fubioned 1rier a Ewo pean bed and breakfast inn, emphu1zing a penon1I touch, the Count.ry Side Inn ia the home of Le Chauau Reataurant. FH \t1rin1 fuhioMble C1lifomia cu.i1itie with a French flair, menu apecialities include Crepee Aus Framboilel, Cobb Salad Pariaienoe and Tow ned<>1 Roaini. BreUlut., lunch and dinner are 1erved daily, beclnnin& at 6:00 a.m. Compliment.al)' hora d'oeuvr• are aerved nichtly in the Loun&e. For reeeJVatioDI pleue call S..9-0300. CAFE FLEURI 'fake a ~at in Cafe Pleura tor break fast, lun<:h or dinner. Enjoy an er quisile environment inn uenced by a French touch. Hot jau Monda~ through Friday from 5.00 till 9:00 p.m. and an out.standin1 wh1U!· l(love hrunch make thia Cafe the pl8l't' to ltlt'tol. Open 7 daya a week. 6:00 11.m. 10:10 p.m. Modeutely pmed 1.'lllll MacArthur Blvd .. r-:t'wport S..ach 4i6·2001 LE MIDI :)c;,eral th1n1<11 make this award win· n1ng hideaway truly speciaJ: Walt.t!r. their Swl.5l> chef. trained in t0ml' of the he~t huuf>H, Palace St Moran. Pia«' C111aad. Baur au l.ac. Zurich Authentic c uiaine f'rovenrnle~:.easonal l{Ourmet fes- t1\'ah< 11 Sunday brunch •10 unique 1l's l1kt> 'lleppinrc hack in time t.o an er11 when excellence of food was matched hy 1tenerous hospitality, a hc ... p1laiil\· rnrely found these da} .Join '\1ama and Walt.er in their French countrv home. Lunch, d in· neor 11nd ~undo} hrunch. Banquet foulitit·~ C'l11'<ed l\fondays :l421 Via Lulo. ~ewporl li.-ach 675 4904 THAI THE THAI TOUCH Step into the wonderful world of Th&land. The splendor or Tiw cuisme and elegant dining is found here at Thai Touch Cui.sine. Your ho&ta are Pranee and Songuk Doungchak and they will serve you an authentic Tba.i meal whether your taat.ea lean toward the mild or the trad1t.ionAlly 11picy Thai Touch IB a little uut or the way, but well worth the find Open for dinner 7 nighta and for luJtch daily except Sunday. Thai Touch Cuisine ia located in the Newport Hilla Shop· ping Center wherl' San Migud Drive end11 at Ford Road 2616 San Miguel Dr 640-0123. IVEXCAN Ml CASA Their food .,, hkr " trip to Mexico' Ho.,p11olitY lt•lt''< hand in hand with their mollo ... M1 c·a,.a eo1 Su Casa," or my hou"" 1s. yr1ur h<tu!le Estab- li.;hed -.11ll I' I 972, 1t'~ no 11ecret I neond' rnJC>V Ii mi nit here. Open lit1ilv from 11 a m for Lunth. Din· 11t!r 11od ( tK kta1I• F.nt.ntamment Werl )',nt nigh I.II 1n I ht Burro Room 2'Jn F, 17th ~t.. Co"UI Mesa. 6.Sfi i62ff. CALIFORNIA BEACH . California Ek-Kh Restaurant is one of Newpon '11 moet contemponiry real.6uranta. Featurina .e•quiait.e ,J1paneae dining includlng 1U1h i, sufood •nd at.eab, mak• this a truly ple,..urable dininJ upu1e""- Located at 3$5 V ui Lido in New· port Be.ch lunch houn 11:30-2:30. dinner 6.30-11:00 7 daya a week. AU major cTedit cud• •oc.pted. Call 676·0676 for informatJon. Dally Piiot Oetebook/ Friday, May 23. 1986 •• .. - - ---~-----------------------------------------------.. OutOnTheTown SEAFOOD STEAKS AMERICA 42f,0 Martingale Way, Newport Beach. 833-0080. Opt>n 11 a.m.-1 :30 am American regwnal cooking. seafo<M:l. p1z.za, putas Fresh Live Maine lobster. New York 11tyle p1zz.a Ct1<1ked an a brick oven Near o.r Airporl ofr MacArthur Late dining. enteruunment Reservatwns ac cept.ed. <'asual. inexpemuve MC, V, AE ANTHONY'S PIER 2 The Southern Calif HestauranL Writer'\ vc.ted this one the winner of the beM value restauranl8. Their 'leafood is the talk of the town with :w 15 fresh r&sh daily CBS Tele· v1111un claim~ they -have the best happ)' hc.ur: in Orange County. Menu ha!> calorie count for the weight conscious Open Friday. Sat· 11rdey and Sunday for dinner. Located on the beautiful Newport Bey al 10;1 N Bayside Ur 640-51'!:! CAFE LIDO ('afr Lado as Newport Cannery Val lal'e·, univ ~upper club lt'11 hieated 1111 Halhoa Pen1n~ula C'afe Lado 1~ w1·ll k n11~ n fo r 1l.<; fre~h seafood <1t>leC't 1CJn'I and contemporar) C'11i11ine, prepared by C'hef Franc1i. The warm, intimate and cozy am- huinC'e of dusty r<me and buricundy dee-or rreale a perfert atm1Jt1phere for vour dining upenence Cafe Lido 111 also the recipient of the Prest 1gioUJ1 Southern CaJifornia Restaurant Writers' Silver Award Casual attire. Dinner n1ghtlv until m1dn1~ht. Live Jazz ni~htly Call 675-2968 for reservatiun'I THE C ANNERY This h1st-0ric waterfront landmark in Newport's Cannery Village fea tures fresh local seafood and East· ern beef Con11istently good 11erv1ce, open for Lunch, Oinner, Sun. Champagne Brunch and Harbor Cruiae8 Entertainment nightly and Sun. afternoons. Enjoy the lounge food galley-1uperb clam chowcier' 3010 LaFayette. 