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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-I' TOllOMOW: HAZY FOMCAITI ON A2 * FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1986 Seven charged in steroids case By LAURA MERK OtllleO.-,,... .... Crimmal charges were filed Thurs- day by the Orange County District Attorney's Office against seven men. alleging they ille&alJy manufactured and distributed anabolic steroids to athletes at Fullerton College. The felony conspiracy charges were filed after an eight-month investiga- tion by the Fullerton Police Depart- ment, the FBI, the Food and Drug Administration and st.ate health of- 16kllledln bus accldent WALKER. Calif. (AP) - A tour bus packed with senior citizens returning from a trip to Reno, Nev., careened off a twisting mountain road into an icy. swift-running river Fri- da)'. killing 16 people dca<l and in~uring at least a doicn, authorities said. California Hi$hway Patrol Officer John Gleason m Bridgeport, who confirmed that 16 people had died, said five others were missing m the river. Authorities sent all available emergency manpower and equip- ment, including divers. to the site. The Los Angeles-bound bus was about 90 southeast of Reno when it ran off U.S. 395 into the West Fork of the Walker River. California Ex-stock brokerage em- ployee charged with spik- ing cold, allergy and diet capsules with rat poison In a scheme to make money on the stock mar- ket./ AS INDEX Advice and Games Auto Piiot AS 81-10 A3 CS-6 86-9 A7 C7 Date book Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather A8 Date book A3 89, C7-8 C1-4 Date book A2 ficials, Deputy District Attorney Kenneth Chinn said. Arrested on three counts of con- spiracy charges to manufacture and distribute steroids were Fountain VaJley resjdents Jeffrey Feliciano, 36; Michael Lee Pycior. 19; and James Guy Joseph, 20. Dr. Val Max Warhaft, 35, and Shayne lier Ganz, 29, both of Irvine; Kevin Lawrence Stensby, 33, of Newport Beach; and Christopher Mark Mott, 29 of Anaheim were also charged. In addjtion to the three felony characs. Feliciano also was charicd with possession of codeine from an earlier arrest. No warrants have been obtajned or served, according to Fullerton Capt. Don Bankhead. "Everyone wilt be contacted of the charaes. All of the suspects or their attorneys have indicated that they would surrender once the charges were filed," he said. The investigation began in Septem- ber 1985 after police were informed that Feliciano had allegedly been scUina steToids to Fullerton College football players, Bankhead said. On Jan. I 0 Feliciano was arrested on charges relating to possession of a controlled substance with the intent to sell. The arrest came after police raided Fountain Valley Research. a business owned by Feliciano, War- haft and three olhen. Feliciano was later released on $25.000 bail. Armed with warrants, pohcc also searched Warhaft's home where they found marijuana and liquid steToids. Police also scu:ed two truckloads of steroids, manufactunna equipment and records at a Santa Ana ware- house. Althou.lh charges wercn 't filed apinst f'ehciano or Warhaft, the 1nvest1gat1on continued. Feliciano 'is not a chemist or pharmacist and is not licensed to manufacture steroids. "FeLic1ano used Dr. Warhaft's DEA (Drua Enforcement Agency) certificate number to order and 0.-, ......... ..,~ ...... Parillon Pedal Boat Paceant contatanta pamped furloualy •ummer. SteTe and JUI Forbatb won. Lea41.Da the beat abo~e Tbunday ln Newport Barbor to celebrate the •tart of were Bob Black (looklng back) and Debbie Voorbea. Newest tradition is soft-pedaled Furious footwork in NeWj)ortboaTrace feaves competitors targets for dousing By ROBERT HYDNMAN OttMo.IJ ........ As far as Newpon Beach trad1t1t~ go, the Pavilion Pedal Bo~~t will not rank among the most pres- ugious. The inaugural event. held Thurs- day outside the stately Balboa Pavilion, was about as dignified as a squirt-gun fight. In fact, 1t was a squ1rt·gun fight as contest.ants watered each other down before the races with plastic guns, water balloons. buckets of water and shoves off the dock. "This is our way of goofing off." said Curt Allen, one of the culpnts respansible ror the first tn what threatens to bttome an annuaJ event. Allen, a boat captain. and other em~loyecs of the Balboa Pavilion decided to st.age a pedal boat race to celebrate the arrival of summer. the opening of the neighboring Balboa Fun Zone and the addition of one of Newport Harbor's newest businesses -Balboa Pedal Boats. ''This whole area 1s starting to develop the old-Balboa feel again and we wanted to call auent1on to that." I said Allen, who pointed to the Fun Zone, Newpon Landing. Bubbles restaurant and other projects as signs of revitahzat1on. Allen and other o~nizers decided to recruit fellow Pavilion employees -boat ~yt.ains. waitresses. bar- tenders, office workers -to form coed teams and race pedal boats around buoys set up a shon distance off the dock. The boats were lent by Steve and Jtll Forbath who, wtth partner Kelly (Pleue eee PEDAL/ A2) purchase vanous types of materials u5Cd to manufacture the steroids;' Bankhead said. It is believed that teroids. a synthetic denva\Jve of 1be male hormonr testosterone. enhance alb,. leuc performance by bu1ld1n1 mutcle tissue. But according to the FDA, steroids can stunt the arowth of young users, disrupt sexual development, cause psychological disturbances and dam- age the liver. Sheriff's deputies vote on strike Iinpasse reached; threat of walkout stirs legal question By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. .,.., ........ Orange County Shenfl's depulles, deadlocked m contract talks wtth the county. were voung today on job actions 1ncludmg the option to strike. Spokesmen forthedeputicsand th~ county djsagreed on whether sUch a strike would be legal. Robert Mad.cod, manager of the Association ofOranic County Depu- ty Sbenffs. said the officers were asked tO phone in their volCS between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. today. Approx- imately 800 of the county's 900 deputies arc memben of the auocia- t1on. He said ncgouators were seeking approval from "well over 50 percent" of those who voted today. Such support would authonze the bargain- ing team to call for Job actions "up to and includmg a work stoppage." Mad.cod sa.ad the vote was prompted by an impasse reached Thursday m contract talks with the count y. The current pact expires JuJy 3. .\!though more than a dozen changes have been proposed by both sides, key areas of disagreement are salary and benefits. Tho county bas offered a 4.1 percent pay increase dunng the first year of two-year (Pleatte 11ee DltPU~/ A2) Bird wants politics out of courtrooms State's embattled chief justice @Is political intrusion In remarks prepared for the annual convention of the Associated Press News Executives Council in Irvine, the controversial chief justice made no direct reference to her own election campaign this fall -in which the most recent poll reports her trailing by 21 percent New freeway suggested as toll road By USA MAHONEY OftlleO.-, ..... lwt Lagun;;i. cracks down on gay, sexual acts in city's Heisler Park 87 DOUG WILLIS .......... ~.,.., Chief Justice Rose Bird told a convention of California newspaper editors Thursday that political press- ures "have no place in the judicial decision-making process.•• Instead, she spoke in defense of the judiciary as an institution which she described as a vital component of modern society which by ncocssity is out of step with other forces in an era of television and instant and simpli- (Pleue Me BIRD/ A2) Cblef Jutice Roee Bird The proposed Eastern Transpor- tation Corridor, intended to connect the Ri vers1de and San ta Ana freeways through Anaheim Hills and Tustin. could become Orange Count)·, fim toll road. A feasib1hty study of the planned Eastern and Foothill transportation corridors suggests tolls could be used to offset 62 percent of the Eastern Comdor's construction cost~ b) the year 2010. (Pleue .ee TOLL/ A2) Colorful Congress chase closing Badham~Rosen berg spar for GOP role- as Democrats battle LaRouchlan id A world tra veler at xpayers' expense, a leader of a min trol arou~ seektng polittcal power. a t candidate, a party leader with ues to drug traffickers and organized crime and o Yuppie from the hippie party fill out the cast of 40th Con~ s1onal D1s1rict contenders from which voters will choose Tuesday. The colorful descnpuons arc from candidates and supponers about their opponents. Accuracy aside. it has made for a spicy campaign in an otherwise bland primary season. Most mter'51 has f ocuscd on the Republican primary pittina C'on- arcssman Robert Badham apinst management consultant Nathan Roscnbera. The winner of lhat nwc 1s the likely rcprcsentativ~ to the IOOth I Convcs-, in the heavily Republican of this campa1p:· Rostnbcrg said distnct. "My · opponents hypocnsy and ar- Despite Badham~s five-term in-' rogancc run counter to the hard- cumbency, he finds himself in a tough working, dynamic people of the 40th race agamst the well -financed and Dlstnct ... well-organized Rosenberg. Badham has responded with qucs- The 33-ycar-old challenger has hit tions about Rosenberg's lit!> to est hard and repeatedly on Badham's and the Forum, controversial sel(- absentecism from roll-call votes in improvement programs founded by the House, his ~~uent travels out of Roscnbcrs's brothC"T. ~cmer ErhanJ. the country and his use of campaign and the challengcr''i St'rv1ce to Demo- dona11ons for personal expenses. crats during the Caner pres1denc) ''There arc clear md1cat1ons that "Nathan Rose nherg •'i • 'tissue the people of this d1stnct are tired of paper' candidate who has wra~ tum taking them for granted and h1mself 1n a thin layer of qul"st1onabk idcstepp1ng the fundamental mucs or neghaible cxpcnence. choo IOJl to By LAURA MERK °' -0.-, ..... llell Laguna Beach police officers are conducting inten sive foot patrols through Heisler Park hoping to discourage public seitual act1v1ty A round-the-clock program staned May 23 and Wlll continue until next Fnda) an the response to residents' complaints that men v.crc meeting 1n the park both day and night to have sex m the restrooms and bushes. accordtnll. to Pubhc Safety Director PAUL ARCHIPLEY attack a I O.vear incumbent rather than run on the mcnts of has own hm1tcd and unknown background." Badham \aid ''Mr Ro<.cnberg l'i an ine,pcn- cnetd carpctllaggcr who apparent!)' was 5Cnt to Orang<' C ounl)' onlv • ffw yean aio and heavily finan<'td b> ihadowy fof't('s scckina to enhance (Pleue tee COLORFUL/ A2) Badham cries foul over anti-Prop. 51 mailer 87 SUSAN HOWLE'M' OfllleO.-, ........ Rep. Robert I:: 8adham filed a complaint with the Oranar County Republican Eth1csC'omm1ttec 'f hu~ da> 1ntr his name And those of other local GOP leaden wctt alleacdly used Without ~rm1 ~•on on a fficr uraina oppo 1tton to Proposi11on SI. the ~ called "dcc!>i)OCkcts" initiatave. The fli~,rJ.. mailed to more than two million uvP voters, said Badtwn paid to have h11 name included. However. Badham aide Wilham Schreiber said 1he fivc-tenn Newport Beach conarnsman favors Prop- o 1t1on S l and reruJCd to pay the S6.SOO rec he was a ltcd for by Pacific Ad Meil af Huntinston Beach. ' .. He came out quite some tame aao in strona suppon of SI ," Schreiber said. Badham's Newpon ~ach office has received at lcut 100 calls reprd- '"' the mailer, he u1d, add1na 1h11 us1n1 Badham's name was "a bad, almo t frauduknt thins 10 do " Mtke Mere1er, whoopct'1tc Pacific Ad Matt, wa5 unavailable for com· ) mcnt Badham' re-ekrnon nmpa1an of- ficials wcrt at fin1 I~ 10 believe th<' nacr wa a Republican mailer hst1na and cndorsina loc.al (,op cud1datM, htt1ber said Wh<'n thcv were' a'lktd 10 contnbute $6, ~00. the) Yid the pnce was too h1Jh B&dham s.a1d tO<IA\ h1\ cam~1gn ofrK'tal ~rt 1hcn ft\kr<l tOC'Ontnbutr • I S2.000 and the' u1d th<'\ would con"der tt '' a'I Ions a'I we wou Id be tn control" of the fint'>hcd produd Paetfk ~d Mail neHr 'ihowcd Bad ham Qr h1<1 campa11n offic1alc; the finished mailer. •nd had "no pcr- m1mon ""hlltoe"C''" to put h1' name on 1t. Badham ~1d Radham said thC' 01cr tndoN" h•' (Ple&ee eee BADBAM/ A2) ....... _..,_ ........... iiiii ...... __ lilil _____ ..... _ ..... ai. ............................ __ .... ____ _... ___ ......... ___________ ------- 1'Je1I Purcell a.f\er June 6. officer; will patrol the park I 2 hours a day until Sept. 14. In addition, the depanmcnt will renew its summer foot patrol with both reserve and sworn officers waUong from Main Beach to Heisler Parle The combination of the two pr<>- grams ~111 cost ncarl)' $25.000 by the time summer 1s over. "3td Purcell. Pohce said no amsts have been made yet for illicit sex ac-ts. but (Pleue .ee POLICE/ A2) QC Assessor claims foe buying office By USA MAHONEY Of IM OellJ ,_. ..... Assessor BradJe)' L. Jacob has aC'cuscd h1 poht1c.tl opponent of tr)mg to bu) lh<' election by dump1n1 more than S2 I 0.000 1n ~nonal funds into his campaign "I want Orange <. ount} voters to kno"' that m" opponent as try1na to bu) th1~ clttt1on," Jaco~ ,.,d Thun.· da) dunna a pre~' confertn<'t tn Santa '\na JacobHatd Oeput\ >\ r ()a, td Holben 1'> try1na to u a huic 1nfu\1on of fund' to "bu y a promo- tion for which he I \ totally un· quahficd • "I am 1ppallcd thll •n)ont would ~ blatantly 11') to bu> 1he offit't of as-,e sor for then own Pl"~nal pm," he~1d Holben ho.,..cvcr, den1c~ he 1s tr') 1n1 to bu) his "Y into pol1t1cal office He said the $210.000 1 pay1na for thttt count)'Wl maihn nect at') to at' tu vtewt to Ora.nae Count\·, I 0' mtlhon voten "A.nou know. runn1n u mpe11J' (Pl ... AM&SSOR/ A.2) ~----------- A9 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Fridey, May 30, 1986 POLICE WATCHING LAGUNA PARK .•• From A l offictals wam 11ler wtll a.nnt men who continually loiter at the park. Purcell said he hopes the officers' hiah visibility will discourqe the men from retumina to the park for sexual encounters. "We arc hop1n1 to put the word out that it is fine to use the park, but let's be respectful of other people's rights. We want to put a stop to illic1t sexual act1v1ty happening in the park;' ht' said. The North Laauna Association has been urging the council to start progntms that would discourage use of the park as a try ting spot. Ounna tbccrackdown. officers also will talk to people who continually loiter around the re trooms and fill out "field interview card " "Every police department in the country 'has them. They arc a scmi- fom1al means of documentation of an incident or public contact tl\at can be positive or negative," said Purcell. The cards, which include the person'& name and reason for be ma at the park, will go on file at the Police Depart· ment for two years and then be destroyed. An tndividual wbo is contacted several times by an offic.er could be arrtsted for loitenna. id Purcell. On Friday and Saturday nl&hts the ··gay foot patrol" program wilf also be in force. said Purcell. The department has found the program. in which a member of the~)' community walks the gay bal'$ with an officer from 9 p.m. until l a.m., a useful tool in the past. BADHAM UPSET OVER PROP. 51 MAILER ... P'romAl rc-clecuon and also endorses a no vote on Propos1ton 51. making a false link between him and the campaJgn opposed 10 the deep-pockets in- itiative. It also leads people to believe that Badham endorses the campaign of Ed Zschau of Los Altos. who 1s seeking the GOP's Senate nom1- na11on. Badham has said he will not fol')nally endorse. but will vote for Bruce Herschensohn Other Republicans included 1n the mailer were Rep. Wilham Dan- neme}'er. state Sen. Ed Royce, As- scmbl) members Ross Johnson. Nolan Fnzzelle. Dons Allen, John Lewis and Gil Ferguson and county Supervjsor Bruce Nestande. They all 53) they were never contacted or the} refused to pay a fee 10 Paci tic Ad Mail Ferguson said hrs office has re- ceived caJls from constituents who have received the mailer. ··Those who called me weren't fooled. but man). many people will be ta~en tn by this ~lick 11mm1ck," Ferguson said. Tom Fuente~. chairman of the Or:ange County Republican Pany. said today he has received several calls from "distressed Orange County Republicans" who have received the mailer. The Orange County Republican Pany had "absolutely no connection" to the mailer, which is "a very soph1s11cated computer piece," Fuentes said. DEPUTIES VOTE ON STRIKE ACTION .•. From Al contract. while the deputies are seeking a 6.8 pereent salary !".use and 1 3 percent increase in benefits. Macleod said the two sides made little progress dunng live 1n1ual meetings. then made headway last weekend v.11h the help of a mediator. But he ~1d that Thursda) the depuuc~· team lef'I a bargaining session because the county represen- tative~ refused to change their offer. ··l\s far as I'm concerned. impasse is v.hen the county guys won't g1"e us an) thing else." Macleod <>aid. Regarding today's vote on JOb action<;. he said. ··1 hope rt will ron\.10<"l' the countv that we're: senous, and that they'll have to get scnous with their offer" Macleod said he hopes the dispute does not ultimately lead to a stnke. but he claims deputies could legally engage 1n one. He cited a ruling last year in a case mvolvmi striking Los .\ngeles County sanitation workers. John Sibley. Orange County's di- rector of employee relations. d1s- grced. He said public employee stnkcs are still illegal 1f they would JCOpard1ze residents' health and safe- t)'. as he believes a deputies' stnke would. Regardtng today's vote. 1bk) s:ud. ..We thmk this 1s a little premature." He added, "The possibihty of a strike by Sherifl's depuues 1s of concern to us. But I don't thmk our deputies would strike illegally. They're too conscientious for that." Sibley said the deputies have asked for too large an mcrcase in pay and benefits at a time when inflation 1s low and the county is financially strained. ··11h1nk theirexpectationsareJust a little too h1~:· he said. Sibley said county representatives arc ready to resume contract talks with the deputies, but he added. ··t think the next move is theirs:· TOLL SUGGESTED FOR NEW CORRIDOR ... From Al < ollet ung toll'> on both road-; l.\'Ould pa) for onl) 34 percl'Dt ol estimated SS 16 cn1llion cost. accord- ing to a coni;ultan1 c;tudy prepared for the Orange Count} Tran<;ponat1on Comm1ss1on The Eastern corndor 1~ \>1ev.cd as a promising candidate for toll bo~ths becau~ there arc no good altemat1"e route'i 3\ ailable to motonsts. thl' report b) Gruen and .\ssoc1atl'c; concluded. In contrast. the 1ntroduct1on ol tolls on the planned Foothill Trans- ponat1on Comdor could cause dn\ - ers to squeeze onto the <ianta .\na Freewa) to the south The Foothill comdor will linl the Eastern corndor with San Clemente. The possibility of collecting tolls on a third transponat1on corridor. the San Joaquin Hills Freeway thol would link Newpon Beac;h and San Juan Capistrano. was not conc;idered Orange C uunt} hal> been looking tnr wa~'i to pa) for thc three nev. frce,,a,., 'incl' 191:!4 v.hen \Oler~ re1ected <t ,,,k., ta>. 1ncreac;t• tu finante them <\bout half of the corndorcost<. will he borne h\ de, eloper~ Estabhc,hing toll roads 1s one method the 1ransporta11on com- m1ss1on rs con'i1denng to pa" Im the balance. Lcg1slat1 on sponl>ored by .\'\- o;emblyman Nolan Frizelle. R-Hunl- rngton Beach. to permit toll roads 1n Orange Count} died this year but could be reintroduced. The toll road lindings will be the sub1ect ofa June 4 public meeung at 7 pm at Tustin High School. 1171 El Camino Real. Possible solu11on'> 10 a 1ratlic bottleneck that will be created b\ freewa \ construcllon In T ust In "lonh ·ru<;lln and Orange ""111 alc;o he dtSCU<;\ed A SSESSOR QUESTIONS_SPENDI NG ... From Al rs ver) expensive.'· he said. Campaign ~pending repons filed last week state that Jacobs has ~pent $24, 108 on his campaign The 1wo ttems ltsted for that expend11ure are a campaign mailer and consultant fees Holben said he 1s running against his boss because he belrc\eS he 1s more quahtied to be asscswr. He cnt1c1zed Jacobs for running an meflic1ent operallon and lacking the skills nccessan to oversee a\SCs\ment procedures. · "If the taxpa>ters knew how the office 1s being run. there would be a revolution." he said Holben's most recent tampa1gn financial disclosure 'itatement shov.s that he has rcce1,ed S2.445 m contnbu11ons. largl.'I) from em- ployees 1n the as.,essor'<. office He also loaned $6<).(XJO tn h" campaign committee and spent about $56.000. ch1efh for ad,en1.,ing and campaign ltteraturl· The s :! I() CJ( l(J J:irnh.. rdl·r<, IC! include~ thrcl' lo.in ~ 101al1ng $161.741 1ha1 Holhl:n made 10 hi\ campaign alter the t losc ol thl' disclosure period Ma ) 17 Holbert said the large \um raml' from the sale ofh1~ deccac;ed mother·, home in Gardena and the hqu1da11on ot some stock she ov. ncd. Holbert. v.ho described his mother a-; a worshipper of Propos1t1on 13-auihor Howard Jarv1'i. said he felt she l.\'Ould ha"e wanted him to have the mone\ to en-;ure that the pnnc1ples of thl' 1978 tax-lrm 1tat1on m1t1at1 ve arc t·amed out in Orange Count) In campaign ma1hngc;. Holben h.t'> called his boss an enemy of Prop- oi.111on I l and accused Jacobs of wac.tmg $1 m1ll1on m taxpayl·rs· mone~ 1n a lax d1~pu1c w.11h thr Irvine { (I Jacobs <;aid ht• was thl' uni\ assc\\or 1n ( ahforn1a 10 roll batk propen\. taxes after Prupo<.1t111n J l v.a\ Jp- pro\ ed h) \ oters. v. h1te others v.-a11cd for a leg.islatl\c mandate. As to the Irvine Co. reas~sc;ment. Jacob" ~:ud. ··we're JUSt domguur JOb -even-handed treatment ·· While the assessor~ oflicl· will ~pend ahout SI million this )Car to defend 1ts assessment of propeny owned b) the count"' 's largest land- holder. Jacobs claimed he will also have sa-.cd taxpaye rs ~'eral m1lhon dunng the same period. .\~a pan1ng shot. Jacobs took issue w11h a !itatement Holben made in a ~ague tJf Women Voters pamphlet. In the pamphlet. Holben c;a1d the assessor'c; offi ce '"nust regain the profes\lonal respect 1t enJO)ed pnor 10 the current adm1n1strat1on." Jacob-,· two predecessors were con- \. ICted ot briber). theft ol publtc mone) and embculicment charges stemming lrom their act1\.1t1es while 1n office COLORFUL CAMPAIGN FOR CONGRESS •.. From Al their poliucal 1nnuence Republicans ma) ""atch w11h interest the outcome of the Demo- cratic pnmary where the official candidate - a d1sc1plc of ultra- conservative L.,,ndon LaRouchc -1<. being challenged b-. 1he part}: 's coun- t} chairman 1n a difficult wntc-m campaign A.rt Hoffmann. a technical wntt'r "'ho lives ouls1dc the dt\trict rn Santa .\na wac; the only per<ion to file for thl Democrauc pnmar) 1n the 40th When pan) leaders learned he wac; a LaRouche d1 sc1plr. the> \Cra m hied to provide an alternat1"c Part) chairman Bruce \umncr ol Ncwpon Bea'h J former 'itate as- ~mbl) man and n:trrcd JUdg~ tf)ok the challenge h11t1).Clf To thwart Hoffman n's au1omat1t primar. '1c.·- tof) he 1<. l.\'3~1ng a wnte-in cam· pa1gn MAIN OFFICE • 9?6~ ·1 don t want the rest ol the countr. to look at Orange County and say \nu've got Republican congressmen who are an embarrassmenl and Democrat\ ha' ea La Rouche altcrna- t1, e." Sumner said "I repre~nt the leg1t1matt' part) enon to pre!icnt voters with a lrg11 - 1mate alternative to the Republican candidate .. Hoffmann counters that Sumner ha' ues with orgam1ed cnmc and drug trafficking -allegations s1m1lar to those LaRouche has leveled at such public figure<; as the Queen ol England He also e'ipouses the LaRouche platform. which call., for quarantining .\ID v1ct1m'i and building a laser defense srilem \lmJ- lar to President Reagan·, ~tratcg1c Defense ln1t1a11 ve "Thcy·re saying wc·re on the frrngt>. hut ....,e·re actualh the core left over from the ideal\ of Presidents Roose- velt and Kennedy, two of the greatest Democrats.'· Hoffmann said. ··we're trying to bring sane policies into the Democratic pany •· Should none of the mainstream pany candidates appeal to voters. they'll find an alternative in Peace and Freedom candidate Steve Sears. The )()..year-old Irvine resident looks and sounds nothing like the pan} leaders of the radical '60s and '70.. Clean cut and moderate. Sears c;a1d. 'Tm pro\.1dmg an alternative be- cause nowadavs the Democrat<. aren't really much different from the Re- publican-;. "You don't have to have long ha1r and be a h1pp1c to takC' issue w11h the v1e""s being <:'(prc,~d in Orange Coun t}· 0.11, Dehery It Q"erent-.d ' " ..,.lo-. 642 •VI Justcall 642-6086 .,. >aa, r,..,.., 11 , ,,. "O• ,..,.. 'fQU< oa...-"" ~ 10 p"' f:•• oe•cl<~ 1"" tN! yO.Jit '«'• • 0. ~90 VOL. 79, NO. 150 What do you hkc about the Daily Pilot" What don·t you like" Call the number above and your meisaac Wlll be recorded, transcnbed and de· livered to the appropnatc editor The same 24-hour answcrina service may be used to record letters to the editor on anr topic. Contnbuton to our utters column must include their name and telephone number for venfication. Tells us what's on your m1nd • k•.,.\My •l\d <;;..,(1·~ II yQ<J °" ""' •9(.... ... ... C<:i • b, I •,.. .t' 0.1 ~fl ,0 I"" •llO Y "" C((ty w i...-.-..i Ctrcutetlon Tetephonet ·--- Lazy, hazy weekend for Coast Fog atong the OOMt and hazy IUNhlne Inland wtll be the Southern Calllornla WMthet 1>9t...-n 1Qa1n Saturday u a htgh-preaur• 1yat.m continue. to hOWt over the Padfto Northweat, torecaatett Mid. Night and motnlnQ low Cloud• and fog will blanket the cotttal ar ... Saturday, clMrlnQ tor hazy afternoon eunatilne In tome area•. the National WMther Servtce lald. HlgM will range from the upper 80s to low 70t at the bNchee and from the upper 70t to the uppet 80s In the coutal valleyt. Lowa wtll dip to the mld·50e 10 tow eo. tomght. Along the 0rang9 Cout ti.. Wiit be night and rnornlno low clouds end fog In vallayt and moatty cloudy nMr the coat, othetwlse hazy through Saturday. Hight at the bMctlee Saturday upper 60s to low 70s. Ov«nlght Iowa In the mid-SO. to low 80s. Mplit II P.u4 ~ 62 U.S. Temps .._,,.. ... 64 ·Q~Qr .. Lo Nft()(IMN 97 72 F~OHTI ....._Yorll City .. 73 Albally N Y ., 71 Nottolll, Va. 65 .. W11m -Co10...,.. 79 62 ,. ... AllluC!'W~ A/NltWO 17 57 °"..,.,,. CMy O!MN 71 51 ~"<• .. t•~ R11t1 F""<e' S~w OeeluOtO,,. S11tt01\111 f &y """""'• 97 •7 ~ ff .. es N Ali.nta ~· to 65 Extended AU#lllC City 11 82 Pho9nla 102 91 Callf. Temps Autlln 17 72 P:=f.: 12 93 111 97 79 11 e.JllmOf• p ,Melne Felt tllr~ IN !*lod •OllCH tow Bir~ 15 .. POt1Mncl.Ont 13 151 8olM 116 13 65 .. p~ c:101* iOC-' IOg It t!IMI ~ IM eo.ton .. n :::rCltf .. 96 ~ 24 houf'e~ ti 5 L"' -=.-IN~Mto ...S 8uf!llO 77 12 74 4$ .. 10 lnlend v M to M. uiw. S2 IO 92 ~ 72 0 "'"° .. 13 Eur9ic• 96 M C11-1on,SC 95 70 Alcflmond 99 83 Fr-.no 102 70 Smog Report Cl\ll'INton.W Ill 82 &6 SI L.OU1t eo 62 l.alleltltet to .. GllM!otta,N C .. 418 Sell lak• Clly .. 54 LOI ~ 711 82 ~ st :sa S..MtonlO .. 12 Oak!Md ee M PolluUinl 9\#lderd lrlCIW li*I 0. 100 CllicaO<> 78 eo SMn• n 57 P-Aooi.. llO 51 good. 100-200 ""'*""lul tor .....itM OndnMll 13 91 ,,.~ ., 13 AM allf M 65 ~ ., eo ~ ff 5t A9dwOOCI City 71 M ~ 200-300 ~ tor ... 300-600 h&UfclouL Flrtl flgw• II CoMrlboa.Olllo 13 65 Sy.-17 67 a.or-to 15 M todl'f:J:': torecMI. ~ .. orevlOut Oe41 ... Ft WQtlh to N TMlpe..81 Ptret19 ... • SallnM ae 52 Oevton . , ... Tot*<• eo 11 Sent>Jeeo 70 13 day' I lln9CI pel o.n--., 311 T-100 • Sen Fl'MCllclo 97 M S... 8-" to MICN111uf 8IYG 5CH7 o..-77 51 Tulle ... .. a.nu. ..,.,.,.. N $4 lrWle. ~ Vall9V 50-12 ... •• 8toc*1on " eo o.tro« w~.oc 11 .. Outulll 17 83 Wlc:NI• 79 st ttloh. low lot 24 llOu!1I 4WICllne ., 5 l "' ~llMcfl 50~) E/11 79 tl2 W11k-9wr• ~ 68 ....,4* 10 418 LOI ~ Alrpon .. 97-42 EIPMO 91 57 &!:' 17 ,. Fllfblnlta "' 611 45 IHI 64 Surf Report P'11go .. 541 Tldea 81yth9 107 72 Fl9Q81•11 75 42 CMlllna 119 91 Gtend RllPIOt 79 55 Lonoa-tl 72 11 &.OCATIOM ICD IMUW GrMtFaie .. 51 TOOA't ~ .. eo Huntington 9Mcll 2-4111• to Helena ,, '5 s-dhlgll 5~P"' 4,5 MonMr9Y 65 51 . good HonolUIU 13 74 hcof>dlow 1124 1>"' 2 1 M1 Wll9on 71 &II ""-.i.tly. Newi>Otl , ... good Ho..tton 17 73 IW#pOf1 8-:11 .. a1 40lh SlrMI, Nwpor1 2-41•1• to lndlanapolll 11 eo IAT\MOA'I' Ont.no 95 68 good J1c1<1on,Mt• .. .. FIAi high 4.46•m 4,0 Pliln Springs 97 10 22ndS1rMI.~ 2-41111 10 J..:11_,,,.... II!> '10 Arlt low IL2t a "' 0 4 p~ 93 51 good Ju-. S6 •7 6-ldhlgll e·1spm ••• "'-tlo. .. 57 l!lalbolWtdgt 2-41•11 10 KaneMClty 78 51 S.nlMmw-llO 59 good L.uVeQM 104 711 Sun -toc13 M 7.51 pin,,._ Sen Ollbrl9I 82 81 ~BMoto 2-41•1• to Uttlt ROCA ... .. Satuto.y al 6• Lii' MCI -liglilll 9l Sen.loM 97 53 good Loulrllll9 ... ... 7·Slpm Sent•AM 79 61 sanci.n--1a 2~1•1• to Men\pNI 117 es Moon Ml• loday 1t 12:53 p.m • "-Sent•CNz ... 47 good Ml.,..,~ 92 79 Saluto.y 11 2 06 un MCI Mta 9Qo11ro ti TW-V*'f .. 41 w.i.,..,,... 116 MllWIUI< .. 711 82 1:64pin.. v-.Vt-J 13 53 a.... Olfctlon.8ou1h BIRD A PPEALS FOR EDITORS' SUPPORT ... From Al lied commun1cat1on. "We reason through the printed word in an age where the pnnted page 1i. becoming passc, and continuity and context take a back seat to pacing and patter:· she told the newspaper editors ··we are an 1nst1tut1on that deals in <.ub1lc11es at a ume when s1mplifi- ca 11on masquerades as under- c;tand1n~ .. -. We arc an inst1tut1on that dl·al'> \\'Ith fundamental principles in an agt' "here the only interest ll> 1n hottom lir1e' .. \he <;a1d the courts. unlike the leg1slat1ve or e\ecut1ves branches of go"ernment which are intended to '>l'ek compromises between compet- mg 1n1erc!>l!>, arc adversaria,l by nature. with the inevitable ~It tn every case that one side wins and the other loses. further creating tensions for the courts. "That role wi ll often be an un- popular one. but the public must understand that thejudiciaJ branch is fulfilling its obligations. . . when it steadfastly performs that difficult duty," and it is a duty of the press to explain those differences between the Judiciary and the legislative and executive branches of government. she said. She also referred indirectly to her own problems campa1$ning for a new term under the restrictions of 1ud1c1al neutrali ty. While cntics arc free to attack. she said. ··we are taught to set aside our personal views about the issues before us during an era in which everybody is expected to have an opinion about everything and express it freely ... We arc not an 1nst1tut1on which can achieve acceptance by the use ofshck public relat1onsg1mmicks and entertaining news hooks." "My concern is with the insutu- tion." she told the editors. ··That is why we need your help in translating this tnst1tu11on to the ~ople. Should we go too long without a true understanding of the role of the Jud1c1al branch. wc will no longer have an institution that can serve as the guardian of the c-0nstitu11on .. :· PEDAL BOAT PAGEANT ALL WET ... From Al Hona. created Balboa Pedal Boats about si\ weeks ago. The tno purchased I 0 pedal boats to be offered for rent every weekend until s(·hool lcts out. then every day dunng \um mer. When the C atallna Holiday leaves each morning for its day-long trips to Ca talina Isl~ d. the I 0 pedal boats take their place 1n the absent shpJUSt west of the Pavilion. The two-seaters rent for Sb per half-hour or SI 0 per hour Like VW Bugs amid a parking lot of Porsches, the fiberglass pedal boats are conspicuous exceptions on a harbor noted for HS swift sailboats. expensive yachts and streamlined power boats. The boats -1n yellow, blue, red and aqua shells -move wi th the speed and grace of a dog paddling through water. lurching ~•owly tor- ward while the dn vers fran tically crank the pedals and steer wnh a rudder. Of course. pedal boats were built for comfon. not speed. as racers found out Thursday. Competitors huffed and puffed their way around the course at a sluggish pace. which made 11 difficult to dodge the water balloons and taunts slung by spec- tators. One team. while obeying the ··no bumping" rule. found a loophole 1n the rulebook and whipped out two wooden paddles to give them added power. The result was not only tired legs, but tired arms as well as Bob Black and partner Debbie Voorhees fin- ished second to winners Steve and Jill Forbath. ·'You don't necessarily have to tum the pedals as fast as you can bec.ause you end up just spinning the wheel in the water." said Jill Forbath of the winning technique. ··You keep a steady space. lean the way you're going ~.nd kind of glide around the buoys. Forbath. who rents the boats while her husband captains the Catalina Holiday, said the boats are already popular among Balboa v1S1tors. ··w e·ve had people in their 60s, children. a Girl Scout troop -you name 1t. Sometimes people who hve on the harbor rent the boats to go pick up something from home," she said. "That way they don't lose their parking space." Holding a parking space -now there's a Newpon Beach tradition worth preserving. Great 5 Year Warranty When )'OU buy C8ft)et made of Alllc<S Anto rv 'nylol\ )OU cet more than ~ promises Mor9 t"8n Jutt b.auty ,_.e that jusC the world's ~ Carpet Wftl'I bullNn soil. ltaln. static end_,..,~- VOi.i Cet Allled's Mt fl\'t year Wft"8nty• A ~ty that Pf'O(ects 'fOA.' carpet 8'111nst flbef wear '°"I after othef earl)ets ll8'fe wetn out thelf weltome So come In Met make a smart eseat on tiwt lmiW1~1t wi>et )'OU can buy Catpet mode of Allled ~ N ,,.~, ........ ED'- Financing Available "Family Owned Since 1879 ' 2927 S. Bristol Street. Costa Mesa ~-~ California Contractor t 1.1cen:w 2782!1 Nevada Contractor s. Ll~n!W I 106 C' .OVth Ol $<>uth C 1 Plt1 Ill 751-2324 ALSO IN LOS ANGELES • LONG BEACH ' Store Hours: Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 10-5 ~ .... s ..................... ._ .... _. ........................ ------.---------~~~~ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Ft1dlly, ,._ 30, 1111 *Al - 'Music Man' set for Harbor High Toma brings hls message to Laguna Newpon Harbor Hi&h School wilJ J>rescnt Meredith Willson'• popufar Midwestern-flavored muskal "The Mus1c Man" Thursday throu&h Saturday at 8 p.m. in the school auditorium, 600 Irvine Ave .. Newport Beach. Cunain is 8 p.m. and tickets arc priced at $4.50 in advance and SS at the box office. Call 76G-33 I 9 weekdays between 8 a.m. and noon for additional information. Service. fair In Viejo The "Reach Out II" community scrvic.es fair will be held Friday and Saturday in the Mission Viejo Mall. The fair is designed to provide information to the public about local community services including child care and day care facilities, YMCA activities, hospitals, charitable organiza. tions and counseling referrals. Women oiler donatlon• The Women's Oub of Laguna Beach will present its donations to the Safety Impact Council on Substance Abuse, the Girls Oub and the lifeguard station at Friday's luncheon meeting. Soprano Adrienne !Jiggj will entertain at the event, along with a singalong·group of senior citizens. Republicans to convene The Costa Mesa Republican Assembly will host the California Republican Assembly's quarterly board of directors meetjng Friday through Sunday at the lrvme Marriott Hotel. Dr. Edward Teller, the "father of the nuclear bomb." will be the banquet speaker. Olll T.R. Johnson at 549-4272 for more information. Catholic singles meeting The Orange County Catholic Alumni Club will sponsor a mixer for single Catholic professionals Friday from 7:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at the Newporter Resort in Newport Beach. Tickets are $10 at the door and more information is available at 857-01 25. Therapists to meet Verbal attacks on druguseearnhim a standing ovation By LAURA MERX Ot .. Dllllr,... ..... As always. former New York police officer David Toma opened his lecture to the crowd of Laauna Beach teen-agers by verbaJI)'. attacking them. ''Let s start straight. If you want to play games, get your ass out of here," he told them. Toma travels to the country's high schools scaring kids away from aJcohol and drugs. His goal is to shock young students into thinking about the abuse of drugs and alcohol -and his success rate equals his ability to instill fear in the young men and women. Toma's much-debated visit to the Laguna Beach High School -where he spoke to high school and Thurston Middle School students -came about as the result ofa request from the IMPACT team and the Safe Conduct Council. With private donations and a S 1.000 gift from the city, Toma was paid $6,000 to scream at the kids, call them trash and tell them how fortunate they were he was there to "save their lives." He describes himself as someone raised in the ghettos. who lay in the gutters with drug users and prostitutes, who grew up with and later was chased by the mob. Gory stories -of "bad trips," infants deformed by drugs their parents used. people who maimed themselves and others while hi$h and a nephew who collapsed his veins shooting heroin and was forced to shoot into his cuticles. eyelids and tongue made up a large part of Toma's two-hour presentation at the high school Wednesday. Occasional Laughter from the crowd prompted his quick and embarrassing disapproval. He repeatedly told the students that durin$ his c.arccr as a police officer. his supenors were only interested in the number of arrests he made and not the number oflivcs he saved. "They don't care hidden danatt'I of nwij&AU&, Toma mid i1 is never clear exactly what b P.ftlldt ia IM drua. He wd before the manjuau ii nw 1 bl is C10nta1n111 lieast 61 chemicals, but by lhe time it L11nba.Jed it contam1over2,000. .. Look. rm here lO save your lives, .. Ille told the audience ptbtted at \be bilb school 1Ymna1uun. M11nt11nin1 that 11 ~t one leefHlll' ae the school had died in the last two,..,. as a result of drink.int. he told the.,..,_ "You still do that crap bec:aute you .. idiots, vou'rc stupid and you're ready IO ID down.'f • Tbe ~uave, uajtJlt·forward ap-"' proach Toma uses is not intended only fO fri&hten, he said. ''Tbestoriesarelbe tnldL 11 Unfonunately, sometimes the tn1tb ii fear," he said. But he warned the aroup that each would inevitably be cau&ht for uun• drup ud many could spend time in J&IL ··And in bjgh school some of you boys are ladiel' men, but in jail they make you the lady, .. he told them. For the most pan. Toma wu wdl received by l ,500 or so tttn·aaen and Wit able to hold their attention thtoulh bis lenathY rrescntation. When he returned from a 5-minute break he was met by applause, and as he left he received a standin& ovation. Further evidence of has succe11 in rcachtn& the youths ts that at lcut 10 percent of the students met with him afterward for rap sessions. Accordina to Karen Ford. an IMPACT member, I SO hjgb school studenu met with Toma Wednesday and junior b1ah school youna· sters met with b1m Thunday. His history of sucx:css dJctates that many of the kids remain in counseling. In addition tO Toma. about 10 counad- ors and psy~holoeists from around the county volunteered to help with the overflow tn coumehng. "(came 6,000 miles to see you becaUIC I lo ve you. If I d1dn 't love you, I wou.&dn 't be here. I can make a lot more money (in New York) within walking distance of my house," he told the sroup before be id\. In the end, Toma defended his astronomical fee for speakina, whicb includes $6,000, a first<lass round-trip air fare and hotel accommodations. A travel agency picked up his air fare and the owner of Laguna Brisas Motor Inn donaled rus room. Marriage and famil y th erapist Darlene Hoff- man will speak to the Orange County chapter of Marriage and Family Therapists on building a successful practice Friday at I I :45 a.m. at the Orange County Medical Associauon Conference Center. Call program chairman Mickie Shapiro at about you. All they care about 1s locking Dllllr,....,_..,..,._,~ you up. The problem is that most people "I charge that because I am ashamed to charge $ 50,000." he said. ··Tbafs what Bob Hope fets. I'm a celebrity. rm a star. I sa ve k.ids: 7 51-1 792 for reservations. · don't Ji ve a damn." he told the students. Trying to convince the crowd of the David Toma holda Laguna youngaten apellbound. Scenic SK run In CdM The fifth annual Corona del Mar Scenic SK Run will be held Saturday, starting at 8 a.m. on Ocean Avenue above the Corona del Mar State Beach parking lot. Registration will be limited to the first 1.500 runners and th e fee 1s $1 0. Cati 644-31 51 for details. County jail inmates lose suit Over law books By LISA MAHONEY Of"'9Dllllr ......... Orange County Jail inmates have ade- quate access to legal materials. a federal judge has ruled. receive up to fi ve law books per day 1n his cell. 1s adequate." Gray wrote in an order issued Tuesday. Ci vil L1bentes Union request that pns- oners beglven dircctaccess toa law library. If so ordered, thecountywould have had to build one especially for the jail. he said. books should be added. And Gray rev ommended that inmates be pven an up- to-date hst of books 1n the jail law library Arts ezploratlon planned Arts Exploration '86 will be held Saturday from IOa.m. to 3 p.m. at the Irvine Fine Arts Center. 4601 Walnut Ave. in Irvine. The event includes demon· strations. film s .. children's pr~ms and a guest speaker. Donna Westerman. d1scuss1on computer graphics techniques for artists. Call 552-1078 for more information. U.S. District Court Judge William Gray said he sees no need to change the way mmates get law books to aid in their own defense or prepare civil rights litigation against their jailers. Gray reached bis dec1s1on after heanng testimony from two Jailhousc lawyers May 20. Convicted murderers Willie Wisely and Walter Black said the jail's system of providina inmates with legal materials made tt difficult for them to defend themselves. Gray did suggest that Sheriff-Coroner Brad Oates grant an exception to the five- book rule when inmates request Shepard's Citatjons because the s1x-10-scven-volume set is useless if it is broken up. upon request. · On another matter. the Judie muted to act on a complaint tha1 irtmates IR beina denied their constitutional fi&bt to ao attorney because of Jona waits in the visit0rs area. "I still believe that the present system . under which an inmate may request and Deputy County Counsel Ed Duran said Gray acted much as he had eicpected. Duran had argued against an American He asked that the Jail's exisuna law library -essentially a closet with shelves (or law books -be assessed to see if new Gray ruled th.at delayed visiu, while unfortuoate. arc not delibenue and th~ fore don't warrant federal court action. Romance authors meet Author Dorothy McMillan will speak to the Oran~e County chapter of the Romance Writers of Amenca Saturday at 11 :30 a.m. at the group's luncheon meeting at the Sizzler Restaurant. 1401 N. Harbor Blvd. Fullerton. Visitors are welcome and admission is SJ, which does not include lunch. Call (213 ) 927-4255 for additional informa1ton. Friday, May 30 Wieder spending report in error Second Distnct Supervisor Hamett Wieder has not spent $442.000 to protect her office against pohttcal opponent David Meslovich, campaign consultant JcfT Adler said Thursday. Wieder mistakenly included expen· d1tures from previous years tn her March 15 to May 17 financial disclosure state· ment. said Adler of Englander Com· mun1cat1ons. Water shortage this summer won 't be felt on Orange Coast F rom stalf and wire reports Water deltvenes in six Southern Call· fomia counties may be curtailed sporad1· cally this summer. but most residents along the Orange Coast wlll feel little or no impact demand penods. The Orange County Water District, which serves Hunttngton Beach and Fountain Valley. will not be affected because 1t has access to a large supply of natural ground waler and purcbucd unfiltered water from MWD. said spokes- man Gordon ElSC'f'. The lrvme Ranch Water District can fall back on reservoir water,' said spokeswoman Joyce Wesner-Owidt. No meetiaga acltedaled ~nd.ay,June2 The error made it appear that Wieder had spent nearly a h,alf million dollars to defeat Meslovich. whom she call ed a "polittcal unknown." In fact. the $442.000 she reported was spent over the course of eight years. he said. SuperYl.or Harriett Wieder $79.500 an this \car's campaign. Meslov1ch of Garden Grove has put up "irtuall\ no fight for Wieder's seat. expending onl~ S7 I 0 of the $976 he ha s raised "There should be no cause fo r alarm because we're talking about shortages of maybe a da} at a time. not a long-range shortage." Metropolitan Water District spokeswoman Pat Messig1an said Thurs- day. A cutback by Metropolitan during peak demand penO<is would force local aaencies to use water from wells and reservoirs. or to ask customers to reduce water use. She said 1n the worst case the district might ration water use to irrigate land- scapes outside commerctal and business centers. • 6:30 p.m., Irvine Finance Commb1lon. Cny Council Chambers, 11200 Jamboree Blvd. An amended disclosure form filed with the Oran1e County Reglstrar of Voters shows Wieder actually paid out about PoucE Loe Trio invade Irvine home, shoot resident in the foot By LAURA MERK Of IM Dlillr .... Mlllt An Irvine man was shot Thursday night by three men who entered his home apparently demanding some· 1h1ng but speaking only Spanish. Irvine police said today. Michael Pfeifer. 35, was shot tn the foot and taken to the Healthcare Medical Center of Tustin where he was listed 1n stable condition. a hospital spokesman said. Lapn&Beach Police rc-.ponded to reports Thurs~ day of a man in a white Karmann Ghia who was cxpos1na himself to pa~r.1by. The officer rcspond1na 10 the scene on Clitl' Drive. however. could not locate the man' where· abouts ••• A Bluebird Canyon Dnve resident rcpe>ned a buf'llary Thursday with a stereo system valued at $350 taken. • • • The owner ofa car parked Wednes- day on Ccmtos Dri ve told police that someone had broken 1n10 the locked vehicle and stolen clothm& and camera &nd t~o equipment vaJucd at Sl,082.SO. • • • Police arrested Andrew Alan Heywood, 24, o( t..quna ~ach on uspicion of driv1n1 under the m- nucn('t of alcohol Heywood v.-as According to police, the men entered the home on Lincoln about 8 p.m. and spoke in Spanish to Prcifer. who only speaks English. Minutes later. Pfeifer was shot. Police said Pfe1fer's wife and two children were an the home when the shooting occurred, but were not injured. Tht men immediately fled the home on foot with a purse and possibly some other items. said at. arrested shonly before I a.m. Wednesday on Ramona A venue Hunttncton Beach A San Juan Cap1 trano woman told poltcc that someone used a piece of wood to smash a window to her Ford parked at Pacific Coast Htihway and Huntinaton trcct and stole her purse and a S200 c.amera. • • • A resident m the 16000 block of Viewpoint answered an advenise· ment to rent a house 1n Santi Ana he pa1d a deposit of $600 and 'illfted a lease but found out to her chaann that the man wa not the owner of the house. ' • • • I A man wh o allqedly fo.l11tly rep- resented h1msclfa the mana er ofan apanment complet 1n the I QOOO blcxk of Holly collectC'd month I)' rent Dick Bowman. who said pohce art still investigating. Irvine police were cont¥ted by residents who heard a gun fire and arrived shortly after the shooting. Two people who noticed a susp1c1ous looking car 1n area de· scribed three men who matched the descriptions aiven by Pfeifer. pohce said. Police arc looking for thl' men they believe are dnving a 1972 brown • Ford Pinto Statton wagon. of $700 from a tenant • • • Thieves broke inlo a Vol k'iwngen Da her parked at Oc-can View High hoot and stole a pu~. chcc h and b3nk1na cards. • • • Culpnts dismantled a IAf'IC ~utcr fount11n valued at S 1.000 1n the front yard of a residence 1n the 6000 block ofC'hele ••• Bandits broke a dnvc-through Wln· dow at the Jack m th<' Box R~tuarant. I SOO I Edward"· and opened a safe and "tolci 1.16' in ca h. Newport Beacb Vandals threw a rock throuaJ1 1 window at Manncn Ubraf').'. cau in SI 00 dam to the cuy bu1ldina,. • • • I\ prowkr ~ .. s ~ported m tht 2900 ~od. of Qucdada at H>:lO p.m. The potenttal crunch 1s not caused by a shortage of water but b) MWD's inab1hty to filter water qu1ckl~ enough dunng peak Smaller districts in south Oranae Coun- ty that depend aJmost exclusively on the MWD might be afTCCled by curtailed supplies. Thursda:r Nothing wa~ reported stolen • • • A $300 car stereo wa'I takt'n from a vehicle parked on Highland in Dover Shores. Fountain Valley Forcing entry through the front door. someone bura.Jan1ed a home on the 9400 block of J>ueblo. a resident reponed Thursday. The loss, est•· mated at more than Sl.100. mcludcd a microwave oven. tele ' 1s1on.jewel11 and bed pread. • • • A resident of the Q400 block of Estrella reported Thu™3ay that th ieve had taken a Smith and We son re volver worth $500 from a bedroom closet. • • • resident of the 16300 block of Rt'dwood rcponcd Thursday that while hewa'I in his b:lth room sh.avtng. $270 was stolen from his wallet. • • • <\n employee at Video II, 18100 Brookhurst SL, reported Thu"4ay that som~ne had re nted a video recorder and a tapt' of "De peratel)' Seek.in& Susan" and failed to return them. The loss wa" l''ltlmatcd at $30S • • • >\ sccunt) agent reported Thursda) that an empto:rec of Grand Auto Sales. 16031 Harbor Blvd.. was suspected of stealing between $2.500 to S6,000 from the bus1neis' cash register. sometime between Apnl 15 and Ma' 15 • • • A resident of the 9700 block of Chen1ll(' reported Thursday that bur- &Jars entered his unsecured burgund:r A MC' Jeep and took a stereo equalizer and a wallet from the ce nter console. The in truder\ unsuccessfully tned to rcmo'e otht'r ~tereo equipment. The loss wu ec;t1m111~ at SSS CoetaMeu Two apartmrnt\ on the 600 block of V1 ctona ~ere bl1rglamed. res1· dents rtJ')()ncd Tuesday A male resident re~lemed that theaves en tered throuih an opc.•n \ltding glall door and stole h1' I~ 1 O\ h color tele' 1 ion. valued t S '\O .\ lemal(' rrs1dent said bufl)a~ <'ntcml thmulh an open window and \tole ~lt'ffO and camera equipment 'alucd at S lSO Pair rape Valley woman Founllin Val police are search· ins fort wo men· w o raped and stn1ck an I ~ar-old wuman 11 her apan- ment. ccordana to the p<>hct repon. the woman was leav101 her apanment near 8rookhurst Strttt and Warner .\venue at about 7 30 am. Thursday when t .. o men. one armed W\th a knife. coaf.rooted her. The woman · wa"' forced Nick 1n\idc. v.herc \he was ra~ anJ \tn.tc'k 1n 1he r. i.:c poh~ Qtd. The men then Oed The men were de nb«1 a' His· pen1 1n 1hc1r earl 2 One wa\ bout 5 fttl in('hes t.tll and 150 pound!.. v.1 th 'ltraaah t blad. tum The other wa., about { feet 7 inche\ ~II and I 6S pound\ llr1\h hlac\t. 't 1'. hair o\.cr bi' ea~ I I • •• P111n& open a rear slid.in& &Jam door to enter. the1ves bural&nzed a home on the l 000 block of Cheyenne, a resident reported Wednesday. The loss. estimated at Sl,935. included Jewell) and two rented videotapes. • • The owner of the Harbor Bay Motel. 2026 rbor Blvd., reported Wednesday at bursJars stole a complete bedroom set .. in.cludint mattress. box sprinp, be<lspread, pillows. ltnen and four towels. from one of the room The loa was esttmatl'd It $540. ••• A manager at the Don Quaxoce Motel. 2100 ~ewi><>rt Blvd.. rcponed Wednesday that thieves stoic $972 in C.'\ h and tra"eler's checks f'rom the bu mess. 1:'&by burglan • e atam bJ llB Th1e,·e plundered the trophy cue at Hope View hool an Huounatoa Beach aner muh1na wiodc>ws and glass doors. tehool officials said today The cul_pnta, wh .> stole about ·x trophies fro m the case, apparn\l)' wert il\Jured and left blood at the . scene·. accordin& to preliminary pohcc rtporu. Damqie wu eau- matcd at U .000. Wednesday njpt's beak-in .,.. the second 10 rcunt wetka al 1 Hunt11l1ton Bclch 1tbool. latr'Qden earhcr bn*e tnto Dwyer Sdmol throuah a be ment 1'iodoW iDd 9'olt the ;chool's rfina trophy. , ' A6 * Orange Coeet OMLY PjLOT/ Friday, M•y 30, 1986 A~ i.-JOf>Olo Jon Pennington. 14, holdehJa National Spelling Bee trophy which was preaented by Wllllam Burleigh Tburaday. K-a-o-1-i-n-i-c earns top speller's trophy WA HI NGTON !-\Pl -Jon Pen- nington said that al 11mc\ 1n the final minute~ of the National ~pclling Bee his mind would go blank bul "hen hl· heard the word he'd ha \I.' io '1)4:11 to win the compet111on hL• thought "Oh goody, good)." The word "odontalg1a ·· '-'J' onl' hl' knew, and that "as all thl' 14·\l·ar-old from Shiremanstown. Pa needeJ 111 put him O\Cr the top anJ bccomL· champion of the 59th '>Pl'lllng hc.·L· The key 10 h1\ succc<1<;, he ca<;ualh told reportt•ro, later. '-'J' ,, nalurJI ab1ht > .. It's JU'it \Onlt'thing. I'm good at.' the tall. hro'-'n-ha1red l'lllhth-gradn said. A!>ked what ~paratl·d him from thl· 173 otheri. he beat in thl' tv.o-da\ spelling bcc he ..aid mut.k\th. "I'm I ul J..1l·r ·· Uut '>oon r1 Ilk l'd1 p-.ed h1'i mod- l'''' .ind hl· '>1gne<l autograph hooJ..\ fur h1<. fdlo" n1mpct1tor\ ··.Ion Pennington thl' lhilmp1on " Jon tooJ.. thr t111l' ,ificr a 'eL·-..aw dUl'I "'llh Kenneth >\ uir'ion. a I,_ H'•ff-nh.I '>l''t'nth-gradcr knm'n a<; \nd' from I L'4Ul'\la. 11.t "ho "a' lOmrx·11nEt 1n thl hc.·l· tor thl' third llml' In that fin.11 round Jon m1\\fll0 lkd h" fir,t two wonh but ~pellet.I tht· Ol'\I 'II\ Cllff\.'l 11\ l 'ndl'r thl rulr'> tor thl' linal mum.I. "hen onl' n1ntt•\tan1 m1\<,pcll' a \\orJ the otha tnntc~1an1 mu\I 'fll•ll lhJI "nrd lorret th and an111hn word lo \\IO rhl' lllmJX'tlllUO gCll'\ hatk Jnd tonh hc.·l'-'l't·n thl' l\l.o until 11nl' 'fll'll' 1"'0 \..,,nrd' 1n a ro~ nirrt·cth Bus driver refuses to aid girl; she dies (HI(~(,() 1-\Pl --\ '1-\ear-old girl w11h ::i parrmal.n who ,ufTcrl·d con' ul\1on<. on a c1I\ hu<; died earl\ I hur<;UJ\ alll'r a good SamantJn \.'a med ht•r to a ho~p11al when thl' hu' drl\er rt•lu'>cd tu lt·JH' hie;. mull' -..11d 1hc ch1kl"' mother Joel till' man "h" l3m(' ln her aid "Thl" "mn;rn ""' \lt11rir 1h1·n· <.1 rr.1m1nll hn hah\ ""' h.1, 1n~ .1 heart atta1 I.. 'hl""• 11-111 ,1 J1•1lt:m.tJ..l't Jnd thl· hu' drl\ n ""·" 11"lllng ha <Jet 1111 1h1• hu' lad' -..11tl I t•d ( iarrett c;.nn llknt died h\ .1 l11\\p11.tl c;.pnkl"\m,1n J\ tht• man \.\oho 1·;1111n l N11 oil" ~loh,on into tlw l'll1l'rg1·nl' ruom 111;111 \.ltth<il'I C Jrtl1ll1 l'>!>UL'd ,1 ,1,1te- nw111 lat1· I h11r,d,1\ that read 1n rart: ··v.l. "ill 1101 comr><'lt' \\llh :i >!rtl' 111~ mothn \ltn Jll "'' h.H:. 'hlldrrn Jnd grJndch1Jdren 111 our ""'n I \Cl\om· al lht' Cl~ kd\ tor ttw lam11\ ( lur he.in-.g.n 11u1 tn thl'Ol It "'11uld ~· U\1'k'' for U\ to t I\ tn 111,111\ or ,.,ln n•1.,pond "hrri all the 1r1lo1111.1i111n "1111t rn · I ;l\l..nt th1 h11' drt\l'I ""uld hl' J..n·p \l1.1wht .1 hind.'" tht• h11,p11.1I' I k \,lid lw • 11111lln I du 11. hl h.ul to turn there ,.111! M.it· I foh'>nn 40 '\J1lok' nwthn '•\11d a ~l·ntkm.tn Ii orn I he hal k 111 t lw h11' t·a mt• up .int.I 111111.. '"' l111k t111l .1nd "'l: ran .1ho111 .1 hlrn I.. to thl' ho\PllJI " Trade deficit narrows sharply Improvement In Aprti reflects reduced oil prices, the impact of declining dollar WA HINGTON (A P) -The na- tion's merchandise trade: deficit nar· rowed sharply m Apnl to S 12. I billlon. reflecting reduced oil pnces and the: long-awaited impact of a declining U.S. dollar. the government reponed today. The Commerce Dcpartmenl said the trade imbalance fell by 16.6 percent from the March level ofS 14.5 bill ion The improvement in Apnl was led by a 10.2 percent drop in overall 1mpons -which totaled $30 b1lllon m Apnl, down from SH 4 billion in March. • This drop offset a disappointing 4.8 percent decline in exports in April. down 10 $18.0 btlhon from March levels ofS 18.9 b1ll1on The April trade deficit was the lowest since a S 10.9 bi I lion imbalance last August. For all of 1985, the nation ran a record S 148. 5 billion trade defic11. The Apnl figures showed the impact of both the world drop 1n 011 prices and efforts to stabhze the U.S. J\1ilitary aid off er tied to CIA agent W~~HINGTON (AP) -A man 1dent1fied as a CIA oflker held out promise!> ofm1htary aid to encourage ~1 x Nicaraguan rebel commanders to desert Eden Pastora and join a ri val l l.S -backed Contra force. rebel of- ficials sa}. The de!>en1ons b) all but one ofh1s top \Ommanders prompted Pastora . a popular but unpredictable rebel leader. IO quit the Contras two weeks ago and complain that "this is a war of the t I n11cd States a~mst Nicaragua." Rebel officials said a man J..nown 10 lhl·m as a CIA contact called "Annan· do" offered Pas1ora's commanders milllar) aid tf they would jOtn the Ll.S.·sponsored United Nicaraguan Oppm111on. or UNO The rebels were told the m1htar) aid would come through t lNO but not ~here ll would originate Sin«C 1984. Congres~ has barred the ( I.\ from g1v1ng militaf} aid and advice to the Contras. although the agenc) " allowed to e\Change in- tl'l hgenn· '-'Ith them f hc (I A has also scuctl} funneled \Cveral million dollar\ to the rebels for pollt tcal pn.>jects th•~ pa!>t }Car. U.S. onicials \J\. "Kchel otlic1ah said l INO's < oo;1a Kican-based lorn.·~ recen1ly relel\ed fi, e '>h1pmen1s of arms that ~ere u..,ed to rn11cc Pastora 's poorl) supplied troop~ to sw11ch allegiances. Bosco Matamoro~. a C ontra spokesman. '>aid UNO'!> m1l1tar) supplirs came Nicole Hobaon from "1n1emat1onal sources.'' but he would not elaborate Asked about a CIA role in Pastora 's downfall. C'IA spokeswoman Kathy Pherson had no comment. Meanwhile. Ni caraguan Vice President Sergio Ramirez said that since Pastora has stopped fighting. he 1s welcome to return to Nicaragua under an amnesty program "without anv threat of retribution from the: government." Pastora. now ~eekmg pohucal asylum 1n Costa Ri ca. 1s bemg detained b)' Costa Rican authon11es. In a telephone interview from jail. he declined to discuss the alleged CIA role in his ouster. but said: "The Americans want to remove one government and 1mpo!><! another. We want nothing 10 do with that." The rebel official~. representing botb Pastora and UNO. said "Armando" 1s an Amencan CIA officer attached to the U S. Embass) in Costa Ri ca The rebels. including Alvaro Jcre1. a leader of a Pastora- alhed group. ~1d "Armando" ha<i been a CIA liaison to the rebels fo r several year\. One Nicaraguan al the week-long senes of meetings in a <;uburb o f San Jose. Costa Rica. said "Armando" opened the talks by offering m1l1tar) aid but ins1-;ting that the commanders first jOln lJ NO "bccauSL' that was the Instrument the Amcru.·an~ had chosen 10 help N1cara~uans" Jury awards 'not in need of limits' WASH INGTON l~Pl -A na- tional consumer group toda) challenged government and indul>try statements that Jury awards in liah- 1hty cases ha ve been running wild . In the pao;t decade. jUr) awards in damage cases have increased onl) at the same pace as mOat1on and economic condition) have raised costs, according 10 the <;tudy by the ( onsumer Federation of Amcnca. The report was issued 1 n rcsponM'. tocall!I for llm1tson)ury awards made b)' the insurance 1ndu\tr) and tht· Reagan admm1strat1on Thr Jus11cc Departmrnt ha\ proposed major liability law change,, 1nclud1ng a $100.000 limit on punitive da~e<; and awa rds for pain and suffennjt. dollar again l fore1an currencies. The dollar has fallen about 30 percent against other m"or curren- cies sancc a year ago. The weaker dollar make 1mpons more ex pensive and U.S.expons more competitive. Analysts have been looking for a turning point in the trade deficit. But despite today's Jood news. cconom· asts general!)' did not expect major improvements in the trade deficit from the declining dollar until latertn the year. Apnl'~ deficit was $2 billion less than the $14.1 billion average deficit dunng the prececding six months. The figures also reflected the full impact of the collapse of world 011 pnccs . . Petroleum product 1m~rts dechn. ed to $2. I billion 1n Apnl from $3.3 billion in March. In April. oi l on the pol market sold for an averaae price of $14.93. compared to a $2$.63 average pric.c from October 1985 10 March I 986. according to Commerce Oepanment analyst , It was the lowest dollar amount spent on 01l 1mports 1n a single month !>inct' June 1975. Meanwhile. non-petroleum 1m- pons dropped 7.5 percent in Apnl. to $27.9 billion. The U.S. trade deficit with Japan remained the largest of any single nation. but dropped to $4. 7 billion in Apnl from theSS.5 billion level of the month before. AT&:T expects contract talks to go down to wire By tbe Associated Pre11 WASHINGTON -Officials oft he Amcncan Telcphont-& Telegraph C o. and 11s largest union predicted that contract talks will go unul the last minute. as the workers vowed a stnke Sunday if there is no agreement. Preparations for a walkout at 9:0 1 p.m. PDT Saturday by the Commun1ca11ons Workers of America were under way Thursday as talks continued. CWA director of public affairs Rozanne Weissman announced a news conference for late Saturday mght "to discuss the outcome of the bargaining-whether a na11onw1de stnke or a settlement." Both sides have said they do not want a s1nke. But with many 1nues unsettled, the unl'On has pnnted picket signs and .\T&T 1s making schedules for management personnel 10 take over the chores of handling collect, person-to-person and other operator-assisted long-d1s1ance calls. Destroyed satelllte to be replaced WASHINGTON -NASA has ordered a replacement for the $250 m1lhon government commun1cat1ons satellite that was 1n the space shuttle Challenger cargo bay when the ship exploded last January. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite and parts fora backup spacecraft being bought from T RW 1n Redondo Beach are scheduled for delivery m fi,e years The value of the contract 1s yet to be negotiated with TRW. The TORS 1s the larges! and most advanced commun1ca11ons satellite m the world. weighing 5.000 pounds and measuring 5 7 feet acro~s 1 ts solar panels. Ex-federal prosecutor to probe Deaver WASH INGTON - A federal coun chose a former U s .. attornc)' to 1n ves11gate lobbyist Michael K. Deaver. and told him to pursue all possible leads m determining whether the ex-pres1dent1al aide should be prosecuted. Wh11ney North Seymour Jr .. once thr top federal prosecutor for New York C-11>, was named by the coun Thursday and qu1ckl} pledged to "let the chips fall where the) may" 1n the'confl1ct-of-1nterest p;obe. The three-Judge pant"I said the probe should cover Dcaver·s lobb) mg for the Canadian go' ernmenl m 11s successful effort for a Joint agreement w11h the United States to combat acid rain and hi s lobbying to retain a tax break for businesses locating in Pucno Rico, also successful so far. The coun sa id Deaver represented the Commonwenllh government. but his office said his clir nt wa) a corporation Casey admlts backlog ln security rechecks WASHI NGTON -CIA Director Wilham Case)' acknowledges that. despite rising concern over intelligence leaks, every U.S. intel ligence a$ency he oversees is behind 'iChedule 1n reinvestigating 11s employees for sccuntv risks. Ca~y blamed a recent spate of intelligence leaks on .. a breakdown m d1se1pl1ne in the government. pnmanly." But he said to solve the problem officials nce-d for news organ11at1ons to exercise restraint in pubhsh1ng '><-'t'rets leaked 1t1 the-m . while the government tries to get its own house 1n order Dunng an 1nten 1ew at CIA headquarters. Casey and Lt. Gen. Wilham Odom. d irector or the National Security Agency. and CIA Deputy Director Robert M Gate-. played down their recent threats of criminal pro"sccullun aga1n\I nrw., organizations which print secrets aboul the gathenng ot c1>m municat111n<1 intelhgencc Butter on hlghway causes traffic jam ST. LOUIS -A tanker truck leaked 6.500 gallons of rnco.i hut ~m I ntcrstate 44. creating an I I -mile grea~ stain "worse than Kl' .. 1ha1 cauSt'd numerous accidents and IOJurcd sever.ti people. one senousl>. police '>ay. The full) loaded tanker owned by Bloml'neT Chocolate ( o. of < htcago began leaking earl y Thursday 15 miles southwest of St. Louis. police said. The driver. Jack Beyer. 54. of Chicago. Mud he was unaware of the leak -which wa-; coman~ from two holes in the.middle -until another trucker told him about 1l on c1t11ens band radio. "I didn't see or feel anything," Beyer said "I mu'>t ha vc hit a pretty severe bump.·· The cocoa butter, which police said resembled cake frosting. caused dozens of cars to lose control on the highway. ~1cag11 T_:.an\11 \11thont\ C h.ur ---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"""T'""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WAREHOUS·E SALE TWO DAYS ONLY: MAY 31 AND JUNE 1, 9 e.m. • 8 p.m . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Thi• wlll be the larg••t Ev•nt of It• Kind •• we ar• over•tocked. Huge Dl1count1 on 111/ our l11mou1 line• Including our direct Euro,,.an Import• -20 to 50~ olfl •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ALL SAlES FINAL All> IN .. AS lS" COM>ITION vo'Lf.(emert EVERY ITEM $nterioa r;nc_: IN 'M STCR Afl> Ttl: WMEHOUSE Wll BE DISC<UrnD VISA AND MASTERCARD ACCEPTED 16th * 1595 Newport Blvd. Costa Mna, CA 92627 642-2050 .............................. ________________________________ ~~~~~ -CALIFORNIA --~-~ Man charged with puttin rat poison in pi ls LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former · employee of th e Merrill Lynch stec;k brokerage was charged with sp1kang cold, allergy and diet capsules with rat poison 1n a scheme to make money on the stock market, Lhe FBI said today. The FBI said Edward Arlen Marks of Temple City, had hoped to profit by depressinJ the price of stock of SmithKJine-Bcckman Corp. Marks had worked as a trainee at the Merrill Lynch brokerage in San Marino, said the FBl's Los Angeles chief, Richard Bretziog. He became the first person charged wtth tamper- '"$ in any of the spate of U.S. drug- ta1ntinJ cases that have claimed at least nane lives smcc 1982. No consumers were inJurcd m the case involving Marks. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said the amount of rat poison found in the Contac Teldrin and Dietac capsules was sufficient to sicken, but not ktll, anyone who took it. Marks was held overnight at the West Los Angeles police station, then hustled into a waiting car this morn- ing and ta.ken downtown fo r arraign- ment this afternoon before a U.S. magistrate at the federal courthouse. He was charged with one count of tampering with consumer products, FBI spokesman Jim Neilson said. The FBI was invcstiga11ng a poss- ible connection between Marks and other dru$·tamperina cases, but Brctzing said there was no indication of a hnk to other cases or that Marks had assistance. ··At this point. we have no reason to behevc he acted in any other capacity than alone," Bretzing said. He added that Marks apparently made no money on the deal. "Since Smith Kline and Beckman dtd not suffer any hysterical drop, tt is ~nlik~ly he made any profits," Brctz- 1ng said. Bretzing said that every FBI bureau in the nation had been involved in the investigation. The big brcakthough came when three workers at the San Marino brokerage identified a voice on a recorded threatening telephone call as that of Marks .. McMartin defendants file suits LOS ANGELES (AP) -Three former defendants in the McManin Pre-School molestation case have filed wrongful prosecution lawsuits. saymg they lost th eir reputation and financial secunty because ofpubhctty from the case. Named 1n the Supenor Court lawsuits filed Thursday art the ctt y of Manhattan Beach, Los Angeles County, which prosecuted the case. and former District Attorney Robert Ph1ltbos1an. "All I want back is what was stolen from me," said V1rgm1a McMartin, the 79-ycar-old fou nder of the Man- hahan Beach school that closed after allegattons surfaced of wh olesale molestation by teachers and staff McMartin and her granddaughter. Peggy Ann Buckey, 29. each sought S 10 m1llton m damages. and Betty Ra1dor. 65. sought unspecified dam- ages in a separate actton. The three were among fi ve defendants d1s- m1ssed from the case because of insufficient evidence. Tutu: Violence would be justified in S. Africa WASHINGTON (AP) -Bishop Desmond Tutu. winner of the 1984 Nobel Peace PnLC, says blacks would be Justified 1n attempti ng the violent overthrow of the whtte South African Jovernment tf the outside world, including the Un11ed S1..4ltes. fatls to impose tough economic sancttons. The black 5outh Afncan clenc, who 1s Anglican bishop of Johan- nesburg, told a gathering here Thurs- day night he wa s not advocating violence. and personally would op- pose 11. But he went further than he had before by saying 11 would be justified. "I have come to the concluswn that tf the mternattonal community re- f uses to apply sanctions. then our people will ha ve tried everyth ing. and following the pnnc1plcs of the tra- ditional doclnne of'Just war.· I would say tt 1s ju'ittfiable to overthrow the system by violence." Tutu ~1d "My last hope 1s the 1nterna11onal community applying sanctions." Tutu said after a showing of a documentary film . "W11ness to Apartheid," which was made wt th hts assistance. There were no meetings w11h admm1stratton officials scheduled m Tutu's overnight stay tn Washington He was scheduled to travel to Tor-onto today. Tutu said he thought the Reagan admtnistrauon was "out of step" with most '\mencans -the yo uth es- pecially -who he argued would support tough economic sanctions. Under pressure from Congress, President Rea$3 n applied some mild sa nctions. as did a few other Western nations. But they apply onl y to a few items and have done little to curb South Africa's foreign trade. The United States is South Afnca's biggest trading partner. 130 Chernobyl acclden t victlms released By tbe A11oclated Press MO COW -A Soviet doctor ~1d today that 130 of 299 people hospttaltzed after the Chernobyl nuclear accident ha ve been dtM:harged. the offi cial news agency Tass reported Dr. Angelina Guskova. chief rad1ologJSt at Moscow's No. 6 hospital where many of the rad1atton v1ct1m s are being treated. also said at least two women were among those hosp1talt1ed. he said the nuclear disaster has shown that women's bodies are better equipped 10 fight radiation exposure than men's bodte) Dr. Robert Gale, a lJ S. bone marro~ spcciahst help1n~ trea t rad1at1on v1ct1ms in Moscow. said he would go to Chernobyl and Kiev next week to examine more victims and devise a program of cart "for the rest of their hves." In a telephone 1nterv1ew Thur-..day. Gale satd 23 people have died as a result of the April 26 accident. He also provided a breakdown ofacctdcnt v1ct1ms and their condition. Korean workers return after strike SEOUL -After a one-day strike. outh Korean workers were returning today to their jobs at U.S. mili tary 1nstallat1ons throughout the count'). military and union officials ceponed. Korean union officials said the union had decided stop the wa lkout temporarily 1n a btd to resume nego11a11ons with the mtlttary, and that all members had been ordered back to work as of today. The) expected the talks to resume later today. The U.S. Forces Korean Employees Union, with a membership of more than 18.000, struck Thursday. demanding w3'e hikes and the withdrawal oflayofTplans. The union said the back-to-work action was taken under an agreement reached overnight with the m1lttar}. which they said expressed its readiness to resume the talks 1fthe stnke stopped A U .. mtlttary spokesman. who declined to be 1dcn11ficd. confirmed the agreement between the two panics but added that his command would not consider the stnke was over until 11 was determined the maJOnt} of stnking workers were back on their JObs. Latin peace talks end without news PANAMA ( ITY. Panama (AP)- Lat1n American offi cials ended a round of talks Thursday on a ~ace treaty for Central Amcnca but dtd not announce whether they 'ltill 1n1ended to meet next weck''l deadline for signing a pact The foreign minister from the Contadora group had set a deadJtnc of June 6 for complettnJ their effort to brina peact to th e rt1JOn But over the wcc\end. the presi- dents of th e ( entral Amencan coun- tnes that would ~ affected by the pact 1nd1c,ated the UUJcl date was unreahst1c. The offic11ls rtponed some pf'Oltt" an the later.t talk'l, but ttltascd no detail! and would not uy whelher the dcadltnr would be ex- tended. MclllcO, Vcne1uela. Panama and Colombia fif'5t met 1n Jonuary 1983 to try 10 amnse a pea~ qrccmcn1 amona O uatcmal . Hondura . C:I Salvidor Nicaragua and Costa Rica • lund1y .11111111 11,er Fin Cll111111111 BPllcll l&.&-IJ.& ''"' S.1ltw Ar""* s.t•• ""1t • Ur• Cnt"1"""*'1 8 A M -2 A M Dally Sunday 8 A M to 12 Midnight •28 E 17th St Cotta Mesa 714-650 1750 Watching thejarora Ora"Q9 Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, M8Y30, 1MI * A8 Class a~tion lawsuit ruect to boost 1nlnl1num wage By die A1toclate4 Prett LOS ANGELES -A group of public intetm law ftnn1 bu filed a clut act1on lawsuit askina the state Supreme Cowt «>order a hJ.lhn' minimum W111Je than the $3.35 per hour now received by 6S0,000 Californians. The suit, filed Thursday, asks the hi&b court to compel the state lndustri.aJ Commiuion LO raise the minimum waae to 11 much as S5.38 per hour, said attorney Fraa Bernstein of the Employment Law Office. one of the lawsuit's eiaht plaintjff&: Bernstein said the commission is required by the state labor code to review the minimum wife every two years. But in l 982 and 1984, the commission (ailed to raise the minimum waie. keepioa the fiaurc at $3.35 an hour. Charge. filed bJ groaJM' bra •1 f'ormer f'BI aaent Rlcbard MUler (left) and bia attorney Stanley GreenMr& watcbju.ron dartnc a field trip to a Lo. Aneelee Little ~e ball puk where lliller alleteclly rendenoa.eecl with iU 8cwtet mlatra.. LOS ANGELES -A white supremacist leader and two memben of a, Jewish mihtant group were cbaracd with misdemeanors for a brawl that broko out between the opposing groups at the downtown tram station. Stank) Charles Wttek, 53, a leader of the White Aryan R.es1siance. wu c:ha.raed Thursday with two counts of assault with intent to produce &J'Clt bodily injury, one count of resistina arrest and one count of battery on a peace officer. Bruer F1rslman and Steven Jay Litt, both 36 and members of the Jewish Oefen~ League, were charged with one count each of battery. School hit for barring pr~gnantgirlfrom rites GM worken vote on ne• contract LOS ANGELES -Union workers at the General Motors auto plant 1n Van Nuys are voting on a proposed contract that would introduce some of the Japanese-style productton methods to the assembly line, but would not guarantee continued production at the plant. Details oflhe contract have not been released, but both maha~mcnt and Local 645 of the United Auto Workers union said it would insu1ute the so-called team concept used in Japan, LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Cath- olic school that banned a pregnant honors student from graduation cer- emonies is sending a pro-abortion message to female students, the leader of a feminist right-to-life group claims. "I really felt the day of the scarlet letter was gone." Susan Carpenter McMillan said at a news conference Thursday. McMillan. president of California Fem1n1sts for Life, charged that a boy who impregnated a girl would not be prohibttcd from the graduation. She said the school's action will be interpreted by female students as a punitive measure that could be avoided by having an abortion. Melissa Martinez, 17, who is more than six months pregnant, will re- ceive her diploma from Mary S~r of the Sea Catholic school m San Pedro. where she earned straiJ!lt A's and served as student body vice president and homecoming princes\. h. h t. h · h h I'. M t n School officials allowed her to 1n w 1c wor,ers ave some say tn ow t ctr 1actones arc run. anagemen 1 continue her studies after she became such operations generally has more Oex1b1lity in ass1Jnmg workers ~n is traditional 1n American 1ndustry1 where JOb catcgones allow a partJcular P.regnant, but they banned thc.unmar-worker to perform only ccnam tasks. ned teen-ager from attending the June 6 ceremonies. sayinJ the school Acld-buraed kidnap victlm turn• 17 must support the teachings of the church. ORANGE -On her 17th birthday -a day most girls spend cclebratina McMillan called on Archbishop with fnends at long-awaned parties - Cheryl Bess was tn a hospital room Roger Mahony to intervene m behalf quietly recovering from surgery on her neck and upper eyelids. Wednesday's of Martinez. operation 1s about the 20th she has undergone since October 1984, when a The Rev. Joesph Battaglia, director maintenance man from her San Bernardino housm1 project drove her to the of communications fo r the Los An-desert. tned to rape her and poured acid on her head and hands. Cheryl was 15 geles archdiocese. said a church when the attack occurred. She celebrated her 17th birthday Thursday. official is assembling a special com-Disfigured for life and perhaps permanentJ y blinded. Cheryl remains in &ood m1ttee to review Miss Marttnez's spirits. her fnends and mother, Norma Bess, saJd. ca9~, he said Monsignor Jeremiah. Custody fight over plaaa. .ettled· Murphy, supenntendent of high ; VENTURA -A divorce battle over custody of two pianos has ended schools, has been unable to reach the harmoniously after lawyers pounded out a settlement qrceable to ~th sides vacat1on1ng Martinez family. -each will get a piano and play solos instead of ducts. "He will get the A grievance procedure 1s under-Boesendorfer and leave her the Steinway to play on. This way they can both way. said the school's Monsignor make music."' lawyer Marvtn Mitchelson said Thursday. Mitcbelson Patnck Gallagher, but a dcc:1~1on re presented Dr. Newton J. Fnedman. who had sued for visitation rights to the won't be reached until next weekj. ke)boards. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;,__ Heres a list of lea · · banks with lower rates on new car loans than Bank of America: ·-----1'i---- - Check us out first. Among Cn lifornia·~ 5 leading hnnb. none offerc; ftxl'J rate nt'W car lo;tn:'I that ht·clt wh.u you can get _._ .... fl t B,.nk of America That\ a ... m.mg claim. hut it'' rruc We guarantt•e 1t'' If you fin d a lower ~nnu.11 percentage rntc for a hxed rate new ~ar loan publi hed hv eciJ rity Pac1fk . Well-.. F:lrJ.!O. Crocker nr F1r..,t lnta~t.tte banks. we'll m;atch 1t o whv spt•nJ you r ume checking tHH thc othc~? Ju,t "h'P hy any convemently located Bank of Aml'rtl .t bran h Or c:lll 1-·551 -~ 3 ~ 3 Mon -Fn . a m • pm ,ind .1rrlv 'll give ynu .1 prdtmmnry credtt decision the next hul\tnt'"' \i.i\ m Bank of America We want the job~ "t Hl•l•llh"f' ~rr""' '" 1'11"1 •ul-w.J1rt'd rut..lt-hl'\I ArR .... II\"'' lh IW" 'I! 1 ••• ""'""'«° St!\,,, .... "" Ml•'• h r ~re rm• •n·•" '"'"k~ .. l )fir•\~ ul rhr.~1.-:h lul~ ,, '11"' • ·-- I A.I * Of'anoe Cout OAILV PILOT/ Frk:l.-y, M-.y 30, 1988 SahlrUJ May 11 ARIES (Mareb 21-April 19): Protect "precious" privacy." Focu on meditation, !Ulization that beln~aJone is n.ot synony"!!ou~ with ~ing lonely. You'll be invited to unusual • metaphys1cal event. Pisces. Virgo figure prominently. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Emphasis on power, authority •. sxrsuasion. strona love relationship. You'll have chance to make contact with one who reveals secret of"financial coup." You'll achieve objective:. OEMINI (May 21-June 20): Restrictions arc removed, sky is the luntt, audience multiplies and you could be on verge of" fame and fonune." You milht be asked to appear before the media, you could win big money contest. CANCER (June 21-July 22): s Emphasis on independence, emotional YONEY responses. new starts, possibility of "new love." You'll get to hcan of 0MARR matters, you'll be flattered. wined and ••••••••••••• dined. Sc.cnano features romance. var- iety, cxc1tement of discovery. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Dec1s1on reached in connection wi.th ca~eer, romance. Stick to familiar ground, don't reach too far afield. lntu1tton stnkes target -teach and learn, follow first impressions. Aquarius native plays paramount role. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Give full play to curiosity -communic~te. make inquiries, discern motives, refuse to play second fiddle. You'll receive "good news" concerning possible law maneuver. Gemini, Sagittanus play roles. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Check details, study leases. be aware of your rights. Individual who shares ideals is willtng to become staunch ally -you need but ask. Stress frankness, credibility, courage of conv1ct1ons. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Many of your best qualtues surface Members of opposite sex find you attractive. will make no secret ofu. You could nde crest of populanty Know ll, plan accordingly. Ge mint. V 1rgo pla} roles. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): Be prepared for s1gn1ficant change 1n lifestyle, home. Scenano htghltghts money, secunty, basic health. emplo}· ment, relations with panner or mate. Long-range prospects will come into loharp, clear focus. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Aura of myster). 1ntngue dominate~ personal scenario. You'll receive .. secret" message. Plans subject to change. travel could be included, close relative makes unusual request. Pisces nati ve figures prominently. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Spotlight on money, po~i'\1on. authonty, intensified love relattonship. Scenano accents pressure of added rcspons1· bihty. Older individual will lend benefit of experience. could help provide funding. PISCES (Feb. 19-¥arch 20): You'll stnke chord of universal appeal. Means you could be talking about. wnttngabout love. You'll reach objccttvc. you'll finish long-standing project and be rid of heavy-duty obligations. Anes figures prominently lF MAY 31 JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic. stubborn. creative. rebelltous. dtd not fit into family pattern and could have been se parated ltterall}' or psychologically from one of both parents at relattvely earl) age Taurus. Leo, Scorpio people play important rotes in your ltfe You make ma)Or domestic adjustment this year -could include actual change of rt>stdence or mantal status. People remember }OU -you 1mpnnt style. }'Ou. often create c.ontroversy and November will be memorable for you in 1986 Shar-pei dogs saved from near-extinction On "Hill Street Blues" that fi c- tional far-nght SWAT commander is shown sometimes with hi s Chinese Shar-pe1 dog. Maybe! you've seen it . l'hat antique breed dates back to 200 B.C. Now about 20,000 exist. but not so long ago onl y 12 pair were left in the world. The meat was considered a dellcac) .\I most the enure breed had been eaten up Q What's the fastest fish'' ~ Blue shark. 45 mph ' The world 1s d1v1ded into those who open presents C'hnstmas morn- ing and those who open presents Chnstmas Eve -but not evenly d1v1ded. Morning. 45 percent Eve. 55 percent. Pepper was pnced per single pep- percorn 1n old Euroix That's why Chnstopher Columbus thought ll might be profitable to find some. Q. What does seaweed do for ice cream'> L.M. BOYD .\. Prevents tce crystals when the ice cream 1s refrozen. It's called alg1n. not seav.eed. And dcscnbed as a ~tabtltzer. Q Ho" can you tell tf a deck of cards 1s marked? A. Grasp the deck firml}' by 1he bottom w11h one hand -with the backs toward you -and nffie the top of the deck with the other hand. If the back pattern stands still, the deck is all nght. If the design shafts. it's marked. that's called the John Scarne nffie an honor of the world's foremost authonty on such matter\. L.M. Boyd Is 11 syadlc:ated colamalsl. Women's prisons getting crowded Things I learned en route to look_ing up other things: •That within the last decade. the number of American women in pnson has trebled, to more than 20.000, leaving some 33.000 children motherless. (And American women are entering pnson at a faster rate then they arc getting out.) •That although Canada is a "bil- inaual" country, with nearly one- thtrd of its populattoo of French descent, only one~ighth of its citizens can speak both English and French. •That in the game of bridge, the success of one out of every three contracts depends on the opening lead. •That more films were made io New Yorlc City than in Hollywood last ~ear: 78 feature films and 72 television films, generating nearly SI. 7 billion for the city. •That by the end of the Korean War. 90 percent of the forestsofSouth Korea that had existed before World War II had been reduced to wasteland by combat. erosion. and the desperate need for fi rewood. •That during the I 960s. the aver- age contract price for a U.S. navaJ ship was $24 million: but srncc 1980, the avera,&e has risen ncarl}' eight times. to $19 1 millton. •That .. amph1b1an" creatures. ac- cording to their name. should hve both 1n water and on land: but. in fact , some never go into the water and others never leave 11 •That at the height of the .. tultp craze" in Holland in the 17th centu ry. fo r a single bulb of a tulip called the SIDNEY Hu11s V1ccroy, one collector exchanged a thousand pounds of cheese, four oxen, eilht pigs, 12 ~eep, a bed, and a suit of clothes. •That the average cost of having a baby in the United States is now $3,200-but more than 25 percent of Amencan women m their child- bearing years have oo pnvatc or pubhc health insurance. (The p<>?rest women, of course. are least ltkely to have health coverage.) •That since: the: U.S. military buildup of the last few years, the Pentagon has funded close to 40 percent of all research and develop- ment, while the comparable figure m Japan is less than I percent: yet Japan expons $5 billion more in bjgh-tech products to the United States than 11 impons from us. (Japan's share of the world's high-tech markets tnpled between 1962 and 1980. while our share dechned by nearly one-third.) •That .. scuttlebutt," meaning gossip. was onginally the lidded cask from which a ship's crew dre\I, its dnnk1ng water, and where rumors "ere exchanged, ltke the offi ce dnnk· ing fountain. Sid.Dey Harri• I• • •YadlcatN colomJJ/st. Veteran regrets not showing feelings DEAR ~NN LAN DERS: Some- thing happened to me recently that tore me apart. I made my first v1s1t to the Vietnam Memonal looking for Robert W1l - ltamson's name. He was my buddy in a untt near Ple1ku . where he died 1n Januar)' 1968. The polished marble wllh all those names and the .. anety of flowers got to me I was fighting to keep my composure when I heard someone say "Roben W1lltamson." In front of me stood a man and a woman wtth two children. The man was holding up one oftht• children 10 touch the name. I wanted to speak to them and find out how they were related. It could have been a meaningful and heart- warming ex perience but I was afraid to show my emottons. I knew I would break down and cry, so I walked away. Since then I have relived that 1nc1dent thousands of t1mes th1nk1ng of what I should bave done, but of course it's 100 late. Please tell your readers not to be ashamed to show their emotions. l realize now that I wouldn't have been the first Vietnam veteran to cry at that monument and I won't ha ve been the la s t. I NCEREL Y, KEN i.\NDERSON. OREGON. WlS. (P.S. I was a member of the 81 5 Engineer Battalton. 937th Combat Engineer Group. It was a terrific unit.) DEAR KEN: Thank you for sbariDg an Intensely personal experience. t am especially pleased that It arrived In time to appear on Memorial Day. Tbe debt we owe to oar veterans can never be repaid nor adeqaately expreued. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was especiall y interested in the reader who expressed 1mtauon with a man in the office who said "hello" when- ANN LANDERS ever he saw her (or others) who· worked there This often happened several ttmes a day. I was rem mded of a doorman a I a commercial bu ilding where I used to work. Ever} day when 1 walked in. his standard ~eting was, "H1. Ho" do yo u feel'' This began to anno}' me because some days 1 didn't feel all that terrific and I felt obhged to say ... Just fine." rather than start a conversation about my physical condition. One morning when I was really draggmg my fanny and should have stayed in bed, the doorman gave me the usual greeting. It was more than I could take. I looked him ~uarely in the eye and asked. "Joe. do you REALLY care how I feel?'' He responded cunly, "No·• I rcplted. "I didn't think so. so please \lop asking." Joe did stop for a whale but then he began to ask, .. Ho" ya' doin"}" That bugged me. too. because I knew he didn't care how I was doing. Please, Ann Landers, urge people to be more sincere. The phony concern I see all around as truly a pain in the neck. - MARY M. IN MANHATTAN. DEAR M.M.M: I don't believe "How do you feel?" and "How ya' doln'?" are questions that indicate serious concem . They are more like greeting• and 1boold be responded to aa such. "OK." will do very nicely. And may I respectfully suggest that you raise your threshold of Irritation? It will Improve yoar mental ud physical bealtb. Kiley aids cons' impossible dream By the A11oc:lated Pren NORFOLK. Mas'\ -Actor Richard Kiley, who won a Ton~ award as Don Quixote tn "The Man of La Mancha ... ~rs he wa\ "absolutely specchle'ls· over a pnson troupe's preparations for a production of the musical. "Out of sptt and batltng wire they've created magJc," Kiley. 64 ~ad after coaching the 20 inmate\ of the Awc!iome Convict Am Group at the Massachusetts C or· recuon Institution for their June 15 performance. "La Mancha" 1'1 a musical adaptation of a novel wrmcn by Miguel de \ervante while he wu 1mpnsoned 1n 1605 for trying to collect tc1'es from the Roman Catholic church during the pan1sh lnqu1!11t1on "The tmaginatJon has no wall!I." Kiley reflected. "The~ au)'~ have flown over the walls 1n thctr minds for ~Urt I aue s the only unncrv1na moment came when I lhooaht that 1n the end we go home and they ao back to their cells " Brooke •ICned NE\\' YORK Actress BreMt 5'1e141 has been s1ined to Riobard KUey a thrct-year, mulllmtllton~ollar contract to appear m tclcv1s1on and pnn1 advertistna for Amd Brooke 8hJelda Extra Ory anupersp1rant. the company says The adverti"ina. oont1nu1n1 the brand's "Get a Ltttle Closer .. theme. will first appear on tCk· vision in June and 1n print 1n August, Anid's maker. Carter Products. a d1v1o;1on of \ancr- Wallacc Inc., said. John Mack, prcs1den1 of Carter Products. ~id 1t selected the actress "becau~ c;hc projects a wholewme. yet o;oph1stt~ted image." Che .. upaet UPPtNGHAM , England - Three member of England's JUnior che s squad defc:ued Gary K.aaparov 1n multt·challenae match an which 1he world cham- pion won 11 game and tted 1n six. IUsparov, 22. who wa paid several thousand dollan for the challcnac in th1 centraJ EnaJand commun1ly, took about 30" se<:- ond for each move Tuesday as he went from table lo table. Phtltp Mons. I 8, one of the victon, said Kasparov "made one fat.al move and that was the end of the match.'' Kasparov 11 1n Bntatn to tn· spcct the venue for his world tttle rtm1tcb with Anatoly K.a'J)Ov. which beams July 28 at London's Park Lane Hotel. READ 'EM AND HEAP Ooth vulnerable North dt.>tll:~ NORTH • K6 3 :'A 10 6 4 ":A WF~ST +9875 \il Q 2 0 Q 974 •J82 •A Q96 :J EAST •Q 104 \i1 J987 OK6 • K 10 7 4 SOUTH +AJ2 ""'K6 3 ')J 108632 •6 Tht> hldd1ng. North East I• Pus I ~ Pass 2 NT Pass Pass Pass South 1 ¢ 1 NT 3 NT Openini;i lt>ad N llll' of t . W t>8 t Pas8 Pus Pass It 1~ ;tll very well to know that eVl'l y card tells a story You ha vt• to learn to read the book We do not envy l'\orth's pltl(ht ul his thml 111rn. Ile had started todt• s<'rtbE' h1~ distribution, but ht.• hud not yet ~hown his strength I k eventually dE'<'lded that, although hts 'hapt> was not 1d<'al, a rebid nf l wo not rump ga \'ea reasonably at·- curnte pttture of hts holding • outh had JUSt enou(th to go on to game w c.,t lt.•d tht• top of ht!) spade se- quence. and a natural play for de· C'hirer would b<.• allow that to run round tn hi' hand That would guaranll'l' thrPl' trirks tn tlw suit and 'leVl'n ovt•rall The only platt' then to look for the l wo extra tricks would be 1n th<' club 'Hiil CHARLES Go REN That. however, would require not only a successful finesse in thf' <;Utt, but a 4.3 break as well. Such a combination 1s considerably agamst the odds The opemng lead almost surely marked East for the queen of <;pad<'S If that were so, a more prum1sing ltne presented itself ' The diamond suit t'Ould be set up If 11 broke 3-3, or 4-2 with one hand havtng a doubleton honor. Declarl'r won thf' king of spade~ at tri<'k onl', t'ashf'd th<' a<'e of dia- mond~ and <'1tme to hand with thE' king cif heart" to lead a low dia- mond! F:a~l's king won, but hE' could dn dt>clarf'r no harm. Hts • ht•art return was won on the tablt> und 11 spade was led lo the J8Ck When that held. ti was all over but th(' shouting Dcdarcr continued with lhl' .1at•k of diamonds to the qm•t•n , and ht' <illll had the ace or "Pade'l a.-; an entry to get back to l11s hand LO t•ash the long dia· monds Declan·r ended up with an ov<'rtnck. ':~~:t:~· S@\l<lil 1"\-~ c lr~ · WOIO UMI ------ld,,•d loy ClAT I ,01.lAH 0 Reo1rongt ••••••1 of •~e lo~' K10,,.bled wo•dt b" low to fo,m tour )1mol• wo'd' I UNCEAN I I I' I I I I LARP l I 1 1 I I t . ---- Pressed lex 11me I has1 1y I T I C E y I ' prepared leltoverc; tor c"nner I .I 1 5 I Wh11P eahng I moaned I gp1 _ _ _ _ ttred ot plann ng meals Slunned my husbJnd blunPO I N 0 C J U D I You ....... 1"''"'., ~-,-;.,..,-..... 1--.1""6 -,.,l':---4 0 " c ~·~ " • • ~ r "~ o •erl t, f il1"U " • .,. ,,,,n1nu """'d' I... --JL-..l.-....J...---1'---'---' ., 1111111••1 •P +,om ''f'IP No l bale ~ ~ r P ••; " vs•Pra 1! !lf P' ' ~ I' (!'<f £ ' JI A Pf ~ TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Dandruff source 6 Freshwater mussel 10 Segments of hrs. 14 Surf walker 15 Drinks up 16 Equal: pref 17 Apparition 18 Sprites 19 Miid oath 20 Salutary 22 Lotion 23 Army vehicle 24 NY team 26 Tax expert 29 Worry 31 Anesthetic 32 Chapeau shop 34 Vanity 38 Plenty 39 Quaff 41 Arm bone 42 Requirement 45 Turn 48 ScottiSh river 49 Linger on 50 AdmlraJlon 51 Formulas 2 3 14 17 20 32 38 42 51 52 ~ 57 83 88 89 55 Walked over 57 A Musketeer 58 Settlers 63 Calf front 6-4 Scorla 65 Accustom 66 Grieve 67 Buck heroine 68 Of Chinese of Old 69 Cicatrix 70 Unite 71 Ontario river DOWN 1 Dip 2 -by gained 3 Coarse fiber 4 Theater slang 5 Molded beforehand 6 Slags 7 Holy man 8 Employ 9 Unprinted works abbr 10 Say1 one's piece 11 US symbol 12 Hanker PREVIOUI PUZZLE IOlV£D 13 Teams 21 " -:-every Ille 22 Tooth stump 25 Mature 26 African lake 27 Haggard 28 -bomb 30 Strange 33 Bookseller 35 Dorsal bones 36 Ground cover 37 Hairy growth 40 -cement 43 Plies 44 Co1oring 46 Eddo 47 Struggler 51 Irritates 52 Moral 53 Porcelain 54 Incrustation 56 Lunch spat 59 Race surtace 60 Indeed 61 One of three 62 Faction 64 Inelegant 11 12 t3 THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "I like the way they tee up these dandelions .. MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson ''Now we·re stuck here ... why did you throw his ball?"' PEANUTS GARFIELD T4ERE I .\M ON TME (OVER WOW '. WAS IT A SELLOUT~ " f ... i ;, .. Ill l ,-. .. ; i • EORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VI P) "Shorty wants to know If he can do his chin-ups before you start cooking." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham l j I ' by Charles M . Schulz H(V, 006! l LAUGH AT YOUR [LIKE PICKINC"1 ON TME C70C1 LOOK4!>! I ePIT ON c,.tOOR f=EE1" ! NHT POOR A~ LOMG AC!> THERE TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ~IT UP GIN6£RI 51T uPI '~ ROSE IS ROSE - Fl~AL£~~ TAWR A~ER A ~I( AT 1ME~/ ~,~~· l4!J A !>TURPCrl FENCE BETWEEN U5 by Tom K. Ryan ----------~--, _OLISIEST SOLlVENIF' V'EN~ t~'?) ~-) WEV!: E\/!:P UNi..::AS~~r-'1 v by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOM COUNTY U.S . ACRES HEY.OR60N. l MEAi\ lw'OO FINAUY MATC.HEP ~R tGG6 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE KEPE5 Tl'"E STME I EU.'/. yoo CAN De.C.10E. Wt-1:.RE. lo PlJfYCJJR fbDIL>M (.;; Al , WE ~1ED 4'0U 10 HAVE T~IS Wim.H ~ A REMEMBRANCE FR01V1 AU. Of US ~ °™E FAWt.:W .1 DOONESBURY ',>,; ... .'HI' ' UJll)I ,M-161.\t MV 1*£1)M.~1,~ IV! -----' . . \ .... ....... ~-t. if(),\,f • ~J ,11· IAJ1lk M' I (<!)\t· "'V 'X ' . ' -'')I l:\ •• .;, ' 1(_)1 fi,'ln ' I \ ,,.. -1,.. _; ,, ~ /. • \\':~ ' _t,~· I • • ~ • t • -. ~. . . ' I ~ '· ' - Orang' Coast OAILV PILOT/Friday. May 30, 19M A7 .. ,, .. > ..... ' ~r ~..,.lXJA. .. l ~A W<£ ANO IO I ~Af.i ~l:J \ • .... • by Berke Breathed by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally by Tom Batiuk by Gary Trudeau ----4••.M - Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Friday, M.y 30, 1988 ----- Proposition 44 may be solution to limited water Perhaps the most important single issue facing Southern Californians is water. Will there be enough of it in their fu ture to sustain the agriculture, industry and population growth that have transformed a desert into a bustling oasis? Despite the best efforts of some very powerful, very bright and very concerned people, there is no sure answer. No one is predicting disaster. but a lot of experts are warning that we'd better face the issue now. before we find ourselves dry. When water resources arc discussed. when plans to divert the precious fl uid from places of plenty to naturall y arid areas are the subject of debate. one cautionary note invariably is sounded: Conserve. Proposition 44 on the June 3 ballot proposes a $150 million bond issue to provide low-interest loans to local water agencies. Half the money would be used for water conservation and ground water recharge programs. The other half would be allocated to all cv1ate problem~ created by agricultural drainage. The loans would be administered by the Depart- ment of Water Resources and the St.ate Water Resources Control Board. the agencies responsible for water supply and quality. The 20-year loans would cost local agencies only 4 percent interest. while the state would pick up the administrative t.ab. estimated at $70 million. Supporters of Prop. 44 emphasize the importance ot conservation and point o ut that the cost of such programs ts beyond the financial resources of most local agencies. We think conservation programs are of enormous importance and. in the long run, may provide a large part of the ultimate solutton to Southern California's water supply problems. We endorse Prop. 44. Opinions eJ(pressed tn lhts space are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on thts page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted Tile Oatl'y Pilot PO Box 1560 Costa Mesa 92626 Phone 642-6086 Laura hasn't been ho1D.e for 1nore than 570 days I 11 tht• f-.d1 tor Laura Bradhur. d1sappearl·d <kt IX I 9X4 It ha<, lx'en O>t·r 'i 70 da\ '> \I Ole Laura ha\ \lcpt 1n hn own bed 'W hen )nu put ~our thild to bed tonight pull up a thair '>II dov.n and reml·mbt:r-hl·r h1rth. hl·r fir\t \mtle laugh k1'>\ hl·r fir'>t hug l kr tir\t v.11rd \tl·p her firc;t 'l nh: me Rl'· mt·mht r hn firq h1rthda\ < hri,tma\ ~ a\tl'T her fir,t que'>t11,n \Oii t11uldn·t an,v..:r Tht· pure JC1\ ol watching "our little girl ~mv. learn laugh Cf1 and JU\t llvi.: lite '-11v. dn\l \our l'}t.:' and 1mag11w th.it ht:J empt\ l·mpt\ nov. for )71J night' lm:ig1m· not kn11v.1nF ti \ht·" h.ipp\ \,1d l;111jo;htng l r. ing t 11ld hung!) hurt or t'\l•n .111\l" lmag1nt• not bl"1ng ,1hk to k1\\ \our thtld gooll night. "Jo"' go to tx·d .ind \ln·p v.dl Pl.EA<)£ monn I'> urgl·nth net·ded to umtinue tht <,earch to hnng. I ..iura hOml· Parent\ ht•lp1ng parent\ I riends helping fr1t•nd.\ Ne1ghhor' hl'lp1ng m·1ghhor\ Pall' and ~11..c Brallhun nel·d 11111 ht Ip \n\ cuntnbu11on v.111 he.· grt•ath· .1ppreua1cd. Fnrnd., 111 find I aur.1. f'() Bo'I. ~71~. llu n11ng1on lka<h 'l~h4X I .1ura " n11"ing no ll"" ncm than 'ht· h:i\ OCl'n tor "711 d:n <. Tll0\.1..\'°I '-' C1n\'°1\l<I> llun11n~1nn lk.11 h Landowners don't play fairly I<> lht· f d1tor I hr 1rnuhle v..1th \Ila rt in Hrnv..cr " 11lumn I\ that thi.' ttlk ·in f>a· 'Pl'l tt \ 1· " not re all}' true \11 r Hrowt·r ' \ ll"W\ ari.: hea qi\ h1J\Cd tilv..ard\ thr lot .ti land de- ' t•locx·r1; 'lt'""'ll<Hnl\ ~k '' thus at nnt t•n <I ol lhl· \pcctrum .ind out of flel\JX'l 11\l' I hl•re l'i no lr>lumn1.-.1 in thl· f'ilot ' l·lhlnnal pap.1• who hal· .mu·' \llr Brnwl•r\ \Jl•v., I hl· ornl\ h,1IJnll" \lTm' to u1ml' Imm thl' I llllf\ ro r hl f-d 1tm o,nt111n \ntl lt-1'l<Hl"11 \ lt•lllr \.l.rtll'r h .... \t·r\ little inl1uentl' t11mp.1rt•d 111 .1 dl'\doper' tacl· to lt1tt' inllul'ntc \qth thl' pc1lit1<1<1n\ 11\ J l>.i' 1d \' <10ha1h 'illua11on and '-1r Hrov.l·r" \nlidh hch1nd C 111lt.11h It \t•em\ tn nw th.11 mmt ol thl' l<•t.11 1.k\t•lopcr<; tl11n'1 pt.n la1rl\ v.1th our poht11JI <.\'\tcm lhn hu\. prorx·rt~ then l'\pcl 11 ani· hL1nl hl· 1n t h,mit n~· lht inning lo tin dop thur prof)l:rh v.1th mon· dt·n"'' JrHI thu\ n11H1' prol11' C t'rt.11111~ \.I.hen I bou1thl m' rmip NI\ I .Htcptnl lht• mn1np that '-'l'nt "'''~ tht· 1Hirth,1\1' I rn \Urt• I uiuldn t e.t·l .1ppfll\-,1l t1H h.lltj(t" fhl' lllntn~ f'llll an ap.irtrnt•nt hntl\l' 11n nn f{ I 1onnl pr11pt'l1\ .inti thu\ makt mo1t ol .1 pr11lit \ t't 1kvd11pt'r\ h.1H' lllt·n )(t"tt1ng OJ\~a\ With Thi\ 01.H ltCl' lln I v.holt''-<lll' OAANGf COAST Daily Pilat h.1\1.-. tc11 quite v1ml' 11mt• \nu will \Ct 1h1' phenomenon '" lwnn n \OU read about "(1eneral l'lan \mt•nd- ment<.,. (lhangtng 111 1hc toning v.11h1n .1 commun1t\ \ ( •l'nerul Pl.1nl \o lllan\. ( reneral Pl.Ill \mcndmt nt' hJ\t' hct•n .1ppnnn.I h\ lc1i..1I g11\l Tll nit 111\ th.Jt 11 I\ ah<.olutcl\ tl11 \11rprl\1 th.11 Wl' h,1\l· 1r;1tl1l nruhkm' \II thl" \MlllU\ l 1111·' .md tht \llUnl\ h.1\t' ,1pproH'cl <•l'nt'TJI Pl.111 \mt·nc.Jmlnl\ '-'llhout ,1 t11emlin.1tl'd po lit \ t·,11 h <IC 11 ng ,I\ JI t ht•\ I 1 \l 111 .1 \iHuum thin~1nii. 1h:i1 their pnlllt\'' .tr1· not related to \urrciund1ng lllrrt mun111c<. and 0111 1ran<,portJl111n nc·1v.ork Thu' v..t• h:l\t' 1raffo p111h lem'i I urge the polttt\ 1;in., 1n 'lhov. .1 l1111l- l,,Urage and n·<,pon\lhtlll\ ''ht n thl'' .ire laced with mou· < rn1cral Plan \ mendmcnl\ 1h.11 11\l fl'<l'l Ol'n'll' .tnc.J traOic Martin Rrov.l'r and thl· dn i.'101)\ f\ 'hould knov. thJt v.11h lrct•d11111 tomes rnpc>n'1h1li1~ Tl'\pon"h1hl\ 111 live w1th10 the rule\ (lon1ng l.1v.'1 tron1call)'. I he In inc ( o I \1r llrowcr\ e\-employcr) ~cm\ 111 fl( more ~n-;111"e 1n th1\ re.,pcl l rcn'nth thdn Mr Brov..er even n.,k1ng tor ll'" dcn,1t)' 1n ..ome of II\ propc:rt) JAN D \. \!'. DFR\1 00 f \.1 I> NrwJ'<>n lkal h ,,.nil Zlnl ro110r T-T9" Men-oono E4•tO< Doti,.., r.11y (d1w T-C'-"' Newt Edolor C1911t9Mff ~" Edill)f ~Cll\Hdmlan Con11o11ei ~ L CMtrell Production M11neQft< T IWfJ K ltftdle Cttculalton M"MOtf .......... ........, Ma11191ing Dfec:1or c!:a~~ ·'It Is absolutely Impossible for even area onably well-Informed person to make a ny enseofthe(JJab/llty Insurance) lssue,gtven the blatantly political goals of all Involved. . . · _ IN PERSPECTIVE Just owning land doesn't give you authority over it .\n open letter to 1r'> l>a1~y Thorix· P1Ccinlh. v..ho ha'> the nw .. fortunl· ul ov.ntng 4' acre' of land in llun11ng1un Beach and lll ht·1ng 74 ~car\ of age lkar tr~ 1'1Cnnll1 'OU l.'aU\l'O quill' ,\ \Ill 111 the H11n1tngton lkach Planning < 11m- m1'>\1t1n chamber'> the other night v.-hen )Ou ltm!X't..I in on \fUtlhc., to plead that the good loll..\ of the u1:-ot llun11nF1t111 Bra\h ··not tJkl· m~ pTO(X'rt> ,11Aa) from mt•"' ;Jftl'I 4(} 'car\ ot 0\1. na .. h1 r [)on 't \ciu Tl' JI Ill'. llcar l.ilh I hill "'hat \OU 111A.n 1\ not mere propcrt\ - 11 " v.et land'> \ lot ha'> hapcx·m·J 10 the l1i.'ld ol real e'>ldll' \tntl" \OU hought wur lanc.J 1n IC)4h \.ou prohahl) thought 'ou pur' ha'>l'd \v..ampland "o 1ntln·d tt.1tl '0111 "I ou houghl \A.i.'tl.intl Nn """ndl·r '11u V. \'ll' called a .. want~n anll wlt'l\h .. lk,docx·r <1nd a '\peculator '\' 0111 pka that .. 1 can·1 get tht· monl') 11111 to pa) the taxes" c.J1tl nothing tn mdt the largl· and 001'>~ audll'nLl' that pad.cd the Planning C omml\\lun thaml)l:r' o v.h.it 1f \OU hJ\l' to pa\ thl· <>range< ounl' ta\ tolkl'lor $fi~4 a 'H'i.'k \l"ar 1n and \'ear out'' · You a'il..L·d ··1, 1h1!> v.-hat the ..\mcman tlag \IJnd\ tor -for pcopk Ill l CI01l' llU1 and IJl..c \OUr propert:-'1'" 1 tw ·'"'""l'T " · H'' ·· During the f'lil\I I ) H"Jr'>. lhl· \rm·man flag has n1nw 1(1 \tancJ for an) group nl ut1tl'n'> ha' 1ng thl· right to tell \OU v..hat 'uu nm do v.11h your prOJX'rl} I hl nrof)l'rt~ dot·\ not actuall} hclong to) OU, II hi.'long, 10 all ol U') 'y OU arl· ml"ll'h the rart•takn. < our!\ ha\<.' ruled that proix·rt) ha., not hc.·en taken 1111 ha'ian} \aluca1 all remaining. \ \oung coupk in thl· MARTIN BROWER northern Caltlom1a cuv ot ~au~hto nought a "1cw lot se"e.ral \ear!> ago hut b} the 11me the) v.ere read\ to build a home. the lot betame known a'> a '1ewpo1nt for the ne1ghhorhoo<l and a bullc.Jtng permit v.a-, not granted r he couple 'iucd the Cit). hut the.· u1 urt held th<11 tht• lot v.as not taken from them -the~ wuld s111l u\l' 11 IO plant cro1>' or rul!.c a garden '°11milarl) dear Mr\ P1cc1nlli. your land" not being taken from )'OU Thr 'itall' < oa!ltal ( onscnann will re· P<H tcdl} hu} 11 from ~ou tor a wetland prt'\t'f\ c tor $I 0.000 per acre . Ne' er mind that a\ re<,1dent1al land 11 ,., rcportl'dl~ v.<11lh .SI m1ll1on an acn· \\hat " .,ncral m1lllon doll;11' among tncnc.J\"1 But )OU c.Jon·t want to dt•\elop homt.>s You v..ant to ht.>lp Huntington Ht•ach h) huild1ng .. a tl(:au11lul hott•I 111 rt\al :"-ll'wrort Reath '°Ian l>ll'gll ,1nd I ong Realh ·· Noy, \t1U h,1vc dnn1: 11 Mrs P1lttr1lh · I 11u1I-; rcalh don·1 like hotel\ ">urt·. the\ hnng large .imourw. ol mllOi.') into the ctl > from hed ta' and \alt•\ ta'I. v.hlle gcnl'rating acJd111onal tourist dollar'> Sure thn create a h11\lnC'>S and '>IK1<1l len1cr tor the cit\. Hut locals still don't like them -unitl 1hc} arr open. What 1<; more important. howevrr. 1., th:it \ou Mr.. P1cunlli, own v..etland<. \nd thc-.c v.ctland'i OOll" t all<'d \v.amps. have not hcc.•n 1dcn1- 1lied a'i v.1ldlitc habitat\ :-Oov. ""'" all cnJO}' w1ldhfe. and v..c tertainl} v.-ani wildlife to rontinur and to Ooumh But the land you own happen!. 10 Ix· considered some uf the last wetland 1n liou1hcm C'ahforn1a Upner t\cv..port Ba}. )'OU ask'> '){)me of the la)t wt'tland 1n Southern Cahforn1a The Ballona Creek area 1n Manna Del Rt}? Some of the last wetland 1n \outhcrn ( altfom1a San Du~go ( red v. ildhfe prescn t''> Some of the la\1 v..etland 1n "iou1hcrn California M1!>s1on Ba> 1n \an Diego'! A lot of the last wetl and in ')outhern California In fall. all ot thl' urhan develo(l- ment in the \tate of Cahlorn1a occup1e~ about 2 pcrcl•nt of tht! \late -and th1!> could go up to 3 percent 1f de' elopment continue'> apace until the year :!CX)() Tht.> other 98 percent'' Open space 1nclud1ng a lot ot the Ja-;t remaining v.ctland 1n Cahfom1a ~o. m\ ~oo<l Mr'> P1ccinll1. thl) 1s a holdup E-=11hcr <,ell your land to the Lonser' anq for I percent of us wonh. or keep 1t so that we can drive b} }Our land forever and admire the v.1ldlife -1 mean you wrt of have )Our "Cr) own San Diego Zoo. e'l(cept ~ou can·1 charge admission fhe property ta.It'' fhc $654 a week ~ou currently pa~ will c.on11nue to 1ncrca<,e o"cr 1hc }rare; 'iO I hope you ha' c a good hold un }our C\oc1al \<.'l Urtt\ All of u\ who enjoy watching the v.ildltft• on )OUr land will send O\Cr our tax collector on Dec 15. Son or a reverse of the San Diego Zoo We w~uch the animals on )'our land and we collect a fee . Mart/a Brower publislles tbe m ontbly newslettu "Mart/a Brower's Orange Couaty Re/Hirt." Is insurance crisis caused by lawyers or politicians? Difficult to make sense of issue in h eat of campaign ' \\( R\\tf'-10-lhc,l·npoor who ha\c no n1;11t•11al :t\\t'I' to protn t an<..I lhl' \l'f\. f ll h wh11 h.1 \ c enough monei. to prnln t th\·nt art·n·1 r'\pt·t 1ath U>nlt'rnnt 1hou1 in· \Ura nu· B111 lor tht• ",1\t m,qcmt\ 111 < .111· torn1ans the avatl.ihtl11\ ot 111\uranrc ,11 rt';l\onahlc ratt·\ " a m.i11er ot maJor l ont,ern -one ol thl' Prill'\ v..c JM\ lor It' ing 1n a modern 1ndu' 1nah11:d, and IJ11gat1on-pront• '>OClt'I\ Wl· ln\Urc our ll\'l'\, our lar\. our hrinw\ Jnd our bu'iinl'<\W\. and a\ la\p.1\l'f\ we hrlp bu\ 1n,urance lo protect our government agenul'\ lrom r111nou) l1ab1llt\ 1a...,.,u1ts l ln- fortunately. we c:an't bu) 1n\urantc aga1n\I political f11mOam mcr\ There .., we arc h(-ing told. an 'mo,uramecm1., .. 1ha1 makl'' liab1hl)' l'O"eragc c11her un,1,atlJhle or proh1h1t1vel)' e~p<'n<;1vr .\' \!.>Ith an) \ulh media ht'<I"> {n\1.,. that ha~ be\<>mt· a hall IO ht'. bounced arc1\Jnd the political arrn:i - ~o mu\ h ~o that 1t " 1mpo'i\1hle 10 M'.'narnte fact from lane) The 1n'iurancc cn,1s. 1f there,., onr 1\ d national phenomenon But the polit1c:'i ol the mntter ha"e bcrnmt' c\pcc1al h acute 1n C alifornm 1n 1h1\ election vcar I ht• 111\uranc:e 10du~try. ll."lckcd by hu<.1nf\\ group~ and local govern· mcnh '>a) a cyclic \OOne\ 1n the tn\utancc market -created 1n pnrt b> dt"cltn10a intcre,t rate'i -h s bttn eicacrrbated b) -;uit-happy lawyer\ Ont' answer to the cn\1\ \."l\'1 th15 falt1on ts mod1ficat1on of the so. called "deep-pocket'' doctnnc That doctnnc mnkcs all defendants 1n u vii 1n1ury suits equally respon..ihlc DAN WALTERS for Judgment\. rcgardlc'i\ of their dt·grce ofliahd1t ) That po-;111on 15 cncapsuled 1n Propo'i1t1on 51. whrch will be decided h} vmcrs ir1 J unc Hut con<.umcr group<, and trial lav.\l'rs 1ns1'>t that the 1n,urancctnw. c11h.l'r result\ from other cau~c; \Uch a\ bad 1nve\tmcnt 1.lctl\1tms. or 1<\ hcing manufatturcd hy msurancr rnmpan1cs lo scducr th<: publlr into changing a law that prott'CI'> tnJured p&rtle\ f rnm that ha'ilC conflict hBH' Oov..cd other elemt•nl\ ol the great 111\urance debate r he ant1-Propo\1t1on ~I group·!> alhe\. 'K'ekmg 10 focus med1a·aurn- tmn on the alleged c;1n\ of the 1n')urancc indu.,try. ha't' mnved 1n c,everal d1rcct10n~. < nucal leg1c;la1or\. led hy l\s- 'l<'mbl} Speaker Wallie Brown. have 1ntroduct'd a ~nes of bill., that would compel tht' 1n)urancc 1ndustl) to perform 1n dc~1rt'd ways. from ending geographical d1ffcrcnt1ah in auto 1nc;urance rates to hc1ng required to prov1de rerta1n li.mdc; of coverag<' On nother level the industry'\ cr111c~ have \ought to pin ~ome of the blame for the '"'uranct cnst"i 6n 1he tntc Department oflnsurance of the adm1n1strat1on of Gov < reorae r>eu - krnc11an A Brown heutl:'nont who hM taken u lcad10g critical roll:'. .\\· scmblywoman M1'1(1ne Water\, has thrtetencd to block the department', budact It wa, not by happcn,tancc that a'I the bill,, the bud&ct action. and the debate over Propo'l1t1on 51 wcrr nearing a d1ma' tht!> month. two reports were produced that werl' h1ghl) critical of the drpartmcnr., ac11v111es, or lack tht'rcof Reports from the Leg1.,laturl'"• auditor-general and the ant1-Pror-: 0\1t1on 51 C'on!