675-5777 C RAZY HORSE STEAKHOUSE Country dining with cla.s11' Authen· tic we11t.ern decor restaUJant and aloon, featuriflj prime rib. fresh seafoods, and their famous pan 11auteed steak a. Lunch: Mon· Fri 11·3. Dinner Mon -Sat !> p.m. (din· ner reservations guaranteed). Danc- ing and live music 1n the aaloon. Oyer Rd. Exit/Newport Fwy. Sant.a Ana. 1714) 549 1512. THE REX OF NEWPORT Located on the oceanfront acrO!l8 from the Newport Beach pier. The Ru ii the Orange Cout'a moet uclu11ve eeafood restaurant Well known for frt~th Hawaiian gourmet nah aelectiona and 1pec1aJizing in 'weet Channel Island abalone, ten der veal snd prime meat.I. T he warm ambiance of the padded booths, gothic paintings and the well 11tocked wine racb lend to Ru's convivial atmOllphere The Rn of Newport is the choice or local' a.s well u v1ait~ra Recipient of the prestigious Travel-Holaday award Casual/elegant attire Lunch. dinner CaJI 675-256f; for r~rvations Valet p11rking T ALE OF T H E WHALE Experience a atep back into lime tt1 a place where you can dine at your own leisure. Enjoy the romance of old Newport with a panoramic bay view. Escit.e your aenteS with their 1enaation.al seafood and traditional favoritiee. Brealcfut 7 a.m .. Mon.· Fri .. Lunch t I ·4 Mon.-Fri .. Dinner 4-11 Mon.-Sat. Sat. and Sun. Brunch 7-4. ()yet.er Baz Fri .. Sat. & Sun. Banquet facilitiet up to 500. 400 Main St .. Balboa. 673-46.33. SAI L LOFT Located above the .Jolly Roger in Laguna. thia roiy rntaurant fea· tures nne frl'9h seafood with ocean view dining. Enjoy the O)'llter bar in a warm atmoephere and decor of nautical motif The seafood menu features swordr11h. 11hmnp, hahbu1. '\Callop8 and many other 11elect1om1. The uyster bar offers oyst.er 'lhooteni. clams, crab & 11hrimp cocktail and aJao hot di11bt1 The Sail Loft, a restaurant that u1 dedi cated to the tradition of comradery 400 S Coast Hwy . Laguna Beach 4~.;u~ G INO'S ON THE HILL Alm<lllt a C'Ml.4 Mesa landmark whert-friends and memuril'f> meet morning, noon, and night for breakfast, lunch and dinner Gino·-. 1 n't an Italian Restaurant. but a restaurant being run by a Clocall Italian Even though they serve many Italian 11em11, they also offer e large variety of olher 1temt1 on their menu. Known for "Honest food and friendly service," Gino's features a varied menu with emphaa1s on quality and re8.80nable prices The lounge opens at 8 a.m for the more aenou1. coclct.a.il hour with ant.erest ing notions at 4:30 PM and Piano Bar Wednesday thru Saturday be ginning at 8:30 PM. Watch for Gino's latest addition, Sunday Champagne Brunch roming 11<.aon Located at 428 E 17th Street, ('05ta Mesa. Call 650-1750 for re'er vat1on11, directions or whett-ver. ) tJINl\ER T1 EAi ERE4 G RAND O I NNEB TBEATBR lmpr•ive dininc and pro(•ionaJ production• are 1ure to pleaae eac:h time you visit. TM extraor<foua.ry buffet offera rout b&ron of bfff, glaud ham with a fruJt uuce, Geor gia chic:keo with peac:hea a11d 1w e and the Mahi Mahi ia aerved in a ~t uuce. Tri-color Cettuec1m and cream ia a real favorite. Enjoy d inneT and a play toni,ht! Grand Dinner Theater located within the Grand Hotel in Anaheim at I Ho~l Way Call 772-7710 HA R LEQUIN DINNER THEATER Every cuatomer can be espected t.11 be treated Hke a celebrity. Thi' theat.er offera 1erumptioua meala with top production1 in an elqanl atmoephere. The sumptuous buffet includes rout baron of bfff chicken and ftah dilhea, putaa, salads, veget.abla, and ainful des suu. The Sat. and Sun. brunch includes a variety of eu dilbea. The Celebrity Terrace it available for private dinint. The individuaU\ decorated privat.e balcony room• t111erlook the 450-eeat honieahoe ~haped main room The Harlequin 1a located a t 3503 S Harbor in Sant..11 Ana Call 979-7560 GUIDE TC ORANGE COAST RESl~URAN I s ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -~ -~ ·§' ~J? ·S ~ ~ §' ~ ~~ ~ ~ t' ~~ ~~ ·~ ·~ § ~ ~J' ~ ~~ "" 3. ~ ;;-~ Re~tauranl <...i:::, ~ "V ~ ~ <::S -4J' ~ ~ ~~q.~ A IRPORTER INN H OTEL c.onunental S9 50 $1 8 95 $4 75-8.9:1 S8 50-SlO 50 111700 M•Arthur 81 lrv1nt K1'1 27711 from $3.00 4-7 • * * 10-eC> • THE BARN Amencan from S4 95 • 141182 R.odhlll Tusun 2:19-01 u from S3 9:1 St I 95 from $2 75 4 3(). 7 * • up 10 600 BRISTOL BAR & GRILL-Holiday Ion Arrwnc-an S6 95-112 95 $3 95-$7 00 S8 95 3131 Bn.1101. C..ta M""" :>:>7 3000 S2 00.15 00 4.7 * • up 10 400 T H E C ANNERY ~food Sil 95-$1995 • 3010 l..aFayt'llA' N1>wpon 8"ach 67:>-:>777 $4 75-S8 95 S8 50·S8 50 4 6 30 • up Lo • 75 C RAZYHORSESTEAKHOUSE Steaks $9.95-$16.95 S3 95-$9.95 Hollda)'I 5-7 up 10 I~ 8"1Qkhollow San1.1 JV-. ~11-1:112 Seafood • • • 200 OILLMAN'S Amcncan $7.95-$2195 80 I E Balboa &Jbo8 673 7726 $3 95-S8 95 SJ 25-$4.95 • 15-45 * LE MIDI from $8.50 Sett& 3421 V1• l.1do. N!'WJ)(W\ &o..-h 67~-4004 French from $5.50 from $12.50 Wine 10·90 LI'S 81Hil Aliama HunUnflOn e.--h 11112 1111:1 Chlneae S7 00-$1 2 00 S2 75-$5.50 up t.o 150 MANDARIN GOURMET l'.IOO Adama eo.ta M,... ~ 11137 Chlneee from 11000 from $4.50 • ut, IO MARCELLO'S Ital.Ian from S4 65 from S3 25 Beer & up to 17:Ml2 8'«h Btvd Hunu~m S.-h 842-:1~:> Wine 65 Ml 'ASA Meldcan a la cane • la can.r . • * ZN E nh St C.1.1 M-&4$. 762'1 &combo & combo R EUBEN'S OF NEWPORT S\mka Crom $8 95 from $4..26 from S8 95 6-7 • * up to • 2SI g C:0.1 Hwy N<"Wpir'\ ~h SMtood " PASTEL'S c.onu~caJ l620 W c-t Hwy ~pan a-ti NI 71117 $5 76-l lUO ~ncSoon &-1 2e Dally Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, Mey 23. 1986 - -rBR •iona.I e each :Hrwy '*'· ~r· 1lau :f io I uecini Enjoy :;rand 1n the Hotel J E R :ed lo The meat. qant >Uffet beef. Ula.a. des· -unch • The e for luallv oom~ !I hot !qUID iant.11 l - - - 25~ FAIR FOMCAaTI OH A2 FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1986 Charges urged in boy's death Restraint u sed on autistic boy a n ger s ead of developmenta lly disabled b oard ~~ -- By ROBERT BARKER Ot ttieo..,,... • ..., The Orange County chairman of a ~late board overseeing the care of developmentally disabled people sa1d Thursday that the death of 14-year- old Banh Paco .. was a severe case of child abuse ofa person not able to UCI gets Lewis Tom Lewt. bu decided to enroll at UC l.rrine, en4ln& •peculation u to where be would con- tinue bl• collegiate baaketball career. C 1. Coast Lagunans are protesting the Laguna College of Art's bulldozing of native vegetation./ A3 Nation The House passes a trade protectionist bill despite Reagan's strong objec- tions./ AS World The death toll rises In fighting among rival black groups In a South Africa squatters camp./ AS Sports The Angels' Wally Joyner will be out for about a week after suffering a severely bruised tendon In his left knee./C1 INDEX Advice and Games Auto Pilot C7 81-6 A3 CS-6 82-7 ca 88 Date book Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather B10 Date book A3 B8-9 C1-4 Date book A 2 defend himself .. Merle E. Tracy. chairman of the Developmental D1sab1hues Arca Board based an Tustin. also said the restraining procedure allegedly used by an anstructer May I to bnng the boy under control at Gall Education Center an Huntington Beach was "a Stricter flight curfew sought By PAUL ARCHIPLEY OllMO..,,...llllfl Flights out of John Wa~nc A1rpon won't be scheduled any later than 9:30 p.m under a proposal going before county supervisors. The plan aims to ensure air earners won't violate the 10 p.m curfew, said county a1rpon counsel Michael Gatzke. "The rule says an airplane can't climb over Newport Beach after I 0 p.m .. " Gatzke said. "Our problem 1s with airlines.that schedule departures a1 9:55, and because of delays or wa111ng on the runway before takeoff, they Oy out after the curfew. ··we're saying don't schedule any (Pleue ~ STRICTER/ A2) Teen-ager convicted of killing molester By STEVE MARBLE OllMDelly l'llotli.fl . A Dana Point teen-ager was con- victed of voluntal) manslaughter Wednesday for fatally 'ihootang his guardian and selling the body afin:. butJurors said they sympath11ed with the killer. The upcnor ( ourt JUI), ~h1ch deliberated 'ii\ da\\. rejected the prosccuuon's argument that Joun De Beer. I!!. was a cold-blooded killer v.ho should be con\ 1ctcd of fim. degree murder DcBccr. a nall\e of Holland. said he shot Ph1lhp Allen Parsons. doused his bod) w11h gasohne and set him afire an 1985 after Parsons tned to molest and choke him Parsons was de..cnbcd 1n coun as a convicted child molester and a vul· gar, hateful man who frequently molested DeBeer or humiliated ham an pubhc. "I thank whal he did protected other httle boys from being abused b~ this man." Juror Doi Jones o;a1d after the verdict. 'Tm going to write him and send him hugs and k141o;co;."' \he \aid. "He's a neat kid." DeBcer. who wa<; I 7 when the (PleHe .ee TEEN/ A2) Coast Guard unit for Orange Coast changes leaders Lt. Michael Parks ordered his ere~ to fire one of the .50-cahbcr machine guns mounted on U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Point Dtv1de across the bow of the fishing vessel. Parks spotted the ship Just out~1de San Clemente Island. First 1t~ crew tncd to flee, then they tncd to scuttle 1he boat. Parks and his men were able to stop the s1nkin1-On board the fishing boat from Colombia they found 10 tons of h1gh·vade manJuana. Parks cites the capturt of crew and contents an May of I 98S as