>umer'> Union ~1<..I that the Department ofln'>urann· has been lax m regulating the int.lust') and 1n responding to cono;umer complaints Nor 1s 11 an) accident that (,o .. r>eukmeJ1an·s Democratic challenger this year, Democrat Tom 8rddlc). has alleged that Dcukme1ian has been tardy in recogn111ng and dealing with the insurance ens..,. Rradley 1s a f0t• of Propos1t1on 51 . while DeukmeJ1an 1\ a supporter ol 1t. The Consumer-; Union n:Port. among other things. charged that DeukmeJtan's insurance com· m1<,s1oner. Bruct' Bunner. was hand- picked for the JOb by insurance- com pan y C\CCu 11 vcs who were among DeukmcJian's major rnmpa1gn con- tributor'> in 1982 • So who 1s telling the truth'> •~ the m!lurance cns1\ somethmg that " being manufactur~ by a monopol- 1<1t1c indu try. in cahoot!\ wnh on adm1n1\tm11on that 1s paying ofT campa1Jn conmbu\loM'> Or 1c; 11 ~meth1 ng that fee-hungry lawyer<; brought about by their mMstence on umg everyone and cverythmg 10 ~•a,ht, reprdlc,s of real fault? It 1s ab~lutely 1mpcm1blc for l:'\Cn a reasonabl y well·mformed f>C'™>n to make any sen~ of the Muc, g1vcn the blatantly polttiul goali. of all in· volvcd. and the overly o;cns.ational. s1mpltnk nature of the campaigns being wa1«t by both factJons All we can do is to hope that ancr the feve" of 1hc moment have subsided. someone will give 1n ,urancc, It\ av1ulabllt ty, and it\ Ct> ts the sort of rat1ona.I poliC)' auent1on that so obv1ou ly is lacking now Daa W•Jter1 I• • 1yodlc"td t:0l•mol11. DAlfWALT&U colamal9t JACK AIDEISOI and DAlC VAN ATTA Benefits of risky foreign service But danger makes it diffic ult to find willing travelers WASHINGTON -There has ne"cr bl'Cn a time in the history of the rt.>publ1c when American diplomats over~eas have been in greater per- '>Onal danger. In the last three )cars. 21 members ol the lJ S. Foreign Service have been killed 1n line of dut)'. Others have been shot at. bombed, kidnapped and otherwise terron1cd while serving their government But 1h1\ 1s al\O a ume of fiscal restraint. when \ongress 1s looking for any means to cut the budgets of federal agencies. So Sen. Edward Zonnsky. D-Neb .. asked the General >\ccoun11ng Office to compile a comprehensive ltst of the .. benefits and allowances" that Foreign Service personnel are entitled to. Zorinsky, a member of the Foreign Relation~ Committee. wanted 10 know if some of the inducements authorized by Congress over the years were a waste of money The GAO auditors s1ned through legislatron. State Department regu- lation!> and other documents for months. and have finally completed an 86-page "fact sheet.. for the senator Our associate Lucctte L.agnado got an advance look al the report Although the auditors scrupulously avoided judgments, one way or the other. on the various benefits and allowances. they presented a "legislat- 1 ve history" of most of them that e'\platned when and why Congresses datin& back to 1901 had seen fit to provide the various perquisites. Here is a samphng of the more than 100 allowances. wh1(h the GAO broke down into 65 categones: •Danger pay. This 1s granted to "employees scrvin$ at a post where l·1v1l 1nsurrec11on. c1v1I war or warlike cond1t1ons cx1sf' and may not exceed 25 percent of the employee's base pay. Al present, danger pay is being given 10 Foreign Service personnel in onl} five countnes: Afghanistan (where the Amencan ambassador was killed 1n 1979). Colombia, El Salvador, Lebanon and Uganda. The GAO notes that in 1983. ( ongre~~ broadened the scope of danger pay b)' stating that "the presence of non-e'iscnt1al personnel or dependents shall not preclude payment. .. This was done. Congress explained. ..1n recognition of the current ep1dem1c of worldwide tcr- ronst aet1v11y and the courage and sacnficc of employees of United States agencies overseas, cwilian as well as m1htary" •Go"emm<'nl hou'i1ng. Foreign \crvtce pe~onnel -;tauoned abroad .. ma} be furnished without cost" \IU3nt'f\ 1n U.S.-owncd or rented buildings. Furniture. equipment and mamtenance art' provided. When government quarters aren't available. the emplo)'ees receive a housing allowance. According to the GAO's legislative h1c;tory.1hrs pracuce began tn 1901 1 in a deliberate attempt to make Foreign Service career'i possible 10 .. men of merit who were not wealthy." It recounted congressional visitors who were dismayed to find Amencan diplomats living in "dingy rooms" or .. 1n place~ where an Amenc.an visitor would be humiliated to find his country'<; representative." •Layette shipment. When a Foreign Serv1cl:' employ~ ha'i a baby ovencas. "shipment of a newbom's clothing. equipment and furniture may be authOnLed in an amount not to c'cecd 2.SO pound" 1f American ur other suitable layette~ are un- available at the post a!.s1gncd " Lackmg specific congrtu1onal authon1ation for this allowan1.:c. the State Department "believe such <>h1pments may be made: undcT its general authont) to ship household clTecH," the <JAO report notes Footnote: lnformt'd of the GAO fact sheet, Gerald Lamhcny, presi- dent of the Amencan Forc11n Service A!>SOC1at1on. pointed out that "in spite of thec;c 5uppo~d benefits. the department sull has to put pressure on Foreign Service Officen to 'lervt ove~a$ these days " Before the ntr of terromm. he said. most Forcian Service people preferred foman duty to a wa,h1ng1on postina. ('ONFlOENTIAL FILE. Can the Olympic'i heal thl:' four-dteadc spht betwten Nonh and South Korca-t We've had report ofhiahly s.eettllvt ellchan c of VIP v1s1tors between oul and Pyonayan1 rectnlly. sua- ats11na that the two Korcas wan• fnendlier rclat1ons before the 1988 '\ummer Olympic m Seoul J•ct AIHhrN• .. , Dal• Vu AIC. arr 1y8'k•l~ n1l•mal1t1 -.... ....... ____________ _.\ ___________________________ ~~~- ·saab 9000 focuses on performance The numbers are Impressive: Top speed, 140 mph; acceleration from o to 60 mph In less than 8 seconds; performance from a 160- hp. twin-cam. 16-valve, turbo- charged engine ... ... cargo capacity, 56.Scublcfeet; rear legroom, 39 Inches; EPA size class, "Large Car;" width In the back, 58 Inches. The 1986 Saab 9000 Turbo Is a large, safe and comfortable sedan with the performance of an exotic sports car and the utlllty of a station wagon. For Magnus Roland, Saab's manager for chassis develope- ment, performance Is more than speed. His concept of performance focuses on the driver. "Communication between car and driver Is fundamental," Roland N I f S A N 714 /833-1300 ff e , • N I N 888 Dove St. NewPC>rt BeaCh 714/833-1000 OrW\(19 Coui DAILY PILOT /Friday, Mey 30, 1... 81 Comblnlnf • front-wheel drive with a lone wheelba.e . and a tran8'f'er.e-mounted enctne said. "For the driver to Interact properly with the car, he must receive clear feedback and the car must respond accurately to his commands.'' When the signals are clear. the ·~river enjoys his car. According to Roland, the difference between a mature chassis and a dangerous one lies In how these Immeasurable signals are transmitted to the driver. An accomplished rally driver, Roland spent countless hours at the wheel of prototypes, flne- tuinlng the Saab 9000 chassis. "The 9000 Is a driver's car." he said. "The driver takes the proper corrective actions Instinctively; the car responds accurately to the driver's adjustments." The Saab 9000 chassis has a new Independent front suspension sys- tem with MacPherson struts and gas-filled shock absorbers. The re~r suspension Is a modified version of the lightweight axle used on the Saab 900. At the heart of Saab 9000's performance Is the f our-vatves- per-cyllnder engine. This Is the third generation Saab Turbo and represents the leading edge In turbocharger technology with Automatic Performance Control, double overhead camshafts, Inter- cooler and self-adjusting hydraulic 5b)•OO 811 ".oo 210·00 200•00 9244.00 valve lifters. The LH-Jetronlc fuel-Injection system compensates for temperature, humidity and altitude changes. It Includes a fall-safe function: The car runs on a pre-set fuel-Injection strategy If there Is a failure In the control system. The Integrated powertraln - engine. transmission and differen- tial form a single unit -Is mounted transversely. Equal length drive shafts on both sides give the Saab 9000 straight and true acceleration even on slippery roads. The transverse-mounted engine helps make the Interior of the Saab 9000 Turbo very spacious. It Is the only European sedan classified as a Large Car by the U.S. Environmen- t al Protection Agency. (For com- parison, a Rolls-Royce Is classified as Mldslze.) The overall length of the Saab 9000 Turbo, at 105.2 Inches, Is actually 4.8 Inches shorter than the Saab 900. But the wheelbase of the new car is a full 6. 1 Inches longer and the 9000 Is three Inches wider. The result Is a compact overall package with a phenomenal amount of room Inside. Saab's attention to the driver's environment begins with the air Inside the car. All air entering the 9000'a ventilation system passes through a filter that removes pollen, oil, soot, even certain bacteria. This protects the driver and passengers from hay fever, sneezing and asthmatic attacks and ff'ie Irritation. It also keeps the car's interior clean. The filter Is made of glass fibers saturated with a special oll. The Automatic Climate Control system deserves special praise. Heater. air conditioner. air vents. fan speed, air reclrculatlon, rear window defogger, even the heaters for the outside rear view mirrors are computer-controlled. All the driver does Is preset the desired Inside temperature at the touch of a button. The micropro- cessor and aenaora Inside and outside the car take over. Ught- emlttlng diodes on the dashboard give a visual status report on the system'soperatlng modes. Manual . override of any or all of the functions Is also possible. There's comfort and conve- nience Inside the Saab 9000 Turbo, too. All rnatruments are circular anaJog type, easy to read at a glance. They are Illuminated Inde- pendently of the headlights when- ever the interior of the car Is dartc, for example on a gk>omy day or when driving under a bridge. The lllumlnatlon ls by ftber optics. Saab'• experience with creating (Pleue eee SAAB/JM) Prices tart in g at $ 2, 900 ,-------------------------------------------------------"-----------~ 1 0 0 % Financing 0 Available O.A.C 7 yr. Financing O.A.C. #1 SO. CALIFORNIA S~\B DEALER # 1 SO. CALIFORNIA MASERATI DEALER r I Ill~ 1:,~C:l·lll I IMPORTS 848 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Calii. 714-752-0900 . . . • . . • . • . . . . . . • . . . . • . ~---·~~------------------------------------------------------------------ JAGUAR Service • Style • Selection A full compliment of factory trained technicians are painstakingly preparing one of our nearly 40 available Jaguars especially for you!! . Jn(/ llf II . \'. f-.. ')'. 77 w .Jog 110,.. '(.Jr j s·,., 11 ·o.; 111 A I fl i {tJS{l JI w I/ I{,,, JI cn 1. . \y1n1lf/ ln11/i/1fJ11 :\II lllS/111¥'(/ JHJ /.'/(11 I/W I.' X.18 L•AS• PROGRAMS AB LOW AS s499 PER MO. ... ..., ......... u .... -·-c---tot -·IOlll , __ _ ll•~lll ---Rlll •--.,... P/111rb1 rffe«tJ p~~f~!:R:.~:• '"' .. ti tfllCtlVI A .\1J11111hu11,1J<.Jf rk4itotl'/n J1H 15. 1916. t,,,., i11q li1 11 '.~. T1kt 1•v11t11t tf A SJJeciul erlili1J11 1110/t wcat: ... ''.'.''.·'.'.•ww __ •r.1ca_._. OrMg8 Coat DAILY Ptl OT/ Friday, May 30. 1$M A yen for European styling? 8aperpcrforma.nce -a premiere mainten- ance and repair Mnice (or Mercedee, BllW and Pone.he -hu annoa.nced the aYall- abWty of aclaai't'e aerodynamic modJ- ftcation ldta. Theee klta are cutom de-•IC.ned to tailor-fit the Nlaean Pa1aar NX and moat Volkawaiena, lncludJ.nC Golf, Jetta, Cabriolet and Rabbit. Company official• aay the "nlibt n . day" difference ln appearance alter lnatallation of theee kl ta la truly remarkable, eepeclally conaldertn,i that the coat la one-third the price ol edetln& modification klta. S~r­ performance, at 1640 Superior A•e., ta Mee.a, alao offera upert lnetallation and perfect paint matcb-upe. 'American Dream' limo has swi1nming pool and hot tub LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jay Ohrberg's 60-foot- long Cadillac has 16 wheels, eight axles, a swimming pool, hot tub. diving board and a drawback -It gets 1 mile per gallon. But Ohrberg figures that won't bother anyone who can afford the $2 million price tag. and he is wllllng to throw In the microwave oven and satellite dish for free. Ohrberg built the limousine out of two 1977 Cadillac El Dorados In less than five weeks. First displayed on a European tour last winter, the car will be In Los Angeles for another two weeks before It's dismantled and shipped to Niagara Falls for the summer. "I had it out on the Autobahn (in Germany) and It handles nicely," Ohrberg, a Los Angeles specialty car designer and dealer. said Monday as passers-by stared at the white limo parked outside his Hollywood Boulevard showroom. The car, dubbed the "American Dream," was a hit at European car shows. said Karen Braverman, Ohrberg's flancee. "They went crazy. We couldn't hold back the crowds," said Braverman, who accompanied the car to Germany, Austria and France. The couple plan to get married in the car next fall. aJI Americans drive over here." Ohrberg. 46, has been building cars for movtes and TV for more than 20 years, Including the Pink Panther's limousine and the Munster moblle. The white and gold-trimmed American Dream seats about 50 and weighs up to 20,000 pounds, depending on how many people and how much water Is In the pool and hot tub. It's powered by two turbocharged 400-cublc-inch engines and Is operated by two drivers -one In the front and one In the back -who communicate through headsets. The car can be divided Into two 30-foot sections and packed Into crates for shipping. The TV sets. ovens, phones. crystal chandelier, helicopter launching pad, which goes over the pool and hot tub, are delivered separately. The previous record for the world's longest limo was held by a Southern California company called Ultra limo, which last year bullt a 47-foot model. Ohrberg said the owner of Ultra limo told him he's getting ready to build a 90-foot limo to reclaim the title In the Guinness Book of World Records. But Ohrberg said he's up to the challenge. "The beauty of It Is that we can take It apart, add another section antJ make It as long as we want." he said of the American Dream. "There's something magic about a limou- sine," noted Ohrberg. "They (Europeans) think It's ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..L..~~~~~ ALL TRUCKS EQUIPPED WITH: • 5,speed • Steel-belted radial tires · • Full carpeting • Floor mats SE-5'• ALSO INCLUDE NEW i 87 RX7 TURBO • AM/FM multi-radio • Door mirrors • Black step bumber THIS IS NOT A PRICE LEADER! • SE-5 stripes • White spoke wheels WE HAVE SEVERAL 1988 82000'8 PRICED TO SELL. BELOW FACTORY INVOICE AT: :i!~~::g~~~K $5888 $£l388 NEW 198682000 SE-5 . • Cloth interior $ ONLY ••• • 60 mo onnuol percentoge rate 1 0 9% cosh doWll S l 099. OMV fff1 S 131, deferred $7990 F1nondng lotol 1163699.5 S.519' '8 Soi.t prtCI $5888 on opproved credft F 6676"9 '8001ds '83 Dodge '81 Honda Omega Aries K Civic 4 door. outomotte, 4 door, a ir, PS, 4 3 door, automatic, otr, PS Nice car AM/FM stereo. Ser ti 23321 4 cyl Sharp. Puff. Ser Ji 260365 Ser #031 638 '81 Toyota '80Chevy Tercel Citation V6 5 \peed, AM/FM Air, automatic, stereo can • liftback AM/FM stereo. Ser #268543 Ser # 170011 '82 Pontiac 1000 5 door, automatic, air, \tereo radio Ser #204671 U SHORTIEO TRUCK '80Mazda RX-7 5 speed, sunroof. alloy wt.eels, s .. reo rodio. Ser #629385 '84 Toyota Corolla 4 door. air cond, p. steering, 26,000 mi Ser #004476 49 • 60 MO. ~I percentoge rote 10.9%, cosh down St°'9. DMV S 138 00, defeu~ $8688.40. Finonc1r19 ..... Ul31.~ Sole Price $6388 Of\ oppni~ cr.dft. '84 Pontiac '83MGzda Fiero SE 626 PS, a ir, 4 door, tilt A/C. AM/FM stereo coss • d1g11ol, alloy wheel, cruise. wheels. low miles 5., #503239 Ser #249988 1425 BAKER ST. COSTA MESA, CA 92~26 (7141545-333 : OFFER8<PIAES AT CLOSE or BUSINfSS 6_·2·06-------------------------------------------------------"' - a Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Friday, May 30, 1988 Some custo1ners bubble over aerodynamic cars ly IDWARD MILLER .......... DETROIT -At night, with Its grille pouring out white tight, the bubble-shaped Mercury Sable look a llke something from another planet, which la why Alana Cohen bought one. "It looks like a UFO. It's nifty," said the 36-year-old credit man- ager from West Los Angeles. "What sold me on It was the front grille and the door handles. That's a l~lcal reason to buy a car, right?' Had a Sable been unavailable, "I probabtywould have looked at an Audi or a BMW, something In that class," Cohen said. "I don't think I would've gone American -as much as I llke to buy American." She called her previous car, an Oldsmoblle Cutlass, "a piece of junk." Cohen, who paid $17,600 for her Sable, Is what the auto Industry calls a "conquest sale," a customer lured from a com- petitor. And as a woman, a Calif ornlan and someone who Intended to buy an Import, she fits three trendsetter categories Detroit Is trying hard to please. The Sable and Its stablemate, the Ford Taurus, are Ford Motor Co. 's attempt to stake out as much ground as possible In the mid-size car market. Intermedi- ate-size cars are growing In Importance as big-car sales sag and stable gasollne prices make small cars less appealing. Introduced In late December, combined sales of Sabl&-Taurus four-door sedans and station wagons have reached more than 90,000 with back orders at 120,000. Ford says It plans to produce half a million a year once full production Is reached at Its Atlanta and Chicago assembly plants. "In the past, the domestic cars gained their distinction by being bigger and having more chrome and fins, whereas the Europeans have done It with more functional styling. These cars seem to be more functionally styled," said J. David Power Ill, president of the automotive market research firm J.D. Power & Associates of Westlake VIiiage. The price, at roughly a third. less or half less than a European vehicle, also Is a main selling point of the new Fords, Power said. .. , ..... .. Compare 1949 Ford, top, and 1988 llercu.ry Sable, Ford'• effort to lure bayen by reYIYlnC more aerodynamic •tJllnC. This Is the No.2 automaker's second time around with the rounded look. The 1949 Ford and Mercury were an attempt to use bolder styling to pump up sales. At the time, Ford was the No.3 automaker behind GM and Chrysler Corp. and was growing weaker. The '49ers came to be known as the cars that saved Ford. Ford chief design executive Jack Telnack said the auto Indus- try sales depression and the Influx of Imports In the late 1970s produced a slmllar sentiment. Ford was In a bind by being a follower. "Times were really tough and I think because of those difficult times, our management was en- couraged to break out of the traditlonal mold in this town and give an Image to our cars that had a lot of Impact," Telnack said. Telnack said the Sable and Taurus styllng wasn't risky. Although more radical than past Fords, it continued a theme begun three years earlier with the Ford Thunderbird-Mercury Cougar and Ford's compact Tempo and Mercury Topaz. "In all fairness, this Is the most calculated risk we ever took," he said. He said extensive market research convinced this com- pany -whose Edsel f alled miserably In the Innovation d&- partment nearly 30 years ago - that the buyers wouldn't reject the Sable and Taurus. Volkswagen's rounded Audi division cars, which the Sable and Taurus are often compared with, also appeared three years ago. In the past few years, most other carmakers have softened the llnes of their products. Jeannette Garretty, an auto- motive Industry anatyst at Bank of America In San Francisco, said styllng wlll become more Import- ant as competition for U.S. sales Increases between the domestic automakers, the Europeans and the Japanese, who are moving Into the mldslze market. Stable gasoline prices and price cuts In the form of sales Incentives wlll allow Americana to "go back to looking at cars aa fun and It may move the market more toward styling -something dif- ferent," she said. But althougtl styling may be making a comeback, frlvollty is dead, said Telnack. Rounded cars of the 1930s, such as the teardrop-shaped Chrysler Air- flow and the Cord, were aero- dynamic fallures. With high fronts and sloped rears, they get better marks In the wind tunnel when facing backward. (Pleue eee STYLlltG/85) • •• Used Car Sales IN THE BEAUTIFUL IRVINE AUTO CENTER 735i 528e 325es SPRING CLEARANCE ON SELECT PREOWNED VEHICLES - 'IO IMW 7331 '12 521• Blue/blue leather, S spd, excelt.nt White/tan, 5 spd, loaded. cond . # 149631 #7951103 '12,998 '13,998 'IS IMW 325• '12 1"\W 121• Co,mos blue/pearl, 5 'J)d. 10 81ock/block S 'f)d. #7950498 ttlovsond miles. # 1629131 '18,998 112,HI M_....._. ................. .._ ............... l &/W.. Saddleback BMW 45 Oldfield Rd , IRVINE 380-1200•800-831-3377 B ....... : .. .. ~~··' w '12 IMW 521• Sliver blue S spd, low miles. M7950932 '13,998 'IS IMW 521• Burgundy/pearl S 'P(.I. tied. seots, comp. di.c stereo, chrome wt\ .. ,,. #9358283 '19,ffl '141MW~._ White/brown. ~ -·-····- sunroof # 1002939 •11~-- . . . -. • • . . . • . .. . • . • • . • . • • . • JAGUAR Service • Style • Selection A full compliment off actory trained technicians are painstakingly preparing one of our nearly 40 available Jaguars especially for you!! . /fl(/ II(/ I .\".I • )'. Tl w . Jay un,.. \: Jf > • C..,'e r 11''"-111 A 11Lil1 jsto 1w 111c J/1Jt'CU1 \ r 11 n//(1 1rru1i11u11 \11 l/l.'-.jllJr1<I j >l'l /(J/ 11 11'1.' XJ8 L•AS• PROGRAMS AB LOW AS s4 99 PER IQ. .... ...., .. -.......... _c- -.... t>t --, .... , ..... -Q tltl'>IC --flln:JI .., __ """ uJ £. .. / c~1, r PRICE 11c11EASE .. , /_L'fll/(/(!// µ/f {i/ Ill •1•11 JltHr '"' .. '' lftectlve A s.1111111hu11,11<.I/ r/l'/ir·otl'/.11 JHt 15. 1916. ('Un 'i 11( / Ii 1111s. T lkl 8'Y11t111 If A s1wnul ediluJ11 111ulwr-u t: ... ••.•.•y.·a.l.•• __ ,_rtca_ ..... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Friday, May 30, 198e A yen for European atyllng? 8uperperfonnance -a premiere ma.l.Dten- ance and repair eentce for llerceda, BMW and Ponche -bu annoanced the aTall- abWty of aclulTe aerodynamic modt- flcadon k.lta. Thae kita are cutom de-•ICbed to tailor-flt the Nluan Palaa.r NX and moet Volbwa&ena, lncluclln& Golf, Jetta, Cabriolet and Rabbit. Company offlclala aay the "m.ht n. day.. difference In appearance alter lnetallation of tbae Ill ta la truly remarkable, eapeclaUy conalderlq that the coat l• one-third the price ol eslatln• modlftcatlon kite. Super· performance, at 1640 Superior A•e., CO.ta Meaa, al.o offer• ezpert lnatallatton and perfect paint match-ape. 'American Dream' limo has swi1n1ning pool and hot tub • LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jay Ohrberg's 60-foot- long Cadillac has 16 wheels, eight axles. a swimming pool, hot tub, diving board and a drawback -it gets 1 mite per gallon. But Ohrberg figures that won't bother anyone who can afford the $~million prtce tag. and he is willing to throw In the microwave oven and satellite dish for free. Ohrberg built the llmouslne out of two 1977 Cadillac El Dorados In less than five weeks. First displayed on a European tour last winter, the car will be in Los Angeles for another two weeks before It's dismantled and shipped to Niagara Falls for the summer. "I had It out on the Autobahn (In Germany) and It handles nicety," Ohrberg. a Los Angeles specialty car designer and dealer, said Monday as passers-by stared at the white llmo parked outside his Hollywood Boulevard showroom. The car, dubbed the "American Dream," was a hit at European car shows, said Karen Braverman, Ohrberg's flancee. "They went crazy. We couldn't hold back th.e crowds," said Braverman. who accompanied the car to Germany. Austria and France. The couple plan to get married In the car next fall. all Americans drive over here.'' Ohrberg, 46, has been building cars for movies and TV for more than 20 years. Including the Pink Panther's llmouslne and the Munster mobile. The white and gold-trimmed American Dream seats about 50 and weighs up to "20,000 poonds, depending on how many people and how much water Is In the pool and hot tub. It's powered by two turbocharged 400-cubic-lnch engines and Is operated by two drivers -one In the front and one In the back -who communicate through headsets. The car can be divided Into two 30-foot sections and packed Into crates for shipping. The TV sets, ovens, phones. crystal chandetler, helicopter launching pad, which goes over the pool and hot tub, are delivered separately. The previous record for the world's longest llmo was held by a Southern Callfornla company called Ultra limo, which last year built a 47-foot model. Ohrberg said the owner of Ultra Limo told him he's getting ready to build a 90-foot llmo to reclaim the tltle In the Guinness Book of World Records. But Ohrberg said he's up to the challenge. "The beauty of It Is that we can take It apart. add another section anti make It as tong as we want," he said of the American Dream. "There's something magic about a llmou- slne," noted Ohrberg. "They (Europeans) think It's ---------------------------------------------------------------------------L---:..__ __ _ ALL TRUCKS EQUIPPED WITH: • 5 speed • Steel-belted radial tires • Full carpeting • Floor mats SE-5'1 ALSO INCLUDE PBELL. NEW '87 RX7 TURBO • AM/FM multi-radio • Door mirrors • Black step bumber • THIS IS NOT A PRICE LEADER! • SE-5 stripes • White spoke wheels WE HA VE SEVERAL 1988 B2000'S PRICED TO SELL BELOW FACTORY INVOICE AT: • Cloth interior :r;,~~:=~~~~K $5888 $6388 NEW 1986 82000 SE-5 SHORTBEO TRUCK $ ONLY ••• 60 mo onnvol perce<tl1>99 rote I 0 9% cosh ~ SI 099 OMV f,_ Sill deferted S7990 F1non<ong total #636995 s.5294 "8 Sole proce s.5888 on opproved credit II 667¥19 '8001ds '83 Dodge '81 Honda Omega Aries K Civic .4 door. ovtomat1c, 4 door, air, PS. 4 3 door, ovtoma1ic, air, PS Nice car AM/FM stereo cyl Shorp Puff Ser .11233214 Ser 11260365 Ser II 031 638 '81 Toyota '80Chevy Tercel Citation V6 5 speed, AM /FM Air, avtoma11c, stereo cass . liftbaclt AM /FM stereo Ser ti 170011 Ser JJ 268.5.43 /COSTA MESA '82 Pontiac 'SO Mazda 1000 RX·7 5 door, ovtoma1ic, .S SPffd, sunroof, alloy wh"ls, st9reo air, stereo radio. radio. Ser #20 ... 671 S.r #62938.S '84 Toyota Corolla 4 door, air cond, p. steenng, 26,000 m1 Ser #00 ...... 76 49 • 60 tM. --..al percent099 rate 10 94M.. ca.II down llOft. DMV S138 00, deferred S8618 M>, finonc1n9 ...., lll:llM Sole Price '6388 on opf)t'Oved credit. '14 Pontiac '83 Mazda Fiero SI 626 A/C, AM/FM s1ereo PS, a ir, 4 door, tilt can , dig11ol, alloy wheel,cruis.. wheels. low miles S.r #503239 Ser #249988 1425 BAKER ST. COSTA MESA, CA 92626 f714' 545-333 : OFFER EXPIRE& AT CLOSE OF BUSINFSS 6_·2 06------------------------------------------------------...J Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 30, 1988 Some customers bubble over aerodynamic cars Ir IDWARD MIUER ,,_..,.., DETROIT -At night, with lta grllle pouring out whrte tight, the bubble-ahaped Mercury Sable looka llke something. from another planet, which la why Alana Cohen bought one. "It looks llke a UFO. lt'a nifty," llld the 36-year-old credit man- ager from Weat Loa Angetea. "What sold me on It was the front gr Ille and the door handles. That'a a l~lcal reason to buy a car, right?' Had a Sable been unavailable, "I probabty would have looked at an Audi or a BMW, something In that clau," Cohen said. "I don't think I would've gone American -as much as I llke to buy American." She called her previous car. an Oldsmoblle Cutlass, "a piece of junk." Cohen, who paid $17,600 for her Sable, Is what the auto Industry calls a "conquest saJe," a customer lured 1rom a com- petitor. And as a woman. a Callfornlan and someone who Intended to buy an Import, she fits three trendsetter categories Detroit Is trying hard to please. The Sable and Its stablemate, the Ford Taurus, are Ford Motor Co. 's attempt to stake out as much ground as possible In the mid-size car market. Intermedi- ate-size cars are growing In Importance as big-car sales sag and stable gasollne prices make small cars less appeallng. Introduced tn late December, combined sales of Sable-Taurus four-door sedans and station wagons have reached more than 90,000 with back orders at 120,000. Ford says It plans to produce half a mllllon a year once full production Is reached at Its Atlanta and Chicago assembly plants. "In the past, the domestic cars gained their distinction by being bigger and having more chrome and fins, whereas the Europeans have done It with more functlonal styling. These cars seem to be more functlonally styled,'' said J. David Power Ill, president of the automotive market research firm J.D. Power & Associates of Westlake VIiiage. The price, at roughly a third less or half less than a European vehicle, also Is a main selllng point of the new Fords, Power saJd. 11&.1• -.. .... ComptUe 1949 Ford, top, and 1986 llercary Sable, Ford'• effort to lure buyera by reTITtnc more aerodynamlc atylln&. 'This Is the No.2 automaker's second time around with the rounded look. The 19~9 Ford and Mercury were an attempt to use bolder st)11ng to pump up sales. At the time, Ford was the No.3 automaker behind GM and Chrysler Corp. and was growing weaker. The • 49ers came to be known as the cars that saved Ford. Ford chief design executive Jack Ternack said the auto Indus- try sales depression and the Influx of Imports In the late 1970s produced a similar sentiment. Ford was In a bind by being a follower. "Times were really tough and I think because of those difficult times, our management was en- couraged to break out of the tradltlonal mold In this town and give an Image to our cars that had a lot of impact," Telnack said. Telnack said the Sable and Taurus styling wasn't risky. Although more radical than past Fords, It continued a theme begun three years earlier with the Ford Thunderbird-Mercury Cougar and Ford's compact Tempo and Mercury Topaz. "In all fairness, this Is the most calculated risk we ever took," he said. He said extensive market research convinced this com- pany -whose Edsel failed miserably In the Innovation de- panment nearly 30 years ago - that the buyers wouldn't reject the Sable and Taurus. Volkswagen's rounded Audi division cars, which the Sable and Taurus are often compared with, also appeared three years ago. In the past few years, most other carmakers have softened the llnes of their products. Jeannette Garretty L an auto- motive Industry anatyst at Bank of America In San Francisco, said styllng will become more Import- ant as competition for U.S. sales Increases between the domestic automakers, the Europeans and the Japanese, who are moving Into the mldslze market. Stable gasoline prices and price cuts In the form of sales Incentives will allow Americana to "go back to looklng at cars as fun and It may move the market more toward styling -something dif- ferent," she said. But although styling may be making a comeback, frlvollty Is dead, said Telnack. Rounded cars of the 1930s, such as the teardrop-shaped Chrysler Air- fl ow and the Cord, were aero- dynamic failures. With high fronts and sloped rears, they get better marks In the wind tunnel when facing backward. (Pleue eee 8TYLl1f0/BS) ••• Used Car Sales . ............... ~ ............ .. IN THE BEAUTIFUL IRVINE AUTO CENTER 735i 528e 325es SPRING CLEARANCE ON SELECT PREOWNED VEHICLES 'IO IMW 7331 '12 521• Blue/blue !.other, 'spd, ex~ellent White/ton, ' apd, looded . cond. # 149631 #7951 103 •12,991 '13,998 'IS IMW 32Se '12 IMW 521• Cosmos blue/pearl, 5 apd, 10 81ock/blodt 5 apd. #79.S0..98 thousand mlt.s. -# 1629131 '11,991 •12,Ma -~ .. _. .......................................... ,1/ .. . . .. ~ ( Saddleback BMW 45 Oldfield Ill, IRVINE 380-1200•8ocf-831-3377 B '12 IMW 521• Silver /blue . 5 apd, low miles ~7950932 •13,991 '15 IMW 521• Burgundy/ pearl, 5 'pd, elect. seem, comp. diK stereo. chrome whtiels -9358283 •19,ff8 '141MWaU. White/brown, 5 tf>d, P/W, wnroof. # 1002939 .,,,. .. '12··~ .... ... ~ .9...;· """ Orenoe eo.t DAILY PILOT/ Friday, Mty so. 18M Porsche polishes product BJ JOHN ROLL • 11 I. 1"-Wftl9f RENO -At first glance, Porsche's Inspection center here Is llttle more than a $7 mllllon garage and body shop with an adjoining parts warehouse and a perking lot filled with up to $17 million In high-performance sports cars. The Reno facility and a nearly Identical one In Charleston, S.C .• were opened on Labor Day 1984 by the newly formed Porsche Cars North America Inc. to clean, "'~ lnapecton ao over every inch of a new Ponche 944 lookina for ahlpplnC Kratchea at lnapection center ln Reno. ) Jeep sales up LOS ANGELES -Aprll sales of Jeep vehicles In Callf ornla Increased 24 per- cent compared to Aprll 1985. reports Bob Wllllams. American Motors Corp. 's western regional manager. Year-to- date, Jeep vehicle sales climbed 46 percent. Total sales of the American-built Renault Alliance, Encore hatchback and Jeep vehicles Increased by more than 7 percent In the month competed to the same month In 1985. Year-to-date. total product sales were up 22 percent compared to the same period last year. ''These sales figures are Indicative of . the perfect marriage of Jeep vehlcles with Californians' lifestyle," said Wll- llams. polish and Inspect the expensive vehicles through the Reno faclllty The 25,306 Porsches sold In cars before they are shipped out last year. However. executives the U.S. last year topped any to Porsche dealers throughout offered no estimate on how many other year In history. Company the county. of their cars required some repair offlclals give much of the credit to Top sales cited Volvo Cars of North America has announced that Vinnie Panariello of Orange County Volvo In Garden Grove has earned membership In the Volvo Diamond Sales League by selling 500 new Volvos and Roger Seamans of Earle Ike Volvo In Costa Mesa has quallfled for the Volvo Gold Sales League by selling 250 new Volvos. Inside the 100,000-square-work, explalnlng the number of the Inspection oenters which they foot facilities, the cars are un-dinged vehicles varies greatly Insist have greatly enhanced loaded, washed, Inspected for through the year because of quallty control. mechanical and body flaws and, weather and shipping conditions. if no problems are found, stored Porsches. which range In price What appears to be a simple. until they are ready for shipment. from a base $20,000 for the new al belt expensive. operation takes Any flaws are corrected at the 924s to more than $50,000 for on a nearly mystical Importance facilities. Cars with major dam-the 928s. were distributed In this for Larry Morris, operations man- age are set aside as company country by Volkswagen until ager for the Reno center. vehicles or used for testing after 1984. But with half of all Porsches "When our Porsches leave being repaired. being sold in the U.S., the here. they are no different than Company officials estimate company decided It needed when they left the assembly tine Higher levels In the career recognition program Include the Diamond Plus Sates League for 750 sales and the Volvo Hall of Fame for 1,000 or more llfetime Volvo sales. Panariello llves In Walnut and Seam- ans Is a resident of Anaheim. they processed some 12.000 greater control over Its destiny. in Germany," he said. ~~~~~~--"-~~~~~~~~~---'~~~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. .. .r-_ 5 AT THIS "'ICtE 1111•.l'>~l 1181)!1()11t8•3'Nl1 t1111347) P 8134A1 • • • • Cu'811& !> ~ ''"''l>M -;oeo:'" : 6"" tuOI ,,.."° V<n I ~26' Vrn •l'Mn • 5 1995 i s2995 ........................................ '81 TOYOTA : '82 TOYOTA TRUCK : HI-LUX Low -~ '"'""' l.ot • It ft •• °"'' DUI r~• -.. •:I\ '~'!ti : ....... "" •O'!Om s2999 : s4499 • ....................................... '82 FORD : '83 TOYOTA GRANADA WON : TERCEL AiAo AC D t ~· • '*"~ w ,.,,,..\ • e ~ 11 I ~ \1 .. 90 r~w~~ VWI • •ESJ&V : • ~>7' s47aa i s47aa ········••.t.•••·····•··················· '83 FoRD • T ·BIAD : 4uftt t~ tr~ p J)t11'~1'¥11\ e OllX\\ Vrn •l ... /118 : 5 6488 ! ···········•••tJ•••• '81 BUICK : REGAL : • • • • • Cadillac sets sailfor'87 NEWPORT, A.I. -Cadillac Motor Car -a major sponsor of the America II Challenge in Its bid to recapture, In 1987, yachting's most cherished symbol, the "America's Cup," -Is building a limited edition America II version of Its all new front-wheel- drive luxury-sport Eldorado. The America Cup II Eldorado features two-tone paint. unique body striping. America II sail panel Insignias and an Eldorado Blarrltz leather interior. Keys to the first model -official car of the America II team -were presented to skipper John Kollus at the christening of the third America II 12- meter yacht, US-46. in Newport, A.I. by Cadillac assistant general sales manager E. A. Torre. "America II Is to yachting what Cadillac Is to automobiles -an American standard for the world -end Cadillac Is especially proud to be the first corporate sponsor of the world-class America II team," said Torre. The America II Challenge Is a partnership of the America II team. the New York Yacht Club end the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, and Includes 34 affiliated U.S. yacht clubs, three corporate sponsors and more then 115 corporate contributors. The team recently flnlshe9 third and was the top American contender In the· World Championship races which ended Feb. 18 In Perth, Australia. US-46 wlll depart on June 6 to join her sister ships In Perth for the Challenger trials running from this October through January 1987. The 1987 America's Cup match is set to begin on Jan. 31, 1987. This will be an historic event. marking the first time the United States has been In the position of challenger for the America's Cup since the schooner America won it In England In 1851. SAAB ••• From Bl Its supersonic jet fighters shows here. The door panels are sculpted with deep storage bins. Carpet- ing Is a quallty close weave; the standard upholstery material Is a close-cropped velour, leather is available. Front seats are elec- trically heated and the front seatbelt shoulder straps have adjustable mounting points. Practical features on the Saab 9000 take advantage of Its roomi- ness. The rear seat folds down to open up a 65-lnch-long cargo area with a total volume of 56.5 cubic feet. Be- cause the rear seat Is asymmetrlcally split, there Is a lot of flexlblll- ty In the use of the \... cargo area. If the nar- rower side Is lowered. there Is room for two rear seat passengers • and the cargo spaoe can accommodate a long load. The body of the 9000 Turbo ls curved with smooth surfaces, the underside of the car· has no sharp edges. All this Improves streamllnlng. The drag coefficient, m'8sured on a fully equipped car, ls.34. "More Importantly." Roland said. ··we con- centrated on making th~ 9000 Insensitive to crosswinds. Olrec- tlonal stability Is excel- lent, even above 130 mph." Standard equipment on the 1986 Saab 9000 Turbo Includes flush headllghta with r• placeable f'latogen bulba. Theeleetronleat- ly tuned radio ha• tour 1peaker1, a graphic equalizer and a total 80 watta of power. Tf'le radio comes wtth anti- theft pr~lon. • ......... __________________ ........ ________ _.....,;._._ _________ __._. __ ~~~~~ Or.,. CoMt DAILY PILOT/Friday, M y 30, 1Me Solutions to your car problems from the Automobile Club of Southern California Compiled by Anthony 8. Barthel and Eleanor Yavaronc Q: l rtttntly purchastd a 1986 Plymouth Rtliant wirh a four cylinder engmt Which Is rht best otl to ust. I 5 W 40 or straight JO .,.-e/ghr oil? Or is thtre no d(fference for this car.' Also. (/I begtn wirh one kmd of oil. can I p111111 a differtm type when / go In for an oil change? -M.8. A: The numerical dcsi&nation to whic h you have referred is an indication of the oil's thickness at a given temperature. On a multi-arade oil (the I SW 40) the ISW indicates that the oil performs as a thin ISW weight oil in cold tempera · roads, where this action is quick and repetitive, the con· tures (winter). mcanina that ii ftows quite freely and is stant passin& of the hydraulic ftuid into and out of the aood for Startin& and initial running. empty tube causes the nu id to foa m thus reducing its The final number, 40, indicates that the oi l will be effectiveness~ thicker as the temperatures rise. This means that 11 will be Gas shocks, on the other hand. use other gases instead able to protect your en&ine as its internal temperature of air. The hydroacn takes the place of air. and helps to becomes hiaher. You can use a straight 30 weight oil 1n push the hydraulic ftu1d back into 11s chamber. and chm1- Southem California with a reasonable amount of confi· nates 11s contact with air Under these circumstances, the dence, as temperature chanaes here do not have a wide hydraulic nu1d rematns stable even under heavy use variation. You can also use a IS W 40 if you wish. and your situations. owner's manual may even recommend this oil. You might Q1 I took my 1979 Che11y 10 a local radiator shop "' re- select the oil for your car while keeping in mind the type of sponse to a mysterious coolant leak Although coolant wa.s drivina you do and the weather conditions under which 1•antshingfrom the rad1at0r and reco1·n y boule. there wasn 't you drive. a mess to i>e-fttn an)1where The mechanic's findings ... 'f!rt There is no problem with changing the type of oil in that there was a leak "' the gasket beMeen rhe intake man· your car when you have an oil and filter change. Granted, I/old and the engine which he replaced 10 the tune of $150. there will be some residue from the old oil in the engine. This must not have been rhe problem. because the coolant but this minimal amount will have little effect on the new .kept disappearing even after the work was done. After a sec- oil. ond trip to the shop. I waited a week and checked the radiator Q: Once again, II s 11me 10 replace the shock.s on my car . good news. bad newf situation. Alrhough all rht warer But this time, instead of sticking with the original equipment wa.r there. it was full of that stop leak s11iff Is this really a shocks as I have done In rhe past. I am considering those Rar folution to my problem? -H.C. charged shock absorbers because I have heard good rhings A: Temporary fixes to a cooling system can be done with about them Can you give me some more information tn htlp those pour-in radiator stop leak products. These products me decide' -R.S. consist of small pan1clcs which become suspended in the A: Gas filled shocks offer several advantages over their radiator ftuid and find their way into small holes in the traditional co unterpans. Sh ocks are hydraulic dampers cooling system, thus plugging them. Although these prod· which control the motion of the suspension. The way ucts arc effective temporanly. and sometimes can last for shocks work is by fo rcing hydraulic ftuid from one cham· quue a while. they are not a permanent solution to your ber into another 1n accordance with the suspension's -"J)roblem. movements. Shock absorber stiffness is determined by the -------------------· size of the openings through whi ch the hydraulic ftuid Questtons for 1h1s column on automorwe maintenance and must pass. repair fhould be addrerstd to On traditional shocks. the hydraulic ftuid ·is transferred Tl/£ AUTO TUTOR from a tube of hydraulic ftuid into an empty tube when A111omob1le Club of Southern California the shock 1s compressed, and drawn back into the clo 1h1s ne1<.spaperorcal/theAuto lnforma11011Centerdirec1 h draul ic ftuid tube as the shock is ex anded. On bad 113-741-4487 9 00 am to HJ() Pm Monday thru Frtday. STYLING MAKES A COMEBACK .•• From BS Pressure was on Ford, which with GM recently convinced the government to relax federal fuel- economy standards, to make Its cars Hrodynamlc and get more mllet per gallon. "Form followed function," Telnack said, because It had to. The success or fallure of the Sable and Taurus may depend In large part on people llke Dr. Ted Hak, 31, a tamlly physician from Santa Monica, who had been driving Japanese cars since.say- ing goodbye to a 1973 Ford Gran Torino. Hak was shopping for an Audi but bought a s1•.000 brownish- gold Sable when he discovered It shared many features with the Audi, such as fuel Injection and rack and pinion steering. But Ford Isn't off the hook. "I swore I'd never buy an American car again," Hak said. ·'There were always llttle th Inga going wrong.'' So Hak, not convinced Ameri- can cars have come back, Is making a notepad standard equipment In his Sable so he can "take lots of notes" on Its performanoe. a as 3 VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU :: ?' P '~ IN THE NATION 2 ~. ........... #06t9.U alloy ...... ..... 1.0 #OU909 '86 IMPULSE '86 IS~UZU TROOPER FACTORY STICKER $98.o FACTORY STICKER You Save $1041 You Save 'II Olde Flrenu '11 Toyota '110......lll10 ........ LJUCI( S epd, w, AMIFM ...,_ ... Oii ........ Md!, .. Corona M·I ••·*·""""--.,,.~,..,,7.000 6 epd, P/1, AMIFM oeet, ... ' only &4,000 ml. -a~ •.ooo 1111. •132ZPt ,....., 11 •oonomy p I u I , .... ,., #100XD6t 13111 13111 13111 .... '14 Rebbtt LI 'II QTI '14BMW1111 'is DetMln IOOZX ..... Eclll'IOfl ''WMe"-, Auto, AJC, _...o&O' ~ ·-AJC.~ .... AJC. AMIN ...,.. -a • ""'· A/C, """"'• ,.., ·~., ... lllllM _...,~ ............ I041 II 1 -.. ()Ny 17. Nim ''"" 111,m $9830 $1143 '71VW lug Convtt 4 ¥ 4 .._ AMIN _._ ~~ ,_..,._. ••11 •u PorectteM4 ,.,.. ..... ,.. ...... ., ....... 117HOI loaded. 1.0. #0902960. FACTORY STICKER $12,001 FACTORY STICKER You Save $1502 You Save '14 ,. '11 leuzu , /U 77VW8ue '11 C""1 T....,.QL Clllldon Auto ., .... ,,~ :..:a·~--.--• IPd ,..,.,,. ... -2 -Alrto, 11r ION. AMIFM AMIN...., & • lllUdl ..... ..... peln1 :;n:ino -IMICle • ....... .,.... lr9nlpOI· ·~ ou1 Ut7 EN 21,000 ,.._,A gr-.t buy tltklrl. # 1CTN641 .,~. $4999 ••••• 14111 •••• '14Chev, '12 VW Jetta '12 Dataun Corvette 200IX l'l9d wtre4 '-"'-· .,._ Ii.IC, ·~ ......... ,,.... __ Alllo AJC. ... ... ,,.,. _., 5."""°'' ,_ ei:t ~11 000 .... •331M °""' ....... ,.,.._ "'"' . --... •11'fT111 """ .,.,.. .__~------------------------------__.... __________ ..;;;-. ______________ ~~~~_,_~~--~---~- $11 ,918 ... $1023 'UVW~ A\110, WC, !Wiiy ....... wJr//I Ille 10¥9. IOW m-. ,._ • ••• '14 Pofttlec Tr-""" ... llN...., --'""'~---wMllltll1K . I . . .. 0ninge Coet1 OAILV PtLOT/ Frtday. Mey 30, 1918 CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM 80UTH ORANGE P-~!!!!!!==~==-~~~~~~ .... 111111 ,. Ill• [ _ ........... ~ II .. · -·II $ ..... ,~ ..... 1111 lOFllT HOlllJ s~ Mg1e 1eYet 3 Bdrm home on pr .... tlglout Harbor ltltnd Road. Well deetgned, ld..i '°' lndoofloutdoor Mvlng, Fem~ wtth bar, formal d"1- 1ng .,.., private IWlm- mfng pool, J>W and ftoet can ecoommod•t• 1atQ9 yadlt AllllnQ S 1.315.000. Owner wlll trnanca. (114) 673-4400 759-9100 let Us Help Yte Sell Y •• p,_,.,.,1 Call Cla11ille4, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. FOR YOUR BUDGET: ADVERTISE IN THE Traditional Realty 631-7370 DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES PR IVATE PARTY RATE (No Cancellation) 4 line, 5 time minimum ~.60 per line-Example: 4 lines, 5 dayss12oo • PrK• mull be included "' od • Rote doe' no1 opply to CommertlOI cxcovrm, Avtomoti .... Booting or Reol Eltcrte • NO CANCELLATIONS OR CHANGES once the od t.cn nm Customer " •e\ponsible for the full amount • FOR MORE DETAILS CALL 642·5678 TOTAL DO WN PAYMENT • MAKES $ IT O NLY Daily Pilat 89 PER MO do1..., /totem 1101tott ...__. ......... ~--~·--.................. , ............. -.... .......... ~#011t'3 #01o.~ _____ _.. ... ..,.,. ....._...._._ ... , .... ..__. ..... _.... - 8IACH • ,_ .. -... ,...., .. I I -·~. --a.ftlld - I LOST MY O•R IUT FOM•AFTERI PLACED AN AD Ill THE CLASSIFIEDS. lutral 2102 M&t Iii 611Ch paa nr Newport complete kttch 1395 539-8191 Agt , .. Cleullled'• 1 grMt pl-to ad1191'11M your tlOrne bull· nMI 'NEW FOR ONLY $1 1 96·page, lull-color Cat•· log of Craft• -patterns. bool<s, supplies. crewel, cross stitch needlepoint. latch hook. qu1lt1ng. and more LAUU WHEELER c R A F T s ..... ltacli 2141 5 etocks to ocEXA Ei.gant cedar & gl ... 28drm, 2'A8a, family room & d«I Pluth crpt1, frplc, eundeck. Obi get, Mty maintained yerd llMH1 Come & entoy our aarden style IOU Qv11l comfortlble hw close to lretWm & So Co.ut Plaz• wtllle only m1nutn to bUC:ll Gar_., available NO PCJS Pl.EASL .._..·UAS •UWYIOI .. ••am.. HAVING FUN YET? EMT81DESHAAP&dMn **BfMd new 28f 2Ba. 28', 18a, l1ove, 8'd9 Choice •r••· G•r•ge. 1 ywd. 1 cw ger. WIO hltue> P•Uo. 1900 No pete 1150 No peta 54-0950 790-1713 or 867-1778 •FREE CABlE TV. ~Bf •UYPmJ NW• & 28', 28a Garden ti. Lg 28' 2Ba. ~ ~. Poot, r.: room 26-b•leony, rrptc. Otti.1 '865. 710 W 18\tl St •v911abie 11250. ,._ Llftl.Y lmT TILlllY 11 ....... GARDEN APARTMENTS ·11.U--· sneme. gM aeo. thN-La 18f Condo Sl501mo. out Pool, .,., MllN. Avt 8115. Agt 112..e11a ClubhH , encl f)rkng, --------Soedotl9 18r 1695. 28r Chennlng Ill hM 1595 2&;Wifrp6c. d/W 1725. complete decor finer Avell now. Sorry, no peta. .,.. klda welcome 2000 Pw.ona. Me-ee72 53M192 Agt Ohg Mau Verde cuetom 2br Wllet'I your home NMcil Inda den dahwahr pe>ol apedalty • Alt ... •tlon1? Ao- Ju11 1800'1 kid• at countlllfl?Autorep81r1 53M 192 Agt dig AdYenlM In ciu.llled • 1981 MAXIMA • 5 spd • Fitness centers. tennis, swimming Models open daily, 9·6 Sorry, no ptts Newport Beach No 880 Irvine A~1nue lat 16thl '45-ncM Newport Beach So 1100 16th Street lat Dover) &42-5n3 ~ • Automatics Stratghl Male, new 28r 2Ba Ap1, •CrOH UC 1Mn41. Avt 7/1. Cell Anne Mwte 854-9454 f(Ul)ADS ARE FREE Cal: MJ ... 11 ....... U... Found F«Mle 2bd ifl NB. HB, CM c;;; Poodle!Terrter Mix. Fri mother, 9dUlt ton, 1750 B•lboa Penln1u1a, mu. clMn, atabte, non 873--0815 drlnk"'1amkra. no peta, FOUND Fem pw1 Scottie now 831-83801846-1584. brown/bleck In EMtblun: WANTED By ~lnQ 5128. Bluelgny cloth col- neet coupte, need b4d ' far 844 083e bath In Pf1Yat• home nr --------OC Falt Grounds during FOUND Young brown fair July a-21, lllUndry R•bbll nr B•ker & prtv. 2 b9da lnUlt be H•l•cre•t home• clMn. price neg, cell col-549-0859 1eCt 918-&44-4iM . LOST COM ArM. SNtty Aua1r $Mic> Dog Mix. C<>me .... ComHlgh. Come brown. .. J •I mee" buX ·lnduelflecl. 1eo-aen or 847~ llEW 1986 300ZX •TURBO'S • 2+2·s •COUPE'S • Orange COMt DAILY PtLOT IF,._, Mir ..... ., I i Loeded. Sunroof. St•eo C-. WhMl1. A A .. 1 Beeu1Y Low. low Ml!Mge lotlded. OrlPf'llt•. Low Mllle9ge. 11111294 I : Air Cond Much M«•. II 1LOZ855 , 111LIF228 I l i $12,686 i PRICED TO SELL 1 $14,788 : t····-··························------···1··············-·········-····---~-----4············-··-····------------1 : 1985 JMp Cherok.... l 1985 BMW 528E l 1113 Renault Alliance · : > : : i I 4 W""' Dnve • 1LEM008 : Bttw:ll &!rt N;ce 112AYE031 : Only 3t 148 Mllel. Exlra Nice. 112AUK174 j i ........... ~~~-~-~~---·······-~---········-~~~!~-~---······i··········----~~~---·--------~ ~.... ... ..... _., -·-· __ ..... -•• '(W'\ ... .. _ .,.., ... .,. -·· ,_,. ·-···-............ ......... . ····-····-~ .... -.. '* .. ··-' .. ' ,,,._ • .. ...-.-\ ......... ---·. • _-oi,...,...... ,... ...... •. • -.• -..-.... .... _.,.... ., ....... ......... --~-~~ ............. .._.. ... ,._. .Jj IRVtNE A~'E!!R. ~,Auto CP!'!!!. l•••nP. ,~.,.!.~~EP n • HAND WAS Available for pecial Car · saoo ..._ ASH N' WAX Wa h, aler Wax $5 75 Air Freshener ~ITH THI o\ll .. ___ ,... _______ ~-----------------_____ ,...... COMPLETE DET IL Interior_ and I ~ !!!!. 00 Extenor _, _, P wmt n n, AD 22 .. °'MOI Coeet DAILY PILOT/ Friday, May SO, 1986 .... ,,,,. -~ ... ..... 1111 ...... !!! Aa!lp! !l! ................ lllJl/lleb/...... Anl)ml,.W .. 1111 , ............... Aa jee"L!lll LGIT: Go11111wr1 "'°" f* .,....~AtJ lmm1dlaM ~ tot ,n HllfP ....,._ 11CMt Mlle•. 111m KITTINI HMflfty & HiWY flll J!7. llm8 DlTiuH'"'mi'ftn, '* iflllll Tenter "*-~ llft ,n. lAerft '9opel1y Mgmt. hllfl ~ cared. no-.> eutO OIWften for tN 0C -M1 raedV tot l0W'9 l'\Or'M, wa-.. ,.. lt'I Alfa ..... In '71 -"• ,. pelnt• &1 I 11tm w ,.,.."'",ocifillcnw Apt. "9fltal ~. Memary t/i tntry.levtt A•glet•r, hm·11an1 v tlnaqullllty ~ taOfM.lnc:Olt....,.pkg,, -a;i"._.-~Npt N•••Ul.._..lmpom ~ •. New t~J...~ ..., __ .... ""*Y' Jumped out ~ :i:.~ poel11on, ,..,Wemen•a: wtccty./wtu'lde. """ + ~ ,. • tt1Mll. .,.,.,, .... ~. r ~ ..... -...10. 7'1.-o q , AIC Uciw/080. I .... Of oer land, It~ ,......~. --.., goocldftvtnereootd,lwd g-. lllO'wance. ~ Fumttut.. c. oloakl ~, .._._ &M-2100. .... ..... ""'· 1121.14M14f ..., pubic. ~ :::.-p11:.9~v advencatlWlt, & Im.ii ....... ~ • ---... ... ,,........ LAW llLICTION °' OATSUN '71 w~ (510) 1Ml1 Hftor ltwd 0 0 Lo1t: Ila....._~ ~:.o~ ':l-a~ pmtoutettlfneof_... :-·in.~::::::: Muft ... tlllena.m.nM NIW •'*DIMWll Wlttl f9de, t,/o. ti200. • •• 2100' ' i.w. no tllllo MWAAO cetlon. AtiOtY et, .... .,. ca11'n.:n1_.155 ~ 4 ... 1117 "IMINGTON Uprl,ht, "·-'l& Ml.a ....... _ 78M1S2 •• ~ Fihtew/aaltet ~-St 210tl4 bofltvd. II uoo. 010. u .... .. VOLli"illA&.a ___ _,.,,.....,._.._...,.,,,.., CM 1'1·1113, IMO-Sl23 ..... _ .... ._._ .......... . ~ ., ' '1am ,.,.. ;11 7M-fH1 --iw, 1AI m . 111 (lllfll DATSUN '1t nozx. a.-. SUMIW 4WO WIOOfl 'iO .... ~, • ..__. Cotta Mw. --....... -..-.... .....,. ....._ llAVICI l LaA8tHQ ..,.. .... ,..,.11\adOW,bta • W""I•• ftnl·"'. QrMt LOifllii ,AMOT, Sm1 ='tnveetrnen' .... flT-llm&Y.. lllll'fl llMllY.. all,~'ifi:-0..'i:f W{_~~~w. oomp1 '.!'!9:~~ oond'.' UIN ... V24t21). ~=:'~ Ouellftca~::'w"=· The Loa Mge6le nm. "·00~:1~0~'"· UI MT-110 ~~~IA;! P::1141in1 (No.et.ry•.a> 64~2ioW71511 Corml•r Su1u1t1, M90noua11~r~oll1, P!!:.:::.'in. ·~ ~~~~ OORDON MOVING & JCPENNEY'iFRIDG handC*wdw/~ '78 i)OiCien ,aklon, ao·. 'r?J!~w~..... -w11•1L-·-170-Fii 700 ....,. 1 ..,.· 915'i""P-' H8. Aewwd re ...... -"' ""' STOAAGl!-H• poeHlon 118 cu "· • yn, ...,..., bend\. Muet ... to ap. ale. !WW t!Na • .-Nng, Ti - -,._ -·---~ ·- •• nl •• b MA.-wl ollent1. lend~ wtge plua ~lellon In for c .... 1 csm.. end tookl & NM great, t100. PNOIM• ,..., Me-8217. ~~~ llll• new cond OPl!N HVIH DAVI "9d. mlntoond, 11K+ mf \.Uft"''llt. -•••--.... toTheVletl'\Compeny, an oftlce """' • pro-758-1154 • · puuu 080 l30-0905 ·-------• WK.11 .. 712·22'3 4350 von Karman. Ste feHlonal atmoapl'\ere. 1*'*'9. w/2 yre ~ ~= ~ JAPANDI 9ICcMQe ltu. •tO,NlwPortBMch Houre hm·2pm or hold QOOda moving... SEARS KENMORE . VWWEIT,Al.IA '7t llNUTlll•f• *IMM~~ dentS need Hoet farnttlel tzeeo or c:a11 4pm-9pm for an Inter· pen.noe. AM*I .. fOem, DRYIEA 4b: Excellent conct. 1tove, D£UV!M' DlttA"1'MINT G~7", ful , f0t S wtc period ttMa 1Urn-714147&-2128 view ~17t4-~1. 115CM1 a.kt Pkwy untt-1. Brown. xlt oond, '60/obo ITO.CMtt'18chwtnnV frldg, t lntc, U ,9110 , bMutJfU1 OOfldttJon mer. Oreg Jol'\n1on lrvtne, 7'6-0643, 642·5S5t ty 13(), Man'• Sdlwlnn SS7-31.a Mcll&nl'$ DUlll 14K m11aa.(0ueu) tl2..f371, 4:30-tpm a.TUY OPUS 111 la an unutuel -L:=t .. ,.. Cont S75. 646-3008 Mm u.n 111.- SUZUKI ~ ~ 770-7001 M • '• • •'·- ••fl I ''""'' A ,.,, ••• ) l.'•lttl •-•a•... unique gift ll'°P loolltng ...,..... 1uutut ,. tenytl• M-Ftlll9,Mtt118 " ... , -for 11able. mature women COUPLE: RETIRED OR I Ill Pllllllll n , ltftel, ........... ....1111 1111 IHS. lucdkl It. -Kft Ill ... .-iftltl!""'"l'Pl"l""'J" .. .,.. B=!IS ._:,n d ~=Pi:;• :~o :;1 :J~t= ~~:l":!t~ ,,..!! LU MT-110 l!'t kXWXil ki 1ifi. nine Fuie.1on~ •1111 TIP Ill Piii XM! YOU A'.XVIAd X of ~WP~con! Plwecall722-t717,llk 5000:\.fthomelnCot· COMPL~:&lvtaue1 grutt 1300 OBO. :~=-8701 100l~~N.9. '°''.....-• ~~~te: ~~A1~i? =ly~'.n83~~ f()f a.tl'\any. TMntc•• g:t's-t9fi~::"' L~!.,=~ ::. ~~M:. ~~ JAca ·r• XJ 12 nhil='U Cell N.R.N. 9'6-1179 lllllTllY ".,......' •• t1uaat1 ..... ..... • CALL 8'n-1934 tl50. Jim 531-2MS. '•"e'!l.!i__!!ll VI OOftYWl!on. buro-n-Top Matoedle Prtoaa PllMI 11"'111 for tneuranoe per90nnel 1111 N..otd Wiii train Muat • PIECE LIVING ROOM Tr...,.,..titl llllY IJllm dy/oamel. Oorg•Oull CAU PITI .. Of AAY lutnttlla Mii and other 1Uppor1 ctutl•. 