perhaps the most memorable event dunng his two-year s11nt as Commanding Of· fia:r of the 82-foot patrol boat U CG Point D1v1de Has command came 10 1n end ThuNiay an an elaborate chanae of command ceremony at the Coa t Guard hcadquancf't in Newpon Beach Parks admitted the day wa'i bitter· wcct for ham "G1vin11. up command'' \Omcthtn~ PAUL ARCHIPLEY Focu s ON THE NEws yo u don't rth h." Parks said ... But 11'!1 easier to gave at up to someone you·\e known for the past eight )'cars ... Relieving Pults wa\ Lt. Manin Langlois Jr The pair attended the ( oa11t Guard demy an New Lon don Connecticut. toaethcr, gradu- a11n11n 1982 Par~,· fir'it '" 1gnmcn1 wa\ m Flonda. where he hclprd mnke nrnc drug ~11urc an 1 V> yea" 1 he Huntington 8( ch rt 1dcnl' new 1s~1gnmcn1 1s at the Coa t OuorJ 0~11on (enter an Lon~ 8(ach (Pleue eee COAST/ A2) -·---- gross abuse of regulattons." Tracy. a resident of Corona del Mar and a reurcd Los Angeles School D1stnct adm1mstrator, has urged Distnct Attorney Cecil Hacks to reconsider a decisi on not to file cnmmal charges. · Tracy, who said Hicks rcponcdly wouldn't talk to him on the tcle· phone, said he's cons1denn~ other alternatives that include asking the Orange County Grand Jury to con· duct an 1nqu1J') to determine if charges should be filed. "We have grave concern 1bat this death be gJven cons1deraoon equal to that gj ven the death of any c1tizerts of our community." he said Wednesday 1n a letter to Hicks. At Tracy's request, Orange County Supervisor Thomas F. Raley also urged Hicks by letter to review the CUC. "If anything, disadvantaged youngsters need more of our love and concern than others." Riley said. But Paul Meyer, an attorney for Gill Educaoon Center tnstructor Jeanne Warnecke, claimed that cnti· cism over the dec1S1on not to file criminal charges "as emouonal rcac- oon to incomplete and pantal infor- mauon." Meyer claimed that Warnecke did not tape a plasuc-lined diaper over the boy's cn\Jrc f~. Instead. he said the diaper was placed only over the eyes to screen out v1~wil sum uh. Meyer aJso claJmed that the boy's head and neck were not covered by a mat in an ensuana re~traininJ procc s. "Mrs. Warnecke 1s a loVlns, com· passionate ~rson who did the ap- propnatt things to protect the cbtld," he said. Meyer wd be bel.Jevcs I.bat lhe 70. pound boy's physical d1fficuJucs or medical complicat1ons were factoD in his death. The boy died May 3. three days after the incident, of what the OranJ.e County Coroner's office (Pleue eee OPnCIAL/ A2, Bank in Irvine seized; unsafe practices cited Newly fo rmed bank to reopen today under federal conserva tor By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. O.., ........ CharginJ unsafe and unsound bus•· ness pracuccs led Consolidated Sav- ings Bank to insolvency, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board Tuesday placed the Irvine bank an con- servatorship. The bank at 2171 Campus Dnve was to reopen today with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpor- ation acting as conservator. The federal bank board also authonzed Federal Savings to enter into a service contract wnh House- hold Bank of Ncwpon Beach. said board spokesman Dave Loveday. Consolidated wall rctam 1ts name, he said. Depositors and stockholders rc- matn insured u;1 the newly-organized bank. The board placed the two-year-old bank in conservatorshie because Consolidated was in "an unsafe and unsound condition:· Loveday said. "It had dissipated its assets and earnings." The board also found Consoltdated to be insolvent. · A state chartered bank. Con· sohdated had assets ofS84.3 mtlhon. Consolidate.d's finanClJ} woes grew out of a rapid growth sirateay con- (Pleue eee BA111t/ A2) Crash victims seek $2.5M from Irvine Balboa Bay Club bash Lady Godiva leada the Balboa Bay Club Chill Cootoff parade, lncludlna a Mew Orlean•-•tyle funeral proceulon with ftplllea In wlilte limoualnea In the rear Thunday. Lady G --.b Carole Arnold -la the chief cook for the White Hone, a New Orlean• chill group baaed In Mewport Beach. By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OftlleO..,NMlllllf Two families who say they were injured in separate Irvine traffic accidents have filed claims seeking almost S2.5 million in damages from the City. One of the claims was tnggered by a collision involving an Irvine pohce car. Seeking damages in one incident are David and Karen Manin. both Sea wall at Crescent Bay to be removed by owner By ROBERT HYNDMAN 0t IM Delly !'lot I tel! A sea wall protecting a bcachfront home 1n Laguna Beach was expected to be tom down this morning. ending a long feud between the property owner. residents and city officials. Contractors representing the C'rei.- cent Bay homeowner during nego· t1ations about the sea wall applied for a demolition permit after plans for a replacement structure were denied by the City Council on Tuesday. s:11d June Catalano. the cit> 's community development director Once the wall as removed. Catalano ~td the city wtll drop its legal challenge against the propeny own- ers. Tony Montcpan and Manon Knoll Montepan -the daughter of Knoll's Berry Farm founder. Walter Knott. A court date was set on the matter for June 4. The boulder-and·grout wall was one of several built at Crescent Bay in 1983 after severe wtnter storms undermined the bluff beneath the Montepan home. The seawall was built to protect both the home and a city staircase to the beach. Catalano said But the wall. paid for JOtntly by the city and the Montepans. was con· structed wtthout proper permits be· cause of the emergency s1tuat1on And later an the year. the state Coastal Comm1ss1on ordered the wall re- moved because 11 encroached on public propcny. "Neither the state nor the city wants something that will take awa) from the sandy beach area:· Catalano (Plu.e .ee DISPUTED/ A2) I Police motorcycle down A p11Heqer lD a car that •tnack a Coeta Meea motorcycle officer ThandaJ loob on u ln•et1tf&aton tn•pect the .cene on Bay Street. Officer Job.a Pherrin allfl'ered a broken let ln the 2 :i4 p.m . acctdeot. wbic b occurred wbUe be wu reepon41nC to a call. • I 1 age 20. of Fountain Valley, and their I 5-month-old child, Diedre. The Martins say they were IDJured April 8 in a traffic accident on Sand Canyon A venue at Bun Lane. The Martins· attorney. Richard L. Banh, said the family's car collided wi th a marked pohce station wagon driven by Offi~r David Edwin Stoermer. Stoermer was responding to a (Pleue eee ACCIDENT/ A2) Cities, schools to close; trashmen offfor holiday By LAURA MERK Of "-0..,NM...,. Th is weekend h1g)iways will be 1ammed with people 1.akmg shon vacations and thousands of Southern Cahfom1ans wdl hat the beaches. Ifs also the weekend we remember those ~ho died in battle for our country. Memorial Day, formall ) acknowleged on May 30, wtll be celebrated this weekend and people around the Orange Coast wtll get their first itch of summertime fever. Also known as Decoration Day. Memorial Day was inaugurated in (Ple&8e 11ee NO/ A2) Parade to mark harbor's founding By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. 0..,,... ..... Celebrants w1ll mark the 50th anniversary of Newpon tlarbor today with a pioneer ~kfast. a formal dinner-dance and a boat parade rcm1n1scent of the one held an 1936 The public as encouraged to part1c1· pate 1n the parade. which bqlns at I p.m. al the harbor cntranoe Boatcn !thould simply hne up out 1dc the Jetties Leading the panlde Wiil bt the Orange County Shmff [)eparuncnt' fireboat Navy and Coa t Guard vessel • the Balboa Pav1hon Co.'s Pavilion Queen. the Su ut ba~'s Arau Wilham Lu k't C'"t \ la Vic and ~e-wpon Beach's entry ui the .\mena's Cup challen . the Eaalc. ~S)('(tators can view the parade throug.hout the harbor aro Good '1ewtng locations include the Sea (Pleue eee PA.aADt/A.2) A2 Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT I Friday, 1-.ioy 23, 1986 . COAST GUARD CHANGES COMMANDERS •.. P'TomAl l..an.IJ1mi. i.pcnt lour }t·ar\ in Hawa11. Part of ht'i duty indu<ll·d service on the <.oa'>t (JUard < unt·r Mo nroe tha1 '>t.'ttrl·he<l tor ''11 "1H11' and WJTCkage In lhe \\<,tier\ u l lhl• \\'.\ of Japan after thl' ~<>' tl'I\ \hut du"'n j South Korean pa!>'>t'ngcr a1rhnc..·r l.1r- ry1na 269 peopk 111 I qx' Lunglo1' will tw uunmaml1nii: 1h1· onl} Coa\t < 1uard unit 111 Oran~w Count) A\ part ul tht• l kH·nth c o.i ... t Guard D1stntt. Iii> orx-rJltonal U lll trol exu:nds lrom Po1n1 ( 11nu:pt1on to the Mt•x1urn burdl'r and h.ilt'"" tu Hawa11. Comm.1n<lrng a Ut''" of I II nwn Langlo" " l hargnl "''th ,1 \.tfll'd m1\~1on th<it uH ludl'\ U)j\tal dl"lt'rl\l' boa11n~ \..ikn n.J\ 1ga111>0 a\\l\lant l' ~an h and rnl Ul'. l U\1t1m., la"' .ind battling drug tratl1d.a'> Although lhl' C oa\I < 1uarll t.111\ un<lcr tht· Lkpanrnrnt 111 r ran,p<t1 · tat1ori ralhl•r 1h.in lhl lkkn,1.· lk · partnwnl, 11 1' th1 k1.kr.1I man11nw law t•nloin·nwnt Jg\'nl \ ,rnd 1h.11 ~om1.·11111n ml"an ... lw111g pn·p.irnl 111 ligh1. H" \h1r thl l \< < 1< 1'111111 Dt.,tdl'. hn,,,,, .1 tlHl'l·l"lghlh' 1nd1 \ICd hull \I ~4 11 ·, lhl· c1hll0\t X: f1ot1l ( 0,1\1 ( 1u.trJ Ultl"r llll lhl· \\t \I < oa ... 