8XRTENDER PfT tr;lnee, have~ trana ~157 SET. Uk• ,,..,,, HM oak -ILL 111111 New enfl, paint, Int, eto. -IP •llTI tx;fF;o;a :&g;d Knowlecffle of work pro-no axp nee. Student pref, • trim. Paid t756, Mii Uta '"" .... fill I llllLI 113,900, pp, 173-4220. ... ·-· and ":..rn i:m ooectl ow1ng,offlcepr~ over 21. Don ~11 IJlllUlllll ... Caah.952-'2~ 14 Ha:: Ma; m 2130t714117·23SS wl rfA Wlllln9 to teectl prv Our•. typing, bulllMM btwn 10:30am-3:30pm. Ful .. tlme. Sherman Ger-MOVING SALE Boyt 18 In. with• ... ti & SS hp out• DOM!ITIC & '0AEION MAHRATI II TU"BO '14 •-.. -.-... --,-,-,-.-,-,- ewtm teaeon• at your engllth l math. ReQuee• Exp'd WalUng P•OPI• <Mn1. CdM Cell Dorothy SchWIM, den & bedroom bOatd moto.-on trailer llllY TIYITI ~~~-otoo we I llOme. '°' ITIOf• Into oen :ri::uon at....._ Con-needed. lmmed opening. M-F 8:30-4 87~2291 wait unit• ant!Qu9 buff9t with hltdl. Good conct. 1U81 l!ACH 8lVD. AtMlilfi9 a........ ••• .. 21M91..oe&3, Sheffy. ~~g·~:.n~•t:r ~·~ Day & Evening lhlft1. Leul "°"' lrtter wlb.wt Qi .... 87~1432. 11850. 640-8033. lH/MT·.... ...... ol ,_ a 111111 'MU -... • ve. · Lov•ly working at· . f'f I T ;;.......,....;. Auto P/B A/O *"90 mftll I PARENTS: ac..ntng for Call 831· t205/ext 15. moapnere. Only Mfloue Female pref. GoOd ctrMng -faL IP.... 1 "' 111..-&. --~:r .,,..,.d Llci 1JvWoat Sttl ~7 C)y91txla (Dlffioul:r. In SECRET ARY /TYPIST people need apply. con-r9COrd. Fl tlme ~e-3443 BIQecreenT.V, llY.rmfum, 1/0, trallar, lo hra 4 W'Mtl ld"/J• ~ pr••M IMW'I lrt ._... Lllllll Aeadlng, ~· and-word proe MCty needed IK1 Mellnda. dining rm ...,..... EP dlnette, beet ofr t8"•. u•raa. Call 646--S&.44 IOI .... .--1 ... 1 leedl ltvd. ::U.')O·~~z:;to~i:: f« tut ~ comm'I Superv190!'873-3515 Permanent PIT. Approx ::::~~~:.~2t~:·· WtaTERNBUILT .......... ft dOll .... I.. l1t/Ml ...... Non·Proflt Newport R.E; brotletage co. In NB. FILL I PUT Tiii 25 hra/wtc. Job lndudee Claeelc say LJlunotl.TMI! YOURS FOR ,.._ .... ~ THEODORE ROBINS Communutly &cnoot ,0 Xln t typing & MCty ltdlll Good gardening, etMnlng of-JU llu MU & br._, OV9I '30.000 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY chltdren oomptetlng K req'd. Barbara 933-2900. w:=~~=~ Mgr no.. email repaln & "'~ '" .... tnW11ted, llktng 113.500, (Stu 29 111 (Ser# 5271) PYf!SQdlll.,~ •. through 5th, on June 7, llm /llllPTlllllT ~2' 8881 nlng errand1. Call btwn 1't WANTED. HANDMADE xtt oond, mult ... to ap. ..... ~_..,. 8-12. Program f or • 9-5 only 675-2311 ITEMS for Boutique pr9Ctate, &45-7873. ORANGE COAST FORD Hlt>O liAlll\011 Ill v ri (0\IA Ml \A o•l J OlllO Parenti Same d9)' oon-Exciting c:arw oPPOf'tunl-PIT BOOKKEEPER Opening, Jun• 8, In 1:Jt .. IUftlttoM.Lowfeeofl50 tyto M111tanOtflce D1-Weekenda 01\ly, U · lllllTIUlllllllT Mountain Aeeorta. C.il ..., b fll4 Jeep/Renault 118' 111 .... 111 .... COYetl t•tno &. con. rector of • young &. J*lence, call Laura fOf Neacted Weetcenct1 ahar 6pm weetcctay1. lt'IMTlll.. 2524 Hwbor eo.ta..._. ....... AM 82 mllN, new upflot, ferencH. For Reier· ~~ = = Int . 490-8311 . Cua •87~900 Mic tot Korkte (714) 827-9310 lmmeo, loeded, O/B, tr1r, 4 Ml·Mll S3t00 (20l).17f.t7ee vatlont,/lnforma11on call with. grMI atrnoapher9 Marla, Dana Pt. llllT AlllTllllll *•Whit• WEDDING Mill. aeuo. no-7372 L tt .... , MBZ '61180 B (71•)84oa-78tO that cater110 IOme of the p /T llLt llLP FHIT Hll 11.1111 DRESS, Sil• 5. NevtK IU,./DNb/lter Cla1d11 IMI BMW 1879 320!. Concord eomp1 r•tored Kit cond lllJlijlll!t wealthleat & well known MON-FRI 11-4PM Exp'd pref'd. Ramada Inn. ~wore lnl :.!1522~ Bee• •·u FORD MUSTYNn .,, 11ereo. lop condl.lt~2·0M-o Mult 891111 sS,500/obo: -people In th• world. 955-1330 ..,, .... a """'""' -71 " ~ loy1, ••Pd v • 55&-6378'786-4439. tlml llllW '11 C1111ne, S apd. Tranapor- t8tlon apeolat, Vin# 34U12 Bttl 44n PAIC!l> TO Sl!LL AT 11111 THEODORE ROBINS FORD J01,r .. AliU\fJW P.t \/(1 (<J\IA Nill ·,A ,,,, J nn111 ltLJt.1 "·-•*ti We're tooklng for IOITl9-~5 ~ induatr1 ... PHILCOup-fm.150 RCA * ... a-· Conv, auto bite top. pa, 831-~78. "-"919 ... OM With excellenl MC• l htk P1r1H/hth 1ry an •. bltc/Wht 19" TV $35. .. paUo F • -·-pb, 289 v9 •no. -B-MW--3-181--.M--.. -ll-blu-MBZ SLC ·1• ALL !X eRIL&XMl FOf ~ retarlal & telephon• NB RHtaurant nffdl Ill~·........ tbl $35. nice 8' eoft gold g'a1:':.~~t. $3900/obo, 848-4013· auto,~. mint cond'. TRAS, took• new ... ~ T~-:2~A~2 ~ ~-~:,_~-COfon• ~·:;~d=-QO!l~ ~-::1.11:.ie~n:~~ 0;:c;::.1~~:~ r::~2r~~~pl:.: CHOICE SLIP . Sallboat• Aat• .... , ... tlll ~~.=~~71~:1or1. ~·1~t.~o~~~i~. blue. ~=aat~ del Mar .,.... Your home puter exp. S 1 •00/mo. cord a muat. Poaltlon hu liable l*IOft Ca.II Oldt at &45-~ 1 only. Up •o •11· & llde •le PNf'd 873-2138 Vecatlon & Medleal. Call varied dutlel. 675-9815 631 •71•8 '1515 Old• up to 2•' In em trtendty .. WANTED! BMW 5281, 8\110 MERCEDES BENZ 450 SL TOYOTA '12 Creaalda, ,.....,. ,.._ Faith at (714)644-3325 Newport 8J CM COPPER loverl: I haw • anc:horege, 831-MIO. aunrOOf, IMth. lo ml.. BY 1984 • Beautlfut. Both fully io.cMd. ~ cttx """"' ..,... needed C.M. Gt J SS30 • molded picture-plate, PVT PTY FOR CASHI top1, chrome wttfff1. moct.t 17250 ~ ... FIT Ind Sat. 2 rotating nPtlT/Wlll 8111 pt ....... PltlH 20·· diam. "Old Hom. END TIE. 28 ft mu. t170 8715-8189 or 542·115' (003~2). Pr1ced to Mii. ~ .;... 644-010I ' d)'loff.Fort>oysagae2& Pllmlll ;WANTED; 1tMd"cMelQ".S251080. mo. Avall 811/M 714 SIMPl.YTHEBEST 8Mctl lmport1 752..otoo 8. Nd relleb6e firm per· FEMALE MODELS 18-25 Monday 1 zm lo ac>Pf'Ox Mre Erlctc. ~-223'4 141-9878 DATSUN 280ZX '13 -Sii-' TOYOTA 'I& Celoa OT eon. Get Mlary &46-1202 Entry level poeltlon In ..Cl Now lnlervleWlng tOf 8:30pm Tues 11am to . . . Salee -Servtoe • L.eul~ YfK, 5 apd. T-top, full NISSAN Sentra Waoon '64 Uft~. 14M, 5 apeed, •tablllfled firm. Muat Sludlo 1 Modelln A approx. 7pm. Wlll tra.ln. SEARS colored 21" TV 8 •WfllT ... IO' EUROPEAN DELIVER power. 14995. (5'02911). • Aulo. llr. wet bflOe, anrt, A/C. lmmeculeta. Hll I'm Robert, I'll be 2 mo have 1trong typing & & Pholog. rahy gs= Apply Pennyeaver. 18'0 mo old. Ilk• new. remote Good locatlon 815-1435 1540 JAMBOREE RD. Corm I• r Su 1 u tc I , Kint cond. 1095. 110,800. 673.e317 old aoon, I'm lootclng tor grammar 1«1111. Full time. Lenny 875""4M5 COM Pl.centla, CM eontrol. coat $850 alklng NEWPORT BEACH 77G-7001. ( 1 2 8 • 8 4). Corm I e r , 1 mature. exp. flt Apply In per.on 10 Mr • PITTEMPHalrDr....,for S.00/obo. GE touter WUIYllYU AdJeoenltoFahlon~ Suzuki. 77G-7001. VW ~ 7• Wtat· baby1ltter. I'm flex Fuent• at Robert a.In, 1fTER OV9n Hamllton 8Mch 3333 W. COAST HWY.NB Open 7 Deye ~Week tlyou'relooklngtO'acat, I ph.,...Pop top, Ith oond. w/ldeu & 181 la neg. WllHam Froat & Auoc: n retlrlfMtl,horn91nHunt-coffeemaket,873-8232. 642-4644;9-SMon-Frt &40-644~ cl .... lledtiear-.fOf'you· PEUGEOT EXECUTIVE mu1t .... $3,200/obo, pteMecatl875-M75. 1.a1ouaHSt NptBch lngton S.ach, Dorrie, CARS -1985 GL 5M-1371n16-4431. --------------· ---SCHOOL 847-723•. aft Spm. L Shape Eklntc bed• WC.I'\• MODELS -Low mttee l&llYIWllTll Qualified IOnWlth ood ctrewen, bookcue, aeveral ,0 cf'IOoel ffom'. VW KAAMANNGHIA '71 Live ln/outAefl.requl'9d. Ttcblcal/Trun JOBS honev: aome~ng cloMt, ladderS300. IBM S•arung 11 SUH. Oreen, «lg. cteen. nine no fee. Slt1era Unlimited SSOS ~ compu1er' l«llie. Co.ta Sel1ctrlc Typewriter (387387). 8Mctl lmporta, well, gel ~~/obo, Agency, 95S 1 WatMI Av. CARPENTER'S APPREN EARN M ... arM ~9-1157. S200. 10 Key Add macl'I '52-0tOO. Sfe 2d'o. Fountain Val'-f -S26. Student cluar1>0m • VW Rabbit •13 GTI B&acll 7141544--0133 g;,~1 S~ '9:~, g:'~ deatc S25. ~9-13-45 P8~H~:~~e~~· ~~~ Ex<*. ooncS.°Sunrl. n.# Dtll•dn 3111 minded yng man w/baalc ' MONEY ITeiemarkeUng NEWPORT BEACH TEN-I grMtt Inter v/good ext ttr• AMIFM cueette. EXPERlENCED houH· woodworking know1-j SlllEll .1011 NIS CLUB Famlly mem-n/palnt, amltm caaMtt•. 850-35'2 IS800 k91P9f, woman 10 ll~n. edge. Mu1t have lrtn• PRIZES llW lYau ••• • bert~lp. Tran1ferrable 13310. e.44-7810. PN rm/bath &. Nlary. Por•tlon. ~8-6«8 .. ......__ $850. Call 733-8'28 Ml.I e.44-8'19. Newport 8cfl TRIPS El\efge11c: people needed PANASONIC PV 1730 HI· --------Sain SSIO 10 conduci , Marketing Fl VHS VCR-1 yr old. ITmFG -•'AMII hHttrl•c ttlt Study for the Orang• muel Mii S500. gl... MOT09I '6/Hr + ml. Muat have car. IEW llE CORP l&IL y PILIT Cout Publlahlng Co. dlnetta, lounge fold out PIT or FIT. 722·9859 Creating new Mgmt po• It ltllll& .. YtlfH Queen-bed, s.45-1083. Wiii llllDllPll/MM ltlona. Wiii train 838-6145 ltwt,lftr. Pleuant phone voice a UPRIGHT frMZ« 1150, 3 PORSCHF u.... in..& day9. 2 In famlty, * SALES * If you at• looking f« e.xtra mu1t. no •Xl*lence r• end tabtee, 1 con. S30 AUDI r,~ 1:f.~a~ne::: DYNAMIC ..,_ program ~~.::":e ~:~ ~u~:';.,1~g~Of ,:; =~ c:r' ~ ~ ~ HCl~:,~,Rg,::.~v (7141873-5438 Telemartcetlng. Unltd Mountain, Knott• Berry senlOf'I. college 1tudent1 wall lurnac. Ilk• nu S75. la1Ma ...... 1111 C..tl lltu 1114 l!!Jllt .... ~ 1111 S••••" '>mito potential 87~28 Mike/ Farm. or Win Prlzel and & moonllghlertl Hour1: bo4lt trailer 15 ft Gregor -THEODORE HOUSEKEEPER Sheri, 813-3082 8111 Award1, Call u1 nowl We Monday-Friday 5:30pm S200. 53&-8082. HouM Demolltlon Sale FRI 10-2. 8AT 1-3. fOYS. 1111tl#I #OTO•I Warm, kind, mature I*· haw Nvet'al opening• In 10 9·00pm. Saturday Plul 5 famlly ier~ Nie. G 8 E lcldl ctot•. hou..notd WllT ROBINS IOn needed to care f« 8 * SALES * C M . H.B. or F I/. 9 ooam to 1:00pm. Start wl_H.!!_EMfAN concrfootetaoodnn-110 Masrlne ve. alboe M~ Flm ~I~~!!, Item•. kid• rum. boOk• •o t Co•u ltwv eldetty Bonnie •93-<>300 642~ al 14.00/hour plu• ...... our • g llland. at/Sun 9-5. -·1 25c ... Picture framea. s. ' ' Management Co In New-bonUMS Private deatc & c o n d I 11 o n I 5 0 0 . ltema. L.atge oak table, •21 Rtwrllde Ave ~ ... porr •• h FORD 10 1,n HAllllO • Ill VO (0\la Ml \A r .. \ J 0010 ..........__. __ t'1' port BMcil on 1119 Bay Apart"*1t Mnr Malnt & phon•. cHual attire. 9ee.-e 1•9. "~-...... _ llU watetbed. etc etc. Come 673-0900 r11n ... --. nd1 tatented ~ • F "919U _. &. wl SAT.ISUN. ..... LIDO COLLECTIBLES M•lallbl ft Sito to work llexlble hOUra & otc •ldlls req'd 58 unite ~meln=:: ~: rM tt n Garage LJ:. COUCh TV. 2945 EJtwner9 Ave. C.M. Sun 8:30.,.pm, 118 Illa JIM CLICK Admlnlatrattv9 XNltt1nt um top dOllar Cati Mr ~~~ t,~1.0:1~1y~11~~ Mick Mon.·Frl at Xb6RX8LE Riff@N§ to refrlg, l«I, etc. 25-~t180. Sat&. Sun 9am-4pm ltheca, antique atlver, *PEUGEOT* 'NAULT PIT 20 h,. week. Stan at ~ 873·8'428· P 0 . Box 1580, Costa 6 4 2 -4 3 3 3 b wt n good horn9 ONLYI 8 wk1 710-"& AvocadO, COf'ona 185 E Wiiton nr Orange china, llnena, fumlture. * MASTERATI * Al.JOI/RE S7 hr. Muat type 50-55 Meu, CA 92628 eam-3pm. Or i fter Good variety. BoK train-del Mar. Sat. 10-1. HouMhotd Qoo<I. toye: ~. tool9. *ALFA ROMEO* JEEP wmp F« ~t call H•b llYOTillll ASSEMBLERS 5:30pm a• &42-5878. ed. tee-7808 UJallY I h l etc. See you lhetel LIDO TREASURES ~· SMB * B'!fER* ~ 0 .. Hatpen 11• 87~ 1952 SALIS APPL y 7 AM ONL '( ..., ... ,..,... 518\.\ IRIS(~ SATURDAY OHL Y. 9-3 11';'Ci~i:.:= ~ r • •MJcaJ/Dnt&J 9105 MACGREGOR y ... CHTS n LIPlllf lPPT, i<!ttens. ~-°"!'<I !;.2neec1121 oood MOVING-ALL MUS GO ~~ eof1 a·1, O~· houMWw•. appflanoea, IRVINE AUTO DENTAL X:SSiSTXNt E•I*~ Newspaper t631 PLACENTIA. CM llTTlll .. ome . .,.. vv -f ,....,_..,.., tema. ._.r Hnen1, decor•t« 1tem1. PIT poeltlon In general ~ Account Executl 11• lYll Ideal tor 11udentl. hou... n11 U9Pll UIU C..11.... 1114 ::tJoi~~~~·· mlrrora. oryatal & llMr. * 7112-0tOO * CENTER n11try omc:.. Some exp needed for tut growing l lY I R•lfLL wl\191. E1rnlng average 8"wood&alumlnum.Plctc-Ml.c l'IMtlld ttema. elk•. SMBTURB0 '81 714-951-3144 helpful. CM 642.()806 publl1hlng company. -S12/hr Work 9AM-3PM Up M2-1068 IOI SWAP lln lul ... ~ 1141 ptitlo tble &. chalr1, mlac Blk, AC, loeded. lllTILllllPllllm ~:.~:::,onm:~ HI.OHi __ Of 3PM -9PM.6'&-1819 KITTENS Every Sunday. Orange oAAXOE §X(E LtJ8Un lltverpla1e,lt\ldento.k. ~~~!.':::~ 800-428-7485 Newport BMdl Practice BLOO. DOCK & marine TllYIL&lllT 3 0ARLINGMALE COU1 Coltege.Fatrvtew& May31&Jun 1:wamer& :~~1807 Port neect1 tront office pereon. lraact htlt malntenenoe (not bolt•).1 EKp"d l ln1ldel out1td• 10 WEEKS OLD Adame, eo.te ....... Ad· Edward1. 8'02 Wrenlletd . ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pr.,., eome exp In chair-h MftlalM It, 3333 W. C?AST HWY.NB Full/Part time. 875-8995. BLACK/WHT 875-eee2 mllllon &. Parking FREE. Av. Hunt. Bch. HOUMhOld MOVING SALE! Litle new llde &. fllllng out In· p 0 Box~ 6"2_,.644• 9-5 Mon-Fri w•--• Jtwtl-/Fan /a... Spac»1110. 432-5880 good1, clothea, tum. etc. deelgner clothea, Cty9tal, turincieFOf'ma .. Full-llme. CoslaM .... CA g2626 OAlltH/IUTlll , .. _ & w~o~ 18 ., lll'll025 SATISUN. 22072 HULA nltew ~~~·shto~~h,.<>~d benema. Hlary optin Attn Tim Gueum•" Weetcends, 4-5 days week. ....... ""~' .... &. Garage Sal9: 290 ROM CR. 24 rt boa1 tra!W ema, '"'"• • -...,,, ...-, 720-1482 Of' 71S0-9i 11 Coate Mesa Auto Wun w/dependabl• car a Ctrat Engagement ring, Lane. Sat/Sun 8-5. 100% '500/m•k• ofr. Mll e 531 Rlverllde Ave. NB. MEDICAL ASSISTANT No phone calla pleue 645· 1039 Jay or Lindi ~= ~_,,':;:~ i::'. IOlltare. With diamond pr00Md1 go to Hunt· hOUMhOld, Come .. REMOOEL OVERBUY Coeta ....._ • day.-. wedding band. Wht gold. lngton Beech Spec:lal Hom. & Offtce Rattan experience. call for app1 1m •••11 I CLASS 1 DRIVER R1g11ter New1paper. Pd S1400, Secrlfloe '°' Center fOf' Handicapped I Lanaltbl&.chf'l.w/t'.t • 557 1980 -Temp po1lt1on. apply In Earn s--oo-seoo mo tOf' $850. s .. to appreciate. Children lnlat 144 1225 8d ~ • Polltlon avallable tor per-person OMV report req PI T aafly AM hre, 11 f t &42 5109 · GARAGE sl (E SXf Q · ll'odl • · HTlllllTllWllT tontoJOlnnew&.growlng 1672Reynold11.1rv · 751-5155, 7-11am to ca orapp . -GARAGE SALE. 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I L---------~------~~-~--~--~ • ____ ,_:_d? __ , _____ '_' __ 72_2 _____________________ _ ,, .... , ... FRIDAY, MAY 30. 1986 World Cup aoccer fever comee to• heed thl• weekend. C2. Ex-QWC footbell •t•r Mike Purcell excehi In new eport. C3. Bird soars; Rockets never get off ground Celtics' MVP tallies 3 l _poin ts to lea d Boston to 1 1 7 -9 5 win BOSTON (A P) -The Boston Celtics lut a rare cold spell so Larry Bird decided 1t wouldn't hurt for basketball's best player to try to end 1t. His hot band pushed the Houston Rockets closer to the end of their season. One day after winning his third consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player award, Bird exploded in the third quaner Thursday night and Houston never could put the pieces back toaether. The Celtics crushed the Rockets 117-95. The team that knocked off the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers 4-I to get to the NBA finals returns home forgame three Sunday with a 2-0 deficit m the best-of-7 championsrup round. "lfa team is playing well, they could play five games in Edmonton and it wouldn't make a difference,'' Boston forward Kevin Mc Hale said. The Celtics arc playing very well. They are 30-3 m their last 33 games and 13-1 m the playoffs. Ten of the 13 victory margms have reached double figures. If they sweep the title series and earn their I 6th crown, their combined record for the regular scas0n and playoffs will be 82-16, surpassing the NBA mark of 81 -16 set in 1971 -72 by the Lakers. Boston cruised to its 40th consecutive home victory Thursday nigh1 on the strength of a 34-19 third pcnod that turned a 60-50 halftime lead into a 25-point advantage that grew to as much as 27 tn the finaJ quarter. NBA CIJ•mplon•b.lp Sena (8 ttl OfHYH) HOUSTON VS. BOSTON (All &•met .. ctaa.uel Z> Boston 112, Houston I 00 Thursday's score -Boston 11 7. Houston 9S (Boston leads senes, 2-0) Sunday-Boston at Houston, 12:30 p .rn. Tuesday -Boston at Houston. 6 p.m. Thursday. June S -Boston at Houston, 6 p.m. (1f necessary) Sunday, June 8 -Houston at Boston, 10 a.m. (1f necessary) Wednesday. June I I -Houston at Boston. 6 p.m. (if necessary) All times PDT. JUmper. He aJso had a steal and a linc-dnvc assist to set up a Robert Parish layup in that stretch. "I thought we stopped him up to the third quarter," Houston Coach Bill Fitch said. "Then he ~ot into one of those 'playing tn his own back yard' s1tuat1ons. where be 1s in his own world and 1t seems hke he is out there Qn his own. When he gets going hke that. he's awesome." "His hands were on every ball. steahng, rebounding, passing and shooting,·· said Celtics' center Bill Walton. "He could do anything he wanted to 1onighL" Bird wanted to win badly Boeton '• Larry Bird , aloni with Akeem Olajuwon of Hoaaton. goee After ball while Kenn llcHale of the Celtica looka on du.r-m, &ame two of NBA Cbamplonablp Setia. .. We went out (1n the second half) and missed three shots and we didn't get up and down the coun very well. and they cut 1t down to eight." said Bird. who led all scorers with 31 points. "From then on. I said 10 myself. ·you might as well stan shooung the ball and see what happens."' Leading 64-56. Boston went on an I 1-I run. which Bird capped with a three-point field goal and a long In 1982. Boston beat Phlladcl ph1a by 40 points in game one. then lost the next game and the dlv1S1on finals. Last year. Boston whipped Los Angeles by 34 points 10 the opener, then lost the next game and the champ1-0nstup sencs. On Monday Boston dominated Houston 112-100 in this year's opener "The win takes off a lot of pressure," said McHak. (Pleue .e CEL TICS/C4) Angels can't do much right against the left By JOSEPH DUDEVOI R When 1t comes tu facing left-handed pi1chin~. the Anitels are usually left out Once again a southpaw handcufTed the Anaels as Detroit hurler Dave La Point did the honors Thursday at Anaheim tad1um in front of28,841 The T1ger'J completed their two-game sweep with a 7-4 win to hand the Angels their seventh loss in their last eight games. "We're pre~sing nght now," said Angels second baseman Bobby Gnch, who saw bis 14- game h1tt1ng streak end. "You can sec the f~hqns com11'\1out," he added. "We're just scuffing 'cm right now. It'<; tou~ even 1n batting practice ... W11h 1h1'l late'it ~tback. the Angels Tonight'• game Baltimore (Flanagan 1-4) at Angels (Romanick 3-1 ). T ime: 7:35. TV: Channel 5 Radio: KMPC (710) Saturday's game: Balumore at Angels. 7:05 p.m. dropE>Cd to 3.-12 against left-handers. ihcy also dropped two games under .500 (22-24) for the first ume since Apnl 14. 1985 "We haven't hammered left-handers too well," said An$cls Manager Gene Mauch ... It just seems a coincidence that these left-handers we face always get a lot of runs to work with." The Angels didn't havt' much to work w11h early on. In fact, the crowd had 10 wall until the sixth in ning to sec the Angels collect their first hit on the wa y to a seven hit total against {)etroit. LaPoint. who was only 1-3 with a 4.42 earned run average coming into the game. looked much better than that. thanks to the Angels. But Gary Pettis finally broke up LaP01nt's no-hit bid with an infield single to lead off the sixth. He was erased on a double play. In the seventh the Aniels made a game of 1t when Diclc Schofield cracked a grand slam to tum a 6-0 game into a 6-4 contest. But waiting in the wings was Tiger reliever Willie Hernandez (another lefty), who camt' tn to get his seventh save. •• "It's hard to play catch up against teams w11h a good bullpen,'' said Mauch. Stan1ng tomght, the Angels take on Baltimore. And Oriole Manager Earl Weaver has shifted his rotation so he has two left- handers going into the threc-t,tmc set "I can sec the reasoning.· said Mauch. "If (Doug) DeCinces and (Bob) Boone were both h11t1ng over .300 against left-handers 1t wouldn't make any difference. though." Gnch feels therc·s only one remedy .. We're Just going to have to battle our way OU! Of It." They'll have to st.an tonight with southpaw Mike Flanqan. In Thursday's game. tht' Angels battled from a 6-0 disadvantage but couldn't &et over (Pleue .ee AJlfGltL8/C~) Dick Scbofleld Fernandez tames former teammates Lendl, Navratilova cruise to victories Mets· left-hander allows just 4 hits to top Dodgers. 5-2 NE\\ YORK (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodge'"' do not U'iually trade away top pro'iperl'>. but Sid Fernandez of the Ne1.1. York Mets 1s ont' that slipped awa\. Femande1 outduelcd Fernando Valenzuela in a battle ofleft-handers Thursda}' nur.ht as the Mets beat the Dodgers. 5-f. for their fifth 'ltra1ght VICI Ory Fernand eL. 5-1 , ritrhed eight in- nings and allowed four hits, including a leadofT homer 1n the fift h hy Mike Marshall. his 13th Fernandez wal ked two and '>truck out five "It's no grudge match,'' said Fernandez, who wa'l traded hy Los Angele<; to the M('ts 1n 1983 for left- handed re liever C'arlo'i 01a1 and infielder Bob Bailor. Rog<:r Mc Dowell relieved Ft'mandc1 to c;tart the ninth and got the first two batters before Mike Marshall singled and Ken Landrcau.1t reached on second hascman Wall> Backman·., error Rt'heH·r fr,sc Oro\<:O then retired Mike Sc1osc1a on a grounder tor his eighth save Valenzuela. 7-3. who had won three straight dec1'11ons. allowed '>IX hits in seven 1nn1ngs He unrharactcn<;t1cal- ly walked six while <1tnkin1t out lour Valenzuela walked two in the Met<;' two-run founh and wal ked the lcadoff Tonight'• game DodJerS (Hersh1scr 5-3) at Pit- tsburgh (B1eleck1 3-3) · Time: 4:35. TV: Channel I I Radio: KABC (790) Saturday's game: Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. hitter 1n their two-run seventh. "I think this 1s definitely a high spot for Sid:· Mets Manager Davey John- son said. "T o beat the Dodgers, especiall y Fernando Valenzuela. is something he will remember for quite awhile." Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda said Fernande? had no reason to hold a grudge. "Sid has become a good pitcher,'' Lasorda said. "When we made the trade 1t was because we needed a left- handcd rehcf pitcher. not beca·use I d1dn·11ike him." George Foster's leadoff home run in the second inning. his fifth. gave the host Mets a 1-0 lead. Los Angeles tied 1t in the fourth when Manano Duncan walked. stole second. went to third on a fl y ball and scored on Stt've Sax's ground out The Mets went ahead 3-l in the founh. With one out, Gary Caner walked. and one out later scored on a double to left by Ray Knight. Knight scored on a single b) Tim Teufel. ,, ...... I Wilan d er s u rvives marath on m atch with Krick stein PARIS (AP) -Top ~ds Ivan Lcndl and Martina Na"ratllova ad- vanced to the founh round of the French Open tennis champ1 onsh1ps Wlth stra1ght-sct v1ctoncs today Lendt. trom C2cchoslovak1a. beat Argentina's Chnst1an Min1uss1 6-1 6-1. 6-2. wh ile Navratilova, from the United States. dc(cated West Gennan Oaud1a Porwick 6-3. 6-3 "The matches have been easier than I expected, .. said Lend I. who. like Navratilova. has not lo'>t a set so far. Lcndl. the French Open champion in 1984 and a finalist last year. had a good workout against Min1uss1. who reached the main draw through a qualifying tournament last weekend But Lcndrs game was too 'itrong for the 18-year-old from Buenos Aire" Also advancini was the women·, No. 7 seed. Amencan Kathy R1nald1 She posted a 6-1. 6-2 victor) 0" er another U.S. player. Roz Fairbank<, The stnng of upsets that eliminated four seeded playcri Thursda\. 'itrm k again in the fi'"'t match 1oda~ World Junior champion Laura Garrone of Ital} beat JOth -<ieeded Zina Gamson of the l n1ted \tale' 6-2. 6-2. Marshall's fifth-inning homer. h1<1 13th, pulled the Dodgers within one run and extended his career-high hi tung streak to 15 games Keith Hernandes of the Meta pabe bold of Dodaer catcher Mike Scloecla while belnt taged oat at plate Thunday. "She IS the bec;t plB}Cr I've hcatcn" said Garrone. 18. lut year·, 1umnr women·schamp1on at the French and U. . Opens "Thi 1s m' mn\I 1mponant victor) ·· Barons hope to score CIF championship Pit c hing to be s potlig h ted in 4-A m atchup Saturday By BARRY FAULKNER o.-. .... e.. •• ., • .-i 1 Tho~ attending the (If 4-A soflball title pme between Fountain Valley H1ah and St Joseph turday at 8 p.m at Mayf81r Park 1n Lakewood. might avoid makina definite po t· pmc ptans -cons1denn the two teams' penchant for holdina tbcir opponent ~rclc The top-Sttded Barons (lS-4) have u~ the superlative pitchina of senior nahl·handcr Patti Taylorand some sterhn1defcns1vc play behind her to rteord 17 shulouu this ~ason. includ1na three 1n four pla)'off pmt''I. Rue the Jcstc". who will hove ~m('what of o home-field adva ntage. with the game being played in thei r. home city of Lakewood. have done the un~t League champion Barons one better. posting goose eggs 1n each of their four playofl wins. including a 29-inning. 1-0 quanerfinal victory over Gahr. Taylor. 19-3 and the unc;ct Leaaue's MVP. ha allowed only three hit' 1n the playoffi . hurhna three one-hitters (a 6-0 fint-round win over l ona Beach Wilson. a l-0 dec1s1on 1n the quancrfinals over El Dorado and the l.Q semifinal Win over Cemtos). alona with a n~hmer (a S-2 tnumph over Maier Dci) 1n the pr<>ttss Onpite lack1n' htah sinkcout numbcr'i T ylor ha thrown ciaht onc.hmen and four no-. hitters this )cat, her first n H the Barons' 1op pitcher after th~ yean on the vanity Taylor, who's trcnath IS herab1ht) to kttp thl' ball low 1n 1he ~tnke zone. ha rrhed all year on thl' '°hd dC'fcns1ve play of her teammatM who haH' " con~1stently handled numerous ground ball., St Joseph. however, u11h1es the stnkMut 1n ~tting down opposing hitters Dunna the 21.J- 1nnm1 (two-day) affair with Gahr. the lc<1t('l"'i re<-ordcd 49 stnkeouts. "Defense will be the kt'}' to the gam(':· <iald &rons' Coach Cary Baker "It's such a big pmt' there Wlll be nerves on both ~1dts If 11 $et-; b" tht' first few 1nninp (without a run ~ortd). 11 could he a Iona pmc,'' he added Balcer however 1s not prcpartd to rC''it on the laurel of ht pitcher and infit'ld. cla1m1 ng ·~ c rt aoint to make something happen We're not gmna to 1t around and wait " Saker wouldn't act into tht pcoc1fic' hut he said h1' team. which ha'I fattd some of the 1ought''>l p1tch1n1 tn the 4-~ d1v1,1on th1~ yt1r 1n lcaaue pl•' will dcfin1ttl\' "put 1he Nt on thc ~II .. 1 he BaroM h ve mana t'd to do that with (Plebe eee 8AJtON8/C2) • GamM>n. ranked 12th in the world, ~1d Garront' played steady 1f unspec- tacular tt'nms and hlamed her own m1s1akes for the loss "She didn't do anything to me," Gamson said. "She basically hit the ball back. and I missed." The player who beat Lcndl in the finals a :year ago C\weden's ~fats W1lander. almost had an early exit ThuNia) Wilander. seeded '\Ccond. needed more than four hours and eve') tnck •n his rcpeno1rc to beat unseeded Amcncan Aaron Knckstem 6-1. 3-6, ~-7. 6-J. 6-4 in a classic clav-court mat(h · .. .\ few time-; I felt lucky." W1lander said "He wa'i the one who wa<. doing things I was fighting harder That's how I won .. W1llander outsc-ored Knckste1 n 165-164. "It's a tough one to lose," said tht l !h,car-old from Grosse Point. Mich. ranked No 36 in the world Stefan Edberg. the fift h seed from ~w<.'d{·n. headed the hst of big-name lo<.l'r\ fhuNJa) He was beaten 6-7, "· S 6-1 ~-6. 6-4 h~ another Swede, M1i..acl Pemfor;. who 1.1.on two "I(<\.\ men ·s singles ch am pmnsh1ps at the l n1\Ct'Sll\ of( 1eorgia Pemfors "·''do" n 1-5 m 1hc second <;et before \taning h1<, comchack. \.IJI"\ Joe Femande1 15 \ears old anJ a \tra1gh1-.\ <.tudcnt al c "arrollton ll1gh 'i(.h<l<1l in ~1am1 Fla defeated '-o 14 \ndrea TemC'"'-an of Hun- ~" ... ti-:!. 6-' I "a' 1hnlled " ..aid t-emandc1, "'h,1 turnt"d flrole<>'i1onal JUSI four m11nth' a1to and 1\ rank~ ~0th in the "nrld Warriors play for title tonight \\1)()(Jhndg(' H1gh0'i. Wamo" bid for thc < IF '·" <;Oftball ~ hnmp1on'>h1p tonight 1n an 8 o\ hx k contr\l al ~fa~ lair Park 1n I ak('wood 1 h(' top-'ittded Wamo" pit their ~ '\. l m:ord and I 8-pmc win \!real aga1mt < ~enta Val- le~ f 2 ,_4) the Pa~1 lk ~que chamr1on Woodbndge·., Patti Ku icll ( 10-1I1., o;chcdulcd to o;tan •'" t the Falcon'i' Heatht'r Rob1n~n (21-4) P'rC"CC'd1na ~oodhnd&r"• pme tonight v.1n be the ~-A ch~ m- p1o'n~h1p aame where El Toro f 1 Sland~rro oC12-ll)cl•\h "··-1,. • I C9 .. Orange Coast OAll.Y PILOT/ Friday, May 30. 19U Matuszak says -male stripper has dressed up story From AP dilpa&cll1et HAYWARD -Former Oakland [i] Raider John Matuszak dad not attack a •II• male stripper and an emcee in a tavern six years ago. a reured bartender testified, but a disc Jockey gave a different accounL Matuszak 1s being sued for S 1.5 mill.Jon by male stnpper Daniel Fisher and his agent, Daniel Zeuo. who claim the former footbaJI star climbed onstage and "~~11lt1•li hn1h nf •tiem at the Ptcadilly Pub an Castro Valley. Former bancndcr Quenun (Whitey) Jones, a defense witness, tesufied Thursday that Matuszak had his arms around two women when they acc1dcntally knocked over a table. He sajd there was no scuffie and no one was inJurcd. Matuszak had testified earher that he was attacked by Fisher without provocation. Jones said he let Matuszak and lwo Raider rookies into the women-only crowd as a favor to the 1wo-11me Superbowl player "John wa~ clowning around. (He) pulled his shirt off." Jones said, adding tha1 perhaps the strippers had become angry because he threatened their taps b) undressing. But John Jeffnes. a disc jockey who was worktng that evening, told a Jury that Matuszak did a stnptease and lay on the stage before grabbing a performer and wrestling him to the ground. Jeffries said after Matuszak lay down on stage. someone an the audience threw a dnnk on him. .. He sat up and turned and then lurched over at Dan Fisher." Jeffnessa1d. The two were locked an a bear hug rolling around on stage and 1l took three people w separate them. he said. Quote of the day Andy Forman, pubhc1 t} director at Latonia Race Course an Florence. Ky .. Just across the Ohio Rn.er from Cincannau. after rev1e.,..ing some of the track's entertainment expense'>. "With over SI 0,000 tn dining room charges th as season, I believe the Cincinnati media can read the Latonia menu better than a Racing Form." Six to run in Hollypark feature INGLEWOOD -A field of six ~ headed by Fran's Valenttne and Dontstop Themus1c was entered Thursday to run in Saturday's $75.000-added Hawthorne Handicap at Holl)wood Park. Fran's Valentine will be ndden b\ Patnr~ Valenzuela and was assigned high we1gh1ofI22 pound\ for the one-male race for older fiThes and mares Dontstop Themus1c wall be ridden by Laflit Pancay and was assigned 121 pounds Others entered were C envak.,, Star . .,...ho "111 be ndden b) C1ary Ste\ ens and "'as ao;sagned I 14 pounds Palm Reader.Chm McC arron 114 pounds. Tall You Eddie DelahOU'i'>Cl)e. I 13 pounds. and let' Stealf'r. Bill Shoemaker. 110 pounds Donlan winds up testimony NEW YORK -Jack Donlan, labeled [i] b> the L'SFL as the culpnt behind two of c II• the .. smoking guns"' an lls antitrust suit against the NFL. wound up ~ven hours of tcstamon> Thursda) saying he had done nothtng to ti) and kill the nval league. The executive director of the NFL Management C-ounc1I. under questioning by NFL lawyer Robert Fiske. restated his conten11on lhat neither he nor the NFL had done anything ant1-compet1t1ve. Specifically. Donlan reiterated that: •The prescnta11on to 60 NFL executi vec; h) Professor Michael Porter of the Harvard Business School was dc.,1gncd onl} to help NFL eaxccutl\·es compete an the salary war lhen going on. USFL counsel Hane\ M-.er.,on c.ontendc; that the Feb. 29. 1984 prescn.tation was part ofa grand scheme IO "conquer"" the l 'SFL. "h1ch indeed was the utle of the seminar. •Has I Q8 ~ mt' mo titled .. Spending the USFL Dollar .. contaant.'d idea\ designed to sai,e mone) tor ,both leagues Thomas wins court judgment LO~ .\~(,f-1 E~ -A i 200.000 arbs-[i] trataon aYvard to lormer NFL cornerback c II> Pat Thoma\ ha<; been confirmed bv a 'iupenor ( oun Judge • Thoma'> .,.. ho pla)ed for the Rams before being traded to the LO'> '\ngelcs Ra1derc; an 1983. had filed a SJ I million suit agamst the Rams and Raiders an September of 1984. cla1m1Dg both clubs failed to meet inJUr¥ lcrms ID has contract. • Yes, we sell Sunglasses too! In fact, our portswear's not bad either! RuNlan• withdraw from meet SAN JOSE -The Rus~1ans have m pulled out of the Dru~ knner Classic. a dec1s1on a Sov1e1 official says stuck Lhear athletes with unused aarhne tickets. Two weeks after Soviet spans officials announ~ they would send a strong contingent of track and field athletes to the event. word came Thursday that the team was staying home The Sovtet simply cant·eled their visa apph- c.a uons with no official ei1planat1on aboul why they were sk1ppan1 Saturday's lockotT to the prestigious Mobil Orand Pnx intemauonal tour In Moscow today, a Soviet athletic oflk1al ~td the team couldo'l apply for va~~ unt1l 1t rtx-caved a formal IOVltallOn .. We got the an vnauon rather late." said Vital) Mayatsky, chief of the lnternauonal Sports·~lataons Department of the Soviet pons Commtttee. · He said flight arrangements Yvere made and the athletes were scheduled to leave Ma) 27. The last day they could pi ck up the visas was Ma) 26 and the U.S. Embassy ID Moscow was closed that day for the Memonal Day hohday. Ma yatsky said the team paid a I 00 percent penaJty for the unused air tickets and decided not to come. Offi cials at The Athletic Congress. the governing body for track and field in the United States which arranged for the Soviets to be entered an the Jenner. said they were surpn sed. Hicks, Walsh meet over coffee REDWOOD CITY -A coffee shop [i] near the San Francisco 49ers training camp c II t 1.1.as the sue of a "'summit" meeting between coach Bill Wal sh. unsigned vet- eran free safet y Dwight Hicks and the player's agent. The three met for about a half hour at the shop on Wednesday an an apparent attempt to avoid reporters. Agent David Pemne said he will meet with 49ers general manager John McVay no later than next week 1n an attempt to get his client under contract. If they can't agree to terms ... The) would ga '-C me a release:· Hicks said. Hicks wants a suh.,tanual raa~ O\er lht.' $225 ()(XJ base ~lal) of last sea\on. ··1 can·1 prOJCCt whether he .,..ill come to camp:· \\ alsh ..aid \\ cdnesda) night in Santa Clara .,...herl· hl' spoke to a group of electronics industl) leader<.. Sikma wants out of Seattle . EA TTLE -Nauonal Basketball m .\ssoc1at1on veteran Jack Stk ma has; Cold· the Seattle uperSonacs he wants to be traded to a contender. accord mg to team· sources 1kma, a seven-tame NBA All-Star. has four )'Cars left on a contract estimated at SI S million a year He has an option ofbecommga free agent altt·r next sea\on. The Sonics have fin1sh('d 31 -51 the la<,t t wc1 seasons. massing the pla)'om each )('ar Couples grabs three-shot lead Fred Couples shot an eight-under-par !I 64 Thursda> t} 1ng a course record. to take a three-stroke lead O\er thr('l' pla}n'> after the first-round of the Kemper Open an &thewa. Md Larry Mize, Tom Sieckmann and Charles Bolling ca<.h carded 6 7s on the 7.1 7 )-\ ard ( ongrernonal Golf ( our'IC as 58 pla\ers 1n the ficid nf 141 either equalled or brokC' par. Leonard Thompson, Dennis Trlxler, David ()grin and Mike Reid had 68s and tra1lt•d by four stroke!. an the compeuuon for the SQ0.000 first pnze. Four pla}er' shot 69s and SC\ en others. includ- ing J.C. Snead, ....,ere at 70 Couple\. .,..ho won the tour- nament here in I c,>!j l made sax hardies an seH·n holco; at one stretch. Has 64. which included a fiv~-under -par front nine. matctled the course record for one round and has nme birdies 1s a Congressional best ... Jn the LPGA Championship at Mason. Couple. Ohio. Lori Garbaci fired a 65 to take the lead after 1he first round at the Jack Nicklaus <ipon 'i Center. Garbacz. a 27-ycar-old who has never won on the women's professional tour. had a round of seven b1 rdies and I I pars. One shot back of the leader was Ayako Okamoto at 6-under-par 66. Pait Bradley, the onl) career S2 m1ll1on winner tn LPGA history. wa s ne\lat 67 Television. radio TELEVISION 4 30 p m -BASEBALL Dodger; at P1mburgh. C hanncl I I 7 JO pm -BASEBALL: Baltimore at Angele;. Channel 5 10 pm -BOXING· Channel 56. RADIO 4 lO p.m -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Patt~burgh. KAR( (790). 7:30 p.m -BASEBALL: Baltimore at Angels, KMPC (710). #119 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759·1622 • Bullocks Wilshire Wing _., Jump ball Angel center fielder Gary Peftia leapa oYer a baee hit off the bat of Detrott•a Dave Collin• dartn& flnt inning of Thunday nlgbt'a &a.me at Anaheim Stadium. ANGELS FALL TO DETROIT. From Cl the hump Detroit catcher Lance Parrish added lhe final run with has 200th career homer to aad the Tiger cause Angel ~tarter Don Sutton (2-S) took the loss. as the road to 300 wans remained a rocky one. La Point was the wanner and I!> now 2-3. w11h bo1h his wans coming at the '\ngels' expen~e The Tiger<; got on the board an the lirst 1nn1ng as Dave Collins came home on a double by Parrish for a 1-0 lead · Detroit made at 4-0 "'1th 11 solo homer b' I ou Whitaker an the third and two more runs ID the fourth w1th the aad of some A..ngel miscues. Suuon left after 51fi innings and ga\ewa) lo rookie Chuck Finley. who made his maJor league debut. Fan le' was added to the stalT when Ken Forsch was released last week. It appeared the Tigers wer~ going to win gomg away. but an the seventh. LaPotnt lost whatever mastery he had over the Angels. George Hendnck led off the inning with a single (his I .800th career hit). Bobb} Grich followed with a walk and Ra ck Burleson singl ed to load the • • bases wuh no outs. Schofield lhen drove a 3-1 fastball over lhe wall an right to chase La Point. "'If he would've taken the pitch 1t would've been ball four ... said La- Poant. .. I had pretty good stuff and was p0pping them pretty good in there." * ANGEL NOTES: Tiie Anoels wen 29·11 n ltfl·rienO.f\ lasr veer . Pllehlng ma1c:11u1» ror the 81ltlmore series will be: Miiie F'--" (1·4) n Ren RM\lllldr (l·l) tonlvM; Stwm Devis (4·)) vs l(lrtr Mee.Ilk• (3·3) Ol'I SlihKClt Y, end Sc.Oft McG,...... (4·3) '" Mitt Witt (4·4) on Sunday Tiiis means ,,_, bed news *°' the Anvets beeeuse bolh Mc:Grf9Qr encs Fla11even ere ltfl·l\endtrl World Cup fever kicks into gear • BARONS. • • A dtheglobe .\ll52games~ roun ' IO England. though the Bnllsh team ... f d not among lhe favontes The BBC SOCCer a n s r ea Y and 1ndt;pendent TV compan1e'i an for Champl·o-n s hi·p Bntatn agreed not to duplicate tele-casts. though the final will be shown I I\ e on both outlets. From AP dispatches World Cup fever has been building for months throughout the soccer community Beginning this weekend. fans oft he" orld's most popular sport will get their fill of the action from Mex ico City. ~(. ESPN and SIN. the Spanish tt.11'\ 1S1on network. are handling tele- ca'it'> an the l 1nated States. SIN signed on extra I m1ll1on households. many from non-pan1sh speaking areas such a!> Lexington. K) .. Cincinnati, and Balon Rouge. La .. Virtually every count!)' 10 the world w1 II get some son of coverage of the month-long event For instance. sn w1tzerland. which doesn't even have a team 1n the tournament. all 52 matches wall be tcleca!>t Most of those games "'II be shown hve. though an the case of conflicts. a ta ped broadca'it will follow the hve one. Seventeen game'> arc scheduled to be televised hve at m1dn1ght and replayed the next morning at 5:30and 7 a.m. There arc three state-run stations 1n Sw111erlnnd - one each in French, German and Italian -which will handle the hroadcasts. alter- natang games A. total of 150 hours will be shown, at a cost of approxamatel) $1 5 million. France, which has one of the fa vored teams, also will have every game. though only a few lave given the seven-hour lime d1 !Terence Coverage in France wall be divided between the two government-owned networks Spain, which hosted the tour- nament in J982and has a strong entry an this year's World Cup. has 33 games set for telecast. with an expected audience of 15 mllhon per game Spanish telev151on offi cials est1ma1e that 20 million people will .... atch lhe final -unless Spain gets there. Then. an audience of25 m1lhon or more as predicted In Portugal, which also has a team an Mei11co. 22 games will be carried h ve. six more on tape. A.II of Ponugars games. of course. will be shown lave. Several other European countnes without teams in the World Cup wall have extensive coverage. In Sweden. 34 games will air li ve and 22 will be rebroadcast. Both state-run television channels will show th e games for an estimated audience of 2 million - double that for the final tn a country of 8.3 million. From Cl cons1stenC) this year. averagrng only three strikeouts per game offensi vely. according to Baker. The Barons aren't blessed with one outstanding hatter. b\lt are .. strong all down through the lineup... said Baker. adding_ "'Lea Young (a senaor third baseman) has been swinging the bat real well." Yo ung and fellow senaors Taylor and second ·baseman Lori Peterson. were members of the 1984 team which lost in the semifinals. and Baker said the team would really like to win it for them. "'We've never been there {the title game) before," said Balcer. "We're there this year. but we.may never be again. You never know in these close games. One team could make a mistake and the best team always isn't the one that wins. These girls have worked hard and they want to win it." U.S. pololsts down France MARSEILLES. France -The United States National water polo team. coached b} Newport Harbor High Coach Bill Barnett. won its first game in an international tournament Thursday. defeaung France 7-5. The Americans were down 5-3 at the halftime. but shut out the host French <;quad ID the final two periods to gain the win. Former Anteater Mark Maize) was 1n goal fo r the Americans, who will meet Spain today in the round-robin tourne}. which runs through Sunday. Sports on TV for weekend Saturday TELEVISION 8 am -MOTOR SPORTS: lnd1anapohs SOO. Channel 7 9· 30 a m -BASEBALL: This week an ba<;eball. Channel 4 9 lOa.m -MQTOR SPORTS: North Star National!> drag ra cing. from Brainerd. Ohio. Channel 9 I 0: IS a m. -BASEBAL(: San Diego at Phaladlephaa. Channel 4 11 a.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Inside NASC'A R. Channel 56 Noon -WRESTLING: Channel 9. I p.m -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Boi11ng_ Gem Cooney vs. Eddie Grc~: New York Mini Marathon (delayed): Water sk11ng. Master~ C'ham- p1onsh1p at Pine Mountain. Ga. I p.m -WORLD CUP SOCCER: Italy vs. Bulgana (delayed). from Mexico Ctty. Channel 4. I p.m. -WRESTLING. Channel 56. I lO pm. -SPORTS SPECIAL. Volleyball - NC A.A champ1on'!htp (Pepperdane vs U C) (tape). from llnwe"'1t} Park, Pa , BiC)cllng -Pans-Roubaax 172 malt race (tape), Channel 2. I 30 p m. -MOTOR PORTS. ~ttmg the Pace - lndaanapoh'i SOO's contnbut1on to automotive tcch- nolo~)' 1\ c'plortd. Channel 7 .: pm -MOTOR SPORTS Roe1ng on the Edge - A.n off-road race throuah tht wild temun of Nevada. ( hanncl 7 3 pm -BOB UE ER WACIY WORLD OF SPORTS ( hannel 4 l pm -MOTOR PORTS NASCAR 600 (tape), Channel 7 ' 30 I'm -GOLF PG.\ Kemper Open, from Bcthc\<11. '11<1 (delayed). Channel 2 4 p m -BASEBALL Dodgen at P1mbut&h ( t111nnel 11 ' 4 p.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Speedway Amcnca, Channel 56 4·30p.m -WIDEWORLDOFSPORTS: Boxing- Gem Cooney vs Eddie Gregg, 10 rounds, heavyweights, from an Francisco (delayed); Running -I Ok mini- mara1hon.(delayed). from New York City, Channel 7. 5 p m. -CHAMPIONS: World's Greatest Athletes -"Dr J ".Channel 2 RADIO 10 15 a.m. -BASEBALL: St. Louis vs. C'1ncinnat1 . KNX (1070) 4 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Pittsburgh, KABC (790). 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Baltimore at Angels. KMPC (7 10). Sunday TELEVISION I 0 a.m -GOLF: PGA Kemper Open, Channel 2 10:30 a.m -BASEBALL. Dodgers at Pittsbuf'lh. Channel 11 11 a m -TENNIS: French Open (delayed). from Pam Channel 4 Noon -BASEBALL: n Francisco at New York Met' or Montreal at Houston. Channel 7 12. 30 p m -PRO BASKETBALL: Boston at Houc;ton an NBA Cbamp1onsh1p ~ric Channel 2. I p. m -WORLD CUP SOCCER: pain vs. Bran I. from GuadalaJ&rl, Meuco (dela)cd). Cba.nnc.I 4. 3 pm -PORTS WORLD· urv1val of the Fattest. from Jackson Holt. Wyomins. Channel 4 RADIO IO 30 a m -BASEBALL· Dodaers at Pinsbu"ah.. KAB (790) · Noon -BASEBALL· Balttmott at Anael , KMPC (710). 12·30 p.m -PRO BASltETBALL: Boston al lfouiton. KLAC (570) Orangt Coeet DAIL V PfLOT /Ff'#Jf#t, .._ 30, ,._ C8 Orioles hCJt; Oakland not Balttmorew~nST th in last !_8 outil'!Ss, 8-6, while A s drop fifth straight ame Frem AP cll1P1tc•ea 9AK1..AND -The Baltimore Oriol~ went ahead on power, Larry Sheets second homer of the game. a~d !l~ayed there with excellent relief Pl!~hm~ ThufSday. . . I thlnk rehcfp1tchang 1s the biggest d1ffercnc:c between this year and last year. When our starters have bad days, tbe relieven come in and do a good job," Sheets said after the Orioles downed the Oakland A's 8-6 for their 15th victory 1n the la~t 18 games. Ken Dixon, the Baltimore staner had an awful day, allowtng tw~ homers and three doubles before leaving in the third innmg. "It was looking kind of ugly at the lime," said reliever Brad Havens 2-1 who pitched perfect baseball fo~ 4~ innings and struck out five batters to get the victory. Don Aase, who got his 12th save, aJlowe<tjust one hit, a single. over the last two innings. ••rt wasn't a balleame until after those first three innings," Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver said. His team made four errors in the first three innings, but Weaver noted. "Base hits and home runs are things that can make up for a lot of mistakes." Sheets made the score 7-6 in the sixth wi1h his second homer. CaJ R1pken Jr. also homered for the Orioles, helping 1he hot team over- come its second consccu11ve four- error game. The A's, after losing a fifth straight game. were addressed by Manager Jackie Moore in a team meeting. "I just wanted to pump some guys up," Moore said. "I can't recall a game in a long time wtth so many iuys diving for balls and sliding hard into bases. 'Tm proud of them and I want them to be aware ofat." The A's ripped Dixon for home runs by Jose Canseco and Camey Lansford, but Baltimore wiped out a 6-5 Oakland lead in the sixth when Shceu hit his sixth homer -and third in two days -after R1pken had walked. IALTIMOttE Wlool11• 2b HUdlef 2b Lacvrf LYM cf Murra., 10 Rlollt11 n ShMt\ dfl Benlciut 3l> 0emDlV C. MaY-lf "•vford c T ..... abr lllll * OAICl.ANO S I ) I PlllMIDt 2b o o o O Socnte lb • O i I Lantlrd 3b • 0 i 0 C.nMICO If • i i 0 KllOIM dh 3 ' 1 2 MOaYls rl • 2 2 • Griffin u 3 I 2 0 Balha c. Io O o Pateoon ) 0 0 0 Javltt cf 4 0 0 0 OHll Ofl lS I JI I T.._ k-b¥ IMlllll urlllll s 0 0 0 S I 1 0 4 2 I I 4 2 2 3 4 0 I 0 l I 2 I 4 0 0 I 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ,. 67. ..,.,,.,. 02l 002 oio-• 0.klaftd JOJ ... --· Ga ma Wlnnl119 RBI -SllNtl (2) E-e.tllouez 2, Rav!Of'd, Codlroll, Dixon 01"--<*klalld I LOB-ealllmore I. O.lla.nd S 28-8odlta, Ca11tee0, M 0 .... 1, HR~ans.c.o !14l, ShMI$ 2 16). IUoUn 171. LanafOf'd (S) S&-M. Davi• (S), JaYlar (11 s.-Mk Youno SF-Lacv I~ H •I • H SO ..,_. Ol•on HaYena W,2·1 AIMS,i2 Oaklaftd 2 l·l 6 41·3 0 2 I • s 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 CO<llrOll l ,3·6 S 6 l I Stewart J • I I Oozier I 1 o o 2 o CO<llrOll 11ltched to 2 batters In Ille 6th. WP-Oozier. Umplr••-Homa, Morrison, Flrsl, McKHll, S.Cond, Clark; Third, SllulOcll. T-2 SI. A-7,747 Yankees2, MarinersO SEATTLE -Dennis Rasm ussen pitched three-hit ball for 8l/1 inmn~ and Milte Pagharulo drove 1n two runs Wtth a homer and double. leading New York to the victory over Seattle. The Yankees won for the ninth time in 11 games. New York has also won nine of its last I 0 games against Seattle. Rasmussen. 5-1 . combined 011 a three-hitter wtth Dave Righetti, who got his 12th save. Rasmussen struck out five and walked two and did not allow a hit after Alvin Davis' leadoff single in the founh. Rasmussen was pulled after walk· ing Davis with two outs in the ninth. and R•ahctt1 ret1~Gorman Thomu on a srounder to end the pme. * NIWY°"IC .. ,,11111 )0 0 0 • 0 0 0 , 0 20 • 0 I 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 3 I I 0 4 I 3 2 4 0 0 0 saanu "IVllldl 2b Mcntlef AOaYll lb GThm• dt'I OHedtn rt PrttleY 3b Cowen•lf Owenu YH ger C •rlllll , 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 4 0 I 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 J 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 ltHllCl•n cf ltlleltlll\,., MlftOIV lb EHltl'dt'I Wlllfltld rl PHQUa" R09111ctr. II HHMYC Pvlrulo3b Mect'lmn T ..... H 2 I 2 T ..... ,. 0 J 0 Sc.re bY """"" New Yenr 010 000 100-2 .... 000 000 000-0 Gama W1n11lno ltBI -Paotlarulo <•> OP-Sealtlt 2 LO&-New Yorll. t, S.attle • 28-Paollarulo HR-Paotlarulo (9) sa-• HenoerlOll 2 (33) NewYwtt Rtttnunen w. S· I RIQflalll S, 12 .... Wllco• L,0·4 M Youno Pe-v .. oer ... H •ER 19 SO • 2·3 3 0 0 2 s I ·3 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 Umplrtt-Home, McClelland. Fl"'· e>.llk lllOef', Secolld. Relltv, Tt'llrd. Coble T-2.JO A-llMt Pldllles 6 , Giants 4 PHI LADELPHIA-Milt Thomp- son, batting just .195, singled with two outs in the ninth inning. driving home Steve Jcltz from third base and giving Philadelphia the victory over San Francisco. Thompson, hitless in has previous four at-bats in the game, hit Greg Minton's 1-0 pitch up the middle to gJve the Ph1lhcs their third straight victory and send the Giants to their third consecutive defeat. Jelu walked with one out 1n the ninth and took second on a pinch- single by Greg Gross, bis I OOth career pinch-hit. JefTStone flied out Lo deep center. allowtng Jelu to tag up and move to third, brins.ms up Thomp- son. Gross' pinch-tut lled him with Rusty Staub for 10th place on the all- ume last. Don Carman. 2-0, the founh Ph1la· delph1a pitcher. gained the victory. He pitched three shutout innings. allowmg one hit. one walk and striking out three. Minton. 2-3. who had relieved an the eighth. took the loss. Tra1hn1 ~. the Phtllles bed tt in the founb apinst Roaer Mason. M1keSchm1dtand Von Hayeuin&Jed with oneoutandOleno Wilsonh1th1s third home run of the season. The Giant ~pined the lead 4-3 in the sixth on a leadoff triple b}' Bob Melvin and Robby Thompson • RBI single. Philadelphia tied 1t in the bottom of the sixth as Schmidt doubled for his third hit and scored on Jeltz's two-cut sinaJe. * SAN l'•AHCISGO ~HILAD• l.l'HIA Gtffdtnct Al«lll lb llrlftlv 3b Laooatdlf COavl• rl MelYlll ( RTllOill 2b MllllOllO Uribe" W..lOll 0 JROl>tl•t1 p MOavtlP WOOdrd2b TOIM Mrlllll l 0 1 0 Stontlf 4 I 0 0 MTllmcl cf 3 0 I 0 S.muet cf 4 I 2 0 Sc:flmdt 3b • I 0 I Havea II> 4 I I 0 GWlllOtl rf 3 O 2 I Oaullonc 0000 JelllU • 0 l 2 TOll....,p J 0 0 0 Tflluiv. P 0000 Scnullll 0 0 0 0 Carman D I 0 0 0 GGroH 1111 J3 4 I 4 T...., kwebY......,. .. '"" s 0 0 0 S 0 I I • 0 0 0 • 2, 0 4 I I 0 J I I 3 3 0 0 0 J 1 1 I 1000 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 I 0 1 0 )4 s . s San l'rudl<• t'1 •1 •-• l"lllle._. ... ,., •1-s Two outa wt'len wlnnlno rU11 Kored Ga.t'M Wlnnl119 RBI -M Thoml>SOll (1), E-Je41t, Leonerd OP-San Fra11Clsco 1 LOB-S.11 FrallCIKo 4, Ptllladelohla 7 28-Schmldt 1 38-MaMn HR-G Wiiton ()) SB-Leonard (5), C. OaYIS (4), GlaOOen (t), R TllOmDSOn II), Toliver (I) I~ H • E• II SO Saft l'rllfldtce Ma•on J Robln'on M OaYll Mlnloo L,2·3 f'tlla~ s s • 1·3 0 0 I 1·3 i 0 I 2·3 2 I 4 l 7 0 I 0 0 0 4 I 1 I TollYer S 3 S T~~· 1 0 0 Carma11 W,2·0 3 I O O I 3 MalOll pll«led to 1 !Miter 111 tlle 6111 H8P-TOll ..... bv Muon Umlliret-Home, Wever, First, R-1; Second, 8roclllal1d«, Third. MOl'll•O ... T-3-ot A-17.17S Baltimore third t.8elllaa Jaan kn.lqaea bobblee Nll b .. error, bat It cllcln •t matter u Oriolee topped A'•• 8-6. Cardinals have many problems, fewsolutions ; T. LOUIS (AP)-Astros reliever Charlie Kerfeld 1s the latest to offer a theory on the puzzling turnaround of the St. Louis Cardinals. ··we're just a bed club," be said. "We're not deep in any department. We're supPoSCd to have a pat defense and we haven't played worth a damn. Our bullpen is very me-. diocrc. Now. it isn't just the b.ini.QI. .. 94 Lasorda: No accounting for success "They don't look like they want to go out and play bascbaJJ," K.erfeld said of the struggling defending National League champions, who we re within three outs last fall of being World Series champions . .. They aren't the same, aggressive team they we~ last year.'' Statistics suppon the analysis by Kerfeld. the winnmg pitcher in Hou~ ton's 4-3, 11-inniog vtctory Wednes- day night. Asked what it would take to tura 1 things around, Hcn.og said, ''bener'• players." ' Houston Manager Hal Lanier, a St.,.• Louts coach for five seasons, said,,.: Dodger manager satisfied with team's standing despite Guerrero'~ absence By JOHN NELSON ,., .............. For the purpose of 11lustrauon. Tommy Lasorda had assumed the role-1fnot the precise posture-of a Madison Avenue adven1s1ng ty· coon. tonight's series opener in Pmsburgh. the Dodgers were three gam" under .500 at 22-25. and 1n fifth place in the National League West, despite win- ning eight of 13 in a recent hot streak Before that successful stretch. how- ever. the Dodgers had lost four 1n a row and six of seven. Guerrero Madlock Slouched down in his chair 1n 1he v1S1ting manager's offi ce at Shea Stadium. only a few minutes from New York's famed advertising stnp. Lasorda talked about ballplayers as if they were corporate accounts. Thev have not been above .500 since the third game of the season. runs. 156 hits. 83 walks and a .320 batting average. He also had 87 RBI. 22 doubles and 12 stolen bases. .. We've played a month without Pedro Guerrero, and we were without Bi'll MadJock for a while," Lasorda said. "If we were a big agency looking for accounts for the year, and we lose two of our biggest ones. hke those two -well, be realistic." "If we let the fate of one man determine our success or failure. we're not as strong as we ought to be.'' Lasorda says. He has not played this year. however. after undergoin$ an oper- ation to repair tendons 1n his left knee. inJur'td in spring training. .. We'll win with or without Guer- rero. We're not going to close our shop. lfwe can stay in the thick of11. then when Pete comes back we can Guerrero has not been the Dodgers· onl)' injury problem. Third baseman Madlock was on the disabled hst from A.pril 25-Ma)' 10 with a strained left thigh. and pinch hitter-first baseman Len Matus1ek has been disabled since make our run." ·· The realism was tha1 going in10 Guerrero led the club last year with 33 home runs. 281 total bases. 9Q Superbowl of Motocroa The Superbowl of Motocrou will be held at the Los Angeles Mem onal Coliseum on Satur· day nt&ht. June 7 to mark the grand finale of th(' 1986 S"upercross ~nes. All the stars of the spon will compete 1n this one·ntght·only spectacular Among 1he com· pe111ors will be Team Honda's Rick Johnson. David Batley and Johnny O'Mara; Team Yamaha's Jim Holley and Ketth Bowen; Team Suzuki's Georac Holland and A.J . Whiting; and Team Kawasaki's Jeff Ward and Ron l..('chien. Ticket pnces arc SI O. $16 and $1 9 with children 10 and under admitted at half price. T1cketsarc available at T1cketron. the LA ports Arena BoJt Office. at Super Shops and part1c1- pa11na Suzuki dealers. as well u throu&h the charaehnes: 634-1300. (21)) 410-1062. f415l Q74-639 I and (619) 268-1)686 Early entry gates open at 4 o'clock June 7, regular pl open and 6 and racing stans at 8 ' Ro~ •botn at l"alr A stnes of horse shows arc scheduled for the Oran~ Count}' Fair. Fnday. July 11. through 'Sunday, July 20. 