1 Mexican jetliner crash blamed on overheated tire l hl.' 75-ton nut\ I\ l'l\UIJ?Pl'd With '>oplmt1t·a1t•<l 1adar. lil'pth hmkr unJ r ,1d10 'IX't'tfirnlly <ln1gnl·d lot '>l'•lll h .111d IC~Ul' OJ)CrallOll\ ,, ltllrll'\ .111 1nll.11.tbk blMt on 11\ '>lt•111 tor uw 111 rl'\<:Ul''> hoanl1ng'> .ind 'uppl\. 1k It \l'rtl"\ \nd 11 I anglo" t'nlountn'> lrouhlt Ith· Parb lu1111d uut\tdl· ,,111 < kml·ntt• (<,land lw1.111.irm hl\lll""' ""1th a pa11 of 'O-l J II tw1 m.1d111w gun\ and a catht.' of \.1-16 ntk ... 4'- u ihbt>r handgun'> and \hotgun'> It \tnflla"'' 1ry to 111111un tht.' Prn111 f)1 "1dt· 11' !)a11 uf 1100 hor\l'~'-"1'r < urnrntn'I J1t·wl \ I, l'n~1nt·P't..in p11\l1 r lhl· 'htp 1n l'\ll'" 111 ~() f..not-. 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"Thl'n' arc good rcpon' that thl' lfru~ trnlltl I'> Ol<l\ 1ng wc5.t.'" Park'> '·"" "Rut 1ht·11· ,111.· di lfercnu:~ tx· l\H'l n h1·11• Jnd J lunda I I'\ e\trcmel~ J1lfa ult II• 1k1n·1 on thl' open "'ater • I hat 111h "·" hl·l·n madc c"en murl.' dtlfa ult l1t•1.1uw 111 (1rJmm-Rud- 111J11 'l11.11n111-H11d11i.1n '' h1111ng tht• l oJ'>I (.1u.ird 11111 Park\ \a1d, be· caU)l' lumh lot tud h.1H' bt.'t•n hit "'v\r rl" dl'11n 11t•I\ lct.'f1ng tlie ptnl' h " Ill' ,,ml It \ ,1 t<ill 111111-r for 1ht· Ill''-" t11r11rn.1nd1n~ 11fltl1.·r hut tht· < lhl\I ( 111,11 d p1d,, 1111(\ lhl lx•\I "\ 1111 ~1·1 \lll"l'rll'd ;.1nd onl~ a fl'\l m.1~t·11 1•.111.,,,1111 "( ummandola '"'" " om· of till' rlHl\t pre\llgrou\ I h tnf\ \OU I .Ill d11 \ 1 .... 1.11.l'' .11 't"' 1.·an tx· tar rnort.' h.11.trdctU\ lh,tn llll l,tnd .. I .111gl111\ "ill h.l\t" "" hamh lull 111Jlo.inv tlw n111\c tu thl· ta\I tant'' of \1111thnn < ,tl1t111111.1 IOU. 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From Al '·II d · I H r ' • 1 1 I 1 1 I ,t I l t" l 11 \\,I\ h l ti I I h1· II \\.ti l olll'l fll I JI Bu• lh~ '"' ' ' f\ u1t,1I• ipl 11111\ ••• 1•ll th\' I '!lit• .ti 11111 l/h \l1i1tl1 p ,11 1\ !\lo.Cd 1111' I ll 11 til".1 ii\ lq.'.tf lt.til1•11~·~· \It 1lll' lllhl '\ II ~ ltll flf.l!I\ Ill pl.I• l'tl l 111 \\ ti " tf .. '·" Ill •• r 1d I ,, '"·' 1h ~d.v.111lu \\ htl1 lhl \1 11n1q>.irt' '''" horx· 111 hu1ld ,1 nvv. J'llllln II\ l" harnn 1n Iron I 111 1111•11 hortll' th1 1 1 l\ \l ill not tn lo pr1111-. 1 11\ 1••lll ll'll" '1;11rl.l\t k.1J1n11- l11 till' p11hftl tw.1d1 It 11 ,, dl•,ttn\1..'d h' lu1ur1· '111rm' ( .11.11.11111 ... 11d 11 \\ill h1.• fl'pl.lll'd h\ ... "'''""''" ,l.tlll,1\1 l•I h,· rd1u11l J\ ~\.J \l \ .111d 11d..sl ,tl llllfl Jtl lJtl' BANK IN IRVINE SEIZED BY U.S .... From Al •\1. l,1 '·"Ir 111 1 t I I ~ 11 ' 11111 l"•'rl' 111 1dl on pro\· n 111 11111 111· ,,11.t \\ 1·'fl 1ktt·r111tnl' 1I1.1 l l.111·1 • 111 \ I hrn· 1111 111 t11: 1 ho.ir<l "'·" .1 p P"llll~·d 111 ,111\ '' 111 11n\\-r-.1t11r ' t..111111.111 ... 111111 .... ( trtllith Jr :11rrt1\ 1 l h.i1r11 1.1 n 111J prn1Jt·n1 of \t,11t \l 111u.tl "·''in~ .ind I 11.111 'Im h " llt1\\ I .11 \\ 1·,1 \ J' tn~' .11111 I .... II .. , • " \\pt •rt H1 ••• h \I"" 1111 l lJ~ h11,11d ,II\ f,trTil' ( I I 11~lw' fur 11 \1 1 p1n11kn1 and 1 htl"I 1·"·' ul l\\ 111111 1' ''' 11..snl..snd '°IJ\1ng.' • 111.t I •1.111 ,11111 \\ .tlln \lll'n Jr .1 h1nl H.111 ~ ••I \111 rtl <t \Ill' prt'\I di.•1 1 NO TRASH COLLECTION MONDAY ... From Al I' I l'1tl , ,, I \rn 1.11 • 111 I 'I II I I lit II ll1111t111v.t1111 lk.1111 l 1iu11t.11n \ 1111· < '"'·' \k\.t In int· ""t'"-POrl B1 .11 ~1 .J11tl l.1gun<1 Be.1th \l1ll he • tllu 1 ·d 1111 l 1n·,d.H l>unng. the 1 111.1111111'1111 rhl· \llTlo. .ill g.arhdgt· v.tll t> 1 ~t·d up .1 da' l.tll" Jltordtn!o! IO >Ill• 111 >II 1 0111JI.In11·, 'pul.n - I' pf1 '""' n11rn1jf[\ h.t\l' thl·1r 1· l\ll 111lllll I 11n I rtd:n \lrll hJ\t' II p1 ~ I •n ' '-l.1hir<f." Onl\ th1t\l' d1•1 •"l rl'Y 11.111 'd1l'dukd 111 h.i"l.' tu r •1,1\h 11111·· lnl \,1111rdJ\ "''II he 1 l•,111}•1· < 11.1 I ' • \t ht dul · d r1n \1 1111.f,i. \.111r11.d 11,...,1, 111lll"ll111n 'l.hl·duk' •I P• ii 111 • • ~ ""', 1n d11lt·d 1111 \), 11 ~,l l •~'l11111· 1h1 l111fo.,..1ng .... et·k _________________ 1· STRICTER FLIGHT CURFEW SOUGHT ... From A 1 Daily Pilot MAIN OFFICE VOL 79. NO 143 • :11 11n \\IHI ti\ -.i.11: ompf1•fl•'> .10 .11 '" p l trl 11t,11 "'Ill limit 1•.11 1\ p.1\\1'111'\l r '"·Wt 111 !111 .111 pnrt ( 1.1 11~1 '.:lief ,111 ,1111\'f\ h,111 .t\kl'd I r 111111 1 I 1111· In • ••r111llt Ill 11n lh1 .11 '" pl.1111 h.11'1111'' ir1 dr.tlt t111m \1.dl r111 m h•·r\ .• 1,,, \\,tr1l1·d 1h .. I ·du.11 \\ 1!11111 \d1111 111\tr.11111n 11. r It'~ 1h • pl.1:1 111.t '' hrd11l1 1 on 111 ,, Pll'\ I . I I \ \ •• 1111 1,tl \ 111.111 m11w11t1nf h 1111 lril\ I \\ht•n 11!1 ii\ h p I I.I I II\ h I h1• pl.Ill I ht pl.111 \Ill .tp H.11 1 11 ~ 'I r111f111 11 11111 th I I .11 rp•11 t I' wr' 1 cl r 1.11 irul 111111 '''' ··~·r ·1 d I•• y. , .tl11n~ ·.qll till' dl"l.I\. l"\en though n ,1n~ h111~·d 111 l1t1\l' lhl' plan rn platl' l11r I ht 1111\\ \lllTHTH'r \{'3\0n · \1r( ,1( ,11\tl il numtx·r of otht:r lJrrtn\ .irl· l.111r1F n 1p1tal tn"C'>lml'nt dn '"""' \1 hnlultng dcu\lonc, and qth<'f 1 on< i-rn'" \,11{1 \1r( al <,pokl·<,- m.1n R11 h.int \hL·1 man "i\1r< jl rt·· l11t1.1nth .1)(HT\ 111 ,11f11pt1on ul the trllCflOl qll.lrlL'f lfllltl.I\ < 1.11/k1· ,,11d thl· ''·'" rl·porl. 'I.Ith 1npul lr1,m lhL' I \\,ind ,m t;irrtl'r\ \l• 1uld ~,, h.tl I. 111 1h1· l ornml\\lon on tune::.., I lw ll11;ird .. ,, '°l11p1·n ""r' " tt·n· 1.111 1d \ 'd1nl11lnl 111 11·\ tl'"' thl' l/ 'fl fl m llJlt1fl f•H ,(i-p,1111111"\,tl lh('tr hr\! nwt·11ng 1n l111w Delly Piiot Dell very le Guerantffd .. Justcall 642-6086 ... '.' h.1t do \11u ltl.l' ;-ih<wt the: Da1h Ptl11t" \.\hi.II Ion 1 \c11J hkl''' c ;tll 1111· numlx·r Jh11\1' .ind \our ml'\\,1gr ~ill ht rt•tnrdt•d trnn\tnlwtl and <II"· 1H·ri:d 111 th1• ,1ppro11n.11c ct111or T ttl' 'amt· 2.i. hour .1nw.cring \t'f\ 1u· ina) tx· ''''d 1 • rcuJrd ll'llN\ tr 1 tht' cd1 1or on an" l<lflll < •ntr tiutnf\ 10 nut I •'llCf\ column mu\I 1ndudt• r n.1rnr .ind 1dr11h•>nc number lnr \ crthl.1l1on lc:lf\ ,, \lh,11 'r•n \ 11ir mrnd · ' , , . . . Circulation TelephonH Fair skies for Memorial weekend Temperatur" areexpec:ttMS to warm• bit along the Orange CoHt .. the Memorial Day weekend ~. wtttl aotM lat• night and fftty morning doud9 but othrMM felr aki.. through Saturday, eccx><dlng to the Natlonal WNther Service. High• today wlll In the 70. and Saturday from 72 to 82. Lowa wlll drop to 52 to 62 ovwnlgtrt. · Southern California mountain• wlll be falr lhrough Saturday. Overnight Iowa 35 to 45. High• 88 to 78. Inner coastal water• -light variable wtnds through Friday night except west to aouthweat 10 to t8 knots Friday afternoon. Southwest 1we11 2 to 3 fMt. Late night and morning low cloud• otherwlae fair. Outer waters -Northwe1t winds 10 to 20 knot• through Friday night. Seas 5 to 8 feet Late night and morning low cloud• otherwise fair U.S. Temps Atl*\y N 'Y 12 6$ Utt .. "'°"' 74 se Al~qoe 87 St LOUI•-se •& A-rttlo 93 u Memj)llll 73 51 Anct>otege 57 •O Mlalnl~ 81 76 Alt\011 1& •11 Mldlan<l~OO.U. 112 &-4 AtlanUG Clly 63 59 Mllw111.tk• 62 •S ~allf. Temps Autlln 83 60 Mp/t·SI P..,1 SA 38 Bemmore 78 fj\ Neel> vi lie a. ., eo 57 H:f.•· iow. lhrOUQll 5 p m ThulllClay Ba welleld 7• 4t StoclltOll 71 52 8kmlnQll•m 74 47 NtrW O•IMn• Blema<cll 73 50 -York Cl1y 11 03 8olM 80 51 N()(folk Ve 19 82 BcMtton eo 611 Olota110meC11y 11 51 Bulfalo 55 60 Orn•ll• 73 52 8ufhf1Qlon VI 118 63 0.lan<IO .. 83 C•tPe< 13 41 PhH~ 73 6$ crw ... 1on s c 71 ea P-..• 103 75 c".,'"'°" w "• IO so "-"<> 118 •7 c ....,..,.,... 78 •8 Aichmond fl() 61 crwcaoo se 47 Si l°"'• 87 •8 c.nc.innau SI •2 Salt lei<• Ctly 86 se c -ano SS •9 S.n Antonio .. Ill CA>lumt>ta.SC 86 65 5.,, JUMP R 81 15 Co4umbu• Ollto 55 •9 S..11 .. SI •• C(ltlG()td ,N H a3 SA Sh<~I 79 54 0.llU-FIWO<ll> 81 60 SIOU• •II• 70 •2 01)'1on 51 •1 $poll-82 ., Den• .. 82 63 Sytac.uM 7• 52 DH Motn&o 119 0 T arnpa.SI P1110g 83 87 0.1100 62 •II TQCMt1<1 73 60 EIPHO 93 63 Tuc;IM)n 102 1111 F111Danl<t se ., TulM 74 58 Fe1go 89 •s WuNngtonDC 81 60 Fl"Qtl•tt 11 u Wtctllll 7J se Grano Rapid• 49 •15 w.11o .. ea,,. 73 60 a ... 1 F•"• 8.ot •• 11¥110'# 13 51 ,._v...,, eo 32 llMuf'llOlll 81 52 Totr..-73 63 BIQllMr .. 2!1 VoeemtteVly 17 311 BlthOC> 75 311 8/y!lle t2 ., c.i ...... 87 ~ Eur•U !It ..0 Surf Report FrMnO fl() •t UlllCUIW II 51 l OllQ BMeh 71 55 LOCATIOM am Olfl. ~~ 77 57 llll'llll ...... 2-3 SW ee 50 S-•Monica 1-.3 SW Monrovia tl 55 Newpot1 9eecll 2-3 SW M011191>41lk> 78 5e San OleQo County 2·3 SW Monl .. ey ee 0 <NllOOI! IO<' SalurGey Lttlle Change Ml Wffton et .. .....0 ... 93 SA Oakland 73 •• O<ltarlO 83 llO Tl des P aim 8prlnQ• 94 112 P...o..wt 11 63 Paao Roblee eo Jll TOOAY RI--79 55 F1tel io-. 3•tam 15 A.a atun llO •• ~low \0 121-m 40 ~Qty 78 •7 301 pm 1 6 Saer-10 7t 60 8->0NQll 88pm •• s ...... 73 ..0 G•-tOOto NC 75 SS San IMrnarcklO fl() sa IATUMIAY HltfllO<O 78 63 Extended H_,a 82 •11 _.., as 811 Hou11on 82 a. NIQ!ll end mO<nlng low c.Jou01. Sun 1nc11anapo1<1 se •• J-ton Mtu 75 so day ltwougll T....Oey. ot ........ M falf J-51 0 T-alur• •anQM ~ htQI>• Kanaa1Coy 73 so 8810 72 lOW9 60 10 60 Vllliey9. l>lghe l H'leQU 117 7• 81 to 92 lOW9 50 10 60 SanGet>ttal 77 55 Flrel low 4 J9am .0 7 S.n OleQo 118 91 ~~::r._ 11oea m 39 5.,, Franc1eco n 61 3._,pm 19 5.,, .i-77 .. 8->0NQll 1003pm ea Santa Ana 73 se Sanla Barbara 87 •5 SUfl ''-IOday al 5 •II • m ll'd Mlt Santa Crui 70 .. ~a1 763pm San•• Man• ,. •• oon ,_!Oday at I Ill pm and Nit Santa Montca a. M II !121 am OFFICIAL URGES CHARGES IN DEATH ... From Al rukd wa<, a<;ph} 'ttat1on \ H untrngton Beath Polite Lt Jame-; 'W alkcr. who tned but failed 10 pl.'r,uadc Deputy D1stnct .