1n Costa Mesa. Hunter and Jumper classes will open the slate on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Horse Western Showw1ll be held Sunday. July 13. from 9 to S. wnh a drcssa&tcxh1b111on to the mu51e of idncy Payne foaturcd at noon. Polo pmes will be held Friday and Saturda)'. July IS:-19. Polo cxh1b1t1ons by professional players will be Fnday from 10 to S Team play will feature professional members from the 1.os Anactcs Colls and teams 1ncludina Moorepark Polo. Los Anaetc1 Equestnan Center, Tn.Vallcy Polo Club..:.. South Co~n1 Pttln Club and the Lakeside Polo l. lub. A ~lebnty·pro uh1bitlon I\ stl for Saturda~. July. 19, a1 noon. featunna Knou Landtn& s Doua htthan On • unda)'. Jul ) 20.i an ..,ndalus1an HorK ~hnw will take place rrom 10 to 4, With the musical drcssqr uh1htt1nn tn ht rrpc-atcd a1 noon Adtn1u1on to theK 'hows ·~ mcluckd in the Fair ldmtts1on pn« of $4 seneral. $2 for children 6-12 and f~ for th()<!( five end under Parkin& will be S2 Fair hours will l'lt' 10 1 m 10 m1dn11h1 on wttkendi and noon to m1dn11hl on wttkdayj For 1nforma11nn. phone HI· U4 7 Oraa6e County Fair racing Th" Orange Count)' Fair lhorou&hbred racing mcc11ng will run Monday Jul)' 7. through Monda). July 21. a1 the Los .\lam11os Race Course The 1 l-day meetin& will fcaturr 11 races nightly. w11h two quarterhorse and one ap- paloosa race JOtn1ng the eight 1horoughbred events Pos1 lime will be 7:30 and wa,enng will include exactas, perfect six. and late dail y doubles 1n the last two races. It will be the first summer mtttmg for the event. which has been held in previous }Cars m the late fall. Toruzn Cb.mplon•lllp Rodeo Amencas tou&hest cowbo) . along w11h some of the.-meanest bucking horses and bulls in the land. arc comma lo Southern C'ahfom111 June 20-22 when Champ1onsh1p Rodeo hit' the Forum 1n tnalewood More than $40,000 1n pnu mone} \1.111 be at stake Ii the rodeo returns to the Forum for the first 11me since 1983 Over 300 of the b1ggC\I namcs 1n professional rodeo will compete 1n ~ddk bronc ndmg.. stctr wttsthng. bareback ndma. calfropina. hull nd1ng and team roprng. as well as a special added attracuon ot iJrls' bareback. bronc ndina. The rodeo opens Fnday. June 20 at 7 \0 pm . followed by sessions on Saturday nit.hi at 7 \0 and Sunday af\emoon at 2 Tickets are pnccd 11 SI 0. S8 and $6 (children 12 and under art$' oft) and In' available 8t the Forum tio11. office and all Ticket master locatioM. 1nch~11n1 May Co .. Mu~1c Plu) and pomman stOreli For more tnfonnauon or 10 order uckets b\ phone, call (213) 480-323? Anabel.m Oa.a Sbow Tht nt''WtSl 1n quality nttarms will bt on display et Lht Anaheim Gun hov. turday and unday at thr Anaheim C'onvrnuon Ctnter. F1~mu from 111 over tbr wor1d ( pain. West Ckrmany Brazil. Italy and witttrland) ~111 be dt plt)«1 11 ~II u 'hotaun 11r nflcs hand&uM aod nflc, f<>r bta andd imall pme. hOY> hnurs "11l be (rom q a m to S p m both da>' C'~ncral adm1\ ion 1~ $4 for dulu and S2 forch1ldrtn S 12 with lh<'>$C untkr llvr adm1Ucd (rtt i\pnl 2 after undergoing shoulder surge!). Pitcher Alejandro Pena was reac- tivated Monday after missing most of last )'ear with a shoulder injury. and even Mike Marshall. whose 12 home runs ues him for the league lead. missed a couple of games with an arm injUI)'. When compared to the firebrand unit that topped the league in I 0 offensive categones last year. St. Louis. last at 16-26 in the NL East. is all but comatose. "Forthe1ranack to work., thcybavet<>; have 2-3 guys who are bitulll wd.l-· Right now. they don't. · • .. There's such an intcr-depcndmc:o! m th~ir bining. If one auy's not bi~~ well. it seems to affect their whole:• hneup, because they rely on speect. rather than power." ! Guerrero. ong1nally scheduled to return in July. now 1s not expected back until August. "1 swear I don't know sometimes what we're thinking of." Manager Whiley Herzog satd after a Cards" defeat that was marked by 10 stnlceouts this week. The Cards. who a year aao offset •: ~ack of power with a 1eaaue-3 .26• banina averaee. a.re 6inina onJ . .224. and they arc last in runs ' "We lose Guerrero. but don't think that's going to stop us.'' Lasorda says. "Sure. I'd like to have him in there, but what can you do? Now. that's like losing a major account. "We consistently swing at balls over our heads. Even 1f we hit them, we pop them up. It just goes on and on. It's like everyone is trying to go up there and h11 a seven-run homer." • Jn 25 games. they have failed tc>; score more than three runs and on 22 • of those occasions they have lost. With still more than tw~thirds oft.be season left. they have been shut out • seven times compared to eight times : for all of 1985. "The operation was a success. but now it's 10 the hands of the ind1v1d- ual." Lasorda says. "He's still in a brace. This is the pan that falls into his hands -how fast can he heal. how hard will he work at rehab1htat1on?" If home runs are the Cards' target. they are well short of their mark. Lasorda said he C'\pected 11 to be tougher for his Dodgers to repeat as d1v1S1on champions. anyway. Through 42 games. St. Louis has only a dozen homers -the lowest total in the major leagues. Pro1ccted over a full season. that is a 45-homer pace. which would be the team's fev.est in 66 years and the fewest in the league since 1945. Herzog believes the trouble goes beyond the lack of power "The things that we were doin& last year we simply haven't been able to l do so far this year," said Jack Clark. "It's as if other teams have done their· homework. They aren't permitting us · to run wild. They aren't intimidated.' by us anv more.'' Purcell gets new kind of kicJ.q Former GWC footbaITPfayer takes up rough, ru_gged rugby By BARRY FAULKNER Delly ..... c ..... , I .._.,, As a star cornerback for Costa Mesa High School. (1olden West College and the University of Pacific back 1n the early 70s, Mike Purcell could only show offh1s ball- carrying skills after a pass interception. But with the dawn of a second athletic career in rugby. Purcell. now a Davis resident, will get plenty of chances to put some moves on opposing tacklers. as well as make a few more familiar defensive plays as a member of the USA Eagles(the American national team). who will take on the All.Japan team Saturday at 3 p.m. at El Camino College. "I started playing rugb) back at Golden West when football was over jUSt as something else to do:· said the 34-year-old Purcell. "and 11 was just more fun." As an All-Conferencecornerback with the Rustlers 1n I Q70-71. Purcell found that rugby allowed for more creative thinking and wasn't hmited so much b) the "programed responses" of defensive football. "Jn rugby yo u get to thmk on your feet. One minute )'Ou're on offense and then the next you're on defense." Purcell said "You ha\C to react mon: 10 rugby and 1ts a better te t o()'our athletic ab1hty." But the 1ran'l1t1on from helmet and shoulder pads to a clothJersc)' and short was not a smoolh one for Purcell. who said It took htm about ix years 10 act rid of his gnd1ron habits and learn to be in the ri&ht position on the lafier rugb)' field (6Q meters wide and 110 meters long) That's not to mention pcrfectmi the passing and kicking skills (with both feet) that the fast·moving game rcquu·cs. · In his IS yea!'\ of playina ruaby. Purcell, now 1.1 petroleum geologist seem to have adjusted sufficicn1I) enou.gh to make the National and an All~Wortd team He ha11 compcted reccn1ly m Hona Kona with the national tCClm. and 10 Johannesbura. South Afnca. wi1h the world team. "The A II-World team was rtally a good cappcr." said Purcell. addin,. "When I amVfli in Johannesburg. I felt hke ~ident Rcapn . . there were so man) n:porte~ and camera creW1 then: to meet me. "Before I <;tarted pla,in11t. I never knew Y..hat rugb) ~as," recalled Purcell " never thou,ht anyth1na would come of 11, but 1t has become the c:cntcrp1ett of my hfc rve aouen a lot out of 1t and it ha been well worth 1t .. The Eaalt1 •~ fe\·ott:d 1n upoom1na Japan match, ba~ on 1he American wennana all s~ of their match~ laS\ ~~r when tounna 1n Japan. The Japa~ team t, 2-2 in a ts current touroftbe U , includm1 lo to Ea tem (3 -21) and M1d~1 (2"-6) Ruab} Football Union team The f.qle'\ al'lo captured tht' m1ddJe kvcl compt'tt uon th15 )C r 1n the Hona Kang •oumey, bcC'ommg the fint Nonll mcrac n team to wrn a trophy in the proccs~ The Amcncan team is not. however. on the same competitive level as 1he spon's international powers,, such as England or Scotland, according to Purcell. "We're gem04 close but it's going to take at least five yean (to reach international prominence).'' Saturday's Japan match will be the second of a doubleheader, with the Old Frothonians taking on the Pheonix Old Boys 10 1he preliminary match at noon. "They will ha ve the advantage of playing together," said Purcell, of Saturday's opponent. (The Americans have been practicing together for only a week.) "They are smaller (10 size) but they are known for their trickiness ot' play." Sconng in rugby consists of a lry (four points), which 1s s1m1lar to a touchdown m football with the ball bcina run into -and downed in -the end zone. a subsequent conversion kick (between the goal posts) worth two points. and penalt) and drop lucks worth three points each. Tickets for the doubleheader are pnced at $5 Surplus of Indy tickets available JNOIA.NAPOLI~ (.\P) -A. s1x-da} run post· ponement of the lnd1anapohs 500 could result an 100.000 fewer fans. officials 'IS)'. and fans seeking tickets are findin& plcnt} of 5ellers The race. \Chcdulcd last unda). was delayed first to Monday and then pushed btlck to Saturday becautc of per 1 tent ram and a dc>n'C to broadcast the event live on national telev1s1on. "There Sttm to be a Im of tickets noaong around nght now." said J()('l<'ohcn. ofTickets Up Front. "We've b«n 1n busmes'i \inC'C I Q78 and I haven t seen an)'thing quite hkc this ... ''The seller\ outnumber the buyers at this time." said Cohen. whose com pan) handle~ transactions fora vancty of evena "We art tak1n orders on a ti;-and-aet basis." be said. "If a pcnon call11 "'" Will go out and get uckcu for that pcnon" Owntr1 of the pmatel) held lndtanapolis Motor 'pttdwa)' do not divulge the numberoft1ckcusold totbe ra«. 1houah tht commonl)' a~ted C$lJmate by potJ<:e and olhtr1 who have attempted to oount lhe Cl'Owd tS 400.000 PohC't art csumauna that about 7S paccnt -300.000 -of the fens will n:tum on h&rday .• Tra k poknman Bob La)'Cock. S1Jd th~ a no way to ptzte lhe aCC'UJ'IK") ohn)' estimates until the day of the ratt ··rm sure that )our gues would be >USt u IC:tOd u anyhod) else' ··he ~1d. ··1 suns m)'tclf about 7S pcnxat ca f ticket holden will return). But a lot of people doG't ii.now nght now whether the) 'rc 1011\1 to come bed.•• a a Orang. Cout DAILY PILOT I Friday. May 30, 1986 f oR THf Rr coRo 1_ ~ • • "I I. MAJ<Ht L•AOU• STANDfNGS A"*1CM &.MtUe Ttau AJWlb t<at1wt Cltv OaktallCI Oilcaoo MiMt\011 Saallle 84•ton Ntw Y0tto. 1St111more 0t1ro11 Mllwaull" Clevela nd T0tonto waST DIVISION w 24 n 11 '1 II II 16 ll:AST DIVISfON L r rt 21 S33 24 471 24 467 2• '" 26 ~ ,. )ti 31 )40 ll 14 619 •St 30 16 11 11 73 10 13 21 n n 11 26 '" ~s S23 "' '41 ~Y'tScoret O.trolt 1, •...i. • Batlfmo•• 8. 0.11.lend 6 N41w Y0tll l Sffltle 0 T .. v't Gamet G9 I , 31, 1 1 ., • 11 ISaltlmot• IFLa,,.gan 1·4) 11 A~ 11tomanlc11. l ·I) n Mllwaull.ff (Nlevt\ • 11 at Clev.._nd (Nlellro l·31 n Ctucaoo !Davit 1 1l at T0tonto (Stt4.C> O· 61 n Teau (Will 2·l l at ICanHl Cllv ILeona r'CI 4·41, n Bo1ton 1woociwaro O·Ol al Mlnnetota (V101a 4·Sl. 11 Detroit IMo,,lt 4 41 at Se.II~ (Moore 2 6J n New York INlalo.ro S·1l et Oak lanes (Young 2 II 11 HOUllOfl Atlante San 01990 San FraocllCo Oed9tn Cine Inna II New Vor~ MonlrH I Pn•La<lllollle c11.ceoo Plllll>Urgh St LOUI\ Nettonal L .. ew Wf!ST DllltSfON w 76 ,. 24 2• n 11 EAST DIVISION L P'cl II S'1 11 ~3 21 S3J n sn 2S 468 1S 40S JO II 132 Sil .,, 7S II 18 74 II 7S 16 ,. 16 2& 419 400 )at ThurMil'l''I StorH Ntw Yori!. S, OtOeln 2 Phlladelon1e S, !>an Frencl,co • ToclaY"s Gamel 1 1 7 ' 3 s ) I 6 12 13 1l 1 14 1 D~ IHarlnl\er S·3) a t PllllOUfCI" (81et1C~1 3·31. n Atta11ta !Mahler 4·4) er Chlcaoo ISanoerton 2·1) San FranC•\CO ILeCou S· 11 et New Yo•~ cBererw• 2-01 n San 01t90 SllOw l 11 at PhUtclelD!l•a ._ Gron 3·SI " St Loul\ I Burr•• 1·01 at C1nc1nnat1 Oennv 3·Sl, 11 n Mo11trHI (Smllll 3 4) at Houllon !Scott • lJ MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amerlcen L••9'1• CT'hrou9" WtdneldeV'I Gama\) BATTING 193 at l>al\l-6000s Bo,ton 311 Yount Milwaukee 311 Pucl<tll M·nnllota 359, Mall•nolv. New Yori. 335 ~H TorU'lto l74, L vnn. Btlllm0tt 31• RUNS-It HtndenM New Vor• 43 Puckett MlnnllOta •I Ph11t10• Oe,lend 18 0 '8rltn, Tuel, JS lt81-Cen\eco Oa>uano 41 Joy-. Anvtl" 411 Ma11lno1v, New Yori< 38. Puci.111 Minot lOla 36, Murrev Baltimore 35 HITS-Pucktll Monne.ota 71 Ml)ll•l'OI• New York 63 8QQO' BO\IC." 62 MO\fDv T0ton10 59 Jey-, All9tll, SI DOUBLE!> Mall• ') • "''"' "I"• 16 B<>11v· 80,1on IS Ow E"vaf\ Bo\ton \ l iso•tr Cltvtla"o IS 8uc '"'' 80''"" I} Oow,,.ng, Aft9911, IJ, fit (f BO\ICJn IJ TRIPLES-I ar4' l1to w •• 1 HOME RUNS Jovntr, Ano•h. ''· l>v• •••II MIMf\Ofe IS Can\fCO 0 11• ano I) r,,, .... Mmn•\ota 11 Bart1tt•JJ To,... ... ii, t 1 STOLEN BASE:S-li! Heoae''''' New Yon )I CanotlO\· C•IC&llG n .Y ono. r,. ,rl IJ W 00 "S Bell mo•4' IJ 8~• e• (,,,,_a 0 11 PIT(HINC, S Of< \•On\ -C f"'f"\ 8 l'~r 8·0 1 69 Hea\ Oe• eno I 1 1 "4 fl'"' Dt " • "' l 17 8'>!1 J < •• Ba·•"'"'~ ~ lJS STRIKEOUTS Hun• 80''0" 8• ( tm"''' Botton 91 Hollut•e M1•wau•"~ /4 fl., Oa~1and 14. 8 11fvtn M•nn,.so•a 61 SAVES-Aa\e 8alt1more 11 Ii!""""' N~w Yotk 11 Stenotv 80\ton 8 0 M-•· Afl9tll, ), Ha•'\ Tt<a\ 7 Jame\ (n,. ""o I National LH9U• (Throu9'> Wtdneidav'• Gamtl) BA TTtNG 9) a1 oa•' -<,.,,,r,n S.n CJ••J lS2 Ra¥ P.11,ouror lS2 Hef"ll"Oft N~ .. Yo•• 333 C B•own San l'ranr•\tO Jll 8roo• • Mon1rea1 ll 1 RUNS C.wvnr !>111" 014'00 JJ Ritinh Mr 1 ''ea J1 vv C•eo '>11n r • .,,.,, \CC JI Bron•• Monlr1Ja1 l9 H~'n&nOf!l Np.-YO'" 19 McRevnold\ \11n O·~llC. 19 RB•-8•00•• Monrre1u 40 ~rsllaM, OodQen. n. !>< l'•n•<JI p,., adf'•Oh.a H c,. ·~· Nf'W VOf"lll l 1 PAr~.,. r •ft( 'l"'d' ] HIT') c;..,,.,, S<t• 0 "9" 67 Rlt. ~·I •\bu•ll~ SI Ila "f ) Mo,.t•ea ~ l\•GQ• \ Mo111rea 1. Sl Ht•~ano~1 N,.,. (o•• B DOUBLE!> Ha•f'\ Pr, 'OclP "'"• R kt f'"OIC2\ p ,lf\C>U't.Jf' 14 TRIPLE~ C•ilt mae So Lu-.•\ ~ M~r""' Atlanta • Re ne\ Mon•rea 4 Bruo~' Mon 1rtta 1 l MrG~e ',t l ()u \ ) M lrPt ( n' 1nn411 ! . ,_.OME. RUN!> B•oo•\ MorH~e 11 ~r"'9l, DedQen, 12, Garvh '>a" 01C"JO If Part.er C1nc1nna1 10 0 11Nson ¥on•rea Y I Dav ' Cn ca11 9 Y Re•'IO•O\ Sa'I 0 "" '1 STOLEN BASES ( ""'"'"" '•' l<iv \ JI OunGan, O~l, It, Ra r~\ Mof'••ro 8 O"•ar> Hn 1\IOn •• E oa~ ' ( f)( 1Mell 14 CELTICS ... From Cl v.ho)corcd .::!)potnh lt d1minah:'>J lot nt \tull Imm our rnin<.h · Boc;tnn C\lahll\hcd a cham- p1on sh1p o;cne~ n.x·ord h) hitting 21 of 24 free th row' for a 45!< pcn.:en1agc l he: I ::ikc:r.-, 't't tlw old mark 111 943 1Ahen chq mad<' 11 of 1'i <ihul\ ac f>h1ladclph1a on M.1\ 16 I Yim Thur\dJ\ nigh!'' game "'a' r>l.1.,.t•d tn QO-<.legn•t· 1cmpaatuH'' in Ro,ton (,arden. v.h tlh h,1, no air lnnd111on· 1ng "I Ill' runn1n~ di<,appt'Jrt•d 1n chc heat ." I 11t·h 'aid "11 v.t• rnn't run. we can't ma kl· up lht· lfllll k r<>tnt~" H ou\ ton "',,, In.I h' \ kccm Ola- Juv.un 1A>1th 21 11<1111l' Jnd RJlph \amp\on v.11h I )I hul th<. I win T o v.t'I \ uim h1tll'd Int I U\I \l "<.'n \C<.Ond -hall po1n1' Om· \tarting guard R c1hcn Rt•td hJd right po1n1' and the •ithl'r I t·"'" I loHJ J U\t \I\ "l loHJ ;c, mm1 l'llt·1. ti\ l' v. ht•n tht• Rcx-kl't'> arl· runn1n~ · Hmton guard Dann~ \mgr <.:11<1 '\\t•'"' ta!..c:n th.11 av.;n ~\l'r. tinw11111 ''l' tall..l'd ahoul the nt•t·d 10 get hal I>. on ckkn'K · On oflen.-,(." thr C l'ltr<.' d1cl tht•1r U\U31 hnlltant )llh of li11<l1ng the Opt•n man \cHral ttml''· Aud""'~" 1\olJ ted on Rodnr)' Mc< nn or Jim Pt:ll'N:n He alrno\t alwav' w<m the ha nlc\ "I don't thin~ 1hc\ l an handle rt· H1rcl ~1d "II the) douhlc-up on ml' I will ,wing 11 (t h<' h.111 1 around I 1hrnk 11 \our bc.•\t pla\ " J he ( l'lt1n \IJrh'cl lhl· '1.'<.orHI quanC'r with ;1 19 11 nin th;ll ga \l' thrm a ~o .. V1 lrad rhl\t nnt:r kll below \t'V('O l)<llOl\ lhl' Tl'\I 111 thr game lfou~ton·, third and la'\t lead wa .. )0.29 Wtlh ~S \t'tnntJ\ left 10 lhl' opening (X'nod ··we didn't loo~ like t he tram th.lt hrought u~ hcrt.• ·· OlaJuwon '<ttd · fht\ wtts thC' wnr" J-1mr nl tht' \cai1on I wa\ ashamed · Jf they arc to win their fir,1 NUA title. the Rockets would become onl)' the fifth team in plavofl h1'1t on to SUf"\'IV{' a 2 0 defiCll They mu\I win four aame\ tn I I days (n the la!tt HO dav'>. &~ton ha\ lo,t three 1t3me'\ PITCHING IS dKltlOM>-01rllno New Vorti 6-0, 3.)1, Oi9da, Ntw V0ti., • I, 110, l(tffelcl Ho<Alon, S 1, 1 U , i..con. $an llra ncl.co. ~1. 1 ti, Fll'~ncltl, New VOi" .. , 4 1, i 0.. l(lllC>Olf' Ho.itton, 1•1, 1 1' STllllKEOUTS-sc:ott. Houtlon, 87 . VllMftl-., o..en. 7b W4!cfl. Dld9Ws, "' z ~llll, Atlanta '1· ~. New Yori!., 6l SAVES-0 Smltll, Mou1ton. II, lllHfdon, Montrt1I II, Gonao. S.n Olt9o. t Fra11Co. c111e1n11a11 1 L• Smllll, Clllcaoo, 1 Of0.(0, New Yor11. 1 AMllUCAN L~AGUti llew17, AMltl4 DIETitOtT Wllltakr 2b Collins rt oaev"' lb -LNPann c Solimndll Harper d" COIH lo S11trlcln ci Htrndon If BrOOkn\ n Tremmln T.talt ebr 111>1 4 I I I S I I 0 s 0 ) 0 4 2 2 , l 1 I 0 2 I I I 4 I 2 I ) 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 3 0 I 1 1 0 0 0 CALl .. OAHIA ~ttls cl JOYl'llf' lb OownlnoW OeCnalo Wlttono ?!> ~llC!tc;k rt G•~ll ?!> ISu•i.tnclll ScllOfltc:I" BOOll• c '8 7 11 6 Tttak kll't bY lnnlft9' ••r11 111 s 0 1 0 5 0 0 0 ) 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 1000 4 I 1 0 l I 0 0 ) 1 1 0 3 1 1 4 ' 0 0 0 Detrtlt lOI 200 Jlll-7 CllHwNa 000 000 400-t Game WiMong RBI -LN F>arrlt n (4) E-<;ricn Boont B•OOlltns Sutton OP-Oatro<t t LOB-Ottro.t t , Catltwn•t 9 2B-<Ollfnl LN Ptrrl\11, H¥ndon Oa Evan' Har04rf' Heno"c" HR-Whttalltr U t ScllOlltld IS) LN Parr11n llOl S9-8r00ktnl I 11 IP' H Ill IElll 99 SO Oetralt LePolnt W ?·J 6 5 • • ) • Htrll&ncltl $,1 3 2 0 0 2 J Caltfornla SuttonL7·S S2·3 I 4 3 I F 1nlev I 1 1 1 l F 1tcher 1 I l I I 1 0 LaF>o1n1 011cP11<1 •o ' l>allttl 111 trw 7tl'I tilSP-<Ole\ l>v Sutton PB-Boone LN F>trrl\11 Umolres-Home, Scott F1r\I W1111e, Second P MllO\, Tlllfcl McCov T-30. A-119'1 Aneel averavei (Tllrou8'1 Tllundl'l"t G•mel 9ATTING Narron Jae I< son Oownl110 Jovot r Gnc" 8urlH On Henorick Schot1e10 Wlllong Jone~ Pttll• 800llf OtC nee. Miter Toi ah Witt Corbet• F11Cl'ltr McCal~•" Staton Romen1c;. Fonttr Brvoen MOO'C! Alt A H Hit RBI "'ct. •• l 6 0 4 l3l 111 71 36 1 18 30I 160 19 41 S 7S 30I 190 ll SI 16 41 lOS 80 12 24 , • )()() 10. I) )0 ' 10 2tl 98 15 27 6 16 276 113 IS 30 S 11 768 101 IS 27 2 13 761 IOS 11 76 7 16 7•1 I~ 16 J.4 1 IS 221 , ,., " 1'I 2 n ?25 1n 10 11 5 7• n1 d 4 9 0 3 209 IS1t lll OJ SS 21t 210 PITCHING IP H 99 SO W·L EAA 16 68 27 6 I 4 4 3 70 1~ II 6 U 0· I 3 60 1 1 I 0 1 00 316 60 ' 60 77 S8 J J • 48 60 I 66 17 75 4 4 4 67 SO 46 ?S 25 3 1 H S 18 24 1 14 3 I 4 91 16' 7S 11 n 2 I S 06 Ill 16 9 lS 1 ) S 21 '-'' 1 61 9 26 2 S 7 OS 7 6 I 0 0 0 18 00 1 1 ) I 00 1800 Su non Ce11oe or·• F·nev Ot~tr' T-11 11 1• \0 ll 0· I 9 S3 403 4I1 159 214 ?2· 24 4.91 Moorp 1 Coroett 4 Otne" !>ave• NATIONAL LEAGUE Men S, Dodoen 2 LOS ANGELES NEW YORK 0 ~lll ' aoe1 lo Sa. :ti M"tN " tti Mar\tie •• (f'Otno 11 L41ior • "" \c Q\i.. a l<VV "' \ t ' •D t 11 l>o I 0 • 0 0 0 4 0 0 I 4 0 I 0 4 I I I I 0 I 0 ., 0 0 I 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1000 000 ¥'1\ •\n ' M•lc.niri ,, Hrnnc11 tr, (~ntr I O\ltr I 0f•\trO rt l\fl•\lM )O f eute llJ McOw11c, Oro"o o Sa nta na• F-rn(l~l p sc.mr 2ti ll l S 2 Total\ Scott 1>v tnnt~ •I>, 11111 4 0 0 0 I I I 0 J 0 I 7 J I I 0 • I I I 0 u 0 0 J I 1 I 4 0 I I o o o n 0 0 Q 0 7 I 0 0 0 0 ~ 0 0 0 0 19 s 1 s lol Anvtle> 000 110 000-2 NtW Yon 010 100 20a -S G•me VV1nn•nv RB• ~11111111 141 E' Bao men l 08-lo• An11ell'\ ~ New Yo•• 6 28 -Knioht M11a1oc• Htr,,anOC!l Oun 4" HR ~O\lfr 'Ii Mo•\h•I• f 13 SB Duncan 20 IF> H A EP 98 SO l Ol ,,,..., ./, .. rt..;f'16 L 1 ~ e04!tifi.1Pr Nt• Y9f'lc J C!rnanoc-1 l/V Mcoo .. c11 O•o"o., e ~ ' 2 1 ) \ 0 I I 0 0 ). Ii 0 0 7 ~ 0 0 () fl • 0 Umo1rf!~ Hnn't B ~Illian"\ F-1r\t U •Plf'V \t'CMd f' Jlf !• ra Vl/t\I T-2 4? A 4 1 080 Hlah school CIF FINA LS I Utvrcl•v el DodOer Stacliuml 4·A I 10 D"' [ \1•••on111 •24·) I V\ F ont11n• 19 I l A '30 ,. m -Ric. MC\11 2• 41 •• Wu•tt•n '~ ., 1 A I p,.. -Ar fe"o 2 I •\ Saugu\ I II 91 I A O 4 rn C. odt•onr 70· 1 I •l 8a1ow " J•a" 11 A 2 Smaa ~ooh ITedaYI Prov·denc" 17 JI v' L1nl1elcl Cllr"t1a11 1?2 3l Men's golf results FreoCou!Mn Cnar .. , &olllng Larrv Min Tom Sltkman e>.nnlt T rtlll« Mike RtlCI Leon.rd Tllomoton Oavto()orln !Sol> E •" WOOCI DIMY Htalner Bfllv Plerot Tommv Vatenllnt RICll Oe!oo' 0111 Fooma11 AllOr-MIQH JONI Aclaml Dan Manoerton JC ~ad 8oCJoy W1clt.I"' Ric._ C•amer Barry Ja..,tc 8rtenCIH r Er11le Gonielt1 Howard Tw111v 81H GLaUot> Donnie Hammooo 9oo Lonr Jo/111 Mll'llltey R-Mlll1>1t Marll.OMaera Gtflt Sever' J otv S111oa1ar Harry TevlOr WlllleWoocl Cllri' Perrv Tom Pern1c• M1kt C.ovt Peter S.nlor Jom Ga"•Olllr Bot> Twev M1..'.e Nicoteltt Steve Pett c r.ar lfl C ooclv Run Cochren 8 u0dv Garoner Victor ReoaldO Frank Conner 31·U-.. lS-~7 >4·U--.1 »·ls-67 34-~ )3-J.s-.f 34·3'-61 3S·u--.t 3'·3S-.• 3'·3s-69 )4·3S-.9 33·~· 3S·3S-70 37·))-10 lJ 37-70 ls-35'-70 33·37-70 36·34-70 3S·3S-70 36 n-11 H ·36-71 34·37-71 3S·36-71 3S·J6-71 34·37-11 33·31-11 34·37-11 lS-36-71 37·3'-71 34·37-71 3S·l6-7 I 36·3S-71 36·3S-71 34·37-71 35·37-12 36·36-77 36·36-12 36·36-12 lt·l4-12 3S·l1-n )1·lS-72 34·31-12 36·36-72 35·37-72 38·34-72 40-32-72 36·36-71 MllltOon•l<I St•vta owmen L1.n11le C...,,_111\ Jonncooi. Eel Oouol•trlV Lon Hlnklt Jiff Lt•i\ Grtt N0tm.n Oevt ltumrntl\ GrttTWI09l Mlt.t Hulo.tt Matll ISroolll Oevld LurldttrOl'I' Oav1c1 Pffote• Jett Grygi.f MQtrll Matallli.V 9oo Gllcllf Ga rv McC0tcl Marl< Pft I Ron111a !Staci.. Da nny ariog, Roes Curl David Eclwatclt Woo4v FlllllUOll Scott Hoell Mlllt McCuflOugl'l TlmStmown Curtis Str•noe La nnv Wadkins Tonv SIMS Cr110 Staoier Bla ine McCalll"e< C11rlt Anoanon ISrtll Uooer Pat Llncl~Y Gery HaHl>l<O ICtnnv Knox Bobbit Ctamoell Fulton Allff'I Brtll Uooer LOttn ROl>e<U GaoroeArcller C1110 &act. Brad Brvanl Tom Byrum (;a0<1" Cacltt Antonio Ce•d• Devil Love ~11rrn M...,lete 36·J6-12 JMS-72 3'-3'-71 36·,.._n 36-3'--72 37·)!.-72 31-n-n u »-n 35-37-n 3MS-11 31-JS-12 35·»-13 37 36-13 37·36-13 40·ll-73 3Hl -73 JS·lt-73 lHl-13 JS·lt-13 l6·37-7l 31·36-13 )6·31-13 l7·36-13 3'·3S-1l 34.3,_73 36·31-73 40·ll-73 36·37-n 36·37-13 lS·ll-73 31·3'-13 37·31-7' 39·3S-14 36-38-7' 36·31-74 37·37-14 3S·3,_14 38·36-74 37·37-74 36·31-74 3'·36-74 38·36-7' 3S·39-74 39·3S-7' 3'·36-1' lS·,,_74 31·36-74 31·36-74 3S·3,_74 fitlcllatd ZOllOI Sl4r¥1Jona1 AndV Olllerd a 1n ltraalson TomPunitr tol>&v Penc"tr o• Motoan Mike Miit' • llla.Caldwfll Greo Ladt~ Mar\ Catcavec:chla Garv MarlOw• On ie Moor• ROl>lt'I Wrenn Joa Inman a ·,..,,.rtv West Jo/I c ornu Trtvff Oooch Ed StlffO ISreo Fexon !SIN Sendtt ISOl>l>Y C Ole Jim Dant Rieff. Fenr Tom Jtnff.lnl Jim Simon' Adrla11 StlUl Brl1n Mooo Frid Funt. Oav• Eicl'ltll>lroe• !Sr.cs Fal>ll T~1G1etton ~fer Oo\ttrhu1s Ml" West Jay Otf1ir>11 Siu tr>11rallam Pate Matollru1 a·Oevls S.1111 Oennv Htolar David Jiminez Coiem.n Pttclta• t ·B,.an Lef>n/\arcl Ot111111 Darr en Catvln Peete Eva11Sclllli.< Ken GrMll La rrv Zleoter 31--1~ 31·31-7S 3'·,,_1S 38·37-7S 3'·37-7S 3t l6-7S )t·)6-7S SA •l-7S .0·)5--15 '1·,._1S 3'-l,_7S 37·3'-7S 36·39-1S 37·lt-7S 41·:U-7S )7 )t-16 3' 4(>-76 ll·-14 31-76 31·l9-76 lt·)t-76 3'·31--76 3'·37-76 40·36-16 lf·37-16 34·4:>-76 31·)1-76 3'·»-11 31·39-17 '1·36-71 31·39-77 40-31-11 3'·»-n '° 31-71 '1·37-71 )9·3,_,. 39·3,_,. 40-~ 41·40-81 4() ,,_.., 3'·u-«l U ·40-f4 '4·'3-t7 WO WO WO WO a-denoltt amateur Women's golf results LPGA CNlmo6onshlp (at~'°"• Ollie) Bonn•• Lauer Catllv Mor" Clnclv Figg M1u le Btrttolll Snirltv Furlono Amv AICOll Susan Sanotrl Mllll Eclllt J•"• BlalOCll Marc• Bozart11 Sut FoottMen Nancv l adDeller Marv Muronv 8evertv l(la n Jene Crelttt Bet" SolOmon Sllelltv Hamlin LIH Youno Colleen Walt.er Lvnn Connellv Sll•rrlri Smver' Nencv Scranton Pi• Nlluon Ptn11v Hammel Aluenore Reinha rdt Cl11c1v Rarick t<alllY Mitt Amv Benz M IS Zimmerma n SuH n Tonkin Lvnn Adam' Maroartt Wero Sha ron Miiter Nancy Wllll e· Brewer Catllv t<ratzert Juclv Otct<lnior> Ja ne Geddis Clndv Hill Sanov Lemon Marv Dwyer Lori Ga•batl Avako Okamoto Pat 8radltv Ok·Hee Ku Connie Chlllt m • Oet>o••h Sli.lnnt • F>attv Ha vH H01111 Stecv Ro1>111 Wa1100 Dale Eo9fl1no Marthe NeuH Jen Slep!len,on 1ta111v Baker C1nc1v Macttev Jult lriff.lter Laura Beugh JOO'( RO\tntllal 8ttlv Barrell VICI<! Ta DCY Mvre Blackwtlcle• Kr '' Ar,1no1on Dawn Coe 37·33-6S 33·n-.6 33-3~1 34.,.._.. 3S·l3--68 3S·34_.9 34·3s--69 3•·3s--69 3'·3s--69 3S·3S-10 )4·36-70 3S·3S-70 33·37-10 36·34-70 3S·3S-10 33·31-70 34·37-71 3S·l6-lt 36·3S-71 )6 3S-11 36 lS-71 37·3-11 33·31-11 36·3S-71 36·3S-71 35·36-71 36·3S.-11 3S·)7-77 37·3S-72 36·36-72 36·36-n 36 36-71 36·36-71 3S·J7-77 35·37-71 ll·l,_7? 11-1s-n 31·3S-12 36 36-77 36 )6-12 36·36-11 39-1}-12 l7 36-ll 36 37-13 38·3S-73 Se• v Ouonlan Ott><>rah McHall1e 8ttn Dan f-1 11·36-13 lS·lt-73 38·3S-73 34.3,_73 37·36-73 31·36-73 36·31-73 31·36-13 ll·3S-73 3S·3t-73 36·37-73 31-36-13 3S·3t-13 ll·.0--73 37·36-73 36·31-13 . 40·)3--73 36·37-73 36-37-73 37 :16-13 39-~73 36·37-73 11·36-13 37·37-1' 11·37-1' 36·31-74 l9·3S-1' 40-~14 lt-36-74 38·36-1' 31·36-74 3S·39-14 ll·:U.--74 37 31-74 36 31-74 36·31-14 3'·40-14 31 42-1' 3S·J9-7' H -39-74 3S·39-14 ll·l6-14 3S·39-1• 38·36-14 38·37-7S 39·36-15 37·31-1S JO AM Wa\/lam Pam Allen Sulit F>eg11 Htather Drew LtllOrt Murao1ooe t<1m Sn1omen Cnrll John.on Joa n Joyce 38·37-1S JS·40-7S 40·3S-7S l7·3t-7S 36·39-7S 36·39-75 ll·31-15 3'·36-7S 31 31-7S 37·ll-7S 37·31-7S l 4·41-1S 40·)6-76 36·40-16 39·37-76 38 31-76 39·31-76 39·31-76 3•·37-16 39·37-16 31·39-16 )7·39-16 37 39-16 39·37-76 38·31-76 36·•1-77 ll·J,_17 31 40-11 39·38-77 ll 39-71 40·l1-11 39 38-71 39 31-77 40 31-71 JI 40-71 38 40-11 39 41>-79 '3 36-79 '1 31-79 39·41>-79 J9 41>-79 36·'3-19 37 42-79 39 '1-80 39·41-tO 39 41-11 JoAnne Carner Pennv Pull Ka•"v POlllewall 01a nnt Oe11ev Lauri Peter,on Jac1<1e Bertttll Rosie Jo~' Silvia eerrotacc 1n1 Oeo R·ct)aro Calllv RevnolO\ LeAnn Canad•v Cethv Marino Jt•Uvn Britz Oenl'e Strt1>1g Jen111 Ande"o11 Marlene Flova Joan 0.111 Ca•oHnt Gowen Jane• Co•u Allct Miiier Nancv fitu1>1n M F'°•gueru•Oo11 j Me ua wn1tmort Baro Tnomu "'""f'"Marie Pal M Soencer Ot~"" M iu e McGeoroe T ammv F•e<!••<• ~ Sa"ora Pa mt< 8ec~v Pee rSOI' !>l>erf Stt1n,,aut r Berl> Bun~ow•I.• Pe111 R1110 C Montoome•v t<av ICtnneov Hte1ner Farr Linda Hunt O.t>!><tManev Donna wn11e BKl<Y Lenon Al"'°" F •n11ev Juclv IC1m1>all·S1mon K ertn Mu11d1noer Barbara Barrow t<alllv Oougllertv LOfl West O Howe Chenceilo• "'''' l=trgon Moce R1t11n"n Pallv Snee,,en '-"eron Barrett Vat ijll.1nf'I•' M ndv Moc.•e L..t.1r-.. n MO....,fl -(. > . Beverley Oav11 8ttw t<ing Oteclet l e,wer Tnert\t Htu•on AllU .. O H111soe Marv OaLono itat,,rvn Vou"ll Sa Iv L•ll t NBA PLAYOFFS Cti.mplom.hlp s.r .. :t (BHt Of MVtn) HOUSTON VS. BOSTON (Alt tMmeS on CNlllMI 2l 8 0\IOn '12. HOUtlon 100 H1ur\Oav s .core -Bostori 111 Hou"on 9S Bo\lon tetcll '•rlel, 7·01 Sun<la• -Bolton e 1 Hou\ton 12 30 o m Tuuoay -Boston et Hou\ton. 6 om Tllunclav 8o•ton at Houston. 6 Pm 111 'leeenarvt Sundav. Ju11e I -Houlton a l Bo1ton 10 e m 11 ne<.euarvl Wtclne\Oav June 11 -11ou1ton at 80\lon, 6 11 m Iii necenery I AH hmH POT Cetttcs 117, Aoclrm ts HOUSTON (tS) -McCra y S· 11 0·0 10 Ota1uwon 8· 16 S· 10 71 Samoson 1 1' •·6 11 LIOYcl 4·9 0·0 . Reocl l · 10 IHI 6. Wl110111s 3·• 1·1 e Pettrlen 3 11 1 1 8, Leavell 7·7 0·0 5 Hams 2-6 7·3 6, EhlO 0·7 7·7 2, McOo•all I I 1 2 3, Welters O·O O·O O Totalt 38·92 11·21 95 [L1\L5 Cerole C11art>onn1er Laurte R1rt1<1• Catllv JOlln\lon BOSTON ( 111} -Mt Haoe 9· 1' 1 I ?S 8 1rcl 11 19 4·f 31, Psrl\11 •· 14 0·0 I , JOllMon 4· 17 10 lO ll. Ainge 6· 1 t 7·7 lS, Walton I • O·O 1, S1cl'lllno S·I 0·0 10, Kitt 1·1 O·O 4 flllrcll>.111 1 I 0 0 1 Vincent 0·4 0 0 0 Carhtte I 1 O·O 2 TotelS 45·90 73 2• 111 Seen bY Ouan.n HOUltOn 30 10 19 2&-9S Bo11ot> J t 19 34 n -111 T"'" 001nt ooel,-Blrd l A•noe LH•e'I Fou1ec1 out-None fitat><>uncl,~oulton S7 IOta 1uwo" 10) Bolton S? {8 1rcl 9) Anl1h-HOulton 21 (McCra y, Reid Sl. Bolton 21 18 ord 1) Total loull-Hou1ton ?4, Boston 20. WATER POLO t'"""8tltMI Teurnemem lat Marwllls, Franca) U.S. Na"-1 TNm 7, Fnnce S Unlltd Stettl 0 3 3 1-7 F ranee t 4 O l>-S Unlltcl Staltl tcorlllQ Berllt\Ofl 1 c;,,,, I Evan.t I, Scll•Oldtr I, Bover I Moucnever I France .coring (;arwu l, 8 rilltt I Herve I °"*'Sc-Soaln 9, Yuoo1le v1a 9 naly 10, Australia 8 .......... 1. Ralph Sampeon of Boa.atoll ta able to eUp throqh the defen.e of Boeton '• Robert Parlell and Larry Bird darlJaC Tbanday'• NBA Cbamptonehlp Serl• 1ame. ' e a a s a c HllVWMd hrll THIM$0AY'$ •HULTS (1"1 .. ., ... .,........,... ,,_..., F"'ST llACI. 1 turlonot $1*;111 LoOfio. (~VJ fit••• ICIOI IH~nandul Malva 's Prlcll 1$1blllel Tlmt 1.24 11S HCONO ••c•. 6 turlOno' TtHaotct (81et ll I Und~turbtd (Plncay) T.., kll0t ~HI COllvarat) Time I 11 4/S 1.0 uo uo uo 460 f 00 120 ~00 420 700 uo S 80 n OAIL v OOUBLe 110-tl 0110 SSI '° TH•D ltAC• 6 furtonot Janv UH (OllNllJnevt> FrltndlY Ltacllr ISll>lllel E:ltt•nt Park (,...,ro1a l 8 20 uo 310 S80 SOO 110 Time I l2 J/S n IXACTA (7·11> oeld '3S 40 lfOUllTH lllACI. OM mile Whtol>ev Tta <Cn tanonl MallClllO (PlllCIY) Etoontaneo tStannu lUO 660 ) 10 uo 300 260 Time 136 4 S u IXACTA 11·61 o••O sn100 FtnH lllACIE. ' lurlot!os Doc Snow (Sttven\I Summers Hiiie< (Orteoa l Brad N' Bruce (Plncav) Time 1 17 3/S 110 S40 340 1440 640 3 40 U •xACTA ( 10·1) P•lcl S194 SO SIXTH lllACI. l I 16 mitts on turt Julle Writer (OtlahouuaYtl IO 60 2S IO IS 00 Prooe• Marv (Plncavl 19 40 17 20 Evtf)lllO 914 (SotOI 32 40 Time l tl U f!)(ACTA 110·11 oaia sJ,OllOO SEVENTH RACE. 7 lurtonol On Your Own Time (F>lllCIYl S 60 vOOCI Zar IOetahouuavt) Ocean Wave (Ort111a l Time l 14 l1S u EXACTA (t-7) oeid s l1HO 360 3IO 1IO S60 8 70 S1 "'ICI( SIX 1e·1·2·10·10·1l oelcl Sl 91400 to 33 winning tlckth !live llot\es) Carryovt• DOOi u s 47' °' EIGHTH lllACll: Ont mlle Gou•am• IPl11<a v1 F>ertv Le10tr ISteve111I Prl1mat1C IOtlt "ouuavel 780 HO 220 310 160 1 IO Time I 36 U IEXACTA t6 41 Pa•cl M300 NINTH RACE. One mile on turf Ant•rllc• (T0tDI 6 60 Prlnctu Cer101e (Bien l Batlaclrv (Plncev) Time 1 35 U IEXACTA IS 61 0110 S 116 SO Attendance 11 134 soo 340 660 • 00 uo Fal""9x Pen lltP-l THURSDAY'S RESULTS (llftl of 4S·nl9flt llanw\S mMflne) FIRST RACE. One mitt oace Demian (Wlt1lem1) I 00 Skloe>eralrlt (Peratr) Ho•lzon S••r (Wine 111 Time 701 U l&:XACTA 19 It oald SISOO SECOND RACE. One m lle oeca LanOdon Street (Wllhercl) l 60 Taro• I011en1 Lovtlv Solrlt IWlltlamll Tlmt 2 05 3/S 4,00 2 60 1.0 240 3 00 J 00 HO 360 240 3 40 S2 DAILY OOUISLE (1·11 otl<I s27 00 '3 f!XACTA (8·4) oald S26 .0 THIRD lllACIE One mite oace IC•no Of Jan ISlelt"l 19 10 910 4 90 Huntert Reward IM1,,lne1l 26 00 10 40 Svncooettcl fitny111m I 8a11er 3 60 r.me 201 • S '3 EXACTA 11·3) oa•d SS1990 FOURTH RACE. One milt Datt Aewerclecl (Parker I 3 40 Jalf'l 8rHH (F>larGel C•eme Ot l e Creme ITOclcll Time 201 1•s FIFTH RACE. OM mlie Dace F'elw fit111at tAnoerson 10 40 Lillie 8 •0hotll ISllval OOCIOf Don (Rutz) Tme 100 U EXACT A (l · 11 oelcl $IS 00 SIXTH RACE. Ont m11e pace Min La urette IW1lllaml) 910 Nltas Naeto (Kuel>llr l Cer•len Oanctt iSmllnl Time 20. '5 EXACTA 16·11 Dll•d S71 )() SEllUtTH ltACf!. One milt oace Wade "4v IMldtancll I 20 True Charlat ISIMtlll Haooy Sco11 ITr~OleY t Time 20'1 3•S SS IE XACTA 17· SI oald S79 00 EIGHTH RACE. One mile oace Gertie Mav !Stetthl 3 60 Nevtr Reoret Me I Hoitt l 60 Runr (Onomtrl Time 2 OS 115 '3 £XACTA I 1-71 Ptlcl SS6 10 NINTH RACE. One mitt trot 370 JOO 160 •00 0 0 410 360 u o 300 HO '20 )()() 3.00 2 80 7 70 610 370 190 360 160 0 0 3'0 4 20 3.40 "40 Satant APO•tntlCt (Wltharcl l t3 00 16 20 • 80 Metl1111 Ptfcla (ltet<.hlorcll It IO 4 60 1moerla1 (;lorv IOttomerl 110 Time 2 00 llS sJ IX ACTA (5·3) oe1d Sl33 90 l2 P'ICK SIX 16·3-6·1· 1·5) oalcl 1730 70 to algnt wlnnlno tlc•ets lllve llorte'I Carrvover OOOf s 1,U7 S8 TENTH lllACIE. One mile oact ~v Amt>auaoor IStettll) • 80 Flamteratt (t<utl>letl Dou s1111 (Leckavl Time 2033rS Sl E XACTA 17·21 OA•O SI03 10 A1tt ncla11<e 1 472 360 )()() 110 460 680 &...-....,..... THUR$0AY'$ •awe.TI Cltlll .. n ............. MFM MMllttllel , .. n ltACa. lJO vard~ llltbt G..v Poltev CFloueroaJ uo , '° So'I' "Iver (lllOrt\) S 20 Mike A c11ar111 11 .. aclt.•v l Time: 17 92 u aXACTA (6·7) '9kl s lUO $1COf'O •AC•. l~ yarda Jem Vltw (TfMWl'I) )20 UO Quttall Suntl .. (I Garclal II IO Col IOI> !lard) Tlma li b U IEXACTA C7 11 Pl ies t77 00 uo 300 u o 1.20 uo 2.60 TH•D llAC•. 3~ verd' LOl!t Coln (Ltcktvl ward• Atoffn Jtl IH Garcia) Pooular (Wtfd) 140 460 JOO 540 uo 2.10 Tl,,...; II°' U UlACTA (t·3l oeid s:lt 40 .. OUllTH 111.ACa. ;uo verd\ CionnuH T-1ecl !Ward) w .. Ftlc;l<t llltl> IOlcllrlctlten) LU.tclou• Lt dY Two <Hartl Tlma II 11 "'"™ llAC•. e10 vtrO\ Chtroer Oevv IOl<trlchtnl Victor VklorlOus lltwlt) Mannvt RHMlll !Gilt) Time 4'.71 190 •00 310 HO 400 ''° HO UO HO 1000 0 0 3'0 '2 UCACTA 17·S) H id «9 40 SIXTff lllACa • .00 varc11 Letrn8oc>M llSard) Cn•clY 5.vt (Hartl One Time Ov« IE Garcia ) 700 uo uo •40 310 HO Tlmt. 10.20. u •XACTA 16·4) oak! m 40 HV•NTH •ACE. lSO yerclt S.rrv1 lttb (Oldlrlckttn> 7 00 Sivie And Sting (Hart) Sma\tlinotv (Bard) Time 11'S n •XACTA 14·2l oald sn '° 360 uo 340 240 400 .. GHTH •ACI. lSO VatOs Baoo A.wav (EdWardsl lloer1no Pau (OIOtft0.111'1) Lono Stt m Gian (Ltcktv) 4410 1410 soo 1110 ''° 360 Time 17 '5 S1 IXACTA (5·91 Pa id •90100 NINTH lllACI. 400 vards Cor00tet1 ISuo IBerdl Rtbeillou\ Otoha n (Fl9utto•> Mvl<ollOs GOid ICatdoza) Time 19 U 4 70 J.10 310 4 00 3.10 680 n IXACTA (7·6) oa ld 11600 u rteK SIX 110·7-6-4·5·1l oal<I st,l?SOO 10 one wlMlno tlct.tt 1,1. llOt'sH) 11 ~ Sic con\Olatlon oato '344 to to 24 wlMl"ll tlcllatt (live ~\It) TIEHTH lllACI. '10 verc11 Ollllt CH ll (Mllffl Shake Em LooH (LawlU Pueblo Clnoer IPeullne) Time 4662 31 10 11 10 7.00 '60 l .40 160 U •xACTA (S--1) Paid $.JC12 70 A llen<Sanct 3.111 o..., ... ~ DAVEY'S LOCKt!ll (......_, 9Mdl) -4 1><>at1. 140 '"""" IS7 t>arracuoa, :M 11on110 t vtllowtall, 7 rOCk lllll, 4 ha llbut, 430 ce tlco t>au 221 '8llCI 1>au 45 mac:ke<tl, 16 tcutoln, 1 wt1He '"". 1 wlllta tea 1>1u NIEWP'OttT LANDING -l t>oe tt, 31 e~s 103 canco 1>1u. IS sand !>au, 3 halfl>Ut, 2 t>onlto, 9 lCuloln, I "1ffinlleecl. 2 rock fllll, 3' mackerel. DANA WHAllF -6 boah, T03 ar19lers SU 1>au. 1 t>arracl.lda, 7 nall!><Jt, 2 rocll fltll, 111 mecff.ttal, 3 \~lltad, 4 Kutpl .... 1 IOO·oound l>ltcloo r.ta l>aU (rttet \ed) TENNIS Frend! 0..-n l•t Pam> TOOAV'S llf!SUL TS w_., Tlllfd RllMd SMtle\ Marline Navratilova (US l def Claud a Porwlct. !West Gtrmanvl, 6-J, 6·3 l<ethv 1t1n•ldl tU SI <Iii Roz Falrt>anlu IU S ), 6·1. 6·2 uaura Gerrone (ttatv) def l ine Garrl1on (US I 6·2 6·1 Mln1\ Third llleufld S1nllt\ Iva n Lenol ICzeclloltovakla l def Cllrlstlan Mini un i I Aroenlln•I. 6· I 6· I, 6·1 THURS· DAY'S RESULTS w_.-s Tlllrd ,..,,., s..,.., Carlino Bauett ICtMcla l def Jenny Bvrne IAUl"a'la l 6·2 6·3 TIMlrsdaV'• transectteni 9ASEBALL A""'1an lMtue OAKLAND A'S-Purclle tad contract ol Dave St41Wert, oltchtr, from Tacoma of tile Pacific Cou t LHgue RtltH .0 Steve Htndt •son, out- fielder TEXAS RANGERS--SI~ GeOfO. s111na11. Pltelltr, t llCI eulont<I him to Seruota of tne Gull Coast Lteout 9ASKIET9ALL UnltM S'9flH .. Mtetbal LMIUf J ERSEY J AMMEllS-Named Nete Arcn·t>alcl, neao c:oac11, anes Eddie Miiie< aslu · lent coen Twin Towers wilt in Boston Garden Rockets' big men combine for just 7 second-half points BOSTON (AP) Hous1on's Akeem 011\Juwon and Ralph Sampson avoided the foul trouble that plagued them in the sencs opener, but the R ockets' big men had second-half trouble as Boston ran away with the second game of the NBA finals Thursday night Olajuwon scored 17 point!'I and ampson IS 1n the first half but ooth faltered 1n the last two pcnodc;, combining for JUSt seven po1 ntc; in that span. during the Cclt1cs' 11 7-95 rout. OlaJuwon had just four points and Samp'°n three 1n the second half "We JUSt brought our bntches up, played hard-nosed defense and tried to keep the ball out of their hands," Boston Coach K.C Jones said. "It was nothinacomphcated, no b1adeal. JUSt hard work and being where we're suppo5Cd to be ... After ~onng 32 of Houston·~ SO points in the opening half to offset weak guard play, the Twin Towers scored 1ust one basket 1n the final 17 minutes. 20 seconds of the aamc. "They've been playing &ood de- fense:· Ol&JuWOn said. "They didn't reallr do anythm& dtficrent We dido t continue the way we were pl1y1na m the fint half" "They're all mona 1n,1de.'' ampson said of Boston's frontcoun defcndcfl. "They know what they're capable or doina. They cu lot of help from the auard~ .. Early 1n the second quarter. Sampson sufrertd a cut under his left c~c thaucqu1rcdst1tchc\but hcsa1d ll didn't affttt his oenonnancc. ln Boston's 112-100 v ic tory in Monday's first game. Sampson pick- ed up his third foul 4:45 into the game and was out of the flow the rest.of the af\emoon Ola1uwon was saddled with his fifth foul w11h 4:49 to go in the thi rd quarter and neither could play with his usual aggrcl'sivcncss. . That wasn't a problem Thursday n1 lht. With game three scheduled for Houston Sunday. "I think )OU will see Ralph bnng his game bac k to the highest level, .. Rockets' Coach 8111 Fitch said. "He 1s the leader on th1~ team. He ha~ not had a lot of f.ood things happen to him in Roston.· Neither ha' c Houston's s tanmg guards. Robert Reid and Lewi~ Ll oyd combined for JU t 14 points Thursday night and ha i1e 34 for the scnes. Reid had I 0 of them in the first period of Monday's game. ··we lost, we played bad That's all rm going to say.'' Reid said Houston·~ fifth !.tarter. lorward Rodney McCra y, also had a rouah niaht tryma to contend wnh tfie vancty of moves and shot Larry Bird made in o;conng a game-high 31 points. "We're topp11)8 our'telves," Sampson ~td "When we 10 home we need to be confident. I feel aood about play ina at home " Sampson probabl> can't feel much worse than Oll)uwon felt after los1n1 ht\ ~ond con\Ceutive pme on the road. "This wos the worst pme of the sca~n." 01-.,uwon s111d "I was ashamed ven in pme one wt pla¥cd better We lookro Hr)' bad ton1,ht but ""e ha ve two da)'' 10 rqroup At home. wt Will be d1f· fertnl We have tl\c home crowd 1nd ,,..c can't let them down.·· RUSSELL YOUNKIN VLJ~ Sales assistants joln Grubb & Ellls Jeffrey C. Ruuell and Paul S. Younkin have3oincd the Newpon Beach office. of Grubb & Elli~ Commercial Brokerage Services. Both ~re sale~ ass~s~a~ts. Russell.to the retail division and Younkin in the industnal ~1v1s1on. Younkin. of Laguna Hills, had been an account manager wnh Irvine-based Market Share. Russell had been district saks manaier for Quality Beverage Co., Inc. He is relocating from Santa Monica to Newport Beach. Lagll:oa N•gucl resid.cnt StevH A. VU11 has been promoted tn vice president of markeun for Upland-based l.nco Homes. MUTUAL FUNDS Orange C09St DAILY PtLOT /F,._, MtlY 30. 1811 al COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSIT! TRANIACTIOllS, Cl I ~ Wh3=t do lower oil prices mea n ? Savings of 700 per typical f am Hy su es t an incredtb letmpact By JOHN CUNNIFF ,.. ....... AMtret NEW YORK -Amencans last year consumed SI 00 biJlion of oil· related Jfroducts. Thi s year, while using up at least the same amount of oil, they arc expected to spend 40 pe~nt less, or just $60 billion. The savings of roughly S 170 for every man, woman and child -or close to $700 for the typical family - suggests the incredible impact that the sudden fall of oil prices has had on the economy. Without any need to resort to theory. economists now can say with certainty that, among other things, the dechne has: Raised automobile sales, en· couraged corporate c.apital spending other than for oil, improved 1he , . foreign trade balance. made th e United States more competitive, rtduced inflation. towered interest rates. and lifted the stock market. Because of these effects, the sav1ngs to Americans are enonnousJy largrr in terms of lowered mortgage rates. greater employment, reduced pro- duction costs and bi~r equities - to say nothing about improved econ- omic confidence. There have, of course. been very serious negative consequence') too. Unemployment in energy state s. which had been below tbr national average when oil prices were rising. arc now below the national average. Bankruptcies are up in oil states. Housing has lanquished. State budgets arc squeezed. According to C$t imates by the Merrill Lynch. the in vestment firm , the deficit for Texas will be at least$ I bill ion this year, with th'e deficits for Louisiana and Oklahoma each about ha if that. Among other states, Alaska and Wyoming have been hit hard. But all this will change. A report by the Department of Energy su&Jests.. in effect, lbat higher prices are 1nev1table within the next decade, and mo~\ likely well befo~ that t1mr . And that means radical economic chanaes aJJ over op.in. Perhaps the most widely felt im- pact will be u'I consumer prices. As otl prices rise , when they do. the 1mpac1 on the Consumer Price Index 1s liketx to be as 1mmcdwte as h was when 011 prices declined. That impact was 1mprcss1ve. By most estimates. lhc United States today would have a consumer prod· ucts inOation rate of 4 percent or so, rather 1han a barely measurable amount, if oil prices had 001 fallen about 40 percent. The energy component acoounts for I 0 percent oftbe CPI. Therefore. a 40 percent decline in oil prices means a 4 percent decline in the CPI~ offsetting a 4 percent rise in other, non-energy components of the index. Almost certainly, other great ~nse­ quenccs can be expected as oil pnccs nse. While much of the United States will feel a negative e{'Onom1c im~ct, thr 1mprovemen1 in oiJ..depmdent runes may be specw:utar 1n icnns of jobs, waies. profits, and improved state budgets. The Enew Department's study shows that if the price level during 1986 drops to $10 a ba.rrel -it was between S 14and S1 4.50 early on May 28 -the subsequent price il'\C.R.UC would begin next ycer. · lf the averaie pncc this year remained at about $1 S a barrel. 1he price rebound could be delayed to 1989. Meanwhile, prices conceivably could decline slightly during 1988. ShouJd the price level be aboul 120 in 1986, oil prices couJd continue to decline through 1989 before the upturn began. For consumers. manufacturers. state bud~et officials. importers. ex- pon.ers, rnvestors and others., the near-term future has seldom been laid oul so neatly. What's done oow to prepare and exploit that near-term future. is a totaJly different matter. _(1Jlilllti:I tJtiM!ti------------------ NEW YO~K (,AP) -The loUowlng (15t 9 shows the Over -the • Counter 10 stocks and werrent' that heve oone up '' the most and dOwn the mosl base<! on 112 ~rcent of change f0< Thursday. 3 No MCurltles trading below S2 or 1000 114 5 sherel are Included. Net and percentage changes are the '1i difference betwMn the previous closlno orlce and Thursday's rest or bid orlce. l UPS . H Name LHI Chg Pel. 31 OccupUrg wt 6~ + 134 UP 1·9 j Polydex 2~ + 11-16 UP 1 • Alfecell wl J l/4 + ~ Up . S S4 OccuPUrg un 161/4 + 334 UP . XpforEn s f i 1 UP S.O 6 PeulHerrls 2 4~ Up u·! 1 7 CllnlcalOta ~ 'h UP I. 2 8 MotoPh wt v. ~ UP . 3 OCcue_elUrg 96!'2 + 11•n Nw,tTeleP<S s " + 111tendVecm m l CompR~h .~!\4 ~ MacmlnRnv ~ ... H~rcom un ~ H 0 O 11r4~ l?t Nell HM .,. ¥1 chHIX>OI 2!h omotrResc 111 OOQl'OVI ~ rownAulp i l"l Conv 87wt th lv~lrs 1 ~st~"iv~ s l1~~ f1~ reftmetlc ~ ... Namto Haber wt FtCtrlFn un HlghPIOll DOWNS Last Cha 3 -'i'h 53,(, -134 411) -1 -m111Jma~------------------- NEW YORK (AP) -The to112wtng llsl shows the New York Stock Exchenve stocks end werrants that have gone UP the most and down the most based on percent of change regardless of volume for Thursday. No securities tredlng below S2 are Incl· ·uded. Net and percentage changes are lhe difference between the previous closing Price and Thursday's 2 o.m p r I c e I UPS Pel. UP 9.9 Up 9.7 UP 8.7 Up 7.S UP 7.1 Up 7.1 UP 6.8 UP 6.6 UP 6.5 10 PlalnsP/{ n 11 Tools oil 1~ CrayRsch s 1 Jemeswav 14 Rolll~sEnv s 1S ~~d usln 19 ~nl 1 Intl tt M<; Nn1'1 WI Fsl l~BCP s Pepsi o s §OHlnPS lack Deck 23 KellWOOd s 24 Ametel<. 25 BestProd 26 Norlhoale g Name 1 ~ISU deP pf J oleco ec;o ' ldeet Basic ,,. ... I ·~ ll\12 3112 Oi v. 1~ I'll 1~~ i ~ 'It 2~ IJt Jttr 1~ 34V. 1~ s'I• 'I• ~ ~ Ill l'h ~ I'll lf'• ~ '"' ..... DOWNS LUI ChO •1 -~ 17"4 -r--'I• 34 -v. UP f i UP Up UP ' UP UP UP t8 Up UP Up u UP UP 4.2 UP 4.1 UP 4.1 Up '·8 UP UP h Pct. ~ lf:T ·~ S !oachmen 19 -1\h j Ymtr 19:\lo -.,., owte to 31;. -I/• I etrd(~r s 3'h-14 ~Amfftco •'-" -'I• 10 stertne 19 -IV. 11 ec Lf.hlg ~-2}\ l~ Texfl nd -1,4 1 Am Holst 8~-'12 14 P•nAm wt 21,1. -... l; RN~Bal 2'At -..... 1 FlnC~ m 11~-~ 1 vlCL Am ~~ -\ill 1 Colln ~ l II) -,,.. 1 Int~ I l -'I• Mc m int 1~-~ &eth Steel 1~-~ Anec:omp -''• ~r~~v 1~= \\ ~ ~ult~'" J't -~ t , co ,~ -If• Union Con> 1 ~-,,., The Pros · Smee 195 7 UlllTT mlUIC( ~A No~!:ker (!: 131-77.0 441 Old Me.,..,t mhd. .... ,.,. ...... c.. INCUMBENT · REPUBLICAN I President Ronald Reagan says: "The Board of Equalization is the State's most important taxation board and we need quahfted people on this board. ..Erma Dronenburg 1s definitely qualified and w1H bring important new tax reform ideas to the state .. Governor George Oeukmejlan says: win the area of finance and taxation, Ernie Dronenburg's expertise has made him an eff 1c1ont and ettect1ve member of the State Board of Equahzauon I have found Ernie to be a good tnend and strong ally We need his continued etf orts and representation °" the Board J T1'HI R119lst•r of Or1nge County editorial says: ·oronenburg ... unusual among state offlc1als in that he seems to have some genuine concern for the taxpayer " ---He's Saved Us Millions! --- FRIENos OF DAONENBURO -David A Howkins CPA lloas 1629 Columbia SH e« • San Diego, C hfofn 9210\ 7.i 7. 7. l r~ 6 6 r 1 4. 4. 4. ~ 4..1 I OfY "' Se!ei u,1 C"t 14 !$ I~+ ~ D t b' NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN SACTIONS FRlllY'I OLlll• Plml Ot•. ,.I S-. LHI Clle ON ... ~\ LJUI Ole Market takes a loss NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market closed out an erratic session with a small loss Friday. backing away from Thul'$day·s record highs. Many Wall Streeters were impressed by the market's strength late Thursday, which enabled Lhe Dow Jones industrial average to edge upward to a new closing high despite a very weak bond market. But anaJysts said traders were still unocrtain over how to read recent signs of increasing economic growth, An index of business activity calculated by Lhe National Assoc1at1on of Purchasing Managers rose sharply in May. the group reported. That news came just after the Commerce Department said the index of lcadinf economic indicators climbed 1.5 percent in Apn . WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om Due to tr.ansmlsslon problems In New York, today's llstlng wlll not appear In the Dally Pilot NEW YORK (AP) Mav 30 Advitnced Oecllned AMEX LEADERS Due to transmission problems In New York. today's listing will not appear In the Dally Piiot. , GoLo QuoTE S L METAL S QuoTES ¥:.=!n= New tllGhS New IOws NYSE LEADERS Due to transmission problems In New York, today's llsO'lg will not appear In the Dally Piiot. Dow JoNES AvERAGES N. EW VORK(iP. -Flnel Dow-Jon.' veraOft for M.Tt . ~: 1~1 i ~flE"J u,k m:~ . . . SI 60 . S. i us 'm· 1" • ~~ ~'" 'l~, ·.~ NASDAQ SUMMARY Ula-G-9, from a.nglorrl qu1ta ~1bly thz. pzrra.ct. pcka.t, e · ~lC m <lMLfY mon·~ <iWordrobz. aol't, ~Ln nz~llU\t o ll cot.ton w1 i Wlth l 19hL'MZ.~t. Un1.on h nmg, wnt.Azd~. kn1Ul.ld cutTh ond boU.om. the ~tpopulm­ wmd bnzoka.r <ZVlZ.f U3n . ntJV'j. rr.zd end bnt 1sh ten \ A PUBLIC ICEBTIMG WILL BB SBLD TO DLP OBTIRJIIQ TOPICS TO BB ADDRESSKD IR AW JUIVIRONllElftAL lKPAC'I' ll&PORT FOR PBLICAW BILL IOAD . MEETING LOCATION coastline Community College Room 48 Ne~port Beach Center 3101 Pacific View Drive Corona del Mar, CA 92625 Nearest cross streets: San Miguel Drive and San Joaquin Hills Road DATE June 11, 1986 TIME 7:00 P.M. The EIR ~coping meeting is scheduled to afford an opportunity for the.public to learn about the project currently under study, to advise the ~ounty as to the feasibility of this project, and to h71P dete~mine its p~tential environmental impacts. The County w1ll consider all written comments received i n response to the scoping notice and all testimony received at this scoping meeting in deciding the issues that will be covered in the EIR. It is anticipated that approval of the project could have an impact on the following environmental factors: Geo l ogy , Air Quali ty, Biological Resources, Hydrology, Cultural Resources, Use , Circulation, Noise and Aesthetics. Land Writte~ and oral statements from any interested person or group regard ing the proposed Schematic Development Plan will be received at the EIR scoping meeting for entry into official transcript. Written comments on environmental concerns to be covered in the EIR will be accepted until 4:00 p.m., June 30, 1986. Comments and an~ questions on the EIR should be sent t o Lisa Burke, EMA/ Environmental and Special Projects Division, P.O. Box 4048, Santa Ana, CA 92702-4048, (714) 834-5550. LB:mgPE12 -7 6142 Submitted by F.W. Ols~n, Manager EMA/Environmental & Special Projects Division fJubl l shed 5/ 30/86 -Oranqc <'oast Da 11 y pi lot F-261 ' "' OrMQe Coeat DAILY Pk.OT /Ftt6fJtl1 W. IO, 1-Cl C8 Orange Coat OAIL.V PILOT/ Frtday, May 30, 1988 fltentlOUl•-11•11 ~lly.lftlMMdi... • PW:lmOUllUIF•M fllCTrTIOUt•'H•U ACTmOUe• H•M '1CTITIOUl•·11•N NnTIOUl•'ll•.. ~IUH•H-IC99t ~ ~ .. '*"° ..-nAW .--1.0lwll ..-nAW umaTACT " 911Mm8TAW ~9TAW U.8TA'W U..ITAW fllc:Tlnout••• ......... ..._. -a -.,.,.. The~......... Thia ttlll""*" .. .., Tlla...,..... ,.,_..,. The~ pwtont.,. The folOwlnO ,._,.era The folowtng C*10nt are The folOWtrlQ penont.,. TM folOWlno ,.,_..an ..,... 8TAW ~ .,,. ---~-~-~Qlltlf/AOI"-~ ....... -dolnl~•: dolno~•· "°""'~-dOlngbul6rieaelia: ooino~-T'Mtol0Wlno'*10N .. ._ .. _()Mpmen ASIOCIAfd • .,,. Counly on ..., I~ Ttfl Gl"'-2. 111 "'et., K,,, £Nn"PMl8.8M1 OAlAT Wl!ITlAN rA"SHIONISLANOPAINT· C~TLE Cl.!ANIM. 7t (a),IA8T WllTl!AN doing bu,lneu u : = .. ...,.,. ... lied 200 w.M Common•_,.., 1MI ,_,1 H&lnt1ft91on a..o11. Caltt. Wti1Mt Ave. 9ulte 2t0, ENT!APAISES. HO UNon EAS, 120 ~ Cent• Or .. nrnoor, lrvtne, CA OAOUP{b)FIAST WUTINt CandleWOOd T.,,aoe ~. ttle COUn'Y Clettl of Ot· •~. Fullerton, cam. ... . .......__. Or ,.~ '*I Hwlttnoton e..c11. Caul. A¥9., Coeta Meaa. Cellf. om.. ~· .1...~.i. ~ 92714 A.ftPAAt9Al (o)rt,.9T 2'4 l . 17tll It. 1100. Colla :;. CountY on Acwl n t2t32 ,..,._,_ ange ...._ U.. Metta Deleno, ltl t.2t47 92ta7 leadl, Callf ~ lAalle Paullne Watlllna. 7t WEITl"H C0~8TAUC· ....... CA 9*7 1111 ' F\lllertOft IAvlno• Md OelY Plot ... Mey '°· June I, ~d It., HumlnQton 8-clft, ~ j. Kaceut&. 11175 Nancy 1... Tt10ll'lt:: W-.it11 J 0111Ma. '702 Greanmoor, lrvlne, CA TIOH IMM'T WU~ JolWI L UN, 1011 MatWI ,_.. Loan AMOClatlon, Call· t3, to 1 ....... cellt. ._.. A¥1 St , Fountain 11*'1, HOUnlonAv.,eo.ta ~CWde. LoaAlatnltoa. 12714 HAVICU 1•,,IMT WUT· LAM, ~ leadl.. CA o,.,.. COllll fomi., 200 W•t Com· ,_"' Jule Mn Soto, 17521 calf. 12708 Callf tmJ Celt 8ryen Kant Watlllnl, 7t EAN REAi. UTATI. 24131 t2leO ftvbll9Nd iv t . fl. u, aa. ll'IOf'IWMlth A.... Full-l..c• Clrde. ~ Tt\19 buelneae le eon· Tiiie bu.in... I• con-Geraldine A. GrtrMe. '702 or .. nmoor, lrvlne, CA Mont• Verde, Laevne Thie butlneet I• con-="°'Mey • ' .-ton, Calf t2t3a PtaJC NOTIC( hectl, Calf. t2ta<4 • duct9d by: an lndlvldual Ckleled by an lndMdual HolcMn C4rcta, 1.oa Alemltoa, t27 t4 NIQull, c.M. t2tT7 ducied bY an lndMdUal ,_111 ThomM 0. !Wing, a ~ Tllla bualneae I• OCH\-Bonnie J. Kaoeuta Nancy I.. ~ Calif Thia bualn... 11 con· Cos>lman Copy Ctntw, Jolln L. UN •al l*\NW of enMOl lv.t l'ICTTnOUI .._.. duCted by: a general f*t• Thlt tta1.,,,.,,1 wu llled Tllla •talamant WM l'lled Tiii• bu1ln••• la oon-ducted by ""9band and wlf9 Inc., Calllornl•. 24H 1 Tiiie tta""*'1 wee llled ·-.,. -- AHocl•I••· 4131 llrofl ~ ITA~ nar9"lp wtth the County C.tr of Ot-wltfl tlle County CW1I of Or-ducted by: flueOend and wife Bryan kent wattllne Monte Verde, La9un• wtth Ille County CW1I of Or· _....;~;..;,;;;=;..;.;""-....'.-...-.,___ su .. t, NewpoM IMCtl, The folOWtr'O,.....,. u.. ...... DllMano anoe County on April 29, .,. County on Aptll 29. WlllWll J om-Tllla atatement ... llled Nlgual, Calf. mn .,,. County on ~ tt. PlCtlT'°"9 ........ Cellf, t2MO dolna bullr-.. • TNt el•*"91tt .. flllld 1Me tNe Thie 11a1--.1 WM flllld with the County Clef1I of Of· Thlt bu.in.. la con· 1tee NMm 8TA,,_y Aotar e. ~.,.,,.. M,L DATA SYSTEMS, wttfl tM County Olattl of Ot-,..,,,. "'7711 wttfl the County CW1c of Or-anoa County on Meyt, , ... ctuct9d bY a OOtPOtet*' ,... The follOWlnO perllON ... .al penner of lt'9tol Stf'tlell 1e&e3 Mt. Sherrod Clrd9. ange Coun1y on Aptl 30, Publllfled Or-no-CoMt Publlahed Ofanga COMt ange County on Aptl 22, r-. David W. Medi, Aealltant PutMW!ed Ortnoe CoMt ~ . A ... ocl•I••· 413 t llrofl Fountain v..,, Callf. tt7°' ttee Deity Piiot Mfrf •. 11. 23. 30. Delly PMot Mtrt 9, 18. 23, 30, ttte Publlthed Otange Coaat Secy Deity Piiot May 23, 30, June ~HOMl·l~I" IN· Str .. 1. Newport leacll, MlehMI P.1..e Doux, 11A3 ~ 19te 1tM ~ Dally Pliot Mey U , 30, June Thlt ttei.rnent WM !tied e. 13. 1He SPEOTIONS (b'Tf'B HOMI c.ii1. 92ee0 Mt. sn.rroes Cltole, Fountain Publlthed °':"7:. Cout F-112 ,,. 1as Pvbltlhed 0ranoa eo..t e. 1~ 1eee w1t11 the County ci.w of Or-'2" INIPECTioN'a to> TAO Tlllt bualn... I• con• V*t. o.llf. 92708 Dally Piiot Mtrt 9. I, 23, 30. ,_________ ---------Deity Piiot M•y t . 1e. 23. 30, F-221 ange1 County on Aj)rll H . PAOH.AlY IHSPEC'TIOH8. ducted by a oet*al 1*1· Linde M. 1.e DGYX, 11A3 1tM .. _ 1r N0Tll'r •-IC M)nH" ltM 1Me .. _.,. WllnH' Ptaoe Colta nerthle> Mt. Sherrod Clnlle. FounU!ln F-1M I'-llW. I'~ llW. F-178.• ,.,~ l'-.n. ""'IW. S5I La Pal1e . • Stephen J KnutHn, v.-ey, C9'lf 92708 PlC'ITnOUI ..,...,. P'lBJC llJJIC( Publllhed Or:'.":r. eo.1 K ._ Meea. Call!. 12t27 ~=:=::. _, ~!t~:!c,~C: Ml.IC NOTICE -~f~TDmn• • ~A~I Pl8JC NOTIC( l'ICTmOUe.,...U =PllotMtrt9• 1 ,23,30, PlCTmOUealll•H p::~~.*~ with thaCounty of Or· M._..:::!..'p, Le ......... ~ ,...._.., _..,_U ~,,,. ... V:::::::..."!Mperwn.· " Tiie fOllowlnQ ~.,. K _. NAm ITAT'llmWT F-172 NMm ITA,_.,,. Cellf. t2e27 Cou ~-25 ...,_ """"' ,.,. , ,,..,... --.......,_ doing ~ u : PlCTTnOUI .,._.. Tiie f()llOWlng ~ ere The fOllOwlnO penont .,. Tiii• bvtl""9 I• OOtl· = nty on .,...... • Thll atatamanl ... nled NAMI ITATil..wT OVELIER YOU ELEC-PHANTOM CHARTERS. ..... ITATl..wT doing bullneM •: ll>TICl doing buelMM •:Newport dueled by: an lndtVldWll P ...... .._.. ,.,..,., ~~ :.:.·~ty!*J.! r,-, ~ ~~ ~· .,.. Tt20AO~~·s,~,~ ls'.~. ~~L.. 405 Awnlda Selvador. Sen The followmg pereona .,. RAD s AK . 2 2 1s2 rtaJC Terrece II, 2M E. 17th St., Don A. Alddle --.... __ ., • ....,.., tMe ., -· O(I .,....._... ,._, .. " .... """'' Clemente. Caltf 12872 do4no ~ ... High 0.-Joneapot1 Ln.. Huntington -Coe1• Met&. CA 928t7 Tlllt etatamant ......... ~ Piiot May t , 1 • 23, 30, 1 ,_,,. 2231 L ~. ~~~~~-~::~. 20e3S Edwttd J . H~. 405 _. Oewlopmenl Compeny 8-c:tl, Calif 92848 '=A.,_.J' John L. UN, 1019 MMlan wttll the County Qertc of Of· ttee Publllhed Orange eo.t Ana. callf 92707 o.ocsw Dr Yort>e Lind Av•nlda Salvador, San 3152 Redhill Awnue ~ SUNn E. Adema, 22132 Tiie tolloWlng perwnt.,.. ~ N9wpot1 e-ctt. CA angaCountyon Mrr,~.L~m F-175 Deity P1'ot May 30, .iu,,. I , 8ehud Atnlrm()krl, 1134 Celff. 