\ttorney Rick Toohey to file rnvoluntary mun<;laughtcr charges against Warn- l'l ke. i.a1d witnesses 1n the room rqxined that the diaper was placed j nd taped mer lht· boy\ enlm: fa<"e and 1hat h1\ l'ntirc body was involved 1n thl" mat11ng proces-;. allegedly rnterfcnng wtlh the bo) ·~ hrcathing Walker said Thursda>-however. that police arc abiding with the d1stnct attome} 'c, pos111on not to file charges. The developmental d1!>ab1l111es Rroup 1s responsible for ovcrsccrng 28.000 young!lte rs enrolled 1n special cducauon programs in Orange Coun- t}. and chairman Traq said there ma) be a feeling among officials that disabled people arc expendable. "There needs to be some penalty, some determination of guilt to serve notice that you can't abuse kids," he said Dcput~ D1s1nct Attorney Toohey, who earlier said there was insufficient evidence 10 suppon a hom1C'1de charge. ~1d Thur~ay he was satisfied with the police 1nvest1gat1on and his review of the matter. But he didn't elaborate funher PARADE MARKS HARBOR'S FOUNDING ... F rom Al \cout ha.,c 1111 Pacific Coast Highway, Lido l'>k. tht· Lido f'lle bndge, Balboa !'land and the publtc l>caches along the Balhoa Pt·ninsula ba)front The parade will begin on a signal trnm Prt.•<,1dent Reagan rn the White llnu\<: in much the same way Prc.'\rden1 hankhn 0 Roosevelt \l,1nt.'J 1he parade.-into the harbor on \.1a' ~' IY'6 r"ho\l' daH will be dt\CU\SCd whl.'n 1h1· ;...l'"'-'por1 Harbor Area ( hambt.'r 11f < 11mrnnle ho\t<, a Pwnccr brl.'ak- f,l\t JI 7. 'o a m. at thl' Balboa Ra; ( !uh f llkCI\ for the event. howncr, .trl' \old out 111 11 < 1rund ~ president of the 'l'\\ r>ort Bcat·h H 1\loncal \OCICl). will welcome guests and present a 'tide show featunng photos of the harbor taken half a century ago. Master of cercmnn1es will be Les Steffenson who. along v.11h other longume Newport Beach residents. "'111 share anecdotes from the harbor's beginning\ Other presentation\ will be made by John Siegel. who served dunng the 1930s as Newpon Beach's assrstant c11y engineer. and T. Duncan Stcwan. known to many as the city's poet laureate. Al 11 a.m . the public '" invited to tour the Newport Harbor Nautu:al Museum at 1714 W Balboa Bl vd. An official opening 1s scheduled for late June. .\ formal dinner-dance will be held at 7 30 p.m. at the Balboa Pavilion. The evening's master of cer- emonies will be Judge Robert Gar· dner. the chief JUsuce of the High Court of Pago Pago 1n Amencan Samoa Longtime Newpon resident Jam~ Roosevelt. son of the late president. also will be a featured <;peaker Tickets for the drnner-dance. pnced at S50 each, arc still available . For reservations and more infor- ma11on, call the chamber of com- merce at 644-8211 ACCIDENT VICTIMS SEEK $2.5 MILLION ... From Al u1mc '>t:t.'nc inves11gat1on ca ll but was nol U\tng the car' .. wath lights or siren. R;irth \atd Harth \a1d ~tocrmcr cut in front of thl" ~1anin,· car and that David \11Jrt1n wa' unable to avoid sinking tht· polite lar The claim states the \.fantn<. <;uffercd tnJune'> to thl'ir '>ptnl'\ and nervous '5ystem and arl' '>Cl'ktng S.:! million 1n damages rhe \Ctond claim was filed b)'. ~1arra flcna Ruiz. Salvador Ru11 Gil and .\nton10 Ru11 , all of Santa Ana T ht·, arc seeking S46 I .800 from the Let the sun shine in! Capture the extra hours of daylight with moveable custom shutters ... in sizes & colors to flt your lifestyle. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (7 14) 548-6841 548-1 717 city of Irvine and the county of Orange. According to thl.' clai m, Gil was dnvinga 1976\hevrolct when 1t was involved an a Jan. I 8 accrdcnt in Irvine on the I 800 block of Warner A venue. east of Pullman Street at the railroad tracks The claim cha~cs that the cny "negligently failed to reduce veg- e1a11on which obscured the view al the railroad crossing .... " II says that Mana Ru11, six months pregnant at the time. was a passenger 1n the car at the time of the accident. Antonio Ru1t was born prematurely on Feb. 20. according to the claim. As a result of the accident. the mother and child were injured. and dnver Gil's car was damaged, the claim states It says Mana Ruiz IOJUred her pelvis. n~t hip, leg and arm. and that her child has required extensive hospital care. The claims are scheduled for re- view Tuesday by the Irvine C11y Council. The city staff has rec- ommended the claims be denied. Designed • Finished • Installed ' Estabrished 1953 1977 Placentia Costa Mesa