92eM• a, ~t:'uc;:i..:~!2 con-:~~?'ta MeM. Caitfomla ~lf~~tlngton ~~•a A)) rtt Tiiie buttMU 11 Con• Publlthed ()fenge Coeilt --.. -.. -----"--.,,_ __ 13. 20 19N SllyWit 1.n., Newport 8-ch, TN1 bualneaa 11 con· ducted by. an lndlYldual G di Bulldera Inc: Wandell R. Adarna, 22132 APAI : · · · dueled by an lndlvldual Deity Piiot May 23 30 Ji.-na.IC nu1~ F-273 Calif. 928e0 ducted by: an Individual Edward J, H.nte:Om 315~~.:lll A~· Suite Joneeport Ln .. Huntington BUSINESS SERVICES, 184 John L. Uhl 8. 1!1 tMe ' ' Ferud Farhulnand, 14300 Unda M. Taul Thi• 1111ement wu med 275 Cotta~. c.ittom1a Beach, Cal/I. 92848 GrHnmoor, Irvine. CA Thia ttetement wu flled ' f-230 ~~:A=-I PtltUC NOTICE ~Ava .. Tlll11n, Cellf. wtt~~ha'~b;:'of"~ wttll t1141 CountyClerkof0r· 92828 California cotp<>r-Thi• butlnett I~ con-t2Ii!!n.. Sclen1no, l&.4 =wlttlthe~~:~-•-ti' llftftH" T ...... .............,, T"'' ·• 1 ., ange County on Aj)rN 29• atlon ' ~~P by· • gerier 1*1· Gr••nmoor, lrvln•. CA 1 ' "-""'-. ... ·-"'-""' pwtOnt.,. PlC'ITnOUI ..,...,. '"' bu .. n... • con-ange County on May t, 1tee 1e&e ,_.," d"'"" ~ ... ducted ..... • _., ~.... --2 George F. Jeoklna. 23144 w_...... R. •cs-· 12114 --------u ~EX"'CLUSIVE HO. ME SE-HAim ITATil..wT ~"'Ip-,. -~ ,,_,. r-•-• ,._,,' G Id S I #201 .,..,_, ,. _,,. Sdarrlno &4 ,._ .. _,.,_ ..,_ SEA CES S The ro11ow1ng perwnt .,.. ,_.,, Publllhed Oranoa Coat Pvbllthed Orange COMt o en pr ngi, ' Thlt etatament WM ftled Leurle e.tll • 1 Publlthed Oranga COMt MAim ITA,_..,. CURITY VI . I•. doing bu91r-. u · 8ehz.ad Amlrmollrt Dalty Piiot May 9, 18, 23. 30, O.lty Piiot May 9, 18, 23, 30, Ol~~r;);,911"1~Glen· with tn, County C*1t of Or-~2r;~4nmoor • lrvlne. CA ~ Pl1~~. Mey 23, 30, June The follOWlnO peir10nt .,. 123 328 N. Newport Blvd.. F"·NK'S FLOW.EAS """" Tlllt 11atemenl ... filed 1988 198'1 _, •""" Countu on May 9 1tee • 8. 1~ ...... dolno buelneaa ... News>On Beacfl. Calif. 928&3 "" · ~.., With t1141 County Clerlt of Or-F-170 F-183 neyra, t.eouna Beach, Ctll-.. .-'' """1 Tiii• bualn"' I• con-' ' F238 KNOTTS IU81NE88 Tina Marl• O. Mallo, ~eu:'~~:~.. Colla Meea. ange County on May 19, f0tnla 92el 1 Publl9htd Oranga eo..t ducted by • oanertl pttt-CENTER, 1303 Avoc.do 17238 AeffMr St .. Fountain Pitrlcla A £.+.. 9008:: 19te PllltJC NOTICE •-IC Wllnl'r Thie bu1lna11 It con-Dally Pllo1 May 23. 30, "'-MfahiP PllltlC NOTICl Ave •220 N9wport 8-:ltl v~. Calif 92708 v,, _... ,....., "~ ""'~ ducted 1>y • general part· 8 13 1tee Tllomu Selarrlno c.m t29ei:> • Thi• bu1ln ... ,, con-~2~;;,L.aguna BMon. -· Publlthed Or.,. CoMt PlCTITIOUI Ml..... narthlp • F-231 Thlt """'*'' ... !'Ned K... wiim. Paclftc Inc Geor-.... ..., 1-....... ~... • "" .....,,.., Piiot M 30 J • N.u. ITATIIMfNT l'tCTITlOUl IUllMlll Kan l<•lly, Guardian with tha County C.. of Or .,...........,.., ---u • · OUC;t_, V I an numuu Jactleon Bria n Harrie . .._., •Y . une ... NAME ITATl•NT 8u0dert, Inc., Jamea B • r'NAii.n1.1WiiiNT Qla. 1303 Avocedo A¥9. Tina M De M.ito 5ee2 Kern Or Huntington 13, 20 198& Tiie following pertOnt are The following panone ara Saltef. ~ P\alC NOTICE = County on May 21. #220, N9wpof1 leecfl, Cailtf. Thlt 1tatament ... filed BMcfl. Calif. 92849 F-288 doing butlr-. ... doing buelt'leel u ; Thi• 1tatement WU flled ~ Tiie IOllowlnQ pettc>N .,.. t2eeo wltn the County Cleric of Or-Thia butln•H ,. con-v I N y L I N -s p E c I A L T y flCTmOUI M.llMU dOlng butlneM u : QEf!IEllA Thi• bualnMa •• c:on-•noa County on May 21. dueled by: • -----· ........ ·-ic NOTICE TERIOAS/CANORO CON· ENTERPRISES OF AMERI with thee County Cltr'kM of 0r,,,: NAM! ITATil•NT Publlthed ~ Coelt MARKETING SERVICES. ducted by. corporlltk>n 1988 ~-""'. -~-,.._.. ~-STRUCTION, 18021 J Sily--Inge ounty on •Y ... Dally Piiot Mtrt 30. June 8. 575Anton8oulevard.Coat• w-H ... ~_ ...... \A.... ·~-.... CA, 28&1 El Rio Cltcle, 198& The following l*'IOfll 11te 13 20 1tee -,.~ .,._,.....,, •-,_.,. Patricia A Edy JlCTIT'IOUI .,..... '*"Sult• 214. IMM, C..tt. Coat• Masa, Ctltt 92828 ~ doing~.. . • F281 M ... CA ma Pr-'dent Pub!Wled Orange Coeet Thlt statement wu ftled NA• ITAT'lllQff 92714 Stephan Matyu Novak, Publlthed Orat199 Coaet JAMES P BATCHELOR Geneva Corportlon, a Tllla ltatemant WM flied Dally Piiot May 30, June 8, wttll lhe County C.. of Or· f 1141 fonowtng petlON Ira Chrlt F Sherrell. 30, 1300 Ada I A • 10B 0 Pllo " 23 30 J COMPAN't', 7701 Warn« 8ilmt II' M()Tll'C Callfomla corporation, 575 wtth the County Ctee1I of Or-13 20 1988 doi~ butlnMt u . Oalllla, Corona dal Mar, m v · ally 1 ... ay · · una ~wx.i" '""' Anton Boulevard, Coatt = County on Aprll 25. F-278 a,.1" County on Mfrf 21, K p c •"OS, 21••0 .,._ Callf. 92625 Coste Mesa, Calll 92828 6, 13, 1988 Ave . Huntington S.ach. M .... CA t2628• 1 tt&e ,..., -_,, Tiii• buslnNI 11 con-F241 Call!. 92647 FteTIT'IOUa ..,...,, n.121 Michel Drift E .. Coata M.... Thia bualne11 It con-dueled by: an lndMdual Jamea Patrick Batchelor. N,._ ITATII....,. Thia bu1ln•H 11 con-Pln4M P\8.IC NOTICE Publlthed Ora,. Cout Calif 92827-5801 ducted b)' an lndlvldual Stephan M Novak l'ta.IC NOTICE 7701 Warn« Ava., Hunt-T1141 rollowtng partona ere ducted by: a corpoHtlon Publlthed Orange Coeet Oatly PllOt May 30, June 8, Patrice Margu erlt• Chr• F Sherrell This 11a1ement wu filed lngton Beacf\, CeHf 92847 doing bullr-. u: H.C Enholm.GenevaCor-Deity Piiot Mrf 23, 30, June ftCTITIOUI ~.. 13. 20 1988 Martina 21840 s.,, Mldlel Thia ltatement WU flied with the County C*11 ol Of. K... tills bullMll •• con-~TAR VIDEO (b)8EST poratlon, Hartyn c EMotm, e. 13. 1Me NAMI ITA~ F 280 E . Cotta MaH, Calll with the Counl)' Clerk of Or-,._. duct..,....., lndlYldual Seaetaty F 221 The lolloWtng l*'IOfl9 ara • ..,.,.27_.,.,.1 ange County on A.pr1I 30, anga .........,nty on May 14, '9Cnnoul Ml ... 11 .... vr. an VI 0 (c)ALL STA.A VIDEO. Thia atat--.t WU ftled ' uv ,,.,,., 1986 1988 NAMf ITAnlll!NT Jamae P Batc:Miof 2075 Newport BIYd. Sull• doing butlMM aa: llllmtJC NOTICE Thi• bu1tn•11 . '' con-9 nona ,_,., Tlle followlng '*'°"' ara This statemenl •• n1ec1 106. Cott• M.... Cant. with the County Clerk of Or-Ptll.IC NOTia: HABITAT CENTERS, 985 l'UUL ducted by-an Individual Publlshed Of'1nge CoPt dolnn bullnMI u : HI Tadl with the County Clerk of Or-92828 ange County on May 15, Bayside Drive w .. t. New-Patrice M. Mtrtlnet Publlshed Orange Cou t ... Cou M 9 l98& 1938 l'IC1TTIOUa tuaMN port Baach. Calif. 92882 ~ICTITIOUI .,..... Thi• ltatement WU tiled Delly Piiot May 9. 18. 23. 30, Delly Pllol May 30, June 8, Anchor Co . 23822 Rockfleld •noe nty on ay . Denny T. Uao, 12 Rlppllng ,_,, ..... ITA,.....,, St•van P Urry, teS NAMI ITATIIMfNT wttfl the County Cltwk of Or· 11186 13, 20 1986 Blvd ' Suite 201-H. I.aka Or "= StrMm. lrvlne, Cellf. 92715 Publlthecl Orange Coaet The followtng per.one - 8ayllde Drive Walt, New-The lollowlng paraone are ange County on Al>fll 30 F-167 F-283 For•t. CA 92830 Published ange e.lla H. Liao, 12 Alppllng Dally Piiot May 23, 30, June doing bualNat M . port Beach. Cellf. 92ee2 doing buelneal u: 19&e • Rleherd Olton Auoclatea. Dally Piiot May 23. 30. June Stream, !Mna, Calif 92715 8 13 1tee AAI Tn11 bu11n"' 1a con-JORDAN& ASSOCIATES. _ 1---11111---1-C-NO-T-IC-E--1---------lnco<porated, 22211 Tr" 6, 13 198& F 2 .. Thia butlMat I• con-· · ~240 ......,.1~~,?DAUClli>~.: ,._,_ "~ n11n11C NOTICE RldQe l -. El Toro. CA • 2v dUC1edby llutbandandwtfe u-,..._, ... ft .. .....,.... duelad by an lndlvidual 131 Coto de Caza. Trabueo Publlthed Orange eo..1 I'~ 926a<> • Danny T Uto MeM, Call!. t2ta7 Steverl p Urry Canyon. Callf 92871 . Delly Piiot May 9. 18. 23. 30, F'ICTITIOUI auUilEll ACTITIOUl IUIMll Gllll• Chatal. 1130 5 PtBJC NOTICE Thi• 1tatament ... filed PllltlC NOTICE Donald L. Hander1on. Thlt tlatement wu flied Sieve Jordan & Al· 11186 NA• ITAT!MENT NAME ITATIMINT Lambarl A.,.., El Monte. CA with the County CW1I of Or· ,_.TIT'IOUI ---·· 2284 ~tla Av.., ea.ta with the County C.. of Of· toclatet, California, 131 F· 188 T .. - , •• 1 ....... "" ....,._. are ,, 732 ....,.TITIOUI IU ... 11 ,._.. .....,.. 2.. ..... --MeM Cal" ttl27 Cou ty on M 21 Co ... _C T ... __ ,.. '"' .,.., .. , ... ,.....~·~ Thefollowtnnna1aon1are .,1 .. ,.., enge 1 vvunty on,....... .. "• ......... IT .. --• . '::X: n ay ' to "" ua. """""'-...-Jolng bullMll U dol"" bullneM ;;' Mlcnet Quay, 5235 Hallfu NAMI ITATIMINT 1tee T~,_,.,, Thl9 butlMM I• ~ 19 6 nyon.Callf 92878 P\&JCNOTICE ENVIORMENTAL OE· ~ .. USH s •LES 4 .... Rd .Tample 0 ty,CA91780 ThefollowlngpetlOf\aara "'1UI hat--"""~ara duetedby:anlndMdual F'a741 Thll bUllMU 11 con-VELOP•1ENT SPECl•LIST " "' "'"' ~ ....... _at ~butlneae U . n-...JA l ..._..__IOln P ,..._ ,..__ Ion ... " M-noHa St.. Coat• M.... Albert Quay, soeo Han· ...,...._ Publlthed Orat199 Coaat •ccou~1NO SYS-............. . ,,_,._ ubllelled .,.ange ...,._, dueled by a corporal FtCTTTIOUI 9U ... ll 1010 p~•"-,.·--1 H ..... -y. ..,, c • LT • P a CI F I C J " "' Tlllt ltatemeM ._.. flied D ..... Pllo .. 30 J .. s J d p _...__, _, ... ..,.,.. ..... --C•lll 92627 derton St . Loe Angelel, .. ... .. Dall~ Pilot May 23, 30, una Te··s 1"t7 w H·U "'·-ta -1 t ... ay · une v, teva or an. r_,..,, NA• ITATElllNT Hunll""ton Be~h. Calif PROPERTIES t"S20 ,......., "*• "' · "' · .,., .,.., with the,.. _ _, c..'11 f/A Of 13 20 I"'"* Th'· 11 t t ft'--' ··• ~ S"'n·• ~, Inc. C.,._ toe32 · " ............ 8 1 l•vv A"'" C·"' ""'7"'" · ,..._,.r • "'"" .., • amen wu """ The following -eon• are "2"-• • "' .. ..,._..... ........ Bl·... Ste G 1-..__ ' ·-. -· "'" -.,.,,.., County on ....... t 1tlt F 278 with the Cou ty Cieri! of Or ...... • _., l0tnla, 499 Megnolla St., Thia bu.1tne11 11 con-,...., ..... ' ,..,.,.., "' F-222 Nanetta Rena Garcia -...-_, ' · n • doing bullnesa u · Monyer S Klralla. 1010 Cott• Mesa. Callf. 112827 ducted by a general par1-Calif 92718 19 7 w 1 8 ' ~ ---------·~ County on Aprll 22• CA ATS, 440 Vitt a Parade, Paelllc Cou t Highway. Thia bualn .. • 11 con· nerlhlp Jefry O•JI Hummel, 45 l'ta.IC NOTICE c.!t. 927~al • anta Ana, n!.!'.~MOra11ge1 23 eo..t 30 P\8.IC NOTICE 19 8 '10T1tl Newport Beactl. Calif 92880 Huntington Bl!lch, Calif dueled by 1 eotporatlotl Giii•• Chalel, Richard Hunter. lrvtne. Calif 92714 Tiii• bu•lneu ta con-.,_., .-..... t lrf 18, · · ru-TITIOUI ---·· • .-.......-.. ~ • Llewaffyn ' Ritt Smith, 92648 Li•""Y A Hudson, See-°''°" AteOClatat, Inc . R 0 Jetry Galt Hummel FtCTITIOUI ..,..... ...~ ......... Aft................. June e. 1tee F-1M r"" --K.--. • .......,.._ 440 Vista Parada. ....__,. Thi• butlneu II con· ..... Tiil• 11atament ... ftled ., ..... ~--1 -· ftlUfY""' ........ tT•....._.... y........ ·~,......' rel•"' Ot900, Cllalrman ..,._ ITA~ .... -.a.-"'·-'-,._ .. ,,._,., _.... ........... ,..,If 928e0 d·""'..,,, by ·-1nd'-"duel -• ._..th t ...... ,.-··ty ,.._._of Or ~ .... ,,_,. ~""" The f....._.._ -'°"' ar• ................. .....__.. •• _, ,,_..,. ..,.. ""''""' -· "" This ata1emen1 wu IUed Thia atatement wu ftled ... '"" """'' ..,..... • The,............,.,'*'°"' er• Thia 11atement -· ..._.. """'-""' ..-..,... ....-.--, Thlt butln .. 1 II con-••on..-S Klralla _ ... h ... Cou ,......... of Or h County on M-8 1tee --··"" --"~" doing bullr-. u ..._. .___.. CaiMf ._ "" ,_ With the County Clark of Or· ..,, i.... nty ..._,. • _, ' doing butlneaa U 'Mlh 11141 Coun"' C.. of Or· •-ti' Mft1¥r CONTRACTOR'S DOOR ~~ Oran0e Cc>Pt d1i:' :~1:;:i•ban<l an<I wife Thll ttatement w" n1ec1 ange County on May 9, 198& ange County on May 20. JOaxllllr IRON DUTCHESS COM-ange County;,;. May 8, 19M --"-~--""-' ........ -. __ & SUPPLY. 11145-A Plaoan· Dally Piiot May II, 18, 23, 30, Thia etaternenl waa fllad with the County Cieri\ or Or-,__ 1988 W• A Halkowtcfl, .. PANY, 2507 Walt Pacific ,._., lltCnTIOUa MIH•H 111 Ave . Co111 M .... Ctlll 1988 with 1 ... "-·nty c•· ... 01 Dr-•,noe9 6 County on Apllt 29· Publl1hed Orange Coast flOll11 Newport Cettt.f °'· lutta Cow Highway #202, New-Pvblltlled Orange CoM1 NMm ITAm•tT 92627 F-173 ~ 'c~y on .... May t4 986 nonu Dally Piiot May 23, 30, Juna Publltlled Orange Co&lt ::. ""''°" 8Nofl, Calf. port BMetl. Calif. 92883 Ody Piiot May u!. 23. 30. TM folowlng ~ .. M .... 11 lndullrlel Inc 6. 13 1986 Dally Piiot May 23, 30, June _............,__ ,.., ,.__,, OJG, Inc .. Callfornla, 50 June 8. 198e ......._ bue111eat •; C.llf~nla 1,,.,. a Pl~tla 19 6 Publlthed Orange Cc>Pt • 3 19... .--... .,.. ..__. ~ ... ~ .,....,..,.. -· ,_157 F-232 u . 1 . "" ...__...,. ..._ __ .. _ Ballefontalna Street. Sulta F-1e4 ULLE INOU8TAIEI, Ave Costa Meee, Ctlll 1 PllltlC NOTICE Dally Piiot May 9 16· 23· 30 F23e ~, ... _. _, -. _, --303, Puedena, Calif 91105 11922 Goctlard St., Hunt- 92827 L , Publlshad Of'anga Coast lll66 t. 1' 1-Thia butlMll I• con-Ml.IC NOTIC( tngton a.ch, Callf. Thia t>u1lne11 11 con-FtCTITIOUt Ml ... U D•l~llot May 30• June 8 F-l60 Ml.IC NOTICE l'ta.IC NOTICE F-2:114• ducted by' a corporation Scott Edward Ctluflek>lt, ducted by • oorport tlon NANI aTAT'llRNT 13· llle& Patrlela Vk:ll, Etq. FICTITIOUl IUIMll 20132 Cape Cottage, Hum· Brenda M .... tt The tollowlng P«tonl art F·262 P\m.IC NOTICE FICT1T10UI IUllNlll ACTmOUI Ml ... 11 Ml.IC NOTICE Thlt 1tatement wu flied N,._ ITATilllPfT lng1on BMdl, .c.itf. t2t4e Thia statement ... filed doing buelMll u : NAME ITAT'l•NT .... ITAnlllfNT with Iha County ci.r. of Or-The lollowlng '*"°"' .,.. Tiit• butlMM I• con- with tile County ci.r. of Of-THE CAPE COO APART-P\&IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI MllMll The loltowtng peraon• •re The followlng l*'IO'l9 ar• ~~IT'"~U _,.County on Maya, ttee doing bualnMt M : ducted~ an lndMdual MENTS 3534 W Bait Roecl NAME ITATHIBfT doing butlMSI U dot~buel,_ •: .._ .. ,,,._ .. , -A JI c H I TE C Seo ,....._..,..._., ange County on May 21, A-•"-'m'. ,.., .. "2*"• . L.,.999'Al_ ---11 T ...... , ..... .__.no,._.,,,.., ara ROJO TRADING COM· RE 0 B S ESS The f--........ __.....ate r-•• T U AL n dwatd ........._,.,, 1988 ,_...,. ...,.,, • ~ .. ,..,.,ivv•--'"' ..,....,_, ,........~. p SO Powell Pl M N U IN d-'nn .... 7°"....::! ~~-Murray, Shardlow & GRAPHICS COMPANY. 87t Thlt atemant ... flled ,,_,,, Maty L 6 Nonnen E. NAm ITAT'IMl.NT dot~ bualneu u ANY. 1 '°'· CENTER. 1303 Avocado TWINKLe-:S COMPLETE-Budlyn, 215 N Marengo Arbor St, Colta Mela. Calif with the Coun1y Ctenc of Or- Publllhed Orange eo..1 Moyer. 2157 Miramar Or • The followlng ~ton• .,. M RKETING VISION AS-Newport BeactlE s . Calff 92~ Ave . •220, Newpt}rt Beach, .. •1••Te .. ·NCE SERVICE Ava . Third noor. Puadena, 92827 .,. County on Mey 1, , .. Dally Pllol M1y 30 June 8 Balboa. Calif 92881 doing bullneu u : SOCt.ATES. 1S48·D Adams Donald laughter, ""1 C•llt 92880 """'"' ""' • Callf t110t Bob Gordon, 27552 ,_.. 13 20 1988 · ' Edward L & Norma K. IMAGIX, 2310 Tustin Ave , Ave . Coate M .... Calll Powell Piece . Newport Wiim• Pacific. Inc. Geor-1433 Superior 1203. P.O. Publlahed Orange Coaet Maagon Mlulon Viejo Publllhed Orange C09t ' F-272 Moyer, 800 lrvtne Or , Newport Beach, Callf 92880 92626 Beech. Call!. 92883 gle, 1303 Avocado Ave. C~~lf 3~27J,;.,,_ Newport Beach, Dally Piiot May 23, 30, June Calif. t28e2 ' Dally Piiot Mrf 18, 23, 30, , Burbank. Calll 91504 Paul• K Hurwitz, 2310 Lisa L Puqua141, 1118 E W James Slaughter, 801 .t220, Newport BMch, Call! ... " .,.,.., 8. t3 1tee Nall Chapman, 8fll Albor Juna 8, 1988 ---------Thlt bualnall 11 con-Tualln Ava . Newport Beach Buckingham Or . Cotta Powell Pla c•. Newport 92880 ,.o3311n ... ~.i11203Hee. It~, F.2231 St., Cotta MHa, Calif. . F-1t2 Nit.IC NOTICE ductad by a n untn-Calif 928e0 Mesa, Caltl 112826 Beach, Calll. 92663 Thia but lnatt It con· .. ...........~ ._...... ---------corporated 111oclallon Thia bualnett 11 con-This bu1lnets 11 con-Thll bu1IMH 11 con-dueled by a eo<poratlorl Pon a..ctl. Cellf 92683 JlCTITIOUI IU ... 11 I otfter thin a~ ductad by •n lndMduaJ duc:tad ~ an Individual ducted by: • gan«tl Part· Wayne H BialMlll, Ya Tfllt butlnMI It con· ...._ ITAT'llllfNT Mary L Moyer Paula K Hurwitz Lisa L Puquale Mre.hlp Pretldent ductad by an lndlYldual The followlng peraon1 art 1 Thie statament wu meo Thi• 1tatement •U flled Thi• 1tetament wu flied W J1met Slaughter Thi• 1tatement wu flied Olln S. Hactcney doing bullnMI at: f with the County Clerk of Or-wtth the Courity Cieri! ol Or-1 with the County Clerk of Or· Thia lletement wu n1ed with 11141 County Clerk of Of. This 1tatement wu ftled IMJ>ULSE SALES LTD . •no• County on Apr11 25. 1nge County on May 21, ange County on April 28, with the County Clark of Or· •noa County on Apr11 24, with the County Cieri! of Or· 440 ~ood Ct . Laguna 1988 1996 1986 ange County on May II. 1988 1988 ange County on Mfrf 9, 1988 Beact1. Cati! 92851 ,_,_, f10r7S7 nan,. ~ ,.,_ ,._., Jamea Stuer'! Oa\111, 4'0 PubHll'led Orange Co&lt PubllSlleCI Orange Cout I Publllhed Orange eo..1 Put>lllhed Orange Coat Publlehed Orange Coaat Publlthed Orange Cou1 Otgood C1 Leguna BMcll. Dally Piiot May 11 16 23, 30, Dally Pllot May 30. June 8, Dally Piiot May 9. 18, 23. 30, Dtlly Piiot Mey 23. 30. June Dally Pllol May 23. 30, June Delly Piiot May 23. 30, June c a111 92851 I t988 13, 20 11188 11986 8 13 1986 6, 13 1988 8, 13 111ae Thia bu•lnen I• con· F-169 F-274 F-157 F-233 F-220 F-225 I< WE'RE HURTING. "·'''">:hH.,l.m lwn·n l'\IX°fl'''l ·na l0'1'1111111rd"J '1t·r n lid ,111<1 111lwr llu111.11111.1r1.111 pr11;tr.tlll\ kn ·p rlllllll11111Ji! \11d ''l , .tll I Jll11rd 1•1 t111111 up ,1111n .. f>k J\( hdp American Red Cross A NEW WORLD ., OF ADVENTURE! • II • Sall through the most exciting columns of services, Items for sale , job opportunities, cars, homes, boats and miscellaneous that exist on the seven seas. Climb aboard the classifieds today. 25~ HAZY -~ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1986 Women claim police brutali Newport police say charges unfounded; cases involve drinking, disorderliness contends she was beaten by Newpon Beach poltce officers. That complaint, filed on behalf of Fullerton resident June Miller, alleges "excessive and unreasonable amounts of force" by the officers during Miller's Sept. 20, 1985. arrest for disorderly conduct. Trent Hams said Weatherholt'~ claims are unfounded. According to Hams, the de.J>tlfl· ment's investigation o( the incldcnt found Weatherholt's inJunes were suffered before officers found her lying face-down on the sidewalk on East Balboa Boulevard. coherently when poltce amved, Harris said. She had a strona smell of alcohol on her breath. and was later arrested for public drunkenness, he added. By SUSAN HOWLETT OflMDely,... ..... A 32-year-old woman who alleges she was handcuffed. shackled and beaten by Newport Beach poli ce officers has filed a $500,000 claim against the city. Marcia Ellen Weatherholt of New- Sult filed Vlr&lnla McMartin la one of three people ru-tnc •ult for wrongful pro•ecutlon in the McMartin Pre-School moleetation ca-.e. A5. Coast Former New York police officer David Toma brings his anti-drug message to Laguna Beach./A3 Sports Larry Bird scores 3 1 points to lead Boston to 117-95 win over Houston In NBA Championship Serles./C1 The Angels fall to Detroit, 7-4, despite grand slam by Dick Schofleld./C1 Pitching will be key when Fountain Valley High soft- ball team guns for CIF title Saturday./C1 INDEX port Beach tiled the claim last week in connection with the Feb. 15 incident, according to Newport Beach City Clerk Wanda Raggio. The city also received noufication Tuesday of a Superior Court lawsuit in connection with a separate com- plaint from another woman who also Weatherholt claims she has been under the care of a half-dozen doctors after she suffered cuts and bruises on her head and body in the alleged beating by unnamed policemen. Newport Beach police spokesman .. They (the officers) tried to ascer- tain what had happened to her. but she would not cooperate." Harris said. Weatherholt was unable to stand on her own and was spcalUng in- Weatherholt claims false imprison- ment, assault and battery, defa- mation and emotional distress 1n the claim filed by Newport Beach at· torney E. Day Carman. Miller's suit alleges that Newport Beach police officer Scott McKnight handcuffed her, then threw her head- first into the back of a patrol car after Pedal boat aeason open• o..r,...,.......,...._. • ....., Conteatanta ln the Pa Yi.lion Pedal Boat Paaeant pa.mp •tart of •ummer. wttb Balboa Pedal Boata ownen 8te•e and furloualy toward the fln1ab ln one of the beata Tbunday ln Jlll ForlMlth ta1rtn1 top bonon. Lead.inc the beat abo•e are Newport Barbor. Co-ed team• competed in celebration of tlae Bob Black (lookinC back) and Debbie Voorhees. Robbers shoot Irvine man in home Victim suffers leg wound when 3 armed men break into house in Heritage Park By PAUL ARCHIPLA Y OfW.o.itr ......... Three men forced their way into an Irvine home Thursday night, shot a resident in the leg and robbed the premises. Irvine police reported. ' The victim. who had not been identified tale Thursday. was taken to the Health C'are Medical Ce nter of Tustin. said Irvine police Lt. Mike While. A hospual spokeswoman said the v1ct1m wa s in stable cond1t1on Thurs- day night. The rob.bery occurred at 8:30 p.m. at 3 Liberty in fieritage Park. White said. • The armed robbers look an un- disclosed number of items from the home after shooting the resident. and fled in a Ford Pinto. Witnesses outside the home. wh o heard the gunshot, gave police a license plate number. but It may have been incorrect. White said. White did not know 1f the vtcllm was alone m the home at the lime of the incident. The three suspects were dcscnbed as Hispanic adults. he said. lnvesttgators were on the scene late Thursday and had launched a search of the area man attempt to locate the suspects. arr"tma her for disorderly conduct on Sept. 20, I 98S. Miller funher alle&ed, •n tbe suit filed by attorney Mtdiael Banks, that McK.n'iht struck her 1n the croin with his knee while she was in a holding area in the Orange County Jail Banks said she has been under the care of a chiropractor for neck and back io- junes since the incident. . Maller was a passenger in a car dnven by Donna Garrison, accordJna to poltce reports. Miller and another (Pleue eee WOIBl'f/A2) Toll road possible for new freeway Report says Eastern Corridor offers best opportunity for toll By LISA MAHONEY Of .. Dllltr,.. ·- The future Eastern Transportauon Corridor: intended to connect the Ri verside and Santa Ana freeways through Anaheim Hills and Tusun could become Orange County's firs1 toll road. A feasib1ltty study of the planned Eastern and Foothill transportation corridors suggests tolls could be used to offset 62 percent of the Eastern Comdor's construcuon costs by the year 2010. Collecting tolls on both roads would pay for only 34 percent ol esumated $516 milhon cost, accord· ing to a consultant study prepared for the OranJe County Transportatlon Commission. The Eastern comdor 1s viewed as a promising candidate for loll booths because there arc no good alternative roules available 10 motorists. the rcpon by Gruen and Associates concluded. In contrast. the introduction ol tolls on the planned Foothill Tran~ ponauon Comdor could cause dnv- ers 10 squeeze onto the Santa Ana Freeway to the south. The Foothill corridor will lmk the Eastern comdor with San Clemente. The possibility of collecting tolls on a third transpo~tion comdor planned to ltnk Newport Beach and (Pleue eee FREEW AT/ A2) Advice and Games Auto Piiot A6 B 1-10 A3 CS-6 06-9 A7 C7 Datebook Bulletin Board Business Classified Wieder spending statement wrong Patrol to curb sex at park begins Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather A8 Oatebook A3 B9. C7-8 C1-4 Date book A2 Second D1stnct Supervisor Har- riett Wieder has not spent $442.000 lo protect her office against political opponent David Meslovich. cam- paign consultant Jeff Adler said Thursday. Wieder mistakenly included ex- penditures from previous years in her March 15 to May 17 financial disclosure stalemcnJ. said Adler of En&lander Communications. ihe error made 1t appear that (Pleue eee WIEDER/ AAl) Laguna poHceto ask loiterers to fill out card s on 24-hour foot patrol along coast By LAURA MERK Of ... Dllltr ......... Responding to residents' com- plaints. Laguna Beach police officers arc conducting foot patrols through Heisler Park hoping to djscourage public sexual activity. A round-the-dock program staned May 23 and will continue unul June 6 in the wake of residents' complaints that men were meeting in the park both day and night to have sex in the restrooms and bushes. Less intense patrols will continue throughout the summer. After June 6, offi cer!> will patrol the park 12 hours a day until Sept. 14. In addition. the department will renew its summer foot patrol w11h both reserve and sworn officers walkmg from Main Beach lo Heisler Park. The combination of the two pro- grams \\ill cost nearl) $25.000 by the lime summer 1s over. <;.a1d Purcell. Thus far. pohce said. no arrests have been made for 1lhc1t sex acts; but officials wam they will arrest men who conunually loiter at the park. Neil Purcell, director of publtc safety. said he hopes the officers' high v1s1b1hty will discourage the men from returning for sexual encounters. "We are hoping to pµt the word out that 1t 1s fine to use the park. but let's be respective of other people's rights We "ant to put a stop to 1lhc1t sexual acll\ll)' happenmg the park.'' said Purcell. The North Laguna i\ssoc1atton has (Pleue eee PATROL/A2) Guitarist Dick Dale back in Balboa house By STEVE MARBLE °' ... Dllltr ,... ..... less Tuesday after discoverin~ that the locks on the landmark residence had been changed and a security guard stationed near the front door. Assessor claims opponent tryingto buy way into o~Ce Evicted and temporanly homeless, surf iiuitarist Dick Dale slept m a car outside his 17-room mansion in Balboa this week before arming himself with a court order that allowed him to re turn home latr Wednesday. "It's wonderful to be back home." said Dale. who was evicted after allqedly defaulting on an $890.000 loan. Dale said he found himself home- "So I slept outside," Dale said. "h was the first time I've had to use bubble gum for toothpaste. Bad," Dale said his pet cat and a bird named Fred were locked inside along with his clothes, musical equipment and other possessions. "l came pretty close to losing my cool," he said. "It was frustrating. (Pleue eee DICK/ A2) By LISA MAHONEY Assessor Bradley L. Jacobs has accused his poht1cnl opponent of tryi ng to buy the election b) dumping over S2 I 0.000 ,n personal funds into his campaign. "I want Orange Count) voters to know that m) opponent 1s ti) mg to buy this elecuon:· Jacohs <,a1d dunng a press conference in ~anta i\na Thursday Jacobs said Dcput) As~ sor David Heated congressional races on Coast Came as surprise PAUL AICHIPLEY GOP incumbent faces tough allenge: Democrats take on LaRouche follower A world traveler Ill tupaye rs' expense, a leader of a mtnd<ontrol v oup ~king poltt1cal power. a cult candidate, a party leader Wlth ttt' lo dn11 tnfficken and orpn11cd cnme, and a yuppie from the h1pp1e pany fill out the ca t of '°'h Conart 1on1I 01 tnct C'Ontendcn whom vottn w1ll choose amona ne1tt Tuesday The colorful de nptions are from candidates and 'lupporten about the tr opponent Accuracy a 1de. 1t has made for a spicy campaign 1n an otherw15c bland pnmary Mo t interest ha, focu'<'d on the Rcpubhcan pnmary pitting Con· gressman H.oben Badham against manaacmenl C'On'iultant Nathan Roscnbera. The Wlnncr of that race 1s the hkely rtprtscntat1ve to the IOOth Congress m the heavily Republican d1 tnn. ELECTION '86 the House. his ~~uent travels out of the country and his use of campaign donation for ptrsonal expcn'iC!I . fi · "There art clear md1cat1ons that Despite Badham s 1~c-term an· the people of this d1 tnct are tired of cumbency. he find tum'Clf '" a.ou h him taluna them for arantcd and nice apmsi the well·flnanced and • side 1epp1n the fundamental ,,,uc, ~ell-orpn11ed R nbtra. of this camP3Jf!'·" Ro'ICnhcra u id The )J year d challenacr ha h~l "My opponent s h)'pocm y and ar hard and rtpcatcdly on "Bldham s ab5tnttt1 m from roll~all vote 1n (Pteue eee Hl:AT£D/A2) Holben is tr. mg to use a huge infusion of funds 10 "bu) a promo- ti on for ~h1ch he 1s totallv un- qualified. I am appalled that anyone would so blatantl} II) ...to bu) the office of assc'lsor for their own personal gain." he '>31d Holben. ho\\C\er dcnie~~ t mg to hu\ h1'i \\8\ mto, 1t1 I oftct He 'iald the s:i fO ()(X) I pa} Ing for thrc-e coun1yw1dc ma1hngs nCCCS'\· ai; to get h1'i '1ew., ocro..,., to Orange Count '41 I O' mil hon \ otcr. ·.\\)OU know. runnin~ a campaign IS \Cf"\ e~penSl\e," he said. { ampa1gn spending reports filed last week state that Jacobs has spent S14. I 08 on his· campaign. The two items lt'ited for that expend1turt arc a campaign mailer and consultant fees. Holben said he 1s running against hi'> boss because he believes he 1s more qualified than Jacobs to be .isM',sor He cnuc1zcd Jacobs for running an inefficient operation and (Pleue He ASS&880R/ A2) . OC Jail inmates lose suit over law books By Ll A MAHONEY Of .... Oll9J ......... Orange C'oun1•11 1nrna1cs ha\.e adequate acccs'i ilrlcpl matcnals. a federal Judge has ruled U Oastnet Coun Judge Wilham Gra) said he ~" no need to rhangc arranaemcnts throuah which 1nmatl"'i can gel law book'l tO aid 1n their own dt-fenSC Of prrpart CIVIi nahts 1111• pt1on apan'lt their J••lcn "I 'illll bche\.c that thr prc\tnt " stC"m under which an 1nm te ma~ ~uMl 11nd tTCet\.t' up I<' fhc la~. hook'I JX'f da\ 1n ht\ cell. 1" d(quate. .... ( .r;\\ \\role 1n an order 1'i"ued T uc"<ia)' ( 1ra\ reached h1~ dec1 ion after hearing t<"illmony from t~OJltlhou la"'er'i May 20 Convicted murderers Willie W1st"I and Walter Black '31d the J3il', 'lysttm ofprov1d· 1n 1nmatc'i with legal mattnals mack' 11 d1flicull for them to dt'fend them· \el\'('\ [)cput-, C ounty ( ounxt l::d Duran 1d (1ra\ acted mlK:h he had elliptttcd ·Duran had a~ •in t n '\mcnCAn C 1v1l Libcit Union (Pteue eee UlllA'l'D/.U) 0rtinge C0Mt DAILY PfLOTI Frklay, May 30, 1988 Water supply cutoffs won't affect most Coast residents Frem 11.aff ud wlre reporl1 Water deliveric an six Southern California counties may be curtailed sporadically this summer, but most residents along the Oranae Coast will feel little or no impact. "There 1hould be no cause for alarm because we're talkina about shortages of maybe a day at a t1me, not a Iona-range shortage," Metro. politan Water District spokeswoman Pai Messigian said Thursday. A cutback by Metropolitan durina peak demand penods would force local agencies to use water from wells and reservoirs, or 10 ask cus1omers to reduce water use. The potenual crunch as not caused by a shortage of water but by MWD's anabihty to filter water quickJy enough dunng peak demand periods. The Orange County Water Distnct, which serves Hun1ing1on Beach and Fountain Valley, will not be affected because it has access to a large supply of natural ground water and purchased unfiltered water from MWD, said spokesman Gordon Elser. The Irvine Ranch Water District can fall back on reservoir water. said spokeswoman Joyce Wegner-Gw1d1. She said an the worst case the district might ration water use to imgate landscapes outside com- mercial and business centers. Smaller distric1s in south Orange County that depend almost exclusive- ly on the MWD might be affected by curtailed supplies. MWD spokesman Tam Skrove s&id last summer's peak demands strained the agency's five filtration plants, and if the plant are overburdened again this summer, water quahty would ~ sacrifiocd and chances of contamina- tion increased. The reason for any curtailment "1s not the amount of water we have access 10. but the amount of water we can treat during a peak (demand) penod." Messig1an s~ud. So possible cutbacks would aflect water that is filtered to remove panicles and disinfected to kill bacteria. not water the dastnct ~lls to cities that have their own filtration facilities. However, most of the water sold by the dastnct as filtered water. Messagian said. MWD is a government agency that wholesales water from the Colorado River and the San Joaquin-Sacra- mento drainage to more than 130 c1t1es and agencies an Los Angeles. Orange. Ventura, Riverside, San Bernardino and San D iego counties. While the agency is considered a supplemental supplier of water, it provides about half the water used by the 13 miJlion residents of those six counties, she said. Carl Boronkay, the distnct's gen- eral m anager. sent a letter to member agencies earlier this month warning that filtered water supplies might "be curtailed in order that Metropolitan can provide adequate water to meet e scntaaJ needs." Skrove said the cause of last summer's unusually high demand for water remains unclear. Officials hope at was a quirk created by bot. dry weather. but are concerned that increased growth in Southern Cali- fornia may have outstripped the capacity of the filterina plants. he added. h wall be <11x years before additional plant capacity can ~ built, Skrove said. Mcss1g1an said MWD officials are meeting with customer agencies to discuss operational changes and con- servation measures that might be needed to avoid a shonage of littered water Air Force copter crash kills five STURGIS. S.D. (AP) -An Air Force helicopter providing security for a missile maintenance Found convoy crashed Thursday, killing five of the six people o n board, the Air Force said. The HU-I helicopter was carrying two crew members a nd four military police, said Airman 1st Class Ron Brown of the Ellsworth Air Force Base public affairs unit. He would not 1dent1fy the victims. PATROL TO CURB SEX AT PARK BEGINS ..• From Al been urging the council 10 stan programs that would d1scourge use of the park for quack sexual rendezvous. Dunng the crackdown, officers will also talk to people who continually loner around the restrooms and fill o ut what 1s called a "field interview card." "Every police depanment in the country has tncm. They ant a sem1- formal means of documentation of an incident or public contact that can be positive or negative." said Purcell. The cards. which include the person's name and reason for being at the park. wall go on file at the Police Depan- ment for two years and then be destroyed A.n 1nd1v1dual who as contacted several times b) an officer could be arrested for lo11enng. said Purcell. l\ssaults and robbenes are also common at the beach park, said Purcell. Name calling sometimes leads to altercauons and cnmanals often prey on people gathered an the coves late at night. he said. As for the beach patrol. Purcell said the influx of bcachgoers during sum- mer months has made the program a necessary pursuit an the past. The officers wall cite people for such offenses as illegal use of bar~ues. drinking on the beach and unleashed dogs. On Friday and Saturday nights the "gay foot patrol" program will also be in force, said Purcell. The depanment has found the program. in which a member of the ~Y community walks the gay bars Wlth an officer from 9 p.m. until J a .m , a useful tool in the past. In summer monthr, between ~00 and 300 men crowd the II.a\< bars each night. said Purcell. When an officer has to make an arTCSt or citation, "a crowd builds up that usually consjsts of outside (Laguna Beach) gays who tend to think the police may be harassing the individual. (The gay member walking with the officer) can dispel those concerns.'' said Purcell. Overall. Purcell said he as confident the increased patrols will help curb summertime problems caused by crowds as well as the North Laguna residents' complaints. "We see 1t as a good positive program. In a wa y 11's a program that as costing us a lot of m oney. especially 1n the first 14 days. But we arc trying to be sens111ve to the concerns of the people an Nonh Laguna and we see the) ha' ea big problem not only with the lllicat se>.ual activity but with the noi~ ... said Purcell. • DICK DALE BACK IN BALBOA HOUSE ... From Al Everything I own and everything J do was inside that house." Sccunty guard Make Basham. hared by Orange Coast Thnft and Loan. said he was under order'i 10 keep Dale out of the house. "Nobody comes 1n. That's all I know." said Basham before Dale obtained a coun order ordenng the thnft and loan temporanly to return the house to ham. The mus1c1an. kno wn to admirers as the "Kang o fSurfGu1tar "1s locked an a running battle with the thnfl and loan. which tiled a foreclosure notice against Dale la'it year and bought the mansion at a foreclosurc sale 1n March. Dale has tiled <1u11 against the Lo\ .\lam1tos-hascd thrift. cla iming fraud a nd ur,ul) ""'e're heading for a super battle WIEDER ... From Al Wieder had ?.pt:nt ncarl) a half m1llion dollars to defeat Me<;lov1ch whom she called a "poh11cal un- known" In fact lhl' $442.000 \he reponctl was spent 01,.er the rn1Jr'>C of eight "ears. he sa11.J · A.n amended d1\dmurl' form filed with the Orange County Reg1c;trar o f Votcr'i '>how!. Wieder allually paid out about S79.500 an th1'> vcar'!. lampa1gn. Me')lov1ch of (1arden Grove has put up v1nuall~ no fight for W1edcr's scat. expend1 ng only S 71 O of the S976 he has raised WOMEN ... From Al pa'iS('nger I 1mothy ~haughne\5('). were arrested for d1\orderly condutt after< 1amson was arre'ited on susp1· c1on of drunken dn ving Hams ~1d Maller wa') arrested after 'ihc c:houtcd ohS(~n111es and interfered with a fil·ld obnety te\t being given to (1amso n "Dunng booking. Ms Miller i;on t1nued to be combauve and verballv abusive to other o fficers at the J3if yelling obsccniucs and making verhal threats." Hams said Her claim has bet'n den1ccl by th<.> Cit y C ounc1 I. MAIN OFFICE JlO W-'I 1'•1 I .... ~. • .... IOO'tt• a. • "' ... "'""' " "· ~)~ 19G 109 II•' ~Ill .,.__ ,\ ~!~I 1142 a ll and I ain't gmng to he down and die.'' Dale said "This 1s m y hou~ I h\.c here .. Officials at the thnft and loan could not be reached for comment and did not return telephone calls <\ coun heanng 1s set Junl' 9 an Supenor Coun 1n Santa Ana The house. built for ra?or blade magnate King Gillette about 70 years ago. is said 10 be wonh $3 5 m1ll1on. It overlooks the entrance to Nt•wpon Harbor Dale said he paid $275,000 for the house an 1976. In his suit, Dale states he wa' 1n a state of "despa1r'' when he agreed to a huge loan instead of going forward v.11h bankruptc). The suit cla1mi. that Dale was charged an interest rate in excess of 18 percent .\t the ume. Dale said. he was still reeling from a bitter divorce and a child molestation tnal in which he v.as found innocent Dale said he had planned a conct·n tour in Japan to help pay oil the loan. but canceled the tour whl'n the thnft allegedly failed to live up to the loan agreement and provide him with mo ney to refurbish the mansion. Dale said he intended to repair the house in case he had to sell it to meet loan demand~ In coun documents. the thnft claims 11 was Dale who violated the loan agreement, which called for monthly payment-; of $14. 7 53 and a lump c;um payment of $1 million within a year Dale. 49. 1s best known for such ~urfing hits as" Let's Go Tnppin .. and "The Scavenger" with the Deltones in the earl) '60s. His sound and style were later popularized by such groups as the Beach Boys and Jan and Dean. according to James Webster. has attorney "I'm one sarong --and I'm no1 going to ca .. e 1n," Dale said. 'Tll fight this all the wa). I'll show them." INMATES LOSE SUIT ..• From Al request that pnsoner-. be g1wn dire< t access to a law library. If so ordered. the rnunty would have had to build one eo;f')fcially for the Jail. he said Gray did c;ugge<;l that ~hrnl1- ( oroncr Rrad Gates grant an c~ccp­ taun to the fi ve-book rule when 1nmate'i rcqucr,t Shepard'<, ( 1tat1on'> bccau~ the r,ix-to-c;cven·\ u luml· '>Cl 1s uc;eless if 11 l'i hrokcn up He askl·d that the Jail's c~1mng law library -C'>SCnt1all\ a dosct with shelves for lav. books -he ac;c;cs...:d to see 1f new books should be added. And Gray recommended that in- mates be given an up-to-date last of books in the Jail law library upon request On another matter, the JUdge refu~ed to act on a complaint that inmates arc being denied their co n- 'it1tut1onal right to an attorney be- cause oflong wans 1n the visitors area. Gray ruled that delayed visits. while unfortunate~ are not deliberate and therefore do n•t warrant federal coun action. FREEWAY TOLL ... From Al "Ian Juan ( a p1">tran<> war, not con \ldrrcd Orange ( ounty hac; been looking tor wayc; 10 pay for the three nC'v. freeway'> c;ince 1984 when votrrc; n.·Jectcd a c;alcc; tax ancrca~ to finant C' them .\hout halfofthc comdorco\t'i will he borne by developer; EHahlishing toll road'i " on<' method the transportation com m1sc;1on 1s cons1denng to fund the ha lance Leg1sla11on soonsorcd hy Ac;. ~mbl)man Nolan Fnzelle, R-Hunt· 1ng1on Beach. lo permit toll roads an Orange County died this year but could be reintroduced. The toll road findings will be the 'iUhJCCt o f a June 4 public meeting at Tusun High School. Possible solutions to a \faffic bottleneck tha1 will ~ created by freeway construction in Tu~tan, Nonh Tustin and Oran,e will also be discussed. The meeting begin s at 7 p.m. at the school at 11 71 El Cam ino Real. o:l,'~' le Quer.nteed Molloty 'l'Olr " JO "' _,,. .. ,....._o, Coo1'11'' •983 • • ,, .... v••"'9 c-c·n· •• ,,..... ~Cat ... 111\it•••'.,,_.t •1''~4 ,, ... CP ·~·~ nwtlt ,.....,. ,.. 11 O" ...,.0-M.., • 1'>0u1 -. • ~· Justcall 642-6086 What do you hke about the Daily Pa lot'' What don'1 you like? Call the number abqve and your messaae will be ~orded. tramcnhcd and de· livered to the appropnate editor ~30P"' CMO<rlOt•7P,.. iWIO yOll CCIOy • De ~.o '"""• -~. t .iilO" ()' (('Wti1'.qtt' -II' VOL. 71. NO. 150 The same 24-hour answenng 5erv1ce may be ustd to record letters to the editor on any topic Contnbutors to our Letter' column must include their name and telephone number for vcnficat1on Tells us what'~ on >Our mind """ '!JO ""' ,. ... '"" COP'( "" 7 a "' fa r.f<I'• •O e"' 1'111 fO>i Copy • De~.0 Clrcut.tlon Te•epttonee ...,.., Ot•roe c-lt •.... ......... a Overcast mornings to continue Night end morning IOw d<M>da wtll ~through Satl.lfdey, b.eornTng pattty eunny at the bMCMa and eunnler Inland dUtlng lM att«noona, tM Natlonel WMther 8«vlce Mid. The P--..tjCOt 8 pm EDT. Fri , Mav 30 High• will range from ee to 72 It the beacha to 78 to 92 lnttnd. Lowa wlll be 55 to e2. Sunny 9nd warm w.ather In the mountain• wlll be accompanied by a 1llght chance of thunderehowert over th• ... tern range&. Hight Wiii be In the upper 70. to mid 901, Iowa In the •oa and 501. Sunny end hOt daya In the d9Ml1 are tor.oaat. with a alight cheno. of thunderahowera o~ tM Owen• Vati.y and eastern Motive Oeeert. w .. t to aouthwtet wind• 10 to 19 knot• will blow through 1oc11 watera thlt attemoon OW!' a .outhwtet 1wetl of 2 to 3 te.t. Low cloud• will hovef through tonight, with partial clearing thl• afternoon. U.S. Tempe U11le~ ... ... ~ ... .. 80 17 .. 79 5A 17 IM IS M n 12 17 12 91 t3 .... 62 16 .. II llO ~ Mleml._,, ............ " 12 7t 17 Calif. Tempe 71 ~ ..._llPeul 9$ 57 =:..::: llWOUQll 6 p"' TlllnOly 13 " _.... ... M ... , Sen!•~ Sloolnon M .. " 59 ae eo 11 eo 72 ... es 75 .. et $9 4l 78 55 13 13 ,, 53 IO M t3 12 .. 41 to eo 11 M ,, 47 11 eo ... 51 " eo .. )t .. 5$ 75 •• 78 1M .. 51 .. 15 .. 51 •• 52 83 71 .., .. ,, .. .. .., &6 •• 71 65 104 75 -OrlMM 10 70 -YO"'~ .. 17 OlclllflOIN Cliy 79 63 OwMlle 71 SI on.ndo 96 .. PMleOllpNe IO 11 PlloeNa 102 79 =::ro.. 12 57 83 65 =rClly .. 15 74 47 AINI " 5-4 ~ " ... 91~ IO ... Salt 1..11<1 City ... 59 ... ""'°"'° .. M 9111 "'*>,P Ill ... 19 a..ni. 77 65 = t1 lie 72 63 "*-... 57 ·~ 87 IM T~PnOg ... 70 T~ IO " T-100 74 Tl*e ... fl WlillfllnOlon,O C 91 ... Eztended '"' :v= ""' Plfiod, •OIPI IOw _. IDGll fOO II*'-llof!O Illa COM! """9 .......... lo 73 and.......,_.,...,.. II lo... ,__ 52 to 12 ... lllOW ~I 91g._ ~ 8lytN Celllllne 0'*'9t Clly £11Nk• ,_ ~-l«IQ hac:ll ~ Monr°"'9 MotMbelkl ~ Ml. W'*>ll ...... ==e-11 ~ P•lptlnOI P9NdlN P-Aolllee ........... "9d IMI "8dwood Oltf a--10 .... Sen ..... ~ SMO.WW ... °""° SM\ FteflCiaoo ....._ ..,....,,. ,..,., ..... a.ntaCna ..,......,. 102 .. t2 62 T.,_ Vf//Wf M 41 77 )I Torr.,_ 76 M " 5A y_,.i1e\lly 83 63 107 72 .. 61 11 " 15 49 Surf Report 102 .. to 63 72 11 LOCA'nOll 11111 Diil. 79 eo Z-e.dl 2.a aw 97 eo knt• Monica 1-a w 19 eo ~8"dl 2-4 aw IO 12 16 61 Sen Ollgo Coullly 2-4 w 71 .. Oullooll lor 8111irdlY' Little "'*'09· IOI 12 aa 11 .. 13 66 51 Ti dee 87 10 63 61 to 52 TODAY .. 67 Flnllllgl'I J'20e.lft 4.4 " M FWllOw IO"I01 "' 00 78 &7 8-'lllllgfl 5•)6 p.tn u " 65 l«oorlCI IOW 11·24 pm 2 I .. 52 IATUNMY tO 5t ,,. .. Ngll 4:46."' 4.0 12 11 FnllOw 11:211 m 0 4 70 83 a.condlllgl'I • 13 p'" ... ., 63 17 53 ,. 11 ... ,__ IOClay al 5·"3 8 1'1\. ....... .. 53 :z::.1175tpm ... 47 l'tle9 loNy al 1;31 Lift. and ... 73 51 ..-e112.&3p m HEATED RACES CAME AS SURPRISE ••• From Al rogance runs counter to the hard- working. dynamic people of the 40th Dastnct." Badham has responded w11h ques- tions about Roscnbrrg's tics to est and The Forum. controversial sclf- i mprovement programs founded by Rosenberg's brother. Werner Erhard. and the challenger's service to Demo- crats during the Can er presidency. "Nathan Rosenberg is a 'tissue paper' candidate who has wrapped h1mself1n a than layer of questionable o r neghg1blc e'penence. choosing to attack a 10-year incumbent rather than run o n the ments of has own hmated and unknown background." Badham said. "Mr Rosenberg is an inexperi- e nced carpetbagger who apparently was sent to Orange County only a few years ago and heavily financed by shadowy forces seeking to enhance their political 1nOuence." Republicans who are unhappy with both candidates may watch with interest the outcome of the Demo- cratic pnmary where the official candidate -a disciple of ultra- conservaove Lyndon LaRouche -1s being challenged by the party's coun- ty chairman in a difficult write-in campaign. An Hoffman, a technical wntcr who lives outside the district in Sant.a Ana, was the onl)' person to file for the Democratic pnmary in the 40th. When party leaders learned he was a LaRouchcdisciple. they scrambled to provide an alternative. Party chairman Bruce Sumner of Newport Beach, a former state as~ semblyman and retired Judge, took the challenge himself to thwan HofT- man 's automatic pnmary victory by waging a wnte-an campaign. "I don't want the rest of the country to look at Orange County a nd say you've got Republican con~ssmen who are an embarrassment and Democrats have a LaRouche alterna- tive ... Sumner said. "I represent the leg111mate pany effon to present voters with a legit- imate alternative to the Republican candidate." Hoffman counters that Sumner has ties with organized cnmc and dru~ trafficking.. He also espouses the LaRouche platform, which calls for quarantining AIDS victims and building a laser defense system simi- lar to Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative. "They're saying we're on the fringe, but we're actually the core left over from the ideals of Presidents Roose- velt and Kennedy. two of the greatest Dcmocnns:· Hoffman said. "We're trying to bring sane policies into the Democratic party." Should none of the mainstream pany candidates appeal to voters, they'll find an alternative in Peace and Freedom candidate Steve Scars. The 30-year-old Irvine resident looks and sounds nothing like the P.any leaders of the radical '60s and 70s. Clean cut and moderate, Sears said, 'Tm providing an alternative be· cause nowadays the Democrats aren't really much different from the Re- publicans. .. Yo u don't have to have long hair and be a h1pp1e to talce issue with the views being expressed . " ASSESSOR QUESTIONS SPENDING ... From Al lacking the skills necessary to ovcr~c assessment procedures. "If the taxpayers knew how the office as being run. there would be a revolution.'' he said . Holben's most recent campaag.n financial disclosure slP· ·ment shows that he has rece1vel $2.445 in contnbuuons. largely from em- ployees in the assessor's office. He also loaned $60,000 to has campaign committee and spent about $56.000. chieOy for advena 1ng and campaign literature. The S2 I 0.000 Jacobs refers to includes three loans totaling $161,741 that Holben made to has campaign after the close of the disclosure period May 17. Holbert said the large sum came from the sale ofhisdeceascd mother's home an Gardena and the liquidation of some stock she owned. Holben. who described has mother as a worshipper of Propos1t1on 13-author Howard Jarvis. said he felt she would have wanted him to have the money to ensure that the pnniciples of the 1978 initiative are earned o ut an Orange County In campaign maahng.s. Holben has called has boss an enemy of Pro~ os1t1on 13 and accused Jacobs of wasting SI m1lhon an tupayers' money an a tu dispute with the Irvine Co. Jacobs said he was the only assessor an C'.alifornaa to roll back propeny taxes after Proposition 13 was a~ proved by voters. while others waited for a legislative mandate. Great 5 Yur W.rr.ntr When )'Oll buy carpet maoe ol Alli.ct Anso N 'nylon )'Ot.l &ilt mort than just promises Mote ttlatl just bNUtY More th«)Ust the WOfld's ll'lt Cati* wtthbuUl../n toll. st.tin. IUltle end weat rtststance '\lblJ pt Allied\ f\Jll flw re• wamttftY• A~ that PfQttctl )OIJr carpet •ntt ,.,., "°' ~ lftet oth9t carpets hlM wom out tl*f weteom. So come In and mlM a amen deal on the tmal'IKt tMY* '°" can buy C8rJ)tt mode of Alllec:I MttO N .... Great Prices JoaNB•A>BsiaC.arsTGo. Financmg Available C'1hfornl1 C'ontrutnr 1; l.tren, 27AU Nrvad" rootrartor < Llrt>n!I~ 11436 I 'Family Owned Since 1879 " 2927 S. Bristol Street, Costa Mesa r.,~~"" !>nu•h ot s0u1n eo.aa rt 1 1 751-2324 AL SO IN LOS •N El 8 •LONG 8£ACH Store Hours: 1=-=..:s::i:::w Mon· Fri 9·6 Sat 10-5 ' MAYJ0,1986 l}\ill' PIUJf ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE \U..2/:N0.21 J I. I I I I I I j I I Summer theater coming in threes June. as they sing in "Carousel." will be busting out all over shortl}. and so will a flock of special summer theater programs - all coming in three at a time. Orange Coast College. which pioneered the summer musical tradition locally some 30 years ago. has a trio of warm weather of!erings i.n store for its audiences this yea~. Saddlcback College will have its Saddleback Company Theater in operation for three more productions. running in repertory. Meanwhile. on Garden Grove's Main Street. the Grove -----------Shakespeare Festival will be back with three of the Bard's classic comedies. two of them under the T stars. And further north. Full-01 erton's Muckenthaler Center will TITUS again play host to the LP Reper- tory Company and its summer • _________ ... triumverate of comedy, mystery and drama. Launching the summer fol' OCC will be a revival of Joseph Stein's comedy "Enter Laughing," based on the autobiographical book by Carl Reiner. opening June 20 for two weekends m the Drama Lab Theater. The comedy-drama "Philadelphia, Here l Come" by !lriaf! Friel is bo~ked for three weekends, July I I-27, in the colleges tnlJmate Studio Theater, while the Coast season will close out wi th a new musical adaptation of the vintage melodrama, .. The Drunkard." which will play in the Drama Lab Aug. 8-24. At Saddleback, the musical "Peter Pan" and the Agath~ Chnstie mystery "Ten Little Indians" will share the stage of the large McKinney Theater while a musical concoction from the l 930sand '40scalled "Jumpin', Jivetmd Jitterbug" will occupy the Studio Theater. All will close the third weekend of August. with .. Peter Pan" o pening July 18. "Indians" July 25 and "Jitterbug" July 5 T he Bard's the thing in Garden Grove with "Henry IV, Pan I" opening the festivities in the Festival Amphitheater July 11 . .. Love's Labor's Lost" arrives at the adjacent Gem Theater July 25, while "The Me~ Wives of Windsor" takes over the amphitheater Aug. 15. In addition. a bonus production, as yet unannounced. will be produced in late August at the Gem. .. The Uninvited," which ran for two weekends in Tustin, moves to the Muckenthaler Center in Fullerton June 12 under the banner of the LP Repertory. The theme shifts to comedy July 10 with .. Any Wednesday," then turns to courtroom drama Aug. 7 for "The Night of January 16th." All tour companies are offering package deals for tickets to their summer seasons. You can call 432-5527 for information on the Orange Coast College shows, 582-4656 for the Saddleback Company Theater. 636-7213 for the Grove Shakespeare Festival and 73 1-2792 for the LP summer at the MuckenthaJer Center. The aforementioned shows are not in heu of but in addition to a fairl y well penciled-in dance card of other local theater activity: Five more productions arrive next week and four others the week afterward. Local ushers will be tearing ticket stubs at a pretty rapid pace through mid-August before the regular pre-September breathing spell in preparation for the I 986-87 season. Publisher: Karen A. Wittmer &Jrtor: Frank Zina Datcbook Editor. Dixie Lindsay Art Director. Steven Houf.h Circulation MMJAIU: Terry K.a.ndJe Production Manqer: Robert L Cantrell Dllebooli 1s published every Fnday by the OnantJC Cout Publilb.i1111 Co • P.O. Box 1560, 330 W.· Bey SL. Cosca Meta. CA 92626. T~ (714j 642-4321. Replv OOSU)e$S hours an a l .m . lO .s p.m .. Monday thn>\1111 Fnday. Deadhnc for caJcndar or cvenl.I items Ind lcltcn II .s .,.m. Monday. The entire contcnls of Da1cbook ire copyrighled by the <>ranaie Cout Publishing Co. All riJ,h1.1 ire mcrvcd. · S Oally Piiot Oatebe>ok/ Friday, May 30, 1988 I A LENGTHY 'SBOAH' PREMIERS IN OR- ANGE COUNTY •••••••••.......•••••••••.•..••••••••••• 16 By ROBERT HYNDMAN "Shoah" -a lengthy but critically acclaimed film about the Holocaust -will begin an exclusive Orange County engagement Wednesday, June 4 at the Balboa Cinema in Newport Beach. The film is presented in cooperation with the Jewish Federation of Orange County, Shoah Survivors of Orange County and Long Beach and the 2nd Generation of Orange County. The 9112-bour film by French director Claude Lanzmann took IO years to complete and uses no archival footage. THE NYLONS AT THE COACH HOUSE SOUNDS Fl'l"'l'ING! ••••.•••••.......••...••••••••••..... 9 By RANDY JAY MATIN On the Nylons most recent British tour the group could be fo und opening shows for Shirley Bassey at the Royal Albert Hall and filling in open dates playing at local dives. Although they arc popular in their native Canada, Europe and Australia since the group's first release in 1982, the Nylons are just starting to crack the American market. The group plays the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano on Saturday night. OC CHAMBER ORCHESTRA HAS UNUSUAL · UPCOMING CONCERT............................. 16 B CHRISTOPHE R PALMER This weekend, the Orange County amber qrchestra, under the direction of Micah Levy, will perform twtce: on Sunday afternoon at Loyola Marymount in Orange, .and on Monday evening at the South Coast Repertory eatrc m Costa Mesa. Conductor Micah Levy likes to think of a ncert program as much like a Chinese menu. It should offer a variety of combinations of types, seasonings, color and texture. The palate should be alternately assaulted and soothed. GET THE JITTERS AT SCR ••••••••••••••••••.•. 13 By VIDA DEAN The final production of Sou th Coast Repertory Theatre•s season is .. Jitters," a comedy by David French directed by Martin Benson. Following the Premiere Night performance during a supper, cast member Susan Isaacs admitted she bad a little of the title -the jiner. . "It was my tint professional stage appearance,'' said the Costa Mesan who was graduated from Estancia High. · RESTAURANT NEWS •••••••••••••••••••••••• 17, 18 RESTAURANT OF THE WEEK •••••••••••••••.. 16 RESTAURANT DIRECT~RY •••••••••••••••••••• 19 RUTH local artist promotes N ewport's Police Olympics By ROBERT HYNDMAN "They prote1¢t it; I paint it." That's how artist Ruth Hynds describes the relationships the police department and she hove with Newport Beach. Considering the long in- volvement both the police and Hynds hove hod with Newport, 1t seems natural that they should work together on a project to benefit the community. Their current collaboration is de- signed to promote the Colt· forn10 Police Olympics, to be staged in Orange County from June 23 to June 29. The 20th annual event, CO· hosted this year by the police deportments of Newport Beach and UC i rvine, will feature 6,000 athletes compel· 1ng in 44 events staged at 25 venues. With· 30,000 spec- tators expected to attend the events, organizers expect rev- enues for the local economy to reach $5.5 million. Proceeds will benefit several groups, including the Orange County Special Olympics, the UCI Poison Control Center, the Orongewood Child Center and police employee associations of Newport Beach and UCI. This is the first time the event hos been staged m the Newport Beach area and the first time ii hos been so widely promoted. "Although they've been staging the Police Olympics lor a long time, they've never really publicized th e event before," Hynds said. \'But the Newport Beach police really wonted to open 1t up to the public and asked me to help promote 11. "I shore their desire to reach out to the community and put something bock. look at what this area hos done for me as a business and as o woman. I'm grateful for it." As the official artist of the 1986 California Police Olympics, Hynds hos prepared watercolors and graphite sketches which will be f eotured and auc · tioned at an exhibition called "A Brush W ith the law" on Thursday, June 5, at the Irvine Marriott Hotel. The 30 pieces of art feature images of competitors engaged in various sporting events. Other items for the auction hove been donated by event sponsors. Proceeds will be donated to the fund -raising effort. Among the auction beneficiaries are· groups Hynds selected that serve women who are rehabilitating their lives. f The 7 p.m. auctio,.n 1s by invitation only and arrangements can be made by calling Michelle Greer. Corter at 673-8661 or 7..30-5198. "When they come to me to help, I just couldn't pass up the chance," Hynds said. "Not only do I gel to put something bock into the community, but os on artist, the thrill for me is seeing and capturing these police in o very human light as they compete." One of the promotional watercolors Hynds prepared for the event depicts o police officer bending forward to .help a young boy who finds himself lost on a Balboa Peninsula street corner. The pointing, "Lost and Found Department" -with its summery feel, cool hues and real -life Newport Beach setting -is typical of the art Hynds has been creating for the post 15 years. Hynds is often seen around the harbor, on the bluffs, 1n the old sections of Balboa with her sketchbooks and camera, capturing the light that ploys off the scenery. , Images of Newport Harbor and the yacht s, build- ings and people that reside near it dominate her work. Of her art, Hynds says she takes to heart the advice of San Francisco artist George Post who said: "Point what makes you put your foot on the broke pedal." In Newport Beach, Hynds might paraphrase that recommendation to soy, "Point what makes you come head to w ind," for the vast majority of her water- colors feature yachts and sailboats cruising New- port's most visible natural resource -the harbor. Her painting "Natives of Newport," for example, ... ... ' - ''N ewport Boy " by Ruth Hynds Cover Photography by lee Payne depicts groups of relaxed boaters leaning against the roils of their yachts as the setting sun bounces their reflections off 1he water . In the brightly colored "Right of Woy," the harbor is criss- crossed by a windsurf er, o small motorboat, a catamaran, a yacht and the Balboa Ferry. The scene is .typical of the bustling activity the harbor hosts every weekend. In "Spectator Fleet," o crowd gathers on the bluffs overlooking Corona del Mor to watch the start of the _Newport. to-Ensenada race. And m ''Newport Boy," the Balboa Pavilion dominates the.. skyline, overlooking numerous yachts moored on a placid harbor. 1\1 feel that what's out in the world is a still life and you can approach it very many ways," Hynds soys. Th~ artist. whose studio is in the back of her home, prefers to spend a lot of time out in the community, sketching images and toking notes and photo- graphs for her paintings. "I find this area endlessly fascinating," she soys. "When you consider that Newport Beach is actually five separate dazzling areas, there's quite o lot to cover." While Hynds hos traveled as for away as Australia and Chino for 1nsp1ration, her work 1ust outside her home hos earned her o strong following in Southern California. Originals of her work hove been purchased by several area businesses including the Sheraton New- port hotel, Price Waterhouse, Yovor Industries, New· port landing and Westmark Savings Bonk . In addition to her work with the California Police Olympics, Hynds is the official artist for the Eagle Syndicate America's Cup Challenge and was the official artist for the 1985 Newport-to-Ensenodo race. Her business, Ruth Hynds Watercolors, produces signed and numbered lithographs, posters and sto~ tionery. • Not bod for someone who didn't start her art career until the summer of 1970 when she took five Please see RUTH HYNDS page 14 Daily PUot Oat~/ Frt4ay, May 30, 1988 .a ( • •'' I ---------------------------------- JUNE S M T W T FS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1 5 1 6 1 7 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Friday "EVITA" at the: Grand Dinner Theater. I Hotel Way. Anaheim (772-77 10~ nightly exC'tpt Mon- da) s at varying curtain times through Sept. 7. "JITTERS" on the main stage of outh Coa~t RepertOr). 655 Town Center Dmc. Costa Mesa (957-4033). Tuesda)S through Fnda)s at 8 p.m . Saturdays at 2 10 and ~. Sunda)~ at 2.30 and 7 3U until June 26. "LAST OF THE CLASS" at the Harlequin Dinner Pla yhouse. 1503 S. Harbor Blvd.. anta Ana (Q79-551 I). nightly except Mon- da)'s at "ar)•ing curtain times Saturdays at 8 f .m .. Sundays at 2.30 until June .. 2. "OKLAHOMA" at 1he Curtain Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real. Tustin (838-1540). mghtl} except Monda}S at "ary- ingcurtain umcs through Aug. 17 "SI DE BY S ID E BY SONDHEIM" at the Newport Theater Arts Center. 2501 Cliff Or1vc. Newport Beach (63 J-028~). Fridays and Satur- days at 8 p.m. through June 14. "TUE SOUND OF MUSIC" b} the Fullerton (1v1c Light Opera at Plummer Aud1tonum. Chapman at lemon. Fullerton (879-1732). final performances tonight and aturday at 8 p.m .. Sunday at 2 p.m. "THE THREE SISTERS" in the Fine Arts Concert Hall at UC Irvine (856-6617). closing per- formances tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. "WHAT THE BUTLER SAW" at the Gem Theater. 12852 Main St.. Garden Grove (636-7213). Wednesdays through aturdays at 8 p.m.. unday performances June I and 22 at 3 p.m .. June 8 and I 5 at 7:30 until June 28. Saturday through June 8. "EVITA" at the urand Dinner ''LEONARDO THE FLOREN-Theater Sec Fnda> listing.. TINE" at Sebastian's West Din-"JITTERS" at South Coast Rcper- ner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico. San tor). Sec Friday listing. Clemente (492-9950), closing per-"LAST OF THE CLASS" at the formances tomight and Saturda) Harlequin Dinner Pla)housc See at R p.m .. Sunday at I and 7 p.m . Friday listing. "THE LIGHTS OF 8 STREET" "LEONARDO THE FLOREN- in the Studio Theater of Orange TINE" at Sebastian's West Dinner Coast College. Costa Mesa Playhouse. See Friday listing. (432-5640). tonight through Sun-"THE LIGHTS OF B STREET" at day at 8 p.m. only. Orange Coast College. See Friday Sunday "EVITA" at the Grand 01nn~1 Theater. Stt Fnday listing.. "JITfERS" at South Coa~t Repe-r- tor) S<-e Fnda) li<illng. "LAST OF THE CLASS" at the Harkqum Dinner Pla )'house ~c Fnday listmg. "LEONARDO THE FLOREN- TINE" a1 Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. Sec Fnday "THE LIGHTS OF 8 STREET" at Orange Coast College. See Fnda) list mg. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. See Fnday list- mg. "OKLAHOMA" at the Cunain Call Dinner Theater. See Fnday listing.. "THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH" by the Young Conservatory Players on South Coast Repcn ory·s Second Stage. Sce Saturday listing. "THE SOUND OF MUSIC" by the Fullenon Civic Light Opera. Sec Fnday hsung. "WHAT THE BUTLER SAW " at the Gem Theater. Sec Fnday listing. Tue9day "EVITA'' at the Grand Dinner 1 heate r. Sec Fnday h~ung. "JITTERS" at South Coast Reper- tory. Sec Fnday listing. "LAST OF THE CLASS" at the Harlequin Dinner Theater. Sec Fn- day listing. •S()NARDO THE .FLOREN- TlN°l" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. See Friday listing.. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Sec Friday list· ing. "OKLAHOMA" at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater. See Friday listing. Top Barchman exhibit opens The J errold Bu.rclunan ezhlb lt opena Saturday at the Diane Sa.None Gallery at 278 Fore.t Ave. ln lAfuna Beacl· Featured abo•e, •Acrylics on Wood.' Tbunday "EVITA" at the Urand Dinn('r Theater. See Friday hs11ng.. "JITTERS .. at South Coast Repcr- IOr). Sec Fnday listing. "LAST OF THE CLASS" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse See Fnda) hsung.. "LEONARDO THE FLOREN- TINE" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. Sec Fnday listing,. "NOISES OFF" at 1hc Laguna Moulton Playhouse See Fnday hst- 1ng. "OKLAHOMA" at the C'una1n Call Dinner Theater. Sec Friday hstin~ "WHAT THE BUTLER SAW' at the Gem Theater. See Fnday hst1ng. fc"3tures Beginning West Coast Swing, 8 p.m . offers Intermediate win~. and 9 p.m. brings social dancan~ with a S I 00 swrng dance contest. $4 class lesson includes cover charge ofS3. 840-3518. Tuesday WEEKLY SENIOR DANCES are presented by the Costa Mesa Seniors from 8-1 1 p.m. Featured is live band music and a large. wooden dance noor. Costa Mesa Women's Club, 610 W. 18th St.. Costa Mesa. $2 donation. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna listing. Moulton Playhouse. 606 Laguna "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Wed.ne9day MA_~-- Canyon Road. Laguna Beach M 1 Pl h se Sec Fnda•· list -r-• ~ ou ton ay ou · ' · "EVITA" at the Grand Dinner (494--0743), Tuesdays through 1ng.. '-'--F r Jl'rtday BUST ENLARGEMENT iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: "OKLAHOMA" at the C'urtatn Call Theater.~ nday isling. Jl'rtday Dinner Theater. Sec Fnday listing. __ . . "JITTERS" at South Coost Reper-THE AMERICAN INTER- THE CARTIERS AND 14 KARAT CLUB for singles gathers for ps)ch1c faires, dances. and house panics at 8 p.m. each Fri. in Ncwpon Beach. 641-3987. hnolly, something tha' works. After 38 years pf proving and perfecting, there is o NA TUIAL Te<hnique for txJst core & r:kvelopment Complete pr09rom now ovotloble on vrd&o tape, to be viewed rn the privacy of your home at o price EVERY WOMAN con afford. Tremendous success eJ1.perr•nced at the INTER NA TIONA l BEAUTY SHOW '86 rn N. Y.C. Morch I 5-18. ~nd rn your che<lc or money order TODAY for '59.95 • "THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH" tory:'Sec fnctay-l~su.oa....... .. NATIONAL DANCE CO. presents a by the Young Conservatory Players "LAST OF THE CLASS" at th'e swing class at 8 p.m each Fnday on the Second Stage of South C'<?ast Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. See followed by _a dance social from Repertory, 655 Town Center Dnve, Friday listing. 9-10:30 p.m.; a J!Uerbug class each Costa Mesa (957-4033). final per-Monday at 8 p.m.; and a ballroom FOCUS %0, a group of singles ages 20.29. meet at 7:30 p.m. at the South Coast Community Church. 5120 Bonita Canyon Dr .. Irvine. 854-7600. formances Saturday at I and 3 p.m.. "LEONARDO THE FLOREN· and Laun clus each Wednesday at 8 Sunday at 3 and 5 p.m. TINE" at Sebast1Jn's West Dinner p.m. $20 for seven lessons. 6SO-'l048 "SIDE BY SIDE BY SONDHEIM" Playhouse. Sec Fnday lisung. at the !'fe~rt Theater Arts Center. "NOISES OFF" at the Laguna Sec Fnday hst1ng. M I Pl h '-'-F d I t "THE SOUND OF MUSIC" by the ou ton ay ouse . .xe n ay •s -Monday Fullenon Civic Light Opera. See mg. PARENTS WITHOUT PART- NERS holds 1hcir monthly dance at 9 p.m. An orientation for new members 1s at 8: I .S p.m. sharp. Ramada Inn. 35 CaJle de lndustnas, an Clemente 586-9183. Friday listing. "OKLAHOMA" at the Curtain Call "THE THREE SISTERS" at LJC Dinner Theater. Sec Friday listing. Irvine. See Fnday listing. "WHAT THE BUTLER SAW" at "WHAT THE BUTl.ER SAW" at the Gem Theater. See Friday hst1ng. the Gem Theater. See Friday listing. TIN •-TONI'S Sw · WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP for MAR ui ang 41smglcs over 4.S meets at the Acacia 1n Dance Club meets each Mo~day Garden Grove for T.G.l.F. at 5:30 at the Hot. Spot, 7492 Edinger p.m. For reservations and 1nfor- A ve .. Huntmgton Beach. 7 p.m . mation. call .524-5 148. LUAU CRUISES • Authenhc South Pt1e1hc Ftoor Sl'IOw • Polyne<11.:in Bun~• Dinner • Moooltghl DanctnQ on Aloha Deck • Fr~ Mai Tat & Shell Lei • 542 SO Per Person • Resetvahon Requ11ec ~ ~LSO • 675•4704 rYin e • ROMANTIC VENETIAN GONo~s p • C>!Ar.4P.\ONE GOllAM£T 8ASl(ET$ • W£004NQ Al SU \,OISf • QA()uP AATCS • e· L ·"'-LIDO MARINA VILLAGE • NEWPORT BEACH nar,crs .... ..-....... ..,,..,. .... ,...._ .. ..,...,_..,..._,.,..~..,. 4 Oalty Pilot Dateb<>Ok/ Fr1day, May 30, 1986 C O NTINUE D Ind PbilbannoGic, the Loi AQ1C1cs period. a.ceno. tOr orpn aod cinema/oooa:n orpeist ud is a Pbilhannooic, the San Franci1CO on:baara will alto be beard. witb the member of the Ainerican Theatre Symphony, the Stuttprt Chamber Festival orcbesu'I under the belOft of Orpn Society H.aO of fame. Doon On:bestra aod the Aspen festival Anillic Director Burloo ICanoo. Tbc open at 7:30. Tickets are SA. Tbc Orchestra.. Music Director Micah f)C!fonnancc suru at 8 p.m. further Crystal Cat.bedral is localied at Cha~ ~ will dircal.. For further infor-1nfonnation isavailableat 673-1880. man Ave. aod Lewis St. in Ganko mauo~ call n7-SS90. -----Grove. BAaOQVll! llU8lC PES'nV AL OP lload__!l S.tardaJ WHEEL OP FalEND8BlP for singles over 45 meet.I at the CbaJct in Cost.a Mesa for dinner at 7 p.m. Call 524-5148. SmulaJ POCUS M, a group of sinak:s ages 30-39, meet at 11.30 Lm. at die South Coast Community Church, 51 20 Bonita Canyon Dr .• Irvine. 854-7600. WHEEL OP PIUEND8BIP, for singles over 4S, meets at 11:30 Lm. for a brunch at McConnicb Landing. Costa Mesa. 524-5148. OS~O'S a.UB MAIUNA Oari- netist Bob Keane and IQ..picce or- chestra for dancing and listening from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. S4 wver dwgc includes appetaer buffel 190 Marina Drive, Scapon VilLllC. Lona· Beach. (2 13) 493-6444. CLASSIC P'IUEND8 for sin&ks 4S and over, meetsforaneveningofjazz and sWln& dancing at the Ritz Carleton Hotel. 33533 Shoreline Dr. Laguna Niguel from 4-8 p.m. S44-9259. PARENTS WITBOU1 PARTNERS Chapter 306 will host a dance and oricnt.atjon for all single parents. Dance to live music and enjoy delicious a~ Crown House. 32803 Pacific Coast Highway, Laguna Niguel al 7: 1 5. For more infonnalion call 586-9183. TaeedaJ THE NEWPORT lllVINE CllAPTER of Parents Wit.bout Part- ners presents their Newcomers' Orientation each Tuesday from 8-9: I 5 p.m .. folJowcd by coffee and oonveration Call S49--ll3S for funbet information. llOWl:U MUSEUM SINGLES POil T'BE All1'S GBOUP bolds its montbJy meeting toni&ht at 7 in the Educational Confereoc::e Room. Meetinp are bdd the first Tuesday of cacti month. Thia month Profcslor Gabriel Yablonsky will give a lecture and slide pnsoaalioo ofber six-year search of the meanina of art symbols and ~ljle dcsips UICd by the people of the Kimalayas. Colt is S4 for Bowen Muteum Foundation mem- bers, $6 for non-members. The Mu- seum is localed at 2002 N. Mam SL Santa Ana. Call 972-1900 for more information. Tbandaf - TJD! TllURSDA Y NJGBT a.ua meets from S:J0.&:30 p.m. weekly at various locations t.hroulh<>ut the area. Parties include dancin&. hon d' oeuvres and door Prizes. 534-2120. WHKBL OP ramND8BIP for lioales over 45 meets for dinner at 6:30 at the Oliu Panda in Anaheim. Call 524-Sl48 for information and reservations. SINGU:S NIGBT AT n.oMmBS 3333 West COMl Hu•y in New-port Beadl in the Tobi Bink Budd- ing.. 7-11 p.cn. Mcmbc:n SIO, Guc:su SIS. No bollt bar. Call Qatli Brown at 7~71 ror raenationa. ~ .. & =··=· & ........ _.__ _~ rrtd&J THE FUU.DTON CBAMBD PU YDI pttfonn Thurs.-Sal &om 1·10 p.m. for dinner suesu at the Irvine H1lton and Towa1' Morcll's restaurant. The C:bamber trio featuiu K.tthlec11 Murphy and Brian Beshore on violin. and Adrienne Big.1 00 CORONA DEL MA.a The sixth an,. ORANGE OOUN'l'Y CILUIBEll W ... HdaJ cello. 17900 Jamboree Blvd •• Irvine. nuaJ Baroque Music Festival of OBCllESTllA WITH UllBALL 11.l&OQUEllUSIC--nl'TIV-ALOF 863-3111. Corona del Mar opens tooilbl with WHf!PJ.Q SeeSunday liltiQ&. <X>llONA DEL MA.a; Caltnal Patio a----the traditional Sunday concert featur-Room of the Sherman Library and ga~J ina Ladd Thom.as at the new Van .,...._, Gatdens.,2645EastCoulHitbwayin THE FUILERTON CILUIBl!!R Zoeren oomole of the 24-rank Abbot Corona del Mar at 8 p.m. Introduced PLAYED. see Friday listing. and Sieker Baroquc-styie e>tpn al St. TBECRYSTALCATllEDIULAN-by art historian lrmeli Descnbcrg. TBE SOUTllEJlN CALlPOllNIA Michaels and AD AQltk O umh, NUAL St1101D Oii.GAN SBlllES this year's program features an from EAl'L y MUSIC SOCIETY will pres-3233 Pacific View Drive in <:orooa praeots Gaylord Qu1er-at the Haul the 20th C.Cntury that reflects ~nt the Los An&cles Baroque Players del Mar. The IOlo portion of the Wript Orpn in dramatic accom-Baroque style. lo the muslca.I por- m a program of Back. Telemann and PfOIJ'lm includes the Bach Toccata perument to <:ec:iJ 8. Demille's epic• tions oflhe prolJ'am, sopnno K.arcn Couperin. William Neil Robens and Fugue in D Minor as well as ftlm .. KingofKinp .. ton.ictuat8p.m . Neibetl, cellist Richard Treat and harpsichord; Ulynes Roseman' short.er works from the Baroque Gaylord Carter is a master harpsichordist Burton Karson Wiii baroque violin; Frances Bach, viol& rr==========================================================:.. da gamba; and Anthony BraziCT, Oauto travcrso. St. Matthews EpiJCOpal Olun:b, I 031 Bienvenida St., Pacific Palisades, at 8 p.m. SIO with $2 disoount for students, seniors and SCE M S members . (213)221-0151. PA C IFIC SYMPHONY BAROQUE CONCERT AT OCC to- night at 7:30 in the Robert 8. Moore Theatre. Tickets arc S 10 for adults and $7 for persons under the qe of 18 and arc available at the Community Service Office in OCCs Student Center BuiJdjng. Tickets may be purctwed by phooe using Visa or Mastercard by calling 432-5880. Under tbe direction of Keith Clark. the Pacific Symphony will perfonn .. Spring" by Vivaldi; Handel's Royal Firework:.s Music: Bach's Branden- burg Conoerto No. 2; Paobelbel's pooular Canon in D Major and Telemann's Viola Concerto. UCl SYMPHONY OBCllES1'RA tonight at 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village Theatre. Over ooe hundred suifll players from area biab tchools wiU JOin the UO Symphony Or- chestra, conducted by Bernard Gilmore, for a performance of Pe1er Warlock's .. CaPriol Suite... Guest bWb IChools iocfude Fountain Valley, Jean Clawer, conductor, lrvioe, Stan Steele, conductor and Woodbridge, Haro&d WiuerConducior. Tickets are SS for ~ admission and $4 f« students and senior citizens and are available at the Fine Arts Box Office. 8S6-6616. ~'--.. MUSIC OP AMEJUCA .. pretented toniaht al 7:30 by the Garden Grove Symphony in the Don Walsh AudilOrium, 11271 Stanford Ave. in Garden Grove. Jim Walker, wortd renowned Outist and Tina Mitchell, Miss Guden Grove, as vocalist with the U.S. Marine Singers will present a propam of Copland. Griff~ Offen- becb and Hill Tictets S2S, SI S, SI 0 and $7 for tenior citizens and stu- dents. Tickets al the Gem Theatre Box Office, 12852 Main Sl, the Garden Grove Ownber' of Com-mcrc:e. 11400 Stanford Ave. or the Music Stand. 12531 Harbor Blvd. To ~ by phone, call 539--5073. For additional information, call 534-7271. GOLDEN OPPO . AWAIT YOU~ St.nmer ~~-~the comer. Colden West Coll$ aim 28 pr~an ams ~ wil pmimt )IOU the ~ to eel ~ in Ji0'8' caree:r field. ~ you to tnnm to a 4-year t.miersity, or provide you with .. ~ memct... ~ .... .,, appc>illbutft ~··111 Jme2. • 5alion I (June 9-~ I). • 5alion I (June 28-A.\.ellt 15). • Enrolrmtt fiie-SS.00 per \llit fup ~ lOma>SS0.00 mmnum ~ ,., • O¥er ~ counes in such 6dds as ~ busineg information ~ ~. aimiM jub:e. aYiatioll technology, romputers, and tuiness. Also fine arts. aerobics. ~. and floral desei. Mo¥e ahead this summer with Golden West Collqfe. .. one of ~·s most 1~ <XJGIDU\ity ~ Call our Golden West Hotline today ill m4>89&-8700 tor r$1mon information. Everythqfs ~ ~ the SlU\l Golden Wnt College 15744 Colden West Stred H~ 8Qch. Calibnia 92647 OUHGB COUNl'Y CllAJBD OltCllES'l'aA W'ITll UlllBALL WBEEID today at 4 p.m. at the Oraoac County campus of Loyola Matymount University, 480 S. Batavia, and on Monday at the South Cout Rei>ertory Theatre io Costa Mesa. TK:ketholdcn are inv1&ed to a Poll coOClert reception this evcnina a nd a pre-concert RlCCPtion on Mon- day. In addition there will be an an display from Anita Neal Contcm- PoralY Ari Gallery in Lapna Beach. Ms. Wheeler, a workkeftown ~ soprano, made m New York Pbilharmonic debut in 1982 and bas appeared with many OtChcstras throug.hout lhe .~rtd mdudina the •L-------------------------------------1 Datty Pffot OateboOk/ Friday, May 30. 1986 6 • CONTINUED perform Baroque as well as contem- porary wor~s Thursday THE FULLERTON CHAMBER PLAYERS. ~e Fnda)' listing SEIVllNARS Friday DREAM JOURN EY-WILDER- NESS QUEST. an evening of \hdc\, poctr) reading and cxpcnmcntal acll\ II) 1\ prc'K'nted tonight a1 7.30 by Jack Crimmins. Ph. D at the Heal1x C cot.er 1n El Toro. Adm1s-.1on to the e"ent is S 15 For funher informa tion, contact th~· Heahx Center, 23732 81nchcr 10 El Toro or call 859-7940. Saturday "SACRED PSYCHOLOGY: THE ART ANO SCIENCE OF HUMAN TRANSFORMATION" A workshop toda)' at 9 am 10 the Huntington Beach Church of Religious Science. 2205 Main 1 Su11e 23 Dr Jean Houston. noted teacher. author and humanist. will present an all da) stud)'. S2S per 11cket. available at the Church or at the Aquanan Age Bookstore 10 the Scacl1ffe Village shopping center at Mai n and Yorktuwn "JAKE SF£F.D IS flJNI Aawktwem .... , .... tile Stoae' Md 'lnltep "tbe Ult Ad':' .... ~ Sunday HEAL TH AND WHOLENESS EXPO AT THE HEALIX CENTER J UNE l 23732 Birtcher Dnve, El Toro. from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. For an adm1sston fee of $5 (under 12 free) you can spend the day 1n free lectures, expencncc therapies, body work and diagnostic techniques at a fractton of their normal cost, enjoy professional readings 10 astrolo~y. numerology. handwn11ng analysis and med1c1nc wheel all at less than pysch1c fair ratc:s .\Isa brow~ the shopping area for crHtals, Native i.\mencan basket~. herbs. Bach Flower rem- edies. e>.ouc handcrans and more. Jane Goldberg. a doctor of trans- personal psychology with a r nvatc practice in Newport Beach w1J be the keynote speaker. w Call 8S9-7940 for more information. Friday HATORI appears Wed -Fn. from 8 p.m.-12:30 a.m. at the heraton Newpon Hotel , 4S45 MacAnhur Blvd .. Newport Beach. 833-0570. FRAN MARTIN performs easy listening. contemporary music on the piano. Dancmg avajlable. Tues.-Fn. 7:30-10:30 p.m .. Holiday Inn. Bristol Ave., Costa Mesa. Dally Piiot Oat~/ Friday, May 30, 1986 ..... ' THE HOP ~resents dancing music by c:mett Fehx Lane Fri.-Sat.: "The Authentics," a live SO's dance band, Sun. at 8:30 p.m.; "Rock 'N Roll Heaven," a live show tribute to the legends featurina Bob Gully, Mon at 8 p.m.: "Rock Around the Clock," a history of rock and roll featunng Jason Chase, Tues. at 8 p.m.: and Crazy Contests, including Lap Sync, Limbo, and Basketball Shoot. Thurs. 18774 Brookhurst, Fountain Valley 963-2366. LEE FERRELL SHOW features Ferrell on saxophone. piano and vocals Wednesday through Saturday from 9 p.m. at Villa Gino. 16883 Beach Blvd. 10 Huntington Beach. 848-4940 ... Saturday • THE HOP, see Fnday lasting. DANCEASV A new ag<' Saturda>. nisht dance every week from 9 un11l midnight at the Laguna Beach Rtt- reational Hall, SOS Forest A vc., Laguna Beach. This dance doesn't poSt' the problem of the smoke-filled, alcohol pushing meat markets where people can feel rc1ccted and lea ve wnhout the fun they came for Join fnendly creative people and dance, or play hke a kid with costumes and percussion instruments provided. HcaJthy refreshments and convcrsa- uon available in the kJtchen. Ad- mission $3. Call Mary Ruth at 497-2044 or C. Shell at 831 -8064. NEW BANJO MINSTRELS AT TRE FORUM THEATRE in Yorba Landa tonight at 8 p.m. The show 1s sponsored 6y the Nor(tfOranic Coast Community College Distnct and features Dixieland. ragtjmc and Roaring 20s music, with comedy, banjo music and vocaJ harmonies. Tickets arc $7. SO and group discounts are available. Call the Community Services office at (714) 779-8591. The Forum Theater is located at 41 7S Fairmont Blvd. in Yorba Linda. LEE FERRELL SHOW See Fnday hsting PATIO POPS DINNER CONCERT presented by the Fullerton CollCfC Symphony Orchestra tonight at 8 m the campus enclosed patio area. Director David Lewis and company will present a vaned musical program with numerous guest artists and special c:nteruunmcnt dunng the din- ner period. beginning at 7: IS. Ad- mission to the dinner and concert 1s $9.50 per person. General admission is S5 and $4 for senior citizens and students. Call 87 1-8101 for more information. Fullerton College 1s located at 321 East Chapman Ave. Fullerton. Sunday BILL MEDLEY IN CONCERT AT THE HOP tonight at 7:30. $1 2.SO per person. 18774 Brookhurst in Foun- tain Valley. Call 963-2366. Monday THE HOP, SC<' Fnday hstmg. RAY CHARLES AND THE RAY CHARL~ ORCHESTRA at the Crazy Horse tonight and tomorrow. 1580 Brookhollow Drive in Santa Ana. S49-15 I 2. Tuaday SNEAK PREVIEW performs hvc each Tuesday from 8 p.m.-12:30a.m. at the Sheraton Newport Hotel. 4S4S MacArthur Blvd .. Ncwpon Beach. 833-0570. THE HOP, see Friday listing. FRAN MARTIN , see Friday listing. RAY CllA.l\LES AND THE RAV ·~ ,,,_ ..... ft'"' T ~ '1 ._ I"" t "'t -' -·--,... CllAIU.ES ORCBiiSTRA: See Mo day listina. Wedneeday HATORI, tee Friday listing. FRAN MARTIN, Stt Friday hsun LEE FERRELL SHOW See Frida listing DENNY PEZZIN at the Bristol B and Grille, Holiday Inn Bristol Pia Hotel, 3131 Bristol SL in Costa Mc .. Rock and Romanoe" 1s featul' each evenin& Wednesday throu Saturday at 8, as Denny PCZZJn talc you through ume to dance to th music of the fifties and romances yo into the eighties. Opening night. Ca 557-3000 ror more mformation . Thanday HATORI, see Fnday hsting. FRAN MAB TIN, sec Fnday hstm THE HOP, sec Friday listing. LEE FERREIJ.. SHOW See Fnda listing. DENNY PEZZIN AT TH BRISTOL BAR AND GRILLE Sc Wednesday listing. Wedneeday The Crazy Horse gives free count dance lessons by Ron and Donna a 7:30 every Wednesday night I 58 Brookhollow Dr. in Santa An S49-1512. Friday JOHN ANELLO JR. and the Ban S 12.SO admission. 870-1711 . CONTINUED DIANE SCHUUR ap~rs at Saddleback College torught at 8 p.m. in the McKinney Theater. The concert. Scbuur's only ap- pearance in Orange County this year, is being sponsored by radio station KSBR-FM (88.5). Shuur has entcnaincd at the White House and has toured with the JVCJazz Festival. Tickctsarc$12 and are available at all Ticket Master outlets and at the Sound Spectrum on Pacific Coast High- way in Laeuna Beach. Saddlcback College 1s located at 28000 Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo. 582-5430. perform Tucs.-Sat. in the Ll:>bby Bar. Hyatt Regency 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 Newpon Bl vd. 675-2968. "BLUES AT THE NUGGET" conclusion of KLON-FM 88.1 concen series at the · Nugget Tavern on the campus of Cal State Lon~ Beach. Johnny Copeland wtth his band and local favorites The Mighty Flyers will appear at 8 and 10";45 p.m. Bernie Peart host of KLON's .. Nothing But the Blues" program. will serve as master of ceremonies. Food and beverages will be avail- "A MUST SEE FILM." -Jack Curry. IJV. TOOAY 0 SlZZLING AND TENDER. I\ love affajr between two women d->ne with style and punetuaccd with h<>mor .. -W11l1m Wolf. GANll.f.TT M~~ SlRVI< r FRI 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 SAT/SUM 1:45, 3:4S 5:45. 7:45, 9:45 e dw Jrd~ TOWN CfNTfR I ' • .'" • ._ • 7 51-41 84 l _,' TA -¥If".'\ "A CLEVERLY ENGINEERED COMEDY. A WARM-HEARTED FARCE-FANTASY." -CKMlfS CHAMPllN LOS ANGELES TIMES Fl l•, l:lS, lO:lS SAT/U l:tO, 4:00, 1:00. 1:15. 10:15 able and there is room for danc- ing. Ample free parking behind the Nugget. Doors will open one half-hour prior to showtime. Tickets are SI 0 and are available at all Ticket Master locations. For funhcr information. call (2 13) 597-9911. AH ticket proceeds will benefit noncommerdal public radio station KLON-FM 88.1. Saturday 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 nati onal scene for over four decades. Del Rae Restaurant, 2151 N. Harbor B. vd. Fullerton. Sunday CAFE UDO "Freeway," featur- ing Max Bennen. from 9 p.m. to I a.m. 2900 Newport Blvd. NEW ORLEANS JAZZ CLUB OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA meets the first Sunday of each month at the Huntington Beach "Some of the moet thrtlng .... eequenc:es ewf. ... swift. tplfty Ind ·--•ig ... •mA MllW'l llrN Plata S2t> 5338 ... ,.,. UA Mows 9152..-1 two ton of pare pow!" ---..-.-...- v ••• ..a.Ing ... llfriflc ... the 9Cl'Wt eJCS* llMI ••. ft:t9dtie. TOP GUN ii '°fJdn'U¥•, top dog, ll:lp91" __ ,....MIC.rt -IP .,_.... ............. ~ .. . ~ ......... .. ---··'"'--"TOP QUlt ii lapof-*11 ...._ flrn tun. ... A~~--~ ........... blgW'I •--.,,.,.. ... ---~.,., ADSllll'lllJITNllMtl9llll TOM CMW • KllLUf MoOll' • ~1••==' w -PCtmSfUllS ...... -... l 91 DllU •Cll!I W Gil lllYldm .... ..,_ •an ma1•ra1m1MJ fmJl••-··-lltllt 1•ar •-m ------·-----·--rt=l~ • , _____ _ •I ·-O:IN!!N,. Ion, 211 12 Pacific Coast High- way. Huntingt.00 Beach I :30 to 6:30 p.m. in the Tailgate Room. Casual drc$s, a dance floor and a $3 donation and th~ public is invited. CAPE MOZA&T features claslic:al piano Wed. eveoiQC. and piano or guitar, pop, aod show-tunes Tbun.- Sat. evenings. All music is performed duriJlgdinner. Also featured is music at Sunday brunch. 31952 Camino Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano. 496-021 2. ---~--Tuesday ----CAFE LIDO .. Intersection," THE LAJl'P STOP, a premiere comedy night club, features Bobby Gaylor and Scott Shaw. 2122 S. East Bristol, Newport Beach. 852-8762. with Wayne Wayne, from 9 p.m. to 1 :30 a.m. 2900 Newpon Blvd. LAGUNA POETS meet each Fri. at 8 p.m. for scheduled and open readings at the Laguna Beach Public library. Ton•ght is open readina night, and everyone as welcome. 4941$.9550 or 494--8375. JOHN ANELLO JR., see Friday listing. Wcdncsd.ay JOHN ANELLO JR., see Friday listing. Thursday ROBERT DUQUESNEL enter- tains on the piano with a wide variety of musical selections Tues.-Sat. from 5-9 p.m. Jrvine Hilton and Towers' Lobby Lounge, 17900 Jamboree Blvd., Irvine. 863-3111. JOHN ANEU.O JR., see Friday listing. CONFREY PlllLLIPS features renditions of Cole Porter. Gershwin and contemporary favorites Tues.- Thurs and Sat. beginning at 9 p.m .. and Fri. beginning at I 0 p.m. Also, the Brazilian songstress, Nilsa.joiM him on Wed. and Thurs. cveninp. Oup Friday LAKEWOOD C.. nter (11JIUI eYllf-y S. C-'f -••llllCll..,._ --TOP9UNPll , ... ~ ........... . _..,.._ PCl.TllOlllT H1 THI 01"MU ......... ................ ., flOLKI AC•DIMY 11 IACK IN TIAININO IN! llOWYS1WO flOl TUMMllT II: THI onea ... .,..,11 ·----Mt! ... _.., .. ...,.,._ OWi TOP OUNfNI 1.-a. •• .-.... 1-,........ """'~ NITTY IN PINK ,,..,.. SHOn CHICUn tN1 .... -........ 1 •• ~===--=zr:~=---.. , ..., 1• 11• ... , ...... lAKEWO D (r,,tit>• Sovt.., l21111:M """""'.Chi·-9'/w Wini"' ·--··· llllOffttl .... WOMAN111 •U7tU LOW ll0W1111 1 ........ Cllrnnl ,.,. .......... &1ts u:sm ANAHEIM 11141119 M/l-IM fm ...... ~ 'W;lUN) ~ AU 'ICl'll rW. LOW llOWlll AT ClOll UNOl !111 SALVADOtl Ill ueae..-. OUT Of AJatCA 1N1 1 ... •1197tM te:M IAl C)ll&'I 11JO •1•S 10.IS _... ""1IMW .... THUNDll IUN po.1i1 h1S -.... ,.., .... , .. ,. NITTY IN PtNIC ,.._,,. 12.-..... ..0 LUCASpo.u1 ,,...,.. ,.,.. BUENA PARt< 111•1u 1 .. ,.,l•••••".i11 .. " ,...,.,,~.,,_u...,..u•~ -NTO!t JO JO DAHCllt, YOUI UPI tS CAlLfNO llll DOWN ANO OUT IN HYlll T HILLS Ill JAICI SPllD !NI HST DIHNSI 1W1 U•M:M•·--------{1M) ;;:..,, .. .., a ~ .... ~ TOP CMINIP'll OITTtNO IVIN 111 l oHABRA "•n•• . ~liII ·? .. ~ ""'..,. .... IMOll'T CIKUIT ,_ 9°" IMll ... 111 ·ICHO PAIUC tit 2:11 ••IS .. ,. ltU , ... DOWN ANO OUT IN alVUl T HIW 111 . ........ . CltOIMOADS 1111 >.ie ,,. "''' -----I'll-l'IAU- CoeaA 1111 hit l:Jt ,,.. ·-... u DOUT muOllUH ,... Al CLOSI aAHCM Ill .,,. 8'U OUNG HO po.1J1 ,,,., ... 1..., --SWiil uaorTY "' ..U llM MAStC ,.IJI ,,,. .... 1 .... snWSTW nau- CoeaA __, NOT1ctOltt11 f!OlftaoltST Ht THI ()TMla seal ( ... U ) CAT'S IYI t"-UI fHUNDla aUH '"°1>1 DIATNWllM 1H Ill _Dally Ptlot Oetebook/ Friday, May 30, 1986 7 ANTIQUES AND COLLEC-TIB~ SHOW See Friday listing. ll~y C 0 N TI-N U E D SCRABBLE is played each Mon- day at I p.m. at the Leisure World clubhouse 2 on Moulton Parkway in l...quna _Hills. Call 837-7223 for 1nf0rmauon. Copa. 633 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. 662-2672. ERIC IAN SCHNEIDER, song- wntcr/folksjnger, performs from 8-11 p.m. at FinaJly A Unicom, an informal coffee house. 21 4 Marn St.. Hunungton Beach . No cover charge. SI minimum. 969-1794. ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIB~ SHOW uotilJune I at Knott's Market- place. The sale will begin at 10 a.m. and continue until mall closjn~ time each day. There will be such dive~ ltt'm!> as lamps. brass. books. furniture, radios. onentaJ rug.s, glass, quilts, baskets, vintage clothing. paper. coins and unique collectibles. Cal Bellini, an actor who has ap- peared m TV shows "Riptide" and "General Hospital" and has movie ncd1t an "Little Big Man," "Fuzz" and .. The Mo untain Men" is produc- ing the show. Call '213)465-0049. "SIDE BY SIDE BY SONDHEIM" A musical revue presented blt-Christ College Irvine tonight at 8 p.m. in the C'ampus Founders Hall Auditonum. Faculty members Bob Baden. B. Wayne Bisbee, Michael Burkhardt. Lee Orchard. Peggy Orchard and Lisa t>amsh will part1c1patc in an evening of music from Stephen Sondheim's musicals "Gypsy."" A Little N1$!1t Music," "West Side Story,"·· Pacific Ovt'nurcs." "A Funny Thiog Hap- pened on the Way to the Forum." and ··Sweeney Todd." Tickets arc $5 for adults and $3 for children and seniors. and arc available by calling the college at 854-8002 C'hnst ( hurch lrvtnt' 1s located at 1530 Concordia in Turtle Rock. HARVARD PROFESSOR ARTHUR MILLER will be the fea- tured speaker at commencement . C ' .R AUSS&LL ATHL.Jn'IC ef"OfltTS'WaA• cxcercises at Western State Univer- sity College oflaw tonight beginning at 6 p.m. Professor Miller teaches civil procedure at Harvard and is a widely recognized authority in sev- eraJ areas or law. He wtll rttieve an honorary ~ from Wcstcm St.ate University m n:oognituon of his contribution to lcpJ education. The public is invited. 1111 North State College . Blvd.. Fullcnon. (7 14) 738-1000. Satarday CAFE MOZART, 5CC Fnday listmg. CONFREY PIDLUPS, sec Friday listing. ROBERT DUQUF3NEL, sec Fn- day listing. THE LAFF STOP, sec Friday hsung. ANNUAL BOO~ SALE sponsored by the Fncnds of the Fountain Valley Library. The sale Will feature hard- cover, paperl>ack books and mis- cellaneous reading material. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in lhc parking lot of the library, 17565 Los Alamos, Fountajn Valley. For information, call 962-5824. ANTIQUES AND COLLEC- TJB~ ~w See Friday listing ... Sanday CAFE MOZART, sec Friday listing. GUN AND COLLECTORS SHOW AND SALE by Don and Alicia Bullock at Anaheim C'°nvention Center in the California Room from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ticket information (714 )999-8900. THE LAFF STOP presents 10 comics. 2122 S.E. Bristol, Newport Beach. 852-8762. THE LAFF STOP presents an aU- male comedy dance revue. 2 122 S.E. Bristol, Newport Beach. 852-8762. MAGIC NIGHT is featured each Monday at 8:30 p.m. Botue's, The Best Western Huntington IJeach Inn. 2111 2 Pacific Coast Hwy., Hunt- ington Beach. 536-1421 Tueeday THE LAYF STOP presents Mike Rapport and J im Rid&ely. 2122 S.E. Bristol, Newport Beach. 852-8762. CONFREY PlllU..IPS, sec Friday listing. SCRABBLE is played each Tues- day at 6:30 p.m. at Home Federal Savings, on Calle de la Plata at Paieo de V aJencia. La&una _Hills. Call 586-2378 for infonnauon. ROBERT DUQ~ sec Fri- day ljsting. LOUCRLIN, hypnotist. appears each Tuesday with audience partjci- pation for adults ages 21 and over. Seating begins at 6 p.m., sbowtime as at 8 p.m. The Best Western Hunt- ington Beach Inn, 21112 Pacific Coast Hwy., Huntington Beach. 536-1421. Wed.De.day SCRABBLE is played on the first and third Wednesdays of each month at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach Tennis Oub, 2601 EastblufT Drive. Newport Beach. Call 979-7321 for information. CAFE MOZART, sec Fnday bstmg. OONFREY PHILLIPS, see Friday listing. CRIBBAGE is played on the sec- ond and fourth Wed. each month at 7 You Con Do It All in Russell Sweats -nine bfllllont colors~ choose from ~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND· NEWPORT BEPCH • (714) 644-5070 a * Dalty Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, May 30, 1986 p.m. Oasis Center, Room I A·B. 5th and Maiiuerite. Corona dd Mar. 644-413&. ~IJ for information. ROBERT DUQUEIN'EL. ace Fri- day listing. THE LAFF STOP, see Tuesday I AdftDCe UTB ANNUAL CATALINA DIX- IELAND JAZ/, .JAMBOREE will be held JuJy 26, bc&innina at 12 noon in Catalina.. The fun starts the minute you step aboard the boat in either San Pedro or Long Beach, with live dixieland jazz aboard. In Avalon, there will be an infonnaJ parasol march through town to the Casino, to the four cocktail clubs where live jazz groups will be playi ng and there wiU be nme solid hours of jazz stars. Get your tickets early and mark your calendar for the Jazz Day of the Decade. For more information call (714) 962-8130, (213) 597-6339, (213)597-7045. Round Trip boat and casino pecb&c is $38 for adults and S 18 for ages 5 to 11. . GOVERNOR and Mrs. George Dcukmejian arc Honorary Chajrmcn of the Newport Harbor Art Museum's summer pany celebrating the unveil- ing of the restored Statue of Liberty. The .. Liberty" partytakesplaceJuly 3 on the grounds of the 'New' New- portcr Resort. Entertainment in- cludes a performance by the Irvine Symphony, a dazzling fireworks dis- play, and dining and dancirtJ under the stars. Guests also en1oy the opening ceremonies of "Liberty Weekend '86." including the actual unveiling of Lady Liberty, via hUJe ~atellilt' television monitors through- out the evening. $75 admission. 759-1122. A CHORUS LINE at the Pacific Ampitbeat.re foT four performances July 2-5. Donna Mc Kecbnie. famous for her Tony Award winnin& yal of Cassie in the ori&inaJ Cway produc::tioG, will star in bea orisinal iole. Ticlcds for ··A Chorus Line .. arc available at the Pacific Ampit.beater Box Office and at all Ticietron locations. To charge tickets by phone. call Te~n at (714) 4l()..l062. olDCSftllta BRIGGS CUNNINGRAM AlJTO. MOl'IVE MUSEUM. 2.SO E. Balcer St., Costa Mesa. Antique can cira 1912- prcaent arc on display. 9 Lm.·5 p.m. Wed..Sun. 546-7660. DISNEYLAND, 1313 Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. The Ma.in Street Electrical Parade ii featured at 8:50 and 11 p.m. Sat. and 8:.SO p.m. Sun. "fantasy in the Slcy" flf'CWOrks arc staeed Sat. at ~:30 p.m. The Totally Minnie puade, starring Mioruc Mouse, is futured Sat.-Sun. Videopolis dance olub is open Sat. niaht Del Courtoey and his Or· chestra at Plua Gardens Sat. ev~ nillJ. The new "Country Bear Va cauoo Hoedown" attl'llctJon feat continuous showinp. The M~ .-Kinedom continues to celebrate 1 lOtti annivcnary with the .. Gift Give Extraordinaire Machine," includin a oew Pontiac rtrebird every day Also, an exhibit of more than 2 artifacts and pbototrapbs UtOcia with the life of President Abrah Lincoln has just been uaended ro one year. This includes cor rcspondeoce that has never bee published in its entirety, u well u th last letter Lincoln wrote to his wife just 12 days before bis execution Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m .• Sat a.m.-1 a.m .• Sun. 9 a.m.-10 p.m 999-456~. KNOTTS BEIUlY. PARM, 803 Beacb Blvd., Buena Part.. Register a Knott's MattetPlace to win a trip t Malaysia. Featured arc 165 rid shows and attractions in four them areas including Camp Snoopy, a six acn: wonderland themed to th C'alifomia High Sierra. U~5200. .. **** An immeuely entertaining, finny, hanay movie Hke 'GboldMlsten! No. 5 -yoa're a 10~ -Jldl Cafry, USA lOOAY ·---·---..._._ ... ~----Pas-.. -...... -m.-. ... -~ ,,,__ ---5.lt.-1 -ID- -asun .._ ..... JJ a ,,,.ca L.--.Um.l u-m.tau NCRUlnaY --m.l ---11 • CRY Cllllll -· ····--~'°' Nylons you can listen"to CONTINUED By RANDY JAY MATIN DMIJ .... Cenlilf•• I Eurythmics. Cooper insisk.d that there is no master plan for the group. ··w e would meet at parties and do a On the Nylons most recent British few old cl.assics. Little by liule our 8 ... • •.n.A tour the group could be found fi . ~ PAVllJON, 400 Main sharks, sea life and freshwater fish opening shows for Shirley Ba~y at ncnds would coax us into singing t., Balboa. CataJina Passenger ~r-from all overt he world. Thirty special th R I Albert H ll d fiJI' . another one. The first attempt we vice provides daily service to educational ci1hJbits are also ava1·1. e oya a an ang an made at performing for the publk C I 673-s2 S open dates playing at local dives. · r. · ata ma. 4 . able to Sea World guests. One price came at a su\1·1or-your-suppcr night MARINELAND, 6610 Palos Ver-admission includes aJJ shows and Although they arc popular in their at a Toronto club Scoops. lbat was des Dr. So .• Rancho Palos Verdes. exhibits. S 14.9S for adults.SI 1.9S for native Canada. Europe and Australia the fint time we were billed as the Featured arc "Baja Reef," killer seniors (SS and over), Children 3-11. since the group's first release in 1982, NyJons and we were not taking it 'oo whales Orky and Co~, pelicans, $1 0.95 and children under 3 arc free. the Nylons arc just starting to crack senously. When performing started pe nguins. walrus', dolphins. and sea Group rates and 12 month pass the American market. The group to become more of a commercial lions.SS adults, $3 children ages 3-11. information, call (619 plays the Coach House in San Juan endeavor we turned to the jazz clubs The park is fully open from t O a.m.·S 9)226-384S or (714 )826-3690. Capistrano on Saturday night. like Basin Street East and right away p.m.with GuidedToursonwcelccnds SAN J UAN CAPISTRANO "We were probably the best lcep1 hcadcdforthc WcstCoastto workon only. (213) 377-IS71. MISSION, 3 1882 Ca m i n o secret in L.A.,"' said Paul Cooper.one a concert fonnula." MOVl.ELAND WAX MUSEUM, Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano. quartcrofthcgounnctacapellagroup Often compared with the Man- that the Beatles were a vocal oriented group as well as the BceGees aod tbe Mamas and Papas; all the groups Who used harmonics creatively. Sorndw>w the link to Manhattan Transfer doesn't seem accurate when you consider that the first tunes we recorded were Springsteen's .. fire .. and a rcgpc version of one of the songs from ·Hair.' " The Nylons did, however. make a thorough study of the great a ~Ua groups such as the Pcnuas1oos but found that stick.mg to just an old sound would have been too limi\iQS. "The old sonp arc great." Coopa- remarkcd.. "but the Persuuiolls already did them so well. We bad to upcrimcnt with what we could add that was new. When ~ collabon~ on new n:penoirc it is a process of'j-.st ftllin& around a piano and lmockio' cm out. 7711 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Elvira Features ~rra Chapel. Caltfomia's in a recent interview, "but now there hattan Transfer. one would assume 1s the newest featured rephca amon1 oldest building, the ruins of the Great is a buzz about us in the industry." the Nylons' influences stem from the already elaborate collcctJon of Stone Church. soldiers barracks. Sin11n1a mii1turcoflhosc'«ood old jazz. But. says Cooper, "I'm sure if movie and tclcv1s1on memorabilia beautiful ~rdcns. and two museum song.sand inventive atTangemcnts of you ulced each one of us you would includin1 life-like replica.s of more rooms wt th artifacts from Native everything from Sprinptcen to tj:le art f .. ur differcntanswen. r would say t~n200rcoo~edm~~1ly l O AmmcanandearlyS~1~~ltu~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a.m.·8 p.m. with Fri.-Sat. open unt119 ~1ly 7:30 a.m.·S p.m. 493-1424. p.m. 522-11 SS. SEA WORLD, 1720 S. Shores OLD WORLD VILLAGE, 7561 Road. Mission Bay, San Diego. Sea Center Ave.. Huntington Beach. hons explore a "Spooky Kooky S~ialty shops arc located in this Castle" 1n the seal and otter show. v1lla1c that features the charm of Also offered is "Dolphin Discovery " quaint European vill~es with cob-the ARCO Penguin Encounter. a ~7 bled st~ls, lantern hghts, and 70 m1llton exhibit that houses 400 murals of European scenes pamtcd penguins. and lcdler whale Shamu. on utcrior walls by European an1sts. Daily 9 a.m.·8 p.m. (619) 226-3901 . 894-0747. SHE RMAN LIBRARY AND GAR. QUEEN MARY, Long Beach DENS, 2647 Pacific Coast Highway, Harbor at the end of the Long Beach Corona dtl Mar. Roses. cactus. Freeway. Eilh1b1ts include special annual gardens. an orchid con- cfTcct sound and hght shows in the scrvatory. koi ponds and a gjft show. Engi ne Room and Wheelhouse re-Daily 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. enacting a flear-collis1on at sea. and r---------------1 an extensive World War II display depicting the "Queen's" active role as a troopship. Daily 10 a.m.·6 p.m. (213) 43S-3S I I. SEA WORLD I 720 South Shores Road. M1ss1on Bay. San Diego. I 3S acre manne zoological park open da1I)' 9 a.m. to dusk with utended summer hours. Shamu and Kandu. the killer whales. perform in a themed show 1n Shamu Stadium and bot· tlenoscd and Pacific dophins. trained seals and sea ltons, otters and a walru3 also perform at special shows. There arc four aquariums featunng ltvc "'SWEET LIBERTY' IS A SWEET HEART OF A MOVIE." -~Shain, TiiETODAYSHOW "THEPERPEC'TSTAR~PANGLED SUMMER ENTERTAINMENT. Alan Aida's 'SWttt Libttty' is a Yankee Doodle dandy ." -Rn Rttd, NFW YORJC POST ------NOW PLAYING ----- 1MA a. tc.e> Uo\..... Hm*flfn .. , ...... ~MM ~ llltCM Uo\... ..... OWtr OtlW'I ..... ""'" COITAMDA (._. T-C.. 7'1-41" LA ~ ,,., ........ ..,..., U'llMA.Dfl ............. m.1111 MIMIOll IMJO ~-f-~ Ol'ANCH ~°',... ... ~ .UT.....,..,. E._.~w.c .,.,. n-•ntAClf oouranno ..-rl ... 751 .. lM ~._cam .-uwm CllDlm -m.mt ._ .... --PUO -lfmrrt _ ,_ 951.-:J .... ·:~11J) 81-tm •.-s• • mu ........ t7t·C1'l 11\A-S0.1'11 -_.. cono NCR lllnlY •19511--~-•1-1111 -n ,_ -•comu.. ••• ••••nm••.,_ -----JM.ml --mo mu 1•••••1 -aumcuna Mi iW•l·ml NCR-. .... Oalty Piiot Oatebook/ Friday, May 30, 19M I • -uu PAOFIC Sl\VINGS BANK Our NEW Courtyards Branch. It's Now Open ... Pacific Savings Bank's newest branch In the Courtyards offers you the best in banking services: -Two ATM's -24 hour access to your accounts --Convenient Hours -10:00am-7:00pm Monday thru Friday -Convenient Hours -10:00am-2:00pm Saturday -High Rates on Checking Accounts, Savings Accounts, IRA's and CD's -Master Card/Visa Credit Cards -Discount Brokerage Services -Friendly, knowledgeable staff -Accounts insured by the FSLIC. Ask about our 65 Roses promotion and learn 'how you can get a free camera and baseball tickets just for opening a qualifying account. Pacific will also make a $25 donation to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation for each qualified account opened. Stop by either our Courtyards or Costa Mesa Branch, meet our staff, and open your account today. ''Visit Our Friendly, Knowledgeable Staff'' ...... FSLIC Courtyards Branch: 1835-A Newport Blvd .. Suite 109, Costa Mesa (next to Evans Rents f... L'Epidor Bakery) 1714) 631 -7631 Costa Mesa Branch: 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa (7 I 4) 631-0800 ~- 1 e Dally Piiot Datebook/ Friday, May 30, 1986 AT FANTASTIC SAM'S F•nt••tlc S•m'• wamer & Goldeflwnt '41-55IO Al~tC...• F•nt••tlc S•m'• Br0011/'lurs1 & Gart1Md ., O#la1 ,,.,_ McOon- F•n,.•tlc S.m'• 19tfl & Harb« 1%1-1 .. -~c.n,., ..... /-,:U/,f a"-f IC •~San(' THE ORIGINAL FAMll ~ HAIRCUTTERS. t7.fkw Costa Mes Now the taste that made Amos famous Is just around the corner. Courtyards Bulldlng 1835 Newport Blvd. "TAKEJT It , fO•Jf br:>dv ond you ,..,,., "' •ho"e. tol 1og yOUt body oll thf' "" I\ It "'"'°"' tQ<NOl•tt"IQ Y'Oll't"'' '<' " C"C>gO"\ tho< COii P'_.MI reWU I NOW IS THE TIME I to plan your romantic getaway Airline Tickets Cruises Tours Groups Business & Leisure Travel Worldwide Coverage -';;t\.:l 11"' STAR " TRAVEL AGENCY (7 14) 722-87 18 1835 Newport, Bldg. A ALWAYS Yvonne Flowers FREE Personalized Service Tina Flowers ,... fry ffeclll frH .. Nttmlty ~ w/$40 PIRlmt 1135 A Newport Blvd. Costa llna 722-0lll I TO THE "MAX!" ' I I'!('" l~fl ""'11 of ~ Tho! INQl\I lol.ng W~ ond gelloft9 "' ' • •rwrt\1 """'1 'Q '\I It()~ O<l hou< llw .. 1""4K 0 w_.i. "'OI' &••CM X 24 mos.With .lust 121 clown (First Visit Incentive) per Must Be 18 mo. INTRODUCTORY OFFER $15 First Cut & Style with Jim, Darlene, Kim & Kathy 722-8111 SALON MONTAGE -. / Telenta t•m. Located in the Costa Mesa Courtyards A Spectrum of Door Styles, Artfully Combined to Create a Kitchen That's Exactly Right for Youl Wedo re-facing too. Oo.i6M "'-*' liMn, oWli1ol>le in wltlfe, blocl °' -.d. • .., $90 00-$49 9$ 0 cloftlong and CKCe\IOf"f .. ,,.,_ .• le>< - BELOW RETAIL Carole little ISPllT Si-.n•--& Sh-• JOAN MAITIN 1135 Newport lldg. D 722-1722 ~a Deity Pnot Detebook/ Frktay, May 30, 1986 11 , . .... !lW"'li' F Wllllam and Darlene M.anclark. II Dalty Piiot OateboOk/ Friday, May 30, 1986 The USO honors its heroes By VIDA DEAN Of .. Dlllr ....... For a little while it was I 0-<:cnt movie and 5<cnt popcorn lime ~~·and a time when old fashioned virtues were remembered and saluted. Th~ USO. which by word and deed llas said 'we love you' to America's military for more than 40 years. bestowed its Distiniuished American Award to three intemat1onally famous idols who still remain atop their pedestals. Norm Croeby wltll Donna Crean. -Y'1!' c;>"-~ • flllil ~ ~ -- . • ' • :_.Z • • '" ·-.... . . . .. ' .. ~ I -• • • s· ' . -. . -~ • .; --l. Gate A•try. Roy Rosen u4 DaJe Evau, heroes of the 'slloot~mups' who have become powerfully success- ful in the business world were remembered for I.hear contributions to America's hunger for heroes through the movie screen and for their contributions to the military h~roes through the USO. It was a night of patriotic emotjon at the Anaheim Hilton, stirring music from a U.S. Marine Corps band, the glitter and gold of uniformed soldiers. sailors, ajrmen and women and, of course I.he U.S. Mannes. And also 1t was an evenmg sprinkled with other stardust. Representatives from tile enter- tainment world included BtNldy Rosen, who stan'Cd an the first movie to win an Oscar. I.he Howard Hughes production of "Wings," and bridging several generation gaps, there was Douy Otmud who was coaxed by emcee Jokuy Gruit into an im- promptu performance at the piano. Other entenainers who kept I.he honorees smiling with their comedy routines were Norm Crosby, Pat B•ttram u4 H•yt Axtoa. "The three honorees have a lot in common." said Buttram ... Roy and Dale are very religious and Gene owns the Angels." "All of us want to have her- oes, "said WIUlam Popejoy, president and CEO at American Sav1ns and Loan. dinner co-chairmen with Rob- ert Anderson of Rockwell Inter- national.·· Heroes are difficult to find . . . but. these lllrcc we could always be proud or·· Tilts was the first time the DAA has gone to more than one person and the first time the event was ever held outside of Los Angeles. CoastaJ folks among the more than 400 there included honorary co chairperson Doua ud Job Creu seated wi th Jue Wltllen and her husband Tom Plenoa, tM JobDJe Creu,, Alu O'Iala, 8ecll ltocl, Pierre Polssoe ud. Darl~•e aJHI Dr. Wllllam Muclark. Also. Dine ud E4 Anold, honor- ary committee members. seated on the dais with the honorees and VIPS including Ttm Vlole, USO president. Before them paraded the Disney characters bnnging letters con- gnuuJations for I.he honorees from Washington to Sacramento. Accepting th~lr l&lique eagle head awards, Autry read a prayer. ("Dear God, help me to be a good player in I.he game oflife .. "); Roaers. who said he will be 75 in November, said he lloped there would be no more wars, but "if there 1s one. let's win 11," and Evans told of her expenencc with the USO as a starlet. Get those 'Jitters' this season at.SCR The show-which runs through June 26-= was funded for I 0,000 by AT&T By VIDA DEAN °' .. ...., ........ The final production ofSoutb Coast Repertory Thea m 's sea.son is "Jitters." a comedy by Dani Fradl directed by Mar1lm ....... Following the Premiere Night pcT· formanc:eduringa supper. cast mem· ber Saa hues admitted she had a liulcoflhe title-Lhcjittcrs. "It was my first professional stage appcarancc,' said the Costa Mcsan who was p-aduated from Est.ancta High. ("She was valedictorian of her tlass," said AM ....... who was her neighbor.) Isaacs was acti vc i o Estancia 's theater program and SCR 's Young Conservatory. She continued her studtesat UCI and London'sCentral School of Speech and Drama and received her undergraduate degree from UCLA film de.,-rtment. "l'vcdonc television, but this play was very good for me," said Lhc pctik blonde actress of the play, which JS about a thcatercompany'sefTorts to get a new production on the stqc. .. Listening to the other actors in the cast talk was a good Cl perience. They all seemed to know actors just like the characters we were playing.." Th~uction which runs th ro June 26 was funded by AT&. to the tune ofS I 0,000. On hand to rccei vc the thanks of Jeff S&ac*, SCR board president, were district ma~ !Mcll _.Myna TrlllP ofl.aauna Hills and Carel and AT&T VP Jim C.ffaM. Others laughiDf tbcirway through the thrce--act play included Costa Mesa Mayor Herma-.... Tem ... Emma Jue IUleJ,Barrlett ... lnWIMer,J~-Jlm~, llarrldte Witmer,.....,_ Ame, .t.etteB.wlta,Clmittte ...... T .. _. Martly NlelMa, CadteriM ... 0e1uen1a.t.etaea.... ... Jerry Adlermu. The Premiere Nightcrs(have donated S l ,000 or more) were treated to the buffet suppu by the Newport Chapteroftbc FricndsofSCR Guilds. The Heritage String Quartet strolled and played as the PNs bad the opportunity to mingle with actors S..Uy Kemp, Gewse SperMbe. Aa..._yF...tul,a.8"uem, ~Caaa•u.hjaalaStewart, AaJ Liilc. R*r1 ...... , ... lauct. eUllWOWIWi [ •.....wTID.,.] .._.a.wOIMr'9 -mw I . .. ,.ono ' ' , Find out What's ' ' CookiU2 ···ts t Re~aran ge coas in oran , Restaurant sundaY s presents a Menu Qu\de co\\ecUon of conven\ent t restaurant orange coas\ets you {\nd menus t~at k\ng before hat scOO out w t to dine. ~ you go ou , , . Daily Pilai Nobody Covers the Coast Like We Do Pickup extra copies for your summer house guests. At news stands by 7 every morn- ing. DeMy PMot 0.te1>ook/ Friday. May 30, 1988 * I a I 14 l••·-·---1'1\--STILi.im ,.." ... ....... , ... II.Al .. ''IETLmm" ..... ., ...... , ... edwards BRISTOL 540-7444 OArS•Jl A' r.,a(t.A· ... ~r. -,,._ .. ,,._, ·-.i~ ra...., .. ,., "'" •11 .._. .•... ...... {Noll) .............. .. .. , ....., .. ,....., .. . ._ .. .,..1., ........ •dward• CHARHR ClHTR! 841-0770 WUIO' llUCH "'11111111Cl0N BUCH • ,.... .. , JlUIO """ WIWMll ''Nllfmlll ... , ......... , .... (,..11) a.tty Pflot O.tebook/ Friday, May 30, 1986 /' "'fCll,.... .. .. ............... -. ....... (fl.II) edwards wc•ODB~1oc( l1A,H1 ,'•'• ,"' .'. • • • au.t-. .._., cmllT" ... .......... . , .... ._ .......... , .... ..__,.Clllr '1llP ~Cl IN." .-.-CN) 551 0655 ... ...._ ..,.~r ... ....... (No.II) 4ml'I ....... rsllf.,_.. ..,.~r· ...... IPlll'" .. (fl.ll) (fl.II) \. .......... •. .r'8. '-..YPll" ... ... (fl)~ edwards SA:lDcE9AC.: l. 'OR(, q , A~ l' " ... l ._ '-..YPll" .. ......... .._ ... ,..11t .. 581 5880 ... ...._ ..,.~r ....... ••(Noll) .. ·-.i~ ........... , ........ .,. ..... .. ............ "" ... ... ,...CJ) edwards EL TORU 581 -9500 l L t ' \ ~~ ~~ ._ •'• ' ,' •t I f ,\ fl ' • ---•u-~~ ... .......... •• JAii IPHI'' (N) ..... ~ ..... .._ llAIM.M "T-raEIM'' "IWHT l.8Dll" (N.11) , ....... lilt, WI (NI 1-. ... IN ~ edwards VIEJO TWIN 830-6990 SUI Of£GO ~"' • '~ • A PAl & c ~P ~·~.A y , ~ . , , ! . .... ''SWHT 1.9l1Tl" INJ ..... 11.1•11 edwards ~ISSION VIEJO MALl : SO FW• IQ CROW~ <'Lll' 9E'#ll~ ~,b,,,,,' llA•. . ._., CSllT"(Nt 11111. 1111, 411f .... ..,.,, .. ...,,_ --.. .,., .... .... "'" .... .. ., ... ... edwards SOUTHCOAS~LAC.UNA 497-17 11 SOUh•COlS'""'' l •BRUl O•U • •, ••8ll" ... ._ m.--mu. .._. .. .. , ....... ... .... --""' .... ... ...... ...... .. RUTH HYNDS ••• FromPaeeS of beginning ms1ruct1on in water- color painting by aniS1 Rex Brandt of Corona del Mar. ··1 had never done any painting before, although I had taken an intro art class in college and was told l could paint well tf I pursued It, .. Hynds says. "But I had observed my whole life and knew I had the talent." Hynds aJso had encouragement from other anists and from those who would look over her shoulder as she set up her easel along the waterfront in Newpon Beach . "I was ready to paint and really wanted to do it. So when I started, 1 was paintinaall the time," she said. "I knew that's what I wanted to do ... Within three months after talong Brandt's watercolor course. Hynds was showing and selling her work. With her two dau&hters ready to go back to private school in the fall. Hynds vowed to make a living as an artjst, rather than resuming her teaching career 10 pay her daughters' tuition costs . •·1 had to sell my work and that made me paint even more," she says "I couldn't afford to have a big ego or butterflies about my art." Her efforts landed her more sales andexh1bit1onsat the Newpon Beach Ci1y Arts Festival, the An-A-Fair Fesuval in Laauna Beach and the Wanter Festavaf of Arts in Laguna. In 1972. with mon: of Brandt's instruction under her belt, Hynds's talent caught the auention of other an students who asked her to open her own beginning watercolor and draw- ing workshops, which Hynds tauaht for the next five years. By 1974, Hynds had Juried into the Festtval of Arts in 1..-guna Beach. where she exhibited every summer until 1978. "I am a discapltned person and I stay busy trying 10 get m y work an front of people to sec and enjoy," Hynds says of her succ:css. "I lake the validation of people loolang at my painting, seeing what I saw, a.nd saying, 'Gee, that's what I thoufht, also.' That's 1mpona.nt feedback . .' Hynds is also conscious of giving back to the community much of what she has received. She says she Joined the Newpon Harbor Arca Chamber of Commerce specific.ally to pay back the commuruty not only for 11s suppon of her as an anasL but for her success as a businesswoman. Her role as a businesswoman, an fact. as one she 1s understandabl} proud of. While some may romanticize the image of the starving anist. Hynds has no such admiration for th~ individuals. "When you sa} starving an1sts, those att people who lake starving. not an," she says mailer-of.factly. "I ha"e too much f'C1pect for my an and will do anything to suppon 11 and keep it go1n_g. That keeps me vel) busy and forces me to be vel) d1sciphned, but I'm walling 10 do it." -CINE-Ft GONE-$nAKEAS ARE BACK STADIUm a S M.Ka SNSD CN-tJt SHOWS AT IO IO DIWl9Ce" C•) SHOWS AT ill 11!0 1(1111~ lllrlf S!ff'lt"' IAQ SNb> ...... JI Plus co-..i11 Beu Delenu (RI s ,, .. , 1:00 .. 10:15 SMCM1T c•cun ntJ SHOWS A T (1:10) CJ 120) $:2$ 7:•0 ••• ,, S 40 7:45 &. t :SO TC»8"" .. , SHOWS AT (1J1 Sl (214 0) S10S 7 :JO t :U Ill 70MM C09AA fa/ Plus Co-HI Tiie Pro1ec1on IR I No PHlff IOIODANCSJtflQ Plus Co-Hit Hollywood Vice Sq11ad I") OOW.60UT• ~~ .. J llOllEY~.... .-VWIU.Y .. U.Sllt\ SH O WS AT (1 :20 (S1l d) SH OWS AT (1:U ) (J:lfl T "• Col•r l"u"-le t~·I > 5•40 7110 a. 10100 1:11 7:5$ a. f :SO 111111111111 n • Jll ... 19'1. lllln. All-Ill ... . ..... .... -$)t.44tl .... 834-3911 ~ mmoo. ua cm coma W m.uee •1 11• atl-JH5 • -IM.l ~ CIDa mt 8. tm • ,_ SMIDUIACK ~1-SllO - OutOnTheTown ,r ~· ~~------ -. 7'~ •• --~ C°~f't ~ -. . . -· . . I • • _, J -;-y °' I --._.,.. -.--- --' ·-' ' -. . -, "! ~- :&staumnu OF THE WEEK By CHRIS CRAWFORD D19J .... C:..; O t I The opening of De Falco's ltahan Ristorante in Costa Mesa mark.s the continuation of a family restaurant tradition that began over sixty years ago. '" "My family has been in the Italian restaurant business since 1914, when the first De Falc-0's opened in Toronto," said Gus De Falco, owner of the new Costa Mesa dinnerhousc. His family was part of the large colony of Italian immigrants who settled in Toronto, where his uncle and several other members of the family opened their first restaurant. ."l starw4.W.Qrkin& \h.~~ wht:.Q l was arQimdieY.cn .. years old. peeling potatoes, sweeping the floor. things hkc that." he recalled. n,e Tbal-1bucl) Cuisll)e Come eajoy a ualqu• CJtp411Nace la Ila• dlalog. Thal Touch otrwn a variety of autbeatlc Thal food from tbe mlldat to tb• tradltJoaally •Icy Tlutl di.Jan. I c....-.. Laac• s.ecw-I No•-Fri O.ty •4.95 Open 7 day• a Weck for DllHNf Open for Lai.ch Dally uceptS.D41ay Later Gus' immediate family moved to Alham- bra. California. where he attended school. and right after graduation from Alhambra High. he opened nis own restaurant (his fu'St De Falco's) at age eighteen. Gaa De Palco 2616 San Mlpel Dr. mushrooms) or "Customc Calzone" (your choice of I• Newport HIS. Sboppl .. Ctr. In 1975, Gus opened another De Falco's in Phoenix. which is currently manaicd by his cousin. any four pizza items with the restaurant's special sauce, S.. Mlflwl Dr. •t F«d Rd. plus ricotta and mozzarella cheeses). Calzone for two is II ~~;!;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~6~·~·~-~·~1~2~S~U Gus' other restaurant expenence in the inter- vening years includes the franchising of three different restaurant chains. "One of them I started m yself. the other two were national chains," he said. "I did about 35 of these, but I missed dealing with the people." Sl0.45;forfour.Sl7.9S. IL "We also carry some items that you don't 'T======~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~t normally find in an halian restaurant, because they're II As a result. b~ opened the newest De Falco's last December. "and it's a lot of fun being in here," he said. .. I've lov~d the restaurant business for a long. long time." Because the restaurant is so new, "a lot of people don't even know we're here yet," he said. "But I would say that already about seventy per cent of our business 1s repeat. And ~nning with our second Friday evening. it's been difficult for people to $Cl in without reservations. Plus. the busmess is build1lng constant· ly ... A large part of the draw, he said, 1s that "people h kc the idea that they can come 10 and cat for as low as $4.95~ the most expensive dish we have is SI 1.95 for veal. artd it is better veal than that served by some of the fancy dmnerhouses in town, at about SS. to S9. less." The menu's family dinners arc also bargains. he said. "We have six family dinners where a family of four can come in, have all the antipasto bar that they want (a large bar featuring over 40 antipasto items) plus all the soup and bread they want. and get spaghcui. ravioli. pizza, or lasagne for about SS.SO each." Another popular part of the menu are the calzones; vegetarian ... De Falco's Special." (pep- peroni. mild Italian sausage, black ohves. and :Recif!.f-J considered too much trouble to make," he said. 'for example. the Braciola Di Manzo Al Vino (See Recipe of the Weck below). -· Another winning dish, sajd Gus, is the Chicken Honey and Mustard (a quarter of chicken marinated and baked with herbs, along with honer, and mustard sauce). "We sell a huge amount of that. • he said. Other big sellers arc his vegetarian dishes, which include baked manicotti, raviol~ and lasagne; faplant Marinara; Linguini with Vegetables in Clam -sauce; and Steamed Vegetables. All of these dinners also include the" All You Care to Eat" Antipasto Bar along with bread for SS. 9S each, or $6. 95 each, a la carte. Pizzas, take out or cat i"t are also very popular. "We do a huge volume of ptZZaS," be said. "and I would put m_y pizza up against anybody's." One of G us' part-time pizza mak.cn is 14-ycar-old son Augustina, who has just been IC()Cptcd to attend Mater Dei in the Fall, and who is currently learning some of the famil~ cooking which has been handed down for generations. De Falco's. at 270 East 17th Street, Costa Mesa, in Hillgrcn Square shopping center, is open for lunch and dinner Tuesday through Saturday, beginning at 11:30 a.m.: dinner only on Sunday. S to 9 p.m. There is an extensive beer and wine list. and both c.atcring and take-out are available. Phone (71 4) 722-9264 for reservations. I 1mau oalon, sliced 3 ltallu plam tomatoes, ~ppe4 • ouces re4 wbte 1 cables,... tomato pule 3 cabletpeoat fresla daopped parsley Pound the steak out until 'h inch thick. Mix together garlic, cheese, breadcrumbs, parsley, egg. and ----,-,----------------spread mixture ovcr'the beef. Season with salt a nd BRACIOLA DI MANZO AL VINO (BEEF ROLL IN pepper. Roll up and secure with toothpicks or slrina. ' WINE SAUCE) 1 ~ ,...u road steak Heat oil in a frypan and sautc the onion until soft. Add OF Tt-=t,.._E_W_E_E_K_ I prUc den, ctae,.d the braciola and fry until brown on all sides. Add the t ~le., .... cnse.t permesaa cllee1e remaining ingl'edicnts and simmer covered for 90 • cablelp11u ltre .. cnmbt minutes. Slice crossways ahd serve with sauce on top. l '8nl belled eg, Hopped Garnish with cherry tomatoes and fresh parsley. t oaca olive oil Serves four. OF THE WEEK SPRmE R AL FRESCO l part wklte lcatlu wlae l part 1••1er ale (diet or replar ) I 11Jce oru1e I 1Uee lemoe l 1lke lime I larse strawberry Serve over cracked or crushed ice in a goblcL The recipes were submitted by De Falco's Restaurant. Co ta Mesa. "· , Excellence in flambe1 • Ex1en11in Wine Lill So•tla c ... t Plau EVERY 8UlmAY 6-7 Call Now-poa 't Miu The Boat! Dally Piiot Datebook/ Frlday, May 30, 1986 11 -FmeArts~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ OC Chamber Orchestra: don't miss this one Thas wttkend, the Ora.nae County Chamber Orchestra, under the direc- tion of Micah Levy, will perform twacc: on Sunday anemoon at Loyola Marymount in Orange. and on Mon- day evening at the South Coast Repcnory Theatre in Costa Mesa. Conductor Micah Levy hkcs to think of a conccn program as much lake a Chinese menu. It should offer a vancty of combinations of types, seasonings, color and texturr. The palate should be alternately assaulted and soothed. Most 1mponantly. in the context of variety, one should fttl that the enttre event has an overall context. Monday night's concen opens and closes with works in the "Conccno G rosso" form. Con:lli's .. Opus 6. Number 2" opens the c.ooccn with o ne of the most evocative titles in the baroque literature. Block's "Conceno Grosso for Strings with Ptano Obla- pto" offers a 20th-a:ntury per- spective. . A Conceno Grosso as a work in which a group of"solo" instruments plays alternately by themselves, and with tbe orchestra as a whole. Thas notion of "group solos" is not just grammatically pu.aling. Indeed, as music has evolved since this pcnod (c. 1700), the individual soloist has become a centerpiece of most cone.en offerings. The C.orelli isa lively work which is followed by what conductor Levy calls a "&entle and soolhin• work. with passionate moments," the Borodin Nocturne for Strings. The work was originally written for string quanct, but was very sucoessfully performed with full orchestra j ust recently in Laguna 8cacb. Shakespeare Sonnets. Finzt was an Etlglish comp<>scr, whose career spanned the first half of lhas century. He was very strong-walled and indi- v1dualisuc, and spent much of his 1ime champiorung unappreciated art- ists· in particular, he is known for rcs~ITCCtlng the works of the English composer Mudge. In his qucs~ for promotion of that which was "and1- vidual.'' he also cultivated an almost- extinct species of English Apples. fonunately, he also had t1mt for Shakespeare. C1m Pua undoubtedly the public's favorite of his wor1cs. lt"s good to ICC that someone remembered. Now, a "solo soloist!" Kimball Wheeler is a young mezzo.soprano who will join us in Orange County between enpgements witfi the New York Philharmonic. She made her debut at the Philharmonic in 1982, and has since that time soloed with the Israel Philharmonic, the National Symphony (in Washington. D.C.) p::::;;;=:::;-;::===================~ and tbe Mcx1co City Symphony. On "Bob Burns: Still the operatic side, she has sung with These five works we~ composed between 1929 and 1942, when they were published:-Though they were composed over a period of time, the ~ngs function as a cycle. They arc followed by a work on which Fin~ mi~t well have had paty: an ana which Moun included in a rewrite of bas opera "ldomeneo" ... but which " never performed. It as a love song. an Italian aria, "Ch'10 M1 Scord1 Di Te," which conductor Levy caJls "hght. but dramatic." This is a virtuoso work with which Wh~lcr will leave us. In this work. Bloch brinp the perspective of a 20th-century com- p<>~r 10 the Baroque style. He aives us the rhythm, the spancncss or one basic concept per movement, the "group solos," even the articulation of the baroque. From the 20.h ccn tury. he adds a touch more melody and a broader palate of harmonies. This 1s a very p<>Wffful work, one which deserves to be played more onen. Award Winning the Rome Opera, and at Wolf Trapp Continental Menu Great ... " and the Kennedy Center. c-t · A Handel aria "Om bra Mai Fu, •. r ea unng 0rv4'rl:r 8-h mhh from the opera "Xerxes" opens A Wide Variety OaJly PiJo1 Wheeler's pan of the program. of Fresh Fish Maestro Levy descnbcs this work as The concen will be presented on Sunday afternoon at the 0ranac Campus of Loyola Marymou.nt Unj- vers1ty, at 4 p.m. On Monday evening. at the South Coast Reper- tory Theatre. a reception with ~frclh­ ments begins al 6:30 p.m., and t~ concert at 8 p. m. Ticket prices for both performances arc S 10 and S 12. Tickers and information are available at 777-5590. lunch • Dinner • Cocktails ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY • BANQUETS 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644-2030 WE PROMISE YOU GOOD CHINESE FOOD LUNCHES, DINNERS. TAoPICAL COCKTAILS. BANQUET FACILITIES. CA TfAING FOOD TO GO OPEN 7 DAYS SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON FOOD TOGO 827 1210 "very slow and stately ... and a bit intense." An am ("afr .. in English) IS a vocal work, usually in three sec- uons. often comp<>scd as part of an opera. Generally the las1 section repeats the first, with the middle section offenng a bit of variety. Afier intennission, Wheeler will sing Finzi's "Five ShaJcespearc Songs," works composed on texts of The concert doses with a wor1c not heard much recently. In 1980, ll was fashionable to celebrate composer Ernst Bloch's b1nhday an · concert. Hardly a week would pass without a performance of has "Conceno Grosso for Strings with Piano Oblipto," Early Bird Dinners '7 .SO Featuring Prime Rib or Fresh F~h Complete dinner with choice of Soup or Salad and Dessen 4 to 6 PM 7 Days a Week 801 E. 8.11~ 673-n26 'Shoah' now at Balboa .. Shoab .. -a leqthy but cnlacally acclaimed film about the Holocaust -will begin an nclusive 0ranae County enpge~t Wednctday. June 4 at the Balboa Cinema an Ncwpon Beach. The film is presented in c:ooper- lf You Are Not Going T 0 Italy... ation with the Jewish F~tion of Orange County, Shoah Survivors of --.a T En I Old W Id Ch • Orange County and Lona Bach and Join Us Inst~ o Joy ts or arm I the 2nd Generation ofOiaJ\te Coun- And Contemporary Elegance. Our New Menu ty. Wiii Complete Your Holiday Dinner 1 to~:;h~~'!!i~~ t~ d;=; ~ N. htl F 5·30 p m to complete and uses no arotuval ft. 19 Y rom . . . footage. The film allows the victims.. 1 ~ Y Closed Monday lbe pefl>Ctrators and the bystanders to tell their stori«. Featured arc conccntn.tion<arnp Northern Ualian Continental Cuisine survivors and Nail camp com- • ~ manden, bistonan Raul Hilt>cra and Anniversary Lunch Specials 3520 East Coast Hwy .. Corona del Mar 675-1922 Polish villagers who still live Oft the ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rl cdlaoftheronnercamps. ··Shoab .. contains none of the horrifying images expected from films about the Holocaust IDJ1ead of Complete Lunches: • Chicken Terlyaki • Shrimp Tempura • Stir Fried Chicken s 3. 95 each lndUdes. c~ryglass of plum wtne .. Jl5S Via Udo• Newport Beach• (714) 675-0575 1 e * o.tly Pit~ D•tebook/ Friday, May 30, 1986 CIUDCAU 1714 Placentia Costa Mesa Call 645-8091 for information Presents LIVE DIXIELAND JAZZ featuring 'The Bourbon Street Dixieland Jau Group Thunday. Friday & Saturday from 8 p.m. DANCING Complete Dinners Only $4.95 Broasted Chicken- Our Specialty -- the morl>id irnaaes-the 6lrn offers current interviews. Because of ill unusual lenatb. "Shoah" will be pmented in two perts. Each pan bas a I S.minutc antennission. Show tim~ are 11 follows. • Part One -which runs four hours and 33 minutes-wdl ICr'OCtl at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 4 tbrouah Sunday, June 8. Matinees bc&innina at I p.m. are ICbcdulcd on Wednes- day, Saturday and Su.nday. • Pan Two -which runt (our hours and SO minutes-will tietoen tt 6:30 p.m. Monday~ June 9 throu,h Thurlday, June 12. A Wcdnetday matinee will beain at 12:30 p.m • Admitlion is SI 0 for each part. A strict card will be available (Ot SI S. Groue sales also ·~ avltlablc. For more 1n(onnation. call 6 7s..4S80. Out On The Town ROY AL UYBER REST AURAN1' A•dlelltk IMtu C.ltiDe Say 1hc word "Indian," and you're saying misconceptions -the Amen· can public seems to believe that all Indian food as too hot. This 1sjust one of the many misconceptions. For dincn who haven't been in· troduccd to northern Indian cuisine. the) have a fanw11c expcnence awaiting them. spicy or not. If you enJOY eaung the cuisine hot. thr chefs of the Royal Kh yber will be more than happy 10 oblige you. And to really apprcc1ate the subtle fla vors of northern lnd1ancu1Stne.1t 1s best to order medium. or mild, for the more delicate taste bud. Prepared 1n the true Tandoon stylt' of cooking. Royal Khyber cooking includes mannaung the various meat. poultry, or fish dishes in a blend tchoosing from 60 natural ingre· d1ents) of herbs, fresh ground spaces. and cultured yogurt. then cooking them usanga skewer, to place the food down into the Tandoor. The Tandoor o\t'n 1s shaped like an "Ali Baba .. basket and 1s fired by charcoal. The succulent Juices from the meat drop 1n the burning charcoals and. mingled A delightful new, and deHclous addition to the Costa Mesa dining scene· Is de Falco's Italian Rlstorante. The decor ls brightly done in the traditional red. white and green colors of Italy, with hanging lamps and lush plant life. A jukebox plays the music of the 50's. Family oriented, de Falco's has something to satisfy the most discriminating palates. The luncheon menu drters a super ~tlon of 17 sandwiches served on de Falco's famous bread and available with a choice of potato, rtoe or pasta salad for $3.95. The lunch size orders of pasta, chlci<en. seafood and house specialties, such as the ehlci<en cacciatore and baked eggptant for only $6.95, Include the extensive 40 Items antlpasta bar and special bread. The bar Includes only fresh and high quality meats. cheeses. fruits and vegetables, as weU as three fresh soups made dally. The ··au you can eat" anttpasta and zuppa bar Is avallab'9 for $4.95 per Pft'SOfl. The dinner menu otters a tremendous variety of mouth watering Italian dishes Including several pastas, plr.za, excellent seafood and veal creations. chicken. and vegetarian dishes. There are also complete family dinners. such as spaghettlnl, ravioli, or lasagne Which feed four peopfe for $21.95. lndMdual din- ner• are priced from $6.95 to $11 .95. The menu features 10 dif- ferent appetizers, ranging from potato aklna to fried ravioli with seuce. de Fmco's la open Tuesday through Thursday from 11:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. ~ Friday and Sat- urday from 11:30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. and Sunday from 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. • F91co'• le located at 270 IMt 11th • ..._. In Coeta ................. 722 ..... with the heat, produ~ a distinctive aroma which is re-absorbed into the meat. Therein lies the sterct of this centuries-ot art. The ..ft al Khyber 1s el ntly designed, rom a style of au~ntic Indian architecture daung back to the 16th century. The Royal Khyber 1s an intimate. romantic fairyland. located at 1000 North Bnstol Street, one block north of Jambortt, Newport Beach The restaurant 1s open daily for lunch and dinner. weekends from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a champagne brunch fcatunng 18 cntrecs. For rellervauons. call 476-1901. CARMELO'S Revile4 Dluer MtH A revised dinner menu offcnng such new dishes alt homemade taghanni pasta with r.ad1cchio, and swordfish rolled in prosciutto. moz.z.arclla, and fresh spices has been introduced at Cannclo's Restaurant, Corona del Mar. Other cntrttS add~ to the bill of fare include nsono with wild mush- rooms, black hngurne with scallops, seafood combination with a pufl pastry shell, and t·bonc veal loin ..,_ cooked in marsaJa with porcini mushrooms and fontina cheese. Spccialwng in Northern ltahan continental cuisine, the restaurant will continue to offer many of ns standard favorites embracing a wide range of veal. seafood. pasta, and fowl selections. Undcrthe dircct1on ofchefG1usep- pe Cefalu, Cannclo's further offers four or five nightly speoals de· tennined by the availability of fresh , high quality ingredients. These can vary from Osso Buco and Panzotti Ravioli to Maine Lobster and Ciop- pino, the h.aban bouillabaisse. Open Tuesday through Sunday. Carmelo's 1s open from 5:30 p.m. for dinner onl y. There 1s an ei1tens1ve wine bst. oodcta1ls. plus live enter· tainmenl nightly. Carmelo's is located at 3520 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. For reservations. call 675-1922. LE MIDI Gala Diaatt u4 Wiae Tutiq Encouraged by th~xtraordinary success of their 1Jlnner with the Winemaker .. LD Fe~ (featuring wines of Louis M. Martini), Marica and Walter of le Midi would now like . Opaso Vachirachatchot at his Balboa Thai Cafe. Let him be your host for an unforgettable dining experience. Taste his savory Thai food and you'll know why his cooking made him famous! 2091h Palm Street, Balboa Peninsula. Dinner 1s served nightly except Tuesday. Call 675·0161 for reservations. r S f .. 8 I I._ ti l ll I" 1 1 SO Years of Fine Italian Diniq Enjoy our cuisine from C~al and Northem Italy. Every meal Is served with old ~"'rtd-eh.lrm. a generous view of Newport Bay. valet parking and complimentary boat slips Piano bar and full menu until I a m Make plans now to dine with us this evenlna call 17141 642·7~or reservations or Information about our bay view banquet facilities 3131 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach to in vite all fnends oJ French cuisipe to part1c1pate in a tasting of the willes that have been enhancing the enjoy- ment of that cuisine for ccntuncs: the wonderful wines of France. Again chef Walter Ruttiman· has arranged a beautifully balanced din· ner of taste sensations to blend graciously wub the selected wines. Six out of the seven courses presented arc new creations of chef Walter. directly inspired by the Premier Cru Wines chosen. Who wouldn't be inspired by names like 1984 Mcursault, Puligny Montrachet, 1983 Nuit St.George, a 1982 Chatcau Magdclaine Premier Grande Cru Classe. or 1979 Cbatcau Rayne Vigneau Premier Grand Cru wines. Monsieur George Spanek, Na- tional Sales Manager of the im· porters. Bcrcut Vandervoort of San Francisco, will be their honored guest. He will not only discuss tbe selected wines, but will also be happy to answer the many queslJons regard- ing tbe wmcs of Fran~. Reservations are ~u1rcd; scaling 1s hm1ted. Contact Manca (6 75-4904) at u Midi. 3421 Via Lido, Newport Beach. I 7 YEARS ON BROADWAY WINNER OF 7 TONY AWARDS WITH THE HIT SONG "DON'T CAY FOR ME ARGENTINA" MOREi.L'S Ceokt Up New Mee• Morcll's, the elegant gourmet res- taurant at The Irvine Hilton and Towers. has introduced a new menu of tempting "Callfom1a Cumne" dishes and delicacies. Many of the items and spcoal~ on the new dinner menu arc develop- ments of the restaurant's Leslee Mendel, chef de part1e, who JOIOed the Morell'sst.aff10 Deciembcr. James Achramowicz, sous chef, supcl'Vlsed the oomplcte new menu projecl "The new menu items at Morell's represent an excning added dimension to the res~urant's cuisine," sajd Don Olivier. the hotel's director of food and beverage opcr-· ations. "These new offcnngs are delicate and delectable entrecs and appetizers that expand the con- sumer's choices at Morell's. These exciting new menu items arc avail· able at both lunch and dmner:· Morcll's focus continues to be "Olhfom1a Cuisine," which 1nvolv~ extensive use of the freshest 1n~­ d1ents, imaginati ve and stnking pres- entations, and unusual combma- 11ons. The resultin.a style 1s both Group Dl8COUnta 772-3220 EVITA Niiiw WM>MBR DIRECTED ANO CHOREOGRAPHED IV TIMOTiiY a.TH ~ Dally Ptt01 O.tebook/ Friday, May 90. 1188 17 > OutOnTheTown delicate and savory. New entrees feature five exciting new seafood dishes: an opaka paka braised in champagne wi th papaya. sea bass sauteed with pine nuts. poached salmon with dill and oba sauce. prawns with tequila and pick- led tomatillos. and lotte wrapped 1n ~abbage leaves. Other additions include a fabulous fitet mignon with raisins and four- peppercom sauce. and a tempting breast of duclding dish with black currants and onion marmalade. New appetizers also stress delicate flavors. such as the new confit of duck with baby green beans and walnut dressing or the Sonoma County chev re in phyllo. pon and yogun sauce. New soups arc a delu:.ately flavored scallop and saffron soup and · a pheasant consomme w1th wild mushroom quenelles. Morell's is open for luncheon from 11 :30 a.m . to 2 p.m., dinner from 6 to 10 p.m .. Monday through Friday, to 11 p.m. on Saturday. For reser- vations. call Mon~ll's at 863-J 111. CHEZ CARY Special Mena for Ja.ne ( hcz Cary's new policy of offenng ~pcl·1al items each month to their regular menu continues ~ 1th specials tn r rhe mo nth of Junc The appetizers are Salad V 1ctor (poached celery heart, pimientos. anchovy fitets, served with French vin1agret1e). $8.95; Escargots Murat (imported snails sauteed in herbs. garlic butter and wine. bedded 1n French bread, with Hollandaise glaze ), $9.95: Angel Hair Pasta Pnmavera (thin pasta with sauteed Julienne of vegetables. ~-in a creamy Parmesan cheese sauce). $9.95. The en trees arc: Abalon1s Pnncesse (two abalone steaks sauteed, topped with stewed tomatoes and mush- rooms. pm1). $29.95: Shish Kebab a la Turque (Turkish style spnng lamb. mannated on a skewer. broiled with vegetables. served with nee pilaO. S25.95; Poulet Au Aubergines (bone- less breast of chicken baked with sliced eggplant and to matoes, served with rainbow pasta, garn1), $20.95. You will enjoy the new items as well as your old fa vontes wh1le d1n1ng amid velvet, fine china. crystal. and •s1l vl•r. with white glove service. !)Inner 1s S<rved beginning at 6 p.m .. with the last scattng al 9 p.m . daily. Cocktails and hors d'oeuvrcs are served 4 to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. For reservations, call 542-3595. Chez Cary is located at 571 S. Main St., Orange. AMERICAN RE D CROSS SpaJllenl Cook-Off Set Disappointed because you know you make the best spaghe111 sauce in town -and you missed last year's American Red Cross Spaghetti Cook- Off? Well, dust olTthose recipes. dig out that sauce pot. and get ready for the Second Annual American Red Cross Spaghetti Cook-Off. September 7. al the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro. In 1985. more than 5.000 spagheu1 lovers sampled the sauce offerings o f 50 contestants. Louie Louie's res~ taurant. Ornngc, with their "Un real Meals," captured top hono rs and the title of Best Spaghetti Sauce in Southern California. In 1986, they will return o nce again to vie for the title and the S 1.000. Grand Pri1c. According to volunteer co-chair- men Paul Chavira and Bob Fuess. the 1986 cook-off will be bigger and more exciting than ever. Chavira. o f Salvatore's Restaurant 1n Orange. said ... We limited the field to 50 compt"llng sauce teams last year - but n..>w that we know how popular the sauce lsimmenng is. we've raised the cook quot.a to I 00 qualified \earns." Four cash pnzes -$1000 .. $500., $300 .• and SI 50. -will be awarded to the top four spa~etti sauces, as determined by the impartial panel of celebrity Judges. Awards will also be given to the People's Choice for Best Sauce, as well as Best Showmanship (booth decoration). Cost to participate is $50. per team. to the Amencan Red Cross. and contestants must prepare six g.aJlons of sauce - one for competition judeing. and five for the public tasting. Four members are allowed per team. although as many "cheerleaders" as desired are en- couraged to pay the $5 event entry fee and cheer their team on to victory "We·re also do ing something a little different this year with the Mis~ Pasta contest ... said Bob Fuess. of the a .a~ •• -·RUBY PALACE ,ILi Mandarin & Sz.echwan Cuisine -·-"ii 3 Generation• of Chinese f amlly Cooking DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS '405 J Talber1 ~ Me1nl K s:w. PCH (7 14) 848-6088 18830 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach Su.n•Thura 11 am-10 pm Frt & Sat 11 am-10:30 pm (Ac.--............ ,._ w .... ,. •• -Ody Piiot o.teboc*/ Frtd8Y, May 30, 1986 Balboa Bay Club ... We're aslung all the cooking teams to enter a contes- tant in the Miss Pasta competition. It's not a requirement to participate. but we know it will add to the fun and ellcitement of the event." The 1986 American Red Cross Spaghetti Cook-off is set for 1 I a.m. to 5 p.m. on September 7. held with the cooperation of the U.S. Marine Atr Corps Air Station, El Toro. and will offer family fun and entertajnment. To enter, contact the Financial De- velopment Office at the Orange County Chapter of the American Red Cross, 835-5381. ext. 350. CHICAGO BEEF STATION Clllcago Comes to CallfornJa! Yes. Vinnie, if you can remember when hot dogs were 100 per cent Vienna Beef, and if you have ever had the chance to taste an original Chicago style Italian Beef Sandwich, you're in for a treat. and as close as 580 W. 19th St., Cost.a Mesa. at Chicago Beef Station. Kate DiDomenico. a Chicago transplant. got tired of trying to find a good .. back on the block' beefand hot do$ fix1n' and decided she couldn't watt any longer. Says Kate. "I visit Ch1caio two or three times a year, and each time my friends ask me to bnng bade Italian Beef sandwiches. It got to the point that I was afraid to tell anyone I was leaving. because you only get so many pounds of carry-on I gc." ~ll. one thing led to another. Kate and Will, another Midwesterner, decided to panncr up and ideas turned into reality, with some valu- able help from Marie, Kate's mom. So you ask yourself, in the day of pink tofu and health clubs on every corner, how do you make a business out of hot dogs and Italian beef! To Dil>Qmenico, the answer was easy. America's fascination with hot dogs 1s phenomenal -you know - baseball. hot dogs, and apple pie! Ifs all-American. Besides. people love their friendly service and good back- on-the-block hospitality. a Jost art at most food establishments. If you'd like to JOin the fun and great taste, Chicago BeefStation is I 1/1 blocks west of Harbor on 19th Street. between the liquor store and the laundr6mat. Telephone 722-7809 llllllJ Jiii 11tl· SllllPF• cu.= 11.&·IJ& f1IJI S.1fllw Ar""111 Sit .. """• IJtt lilt"'*-' 8 A.M. • 2 A.M. Deity Sunday 8 A.M. to t2 Midnight 428 E. 17th St. Cotta Mesa 714~850-1750 .. 'Committed' to be •. on Sunday at UCI Filmmaker Lynne T 11lman will introduce her film "Committed" - a narrative feature on the life of Frances Farmer -in a spec1aJ presentation Sund&>'· June l at UC Irvine. The program. which will beg.in at 7 p.m. in room 178 of UCl's Human- 1t1es Hall. is.co-sponsored b y the UC I Film Studies program and the educa· t1on department of the Newport Harbor Art Museum. Tillman co-directed and produced this film in 1984 wllh Sheila . McLaughiin who stars as Frances Farmer in this look at the life of Hollywood·,. dark star who once wa~ hailed as .. tht' new G arbo." .. Committed" 1s not a documc-n- tary, nor does st paint a picture of Farmer as an innocent. With Its ~tark lighting. hig~-angle shot~. m1n1mal d1alogu~. grainy texture and hauntmg saxopho ne mus1c1 the film addrts.ses some of the political and feminist issues other film accounts of Farmer's life have not. The story of Frances Farmer ts one of a bnght. rebellious, outspoken woman who was the target of McCarthy-era politics and the Holly- wood star machine. Addicted to alcohol and drugs. Farmer was com- mitted by her mother to years in mental institutions and eventually underwent a lobotomy. Tht' program is part of the Newport Harbor Art Museum'sContcmporaf) Culture Series which is funded 1n pan by the California Council for the Arts. T ickets at the door arc $3 general admission and $2 for NHAM mem- bers and students. For mo~ infor- mation . call the museum's education department at 759-1122. Wine of the Week: Sauvignon Blanc By MIXE DUNNE ~-----The more Sauvignon Blanc I taste. the more impressed I am by releases made from grapes grown in Lake County. Yes. it's .1n California - north of Napa. east of Mendocino. Lake County·s n ch . diverse soils and its short. cunous growing season -warm days often moderated by cool breezes off sea. lake and moun· taan -arc produci ng Sauvignon Blancs clean. round. fresh and so fat with frutt they taste almost sweet. They tend to be floral in ~mcll. nchly fruity in fla vor. not at all grassy. Almost 1nvanably, the) are finashed without ever having &ouched wood. Now Serving COUNTRY SJYLE SUIDIY $199 IRUICH Includes Beverage Well Drink or Beer , 9:00 II to 1 :00 Pl 845-8891 1712 Placentia CoetaMeaa They are native but sophjsticated. The latest rcleaK of this ilk to tickle my taste buds is Buena Visui Wine- ry's 1985 Lake County Sauvia.non Blanc {$7.50). Although the wine only recently was released . and although the w1ne-Judgjng season is just under way. it alread y has won a gold medal. awarded at the Dallas Morning News National Wine Competition. In color. the wine is unusually light: ifs nearly as clear as water, not at all tndicauvc of its lush flavor. The aromn 1s more promisin&. all wild- flowers. honey bees and warm SP.nng sunshine. In flavor, it's nothing 1f not fruity. melons mostly. with a c1tnc- langiness along the edge and a long. clean, ple.asant finish. The alcohol 1'i 12 percent. the residual ~opr . 7 perccnL Taken alone, 11's an appealing!) soft aperitif wine. As a dinner wine. 11 will be ideal with salads. Poultry . shellfish. I tasted it with a seafood medley (shrimp, lobster. scallops} 1n puff pastry. finished with a prhc- accented. d1ll-garn1shed creme- fra1che sauce. and found the pairing td~I. OMETHING ODO? ISIT ART ALLERIES! AMERICA 4250 Martingale Way, Newport Beach. 833-~. OP!n 11 a.m.· po a.m. American rqional cooking lunch specials, happy hour. Fresh l..'ve Maine l~ter. New York style p1ua cooked an a brick oven. Near O.C. Airport off MacArthur. Late dining, entertainment. Reser- vations accepted. Casual, inexpen- iuve MC, V, AE. THE BARN Htwe the prime o( your life ch008ing from the extensive 25 item menu. Steaks, seafood, BBQ, Mexican dis- h~s including salad bar, and more. Western charm and country am- biance. Breekfut M-5 6:30-11:00, Lunrh M-F' 11:00-2:30, Dinner 7 nights from 5:00 p.m. Happy hour M-F 4:30-7 p.m. Satellite dish. Live entertainment and dancing. Ban- quet facilities. 14982 Redhill, Tustm. 269-011 5. THE ORIGINAL BARN FARMER STEAKHOUSE Yes! They are the orifioal. Famou1 for their one-and-a-half pound Porterhouse ateab and featuring diaplay broilina. Proudly 1ervina for 24 yeara. Lunch Mon.-Fri 11-2. Din- ner nifhtly Mon.-Fri. from 5 p.m. Sat. & Sun. from 4 p.m. 2001 Harbor Blvd., Co.w Mesa. 642-9777. BENNIGAN'S Freah food eerved with a aide of fun. Menu futurea unique appetiu~. 1alad1, ee..tood, croiuant und- wichea, bw1era, Mexican dishes, and an eseiting brunrh menu. Lunch and dinner from 11 a.m weekdaya. Brunch 9-3 on WMkenda. Full bar with 11peciaJt.y drlnlta. Happy hour •· 7 weekdaye. ln Coat.a MMA, South Coaat Plaza par kins lot by Sak'• Fifth Avenue ZU -3938. In Weatminat.er, 646 We1tmin1tar MaU 8914622. Dancini eveninp in Weat.mlnater location. BOB BURNS Superb la the word to de.cribe this fine clinint •wblithment. Serving Newport for 18 years, 1peciali1ina in Anew railed heel, the rmest YoU can set. Alao featuri111 ftelh raah, veal and chicken. The linen covered tablee, candJet and ftelh flowera add to t.be elepnce, with booUw and biih beck chain for privacy. FUcbrinc lanteme and cl-'cal mueic capture t.be cbarmia, and warm atmotphere. Open f0t lunch, clin.I* md I.heir aplitnclifetOOI Su.o- da,y bnancb. 2nene1 .. wine U.t. 97 P..bioo ltlmd. &M-2030. 8AJ8TOL BAil 6 ORILL • At Bollda1 Jaa Tradh.fooally an all AIMrican favont.e ~ to eat l ~ prieed for famlly dlntnr. _E_!ery· thing from juicy 1t.eada and chope to 1pecial chicken diahN and fresh eeafood. Bount.eou1 aa.l1d bar. Sumptuous daily luncheon buffet. Open daily for dining and cocktails. 3131 Briatol SL, Coat.a Mesa. 557-3000. DILLMAN'S The Dillman famtly is famow for their treditional warm hospitality and fine food. Fineet !)Time rib in Balboa and fresh frah daily. Com- plete dinner 1peciah daily. Friendly aervice and a fun, delightful at- mosphere. Open daily for lunch and djnner. Brunch Sat. and Sun. 801 E. Balboe. 67~ 7726. THE IDDE-AWAY Tired or eat.inc out at placa with no privacy'! Search no more! The Hide- away provides priv1cy with it. booth& and partitione, perfect for buaineaa luncheone and romantic dining. All newly decorated offering a reluing 1tmoephere. The apecial- tiea are tea.food and 1teab. Af- fordable dining for the whole fam- ily. Variety o( daily apeciala. Hom•· made aoupe and aaucea. Beer It wine aerved alao. 5874 F.dinger at Spring· dale in Marina Shopping Village. Huntington Beach. 840-6618. JOLLY ROGER Great. American food and at the beat prices. The Jolly Roger bu alway. bffn known ea a 1ood family value restaurant. The menu featuree breillut, lunch and dinner with 1 large variety of di.ahN to chooee from. From ea diahee, criddJe c:akea, buraera. aandwicbee, aalad~ to complete dinnen of aeafood, 1teab, rhicken and deliciou1 dee· aerte. Family owned for 35 yeara with the friendlieet aervioe in town. 400 S. Cout Hwy., Laguna Beach. 494-3137. CALFURNIAN PASTEL'S The neweat event in dining in the Newport area. Featuring 1 1peclal blend of culinary creationa from California and the reat of the WOfld. Such tantali1in1 item• ae; m&rinat.d ahrimp and ICa1.lope in a (inpr vinaipett.e ..tad. Mouth· · wa.t.erinc pMt.a like anpl bait with ...tood and freeh tomato. Piual baked in an authentk Italian wood bu.rnins ~n. the only one in New- port. And a variety ol Grilladee tpecialtia Dinn.r .. rwct daily (doeed Monday) and H@py HOW'. R..rvt\Jone recomme.nclect. 1620 W. CoMt H.ifh-.y. N"J>Ort Beach. (714) 6.48-7167. BUBBLES BALBOA CLUB BubblM la a tiulu.re, 1 30'e 1tyle 1111>1* dub done with lant.M,y and wit. The Cbam.JNllDe Ice bucbta an ahaped like top bat.a and the light rtxtwee like martini , ....... The w.U. are hWll with ori&inal 1990'1 art and the reet.rooma are true to deco atyle. The cuieine combinea French and It.alien element.a in a homey American c:onten. Open for dinner Mon.-Thun. 6:30-10:30 p.m.; 6-11 p.m. Fri., Sat. Sun. Sun- de,y Brunch 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Reiier- vationa are •ua•t.ed. Dinner from .9.95 to •15.95. Full Bar. Vita, Mu- terCard, American Exp.reu. Bub- blee ia located at 111 Palm Street. in Balboa at the comer of Palm and Balboe. CaU 675-9093. INDIAN ROY AL KHYBER RESTAURANT 1000 North Bristol Street. Newport Beach, (al Jamboree) 714-752-5200. Lunch-Dinner, exquiaite dining in the midat or I aleaming white Taj Mahal ouia. Feat.wing award win- nin1 northern lndian cui1ine elerantly preMnt.ed in the Moghul tradition. Hora d'oeuvrea, aerved Mon-Fri 5:00.S:OO, Lunch Mon-Fri 11 -2:30, Sat & Sun champqne brunch 11-3:00, Dinner Sun-Thurs 5:30-10:30, Fri-Sat until 11:30: Res- ervations acoept.ed, MuterCard, Viea. American E~preu. Gourmet. caterin1, weddinp, private parties, and corporate accomodationa. eerved in Old World charm. Et.· tensive wine liat. Dinner nichtJy. Piano bar. Full menu till 1,,-00 Lm. 3131 Weet Cout Hwy., Ne-wport Beach. 642-7880. LI'S RESTAURANT Uyou love Chineee rood, you're aure to enjoy dining here, u Ll'a p.rom- iaea truly authentic Chineee food. The menu offen a wide variety or ezot.ic dishee, from a la carte to combinationa including Cantoneee & Szechuan 1tyle. Breathtakina decor in a 1u.premely be•utiful at- moepbere. T ropical drinka to quench your thirst. Open aeven daye a week for lunch and dinner. 8961 Adema, Huntin1ton Beach. 961·9115. 314 N. Beach Blvd., Anaheim. 827-1210. THE LOTUS Enter the Orient and nperienct the urellence of Mandarin and Suchwan Cui1ines. Authentic Chi- nese di1he especially prepared by mutf'r chef Liu. The Lotus can offer culinary mut.erpi~ to y~ur liking. The lovely dining area is dominat.ed with pictures of the Lotus Oower-the symbol of purity in Chinese culture. Enjoy fine Chi- nese dining aa weU as wine, 1pirita and hospitality at the Lotus. Located in HArbor Cent.er at 2:l00 Harbor Blvd. in Coet.a Mesa. Call r -\ 545.3331 !.IT.i~'.A.::!b:;!ft~,~~---=--::-::-::-::-::-MA-NDAilfN GOURMET CA.RMELO'S Thia ultre-amart haven of excep- tional Italian and Continental Cui1ine ia one of the more rewarding placea to dine. Freeh put. and 1pecial "light" NUcel are carefully prepued by thNe oft.be ftne9t Ital- ian cbef1. Piano bar entertainment complement.a t.be fun atmoapbere. Alfrete0 dinin& (weather per- mitt.ina). Open Tuee.-Sun. from 6:00 p.m. for dinner. 3520 E. Coeat Hwy, Corona del Mar. 675-1922. DELPACO'• "Home of t.be all you care to eat antiputo and zuppa bar" 14.95. Since 1914 a tradition in three cit.iea and two countriea. Truly a family reataurant with family prices. Din- nert $4.95 to $11.95. Veal, chicken, calzonet, calamari, put.as, 11Campi beer It wine li1t.a. Open for lunch and dionert. Sundays feature "Sina A-Long" with Tony, a really fun nit.e. Cloeed Mondaya. 270 Eaat l 7t.b Stret. Hilpen Squan, Coata Mesa. Raervat.iom 722-9264. MARCELLO'S TbJa award winner olfen a.n es- taneive menu 1ped1lislna in peiat.M, VM1. doppi.no and &.heir famoua handiude pi:aa.. Eatabliahed Una. 1973, thia Camily owned reewu.rant bu captured &.be he&rta of It.alien food lown. Lunch Mon.-Frl., Din· Mr 7 nlthta a weelL 17602 Beech 1t Slater, Huntln1ton Beach. 842-6606. VILLA NOVA A beautiful b-.y view createe the romantic Mttinc lh.t bu mMle the Villa Nova• "1pec:ial kind ol place" for over til\.y yean. Supub cuitine from Central and Northern ttaty A truly 1peciaJ place to dine, the Mandarin Gourmet h11 bffn a gold award winner and owne~. Michael Chiang wu voted Reetauret.ew of the Year. Specializing in Peking, Shanghai, Sz«hwan and Hunan cuisines, they offer an array of deli- cacies including Peking Durk. dumplinp, whole fi11h and more sumptioua dishea. Elegant at moephere, impeccable aervice and extensive wine liat. 1500 Adams, Costa Meaa. 040-1937 CONTINENTAL MEDITERRANEAN ROOM Altpol'ter lnD Hotel Congenial and BKluded from t.he buay airport 1urroundin11. The Mediterranean Room offera superb continental cuisine for lunch, din- ner and Sunday brunch. Top enter· tainment nightly in the Cabaret Lounge. The Capi.in'e Table is open for dining 24 hours. Perfect for watchin,f California 1unaet1 i.I the Flight Deck Lounge. The Airport.er Inn is located 1t 18700 Mac.Arthur Blvd. in Irvine. 833-2770. PUFFIN'S An adventure in n1tura.I eat.ana. Freeh quality iniredientt prepared in 1 1imple yet elegant ny. Award winnins recipee. Garden 1ett.ina in 1 European Cale 1t.yle at:maephere. Casua1 brttkfut and lunch. Fo~l dinJni for dinner. Sun -Thun. 7 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. A Sat.. till 11 p.m. 30SO E. Cout Hwy .. Corona del Mar. 640-1673. RIVI BRA Relu to rrac:toua .. rvice in ID elegant. intim1t.e at.m011pbere. Ea· pertly p,.pared continent.al diehell by Chef l\ich&Td ~l'(Mf, aince 1970. Tbl1 award wlnnlna ,.... t.aurant aJao offers' an Htenaivt wine. liat.. and escela in table.ide prep. a11ttons and flambet. Open for Lunch 11:30-3 p.m., Dinner from 5, p.m. Escellent banquet facllitit11.: Cl~ Sun. and holidays. 3333 S. 1 Bn,tol. C08ta Me11. 040-3840. LECRATEAU A touch or the French countryside bu come to Newport Beach, with the opening or t.be Countiy Side Inn t at the comer of Briatol and Redhill Avenue. Fuhioned after a Euro-, pean bed and b1'Mkfut inn, emphaaising a l)enonal touch, t.be Country Side Inn ii the home ol Le · Chateau Rat.want... Peaturins fuhiooable California cuiai.ne with a French flair, menu 1pec;ialit.iet include Crepes Am Framboiaea Cobb Salad Pariaienne and Tour: nedoa R<.eini. Brealdut, lunch and dinner are served daily, beginnin1 at 6:00 Lm. Complimentary bora d'oeuvree are aerved nifbtly in tJw ' Lounae. For reaervatiODI pJeue caU 049-0300. CAFE FLEURI Take a seat in Cafe Fleuri for break- fast, lunch or dinner. Enjoy an ex· quisite ertvironmenl inOuenced by a French touch. Hot jau Monday through Friday from 5:00 till 9:00 p.m. and an outatanding whit.e- glove brunch make this Care the place to meet. Open 7 daye a week, 6:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Moderately priced. 4500 MacArthur Blvd .. -~ Beaeh. il7tF2001. LE MIDI Several things make this award win- ning hideaway truly special: Walter, their Swi chef, trained in 10me of the best howes; Pal~ St.. Moritz. Place Gstaad. Baur au Lac, Zurich. Authe n tic ruiaine Provencale--aeuonaJ gourmet fea · tivals-a Sunday brunch IO unique it"s like stepping back in time to an ere when escellen~ of food wu matched by generoUtl hotpitality, a hospitality rarely found these da)'ll. 1 Join Marica and Walter in their French country home. Lunch, din- ner and Sunday brunch. Banquet facilities. Closed Monda)'3. 3421 Via Lido, Nt'wpor1 Beach. 675-4904. Ml CASA Their food is like a trip to Mezico! H<>1pitality ~ hand in hand with their motto, "Mj Cua• Su C...," or my houae ia your hou.e. F..et-1b- li1hed 1ince 1972, it'• no ~t friend11 enjoy dinins here. Open • daily from 11 a.m. for Lunch. Din- ner and Cockta.i.la. Entertainment ' Wed -Sun. nisbta in the 8urTO Room. 296 E. 17th St., Cotta M .... 643-7626. JAACU\E E CALD'ORNIA BBACH Caljfomia 8Mch Re.taurut la oae of Newport'• mcst cont..mporvy, rwt.aurent.a. FMt.u.rinc uqultlt.a J~ dininc tnductinc euahi, · ...tood end Nab. mU.-uu. • \ru.ly plwunble dlnlllc u~ Locat.i at 3366 Via Udo in New- , pone.ch. Lunch boun 11:30·2.:30 dlnnp 5:30-11 :00 7 d_,. a ... Alj . ~ credit ca:rda ~ Call ' 876-067& lor infonn.Uon. J I . Out On The Town THAI THE THAI TOUCH Step int-0 the wonderful world of Thailand. The splendor of Thai cuisine and elegant dining is found here at Thai Touch Cuisine Your h0fll8 are P1anee and Songsak Doungchak and they will serve you an authentic Thai meal whether your tastes lean toward lhe mild or the lrad1t1onally sp1c-y Thai T ouch 1s a little out of the way, but well worth the find. Open for dinner 7 ntl!'.hl.'! and for lunc-h daily except Sunday Thai T ou<"h Cuisine is located m the Newport Hills Shop- ping Center where San M11t1Jel Drive end.JI at FMd Rm1d i616 San Miguel Dr 640-012:1 SEAFOOD STEAKS ANTHONY'S PIER 2 The Southern Calif Restaurant Writen voted this one the winner of the ~t value relltaurant.s. The1t seafood it the talk of the town with 30-35 fresh fish daily CBS Tele· vision cl11ims they have the ~t happy hour . in Orange County. Menu has calorie count for the weight conteioua. Open Friday, Sat· urday and Sunday for dinner. Locat~ on the beautiful Newport Bay et 103 N. Bayside Dr. 640-5123. CAFE LIDO C'afe Lido is Newport Cannery Vtl- lage's only supper club. lt'a located on Balboa Peninsula. Cafe Lido IA well known for it.II freeh seafooti aelect1on1 and contemporary t'uisine, prepared by Chef Francil\, The warm, intimate and co~y am· b1ance of du11ty roee and bur(CUndy decor create a perfect etmoephtrf for your dining experience Caft Lido is also the recipient of the Prestig1ou1 Southern California Re taurant Writers' il\.er Award Casual attire. Dinner nightly until midnight Live jazz nightly ('all 675-2968 for reservations. THE CANNERY This h111tor1c waterfront landmark 1n Newp()tt's Cannery Village rea · tures fresh loca.l 1ufood and F.ut trn bttf Consiat.enlly 1ood service, open for Lunch, Dinner, Sun C hampagne Brunch a11d Harbor C ruises Entertainment mghtly and Sun. aft.ernoon11. EnJOy the loun11t food galley-superb clam chowder' :JOJO LaFayette. 675-5777. CRAZY HORSE STEAKHOUSE Country dining with claea! Authen tic western decor re8taur8Jlt and saloon, featuring prime rib, fresh seafoods, and their famous pan saut.eed eteaia. Lunch: Mon Fri 11-3. Dinner Mon-Sat 5 p.m. (din- ner reservatione guaranteed~. Dant'· ing and live music in the aaJ0<in. Dyer Rd. Exit/Newport Fwy. Santa Ana. (714) 549-1512. THE REX OP NEWPORT Located on the oceanfront acr~ from the Newport Beach pier. The Ru it the Orange Coe.et'• mMt ncluaive aeafood restaurant. Well known for fresh Hawaii&n gourmet fi1h 11electione and apeciAliiing 1n ~weet Channel bland abalone, t.en der veal and prime meatll. The warm ambiance of the padded booths. goth1c patntinp and the well stocked wine rack11 lend to Ru's convivial atm08phere. The Rei of Newport is tht choice of loca ls as wtll u vi11it.ora. Recipient nf the pre11tig1ous Travel-Holiday 8ward Caaual/elegant allirt Lunch, dinner. Call 67fi-2566 for reservation8. Valet parkinR TALE OF THE WHALE Experient'e 11 sup back int.<> time to a place where you can dine at your own leisure. Enjoy the romanre of old Newport with a panoramic bay view. E1cite your aente1 with their 1enaationa.l aealood and traditional favoritiea. Breakfut 7 a.m., Mon.· Fri., Lunch 11 -4 Mon.-Fri., Dinner 4-11 Mon.-SaL S:lt. and Sun. Brunch 7 -4, Oyater Bar Fri., Sat. & Sun. Banquet facilitie. up to 600 400 Main SL, BaJboe 673-4633 SAIL LOFT Located above the Jolly Racer 1n Laguna, th it coiy reetaurant fea· turtt fine freth aealood with ocean view dining. EnJOY the oyster bu 1n a warm atmoephere and decor of nautical motif. The teafood menu features swordfish, ahrimp, halibut, &eallopt1 and many other aelection. The oyster bar offers oyater shooters, clams, crab &r ahrimp rnckta1I and alM> hot d1ahea. Tht Sail Loft, a re11taurant that 1s dt'd1 rated to the trad1t1on of comr11dtry .WO S Coatt Hwy , Laguna ~a<'h 494 .U58 cr\E CF A Kl\Kl GINO'S ON THE HILL Almo'l a l 114'.ta Me'<ll landmark "htre frit-ndi. and mt'munh meet morninl(. nc~m. and night for hreBkfast, lunch and dinner Gin11', 1~n't an Italian-Restaurant. hut 11 rehUlurant being run b\ a llornll Italian. Even though they 'lt'rvt' many Italian items. the\' al<1n off t r 11 large var1tty of other 1t"m' on thPir menu Known fur "Hont<1l food and friendly ~en·1re," r;ino·, feature' 11 v1m ed menu with l'mphas1s on qunhty and reasrmeble prices. 1 ht' lounl(e opeM al IS a.l"(l fur the mort ,. ~erioui;, cockuul hour with mterei.t 1ng notions at 4:10 PM and P1a1111 Bar Wednesday thru Saturday he ginning at 8:30 PM C:1no''I latei.t add1t1on, unda~ ChampaRne • Brunch coming June lat located •l 428 E 17th Street, Coai. MMA. C'all 650-1760 for reaervation.11, direc tions or whatever. GRAND DINND TBKATBR lmpreaaive dinlnr and prollllllonaJ produc:t.iona a.re awe to plMae ..ch time you viait. The eatreol'dinary burret offert rout heron of beef, glued ham with a fruit aauce, Geor- gia chicken with peech. anc1·,1au and the Mahi Mahi ii Mrved in 1 peuant aauce. Tri-color (eUuccini and cream it a rut favorite. Enjoy dinner and a play toftiiht! Grand Dinner Theater located within the Grand Hot.el in Anah.im at I Hotel W1y Call 772-7710. HARLEQ UIN DINNER THEATER Every ru•tomer can be espe«ed to be treated liJie a celebrity. The theater offert 1erumptioua meab with t.op productiona in an elegant atmoephere. The tumptuoua buffet 1ncludet rout baron of beef, chicken and fiah diaM., ,..w, 4aladt. vegetAablea, and a.infuJ dea 11uta. The Sat.. and Su.n. brunt'h include. a variety of .. , ditbee. The Celebrity Terrace ia available for pr&vate d1ninc. The individually dtcorated privet. be.loony room1 overlook the 4~1Nl hortahoe shaped main room. The Harlequin 11 located at 3503 S. Harbor in Santa Ana Call 979-7~. GUIDE TO ORANGE COAST RES-IJ'' 1~_0_1 I ::I , ~ ~ § ~ ~ 'J . " ~~ ~ ~ ~ -~ ~ ~ ·~ ~ ~~s ~ I ~ \,.)<:i ~ ~ t-., ~ ·~ ·~ Restaurant c ~ $4.75-8 95 $6 50·$10.50 from $3 00 AIRPORTER INN HOTEL Conunenlal $9.50-$18 95 18700 M•Arthur 81 . l.rvu~ 833 2770 4.7 • * • 10-600 * $11 95 THE BARN Amencan from M 95 14982 R.tdtuD, 1Wun U9 0116 {rom n 75 4 30 7 * ft * u~ $3~$700 $8115 BRISTOL BAR A: GRILL-Holiday ln.n Amttican $6 95-$12 95 3131 Bnnol O.U M..,. )!11-3000 4 7 • S2.00.~ 00 * up'° 400 TH E CANNERY Seafood 3010 Laf•y~U•, N~ Beec-h 876-67'77 $11.95-$1995 $4 75-$895 4-630 • * u~~'° • CRAZYHORSESTEAKROUSE Stab $99~$1695 1)11() 8roolV>ollow. s..n1.a Aria S-411-1612 Se.lood 5.7 • * * u&-;' DEJi'ALCO'S 11&1.lan 14_g$-$1195 270 A E 17111 St, C:C.1.a M ... 722 92&4 4.7 • Wule& Beer " I J '3.~$8.~ DILLMAN'S Amencan 17 95-$21 95 801 P.: S.lbna, a.Jbom 1173 77~ * lM~ * {rom $12 50 LE MIDI French from $8 50 3421 Vui l..tdo. l'l<-wpor1 llffch 87)-4904 Beer& Wine J0-6() LI'S Ch~ 17 00.112 00 Ml Adami. HunWlf\Ofl 8"d\ 812 911$ up to 150 from M.50 MANDARIN GOURMET Ch~ from 110.00 1500 Adama, C..1.a M-~-11137 • up to ao from '3 ~ MARCELLO'S llalian from M M 11~ Breth Blvd, Hunu""°" 8Mch 842·6~ ~ up to M Ml CASA MelOCall •la caru 2M JI: 17\h St C-McM ~7t» &combo * * fromf4.~ * REUBEN'S OF NEWPORT Stab from MM 20 I &. c-t Hwy ltewport 8-:tl s.tood * • 1• Delly Piiot Oetebook/ Friday. May 30, 1986